"Australia! Why, Osborne, what could you do there? And leave my

father! I hope you'll never get your hundred pounds, if that's the

use you're to make of it! Why, you'd break the Squire's heart."

"It might have done once," said Osborne, gloomily, "but it wouldn't

now. He looks at me askance, and shies away from conversation with

me. Let me alone for noticing and feeling this kind of thing. It's

this very susceptibility to outward things that gives me what faculty

I have; and it seems to me as if my bread, and my wife's too, were to

depend upon it. You'll soon see for yourself the terms which I am on

with my father!"

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Roger did soon see. His father had slipped into a habit of silence

at meal-times--a habit which Osborne, who was troubled and anxious

enough for his own part, had not striven to break. Father and son

sate together, and exchanged all the necessary speeches connected

with the occasion civilly enough; but it was a relief to them when

their intercourse was over, and they separated--the father to brood

over his sorrow and his disappointment, which were real and deep

enough, and the injury he had received from his boy, which was

exaggerated in his mind by his ignorance of the actual steps Osborne

had taken to raise money. If the money-lenders had calculated the

chances of his father's life or death in making their bargain,

Osborne himself had thought only of how soon and how easily he could

get the money requisite for clearing him from all imperious claims

at Cambridge, and for enabling him to follow Aimée to her home in

Alsace, and for the subsequent marriage. As yet, Roger had never seen

his brother's wife; indeed, he had only been taken into Osborne's

full confidence after all was decided in which his advice could have

been useful. And now, in the enforced separation, Osborne's whole

thought, both the poetical and practical sides of his mind, ran

upon the little wife who was passing her lonely days in farmhouse

lodgings, wondering when her bridegroom husband would come to her

next. With such an engrossing subject, it was, perhaps, no wonder

that he unconsciously neglected his father; but it was none the less

sad at the time, and to be regretted in its consequences.

"I may come in and have a pipe with you, sir, mayn't I?" said Roger,

that first evening, pushing gently against the study-door, which his

father held only half open.

"You'll not like it," said the squire, still holding the door against

him, but speaking in a relenting tone. "The tobacco I use isn't what

young men like. Better go and have a cigar with Osborne."




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