Mr. Dawbarn
by T.W. Robertson
CHAPTER I.
“Would you have the kindness to step this way, sir, into Mr. Dawbarn’s room?”
These words were addressed by a banker’s clerk to a young man whose dress and manners were a vulgar compound of groom, betting-man, and pugilist. The sporting gentleman swaggered by the desks and the clerks, looking infinite disparagement at the whole concern, and was ushered through the double doors into the presence of Mr. Dawbarn.
Mr. Dawbarn was the principal banker in Bramlingdon, and Bramlingdon was the county town of the little county of Mulford. It consisted of one long, straggling street, beautified by five old churches, each a splendid specimen of architecture, which contrasted strongly with the Town Hall, the Corn Exchange, and the Market Place, which were modern buildings, and unpleasant to look at.
“Mr. Studden,” said Mr. Dawbarn to the young gentleman of sporting appearance, “I have to talk to you, sir, very seriously; sit down, if you please.”
Mr. Studden sat in a chair as if it were a saddle, shut one eye knowingly, and examined the thong of his whip with the other.
“Mr. Studden,” continued the banker, solemnly, “I have been informed that you have overdrawn your account to the amount of—”
“Yes; I know all about that, governor,” broke in Mr. Studden, “I’ve been told so twice.”
“I therefore gave directions that the next time you presented a check, you should be shown in here to me,” said the banker.
“That is—a check of my own drawing.”
“Quite so.”
“Well, now… Read More