Page:The Strand Magazine (Volume 4).djvu/164

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164
THE STRAND MAGAZINE.

the moment; very uncertain and unreliable, sadly inconsistent, without fixed purpose or deliberate judgment; not wanting in ability, but only in the power to apply it usefully; careless of money, but scarcely to be called generous; not altogether free from vanity, his temper is very irritable and passionate. . ."

There was more, but a sigh from John—poor John! the most faithful and generous of friends, and the most steady-going of mortals—made me drop the sheet and take up the other.

This was a very short note:—

"Dear Mr. Elder,—You insisted that I should consult Miss Harris, and trust her verdict on your character rather than my own. What that is you will see by the enclosed, and I am sure you cannot wonder that I dare not marry the man described. I am sending back your presents and letters by next post. With most sincere wishes for your happiness,

"Yours truly,
"Louisa Woodroffe."


"Oh, John!" I said, when I had read this, but she could not have meant it."

"She meant it so thoroughly that when I got to her mother's house in London, the very evening of the day I received it, they were both gone abroad, and I have not so much as seen her from that time to this."

So that was why the dining-room door was never altered.


"They were both gone abroad."