[A Perilous Secret by Charles Reade]@TWC D-Link bookA Perilous Secret CHAPTER IV 12/12
A gentleman of the nineteenth century, sharpened by trade, can easily do that.
Sell Clifford Hall? I'd rather live on the rabbits and the pigeons and the blackbirds, and the carp in the pond, and drive to church in the wheelbarrow." So for a time Walter administered his father's estate, and it was very instructive.
Oh! the petty frauds--the swindles of agency--a term which, to be sure, is derived from the Latin word "agere," _to do_--the cobweb of petty commissions--the flat bribes--the smooth hush-money! Walter soon cut the expenses down to the income, which was ample, and even paid off the one mortgage that encumbered this noble estate at five per cent., only four per cent.
of which was really fingered by the mortgagee; the balance went to a go-between, though no go-between was ever wanted, for any solicitor in the country would have found the money in a week at four per cent. The old gentleman was delighted, and engaged his own son as steward at a liberal salary; and so Walter Clifford found employment and a fair income without going away from home again..
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