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Felix
Holt, The Radical
He left me when
the down upon his lip Lay like the shadow of a
hovering kiss. "Beautiful mother, do not grieve,"
he said; "I will be great, and build our
fortunes high. And you shall wear the longest
train at court, And look so queenly, all the
lords shall say, 'She is a royal changeling:
there is some crown Lacks the right head, since
hers wears naught but braids.'" O, he is coming
now—but I am gray: And he——
On the first of September, in the memorable year
1832, some one was expected at Transome Court.
As early as two o'clock in the afternoon the
aged lodge-keeper had opened the heavy gate,
green as the tree trunks were green with
nature's powdery paint, deposited year after
year. Already in the village of Little Treby,
which lay on the side of a steep hill not far
off the lodge-gates, the elder matrons sat in
their best gowns at the few cottage doors
bordering the road, that they might be ready to
get up and make their courtesy when a travelling
carriage should come in sight; and beyond the
village several small boys were stationed on the
look-out, intending to run a race to the barn-like
old church, where the sexton waited in the
belfry ready to set the one bell in joyful
agitation just at the right moment...
Brother
Jacob
Among the many fatalities attending the
bloom of young desire, that of blindly taking to
the confectionery line has not, perhaps, been
sufficiently considered. How is the son of a
British yeoman, who has been fed principally on
salt pork and yeast dumplings, to know that
there is satiety for the human stomach even in a
paradise of glass jars full of sugared almonds
and pink lozenges, and that the tedium of life
can reach a pitch where plum-buns at discretion
cease to offer the slightest excitement? Or how,
at the tender age when a confectioner seems to
him a very prince whom all the world must envy—who
breakfasts on macaroons, dines on meringues,
sups on twelfth-cake, and fills up the
intermediate hours with sugar-candy or
peppermint—how is he to foresee the day of sad
wisdom, when he will discern that the
confectioner’s calling is not socially
influential, or favourable to a soaring ambition?
I have known a man who turned out to have a
metaphysical genius, incautiously, in the period
of youthful buoyancy, commence his career as a
dancing-master; and you may imagine the use that
was made of this initial mistake by opponents
who felt themselves bound to warn the public
against his doctrine of the Inconceivable. He
could not give up his dancing-lessons, because
he made his bread by them, and metaphysics would
not have found him in so much as salt to his
bread. It was really the same with Mr. David
Faux and the confectionery business. His uncle,
the butler at the great house close by Brigford,
had made a pet of him in his early boyhood, and
it was on a visit to this uncle that the
confectioners’ shops in that brilliant town had,
on a single day, fired his tender imagination.
He carried home the pleasing illusion that a
confectioner must be at once the happiest and
the foremost of men, since the things he made
were not only the most beautiful to behold, but
the very best eating, and such as the Lord Mayor
must always order largely for his private
recreation; so that when his father declared he
must be put to a trade, David chose his line
without a moment’s hesitation; and, with a
rashness inspired by a sweet tooth, wedded
himself irrevocably to confectionery. Soon,
however, the tooth lost its relish and fell into
blank indifference; and all the while, his mind
expanded, his ambition took new shapes, which
could hardly be satisfied within the sphere his
youthful ardour had chosen...
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