[Barchester Towers by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link book
Barchester Towers

CHAPTER XVI
10/25

His mind, however, slightly inclined itself to the appointment of Mr.Harding, seeing that by such a step he should have the assistance of Mr.Slope in opposing Mrs.Proudie.
Such was the state of affairs at the palace, when Mr.Slope called at Mrs.Bold's house and found her playing with her baby.

When she ran out of the room, Mr.Slope began praising the weather to Mary Bold, then he praised the baby and kissed him, and then he praised the mother, and then he praised Miss Bold herself.

Mrs.Bold, however, was not long before she came back.
"I have to apologize for calling at so very early an hour," began Mr.
Slope, "but I was really so anxious to speak to you that I hope you and Miss Bold will excuse me." Eleanor muttered something in which the words "certainly," and "of course," and "not early at all," were just audible, and then apologized for her own appearance, declaring, with a smile, that her baby was becoming such a big boy that he was quite unmanageable.
"He's a great big naughty boy," said she to the child, "and we must send him away to a great big rough romping school, where they have great big rods and do terrible things to naughty boys who don't do what their own mammas tell them;" and she then commenced another course of kissing, being actuated thereto by the terrible idea of sending her child away which her own imagination had depicted.
"And where the masters don't have such beautiful long hair to be dishevelled," said Mr.Slope, taking up the joke and paying a compliment at the same time.
Eleanor thought he might as well have left the compliment alone, but she said nothing and looked nothing, being occupied as she was with the baby.
"Let me take him," said Mary.

"His clothes are nearly off his back with his romping," and so saying she left the room with the child.
Miss Bold had heard Mr.Slope say he had something pressing to say to Eleanor, and thinking that she might be _de trop_, took this opportunity of getting herself out of the room.
"Don't be long, Mary," said Eleanor as Miss Bold shut the door.
"I am glad, Mrs.Bold, to have the opportunity of having ten minutes' conversation with you alone," began Mr.Slope.

"Will you let me openly ask you a plain question ?" "Certainly," said she.
"And I am sure you will give me a plain and open answer." "Either that, or none at all," said she, laughing.
"My question is this, Mrs.Bold: is your father really anxious to go back to the hospital ?" "Why do you ask me ?" said she.


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