[283]
not even a clean collar, nothing but very soiled traveling dresses; while Lady Mary Labouchere writes that her carriage will wait for us at Slough Station this afternoon, and we must be off at two.
What's to be done?
Luckily I did not carry all my dresses to Dunrobin; so I, of all the party, have a dress that can be worn.
We go out and buy collars and handkerchiefs, and two o'clock beholds us at the station house.
Stoke Park. I arrived here alone, the baggage not having yet been heard from.
Mr. G., being found in London, confessed that he delayed sending it by the proper train.
In short, Mr. G. is what is called an easy man, and one whose easiness makes everybody else uneasy.
So because he was easy and thought it was no great matter, and things would turn out well enough, without any great care, we have had all this discomfort.
I arrived alone at the Slough Station and found Lady Mary's carriage waiting.
Away we drove through a beautiful park full of deer, who were so tame as to stand and look at us as we passed.
The house is in the Italian style, with a dome on top, and wide terraces with stone balustrades around it.
Lady Mary met me at the door, and seemed quite concerned to learn of our ill-fortune.
We went through a splendid suite of rooms to a drawing-room, where a little tea-table was standing.
After tea Lady Mary showed me my room.
It had that delightful, homelike air of repose and comfort they succeed so well in giving to rooms here.
There was a cheerful fire burning, an arm-chair drawn up beside it, a sofa on the other side with a neatly arranged sofa-table on which were writing materials.
One of
This text is part of:
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.