[Yeast: A Problem by Charles Kingsley]@TWC D-Link book
Yeast: A Problem

CHAPTER VII: THE DRIVE HOME, AND WHAT CAME OF IT
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Now it was not extraordinary that Squire Lavington had 'assimilated' a couple of bottles of Carbonel's best port; for however abstemious the new lord himself might be, he felt for the habits, and for the vote of an old-fashioned Whig squire.

Nor was it extraordinary that he fell fast asleep the moment he got into the carriage; nor, again, that his wife and daughters were not solicitous about waking him; nor, on the other hand, that the coachman and footman, who were like all the squire's servants, of the good old sort, honest, faithful, boozing, extravagant, happy-go-lucky souls, who had 'been about the place these forty years,' were somewhat owlish and unsteady on the box.

Nor was it extraordinary that there was a heavy storm of lightning, for that happened three times a-week in the chalk hills the summer through; nor, again, that under these circumstances the horses, who were of the squire's own breeding, and never thoroughly broke (nothing was done thoroughly at Whitford), went rather wildly home, and that the carriage swung alarmingly down the steep hills, and the boughs brushed the windows rather too often.

But it was extraordinary that Mrs.Lavington had cast off her usual primness, and seemed to-night, for the first time in her life, in an exuberant good humour, which she evinced by snubbing her usual favourite Honoria, and lavishing caresses on Argemone, whose vagaries she usually regarded with a sort of puzzled terror, like a hen who has hatched a duckling.
'Honoria, take your feet off my dress.

Argemone, my child, I hope you spent a pleasant evening ?' Argemone answered by some tossy commonplace.
A pause--and then Mrs.Lavington recommenced,-- 'How very pleasing that poor young Lord Vieuxbois is, after all!' 'I thought you disliked him so much.' 'His opinions, my child; but we must hope for the best.


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