Vera Nevill

Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron

Vera Nevill

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Title: Vera Nevill Poor Wisdom's Chance
Author: Mrs. H. Lovett Cameron
Release Date: May 14, 2006 [EBook #18385]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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VERA NEVILL;
OR, POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
A NOVEL.
BY MRS. H. LOVETT CAMERON
Author of "Pure Gold," "In a Grass Country," etc., etc.
PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY. 1893.

"No. Vain, alas! th' endeavour From bonds so sweet to sever. Poor Wisdom's Chance Against a glance Is now as weak as ever."
Moore's Melodies.

CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
The Vicar's Family
CHAPTER II.
Kynaston Hall
CHAPTER III.
Fanning Dead Ashes
CHAPTER IV.
The Lay Rector
CHAPTER V.
"Little Pitchers"
CHAPTER VI.
A Soir��e at Walpole Lodge
CHAPTER VII.
Evening Reveries
CHAPTER VIII.
The Member for Meadowshire
CHAPTER IX.
Engaged
CHAPTER X.
A Meeting on the Stairs
CHAPTER XI.
An Idle Morning
CHAPTER XII.
The Meet at Shadonake
CHAPTER XIII.
Peacock's Feathers
CHAPTER XIV.
Her Wedding Dress
CHAPTER XV.
Vera's Message
CHAPTER XVI.
"Poor Wisdom"
CHAPTER XVII.
An Unlucky Love-Letter
CHAPTER XVIII.
Lady Kynaston's Plans
CHAPTER XIX.
What She Waited For
CHAPTER XX.
A Morning Walk
CHAPTER XXI.
Maurice's Intercession
CHAPTER XXII.
Mr. Pryme's Visitors
CHAPTER XXIII.
A White Sunshade
CHAPTER XXIV.
Her Son's Secret
CHAPTER XXV.
St. Paul's, Knightsbridge
CHAPTER XXVI.
The Russia-Leather Case
CHAPTER XXVII.
Dinner at Ranelagh
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Mrs. Hazeldine's "Long Eliza"
CHAPTER XXIX.
A Wedding Tour
CHAPTER XXX.
"If I could Die!"
CHAPTER XXXI.
An Eventful Drive
CHAPTER XXXII.
By the Vicarage Gate
CHAPTER XXXIII.
Denis Wilde's Love
CHAPTER XXXIV.
A Garden Party
CHAPTER XXXV.
Shadonake Bath
CHAPTER XXXVI.
At Peace

VERA NEVILL
OR
POOR WISDOM'S CHANCE.
CHAPTER I.
THE VICAR'S FAMILY.
With that regal indolent air she had So confident of her charm.
Owen Meredith.
Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear.
Shakespeare.
Amongst the divers domestic complications into which short-sighted man is prone to fall there is none which has been more conclusively proved to be an utter and egregious failure than that family arrangement which, for lack of a better name, I will call a "composite household."
No one could have spoken upon this subject with greater warmth of feeling, nor out of the depths of a more painful experience, than could the Rev. Eustace Daintree, sometime vicar of the parish of Sutton-in-the-Wold.
Mr. Daintree's family circle consisted of himself, his mother, his wife, and his wife's sister, and I should like to know how a man could expect to lead a life of peace and tranquillity with such a combination of inharmonious feminine elements!
There were two children also, who were a fruitful source of discord and disunion. It is certain that, had he chosen to do so, the Rev. Eustace might have made many heart-rending and harrowing revelations concerning the private life and customs of the inhabitants of his vicarage. It is equally certain, however, that he would not have chosen to do so, for he was emphatically a man of peace and gentleness, kind hearted and given to good works; and was, moreover, sincerely anxious to do his duty impartially to those whom Providence or fate, or a combination of chances and changes, had somehow contrived to bring together under his roof.
Things had not always been thus with him. In the early days of their married life Eustace Daintree and Marion his wife had had their home to themselves, and right well had they enjoyed it. A fairly good living backed up by independent means, a small rural parish, a pleasant neighbourhood, a pretty and comfortable vicarage-house--what more can the hearts of a clergyman of the Church of England and his wife desire? Mr. and Mrs. Daintree, at all events, had wished for nothing better. But this blissful state of things was not destined to last; it was, perhaps, hardly to be expected that it should, seeing that man is born to trouble, and that happiness is known to be as fleeting as time or beauty or any other good thing.
When Eustace Daintree had been married five years, his father died, and his mother, accepting his warmly tendered invitation to come to Sutton-in-the-Wold upon a long visit, took up her abode in the pleasant vicarage-house.
Her visit was long indeed. In a weak moment her son consented to her urgent request to be allowed to subscribe her quota to the household expenses--this was as good as giving her a ninety-nine years' lease of her quarters. The thin end of the wedge thus inserted, Mrs. Daintree m��re became immovable as the church tower or the kitchen chimney, and the doomed members of the family began to understand that nothing short of death itself was likely to terminate the old lady's residence amongst them. For the future her son's house became her home.
But, even thus, things were not at their worst. Marion Daintree was a soft-hearted, gentle-mannered little woman. It cannot be said that she regarded the permanent instalment of her mother-in-law in her home with pleasurable feelings; she would
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