[The Mermaid by Lily Dougall]@TWC D-Link book
The Mermaid

CHAPTER VI
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"FROM HOUR TO HOUR WE RIPE----" The elder Simpson gradually learned to expend more money upon his son; it was not that the latter was a spendthrift or that he took to any evil courses--he simply became a gentleman and had uses for money of which his father could not, unaided, have conceived.

Caius was too virtuous to desire to spend his father's hardly-gathered stores unnecessarily; therefore, the last years of his college life in Montreal he did not come home in summer, but found occupation in that city by which to make a small income for himself.
In those two years he learned much of medical and surgical lore--this was of course, for he was a student by nature; but other things that he learned were, upon the whole, more noteworthy in the development of his character.

He became fastidious as to the fit of his coat and as to the work of the laundress upon his shirt-fronts.

He learned to sit in easy attitude by gauzily-dressed damsels under sparkling gaslight, and to curl his fair moustache between his now white fingers as he talked to them, and yet to moderate the extent of the attention that he paid to each, not wishing that it should be in excess of that which was due.

He learned to value himself as he was valued--as a rising man, one who would do well not to throw himself away in marriage.


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