It may be all very pleasant "to sport with Amaryllis in the shade,

or with the tangles of Neæra's hair," but young men at the outset of

their independent life have many other cares in this prosaic England

to occupy their time and their thoughts. Roger was Fellow of Trinity,

to be sure; and from the outside it certainly appeared as if his

position, as long as he chose to keep unmarried, was a very easy

one. His was not a nature, however, to sink down into inglorious

ease, even had his fellowship income been at his disposal. He

looked forward to an active life; in what direction he had not yet

determined. He knew what were his talents and his tastes; and did

not wish the former to lie buried, nor the latter, which he regarded

as gifts, fitting him for some peculiar work, to be disregarded or

thwarted. He rather liked awaiting an object, secure in his own

energy to force his way to it, when once he saw it clearly. He

reserved enough of money for his own personal needs, which were

small, and for the ready furtherance of any project he might see

fit to undertake; the rest of his income was Osborne's; given and

accepted in the spirit which made the bond between these two brothers

so rarely perfect. It was only the thought of Cynthia that threw

Roger off his balance. A strong man in everything else, about her

he was as a child. He knew that he could not marry and retain

his fellowship; his intention was to hold himself loose from any

employment or profession until he had found one to his mind, so

there was no immediate prospect--no prospect for many years, indeed,

that he would be able to marry. Yet he went on seeking Cynthia's

sweet company, listening to the music of her voice, basking in her

sunshine, and feeding his passion in every possible way, just like an

unreasoning child. He knew that it was folly--and yet he did it; and

it was perhaps this that made him so sympathetic with Osborne. Roger

racked his brains about Osborne's affairs much more frequently than

Osborne troubled himself. Indeed, he had become so ailing and languid

of late, that even the Squire made only very faint objections to

his desire for frequent change of scene, though formerly he used to

grumble so much at the necessary expenditure it involved.

"After all, it doesn't cost much," the Squire said to Roger one day.

"Choose how he does it, he does it cheaply; he used to come and ask

me for twenty, where now he does it for five. But he and I have

lost each other's language, that's what we have! and my dictionary"

(only he called it "dixonary") "has all got wrong because of those

confounded debts--which he will never explain to me, or talk

about--he always holds me off at arm's length when I begin upon

it--he does, Roger--me, his old dad, as was his primest favourite of

all, when he was a little bit of a chap!"




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