An Engagement of Convenience: A Novel
In tragic life, God wot, No villain need be!
George Meredith.
Miss Robinson had first seen Wyndham and fallen in love with him on the day that he appeared in the road as a neighbour and set up his studio there. But that was years before, and she had never made his acquaintance. He was the Prince Charming of the romances, handsome, of knightly bearing, with a winning smile on his frank face. From her magic window in the big corner house where the road branched off into two, she had narrowly observed his goings and comings, had watched eagerly all that was visible of his romantic, mysterious profession—the picturesque Italian models that pulled his bell, the great canvasses and frames that, during the earlier years at least, were borne in through his door, to reappear in due course as finished pictures on their way to the exhibitions—and it was sometimes possible to catch glimpses of stately figure-paintings and fascinating scenes and landscapes.
Then, too, there was the suggestion of his belonging to a brilliant social world: she had indeed felt that at her first sight of him. Smart broughams and victorias in which nestled stylish people not unfrequently drew up at his studio about tea-time, and in the season he could be seen going off every night in garb of ceremony; not to speak of his occasional departures—to important country-houses, no doubt—with portmanteaus and dressing-bags stacked on the roof of his hansom.
And not less eagerly had Miss Robinson followed his work, scanning the magazines for his drawings, and haunting the galleries in the search for his paintings. No one guessed how much he was the interest of her life: her parents had no suspicion at all, though they knew of their unusual neighbour, and spoke of him occasionally at table. But Alice Robinson was the humblest of womankind. Her youth lay already in the past: she accounted herself the plainest of the plain. So she idealised and worshipped her hero at a distance, feeling immeasurably farther from him than the hundred yards of respectable Hampstead pavement that separated their lives.
Louis Zangwill
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78 NEW BOND STREET, LONDON, W.
Life of the Right Hon Thomas Burt, M.P.
The Automobilist Abroad.
England and America, 1763 to 1783.
Diary of Dr. Polidori.
Some Reminiscences.
The Western Avernus
Moons and Winds of Araby.
Pranks in Provence.
Si Mihi
Going Through the Mill.
Auction Bridge.
POETRY.
Nineveh and other Poems.
FICTION.
An Engagement of Convenience.
The Brotherhood of Wisdom.
Follow Up!
Faith Unfaithful.
A Mirror of Folly.
The Barony of Brendon.
Fortune's Fool.
The Nancy Manoeuvres.
The Feast of Bacchus.
One or Two.
The Builders.
Eve and the Wood God.
The Gaiety of Fatma.
It Happened in Japan.
The Voyage of the Arrow.
The Sunset Trail.
The Making of a Man.
Christopher Deane.
Playmates; or, Studies in Child Life.
Reflections of a Householder.
Benedictine.
Hints to Young Authors.
Litanies of Life.
Three Little Gardeners.
Nathaniel Hawthorne's Romances.