"Just now, sir, you called it corrupting with a bribe," muttered Mr.

Coxe.

Mr. Gibson took no notice of this speech, but went on--"Inducing one

of my servants to risk her place, without offering her the slightest

equivalent, by begging her to convey a letter clandestinely to my

daughter--a mere child."

"Miss Gibson, sir, is nearly seventeen! I heard you say so only the

other day," said Mr. Coxe, aged twenty. Again Mr. Gibson ignored the

remark.

"A letter which you were unwilling to have seen by her father, who

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had tacitly trusted to your honour, by receiving you as an inmate of

his house. Your father's son--I know Major Coxe well--ought to have

come to me, and have said out openly, 'Mr. Gibson, I love--or I fancy

that I love--your daughter; I do not think it right to conceal this

from you, although unable to earn a penny; and with no prospect of an

unassisted livelihood, even for myself, for several years, I shall

not say a word about my feelings--or fancied feelings--to the very

young lady herself.' That is what your father's son ought to have

said; if, indeed, a couple of grains of reticent silence wouldn't

have been better still."

"And if I had said it, sir--perhaps I ought to have said it," said

Mr. Coxe, in a hurry of anxiety, "what would have been your answer?

Would you have sanctioned my passion, sir?"

"I would have said, most probably--I will not be certain of my exact

words in a suppositional case--that you were a young fool, but not

a dishonourable young fool, and I should have told you not to let

your thoughts run upon a calf-love until you had magnified it into

a passion. And I daresay, to make up for the mortification I should

have given you, I might have prescribed your joining the Hollingford

Cricket Club, and set you at liberty as often as I could on the

Saturday afternoons. As it is, I must write to your father's agent in

London, and ask him to remove you out of my household, repaying the

premium, of course, which will enable you to start afresh in some

other doctor's surgery."

"It will so grieve my father," said Mr. Coxe, startled into dismay,

if not repentance.

"I see no other course open. It will give Major Coxe some trouble

(I shall take care that he is at no extra expense), but what I think

will grieve him the most is the betrayal of confidence; for I trusted

you, Edward, like a son of my own!" There was something in Mr.

Gibson's voice when he spoke seriously, especially when he referred

to any feeling of his own--he who so rarely betrayed what was passing

in his heart--that was irresistible to most people: the change from

joking and sarcasm to tender gravity.




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