Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science - Volume 17, No. 097, January, 1876 by Various
page 77 of 286 (26%)
page 77 of 286 (26%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
intervention on his part, so he took in enjoyment and gave it out to
the people round him with equal unconsciousness. Let it not be said that such a man as this is of no value in a world like ours: he is at once an anodyne and a stimulant of the healthiest and most innocent kind. As was meet, he first saw the lady who was to be his wife in the hunting-field. She was Miss Garscube of Garscube, an only child and an heiress. She was a fast young lady when as yet fastness was a rare development:--a harbinger of the fast period, the one swallow that presages summer, but does not make it--and as such much in the mouths of the public. Miss Garscube was said to be clever--she was certainly eccentric--and she was no beauty, but community of tastes in the matter of horses and dogs drew her and Lord Arthur together. On one of the choicest of October days, when she was following the hounds, and her horse had taken the fences like a creature with wings, he came to one which he also flew over, but fell on the other side, throwing off his rider--on soft grass, luckily. But almost before an exclamation of alarm could leave the mouths of the hunters behind, Miss Garscube was on her feet and in the saddle, and her horse away again, as if both had been ignorant of the little mishap that had occurred. Lord Arthur was immediately behind, and witnessed this bit of presence of mind and pluck with unfeigned admiration: it won his heart completely; and on her part she enjoyed the genuineness of his homage as she had never enjoyed anything before, and from that day things went on and prospered between them. |
|