Kate Coventry

G.J. Whyte-Melville
Kate Coventry, by G. J.
Whyte-Melville

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Title: Kate Coventry An Autobiography
Author: G. J. Whyte-Melville

Release Date: June 7, 2007 [eBook #21759]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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COVENTRY***
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KATE COVENTRY

An Autobiography
Edited by
G. J. WHYTE-MELVILLE

[Illustration: Now began a battle in good earnest.]

T. Nelson and Sons 1909

CONTENTS.
Chapter I
3
Chapter II
15
Chapter III
24
Chapter IV
35
Chapter V
46
Chapter VI

58
Chapter VII
66
Chapter VIII
77
Chapter IX
89
Chapter X
103
Chapter XI
114
Chapter XII
125
Chapter XIII
138
Chapter XIV
151
Chapter XV
163

Chapter XVI
175
Chapter XVII
188
Chapter XVIII
201
Chapter XIX
214
Chapter XX
228
Chapter XXI
241
Chapter XXII
254
Chapter XXIII
267
Chapter XXIV
274

KATE COVENTRY.
AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
CHAPTER I.
"Kate," said Aunt Deborah to me as we sat with our feet on the fender
one rainy afternoon--or, as we were in London, I should say one rainy
morning--in June, "I think altogether, considering the weather and what
not, it would be as well for you to give up this Ascot expedition, my
dear."
I own I felt more than half inclined to cry--most girls would have
cried--but Aunt Deborah says I am very unlike the generality of women;
and so, although I had ordered a peach-coloured mantle, and such a
bonnet as can only be seen at Ascot on the Cup Day, I kept back my
tears, and swallowed that horrid choking feeling in my throat, whilst I
replied, with the most careless manner I could assume, "Goodness, aunt,
it won't rain for ever: not that I care; but think what a disappointment
for John!"
I must here be allowed the privilege of my sex, to enter on a slightly
discursive explanation as to who Aunt Deborah is and who I am, not
forgetting Cousin John, who is good-nature itself, and without whom I
cannot do the least bit. My earliest recollections of Aunt Deborah, then,
date from a period when I was a curly-headed little thing in a white
frock (not so very long ago, after all); and the first occasion on which I
can recollect her personality with any distinctness was on a certain
birthday, when poor grandfather said to me in his funny way, "Kate,
you romp, we must get you a rocking-horse."
Aunt Deborah lifted up her hands and eyes in holy horror and
deprecation. "A rocking-horse, Mr. Coventry," said she; "what an
injudicious selection! (Aunt Deborah likes to round her periods, as the
book-people say.) The child is a sad tomboy already, and if you are
going to teach her to ride, I won't answer for the consequences in
after-life, when the habits of our youth have become the second nature
of our maturity."

Imagine such sentiments so expressed by a tall austere lady, with high
manly features, piercing dark eyes, a front of jet-black hair coming low
down on a somewhat furrowed brow. Cousin John says all dark women
are inclined to be cross; and I own I think we blondes have the best of it
as far as good temper is concerned. My aunt is not altered in the
slightest degree from what she was then. She dresses invariably in gray
silks of the most delicate shades and texture; carries spectacles low
down upon her nose, where they can be of no earthly use except for
inspection of the carpet; and wears lavender kid gloves at all hours of
the day and night--for Aunt Deborah is vain of her hand, and preserves
its whiteness as a mark of her birth and parentage. Most families have a
crotchet of some sort on which they plume themselves; some will boast
that their scions rejoice one and all in long noses; others esteem the
attenuated frames which they bequeath to their descendants as the most
precious of legacies; one would not part with his family squint for the
finest pair of eyes that ever adorned an Andalusian maiden; another
cherishes his hereditary gout as a priceless patent of nobility; and even
insanity is prized in proportion to the tenacity with which it clings to a
particular race. So the Horsinghams never cease talking of the
Horsingham hand; and if I want to get anything out of Aunt Deborah, I
have only to lend her a pair of my
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