The Struggles of Brown, Jones, and Robinson / By One of the Firm by Anthony Trollope
Author:Anthony Trollope [Trollope, Anthony]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Satire, Humorous stories, Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction, Advertising -- Fiction, Clothing trade -- Fiction, Businessmen -- Fiction, Men's furnishing goods -- Fiction
Published: 2008-12-14T05:00:00+00:00
Woman takes delight in abundance of pleasure,
But a man's life is to labour and toil.
That's about the truth of it, and that's what comes of your Halls of Harmony."
"You would like woman to be a household drudge."
"So I would,—only drudge don't sound well. Call her a ministering angel instead, and it comes to the same thing. They both of 'em means much of a muchness;—getting up your linen decent, and seeing that you have a bit of something hot when you come home late. Well, good-night, old fellow. I shall have my hair combed if I stay much longer. Take my advice, and as you mean to do it, do it at once. And don't let the old 'un nobble all the money. Live and let live. That's fair play all over." And so Mr. Poppins took his leave.
Had anybody suggested to George Robinson that he should go to Poppins for advice as to his course of life, George Robinson would have scorned the suggestion. He knew very well the great difference between him and his humble friend, both as regarded worldly position and intellectual attainments. But, nevertheless, there was a strain of wisdom in Poppins' remarks which, though it appertained wholly to matters of low import, he did not disdain to use. It was true that Maryanne Brown still frequented the Hall of Harmony, and went there quite as often without her betrothed as with him. It was true that Mr. Brown had adopted a habit of using the money of the firm, without rendering a fair account of the purpose to which he applied it. The Hall of Harmony might not be the best preparation for domestic duties, nor Mr. Brown's method of applying the funds the best specific for commercial success. He would look to both these things, and see that some reform were made. Indeed, he would reform them both entirely by insisting on a division of the profits, and by taking Maryanne to his own bosom. Great ideas filled his mind. If any undue opposition were made to his wishes when expressed, he would leave the firm, break up the business, and carry his now well-known genius for commercial enterprise to some other concern in which he might be treated with a juster appreciation of his merits.
"Not that I will ever leave thee, Maryanne," he said to himself, as he resolved these things in his mind.
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