[Kennedy Square by F. Hopkinson Smith]@TWC D-Link bookKennedy Square CHAPTER XVII 5/17
He took a certain pride, too, in living under the same roof, so to speak, with one universally known as a gentleman of the old school, whose birth, education, and habits made him the standard among his fellows--a man without pretence or sham, living a simple and wholesome life; with dogs, guns, priceless Madeira and Port, as well as unlimited clothes of various patterns adapted to every conceivable service and function--to say nothing of his being part of the best society that Kennedy Square could afford. Even to bow to his distinguished landlord as he was descending his front steps was in itself one of his greatest pleasures.
That he might not miss it, he would peer from behind his office shutters until the shapely legs of his patron could be seen between the twisted iron railing.
Then appearing suddenly and with assumed surprise, he would lift his hat with so great a flourish that his long, thin arms and body were jerked into semaphore angles, his face meanwhile beaming with ill-concealed delight. Should any one of St.George's personal friends accompany him--men like Kennedy, or General Hardisty, or some well-known man from the Eastern Shore--one of the Dennises, or Joyneses, or Irvings--the pleasure was intensified, the incident being of great professional advantage.
"I have just met old General Hardisty," he would say--"he was at our house," the knowing ones passing a wink around, and the uninitiated having all the greater respect and, therefore, all the greater confidence in that rising young firm of "Pawson & Pawson, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law--Wills drawn and Estates looked after." That this rarest of gentlemen, of all men in the world, should be made the victim of a group of schemers who had really tricked him of almost all that was left of his patrimony, and he a member of his own profession, was to Pawson one of the great sorrows of his life.
That he himself had unwittingly helped in its culmination made it all the keener.
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