[Lord Kilgobbin by Charles Lever]@TWC D-Link book
Lord Kilgobbin

CHAPTER XXI
3/11

'When they say six for the dinner-hour, they might surely be in the drawing-room by that hour,' was Miss Betty's reflection as she turned over some of the magazines and circulating-library books which since Nina's arrival had found their way to Kilgobbin.

The contemptuous manner in which she treated _Blackwood_ and _Macmillan_, and the indignant dash with which she flung Trollope's last novel down, showed that she had not been yet corrupted by the light reading of the age.

An unopened country newspaper, addressed to the Viscount Kilgobbin, had however absorbed all her attention, and she was more than half disposed to possess herself of the envelope, when Mr.
Kearney entered.
His bright blue coat and white waistcoat, a profusion of shirt-frill, and a voluminous cravat proclaimed dinner-dress, and a certain pomposity of manner showed how an unusual costume had imposed on himself, and suggested an important event.
'I hope I see Miss O'Shea in good health ?' said he, advancing.
'How are you, Mathew ?' replied she dryly.

'When I heard that big bell thundering away, I was so afraid to be late that I came down with one bracelet, and I have torn my glove too.' 'It was only the first bell--the dressing-bell,' he said.
'Humph! That's something new since I was here last,' said she tartly.
'You remind me of how long it is since you dined with us, Miss O'Shea.' 'Well, indeed, Mathew, I meant to be longer, if I must tell the truth.

I saw enough the last day I lunched here to show me Kilgobbin was not what it used to be.


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