[Lord Ormont and his Aminta by George Meredith]@TWC D-Link book
Lord Ormont and his Aminta

CHAPTER VIII
8/11

This fellow here has had his French maitre d'armes.

Show me your hand, sir.' Weyburn smiled, and extended his right hand, saying: 'The wrist wants exercise.' 'Ha! square thumb, flesh full at the nails' ends; you were a bowler at cricket.' 'Now examine the palms, my lord; I judge by the lines on the palms,' Mrs.Pagnell remarked.
He nodded to her and rose.
Coffee had not been served, she reminded him; it was coming in, so down he sat a yard from the table; outwardly equable, inwardly cursing coffee; though he refused to finish a meal without his cup.
'I think the palms do betray something,' said Mrs.Lawrence; and Aminta said: 'Everything betrays.' 'No, my dear,' Mrs.Pagnell corrected her; 'the extremities betray, and we cannot read the centre.

Is it not so, my lord ?' 'It may be as you say, ma'am.' She was disappointed in her scheme to induce a general examination of palms, and especially his sphinx lordship's.
Weyburn controlled the tongue she so frequently tickled to an elvish gavotte, but the humour on his face touched Mrs.Lawrence's to a subdued good-fellow roguishness, and he felt himself invited to chat with her on the walk for a reposeful ten minutes in Aminta's drawing-room.
Mrs.Pagnell, 'quite enjoying the company,' as she told her niece, was dismayed to hear her niece tell her of a milliner's appointment, positive for three o'clock; and she had written it in her head 'p.m., four o'clock,' and she had mislaid or destroyed the milliner's note; and she still had designs upon his lordship's palms, things to read and hint around her off the lines.

She departed.
Lord Ormont became genial; and there was no one present who did not marvel that he should continue to decree a state of circumstances more or less necessitating the infliction he groaned under.

He was too lofty to be questioned, even by his favourites.


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