family--against so lovely and so admirable a girl as Alice Goodwin. It
is a union between the kite and the dove, Charley, and it would be base
and cowardly in me to see such a union accomplished."
"Father," said Charles, "in this matter will you be guided by me?
If Alice herself is a consenting party to the match, you have, in my
opinion, no right to interfere, at least with her affections. If she
marries him without stress or compulsion, she does it deliberately, and
she shapes her own course and her own fate. In the meantime I advise
you to hold back for the present, and wait until her own sentiments are
distinctly understood. That can be effected by a private interview with
yourself, which you can easily obtain. Let us not be severe on Harry. I
rather think he is pressed forward in the matter by my mother, for the
sake of the property If his uncle has discarded him, it is not, surely,
unreasonable that a young man like him, without a profession or
any fixed purpose in life, should wish to secure a wife--and such a
wife--who will bring back to him the very property which was originally
destined for himself in the first instance. Wait, then, at all events,
until Alice's conduct in the matter is known. If there be unjustifiable
force and pressure upon her, act; if not, I think, sir, that, with every
respect, your interference would be an unjustifiable intrusion."
"Very well, Charley; I believe you are right; I will be guided by you
for the present; I won't interfere; but in the meantime I shall have an
eye to their proceedings. I don't think the Goodwins at all mercenary or
selfish, but it is quite possible that they may look upon Harry as the
heir of his uncle's wealth; and, after all, Charley, nature is nature;
that may influence them even unconsciously, and yet I am not in a
condition to undeceive them."
"Father," said Charles, "all I would suggest is, as I said before, a
little patience for the present; wait a while until we learn how Alice
herself will act. I am sorry to say that I perceived what I believe to
be an equivocation on the part of my mother in her allusion to Alice. I
think it will be found by and by that her personal consent has not been
given; and, what is more, that she was not present at all during
their conversation on the subject. If she was, however, and became a
consenting party to the proposal, then I say now, as I said before, you
have no right to interfere in the business."
"What keep
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