<p><SPAN name="c3" id="c3"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
<h3>Mr. Abel Wharton, Q.C.<br/> </h3>
<p>Lopez was not a man to let grass grow under his feet when he had
anything to do. When he was tired of walking backwards and forwards
over the same bit of pavement, subject all the while to a cold east
wind, he went home and thought of the same matter while he lay in
bed. Even were he to get the girl's assurances of love, without the
father's consent he might find himself farther from his object than
ever. Mr. Wharton was a man of old fashions, who would think himself
ill-used and his daughter ill-used, and who would think also that a
general offence would have been committed against good social
manners, if his daughter were to be asked for her hand without his
previous consent. Should he absolutely refuse,—why then the battle,
though it would be a desperate battle, might perhaps be fought with
other strategy; but, giving to the matter his best consideration,
Lopez thought it expedient to go at once to the father. In doing this
he would have no silly tremors. Whatever he might feel in speaking to
the girl, he had sufficient self-confidence to be able to ask the
father, if not with assurance, at any rate without trepidation. It
was, he thought, probable that the father, at the first attack, would
neither altogether accede, or altogether refuse. The disposition of
the man was averse to the probability of an absolute reply at the
first moment. The lover imagined that it might be possible for him to
take advantage of the period of doubt which would thus be created.</p>
<p>Mr. Wharton was and had for a great many years been a barrister
practising in the Equity Courts,—or rather in one Equity Court, for
throughout a life's work now extending to nearly fifty years, he had
hardly ever gone out of the single Vice-Chancellor's Court which was
much better known by Mr. Wharton's name than by that of the less
eminent judge who now sat there. His had been a very peculiar, a very
toilsome, but yet probably a very satisfactory life. He had begun his
practice early, and had worked in a stuff gown till he was nearly
sixty. At that time he had amassed a large fortune, mainly from his
profession, but partly also by the careful use of his own small
patrimony and by his wife's money. Men knew that he was rich, but no
one knew the extent of his wealth. When he submitted to take a silk
gown, he declared among his friends that he did so as a step
preparatory to his retirement. The altered method of work would not
suit him at his age, nor,—as he said,—would it be profitable. He
would take his silk as an honour for his declining years, so that he
might become a bencher at his Inn. But he had now been working for
the last twelve or fourteen years with his silk gown,—almost as hard
as in younger days, and with pecuniary results almost as serviceable;
and though from month to month he declared his intention of taking no
fresh briefs, and though he did now occasionally refuse work, still
he was there with his mind as clear as ever, and with his body
apparently as little affected by fatigue.</p>
<p>Mr. Wharton had not married till he was forty, and his wife had now
been two years dead. He had had six children,—of whom but two were
now left to make a household for his old age. He had been nearly
fifty when his youngest daughter was born, and was therefore now an
old father of a young child. But he was one of those men who, as in
youth they are never very young, so in age are they never very old.
He could still ride his cob in the park jauntily; and did so
carefully every morning in his life, after an early cup of tea and
before his breakfast. And he could walk home from his chambers every
day, and on Sundays could do the round of the parks on foot. Twice a
week, on Wednesdays and Saturdays, he dined at that old law club, the
Eldon, and played whist after dinner till twelve o'clock. This was
the great dissipation and, I think, the chief charm of his life. In
the middle of August he and his daughter usually went for a month to
Wharton Hall in Herefordshire, the seat of his cousin Sir Alured
Wharton;—and this was the one duty of his life which was a burthen
to him. But he had been made to believe that it was essential to his
health, and to his wife's, and then to his girl's health, that he
should every summer leave town for a time,—and where else was he to
go? Sir Alured was a relation and a gentleman. Emily liked Wharton
Hall. It was the proper thing. He hated Wharton Hall, but then he did
not know any place out of London that he would not hate worse. He had
once been induced to go up the Rhine, but had never repeated the
experiment of foreign travel. Emily sometimes went abroad with her
cousins, during which periods it was supposed that the old lawyer
spent a good deal of his time at the Eldon. He was a spare, thin,
strongly made man, with spare light brown hair, hardly yet grizzled,
with small grey whiskers, clear eyes, bushy eyebrows, with a long
ugly nose, on which young barristers had been heard to declare that
you might hang a small kettle, and with considerable vehemence of
talk when he was opposed in argument. For, with all his well-known
coolness of temper, Mr. Wharton could become very hot in an argument,
when the nature of the case in hand required heat. On one subject all
who knew him were agreed. He was a thorough lawyer. Many doubted his
eloquence, and some declared that he had known well the extent of his
own powers in abstaining from seeking the higher honours of his
profession; but no one doubted his law. He had once written a
book,—on the mortgage of stocks in trade; but that had been in early
life, and he had never since dabbled in literature.</p>
<p>He was certainly a man of whom men were generally afraid. At the
whist-table no one would venture to scold him. In the court no one
ever contradicted him. In his own house, though he was very quiet,
the servants dreaded to offend him, and were attentive to his
slightest behests. When he condescended to ride with any acquaintance
in the park, it was always acknowledged that old Wharton was to
regulate the pace. His name was Abel, and all his life he had been
known as able Abe;—a silent, far-seeing, close-fisted, just old man,
who was not, however, by any means deficient in sympathy either with
the sufferings or with the joys of humanity.</p>
<p>It was Easter time and the courts were not sitting, but Mr. Wharton
was in his chamber as a matter of course at ten o'clock. He knew no
real homely comforts elsewhere,—unless at the whist-table at the
Eldon. He ate and drank and slept in his own house in Manchester
Square, but he could hardly be said to live there. It was not there
that his mind was awake, and that the powers of the man were
exercised. When he came up from the dining-room to join his daughter
after dinner he would get her to sing him a song, and would then seat
himself with a book. But he never read in his own house, invariably
falling into a sweet and placid slumber, from which he was never
disturbed till his daughter kissed him as she went to bed. Then he
would walk about the room, and look at his watch, and shuffle
uneasily through half-an-hour till his conscience allowed him to take
himself to his chamber. He was a man of no pursuits in his own house.
But from ten in the morning till five, or often till six, in the
evening, his mind was active in some work. It was not now all law, as
it used to be. In the drawer of the old piece of furniture which
stood just at the right hand of his own arm-chair there were various
books hidden away, which he was sometimes ashamed to have seen by his
clients,—poetry and novels and even fairy tales. For there was
nothing Mr. Wharton could not read in his chambers, though there was
nothing that he could read in his own house. He had a large pleasant
room in which to sit, looking out from the ground floor of Stone
Buildings on to the gardens belonging to the Inn,—and here, in the
centre of the metropolis, but in perfect quiet as far as the outside
world was concerned, he had lived and still lived his life.</p>
<p>At about noon on the day following that on which Lopez had made his
sudden swoop on Mr. Parker and had then dined with Everett Wharton,
he called at Stone Buildings and was shown into the lawyer's room.
His quick eye at once discovered the book which Mr. Wharton half hid
away, and saw upon it Mr. Mudie's suspicious ticket. Barristers
certainly never get their law books from Mudie, and Lopez at once
knew that his hoped-for father-in-law had been reading a novel. He
had not suspected such weakness, but argued well from it for the
business he had in hand. There must be a soft spot to be found about
the heart of an old lawyer who spent his mornings in such occupation.
"How do you do, sir?" said Mr. Wharton rising from his seat. "I hope
I see you well, sir." Though he had been reading a novel his tone and
manner were very cold. Lopez had never been in Stone Buildings
before, and was not quite sure that he might not have committed some
offence in coming there. "Take a seat, Mr. Lopez. Is there anything I
can do for you in my way?"</p>
<p>There was a great deal that could be done "in his way" as
father;—but how was it to be introduced and the case made clear?
Lopez did not know whether the old man had as yet ever suspected such
a feeling as that which he now intended to declare. He had been
intimate at the house in Manchester Square, and had certainly
ingratiated himself very closely with a certain Mrs. Roby, who had
been Mrs. Wharton's sister and constant companion, who lived in
Berkeley Street, close round the corner from Manchester Square, and
spent very much of her time with Emily Wharton. They were together
daily, as though Mrs. Roby had assumed the part of a second mother,
and Lopez was well aware that Mrs. Roby knew of his love. If there
was real confidence between Mrs. Roby and the old lawyer, the old
lawyer must know it also;—but as to that Lopez felt that he was in
the dark.</p>
<p>The task of speaking to an old father is not unpleasant when the
lover knows that he has been smiled upon, and, in fact, approved for
the last six months. He is going to be patted on the back, and made
much of, and received into the family. He is to be told that his Mary
or his Augusta has been the best daughter in the world and will
therefore certainly be the best wife, and he himself will probably on
that special occasion be spoken of with unqualified praise,—and all
will be pleasant. But the subject is one very difficult to broach
when no previous light has been thrown on it. Ferdinand Lopez,
however, was not the man to stand shivering on the brink when a
plunge was necessary,—and therefore he made his plunge. "Mr.
Wharton, I have taken the liberty to call upon you here, because I
want to speak to you about your daughter."</p>
<p>"About my daughter!" The old man's surprise was quite genuine. Of
course when he had given himself a moment to think, he knew what must
be the nature of his visitor's communication. But up to that moment
he had never mixed his daughter and Ferdinand Lopez in his thoughts
together. And now, the idea having come upon him, he looked at the
aspirant with severe and unpleasant eyes. It was manifest to the
aspirant that the first flash of the thing was painful to the father.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. I know how great is my presumption. But, yet, having
ventured, I will hardly say to entertain a hope, but to have come to
such a state that I can only be happy by hoping, I have thought it
best to come to you at once."</p>
<p>"Does she know anything of this?"</p>
<p>"Of my visit to you? Nothing."</p>
<p>"Of your intentions;—of your suit generally? Am I to understand that
this has any sanction from her?"</p>
<p>"None at all."</p>
<p>"Have you told her anything of it?"</p>
<p>"Not a word. I come to ask you for your permission to address her."</p>
<p>"You mean that she has no knowledge whatever of your—your preference
for her."</p>
<p>"I cannot say that. It is hardly possible that I should have learned
to love her as I do without some consciousness on her part that it is
so."</p>
<p>"What I mean is, without any beating about the bush,—have you been
making love to her?"</p>
<p>"Who is to say in what making love consists, Mr. Wharton?"</p>
<p>"D–––– it, sir, a gentleman knows.
A gentleman knows whether he has
been playing on a girl's feelings, and a gentleman, when he is asked
as I have asked you, will at any rate tell the truth. I don't want
any definitions. Have you been making love to her?"</p>
<p>"I think, Mr. Wharton, that I have behaved like a gentleman; and that
you will acknowledge at least so much when you come to know exactly
what I have done and what I have not done. I have endeavoured to
commend myself to your daughter, but I have never spoken a word of
love to her."</p>
<p>"Does Everett know of all this?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"And has he encouraged it?"</p>
<p>"He knows of it, because he is my most intimate friend. Whoever the
lady might have been, I should have told him. He is attached to me,
and would not, I think, on his own account, object to call me his
brother. I spoke to him yesterday on the matter very plainly, and he
told me that I ought certainly to see you first. I quite agreed with
him, and therefore I am here. There has certainly been nothing in his
conduct to make you angry, and I do not think that there has been
anything in mine."</p>
<p>There was a dignity of demeanour and a quiet assured courage which
had its effect upon the old lawyer. He felt that he could not storm
and talk in ambiguous language of what a "gentleman" would or would
not do. He might disapprove of this man altogether as a
son-in-law,—and at the present moment he thought that he did,—but
still the man was entitled to a civil answer. How were lovers to
approach the ladies of their love in any manner more respectful than
this? "Mr. Lopez," he said, "you must forgive me if I say that you
are comparatively a stranger to us."</p>
<p>"That is an accident which would be easily cured if your will in that
direction were as good as mine."</p>
<p>"But, perhaps, it isn't. One has to be explicit in these matters. A
daughter's happiness is a very serious consideration,—and some
people, among whom I confess that I am one, consider that like should
marry like. I should wish to see my daughter marry,—not only in my
own sphere, neither higher nor lower,—but with some one of my own
class."</p>
<p>"I hardly know, Mr. Wharton, whether that is intended to exclude me."</p>
<p>"Well,—to tell you the truth I know nothing about you. I don't know
who your father was,—whether he was an Englishman, whether he was a
Christian, whether he was a Protestant,—not even whether he was a
gentleman. These are questions which I should not dream of asking
under any other circumstances;—would be matters with which I should
have no possible concern, if you were simply an acquaintance. But
when you talk to a man about his
<span class="nowrap">daughter—!"</span></p>
<p>"I acknowledge freely your right of inquiry."</p>
<p>"And I know nothing of your means;—nothing whatever. I understand
that you live as a man of fortune, but I presume that you earn your
bread. I know nothing of the way in which you earn it, nothing of the
certainty or amount of your means."</p>
<p>"Those things are of course matters for inquiry; but may I presume
that you have no objection which satisfactory answers to such
questions may not remove?"</p>
<p>"I shall never willingly give my daughter to any one who is not the
son of an English gentleman. It may be a prejudice, but that is my
feeling."</p>
<p>"My father was certainly not an English gentleman. He was a
Portuguese." In admitting this, and in thus subjecting himself at
once to one clearly-stated ground of objection,—the objection being
one which, though admitted, carried with itself neither fault nor
disgrace,—Lopez felt that he had got a certain advantage. He could
not get over the fact that he was the son of a Portuguese parent, but
by admitting that openly he thought he might avoid present discussion
on matters which might, perhaps, be more disagreeable, but to which
he need not allude if the accident of his birth were to be taken by
the father as settling the question. "My mother was an English lady,"
he added, "but my father certainly was not an Englishman. I never had
the common happiness of knowing either of them. I was an orphan
before I understood what it was to have a parent."</p>
<p>This was said with a pathos which for the moment stopped the
expression of any further harsh criticism from the lawyer. Mr.
Wharton could not instantly repeat his objection to a parentage which
was matter for such melancholy reflections; but he felt at the same
time that as he had luckily landed himself on a positive and
undeniable ground of objection to a match which was distasteful to
him, it would be unwise for him to go to other matters in which he
might be less successful. By doing so, he would seem to abandon the
ground which he had already made good. He thought it probable that
the man might have an adequate income, and yet he did not wish to
welcome him as a son-in-law. He thought it possible that the
Portuguese father might be a Portuguese nobleman, and therefore one
whom he would be driven to admit to have been in some sort a
gentleman;—but yet this man who was now in his presence and whom he
continued to scan with the closest observation, was not what he
called a gentleman. The foreign blood was proved, and that would
suffice. As he looked at Lopez he thought that he detected Jewish
signs, but he was afraid to make any allusion to religion, lest Lopez
should declare that his ancestors had been noted as Christians since
St. James first preached in the Peninsula.</p>
<p>"I was educated altogether in England," continued Lopez, "till I was
sent to a German university in the idea that the languages of the
continent are not generally well learned in this country. I can never
be sufficiently thankful to my guardian for doing so."</p>
<p>"I dare say;—I dare say. French and German are very useful. I have a
prejudice of my own in favour of Greek and Latin."</p>
<p>"But I rather fancy I picked up more Greek and Latin at Bohn than I
should have got here, had I stuck to nothing else."</p>
<p>"I dare say;—I dare say. You may be an Admirable Crichton for what I
know."</p>
<p>"I have not intended to make any boast, sir, but simply to vindicate
those who had the care of my education. If you have no objection
except that founded on my birth, which is an
<span class="nowrap">accident—"</span></p>
<p>"When one man is a peer and another a ploughman, that is an accident.
One doesn't find fault with the ploughman, but one doesn't ask him to
dinner."</p>
<p>"But my accident," said Lopez smiling, "is one which you would hardly
discover unless you were told. Had I called myself Talbot you would
not know but that I was as good an Englishman as yourself."</p>
<p>"A man of course may be taken in by falsehoods," said the lawyer.</p>
<p>"If you have no other objection than that raised, I hope you will
allow me to visit in Manchester Square."</p>
<p>"There may be ten thousand other objections, Mr. Lopez, but I really
think that the one is enough. Of course I know nothing of my
daughter's feelings. I should imagine that the matter is as strange
to her as it is to me. But I cannot give you anything like
encouragement. If I am ever to have a son-in-law I should wish to
have an English son-in-law. I do not even know what your profession
is."</p>
<p>"I am engaged in foreign loans."</p>
<p>"Very precarious I should think. A sort of gambling; isn't it?"</p>
<p>"It is the business by which many of the greatest mercantile houses
in the city have been made."</p>
<p>"I dare say;—I dare say;—and by which they come to ruin. I have the
greatest respect in the world for mercantile enterprise, and have had
as much to do as most men with mercantile questions. But I ain't sure
that I wish to marry my daughter in the City. Of course it's all
prejudice. I won't deny that on general subjects I can give as much
latitude as any man; but when one's own hearth is
<span class="nowrap">attacked—"</span></p>
<p>"Surely such a proposition as mine, Mr. Wharton, is no attack!"</p>
<p>"In my sense it is. When a man proposes to assault and invade the
very kernel of another man's heart, to share with him, and indeed to
take from him, the very dearest of his possessions, to become part
and parcel with him either for infinite good or infinite evil, then a
man has a right to guard even his prejudices as precious bulwarks."
Mr. Wharton as he said this was walking about the room with his hands
in his trowsers pockets. "I have always been for absolute toleration
in matters of religion,—have always advocated admission of Roman
Catholics and Jews into Parliament, and even to the Bench. In
ordinary life I never question a man's religion. It is nothing to me
whether he believes in Mahomet, or has no belief at all. But when a
man comes to me for my <span class="nowrap">daughter—"</span></p>
<p>"I have always belonged to the Church of England," said Ferdinand
Lopez.</p>
<p>"Lopez is at any rate a bad name to go to a Protestant church with,
and I don't want my daughter to bear it. I am very frank with you, as
in such a matter men ought to understand each other. Personally I
have liked you well enough and have been glad to see you at my house.
Everett and you have seemed to be friends, and I have had no
objection to make. But marrying into a family is a very serious thing
indeed."</p>
<p>"No man feels that more strongly than I do, Mr. Wharton."</p>
<p>"There had better be an end of it."</p>
<p>"Even though I should be happy enough to obtain her favour?"</p>
<p>"I can't think that she cares about you. I don't think it for a
moment. You say you haven't spoken to her, and I am sure she's not a
girl to throw herself at a man's head. I don't approve it, and I
think it had better fall to the ground. It must fall to the ground."</p>
<p>"I wish you would give me a reason."</p>
<p>"Because you are not English."</p>
<p>"But I am English. My father was a foreigner."</p>
<p>"It doesn't suit my ideas. I suppose I may have my own ideas about my
own family, Mr. Lopez? I feel perfectly certain that my child will do
nothing to displease me, and this would displease me. If we were to
talk for an hour I could say nothing further."</p>
<p>"I hope that I may be able to present things to you in an aspect so
altered," said Lopez as he prepared to take his leave, "as to make
you change your mind."</p>
<p>"Possibly;—possibly," said Wharton, "but I do not think it probable.
Good morning to you, sir. If I have said anything that has seemed to
be unkind, put it down to my anxiety as a father and not to my
conduct as a man." Then the door was closed behind his visitor, and
Mr. Wharton was left walking up and down his room alone. He was by no
means satisfied with himself. He felt that he had been rude and at
the same time not decisive. He had not explained to the man as he
would wish to have done, that it was monstrous and out of the
question that a daughter of the Whartons, one of the oldest families
in England, should be given to a friendless Portuguese,—a probable
Jew,—about whom nobody knew anything. Then he remembered that sooner
or later his girl would have at least £60,000, a fact of which no
human being but himself was aware. Would it not be well that somebody
should be made aware of it, so that his girl might have the chance of
suitors preferable to this swarthy son of Judah? He began to be
afraid, as he thought of it, that he was not managing his matters
well. How would it be with him if he should find that the girl was
really in love with this swarthy son of Judah? He had never inquired
about his girl's heart, though there was one to whom he hoped that
his girl's heart might some day be given. He almost made up his mind
to go home at once, so anxious was he. But the prospect of having to
spend an entire afternoon in Manchester Square was too much for him,
and he remained in his chamber till the usual hour.</p>
<p>Lopez, as he returned from Lincoln's Inn, westward to his club, was,
on the whole, contented with the interview. He had expected
opposition. He had not thought that the cherry would fall easily into
his mouth. But the conversation generally had not taken those turns
which he had thought would be most detrimental to him.</p>
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