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Tales & Novels, Vol. 2 by Maria Edgeworth
Book, page 271 / 468


by! Did you ever see a handsomer uniform than the colonel's? And what
a fine horse! 'Gad! I wish I had a commission in the army: I should so
like to be in his place this minute."

"This minute? Yes, perhaps, you would; because he has, as you say, a
handsome uniform and a fine horse: but all his minutes may not be like
this minute."

"Faith, William, that is almost as soberly said as my old uncle himself
could have spoken. See what it is to live shut up with old folks! You
catch all their ways, and grow old and wise before your time."

"The danger of growing wise before my time does not alarm me much: but
perhaps, cousin, you feel that danger more than I do?"

"Not I," said Charles, stretching himself still farther out of the
window to watch the dragoons, as they were forming on the parade in the
market-place. "I can only say, as I said before, that I wish I had been
put into the army instead of into this cursed cotton manufactory. Now
the army is a genteel profession, and I own I have spirit enough to make
it my first object to look and live like a gentleman."

"And I have spirit enough," replied William, "to make it my first object
to look and live like an independent man; and I think a manufacturer,
whom you despise so much, may be perfectly independent. I am sure,
for my part, I am heartily obliged to my uncle for breeding me up to
business; for now I am at no man's orders; no one can say to me, 'Go to
the east, or go to the west; march here, or march there; fire upon this
man, or run your bayonet into that.' I do not think the honour and
pleasure of wearing a red coat, or of having what is called a genteel
profession, would make me amends for all that a soldier must suffer,
if he does his duty. Unless it were for the defence of my country, for
which I hope and believe I should fight as well as another, I cannot
say that I should like to be hurried away from my wife and children,
to fight a battle against people with whom I have no quarrel, and in a
cause which perhaps I might not approve of."

"Well, as you say, William, you that have a wife and children are quite
in a different situation from me. You cannot leave them, of course.
Thank my stars, I am still at liberty, and I shall take care and keep

 
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