"I only wish Osborne and Roger had been at home," said Mrs. Hamley,

in her low soft voice. "She may find it dull, being with old people,

like the squire and me, from morning till night. When can she come?

the darling--I am beginning to love her already!"

Mr. Gibson was very glad in his heart that the young men of the house

were out of the way; he did not want his little Molly to be passing

from Scylla to Charybdis; and, as he afterwards scoffed at himself

for thinking, he had got an idea that all young men were wolves in

chase of his one ewe-lamb.

"She knows nothing of the pleasure in store for her," he replied;

"and I'm sure I don't know what feminine preparations she may think

necessary, or how long they may take. You'll remember she is a little

ignoramus, and has had no ... training in etiquette; our ways at

home are rather rough for a girl, I'm afraid. But I know I could not

send her into a kinder atmosphere than this."

When the Squire heard from his wife of Mr. Gibson's proposal, he was

as much pleased as she at the prospect of their youthful visitor;

for he was a man of a hearty hospitality, when his pride did not

interfere with its gratification; and he was delighted to think of

his sick wife's having such an agreeable companion in her hours of

loneliness. After a while he said,--"It's as well the lads are at

Cambridge; we might have been having a love-affair if they had been

at home."

"Well--and if we had?" asked his more romantic wife.

"It wouldn't have done," said the Squire, decidedly. "Osborne

will have had a first-rate education--as good as any man in the

county--he'll have this property, and he's a Hamley of Hamley; not a

family in the shire is as old as we are, or settled on their ground

so well. Osborne may marry where he likes. If Lord Hollingford had a

daughter, Osborne would have been as good a match as she could have

required. It would never do for him to fall in love with Gibson's

daughter--I shouldn't allow it. So it's as well he's out of the way."

"Well! perhaps Osborne had better look higher."

"Perhaps! I say he must." The Squire brought his hand down with a

thump on the table, near him, which made his wife's heart beat hard

for some minutes. "And as for Roger," he continued, unconscious of

the flutter he had put her into, "he'll have to make his own way,

and earn his own bread; and, I'm afraid, he's not getting on very

brilliantly at Cambridge. He mustn't think of falling in love for

these ten years."




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