[The Way We Live Now by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookThe Way We Live Now CHAPTER XIII - THE LONGESTAFFES 26/27
What does he expect is to become of us? If he wants to save money why doesn't he shut Caversham up altogether and go abroad? Caversham costs a great deal more than is spent in London, and it's the dullest house, I think, in all England.' The family party in Bruton Street that evening was not very gay. Nothing was being done, and they sat gloomily in each other's company. Whatever mutinous resolutions might be formed and carried out by the ladies of the family, they were not brought forward on that occasion. The two girls were quite silent, and would not speak to their father, and when he addressed them they answered simply by monosyllables.
Lady Pomona was ill, and sat in a corner of a sofa, wiping her eyes.
To her had been imparted upstairs the purport of the conversation between Dolly and his father.
Dolly had refused to consent to the sale of Pickering unless half the produce of the sale were to be given to him at once.
When it had been explained to him that the sale would be desirable in order that the Caversham property might be freed from debt, which Caversham property would eventually be his, he replied that he also had an estate of his own which was a little mortgaged and would be the better for money.
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