The Westcotes

Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
The Westcotes

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Quiller-Couch
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Title: The Westcotes
Author: Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
Release Date: December 30, 2003 [eBook #10548]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE
WESTCOTES***
E-text prepared by Guus van Baalen

Transcriber's Notes:
1. Words which may seem to be transcriber's typos, or otherwise
suspect, but which are reproduced faithfully (archaic spellings, printer's
typos--sometimes I couldn't tell):

Ch. I: befel, undigged Ch. III: chaperon Ch. IV: babby, mun, valtz Ch.
V: zounded, dimpsey, after'n, ax'n, ax Ch. VI: picquet, damitol Ch. XI:
alwaies, Desarts, Eternitie
2. Diphthongs, given as single characters in the printed copy, are
transcribed as two separate characters.

THE WESTCOTES
by
ARTHUR THOMAS QUILLER-COUCH

DEDICATION

MY DEAR HENRY JAMES,
A spinster, having borrowed a man's hat to decorate her front hall,
excused herself on the ground that the house 'wanted a something.' By
inscribing your name above this little story I please myself at the risk of
helping the reader to discover not only that it wants a something, but
precisely what that something is. It wants--to confess and have done
with it--all the penetrating subtleties of insight, all the delicacies of
interpretation, you would have brought to Dorothea's aid, if for a
moment I may suppose her worth your championing. So I invoke your
name to stand before my endeavour like a figure outside the brackets in
an algebraical sum, to make all the difference by multiplying the
meaning contained.
But your consent gives me another opportunity even more warmly
desired. And I think that you, too, will take less pleasure in discovering
how excellent your genius appears to one who nevertheless finds it a
mystery in operation, than in learning that he has not missed to admire,
at least, and with a sense almost of personal loyalty, the sustained and

sustaining pride in good workmanship by which you have set a
common example to all who practise, however diversely, the art in
which we acknowledge you a master.
A. T. QUILLER-COUCH
October 25th, 1901

CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
THE WESTCOTES OF BAYFIELD
CHAPTER II
THE ORANGE ROOM
CHAPTER III
A BALL, A SNOWSTORM, AND A SNOWBALL
CHAPTER IV
ENCOUNTER BETWEEN A HIGH HORSE AND A HOBBY
CHAPTER V
BEGINS WITH ANCIENT HISTORY AND ENDS WITH AN OLD
STORY
CHAPTER VI
FATE IN A LAURELLED POST-CHAISE
CHAPTER VII

LOVE AND AN OLD MAID
CHAPTER VIII
CORPORAL ZEALLY INTERVENES
CHAPTER IX
DOROTHEA CONFESSES
CHAPTER X
DARTMOOR
CHAPTER XI
THE NEW DOROTHEA
CHAPTER XII
GENERAL ROCHAMBEAU TELLS A STORY; AND THE
TING-TANG RINGS FOR THE LAST TIME
CHAPTER I
THE WESTCOTES OF BAYFIELD
A mural tablet in Axcester Parish Church describes Endymion
Westcote as "a conspicuous example of that noblest work of God, the
English Country Gentleman." Certainly he was a typical one.
In almost every district of England you will find a family which,
without distinguishing itself in any particular way, has held fast to the
comforts of life and the respect of its neighbours for generation after
generation. Its men have never shone in court, camp, or senate; they
prefer tenacity to enterprise, look askance upon wit (as a dangerous
gift), and are even a little suspicious of eminence. On the other hand

they make excellent magistrates, maintain a code of manners most
salutary for the poor in whose midst they live and are looked up to; are
as a rule satisfied, like the old Athenian, if they leave to their heirs not
less but a little more than they themselves inherited, and deserve, as
they claim, to be called the backbone of Great Britain. Many of the
women have beauty, still more have an elegance which may pass for it,
and almost all are pure in thought, truthful, assiduous in deeds of
charity, and marry for love of those manly qualities which they have
already esteemed in their brothers.
Such a family were the Westcotes of Bayfield, or Bagvil, in 1810.
Their "founder" had settled in Axcester towards the middle of the
seventeenth century, and prospered--mainly, it was said, by usury. A
little before his death, which befel in 1668, he purchased Bayfield
House from a decayed Royalist who had lost his only son in the Civil
Wars; and to Bayfield and the ancestral business (exalted now into
Banking) his descendants continued faithful. One or both of the two
brothers who, with their half-sister, represented the family in 1810,
rode in on every week-day to their Bank-office in Axcester High
Street,--a Georgian house of
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