John Caldigate
The Project Gutenberg eBook, John Caldigate, by Anthony Trollope
E-text prepared by Project Gutenberg Distributed Proofreaders and revised by Joseph E. Loewenstein, M.D.
Perhaps it was more the fault of Daniel Caldigate the father than of his son John Caldigate, that they two could not live together in comfort in the days of the young man's early youth. And yet it would have been much for both of them that such comfortable association should have been possible to them. Wherever the fault lay, or the chief fault—for probably there was some on both sides—the misfortune was so great as to bring crushing troubles upon each of them.
There were but the two of which to make a household. When John was fifteen, and had been about a year at Harrow, he lost his mother and his two little sisters almost at a blow. The two girls went first, and the poor mother, who had kept herself alive to see them die, followed them almost instantly. Then Daniel Caldigate had been alone.
And he was a man who knew how to live alone,—a just, hard, unsympathetic man,—of whom his neighbours said, with something of implied reproach, that he bore up strangely when he lost his wife and girls. This they said, because he was to be seen riding about the country, and because he was to be heard talking to the farmers and labourers as though nothing special had happened to him. It was rumoured of him, too, that he was as constant with his books as before; and he had been a man always constant with his books; and also that he had never been seen to shed a tear, or been heard to speak of those who had been taken from him.
He was, in truth, a stout, self-constraining man, silent unless when he had something to say. Then he could become loud enough, or perhaps it might be said, eloquent. To his wife he had been inwardly affectionate, but outwardly almost stern. To his daughters he had been the same,—always anxious for every good thing on their behalf, but never able to make the children conscious of this anxiety. When they were taken from him, he suffered in silence, as such men do suffer; and he suffered the more because he knew well how little of gentleness there had been in his manners with them.
Anthony Trollope
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John Caldigate
Anthony Trollope
Contents
Chapter I
Folking
Chapter II.
Puritan Grange
Chapter III.
Daniel Caldigate
Chapter IV.
The Shands
Chapter V.
The Goldfinder
Chapter VI.
Mrs. Smith
Chapter VII.
The Three Attempts
Chapter VIII.
Reaching Melbourne
Chapter IX.
Nobble
Chapter X.
Polyeuka Hall
Chapter XI.
Ahalala
Chapter XII.
Mademoiselle Cettini
Chapter XIII.
Coming Back
Chapter XIV.
Again at Home
Chapter XV.
Again At Pollington
Chapter XVI.
Again at Babington
Chapter XVII.
Again at Puritan Grange
Chapter XVIII.
Robert Bolton
Chapter XIX.
Men Are So Wicked
Chapter XX.
Hester's Courage
Chapter XXI.
The Wedding
Chapter XXII
As To Touching Pitch
Chapter XXIII.
The New Heir
Chapter XXIV.
News from the Gold Mines
Chapter XXV.
The Baby's Sponsors
Chapter XXVI.
A Stranger in Cambridge
Chapter XXVII.
The Christening
Chapter XXVIII.
Tom Crinkett at Folking
Chapter XXIX.
'Just by Telling Me that I Am'
Chapter XXX.
The Conclave at Puritan Grange
Chapter XXXI.
Hester Is Lured Back
Chapter XXXII.
The Babington Wedding
Chapter XXXIII.
Persuasion
Chapter XXXIV.
Violence
Chapter XXXV.
In Prison
Chapter XXXVI.
The Escape
Chapter XXXVII.
Again at Folking
Chapter XXXVIII.
Bollum
Chapter XXXIX.
Restitution
Chapter XL.
Waiting For The Trial
Chapter XLI
The First Day
Chapter XLII.
The Second Day
Chapter XLIII.
The Last Day
Chapter XLIV.
After the Verdict
Chapter XLV.
The Boltons Are Much Troubled
Chapter XLVI.
Burning Words
Chapter XLVII.
Curlydown and Bagwax
Chapter XLVIII.
Sir John Joram's Chambers
Chapter XLIX.
All the Shands
Chapter L.
Again at Sir John's Chambers
Chapter LI.
Dick Shand Goes To Cambridgeshire
Chapter LII.
The Fortunes of Bagwax
Chapter LIII.
Sir John Backs His Opinion
Chapter LIV.
Judge Bramber
Chapter LV.
How the Conspirators Throve
Chapter LVI.
The Boltons Are Very Firm
Chapter LVII.
Squire Caldigate at the Home Office
Chapter LVIII.
Mr. Smirkie Is Ill-used
Chapter LIX.
How The Big-Wigs Doubted
Chapter LX.
How Mrs. Bolton Was Nearly Conquered
Chapter LXI.
The News Reaches Cambridge
Chapter LXII.
John Caldigate's Return
Chapter LXIII.
How Mrs. Bolton Was Quite Conquered
Chapter LXIV.
Conclusion