Chapter Nine
CONCERNING THINGS NOT TO BE MENTIONED IN THE SOCIETY JOURNALS
The days went rapidly by for Crane, to whom
they were full of events. The House committed
fewer follies than might have been expected, and
the management of the international crisis had put
the country into a thoroughly good humour with
both the House and the Administration. Crane
gained steadily in consequence among the politicians,
and it was with difficulty he kept his head;
but he kept it.
He did not relax his efforts to win his children's hearts, and in the effort he began to feel a strange jealousy of Thorndyke, who had won them without any effort at all. Thorndyke had not only taken Roger and Elizabeth to the Zoo on the first Sunday, but on the next he had appeared, looking extremely sheepish, and had requested the pleasure of