[Lady Connie by Mrs. Humphry Ward]@TWC D-Link bookLady Connie CHAPTER VII 3/46
The young mothers who wheeled their own perambulators in the Parks, who bathed and dressed and taught their children, whose house-books showed a spirited and inventive economy of which they were inordinately proud, who made their own gowns of Liberty stuff in scorn of the fashion, were at the same time excellent hostesses, keeping open house on Sundays for their husbands' undergraduate pupils, and gallantly entertaining their own friends and equals at small flowery dinner-parties in Morris-papered rooms, where the food and wine mattered little, and good talk and happy comradeship were the real fare. Meanwhile the same young mothers were going to lectures on the Angevins, or reading Goethe or Dante in the evenings--a few friends together, gathering at each other's houses; then were discussing politics and social reform; and generally doing their best--unconsciously--to silence the croakers and misogynists who maintained that when all the girl babies in the perambulators were grown up, and Oxford was flooded with womenkind like all other towns, Oxford would have gone to "Death and damnation." But Mrs.Hooper, poor lady, was not of this young and wholesome generation.
She was the daughter of a small Midland manufacturer, who had rushed into sudden wealth, for a few years, had spent it all in riotous living, over a period just sufficient to spoil his children, and had then died leaving them penniless.
Ewen Hooper had come across her when he was lecturing at a northern university, immediately after his own appointment at Oxford.
He had passed a harassed and penurious youth, was pining for a home.
In ten days he was engaged to this girl whom he met at the house of a Manchester professor.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|