And this was all that his public school and University education had been able to do for Theobald! Nevertheless
for his own part he thought his letter rather a good one, and congratulated himself in particular upon his
cleverness in inventing the story of a previous attachment, behind which he intended to shelter himself if
Christina should complain of any lack of fervour in his behaviour to her.
I need not give Christina's answer, which of course was to accept. Much as Theobald feared old Mr
Allaby I do not think he would have wrought up his courage to the point of actually proposing but for
the fact of the engagement being necessarily a long one, during which a dozen things might turn up
to break it off. However much he may have disapproved of long engagements for other people, I doubt
whether he had any particular objection to them in his own case. A pair of lovers are like sunset and
sunrise: there are such things every day but we very seldom see them. Theobald posed as the most
ardent lover imaginable, but, to use the vulgarism for the moment in fashion, it was all `side.' Christina
was in love as indeed she had been twenty times already. But then Christina was impressionable and
could not even hear the name `Missolonghi' mentioned without bursting into tears. When Theobald accidentally
left his sermon case behind him one Sunday, she slept with it in her bosom and was forlorn when she
had as it were to disgorge it on the following Sunday; but I do not think Theobald ever took so much as
an old toothbrush of Christina's to bed with him. Why, I knew a young man once who got hold of his
mistress's skates and slept with them for a fortnight and cried when he had to give them up.