Ratler in a
post-chaise from the neighbouring town. Mr. Ratler, who had done
this kind of thing very often before, travelled without
impediments, but the new servant of our hero's was stuck outside
with the driver, and was in the way. "I never bring a man with me,"
said Mr. Ratler to his young friend. "The servants of the house
like it much better, because they get fee'd; you are just as well
waited on, and it don't cost half as much." Phineas blushed as he
heard all this; but there was the impediment, not to be got rid of
for the nonce, and Phineas made the best of his attendant. "It's
one of those points," said he, "as to which a man never quite makes
up his mind. If you bring a fellow, you wish you hadn't brought
him; and if you don't, you wish you had." "I'm a great deal more
decided in my ways that that," said Mr. Ratler.
Loughlinter, as they approached it, seemed to Phineas to be a
much finer place than Saulsby. And so it was, except that
Loughlinter wanted that graceful beauty of age which Saulsby
possessed. Loughlinter was all of cut stone, but the stones had
been cut only yesterday. It stood on a gentle slope, with a
greensward falling from the front entrance down to a mountain lake.
And on the other side of the Lough there rose a mighty mountain to
the skies, Ben Linter. At the foot of it, and all round to the
left, there ran the woods of Linter, stretching for miles through
crags and bogs and mountain lands. No better ground for deer than
the side of Ben Linter was there in all those highlands. And the
Linter, rushing down into the Lough through rocks which, in some
places, almost met together above its waters, ran so near to the
house that the pleasant noise of its cataracts could be heard from
the hall door. Behind the house the expanse of drained park land
seemed to be interminable; and then, again, came the mountains.
There were Ben Linn and Ben Lody;—and the whole territory belonging
to Mr. Kennedy. He was laird of Linn and laird of Linter, as his
people used to say. And yet his father had walked into Glasgow as a
little boy,—no doubt with the normal half-crown in his breeches
pocket.
"Magnificent;—is it not?" said Phineas to the Treasury
Secretary, as they were being driven up to the door.
"Very grand;—but the young trees show the new man. A new man may
buy a forest; but he can't get park trees."
Phineas, at the moment, was thinking how far all these things
which he saw, the mountains stretching everywhere around him, the
castle, the lake, the river, the wealth of it all, and, more than
the wealth, the nobility of the beauty, might act as temptations to
Lady Laura Standish. If a woman were asked to have the half of all
this, would it be possible that she should prefer to take the half
of his nothing? He thought it might be possible for a girl who
would confess, or seem to confess, that love should be everything.
But it could hardly be possible for a woman who looked at the world
almost as a man looked at it,—as an oyster to be opened with such
weapon as she could find ready to her hand. Lady Laura professed to
have a care for all the affairs of the world. She loved politics,
and could talk of social science, and had broad ideas about
religion, and was devoted to certain educational views. Such a
woman would feel that wealth was necessary to her, and would be
willing, for the sake of wealth, to put up with a husband without
romance. Nay; might it not be that she would prefer a husband
without romance? Thus Phineas was arguing to himself as he was
driven up to the door of Loughlinter Castle, while Mr. Ratler was
eloquent on the beauty of old park trees. "After all, a Scotch
forest is a very scrubby sort of thing," said Mr. Ratler.
There was nobody in the house,—at least, they found nobody; and
within half an hour Phineas was walking about the grounds by
himself. Mr. Ratler had declared himself to be delighted at having
an opportunity of writing letters,—and no doubt was writing them by
the dozen, all dated from Loughlinter, and all detailing the facts
that Mr.
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