He had now, for the
first time, an opportunity of judging of the estimation in which
his mother and his family were held by certain leaders of the ton,
of whom, in her letters, she had spoken so much, and into whose
society, or rather into whose parties, she had been admitted. He
saw that the renegade cowardice, with which she denied, abjured,
and reviled her own country, gained nothing but ridicule and
contempt. He loved his mother; and, whilst he endeavoured to
conceal her faults and foibles as much as possible from his own
heart, he could not endure those who dragged them to light and
ridicule. The next morning the first thing that occurred to Lord
Colambre's remembrance when he awoke was the sound of the
contemptuous emphasis which had been laid on the words IRISH
ABSENTEES! This led to recollections of his native country, to
comparisons of past and present scenes, to future plans of life.
Young and careless as he seemed, Lord Colambre was capable of
serious reflection. Of naturally quick and strong capacity, ardent
affections, impetuous temper, the early years of his childhood
passed at his father's castle in Ireland, where, from the lowest
servant to the well-dressed dependant of the family, everybody had
conspired to wait upon, to fondle, to flatter, to worship, this
darling of their lord. Yet he was not spoiled—not rendered selfish.
For, in the midst of this flattery and servility, some strokes of
genuine generous affection had gone home to his little heart; and,
though unqualified submission had increased the natural impetuosity
of his temper, and though visions of his future grandeur had
touched his infant thought, yet, fortunately, before he acquired
any fixed habits of insolence or tyranny, he was carried far away
from all that were bound or willing to submit to his commands, far
away from all signs of hereditary grandeur—plunged into one of our
great public schools—into a new world. Forced to struggle, mind and
body, with his equals, his rivals, the little lord became a
spirited schoolboy, and, in time, a man. Fortunately for him,
science and literature happened to be the fashion among a set of
clever young men with whom he was at Cambridge. His ambition for
intellectual superiority was raised, his views were enlarged, his
tastes and his manners formed. The sobriety of English good sense
mixed most advantageously with Irish vivacity; English prudence
governed, but did not extinguish his Irish enthusiasm. But, in
fact, English and Irish had not been invidiously contrasted in his
mind: he had been so long resident in England, and so intimately
connected with Englishmen, that he was not obvious to any of the
commonplace ridicule thrown upon Hibernians; and he had lived with
men who were too well informed and liberal to misjudge or
depreciate a sister country. He had found, from experience, that,
however reserved the English may be in manner, they are warm at
heart; that, however averse they may be from forming new
acquaintance, their esteem and confidence once gained, they make
the most solid friends. He had formed friendships in England; he
was fully sensible of the superior comforts, refinement, and
information, of English society; but his own country was endeared
to him by early association, and a sense of duty and patriotism
attached him to Ireland. And shall I too be an absentee? was a
question which resulted from these reflections—a question which he
was not yet prepared to answer decidedly. In the meantime, the
first business of the morning was to execute a commission for a
Cambridge friend. Mr. Berryl had bought from Mr. Mordicai, a famous
London coachmaker, a curricle, WARRANTED SOUND, for which he had
paid a sound price, upon express condition that Mr. Mordicai,
BARRING ACCIDENTS, should be answerable for all repairs of the
curricle for six months. In three, both the carriage and body were
found to be good for nothing—the curricle had been returned to Mr.
Mordicai—nothing had since been heard of it, or from him—and Lord
Colambre had undertaken to pay him and it a visit, and to make all
proper inquiries. Accordingly, he went to the coachmaker's, and,
obtaining no satisfaction from the underlings, desired to see the
head of the house. He was answered, that Mr. Mordicai was not at
home. His lordship had never seen Mr. Mordicai; but, just then, he
saw, walking across the yard, a man, who looked something like a
Bond Street coxcomb, but not the least like a gentleman, who
called, in the tone of a master, for 'Mr. Mordicai's barouche!' It
appeared; and he was stepping into it when Lord Colambre took the
liberty of stopping him; and, pointing to the wreck of Mr. Berryl's
curricle, now standing in the yard, began a statement of his
friend's grievances, and an appeal to common justice and
conscience, which he, unknowing the nature of the man with whom he
had to deal, imagined must be irresistible. Mr. Mordicai stood
without moving a muscle of his dark wooden face. Indeed, in his
face there appeared to be no muscles, or none which could move; so
that, though he had what are generally called handsome features,
there was, all together, something unnatural and shocking in his
countenance.
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