Mistress Haylark recommended Charley to use smelling salts to her daughter.
But that young gentleman had his own specific for reviving her.
He conducted Clara from the back to the front parlour, where soon the sounds of merry laughter and lively music told plainly that she was fully recovered, and in the best of spirits.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
SIR ANDREW AND PHILLIP HIS SON-IN-LAW MAKE FRIENDS AND ENEMIES.
The marriage of Charley and Miss Clara was duly announced in the newspapers, and the style in which it was said to have been conducted so astonished the clerks and employés of the India House and other circles in which he was formerly known, that every one unanimously considered that Charles must have had “a windfall,” or “a very sudden rise” in the world.
Sir Andrew, in the retirement of his little country house heard of it.
Mr. Phillip Redgill in the smoky, dingy, card and gambling rooms, also heard of it, and both were very much surprised.
The latter thought he would lose no time in congratulating young Warbeck.