Plot
After taking his degree at Cambridge,
John Caldigate found himself, in consequence of
certain amusements at Newmarket
and elsewhere, heavily indebted to a moneylender, Davis, and with no means to meet
his obligation. His father Daniel Caldigate,
disgusted with his extravagance and folly, arranged through his banker friend
Nicholas Bolton for the sale by his son of the reversion of the estate and for
a mortgage to clear his debts. At Mr. Bolton's home where John went to sign the
papers, he met, briefly, Bolton's young
daughter Hester, and fell in love with her. With his college friend Dick Shand,
he went out to New South Wales to try his fortune in goldmining.
On the long voyage out he met Euphemia Smith, an
adventuress, and was trapped into a quasi-engagement. The two young men had the
good fortune to locate a paying mine and worked together until Dick, who had
been drinking heavily, disappeared. John, in his loneliness, foolishly renewed
his attentions to Euphemia Smith, and for a time they
lived together.
After John had acquired a considerable property he
sold his mine and returned to England, where he was reconciled with his father
and married Hester Bolton. Soon after the birth of his son, Euphemia Smith and
Tim Crinkett a former partner to whom he had sold his interest in the mine,
followed him to England to blackmail him into a repayment of £20,000. They
alleged that the mine was worked out; that he had married Mrs. Smith in New South Wales; and that
his marriage to Hester Bolton was bigamous. He recognized that there was a
moral though not a legal claim for the return of part of the purchase price of
the mine, but was advised against buying them off. In the course of the trial,
however, he very foolishly did so, and when this became known, opinion ran
against him. He was convicted and sentenced to two years' imprisonment. The
evidence against him rested largely on an envelope posted in Sydney, addressed by him to Mrs. Smith as
Mrs. Caldigate. A postal clerk succeeded in proving
that the postmark on the envelope was a forgery, and that the stamp was not
issued until after the date of the postmark. At this fortunate moment Dick Shand returned and by his testimony proved that there had
been no marriage. An appeal was made to the Home Office, and John received the
Queen's pardon.
GEROULD,
WINIFRED GREGORY;
A GUIDE TO TROLLOPE.
© 1948 Princeton University Press,
1976 renewed PUP
Reprinted by permission of Princeton
University Press.
Url: http://www.anthonytrollope.com/
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés
López
©Davinia Moreno Arroyo
Universitat de València
Press
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