1:38:00
...leaving England...
1:38:03
...and to be stopped...
1:38:06
...the instant of your return.
1:38:11
Lord Bullingdon has also asked me
to point out to you...
1:38:17
...that should you decide to remain here...
1:38:20
...your stay would infallibly plunge you...
1:38:25
...into jail.
1:38:29
As in view of the present circumstances
there will soon be...
1:38:34
...innumerable writs taken out
against you for...
1:38:38
...debts long-outstanding...
1:38:41
...and your credit is so blown that...
1:38:45
...you could not hope...
1:38:47
...to raise a shilling.
1:39:18
Utterly baffled and beaten...
1:39:22
...what was the lonely
and broken-hearted man to do?
1:39:26
He took the annuity and returned
to lreland with his mother...
1:39:31
...to complete his recovery.
1:39:34
Sometime later he travelled abroad.
1:39:38
His life there, we have not the means
of following accurately.
1:39:43
He appears to have resumed
his former profession of a gambler...
1:39:46
...without his former success.
1:39:50
He never saw Lady Lyndon again.