[Beauchamp’s Career by George Meredith]@TWC D-Link book
Beauchamp’s Career

CHAPTER II
18/20

For that fire-and-smoke writer dedicated volumes to the praise of a regicide.

Nice reading for her dear boy! Some weeks after Nevil was off again, she abused herself for her half-hearted love of him, and would have given him anything--the last word in favour of the Country versus the royal Martyr, for example, had he insisted on it.

She gathered, bit by bit, that he had dashed at his big blustering cousin Cecil to vindicate her good name.

The direful youths fought in the Steynham stables, overheard by the grooms.

Everard received a fine account of the tussle from these latter, and Rosamund, knowing him to be of the order of gentlemen who, whatsoever their sins, will at all costs protect a woman's delicacy, and a dependant's, man or woman, did not fear to have her ears shocked in probing him on the subject.
Everard was led to say that Nevil's cousins were bedevilled with womanfolk.
From which Rosamund perceived that women had been at work; and if so, it was upon the business of the scandal-monger; and if so, Nevil fought his cousin to protect her good name from a babbler of the family gossip.
She spoke to Stukely Culbrett, her dead husband's friend, to whose recommendation she was indebted for her place in Everard Romfrey's household.
'Nevil behaved like a knight, I hear.' 'Your beauty was disputed,' said he, 'and Nevil knocked the blind man down for not being able to see.' She thought, 'Not my beauty! Nevil struck his cousin on behalf of the only fair thing I have left to me!' This was a moment with her when many sensations rush together and form a knot in sensitive natures.


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