Marriage à la mode, by Mrs. 
Humphry Ward 
 
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Title: Marriage à la mode 
Author: Mrs. Humphry Ward 
Release Date: January 16, 2007 [EBook #20383] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
MARRIAGE À LA MODE *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan and the Online 
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Marriage à la Mode 
BY MRS. HUMPHRY WARD
ILLUSTRATED BY FRED PEGRAM 
NEW YORK DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY 1909 
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF 
TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING 
THE SCANDINAVIAN 
COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY MRS. HUMPHRY WARD COPYRIGHT, 
1909, BY MARY AUGUSTA WARD PUBLISHED, MAY, 1909 
 
TO L. C. W. 
 
[Illustration: DAPHNE FLOYD] 
 
NOTE 
THIS STORY APPEARED IN ENGLAND UNDER THE TITLE OF 
"DAPHNE." THE PUBLISHERS ARE INDEBTED TO THE 
PROPRIETORS OF THE "PALL MALL MAGAZINE" FOR THEIR 
PERMISSION TO USE THE DRAWINGS BY MR. FRED PEGRAM. 
 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
Daphne Floyd 
"He caught the hand, he gathered its owner into a pair of strong arms, 
and bending over her, he kissed her" 
"In the dead of night Daphne sat up in bed, looking at the face and head 
of her husband beside her on the pillow"
"Her whole being was seething with passionate and revengeful 
thought" 
 
Marriage à la Mode 
 
 
CHAPTER I 
"> 
PART I 
CHAPTER I 
"A stifling hot day!" General Hobson lifted his hat and mopped his 
forehead indignantly. "What on earth this place can be like in June I 
can't conceive! The tenth of April, and I'll be bound the thermometer's 
somewhere near eighty in the shade. You never find the English 
climate playing you these tricks." 
Roger Barnes looked at his uncle with amusement. 
"Don't you like heat, Uncle Archie? Ah, but I forgot, it's American 
heat." 
"I like a climate you can depend on," said the General, quite conscious 
that he was talking absurdly, yet none the less determined to talk, by 
way of relief to some obscure annoyance. "Here we are sweltering in 
this abominable heat, and in New York last week they had a blizzard, 
and here, even, it was cold enough to give me rheumatism. The 
climate's always in extremes--like the people." 
"I'm sorry to find you don't like the States, Uncle Archie."
The young man sat down beside his uncle. They were in the deck 
saloon of a steamer which had left Washington about an hour before for 
Mount Vernon. Through the open doorway to their left they saw a wide 
expanse of river, flowing between banks of spring green, and above it 
thunderous clouds, in a hot blue. The saloon, and the decks outside, 
held a great crowd of passengers, of whom the majority were women. 
The tone in which Roger Barnes spoke was good-tempered, but quite 
perfunctory. Any shrewd observer would have seen that whether his 
uncle liked the States or not did not in truth matter to him a whit. 
"And I consider all the arrangements for this trip most unsatisfactory," 
the General continued angrily. "The steamer's too small, the 
landing-place is too small, the crowd getting on board was something 
disgraceful. They'll have a shocking accident one of these days. And 
what on earth are all these women here for--in the middle of the day? 
It's not a holiday." 
"I believe it's a teachers' excursion," said young Barnes absently, his 
eyes resting on the rows of young women in white blouses and spring 
hats who sat in close-packed chairs upon the deck--an eager, talkative 
host. 
"H'm--Teachers!" The General's tone was still more pugnacious. 
"Going to learn more lies about us, I suppose, that they may teach them 
to school-children? I was turning over some of their school-books in a 
shop yesterday. Perfectly abominable! It's monstrous what they teach 
the children here about what they're pleased to call their War of 
Independence. All that we did was to ask them to pay something for 
their own protection. What did it matter to us whether they were 
mopped up by the Indians, or the French, or not? 'But if you want us to 
go to all the expense and trouble of protecting you, and putting down 
those fellows, why, hang it,' we said, 'you must pay some of the bill!' 
That was all English Ministers asked; and perfectly right too. And as 
for the men they make such a fuss about, Samuel Adams, and John 
Adams, and Franklin, and all the rest of the crew, I tell you, the    
    
		
	
	
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