esent day, showing that the race of men is
indeed "like leaves on trees, now green in youth, now withering on
the ground." Yet to the branch the most bare will green leaves
return, so long as the sap can remount to the branch from the root;
but the branch which has ceased to take life from the root--hang it
high, hang it low--is a prey to the wind and the woodman.
It was mid-day. The boy and his new friend were standing apart, as
becomes silent anglers, on the banks of a narrow brawling rivulet,
running through green pastures, half a mile from the house. The sky was
overcast, as Darrell had predicted, but the rain did not yet fall. The
two anglers were not long before they had filled a basket with small
trout. Then Lionel, who was by no means fond of fishing, laid his rod on
the bank, and strolled across the long grass to his companion.
"It will rain soon," said he. "Let us take advantage of the present
time, and hear the flute, while we can yet enjoy the open air. No, not
by the margin, or you will be always looking after the trout. On the
rising ground, see that old thorn tree; let us go and sit under it. The
new building looks well from it. What a pile it would have been! I may
not ask you, I suppose, why it is left uncompleted. Perhaps it would
have cost too much, or would have been disproportionate to the estate."
"To the present estate it would have been disproportioned, but not to
the estate Mr. Darrell intended to add to it. As to cost, you don't
know him. He would never have undertaken what he could not afford to
complete; and what he once undertook, no thoughts of the cost would
have scared him from finishing. Prodigious mind,--granite! And so rich!"
added Fairthorn, with an air of great pride. "I ought to know; I write
all his letters on money matters. How much do you think he has, without
counting land?"
"I cannot guess."
"Nearly half a million; in two years it will be more than half a
million. And he had not three hundred a year when he began life; for
Fawley was sadly mortgaged."
"Is it possible! Could any lawyer make half a million at the bar?"
"If any man could, Mr. Darrell would. When he sets his mind on a thing,
the thing is done; no help for it. But his fortune was not all made at
the bar, though a great part of it was. An old East Indian bachelor of
the same name, but who had never been heard of hereabouts till he wrote
from Calcutta to Mr. Darrell (inquiring if they were
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