[Godolphin Complete by Edward Bulwer-Lytton]@TWC D-Link bookGodolphin Complete CHAPTER XI 3/4
He stayed with him in London for about a year, and went everywhere with him, though so mere a boy.
His manners were, I well remember, assured and formed.
A relation left him some moderate legacy, and afterwards he went abroad alone." "But the ruins! The late Mr.Godolphin, notwithstanding his reserve, did not object to indulging the curiosity of his neighbours." "No: he was proud of the interest the ruins of his hereditary mansion so generally excited,--proud of their celebrity in print-shops and in tours; but he himself was never seen.
The cottage in which he lived, though it adjoins the ruins, was, of course, sacred from intrusion, and is so walled in, that that great delight of English visitors at show-places--peeping in at windows--was utterly forbidden.
However that be, during Mr.Godolphin's life, I never had courage to visit what, to me, would have been a melancholy scene now, the pain would be somewhat less; and since you wish it, suppose we drive over and visit the ruins to-morrow? It is the regular day for seeing them, by the by." "Not, dear Lady Erpingham, if it give you the least--" "My sweet girl," interrupted Lady Erpingham, when a servant approached to announce visitors at the castle. "Will you go into the saloon, Constance ?" said the elder lady, as, thinking still of love and Arthur Godolphin, she took her way to her dressing-room to renovate her rouge. It would have been a pretty amusement to one of the lesser devils, if, during the early romance of Lady Erpingham's feelings towards Arthur Godolphin, he had foretold her the hour when she would tell how Arthur Godolphin died a miser--just five minutes before she repaired to the toilette to decorate the cheek of age for the heedless eyes of a common acquaintance.
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