Chapter 8
As she was devoted to romantic effects Lord Warburton ventured to express a hope that she would
come some day and see his house, a very curious old place. He extracted from Mrs Touchett a promise
that she would bring her niece to Lockleigh, and Ralph signified his willingness to attend the ladies if
his father should be able to spare him. Lord Warburton assured our heroine that in the mean time his
sisters would come and see her. She knew something about his sisters, having sounded him, during
the hours they spent together while he was at Gardencourt, on many points connected with his family.
When Isabel was interested she asked a great many questions, and as her companion was a copious
talker she urged him on this occasion by no means in vain. He told her he had four sisters and two
brothers and had lost both his parents. The brothers and sisters were very good peoplenot particularly
clever, you know, he said, but very decent and pleasant; and he was so good as to hope Miss Archer
might know them well. One of the brothers was in the Church, settled in the family living,1 that of Lockleigh,
which was a heavy, sprawling parish, and was an excellent fellow in spite of his thinking differently from
himself on every conceivable topic. And then Lord Warburton mentioned some of the opinions held
by his brother, which were opinions Isabel had often heard expressed and that she supposed to be
entertained by a considerable portion of the human family. Many of them indeed she supposed she
had held herself, till he assured her she was quite mistaken, thatit was really impossible, that she
had doubtless imagined she entertained them, but that she might depend that, if she thought them over
a little, she would find there was nothing in them. When she answered that she had already thought
several of the questions involved over very attentively he declared that she was only another example
of what he had often been struck withthe fact that, of all the people in the world, the Americans were
the most grossly superstitious. They were rank Tories and bigots, every one of them; there were no
conservatives like American conservatives. Her uncle and her cousin were there to prove it; nothing
could be more mediaeval than many of their views; they had ideas that people in England nowadays
were ashamed to confess to; and they had the impudence moreover, said his lordship, laughing, to pretend
they knew more about the needs and dangers of this poor dear stupid old England than he who was
born in it and owned a considerable slice of itthe more shame to him! From, all of which Isabel gathered
that Lord Warburton was a nobleman of the newest pattern, a reformer, a radical, a contemner of ancient
ways. His other brother, who was in the army in India, was rather wild and pig-headed and had not
been of much use as yet but to make debts for Warburton to payone of the most precious privileges
of an elder brother. I dont think I shall pay any more, said her friend; he lives a monstrous deal better
than I do, enjoys unheard-of luxuries and thinks himself a much finer gentleman than I. As Im a consistent
radical I go in only for equality; I dont go in for the superiority of the younger brothers. Two of his four
sisters, the second and the fourth, were married, one of them having done very well, as they said, the
other only so-so. The husband of the elder, Lord Haycock, was a very good fellow, but unfortunately
a horrid Tory; and his wife, like all good English wives, was worse than her husband. The other had
espoused a smallish squire in Norfolk and, though married but the other day, had already five children.
This information and much more Lord Warburton imparted to his young American listener, taking pains
to make many things clear and to lay bare to her apprehension the peculiarities of English life. Isabel
was often amused at his explicitness and at the small allowance he seemed to make either for her own
experience or for her imagination. He thinks Im a barbarian, she said, and that Ive never seen forks
and spoons; and she used to ask him artless questions for the pleasure of hearing him answer seriously.
Then when he had fallen into the trap, Its a pity you cant see me in my war-paint and feathers, she
remarked; if I had known how kind you are to the poor savages I would have brought over my native
costume! Lord Warburton had travelled through the United States and knew much more about them
than Isabel; he was so good as to say that America was the most charming country in the world, but
his recollections of it appeared to encourage the idea that Americans in England would need to have
a great many things explained to them. If I had only had you to explain things to me in America! he
said. I was rather puzzled in your country; in fact I was quite bewildered, and the trouble was that the
explanations only puzzled me more. You know I think they often gave me the wrong ones on purpose; theyre
rather clever about that over there. But when I explain you can trust me; about what I tell you theres
no mistake. There was no mistake at least about his being very intelligent and cultivated and knowing
almost everything in the world. Although he gave the most interesting and thrilling glimpses Isabel felt
he never did it to exhibit himself, and though he had had rare chances and had tumbled in, as she put