what the deuce 
is he going to do?" 
Aloud he said: 
"Well, all I know is, I had a deplorable letter last mail from your poor 
mother." 
The young man turned his head away, his cigarette still poised at his 
lips. "Yes, I know--mother's awfully down." 
"Well, certainly your mother was never meant for a poor woman," said 
the General, with energy. "She takes it uncommonly hard." 
Roger, with face still averted, showed no inclination to discuss his 
mother's character on these lines. 
"However, she'll get along all right, if you do your duty by her," added 
the General, not without a certain severity. 
"I mean to do it, sir." Barnes rose as he spoke. "I should think we're 
getting near Mount Vernon by this time. I'll go and look." 
He made his way to the outer deck, the General following. The old 
soldier, as he moved through the crowd of chairs in the wake of his 
nephew, was well aware of the attention excited by the young man. The 
eyes of many damsels were upon him; and, while the girls looked and 
said nothing, their mothers laughed and whispered to each other as the 
young Apollo passed. 
Standing at the side of the steamer, the uncle and nephew perceived 
that the river had widened to a still more stately breadth, and that, on 
the southern bank, a white building, high placed, had come into view.
The excursionists crowded to look, expressing their admiration for the 
natural scene and their sense of its patriotic meaning in a frank, 
enthusiastic chatter, which presently enveloped the General, standing in 
a silent endurance like a rock among the waves. 
"Isn't it fine to think of his coming back here to die, so simply, when 
he'd made a nation?" said a young girl--perhaps from Omaha--to her 
companion. "Wasn't it just lovely?" 
Her voice, restrained, yet warm with feeling, annoyed General Hobson. 
He moved away, and as they hung over the taffrail he said, with 
suppressed venom to his companion: "Much good it did them to be 
'made a nation'! Look at their press--look at their corruption--their 
divorce scandals!" 
Barnes laughed, and threw his cigarette-end into the swift brown water. 
"Upon my word, Uncle Archie, I can't play up to you. As far as I've 
gone, I like America and the Americans." 
"Which means, I suppose, that your mother gave you some 
introductions to rich people in New York, and they entertained you?" 
said the General drily. 
"Well, is there any crime in that? I met a lot of uncommonly nice 
people." 
"And didn't particularly bless me when I wired to you to come here?" 
The young man laughed again and paused a moment before replying. 
"I'm always very glad to come and keep you company, Uncle Archie." 
The old General reddened a little. Privately, he knew very well that his 
telegram summoning young Barnes from New York had been an act of 
tyranny--mild, elderly tyranny. He was not amusing himself in 
Washington, where he was paying a second visit after an absence of 
twenty years. His English soul was disturbed and affronted by a wholly
new realization of the strength of America, by the giant forces of the 
young nation, as they are to be felt pulsing in the Federal City. He was 
up in arms for the Old World, wondering sorely and secretly what the 
New might do with her in the times to come, and foreseeing an 
ever-increasing deluge of unlovely things--ideals, principles, 
manners--flowing from this western civilization, under which his own 
gods were already half buried, and would soon be hidden beyond 
recovery. And in this despondency which possessed him, in spite of the 
attentions of Embassies, and luncheons at the White House, he had 
heard that Roger was in New York, and could not resist the temptation 
to send for him. After all, Roger was his heir. Unless the boy flagrantly 
misbehaved himself, he would inherit General Hobson's money and 
small estate in Northamptonshire. Before the death of Roger's father 
this prospective inheritance, indeed, had not counted for very much in 
the family calculations. The General had even felt a shyness in alluding 
to a matter so insignificant in comparison with the general scale on 
which the Barnes family lived. But since the death of Barnes père, and 
the complete pecuniary ruin revealed by that event, Roger's 
expectations from his uncle had assumed a new importance. The 
General was quite aware of it. A year before this date he would never 
have dreamed of summoning Roger to attend him at a moment's notice. 
That he had done so, and that Roger had obeyed him, showed how 
closely even the family relation may depend on pecuniary 
circumstance. 
The steamer swung round to the landing-place under the hill of Mount 
Vernon. Again, in disembarkation,    
    
		
	
	
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