 
       
      "Hush, my dear; not quite so loud. But if
 it is good for you, Daisy?"
"It can't be good for any one, papa — that
 horrible London — where I am to be dressed
 up, like one of those travelling monkeys we
 have seen here, in feathers and a train. '
"Your mamma is right, Daisy," said Mr.
Lamplugh, with a sigh; "you are a savage—
true Bedouin."
"I am what my darling mother was, papa,
 and what I always will remain," cried
 Daisy.
' Heaven help me! " groaned Mr. Lamplugh.
"What a life is mine! I, a quiet
 man, loving ease above all things, to be the
 battle-ground between an Arab child and the
 Lady Albinia."
And he certainly was to be pitied.
So they all were; Lady Albinia with the
 rest. For, this unconventional atmosphere
 was just as hateful to her as her stiffness and
 suppression was foreign to it; though
 not so hurtful. To the children, the chief
 harm done, was the sense of guilt taught
 them. They, who had never heard of evil,
 now found that every action of their lives was
 wrong, and wasted many an hour in tearful
 perplexity between good and evil, which had
 all the effect of real sinfulness upon
 them. Daisy, who had been as free as the
 winds of heaven, was now followed and
 watched, like a criminal. A strange air of
 suspicion and wrong was cast around her when
 she was with Charley Musgrave; an
atmosphere of glances, whispers, inuendoes,
 hints, that she could not understand, and
 that irritated rather than controlled her.
 Altogether, it was a miserable household.
Unhappiness threw Charley and Daisy
 more than ever together; for he too was
 wretched. An unfettered nature like his
 could not find much nurture beneath the
 shadow of Lady Albinia; and, as it never
 occurred to him to leave the family, he
 remained and suffered with the rest. By
being thrown thus mournfully together, no
 longer in the innocent freedom of their former
 life, thoughts and feelings which would not have
 ripened yet had they lived as of old sprang
up into quick maturity; so, Lady Albinia
hastened the catastrophe she wanted to avert.
 Daisy and Charley Musgrave found out one
 day that they loved each other, yet not
 as brother and sister. Hitherto they had
 lived in the belief that they loved as brother
 and sister do.
Lady Albinia was horror-struck. Her step-
child engaged to a worthless tutor—a man,
 half arist, half teacher, who had actually to
 work for his living! It could never be. She
 flatly told Mr. Lamplugh so, and he shrugged
 his shoulders in despair, and said despondingly
that he would not interfere. So, he
 went up to London suddenly, leaving his
 aristocratic wife and his wild household to
fight out the fight by themselves. The lady
was left a clear stage now. Mistress of the
 family, without even the seeming contronl of
 her husband, she would soon make matters
 conform to her ideas. She would try, at any
 rate. The morning after Mr. Lamplugh went
 away, she called Charley Musgiave into her
 room. Charley came in, in his old lounging,
careless way, thinking more of a linnet's nest
 he had found, and wanted to show Daisy, than
 of the Lady Albinia.
"Mr. Musgrave," began the lady stiffly,
 but with all her renowned politeness. "I
 am sorry to be obliged to trouble you with a
 few unpleasant words."
Charley Musgrave looked up frankly.
 "Well, Lady Albinia, what is it?"
"You must be aware, Mr. Musgrave, that
 your proposals for Miss Lamplugh cannot
meet with my approbation," said the
 Lady Albinia, playing with her diamond ring,
 with her finger and thumb hooked together,
 like a beak.
"Why not, my lady?" he asked, his cheeks
 rather flushed now.
"Oh, Mr. Musgrave we need not go into
 detail. It is quite enough to say, generally,
 that the connection would be undesirable, and
 that I positively refuse my consent. Most
 gentlemen would be satisfied with this
 answer."
"But, Lady Albinia," urged Charley, "when
 a man's prospects, and every hope of happiness,
are to be blighted, it is but fair to tell him
 plainly why. To say that the connection is
 undesirable is very vague. Have you nothing
 more definite to urge against me — my habits,
 character, principles?"
"Nothing decidedly immoral, Mr.
Musgrave; much that I entirely disapprove of."
"As what, my lady ?"
"Oh! Your freedom, wildness, and—as
 I consider it — vulgarity. I have always
deplored your influence in this household—I
 confess it frankly—and now I firmly oppose
 this engagement. Granting that my ideas of
 good breeding are unnecessarily high for Mr.
 Lamplugh's children, yet still, Mr. Musgrave,
 your fortune, your worldly position, would be
 a sufficient barrier."
"But if Daisy does not object to my
 poverty?"
"Miss Lamplugh must be guided and
controlled."
"And if she will not, Lady Albinia?"
"Mr. Musgrave, she shall."
"Is it, then, open war?"
"No, Mr. Musgrave, it is simply a negative
 warfare. I do not condescend to war with
 tutors and children;" and the Lady Albinia
 seated herself with inexpressible disdain. " Of
 course, Mr. Musgrave," she added after a
 moment's silence, during which Charley had
 been doing strict battle with his passionate
 impulse to defy her to her face, " you will
 consider this conversation as a sufficient
dismissal from your place as tutor to the Master
 Lamplughs."
Dickens Journals Online 