Things were not going on any better at Hamley Hall. Nothing had

occurred to change the state of dissatisfied feeling into which the

Squire and his eldest son had respectively fallen; and the long

continuance merely of dissatisfaction is sure of itself to deepen

the feeling. Roger did all in his power to bring the father and son

together; but sometimes wondered if it would not have been better to

leave them alone; for they were falling into the habit of each making

him their confidant, and so defining emotions and opinions which

would have had less distinctness if they had been unexpressed. There

was little enough relief in the daily life at the Hall to help them

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all to shake off the gloom; and it even told on the health of both

the Squire and Osborne. The Squire became thinner, his skin as well

as his clothes began to hang loose about him, and the freshness

of his colour turned to red streaks, till his cheeks looked like

Eardiston pippins, instead of resembling "a Katherine pear on the

side that's next the sun." Roger thought that his father sate indoors

and smoked in his study more than was good for him, but it had

become difficult to get him far afield; he was too much afraid of

coming across some sign of the discontinued drainage works, or being

irritated afresh by the sight of his depreciated timber. Osborne was

wrapt up in the idea of arranging his poems for the press, and so

working out his wish for independence. What with daily writing to

his wife--taking his letters himself to a distant post-office, and

receiving hers there--touching up his sonnets, &c., with fastidious

care--and occasionally giving himself the pleasure of a visit to the

Gibsons, and enjoying the society of the two pleasant girls there,

he found little time for being with his father. Indeed, Osborne was

too self-indulgent or "sensitive," as he termed it, to bear well

with the Squire's gloomy fits, or too frequent querulousness. The

consciousness of his secret, too, made Osborne uncomfortable in his

father's presence. It was very well for all parties that Roger was

not "sensitive," for, if he had been, there were times when it would

have been hard to bear little spurts of domestic tyranny, by which

his father strove to assert his power over both his sons. One of

these occurred very soon after the night of the Hollingford

charity-ball.

Roger had induced his father to come out with him; and the Squire

had, on his son's suggestion, taken with him his long unused spud.

The two had wandered far afield; perhaps the elder man had found the

unwonted length of exercise too much for him; for, as he approached

the house, on his return, he became what nurses call in children

"fractious," and ready to turn on his companion for every remark he

made. Roger understood the case by instinct, as it were, and bore it

all with his usual sweetness of temper. They entered the house by

the front door; it lay straight on their line of march. On the old

cracked yellow-marble slab, there lay a card with Lord Hollingford's

name on it, which Robinson, evidently on the watch for their return,

hastened out of his pantry to deliver to Roger.




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