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Those young men! Dunfield was at that time not perhaps worse off in its supply of marriageable males than other small provincial towns, but, to judge from the extensive assortment which passed through the Cartwrights’ house, the lot of Dunfield maidens might beheld pathetic. They were not especially ignorant or vulgar, these budding townsmen, simply imbecile. One could not accuse them of positive faults, for they had no positive qualities, unless it were here and there a leaning to physical fatuity. Their interests were concerned with the pettiest of local occurrences; their favouritisms and animosities were those of overgrown infants. They played practical jokes on each other in the open streets; they read the local newspapers to extract the feeblest of gossip; they had a game which they called polities, and which consisted in badging themselves with blue or yellow, according to the choice of their fathers before them; they affected now and then to haunt bar-parlours and billiard-rooms, and made good resolutions when they had smoked or drunk more than their stomachs would support. If any Dunfield schoolboy exhibited faculties of a kind uncommon in the town, he was despatched to begin life on a more promising scene; those who remained, who became the new generation of business men, of town councillors, of independent electors, were such as could not by any possibility have made a living elsewhere. Those elders who knew Dunfield best could not point to a single youth of fair endowments who looked forward to remaining in his native place.

The tone of Dunfield society was not high.

No wonder that Emily Hood had her doubts as to the result of study taken up by one of the Cartwrights. Still, she held it a duty to give what help she could, knowing how necessary it was that Jessie should, if possible, qualify herself to earn a living. The first thing after breakfast on Tuesday morning she set forth to visit her friends. It was not quite ten o’clock when she reached the house, and she looked forward with some assurance of hope to finding the family alone. Jessie herself opened the door, and Emily; passing at once into the sitting-room, discovered that not only had a visitor arrived before her, but this the very person she would most have desired to avoid. Mr. Richard Dagworthy was seated in conversation with Mrs. Cartwright and her daughters or rather he had been conversing till Emily’s arrival caused a momentary silence. He had called thus early, on his way to the mill, to inquire for Mr. Cartwright’s present address having occasion to communicate with him on business matters.

The room was so small that Emily had a difficulty in reaching Mrs. Cartwright to shake hands with her, owing to Dagworthy’s almost blocking the only available way round the table. He stood up and drew back, waiting his turn for greeting; when it came, he assumed the manner of an old friend. A chair was found for Emily, and conversation, or what passed for such, speedily regathered volume. The breakfast things were still on the table, and Miss Geraldine, who was always reluctant to rise of a morning, was engaged upon her meal.

‘You see what it’s come to, Mr. Dagworthy,’ exclaimed the mother of the family, with her usual lack of reticence. ‘Jessie can’t or won’t learn by herself, so she has to bother Emily to come and teach her. It’s too bad, I call it, just in her holiday time. She looks as if she wanted to run about and get colour in her cheeks, don’t you think so?’

‘Well, mother,’ cried Jessie, ‘you needn’t speak as if Emily was a child in short clothes.’

The other girls laughed.

‘I dare say Emily wishes she was,’ pursued Mrs. Cartwright. ‘When you’re little ones, you’re all for being grown up, and when you are grown up, then you see how much better off you were before,—that is, if you’ve got common sense. I wish my girls had half as much all put together as Emily has.’

‘I’m sure I don’t wish I was a child,’ remarked Geraldine, as she bit her bread-and-butter.

‘Of course you don’t, Geraldine,’ replied Dagworthy, who was on terms of much familiarity with all the girls. ‘If you were, your mother wouldn’t let you come down late to breakfast, would she?’

‘I never remember being in time for breakfast since I was born,’ cried the girl.

‘I dare say your memory doesn’t go far enough back,’ rejoined Dagworthy, with the smile of one who trifled from a position of superior age and experience.

Mrs. Cartwright laughed with a little embarrassment. Amy, the eldest girl, was quick with an inquiry whether Emily had been as yet to the Agricultural Show, the resort at present of all pleasure-seeking Dunfieldians. Emily replied that she had not, and to this subject the talk strayed. Mr. Dagworthy had dogs on exhibition at the show. Barbara wanted to know how much he would take for a certain animal which had captivated her; if she had some idea that this might lead to an offer of the dog as a present, she was doomed to disappointment, for Dagworthy named his price in the most matter-of-fact way. But nothing had excited so much interest in these young ladies as the prize pigs; they were in raptures at the incredible degree of fatness attained; they delighted to recall that some of the pigs were fattened to such a point that rollers had to be placed under their throats to keep their heads up and prevent them from being choked by the pressure of their own superabundant flesh. In all this conversation Dagworthy took his part, but not quite with the same freedom as before Emily’s arrival. His eyes turned incessantly in her direction, and once or twice he only just saved himself from absent-mindedness when a remark was addressed to him. It was with obvious reluctance that he at length rose to leave.

‘When are you all coming to see me?’ he asked, as he stood smoothing his felt hat with the back of his hand. ‘I suppose I shall have to give a croquet party, and have some of the young fellows, then you’ll come fast enough. Old men like myself you care nothing about.’

‘I should think not, indeed,’ replied Barbara the plain. ‘Why, your hair’s going grey. If you didn’t shave, you’d have had grey whiskers long ago.’

‘When I invite the others,’ he returned, laughing, ‘you may consider yourself excepted.’

Amid delicate banter of this kind he took his departure. Of course he was instantly the subject of clamorous chatter.

‘Will he really give a croquet party?’ demanded one, eagerly.

‘Not he!’ was the reply from another. ‘It would cost him too much in tea and cakes.’

‘Nonsense!’ put in Mrs. Cartwright. ‘He doesn’t care for society, that’s what it is. I believe he’s a good deal happier living there by himself than he was when his wife was alive.’

‘That isn’t very wonderful,’ exclaimed Amy. ‘A proud, stuck-up thing, she was! Served him right if she made him uncomfortable; he only married her because her people were grand.’

‘I don’t believe they ever go near him now,’ said the mother.

‘What did they quarrel about, mother?’ asked Jessie. ‘I believe he used his wife badly, that’s the truth of it.’

‘How do you know what the truth of it is?’ returned her mother, contemptuously. ‘I know very well he did nothing of the kind; whatever his faults are, he’s not that sort of man.’