"You will see my Georgy," was the best thing Emmy could think of to

console Becky. If anything could make her comfortable that would.

And so the two women continued talking for an hour or more, during

which Becky had the opportunity of giving her new friend a full and

complete version of her private history. She showed how her marriage

with Rawdon Crawley had always been viewed by the family with feelings

of the utmost hostility; how her sister-in-law (an artful woman) had

poisoned her husband's mind against her; how he had formed odious

connections, which had estranged his affections from her: how she had

borne everything--poverty, neglect, coldness from the being whom she

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most loved--and all for the sake of her child; how, finally, and by the

most flagrant outrage, she had been driven into demanding a separation

from her husband, when the wretch did not scruple to ask that she

should sacrifice her own fair fame so that he might procure advancement

through the means of a very great and powerful but unprincipled

man--the Marquis of Steyne, indeed. The atrocious monster!

This part of her eventful history Becky gave with the utmost feminine

delicacy and the most indignant virtue. Forced to fly her husband's

roof by this insult, the coward had pursued his revenge by taking her

child from her. And thus Becky said she was a wanderer, poor,

unprotected, friendless, and wretched.

Emmy received this story, which was told at some length, as those

persons who are acquainted with her character may imagine that she

would. She quivered with indignation at the account of the conduct of

the miserable Rawdon and the unprincipled Steyne. Her eyes made notes

of admiration for every one of the sentences in which Becky described

the persecutions of her aristocratic relatives and the falling away of

her husband. (Becky did not abuse him. She spoke rather in sorrow than

in anger. She had loved him only too fondly: and was he not the father

of her boy?) And as for the separation scene from the child, while

Becky was reciting it, Emmy retired altogether behind her

pocket-handkerchief, so that the consummate little tragedian must have

been charmed to see the effect which her performance produced on her

audience.

Whilst the ladies were carrying on their conversation, Amelia's

constant escort, the Major (who, of course, did not wish to interrupt

their conference, and found himself rather tired of creaking about the

narrow stair passage of which the roof brushed the nap from his hat)

descended to the ground-floor of the house and into the great room

common to all the frequenters of the Elephant, out of which the stair

led. This apartment is always in a fume of smoke and liberally

sprinkled with beer. On a dirty table stand scores of corresponding

brass candlesticks with tallow candles for the lodgers, whose keys hang

up in rows over the candles. Emmy had passed blushing through the room

anon, where all sorts of people were collected; Tyrolese glove-sellers

and Danubian linen-merchants, with their packs; students recruiting

themselves with butterbrods and meat; idlers, playing cards or dominoes

on the sloppy, beery tables; tumblers refreshing during the cessation

of their performances--in a word, all the fumum and strepitus of a

German inn in fair time. The waiter brought the Major a mug of beer,

as a matter of course, and he took out a cigar and amused himself with

that pernicious vegetable and a newspaper until his charge should come

down to claim him.




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