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What Will He Do with It — Volume 08 by Baron Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton
page 52 of 69 (75%)
a week upon his old acquaintance, frighten him with a few threats, or
force a deathlike smile from agonising lips by a few villanous jokes,
carry off his four sovereigns, and enjoy himself thereon till pay-day
duly returned, was a condition of things that Jasper did not greatly care
to improve; and truly had he said to Poole that his earlier energy had
left him. As a sensualist of Jasper's stamp grows older and falls lower,
indolence gradually usurps the place once occupied by vanity or ambition.
Jasper was bitterly aware that his old comeliness was gone; that never
more could he ensnare a maiden's heart or a widow's gold. And when this
truth was fully brought home to him, it made a strange revolution in all
his habits. He cared no longer for dress and gewgaws--sought rather to
hide himself than to parade. In the neglect of the person he had once so
idolised--in the coarse roughness which now characterised his exterior--
there was that sullen despair which the vain only know when what had
made them dainty and jocund is gone for ever. The human mind, in
deteriorating, fits itself to the sphere into which it declines. Jasper
would not now, if he could, have driven a cabriolet down St. James's
Street. He had taken more and more to the vice of drinking as the
excitement of gambling was withdrawn from him. For how gamble with those
who had nothing to lose, and to whom he himself would have been pigeon,
not hawk? And as he found that, on what he thus drew regularly from
Dolly Poole, he could command all the comforts that his embruted tastes
now desired, so an odd kind of prudence for the first time in his life
came with what he chose to consider "a settled income." He mixed with
ruffians in their nightly orgies; treated them to cheap potations;
swaggered, bullied, boasted, but shared in no project of theirs which
might bring into jeopardy the life which Dolly Poole rendered so
comfortable and secure. His energies, once so restless, were lulled,
partly by habitual intoxication, partly by the physical pains which had
nestled themselves into his robust fibres, efforts of an immense and
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