Beauchamp’s Career

by George Meredith


Contents

[CHAPTER I. THE CHAMPION OF HIS COUNTRY]
[CHAPTER II. UNCLE, NEPHEW, AND ANOTHER]
[CHAPTER III. CONTAINS BARONIAL VIEWS OF THE PRESENT TIME]
[CHAPTER IV. A GLIMPSE OF NEVIL IN ACTION]
[CHAPTER V. RENÉE]
[CHAPTER VI. LOVE IN VENICE]
[CHAPTER VII. AN AWAKENING FOR BOTH]
[CHAPTER VIII. A NIGHT ON THE ADRIATIC]
[CHAPTER IX. MORNING AT SEA UNDER THE ALPS]
[CHAPTER X. A SINGULAR COUNCIL]
[CHAPTER XI. CAPTAIN BASKELETT]
[CHAPTER XII. AN INTERVIEW WITH THE INFAMOUS DR. SHRAPNEL]
[CHAPTER XIII. A SUPERFINE CONSCIENCE]
[CHAPTER XIV. THE LEADING ARTICLE AND MR. TIMOTHY TURBOT]
[CHAPTER XV. CECILIA HALKETT]
[CHAPTER XVI. A PARTIAL DISPLAY OF BEAUCHAMP IN HIS COLOURS]
[CHAPTER XVII. HIS FRIEND AND FOE]
[CHAPTER XVIII. CONCERNING THE ACT OF CANVASSING]
[CHAPTER XIX. LORD PALMET, AND CERTAIN ELECTORS OF BEVISHAM]
[CHAPTER XX. A DAY AT ITCHINCOPE]
[CHAPTER XXI. THE QUESTION AS TO THE EXAMINATION OF THE WHIGS, AND THE FINE BLOW STRUCK BY MR. EVERARD ROMFREY]
[CHAPTER XXII. THE DRIVE INTO BEVISHAM]
[CHAPTER XXIII. TOURDESTELLE]
[CHAPTER XXIV. HIS HOLIDAY]
[CHAPTER XXV. THE ADVENTURE OF THE BOAT]
[CHAPTER XXVI. MR. BLACKBURN TUCKHAM]
[CHAPTER XXVII. A SHORT SIDELOOK AT THE ELECTION]
[CHAPTER XXVIII. TOUCHING A YOUNG LADY’S HEART AND HER INTELLECT]
[CHAPTER XXIX. THE EPISTLE OF DR. SHRAPNEL TO COMMANDER BEAUCHAMP]
[CHAPTER XXX. THE BAITING OF DR. SHRAPNEL]
[CHAPTER XXXI. SHOWING A CHIVALROUS GENTLEMAN SET IN MOTION]
[CHAPTER XXXII. AN EFFORT TO CONQUER CECILIA IN BEAUCHAMP’S FASHION]
[CHAPTER XXXIII. THE FIRST ENCOUNTER AT STEYNHAM]
[CHAPTER XXXIV. THE FACE OF RENÉE]
[CHAPTER XXXV. THE RIDE IN THE WRONG DIRECTION]
[CHAPTER XXXVI. PURSUIT OF THE APOLOGY OF MR. ROMFREY TO DR. SHRAPNEL]
[CHAPTER XXXVII. CECILIA CONQUERED]
[CHAPTER XXXVIII. LORD AVONLEY]
[CHAPTER XXXIX. BETWEEN BEAUCHAMP AND CECILIA]
[CHAPTER XL. A TRIAL OF HIM]
[CHAPTER XLI. A LAME VICTORY]
[CHAPTER XLII. THE TWO PASSIONS ]
[CHAPTER XLIII. THE EARL OF ROMFREY AND THE COUNTESS]
[CHAPTER XLIV. THE NEPHEWS OF THE EARL, AND ANOTHER EXHIBITION OF THE TWO PASSIONS IN BEAUCHAMP]
[CHAPTER XLV. A LITTLE PLOT AGAINST CECILIA]
[CHAPTER XLVI. AS IT MIGHT HAVE BEEN FORESEEN]
[CHAPTER XLVII. THE REFUSAL OF HIM]
[CHAPTER XLVIII. OF THE TRIAL AWAITING THE EARL OF ROMFREY]
[CHAPTER XLIX. A FABRIC OF BARONIAL DESPOTISM CRUMBLES]
[CHAPTER L. AT THE COTTAGE ON THE COMMON]
[CHAPTER LI. IN THE NIGHT]
[CHAPTER LII. QUESTION OF A PILGRIMAGE AND AN ACT OF PENANCE]
[CHAPTER LIII. THE APOLOGY TO DR. SHRAPNEL]
[CHAPTER LIV. THE FRUITS OF THE APOLOGY]
[CHAPTER LV. WITHOUT LOVE]
[CHAPTER LVI. THE LAST OF NEVIL BEAUCHAMP]

CHAPTER I.
THE CHAMPION OF HIS COUNTRY

When young Nevil Beauchamp was throwing off his midshipman’s jacket for a holiday in the garb of peace, we had across Channel a host of dreadful military officers flashing swords at us for some critical observations of ours upon their sovereign, threatening Afric’s fires and savagery. The case occurred in old days now and again, sometimes, upon imagined provocation, more furiously than at others. We were unarmed, and the spectacle was distressing. We had done nothing except to speak our minds according to the habit of the free, and such an explosion appeared as irrational and excessive as that of a powder-magazine in reply to nothing more than the light of a spark. It was known that a valorous General of the Algerian wars proposed to make a clean march to the capital of the British Empire at the head of ten thousand men; which seems a small quantity to think much about, but they wore wide red breeches blown out by Fame, big as her cheeks, and a ten thousand of that sort would never think of retreating. Their spectral advance on quaking London through Kentish hopgardens, Sussex corn-fields, or by the pleasant hills of Surrey, after a gymnastic leap over the riband of salt water, haunted many pillows. And now those horrid shouts of the legions of Caesar, crying to the inheritor of an invading name to lead them against us, as the origin of his title had led the army of Gaul of old gloriously, scared sweet sleep. We saw them in imagination lining the opposite shore; eagle and standard-bearers, and gallifers, brandishing their fowls and their banners in a manner to frighten the decorum of the universe. Where were our men?

The returns of the census of our population were oppressively satisfactory, and so was the condition of our youth. We could row and ride and fish and shoot, and breed largely: we were athletes with a fine history and a full purse: we had first-rate sporting guns, unrivalled park-hacks and hunters, promising babies to carry on the renown of England to the next generation, and a wonderful Press, and a Constitution the highest reach of practical human sagacity. But where were our armed men? where our great artillery? where our proved captains, to resist a sudden sharp trial of the national mettle? Where was the first line of England’s defence, her navy? These were questions, and Ministers were called upon to answer them. The Press answered them boldly, with the appalling statement that we had no navy and no army. At the most we could muster a few old ships, a couple of experimental vessels of war, and twenty-five thousand soldiers indifferently weaponed.

We were in fact as naked to the Imperial foe as the merely painted Britons.

This being apprehended, by the aid of our own shortness of figures and the agitated images of the red-breeched only waiting the signal to jump and be at us, there ensued a curious exhibition that would be termed, in simple language, writing to the newspapers, for it took the outward form of letters: in reality, it was the deliberate saddling of our ancient nightmare of Invasion, putting the postillion on her, and trotting her along the high-road with a winding horn to rouse old Panic. Panic we will, for the sake of convenience, assume to be of the feminine gender, and a spinster, though properly she should be classed with the large mixed race of mental and moral neuters which are the bulk of comfortable nations. She turned in her bed at first like the sluggard of the venerable hymnist: but once fairly awakened, she directed a stare toward the terrific foreign contortionists, and became in an instant all stormy nightcap and fingers starving for the bell-rope. Forthwith she burst into a series of shrieks, howls, and high piercing notes that caused even the parliamentary Opposition, in the heat of an assault on a parsimonious Government, to abandon its temporary advantage and be still awhile. Yet she likewise performed her part with a certain deliberation and method, as if aware that it was a part she had to play in the composition of a singular people. She did a little mischief by dropping on the stock-markets; in other respects she was harmless, and, inasmuch as she established a subject for conversation, useful.