'Except a gentleman by birth,' said his lady.
'Or the least bit of an archæologist,' said Mr Jonathan Prothero. 'I tried one day—you will scarcely believe it, Mr Gwynne—to make him understand that Garn Goch was an old British encampment, but he would not take it in.'
'Ah, really; I do not very much wonder myself, for I cannot quite "take in" those heaps of stones and all that sort of thing,' responded the host.
'What can they find to interest them in that sort of person?' asked Lady Mary in an aside to Mr Gwynne.
Miss Gwynne overheard it, and answered for her father.
'He is a young man of great talent, very rich, very handsome, and has had a miser for a father. Is not that the case Mr Rowland?'
'I—I—really, it is scarcely fair to appeal to me, as he is a relation.'
'And do you never say a good word in favour of your relations?'
'I hope so, when they deserve it,' said Rowland resolutely, glancing at his sister, who was biting her glove.
'If I may be allowed an opinion,' said Mrs Jonathan decidedly, also glancing at poor Netta, 'I should say that Howel Jenkins was a complete scapegrace. What he may yet turn out remains to be proved.'