My Lady's Money, by Wilkie 
Collins 
 
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Title: My Lady's Money 
Author: Wilkie Collins 
Release Date: March 21, 2006 [EBook #1628] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY 
LADY'S MONEY *** 
 
Produced by James Rusk and David Widger 
 
MY LADY'S MONEY 
by Wilkie Collins
AN EPISODE IN THE LIFE OF A YOUNG GIRL 
PERSONS OF THE STORY 
Women: 
Lady Lydiard (Widow of Lord Lydiard) 
Isabel Miller (her Adopted Daughter) 
Miss Pink (of South Morden) 
The Hon. Mrs. Drumblade (Sister to the Hon. A. Hardyman) 
Men 
The Hon. Alfred Hardyman (of the Stud Farm) 
Mr. Felix Sweetsir (Lady Lydiard's Nephew) 
Robert Moody (Lady Lydiard's Steward) 
Mr. Troy (Lady Lydiard's Lawyer) 
Old Sharon (in the Byways of Legal Bohemia) 
Animal 
Tommie (Lady Lydiard's Dog) 
 
PART THE FIRST. 
THE DISAPPEARANCE. 
CHAPTER I. 
OLD Lady Lydiard sat meditating by the fireside, with three letters 
lying open on her lap.
Time had discolored the paper, and had turned the ink to a brownish 
hue. The letters were all addressed to the same person--"THE RT. HON. 
LORD LYDIARD"--and were all signed in the same way--"Your 
affectionate cousin, James Tollmidge." Judged by these specimens of 
his correspondence, Mr. Tollmidge must have possessed one great 
merit as a letter-writer--the merit of brevity. He will weary nobody's 
patience, if he is allowed to have a hearing. Let him, therefore, be 
permitted, in his own high-flown way, to speak for himself. 
First Letter.--"My statement, as your Lordship requests, shall be short 
and to the point. I was doing very well as a portrait-painter in the 
country; and I had a wife and children to consider. Under the 
circumstances, if I had been left to decide for myself, I should certainly 
have waited until I had saved a little money before I ventured on the 
serious expense of taking a house and studio at the west end of London. 
Your Lordship, I positively declare, encouraged me to try the 
experiment without waiting. And here I am, unknown and unemployed, 
a helpless artist lost in London--with a sick wife and hungry children, 
and bankruptcy staring me in the face. On whose shoulders does this 
dreadful responsibility rest? On your Lordship's!" 
Second Letter.--"After a week's delay, you favor me, my Lord, with a 
curt reply. I can be equally curt on my side. I indignantly deny that I or 
my wife ever presumed to see your Lordship's name as a means of 
recommendation to sitters without your permission. Some enemy has 
slandered us. I claim as my right to know the name of that enemy." 
Third (and last) Letter.--"Another week has passed--and not a word of 
answer has reached me from your Lordship. It matters little. I have 
employed the interval in making inquiries, and I have at last discovered 
the hostile influence which has estranged you from me. I have been, it 
seems, so unfortunate as to offend Lady Lydiard (how, I cannot 
imagine); and the all-powerful influence of this noble lady is now used 
against the struggling artist who is united to you by the sacred ties of 
kindred. Be it so. I can fight my way upwards, my Lord, as other men 
have done before me. A day may yet come when the throng of 
carriages waiting at the door of the fashionable portrait-painter will
include her Ladyship's vehicle, and bring me the tardy expression of 
her Ladyship's regret. I refer you, my Lord Lydiard, to that day!" 
Having read Mr. Tollmidge's formidable assertions relating to herself 
for the second time, Lady Lydiard's meditations came to an abrupt end. 
She rose, took the letters in both hands to tear them up, hesitated, and 
threw them back in the cabinet drawer in which she had discovered 
them, among other papers that had not been arranged since Lord 
Lydiard's death. 
"The idiot!" said her Ladyship, thinking of Mr. Tollmidge, "I never 
even heard of him, in my husband's lifetime; I never even knew that he 
was really related to Lord Lydiard, till I found his letters. What is to be 
done next?" 
She looked, as she put that question to herself, at an open newspaper 
thrown on the table, which announced the death of "that accomplished 
artist Mr. Tollmidge, related, it is said, to the late well-known 
connoisseur, Lord Lydiard." In the next sentence the writer of the 
obituary notice deplored the destitute condition of Mrs. Tollmidge and 
her children, "thrown helpless on the mercy of the world." Lady 
Lydiard    
    
		
	
	
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