- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Villette, by Charlotte Brontë
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
- almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
- re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
- with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
- Title: Villette
- Author: Charlotte Brontë
- Posting Date: August 23, 2010 [EBook #9182]
- Release Date: October, 2005
- First Posted: September 12, 2003
- [Last updated: March 2, 2016]
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VILLETTE ***
- Produced by Delphine Lettau, Charles Franks and Distributed Proofreaders
- VILLETTE.
- BY
- CHARLOTTE BRONTË.
- CONTENTS
- CHAPTER
- I. BRETTON
- II. PAULINA
- III. THE PLAYMATES
- IV. MISS MARCHMONT
- V. TURNING A NEW LEAF
- VI. LONDON
- VII. VILLETTE
- VIII. MADAME BECK
- IX. ISIDORE
- X. DR. JOHN
- XI. THE PORTRESS'S CABINET
- XII. THE CASKET
- XIII. A SNEEZE OUT OF SEASON
- XIV. THE FÊTE
- XV. THE LONG VACATION
- XVI. AULD LANG SYNE
- XVII. LA TERRASSE
- XVIII. WE QUARREL
- XIX. THE CLEOPATRA
- XX. THE CONCERT
- XXI. REACTION
- XXII. THE LETTER
- XXIII. VASHTI
- XXIV. M. DE BASSOMPIERRE
- XXV. THE LITTLE COUNTESS
- XXVI. A BURIAL
- XXVII. THE HÔTEL CRÉCY
- XXVIII. THE WATCHGUARD
- XXIX. MONSIEUR'S FÊTE
- XXX. M. PAUL
- XXXI. THE DRYAD
- XXXII. THE FIRST LETTER
- XXXIII. M. PAUL KEEPS HIS PROMISE
- XXXIV. MALEVOLA
- XXXV. FRATERNITY
- XXXVI. THE APPLE OF DISCORD
- XXXVII. SUNSHINE
- XXXVIII. CLOUD
- XXXIX. OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE
- XL. THE HAPPY PAIR
- XLI. FAUBOURG CLOTILDE
- XLII. FINIS
- VILLETTE.
- CHAPTER I.
- BRETTON.
- My godmother lived in a handsome house in the clean and ancient town of
- Bretton. Her husband's family had been residents there for generations,
- and bore, indeed, the name of their birthplace--Bretton of Bretton:
- whether by coincidence, or because some remote ancestor had been a
- personage of sufficient importance to leave his name to his
- neighbourhood, I know not.
- When I was a girl I went to Bretton about twice a year, and well I
- liked the visit. The house and its inmates specially suited me. The
- large peaceful rooms, the well-arranged furniture, the clear wide
- windows, the balcony outside, looking down on a fine antique street,
- where Sundays and holidays seemed always to abide--so quiet was its
- atmosphere, so clean its pavement--these things pleased me well.
- One child in a household of grown people is usually made very much of,
- and in a quiet way I was a good deal taken notice of by Mrs. Bretton,
- who had been left a widow, with one son, before I knew her; her
- husband, a physician, having died while she was yet a young and
- handsome woman.
- She was not young, as I remember her, but she was still handsome, tall,
- well-made, and though dark for an Englishwoman, yet wearing always the
- clearness of health in her brunette cheek, and its vivacity in a pair
- of fine, cheerful black eyes. People esteemed it a grievous pity that
- she had not conferred her complexion on her son, whose eyes were
- blue--though, even in boyhood, very piercing--and the colour of his
- long hair such as friends did not venture to specify, except as the sun
- shone on it, when they called it golden. He inherited the lines of his
- mother's features, however; also her good teeth, her stature (or the
- promise of her stature, for he was not yet full-grown), and, what was
- better, her health without flaw, and her spirits of that tone and
- equality which are better than a fortune to the possessor.
- In the autumn of the year ---- I was staying at Bretton; my godmother
- having come in person to claim me of the kinsfolk with whom was at that
- time fixed my permanent residence. I believe she then plainly saw
- events coming, whose very shadow I scarce guessed; yet of which the
- faint suspicion sufficed to impart unsettled sadness, and made me glad
- to change scene and society.
- Time always flowed smoothly for me at my godmother's side; not with
- tumultuous swiftness, but blandly, like the gliding of a full river
- through a plain. My visits to her resembled the sojourn of Christian
- and Hopeful beside a certain pleasant stream, with "green trees on each
- bank, and meadows beautified with lilies all the year round." The charm
- of variety there was not, nor the excitement of incident; but I liked
- peace so well, and sought stimulus so little, that when the latter came
- I almost felt it a disturbance, and wished rather it had still held
- aloof.
- One day a letter was received of which the contents evidently caused
- Mrs. Bretton surprise and some concern. I thought at first it was from
- home, and trembled, expecting I know not what disastrous communication:
- to me, however, no reference was made, and the cloud seemed to pass.
- The next day, on my return from a long walk, I found, as I entered my
- bedroom, an unexpected change. In, addition to my own French bed in its
- shady recess, appeared in a corner a small crib, draped with white; and
- in addition to my mahogany chest of drawers, I saw a tiny rosewood
- chest. I stood still, gazed, and considered.
- "Of what are these things the signs and tokens?" I asked. The answer
- was obvious. "A second guest is coming: Mrs. Bretton expects other
- visitors."
- On descending to dinner, explanations ensued. A little girl, I was
- told, would shortly be my companion: the daughter of a friend and
- distant relation of the late Dr. Bretton's. This little girl, it was
- added, had recently lost her mother; though, indeed, Mrs. Bretton ere
- long subjoined, the loss was not so great as might at first appear.
- Mrs. Home (Home it seems was the name) had been a very pretty, but a
- giddy, careless woman, who had neglected her child, and disappointed
- and disheartened her husband. So far from congenial had the union
- proved, that separation at last ensued--separation by mutual consent,
- not after any legal process. Soon after this event, the lady having
- over-exerted herself at a ball, caught cold, took a fever, and died
- after a very brief illness. Her husband, naturally a man of very
- sensitive feelings, and shocked inexpressibly by too sudden
- communication of the news, could hardly, it seems, now be persuaded but
- that some over-severity on his part--some deficiency in patience and
- indulgence--had contributed to hasten her end. He had brooded over this
- idea till his spirits were seriously affected; the medical men insisted
- on travelling being tried as a remedy, and meanwhile Mrs. Bretton had
- offered to take charge of his little girl. "And I hope," added my
- godmother in conclusion, "the child will not be like her mamma; as
- silly and frivolous a little flirt as ever sensible man was weak enough
- to marry. For," said she, "Mr. Home _is_ a sensible man in his way,
- though not very practical: he is fond of science, and lives half his
- life in a laboratory trying experiments--a thing his butterfly wife
- could neither comprehend nor endure; and indeed" confessed my
- godmother, "I should not have liked it myself."
- In answer to a question of mine, she further informed me that her late
- husband used to say, Mr. Home had derived this scientific turn from a
- maternal uncle, a French savant; for he came, it seems; of mixed French
- and Scottish origin, and had connections now living in France, of whom
- more than one wrote _de_ before his name, and called himself noble.
- That same evening at nine o'clock, a servant was despatched to meet the
- coach by which our little visitor was expected. Mrs. Bretton and I sat
- alone in the drawing-room waiting her coming; John Graham Bretton being
- absent on a visit to one of his schoolfellows who lived in the country.
- My godmother read the evening paper while she waited; I sewed. It was a
- wet night; the rain lashed the panes, and the wind sounded angry and
- restless.
- "Poor child!" said Mrs. Bretton from time to time. "What weather for
- her journey! I wish she were safe here."
- A little before ten the door-bell announced Warren's return. No sooner
- was the door opened than I ran down into the hall; there lay a trunk
- and some band-boxes, beside them stood a person like a nurse-girl, and
- at the foot of the staircase was Warren with a shawled bundle in his
- arms.
- "Is that the child?" I asked.
- "Yes, miss."
- I would have opened the shawl, and tried to get a peep at the face, but
- it was hastily turned from me to Warren's shoulder.
- "Put me down, please," said a small voice when Warren opened the
- drawing-room door, "and take off this shawl," continued the speaker,
- extracting with its minute hand the pin, and with a sort of fastidious
- haste doffing the clumsy wrapping. The creature which now appeared made
- a deft attempt to fold the shawl; but the drapery was much too heavy
- and large to be sustained or wielded by those hands and arms. "Give it
- to Harriet, please," was then the direction, "and she can put it away."
- This said, it turned and fixed its eyes on Mrs. Bretton.
- "Come here, little dear," said that lady. "Come and let me see if you
- are cold and damp: come and let me warm you at the fire."
- The child advanced promptly. Relieved of her wrapping, she appeared
- exceedingly tiny; but was a neat, completely-fashioned little figure,
- light, slight, and straight. Seated on my godmother's ample lap, she
- looked a mere doll; her neck, delicate as wax, her head of silky curls,
- increased, I thought, the resemblance.
- Mrs. Bretton talked in little fond phrases as she chafed the child's
- hands, arms, and feet; first she was considered with a wistful gaze,
- but soon a smile answered her. Mrs. Bretton was not generally a
- caressing woman: even with her deeply-cherished son, her manner was
- rarely sentimental, often the reverse; but when the small stranger
- smiled at her, she kissed it, asking, "What is my little one's name?"
- "Missy."
- "But besides Missy?"
- "Polly, papa calls her."
- "Will Polly be content to live with me?"
- "Not _always_; but till papa comes home. Papa is gone away." She shook
- her head expressively.
- "He will return to Polly, or send for her."
- "Will he, ma'am? Do you know he will?"
- "I think so."
- "But Harriet thinks not: at least not for a long while. He is ill."
- Her eyes filled. She drew her hand from Mrs. Bretton's and made a
- movement to leave her lap; it was at first resisted, but she
- said--"Please, I wish to go: I can sit on a stool."
- She was allowed to slip down from the knee, and taking a footstool, she
- carried it to a corner where the shade was deep, and there seated
- herself. Mrs. Bretton, though a commanding, and in grave matters even a
- peremptory woman, was often passive in trifles: she allowed the child
- her way. She said to me, "Take no notice at present." But I did take
- notice: I watched Polly rest her small elbow on her small knee, her
- head on her hand; I observed her draw a square inch or two of
- pocket-handkerchief from the doll-pocket of her doll-skirt, and then I
- heard her weep. Other children in grief or pain cry aloud, without
- shame or restraint; but this being wept: the tiniest occasional sniff
- testified to her emotion. Mrs. Bretton did not hear it: which was quite
- as well. Ere long, a voice, issuing from the corner, demanded--"May the
- bell be rung for Harriet!"
- I rang; the nurse was summoned and came.
- "Harriet, I must be put to bed," said her little mistress. "You must
- ask where my bed is."
- Harriet signified that she had already made that inquiry.
- "Ask if you sleep with me, Harriet."
- "No, Missy," said the nurse: "you are to share this young lady's room,"
- designating me.
- Missy did not leave her seat, but I saw her eyes seek me. After some
- minutes' silent scrutiny, she emerged from her corner.
- "I wish you, ma'am, good night," said she to Mrs. Bretton; but she
- passed me mute.
- "Good-night, Polly," I said.
- "No need to say good-night, since we sleep in the same chamber," was
- the reply, with which she vanished from the drawing-room. We heard
- Harriet propose to carry her up-stairs. "No need," was again her
- answer--"no need, no need:" and her small step toiled wearily up the
- staircase.
- On going to bed an hour afterwards, I found her still wide awake. She
- had arranged her pillows so as to support her little person in a
- sitting posture: her hands, placed one within the other, rested quietly
- on the sheet, with an old-fashioned calm most unchildlike. I abstained
- from speaking to her for some time, but just before extinguishing the
- light, I recommended her to lie down.
- "By and by," was the answer.
- "But you will take cold, Missy."
- She took some tiny article of raiment from the chair at her crib side,
- and with it covered her shoulders. I suffered her to do as she pleased.
- Listening awhile in the darkness, I was aware that she still
- wept,--wept under restraint, quietly and cautiously.
- On awaking with daylight, a trickling of water caught my ear. Behold!
- there she was risen and mounted on a stool near the washstand, with
- pains and difficulty inclining the ewer (which she could not lift) so
- as to pour its contents into the basin. It was curious to watch her as
- she washed and dressed, so small, busy, and noiseless. Evidently she
- was little accustomed to perform her own toilet; and the buttons,
- strings, hooks and eyes, offered difficulties which she encountered
- with a perseverance good to witness. She folded her night-dress, she
- smoothed the drapery of her couch quite neatly; withdrawing into a
- corner, where the sweep of the white curtain concealed her, she became
- still. I half rose, and advanced my head to see how she was occupied.
- On her knees, with her forehead bent on her hands, I perceived that she
- was praying.
- Her nurse tapped at the door. She started up.
- "I am dressed, Harriet," said she; "I have dressed myself, but I do not
- feel neat. Make me neat!"
- "Why did you dress yourself, Missy?"
- "Hush! speak low, Harriet, for fear of waking _the girl_" (meaning me,
- who now lay with my eyes shut). "I dressed myself to learn, against the
- time you leave me."
- "Do you want me to go?"
- "When you are cross, I have many a time wanted you to go, but not now.
- Tie my sash straight; make my hair smooth, please."
- "Your sash is straight enough. What a particular little body you are!"
- "It must be tied again. Please to tie it."
- "There, then. When I am gone you must get that young lady to dress you."
- "On no account."
- "Why? She is a very nice young lady. I hope you mean to behave prettily
- to her, Missy, and not show your airs."
- "She shall dress me on no account."
- "Comical little thing!"
- "You are not passing the comb straight through my hair, Harriet; the
- line will be crooked."
- "Ay, you are ill to please. Does that suit?"
- "Pretty well. Where should I go now that I am dressed?"
- "I will take you into the breakfast-room."
- "Come, then."
- They proceeded to the door. She stopped.
- "Oh! Harriet, I wish this was papa's house! I don't know these people."
- "Be a good child, Missy."
- "I am good, but I ache here;" putting her hand to her heart, and
- moaning while she reiterated, "Papa! papa!"
- I roused myself and started up, to check this scene while it was yet
- within bounds.
- "Say good-morning to the young lady," dictated Harriet. She said,
- "Good-morning," and then followed her nurse from the room. Harriet
- temporarily left that same day, to go to her own friends, who lived in
- the neighbourhood.
- On descending, I found Paulina (the child called herself Polly, but her
- full name was Paulina Mary) seated at the breakfast-table, by Mrs.
- Bretton's side; a mug of milk stood before her, a morsel of bread
- filled her hand, which lay passive on the table-cloth: she was not
- eating.
- "How we shall conciliate this little creature," said Mrs. Bretton to
- me, "I don't know: she tastes nothing, and by her looks, she has not
- slept."
- I expressed my confidence in the effects of time and kindness.
- "If she were to take a fancy to anybody in the house, she would soon
- settle; but not till then," replied Mrs. Bretton.
- CHAPTER II.
- PAULINA.
- Some days elapsed, and it appeared she was not likely to take much of a
- fancy to anybody in the house. She was not exactly naughty or wilful:
- she was far from disobedient; but an object less conducive to
- comfort--to tranquillity even--than she presented, it was scarcely
- possible to have before one's eyes. She moped: no grown person could
- have performed that uncheering business better; no furrowed face of
- adult exile, longing for Europe at Europe's antipodes, ever bore more
- legibly the signs of home sickness than did her infant visage. She
- seemed growing old and unearthly. I, Lucy Snowe, plead guiltless of
- that curse, an overheated and discursive imagination; but whenever,
- opening a room-door, I found her seated in a corner alone, her head in
- her pigmy hand, that room seemed to me not inhabited, but haunted.
- And again, when of moonlight nights, on waking, I beheld her figure,
- white and conspicuous in its night-dress, kneeling upright in bed, and
- praying like some Catholic or Methodist enthusiast--some precocious
- fanatic or untimely saint--I scarcely know what thoughts I had; but
- they ran risk of being hardly more rational and healthy than that
- child's mind must have been.
- I seldom caught a word of her prayers, for they were whispered low:
- sometimes, indeed, they were not whispered at all, but put up
- unuttered; such rare sentences as reached my ear still bore the burden,
- "Papa; my dear papa!" This, I perceived, was a one-idea'd nature;
- betraying that monomaniac tendency I have ever thought the most
- unfortunate with which man or woman can be cursed.
- What might have been the end of this fretting, had it continued
- unchecked, can only be conjectured: it received, however, a sudden turn.
- One afternoon, Mrs. Bretton, coaxing her from her usual station in a
- corner, had lifted her into the window-seat, and, by way of occupying
- her attention, told her to watch the passengers and count how many
- ladies should go down the street in a given time. She had sat
- listlessly, hardly looking, and not counting, when--my eye being fixed
- on hers--I witnessed in its iris and pupil a startling transfiguration.
- These sudden, dangerous natures--_sensitive_ as they are called--offer
- many a curious spectacle to those whom a cooler temperament has secured
- from participation in their angular vagaries. The fixed and heavy gaze
- swum, trembled, then glittered in fire; the small, overcast brow
- cleared; the trivial and dejected features lit up; the sad countenance
- vanished, and in its place appeared a sudden eagerness, an intense
- expectancy. "It _is_!" were her words.
- Like a bird or a shaft, or any other swift thing, she was gone from the
- room. How she got the house-door open I cannot tell; probably it might
- be ajar; perhaps Warren was in the way and obeyed her behest, which
- would be impetuous enough. I--watching calmly from the window--saw her,
- in her black frock and tiny braided apron (to pinafores she had an
- antipathy), dart half the length of the street; and, as I was on the
- point of turning, and quietly announcing to Mrs. Bretton that the child
- was run out mad, and ought instantly to be pursued, I saw her caught
- up, and rapt at once from my cool observation, and from the wondering
- stare of the passengers. A gentleman had done this good turn, and now,
- covering her with his cloak, advanced to restore her to the house
- whence he had seen her issue.
- I concluded he would leave her in a servant's charge and withdraw; but
- he entered: having tarried a little while below, he came up-stairs.
- His reception immediately explained that he was known to Mrs. Bretton.
- She recognised him; she greeted him, and yet she was fluttered,
- surprised, taken unawares. Her look and manner were even expostulatory;
- and in reply to these, rather than her words, he said,--"I could not
- help it, madam: I found it impossible to leave the country without
- seeing with my own eyes how she settled."
- "But you will unsettle her."
- "I hope not. And how is papa's little Polly?"
- This question he addressed to Paulina, as he sat down and placed her
- gently on the ground before him.
- "How is Polly's papa?" was the reply, as she leaned on his knee, and
- gazed up into his face.
- It was not a noisy, not a wordy scene: for that I was thankful; but it
- was a scene of feeling too brimful, and which, because the cup did not
- foam up high or furiously overflow, only oppressed one the more. On all
- occasions of vehement, unrestrained expansion, a sense of disdain or
- ridicule comes to the weary spectator's relief; whereas I have ever
- felt most burdensome that sort of sensibility which bends of its own
- will, a giant slave under the sway of good sense.
- Mr. Home was a stern-featured--perhaps I should rather say, a
- hard-featured man: his forehead was knotty, and his cheekbones were
- marked and prominent. The character of his face was quite Scotch; but
- there was feeling in his eye, and emotion in his now agitated
- countenance. His northern accent in speaking harmonised with his
- physiognomy. He was at once proud-looking and homely-looking. He laid
- his hand on the child's uplifted head. She said--"Kiss Polly."
- He kissed her. I wished she would utter some hysterical cry, so that I
- might get relief and be at ease. She made wonderfully little noise: she
- seemed to have got what she wanted--_all_ she wanted, and to be in a
- trance of content. Neither in mien nor in features was this creature
- like her sire, and yet she was of his strain: her mind had been filled
- from his, as the cup from the flagon.
- Indisputably, Mr. Home owned manly self-control, however he might
- secretly feel on some matters. "Polly," he said, looking down on his
- little girl, "go into the hall; you will see papa's great-coat lying on
- a chair; put your hand into the pockets, you will find a
- pocket-handkerchief there; bring it to me."
- She obeyed; went and returned deftly and nimbly. He was talking to Mrs.
- Bretton when she came back, and she waited with the handkerchief in her
- hand. It was a picture, in its way, to see her, with her tiny stature,
- and trim, neat shape, standing at his knee. Seeing that he continued to
- talk, apparently unconscious of her return, she took his hand, opened
- the unresisting fingers, insinuated into them the handkerchief, and
- closed them upon it one by one. He still seemed not to see or to feel
- her; but by-and-by, he lifted her to his knee; she nestled against him,
- and though neither looked at nor spoke to the other for an hour
- following, I suppose both were satisfied.
- During tea, the minute thing's movements and behaviour gave, as usual,
- full occupation to the eye. First she directed Warren, as he placed the
- chairs.
- "Put papa's chair here, and mine near it, between papa and Mrs.
- Bretton: _I_ must hand his tea."
- She took her own seat, and beckoned with her hand to her father.
- "Be near me, as if we were at home, papa."
- And again, as she intercepted his cup in passing, and would stir the
- sugar, and put in the cream herself, "I always did it for you at home;
- papa: nobody could do it as well, not even your own self."
- Throughout the meal she continued her attentions: rather absurd they
- were. The sugar-tongs were too wide for one of her hands, and she had
- to use both in wielding them; the weight of the silver cream-ewer, the
- bread-and-butter plates, the very cup and saucer, tasked her
- insufficient strength and dexterity; but she would lift this, hand
- that, and luckily contrived through it all to break nothing. Candidly
- speaking, I thought her a little busy-body; but her father, blind like
- other parents, seemed perfectly content to let her wait on him, and
- even wonderfully soothed by her offices.
- "She is my comfort!" he could not help saying to Mrs. Bretton. That
- lady had her own "comfort" and nonpareil on a much larger scale, and,
- for the moment, absent; so she sympathised with his foible.
- This second "comfort" came on the stage in the course of the evening. I
- knew this day had been fixed for his return, and was aware that Mrs.
- Bretton had been expecting him through all its hours. We were seated
- round the fire, after tea, when Graham joined our circle: I should
- rather say, broke it up--for, of course, his arrival made a bustle; and
- then, as Mr. Graham was fasting, there was refreshment to be provided.
- He and Mr. Home met as old acquaintance; of the little girl he took no
- notice for a time.
- His meal over, and numerous questions from his mother answered, he
- turned from the table to the hearth. Opposite where he had placed
- himself was seated Mr. Home, and at his elbow, the child. When I say
- _child_ I use an inappropriate and undescriptive term--a term
- suggesting any picture rather than that of the demure little person in
- a mourning frock and white chemisette, that might just have fitted a
- good-sized doll--perched now on a high chair beside a stand, whereon
- was her toy work-box of white varnished wood, and holding in her hands
- a shred of a handkerchief, which she was professing to hem, and at
- which she bored perseveringly with a needle, that in her fingers seemed
- almost a skewer, pricking herself ever and anon, marking the cambric
- with a track of minute red dots; occasionally starting when the
- perverse weapon--swerving from her control--inflicted a deeper stab
- than usual; but still silent, diligent, absorbed, womanly.
- Graham was at that time a handsome, faithless-looking youth of sixteen.
- I say faithless-looking, not because he was really of a very perfidious
- disposition, but because the epithet strikes me as proper to describe
- the fair, Celtic (not Saxon) character of his good looks; his waved
- light auburn hair, his supple symmetry, his smile frequent, and
- destitute neither of fascination nor of subtlety (in no bad sense). A
- spoiled, whimsical boy he was in those days.
- "Mother," he said, after eyeing the little figure before him in silence
- for some time, and when the temporary absence of Mr. Home from the room
- relieved him from the half-laughing bashfulness, which was all he knew
- of timidity---"Mother, I see a young lady in the present society to
- whom I have not been introduced."
- "Mr. Home's little girl, I suppose you mean," said his mother.
- "Indeed, ma'am," replied her son, "I consider your expression of the
- least ceremonious: Miss Home _I_ should certainly have said, in
- venturing to speak of the gentlewoman to whom I allude."
- "Now, Graham, I will not have that child teased. Don't flatter yourself
- that I shall suffer you to make her your butt."
- "Miss Home," pursued Graham, undeterred by his mother's remonstrance,
- "might I have the honour to introduce myself, since no one else seems
- willing to render you and me that service? Your slave, John Graham
- Bretton."
- She looked at him; he rose and bowed quite gravely. She deliberately
- put down thimble, scissors, work; descended with precaution from her
- perch, and curtsying with unspeakable seriousness, said, "How do you
- do?"
- "I have the honour to be in fair health, only in some measure fatigued
- with a hurried journey. I hope, ma'am, I see you well?"
- "Tor-rer-ably well," was the ambitious reply of the little woman and
- she now essayed to regain her former elevation, but finding this could
- not be done without some climbing and straining--a sacrifice of decorum
- not to be thought of--and being utterly disdainful of aid in the
- presence of a strange young gentleman, she relinquished the high chair
- for a low stool: towards that low stool Graham drew in his chair.
- "I hope, ma'am, the present residence, my mother's house, appears to
- you a convenient place of abode?"
- "Not par-tic-er-er-ly; I want to go home."
- "A natural and laudable desire, ma'am; but one which, notwithstanding,
- I shall do my best to oppose. I reckon on being able to get out of you
- a little of that precious commodity called amusement, which mamma and
- Mistress Snowe there fail to yield me."
- "I shall have to go with papa soon: I shall not stay long at your
- mother's."
- "Yes, yes; you will stay with me, I am sure. I have a pony on which you
- shall ride, and no end of books with pictures to show you."
- "Are _you_ going to live here now?"
- "I am. Does that please you? Do you like me?"
- "No."
- "Why?"
- "I think you queer."
- "My face, ma'am?"
- "Your face and all about you: You have long red hair."
- "Auburn hair, if you please: mamma, calls it auburn, or golden, and so
- do all her friends. But even with my 'long red hair'" (and he waved his
- mane with a sort of triumph--tawny he himself well knew that it was,
- and he was proud of the leonine hue), "I cannot possibly be queerer
- than is your ladyship."
- "You call me queer?"
- "Certainly."
- (After a pause), "I think I shall go to bed."
- "A little thing like you ought to have been in bed many hours since;
- but you probably sat up in the expectation of seeing me?"
- "No, indeed."
- "You certainly wished to enjoy the pleasure of my society. You knew I
- was coming home, and would wait to have a look at me."
- "I sat up for papa, and not for you."
- "Very good, Miss Home. I am going to be a favourite: preferred before
- papa soon, I daresay."
- She wished Mrs. Bretton and myself good-night; she seemed hesitating
- whether Graham's deserts entitled him to the same attention, when he
- caught her up with one hand, and with that one hand held her poised
- aloft above his head. She saw herself thus lifted up on high, in the
- glass over the fireplace. The suddenness, the freedom, the disrespect
- of the action were too much.
- "For shame, Mr. Graham!" was her indignant cry, "put me down!"--and
- when again on her feet, "I wonder what you would think of me if I were
- to treat you in that way, lifting you with my hand" (raising that
- mighty member) "as Warren lifts the little cat."
- So saying, she departed.
- CHAPTER III.
- THE PLAYMATES.
- Mr. Home stayed two days. During his visit he could not be prevailed on
- to go out: he sat all day long by the fireside, sometimes silent,
- sometimes receiving and answering Mrs. Bretton's chat, which was just
- of the proper sort for a man in his morbid mood--not over-sympathetic,
- yet not too uncongenial, sensible; and even with a touch of the
- motherly--she was sufficiently his senior to be permitted this touch.
- As to Paulina, the child was at once happy and mute, busy and watchful.
- Her father frequently lifted her to his knee; she would sit there till
- she felt or fancied he grew restless; then it was--"Papa, put me down;
- I shall tire you with my weight."
- And the mighty burden slid to the rug, and establishing itself on
- carpet or stool just at "papa's" feet, the white work-box and the
- scarlet-speckled handkerchief came into play. This handkerchief, it
- seems, was intended as a keepsake for "papa," and must be finished
- before his departure; consequently the demand on the sempstress's
- industry (she accomplished about a score of stitches in half-an-hour)
- was stringent.
- The evening, by restoring Graham to the maternal roof (his days were
- passed at school), brought us an accession of animation--a quality not
- diminished by the nature of the scenes pretty sure to be enacted
- between him and Miss Paulina.
- A distant and haughty demeanour had been the result of the indignity
- put upon her the first evening of his arrival: her usual answer, when
- he addressed her, was--"I can't attend to you; I have other things to
- think about." Being implored to state _what_ things:
- "Business."
- Graham would endeavour to seduce her attention by opening his desk and
- displaying its multifarious contents: seals, bright sticks of wax,
- pen-knives, with a miscellany of engravings--some of them gaily
- coloured--which he had amassed from time to time. Nor was this powerful
- temptation wholly unavailing: her eyes, furtively raised from her work,
- cast many a peep towards the writing-table, rich in scattered pictures.
- An etching of a child playing with a Blenheim spaniel happened to
- flutter to the floor.
- "Pretty little dog!" said she, delighted.
- Graham prudently took no notice. Ere long, stealing from her corner,
- she approached to examine the treasure more closely. The dog's great
- eyes and long ears, and the child's hat and feathers, were irresistible.
- "Nice picture!" was her favourable criticism.
- "Well--you may have it," said Graham.
- She seemed to hesitate. The wish to possess was strong, but to accept
- would be a compromise of dignity. No. She put it down and turned away.
- "You won't have it, then, Polly?"
- "I would rather not, thank you."
- "Shall I tell you what I will do with the picture if you refuse it?"
- She half turned to listen.
- "Cut it into strips for lighting the taper."
- "No!"
- "But I shall."
- "Please--don't."
- Graham waxed inexorable on hearing the pleading tone; he took the
- scissors from his mother's work-basket.
- "Here goes!" said he, making a menacing flourish. "Right through Fido's
- head, and splitting little Harry's nose."
- "No! _No!_ NO!"
- "Then come to me. Come quickly, or it is done."
- She hesitated, lingered, but complied.
- "Now, will you have it?" he asked, as she stood before him.
- "Please."
- "But I shall want payment."
- "How much?"
- "A kiss."
- "Give the picture first into my hand."
- Polly, as she said this, looked rather faithless in her turn. Graham
- gave it. She absconded a debtor, darted to her father, and took refuge
- on his knee. Graham rose in mimic wrath and followed. She buried her
- face in Mr. Home's waistcoat.
- "Papa--papa--send him away!"
- "I'll not be sent away," said Graham.
- With face still averted, she held out her hand to keep him off.
- "Then, I shall kiss the hand," said he; but that moment it became a
- miniature fist, and dealt him payment in a small coin that was not
- kisses.
- Graham--not failing in his way to be as wily as his little
- playmate--retreated apparently quite discomfited; he flung himself on a
- sofa, and resting his head against the cushion, lay like one in pain.
- Polly, finding him silent, presently peeped at him. His eyes and face
- were covered with his hands. She turned on her father's knee, and gazed
- at her foe anxiously and long. Graham groaned.
- "Papa, what is the matter?" she whispered.
- "You had better ask him, Polly."
- "Is he hurt?" (groan second.)
- "He makes a noise as if he were," said Mr. Home.
- "Mother," suggested Graham, feebly, "I think you had better send for
- the doctor. Oh my eye!" (renewed silence, broken only by sighs from
- Graham.)
- "If I were to become blind----?" suggested this last.
- His chastiser could not bear the suggestion. She was beside him
- directly.
- "Let me see your eye: I did not mean to touch it, only your mouth; and
- I did not think I hit so _very_ hard."
- Silence answered her. Her features worked,--"I am sorry; I am sorry!"
- Then succeeded emotion, faltering; weeping.
- "Have done trying that child, Graham," said Mrs. Bretton.
- "It is all nonsense, my pet," cried Mr. Home.
- And Graham once more snatched her aloft, and she again punished him;
- and while she pulled his lion's locks, termed him--"The naughtiest,
- rudest, worst, untruest person that ever was."
- * * * * *
- On the morning of Mr. Home's departure, he and his daughter had some
- conversation in a window-recess by themselves; I heard part of it.
- "Couldn't I pack my box and go with you, papa?" she whispered earnestly.
- He shook his head.
- "Should I be a trouble to you?"
- "Yes, Polly."
- "Because I am little?"
- "Because you are little and tender. It is only great, strong people
- that should travel. But don't look sad, my little girl; it breaks my
- heart. Papa, will soon come back to his Polly."
- "Indeed, indeed, I am not sad, scarcely at all."
- "Polly would be sorry to give papa pain; would she not?"
- "Sorrier than sorry."
- "Then Polly must be cheerful: not cry at parting; not fret afterwards.
- She must look forward to meeting again, and try to be happy meanwhile.
- Can she do this?"
- "She will try."
- "I see she will. Farewell, then. It is time to go."
- "_Now_?--just _now_?
- "Just now."
- She held up quivering lips. Her father sobbed, but she, I remarked, did
- not. Having put her down, he shook hands with the rest present, and
- departed.
- When the street-door closed, she dropped on her knees at a chair with a
- cry--"Papa!"
- It was low and long; a sort of "Why hast thou forsaken me?" During an
- ensuing space of some minutes, I perceived she endured agony. She went
- through, in that brief interval of her infant life, emotions such as
- some never feel; it was in her constitution: she would have more of
- such instants if she lived. Nobody spoke. Mrs. Bretton, being a mother,
- shed a tear or two. Graham, who was writing, lifted up his eyes and
- gazed at her. I, Lucy Snowe, was calm.
- The little creature, thus left unharassed, did for herself what none
- other could do--contended with an intolerable feeling; and, ere long,
- in some degree, repressed it. That day she would accept solace from
- none; nor the next day: she grew more passive afterwards.
- On the third evening, as she sat on the floor, worn and quiet, Graham,
- coming in, took her up gently, without a word. She did not resist: she
- rather nestled in his arms, as if weary. When he sat down, she laid her
- head against him; in a few minutes she slept; he carried her upstairs
- to bed. I was not surprised that, the next morning, the first thing she
- demanded was, "Where is Mr. Graham?"
- It happened that Graham was not coming to the breakfast-table; he had
- some exercises to write for that morning's class, and had requested his
- mother to send a cup of tea into the study. Polly volunteered to carry
- it: she must be busy about something, look after somebody. The cup was
- entrusted to her; for, if restless, she was also careful. As the study
- was opposite the breakfast-room, the doors facing across the passage,
- my eye followed her.
- "What are you doing?" she asked, pausing on the threshold.
- "Writing," said Graham.
- "Why don't you come to take breakfast with your mamma?"
- "Too busy."
- "Do you want any breakfast?"
- "Of course."
- "There, then."
- And she deposited the cup on the carpet, like a jailor putting a
- prisoner's pitcher of water through his cell-door, and retreated.
- Presently she returned.
- "What will you have besides tea--what to eat?"
- "Anything good. Bring me something particularly nice; that's a kind
- little woman."
- She came back to Mrs. Bretton.
- "Please, ma'am, send your boy something good."
- "You shall choose for him, Polly; what shall my boy have?"
- She selected a portion of whatever was best on the table; and, ere
- long, came back with a whispered request for some marmalade, which was
- not there. Having got it, however, (for Mrs. Bretton refused the pair
- nothing), Graham was shortly after heard lauding her to the skies;
- promising that, when he had a house of his own, she should be his
- housekeeper, and perhaps--if she showed any culinary genius--his cook;
- and, as she did not return, and I went to look after her, I found
- Graham and her breakfasting _tête-à-tête_--she standing at his elbow,
- and sharing his fare: excepting the marmalade, which she delicately
- refused to touch, lest, I suppose, it should appear that she had
- procured it as much on her own account as his. She constantly evinced
- these nice perceptions and delicate instincts.
- The league of acquaintanceship thus struck up was not hastily
- dissolved; on the contrary, it appeared that time and circumstances
- served rather to cement than loosen it. Ill-assimilated as the two were
- in age, sex, pursuits, &c., they somehow found a great deal to say to
- each other. As to Paulina, I observed that her little character never
- properly came out, except with young Bretton. As she got settled, and
- accustomed to the house, she proved tractable enough with Mrs. Bretton;
- but she would sit on a stool at that lady's feet all day long, learning
- her task, or sewing, or drawing figures with a pencil on a slate, and
- never kindling once to originality, or showing a single gleam of the
- peculiarities of her nature. I ceased to watch her under such
- circumstances: she was not interesting. But the moment Graham's knock
- sounded of an evening, a change occurred; she was instantly at the head
- of the staircase. Usually her welcome was a reprimand or a threat.
- "You have not wiped your shoes properly on the mat. I shall tell your
- mamma."
- "Little busybody! Are you there?"
- "Yes--and you can't reach me: I am higher up than you" (peeping between
- the rails of the banister; she could not look over them).
- "Polly!"
- "My dear boy!" (such was one of her terms for him, adopted in imitation
- of his mother.)
- "I am fit to faint with fatigue," declared Graham, leaning against the
- passage-wall in seeming exhaustion. "Dr. Digby" (the headmaster) "has
- quite knocked me up with overwork. Just come down and help me to carry
- up my books."
- "Ah! you're cunning!"
- "Not at all, Polly--it is positive fact. I'm as weak as a rush. Come
- down."
- "Your eyes are quiet like the cat's, but you'll spring."
- "Spring? Nothing of the kind: it isn't in me. Come down."
- "Perhaps I may--if you'll promise not to touch--not to snatch me up,
- and not to whirl me round."
- "I? I couldn't do it!" (sinking into a chair.)
- "Then put the books down on the first step, and go three yards off"
- This being done, she descended warily, and not taking her eyes from the
- feeble Graham. Of course her approach always galvanized him to new and
- spasmodic life: the game of romps was sure to be exacted. Sometimes she
- would be angry; sometimes the matter was allowed to pass smoothly, and
- we could hear her say as she led him up-stairs: "Now, my dear boy, come
- and take your tea--I am sure you must want something."
- It was sufficiently comical to observe her as she sat beside Graham,
- while he took that meal. In his absence she was a still personage, but
- with him the most officious, fidgety little body possible. I often
- wished she would mind herself and be tranquil; but no--herself was
- forgotten in him: he could not be sufficiently well waited on, nor
- carefully enough looked after; he was more than the Grand Turk in her
- estimation. She would gradually assemble the various plates before him,
- and, when one would suppose all he could possibly desire was within his
- reach, she would find out something else: "Ma'am," she would whisper to
- Mrs. Bretton,--"perhaps your son would like a little cake--sweet cake,
- you know--there is some in there" (pointing to the sideboard cupboard).
- Mrs. Bretton, as a rule, disapproved of sweet cake at tea, but still
- the request was urged,--"One little piece--only for him--as he goes to
- school: girls--such as me and Miss Snowe--don't need treats, but _he_
- would like it."
- Graham did like it very well, and almost always got it. To do him
- justice, he would have shared his prize with her to whom he owed it;
- but that was never allowed: to insist, was to ruffle her for the
- evening. To stand by his knee, and monopolize his talk and notice, was
- the reward she wanted--not a share of the cake.
- With curious readiness did she adapt herself to such themes as
- interested him. One would have thought the child had no mind or life of
- her own, but must necessarily live, move, and have her being in
- another: now that her father was taken from her, she nestled to Graham,
- and seemed to feel by his feelings: to exist in his existence. She
- learned the names of all his schoolfellows in a trice: she got by heart
- their characters as given from his lips: a single description of an
- individual seemed to suffice. She never forgot, or confused identities:
- she would talk with him the whole evening about people she had never
- seen, and appear completely to realise their aspect, manners, and
- dispositions. Some she learned to mimic: an under-master, who was an
- aversion of young Bretton's, had, it seems, some peculiarities, which
- she caught up in a moment from Graham's representation, and rehearsed
- for his amusement; this, however, Mrs. Bretton disapproved and forbade.
- The pair seldom quarrelled; yet once a rupture occurred, in which her
- feelings received a severe shock.
- One day Graham, on the occasion of his birthday, had some friends--lads
- of his own age--to dine with him. Paulina took much interest in the
- coming of these friends; she had frequently heard of them; they were
- amongst those of whom Graham oftenest spoke. After dinner, the young
- gentlemen were left by themselves in the dining-room, where they soon
- became very merry and made a good deal of noise. Chancing to pass
- through the hall, I found Paulina sitting alone on the lowest step of
- the staircase, her eyes fixed on the glossy panels of the dining-room
- door, where the reflection of the hall-lamp was shining; her little
- brow knit in anxious, meditation.
- "What are you thinking about, Polly?"
- "Nothing particular; only I wish that door was clear glass--that I
- might see through it. The boys seem very cheerful, and I want to go to
- them: I want to be with Graham, and watch his friends."
- "What hinders you from going?"
- "I feel afraid: but may I try, do you think? May I knock at the door,
- and ask to be let in?"
- I thought perhaps they might not object to have her as a playmate, and
- therefore encouraged the attempt.
- She knocked--too faintly at first to be heard, but on a second essay
- the door unclosed; Graham's head appeared; he looked in high spirits,
- but impatient.
- "What do you want, you little monkey?"
- "To come to you."
- "Do you indeed? As if I would be troubled with you! Away to mamma and
- Mistress Snowe, and tell them to put you to bed." The auburn head and
- bright flushed face vanished,--the door shut peremptorily. She was
- stunned.
- "Why does he speak so? He never spoke so before," she said in
- consternation. "What have I done?"
- "Nothing, Polly; but Graham is busy with his school-friends."
- "And he likes them better than me! He turns me away now they are here!"
- I had some thoughts of consoling her, and of improving the occasion by
- inculcating some of those maxims of philosophy whereof I had ever a
- tolerable stock ready for application. She stopped me, however, by
- putting her fingers in her ears at the first words I uttered, and then
- lying down on the mat with her face against the flags; nor could either
- Warren or the cook root her from that position: she was allowed to lie,
- therefore, till she chose to rise of her own accord.
- Graham forgot his impatience the same evening, and would have accosted
- her as usual when his friends were gone, but she wrenched herself from
- his hand; her eye quite flashed; she would not bid him good-night; she
- would not look in his face. The next day he treated her with
- indifference, and she grew like a bit of marble. The day after, he
- teased her to know what was the matter; her lips would not unclose. Of
- course he could not feel real anger on his side: the match was too
- unequal in every way; he tried soothing and coaxing. "Why was she so
- angry? What had he done?" By-and-by tears answered him; he petted her,
- and they were friends. But she was one on whom such incidents were not
- lost: I remarked that never after this rebuff did she seek him, or
- follow him, or in any way solicit his notice. I told her once to carry
- a book or some other article to Graham when he was shut up in his study.
- "I shall wait till he comes out," said she, proudly; "I don't choose to
- give him the trouble of rising to open the door."
- Young Bretton had a favourite pony on which he often rode out; from the
- window she always watched his departure and return. It was her ambition
- to be permitted to have a ride round the courtyard on this pony; but
- far be it from her to ask such a favour. One day she descended to the
- yard to watch him dismount; as she leaned against the gate, the longing
- wish for the indulgence of a ride glittered in her eye.
- "Come, Polly, will you have a canter?" asked Graham, half carelessly.
- I suppose she thought he was _too_ careless.
- "No, thank you," said she, turning away with the utmost coolness.
- "You'd better," pursued he. "You will like it, I am sure."
- "Don't think I should care a fig about it," was the response.
- "That is not true. You told Lucy Snowe you longed to have a ride."
- "Lucy Snowe is a _tatter_-box," I heard her say (her imperfect
- articulation was the least precocious thing she had about her); and
- with this; she walked into the house.
- Graham, coming in soon after, observed to his mother,--"Mamma, I
- believe that creature is a changeling: she is a perfect cabinet of
- oddities; but I should be dull without her: she amuses me a great deal
- more than you or Lucy Snowe."
- * * * * *
- "Miss Snowe," said Paulina to me (she had now got into the habit of
- occasionally chatting with me when we were alone in our room at night),
- "do you know on what day in the week I like Graham best?"
- "How can I possibly know anything so strange? Is there one day out of
- the seven when he is otherwise than on the other six?"
- "To be sure! Can't you see? Don't you know? I find him the most
- excellent on a Sunday; then we have him the whole day, and he is quiet,
- and, in the evening, _so_ kind."
- This observation was not altogether groundless: going to church, &c.,
- kept Graham quiet on the Sunday, and the evening he generally dedicated
- to a serene, though rather indolent sort of enjoyment by the parlour
- fireside. He would take possession of the couch, and then he would call
- Polly.
- Graham was a boy not quite as other boys are; all his delight did not
- lie in action: he was capable of some intervals of contemplation; he
- could take a pleasure too in reading, nor was his selection of books
- wholly indiscriminate: there were glimmerings of characteristic
- preference, and even of instinctive taste in the choice. He rarely, it
- is true, remarked on what he read, but I have seen him sit and think of
- it.
- Polly, being near him, kneeling on a little cushion or the carpet, a
- conversation would begin in murmurs, not inaudible, though subdued. I
- caught a snatch of their tenor now and then; and, in truth, some
- influence better and finer than that of every day, seemed to soothe
- Graham at such times into no ungentle mood.
- "Have you learned any hymns this week, Polly?"
- "I have learned a very pretty one, four verses long. Shall I say it?"
- "Speak nicely, then: don't be in a hurry."
- The hymn being rehearsed, or rather half-chanted, in a little singing
- voice, Graham would take exceptions at the manner, and proceed to give
- a lesson in recitation. She was quick in learning, apt in imitating;
- and, besides, her pleasure was to please Graham: she proved a ready
- scholar. To the hymn would succeed some reading--perhaps a chapter in
- the Bible; correction was seldom required here, for the child could
- read any simple narrative chapter very well; and, when the subject was
- such as she could understand and take an interest in, her expression
- and emphasis were something remarkable. Joseph cast into the pit; the
- calling of Samuel; Daniel in the lions' den;--these were favourite
- passages: of the first especially she seemed perfectly to feel the
- pathos.
- "Poor Jacob!" she would sometimes say, with quivering lips. "How he
- loved his son Joseph! As much," she once added--"as much, Graham, as I
- love you: if you were to die" (and she re-opened the book, sought the
- verse, and read), "I should refuse to be comforted, and go down into
- the grave to you mourning."
- With these words she gathered Graham in her little arms, drawing his
- long-tressed head towards her. The action, I remember, struck me as
- strangely rash; exciting the feeling one might experience on seeing an
- animal dangerous by nature, and but half-tamed by art, too heedlessly
- fondled. Not that I feared Graham would hurt, or very roughly check
- her; but I thought she ran risk of incurring such a careless, impatient
- repulse, as would be worse almost to her than a blow. On the whole,
- however, these demonstrations were borne passively: sometimes even a
- sort of complacent wonder at her earnest partiality would smile not
- unkindly in his eyes. Once he said:--"You like me almost as well as if
- you were my little sister, Polly."
- "Oh! I _do_ like you," said she; "I _do_ like you very much."
- I was not long allowed the amusement of this study of character. She
- had scarcely been at Bretton two months, when a letter came from Mr.
- Home, signifying that he was now settled amongst his maternal kinsfolk
- on the Continent; that, as England was become wholly distasteful to
- him, he had no thoughts of returning hither, perhaps, for years; and
- that he wished his little girl to join him immediately.
- "I wonder how she will take this news?" said Mrs. Bretton, when she had
- read the letter. _I_ wondered, too, and I took upon myself to
- communicate it.
- Repairing to the drawing-room--in which calm and decorated apartment
- she was fond of being alone, and where she could be implicitly trusted,
- for she fingered nothing, or rather soiled nothing she fingered--I
- found her seated, like a little Odalisque, on a couch, half shaded by
- the drooping draperies of the window near. She seemed happy; all her
- appliances for occupation were about her; the white wood workbox, a
- shred or two of muslin, an end or two of ribbon collected for
- conversion into doll-millinery. The doll, duly night-capped and
- night-gowned, lay in its cradle; she was rocking it to sleep, with an
- air of the most perfect faith in its possession of sentient and
- somnolent faculties; her eyes, at the same time, being engaged with a
- picture-book, which lay open on her lap.
- "Miss Snowe," said she in a whisper, "this is a wonderful book.
- Candace" (the doll, christened by Graham; for, indeed, its begrimed
- complexion gave it much of an Ethiopian aspect)--"Candace is asleep
- now, and I may tell you about it; only we must both speak low, lest she
- should waken. This book was given me by Graham; it tells about distant
- countries, a long, long way from England, which no traveller can reach
- without sailing thousands of miles over the sea. Wild men live in these
- countries, Miss Snowe, who wear clothes different from ours: indeed,
- some of them wear scarcely any clothes, for the sake of being cool, you
- know; for they have very hot weather. Here is a picture of thousands
- gathered in a desolate place--a plain, spread with sand--round a man in
- black,--a good, _good_ Englishman--a missionary, who is preaching to
- them under a palm-tree." (She showed a little coloured cut to that
- effect.) "And here are pictures" (she went on) "more stranger" (grammar
- was occasionally forgotten) "than that. There is the wonderful Great
- Wall of China; here is a Chinese lady, with a foot littler than mine.
- There is a wild horse of Tartary; and here, most strange of all--is a
- land of ice and snow, without green fields, woods, or gardens. In this
- land, they found some mammoth bones: there are no mammoths now. You
- don't know what it was; but I can tell you, because Graham told me. A
- mighty, goblin creature, as high as this room, and as long as the hall;
- but not a fierce, flesh-eating thing, Graham thinks. He believes, if I
- met one in a forest, it would not kill me, unless I came quite in its
- way; when it would trample me down amongst the bushes, as I might tread
- on a grasshopper in a hayfield without knowing it."
- Thus she rambled on.
- "Polly," I interrupted, "should you like to travel?"
- "Not just yet," was the prudent answer; "but perhaps in twenty years,
- when I am grown a woman, as tall as Mrs. Bretton, I may travel with
- Graham. We intend going to Switzerland, and climbing Mount Blanck; and
- some day we shall sail over to South America, and walk to the top of
- Kim-kim-borazo."
- "But how would you like to travel now, if your papa was with you?"
- Her reply--not given till after a pause--evinced one of those
- unexpected turns of temper peculiar to her.
- "Where is the good of talking in that silly way?" said she. "Why do you
- mention papa? What is papa to you? I was just beginning to be happy,
- and not think about him so much; and there it will be all to do over
- again!"
- Her lip trembled. I hastened to disclose the fact of a letter having
- been received, and to mention the directions given that she and Harriet
- should immediately rejoin this dear papa. "Now, Polly, are you not
- glad?" I added.
- She made no answer. She dropped her book and ceased to rock her doll;
- she gazed at me with gravity and earnestness.
- "Shall not you like to go to papa?"
- "Of course," she said at last in that trenchant manner she usually
- employed in speaking to me; and which was quite different from that she
- used with Mrs. Bretton, and different again from the one dedicated to
- Graham. I wished to ascertain more of what she thought but no: she
- would converse no more. Hastening to Mrs. Bretton, she questioned her,
- and received the confirmation of my news. The weight and importance of
- these tidings kept her perfectly serious the whole day. In the evening,
- at the moment Graham's entrance was heard below, I found her at my
- side. She began to arrange a locket-ribbon about my neck, she displaced
- and replaced the comb in my hair; while thus busied, Graham entered.
- "Tell him by-and-by," she whispered; "tell him I am going."
- In the course of tea-time I made the desired communication. Graham, it
- chanced, was at that time greatly preoccupied about some school-prize,
- for which he was competing. The news had to be told twice before it
- took proper hold of his attention, and even then he dwelt on it but
- momently.
- "Polly going? What a pity! Dear little Mousie, I shall be sorry to lose
- her: she must come to us again, mamma."
- And hastily swallowing his tea, he took a candle and a small table to
- himself and his books, and was soon buried in study.
- "Little Mousie" crept to his side, and lay down on the carpet at his
- feet, her face to the floor; mute and motionless she kept that post and
- position till bed-time. Once I saw Graham--wholly unconscious of her
- proximity--push her with his restless foot. She receded an inch or two.
- A minute after one little hand stole out from beneath her face, to
- which it had been pressed, and softly caressed the heedless foot. When
- summoned by her nurse she rose and departed very obediently, having bid
- us all a subdued good-night.
- I will not say that I dreaded going to bed, an hour later; yet I
- certainly went with an unquiet anticipation that I should find that
- child in no peaceful sleep. The forewarning of my instinct was but
- fulfilled, when I discovered her, all cold and vigilant, perched like a
- white bird on the outside of the bed. I scarcely knew how to accost
- her; she was not to be managed like another child. She, however,
- accosted me. As I closed the door, and put the light on the
- dressing-table, she turned to me with these words:--"I cannot--_cannot_
- sleep; and in this way I cannot--_cannot_ live!"
- I asked what ailed her.
- "Dedful miz-er-y!" said she, with her piteous lisp.
- "Shall I call Mrs. Bretton?"
- "That is downright silly," was her impatient reply; and, indeed, I well
- knew that if she had heard Mrs. Bretton's foot approach, she would have
- nestled quiet as a mouse under the bedclothes. Whilst lavishing her
- eccentricities regardlessly before me--for whom she professed scarcely
- the semblance of affection--she never showed my godmother one glimpse
- of her inner self: for her, she was nothing but a docile, somewhat
- quaint little maiden. I examined her; her cheek was crimson; her
- dilated eye was both troubled and glowing, and painfully restless: in
- this state it was obvious she must not be left till morning. I guessed
- how the case stood.
- "Would you like to bid Graham good-night again?" I asked. "He is not
- gone to his room yet."
- She at once stretched out her little arms to be lifted. Folding a shawl
- round her, I carried her back to the drawing-room. Graham was just
- coming out.
- "She cannot sleep without seeing and speaking to you once more," I
- said. "She does not like the thought of leaving you."
- "I've spoilt her," said he, taking her from me with good humour, and
- kissing her little hot face and burning lips. "Polly, you care for me
- more than for papa, now--"
- "I _do_ care for you, but you care nothing for me," was her whisper.
- She was assured to the contrary, again kissed, restored to me, and I
- carried her away; but, alas! not soothed.
- When I thought she could listen to me, I said--"Paulina, you should not
- grieve that Graham does not care for you so much as you care for him.
- It must be so."
- Her lifted and questioning eyes asked why.
- "Because he is a boy and you are a girl; he is sixteen and you are only
- six; his nature is strong and gay, and yours is otherwise."
- "But I love him so much; he _should_ love me a little."
- "He does. He is fond of you. You are his favourite."
- "Am I Graham's favourite?"
- "Yes, more than any little child I know."
- The assurance soothed her; she smiled in her anguish.
- "But," I continued, "don't fret, and don't expect too much of him, or
- else he will feel you to be troublesome, and then it is all over."
- "All over!" she echoed softly; "then I'll be good. I'll try to be good,
- Lucy Snowe."
- I put her to bed.
- "Will he forgive me this one time?" she asked, as I undressed myself. I
- assured her that he would; that as yet he was by no means alienated;
- that she had only to be careful for the future.
- "There is no future," said she: "I am going. Shall I ever--ever--see
- him again, after I leave England?"
- I returned an encouraging response. The candle being extinguished, a
- still half-hour elapsed. I thought her asleep, when the little white
- shape once more lifted itself in the crib, and the small voice
- asked--"Do you like Graham, Miss Snowe?"
- "Like him! Yes, a little."
- "Only a little! Do you like him as I do?"
- "I think not. No: not as you do."
- "Do you like him much?"
- "I told you I liked him a little. Where is the use of caring for him so
- very much: he is full of faults."
- "Is he?"
- "All boys are."
- "More than girls?"
- "Very likely. Wise people say it is folly to think anybody perfect; and
- as to likes and dislikes, we should be friendly to all, and worship
- none."
- "Are you a wise person?"
- "I mean to try to be so. Go to sleep."
- "I _cannot_ go to sleep. Have you no pain just here" (laying her elfish
- hand on her elfish breast,) "when you think _you_ shall have to leave
- Graham; for _your_ home is not here?"
- "Surely, Polly," said I, "you should not feel so much pain when you are
- very soon going to rejoin your father. Have you forgotten him? Do you
- no longer wish to be his little companion?"
- Dead silence succeeded this question.
- "Child, lie down and sleep," I urged.
- "My bed is cold," said she. "I can't warm it."
- I saw the little thing shiver. "Come to me," I said, wishing, yet
- scarcely hoping, that she would comply: for she was a most strange,
- capricious, little creature, and especially whimsical with me. She
- came, however, instantly, like a small ghost gliding over the carpet. I
- took her in. She was chill: I warmed her in my arms. She trembled
- nervously; I soothed her. Thus tranquillized and cherished she at last
- slumbered.
- "A very unique child," thought I, as I viewed her sleeping countenance
- by the fitful moonlight, and cautiously and softly wiped her glittering
- eyelids and her wet cheeks with my handkerchief. "How will she get
- through this world, or battle with this life? How will she bear the
- shocks and repulses, the humiliations and desolations, which books, and
- my own reason, tell me are prepared for all flesh?"
- She departed the next day; trembling like a leaf when she took leave,
- but exercising self-command.
- CHAPTER IV.
- MISS MARCHMONT.
- On quitting Bretton, which I did a few weeks after Paulina's
- departure--little thinking then I was never again to visit it; never
- more to tread its calm old streets--I betook myself home, having been
- absent six months. It will be conjectured that I was of course glad to
- return to the bosom of my kindred. Well! the amiable conjecture does no
- harm, and may therefore be safely left uncontradicted. Far from saying
- nay, indeed, I will permit the reader to picture me, for the next eight
- years, as a bark slumbering through halcyon weather, in a harbour still
- as glass--the steersman stretched on the little deck, his face up to
- heaven, his eyes closed: buried, if you will, in a long prayer. A great
- many women and girls are supposed to pass their lives something in that
- fashion; why not I with the rest?
- Picture me then idle, basking, plump, and happy, stretched on a
- cushioned deck, warmed with constant sunshine, rocked by breezes
- indolently soft. However, it cannot be concealed that, in that case, I
- must somehow have fallen overboard, or that there must have been wreck
- at last. I too well remember a time--a long time--of cold, of danger,
- of contention. To this hour, when I have the nightmare, it repeats the
- rush and saltness of briny waves in my throat, and their icy pressure
- on my lungs. I even know there was a storm, and that not of one hour
- nor one day. For many days and nights neither sun nor stars appeared;
- we cast with our own hands the tackling out of the ship; a heavy
- tempest lay on us; all hope that we should be saved was taken away. In
- fine, the ship was lost, the crew perished.
- As far as I recollect, I complained to no one about these troubles.
- Indeed, to whom could I complain? Of Mrs. Bretton I had long lost
- sight. Impediments, raised by others, had, years ago, come in the way
- of our intercourse, and cut it off. Besides, time had brought changes
- for her, too: the handsome property of which she was left guardian for
- her son, and which had been chiefly invested in some joint-stock
- undertaking, had melted, it was said, to a fraction of its original
- amount. Graham, I learned from incidental rumours, had adopted a
- profession; both he and his mother were gone from Bretton, and were
- understood to be now in London. Thus, there remained no possibility of
- dependence on others; to myself alone could I look. I know not that I
- was of a self-reliant or active nature; but self-reliance and exertion
- were forced upon me by circumstances, as they are upon thousands
- besides; and when Miss Marchmont, a maiden lady of our neighbourhood,
- sent for me, I obeyed her behest, in the hope that she might assign me
- some task I could undertake.
- Miss Marchmont was a woman of fortune, and lived in a handsome
- residence; but she was a rheumatic cripple, impotent, foot and hand,
- and had been so for twenty years. She always sat upstairs: her
- drawing-room adjoined her bed-room. I had often heard of Miss
- Marchmont, and of her peculiarities (she had the character of being
- very eccentric), but till now had never seen her. I found her a
- furrowed, grey-haired woman, grave with solitude, stern with long
- affliction, irritable also, and perhaps exacting. It seemed that a
- maid, or rather companion, who had waited on her for some years, was
- about to be married; and she, hearing of my bereaved lot, had sent for
- me, with the idea that I might supply this person's place. She made the
- proposal to me after tea, as she and I sat alone by her fireside.
- "It will not be an easy life;" said she candidly, "for I require a good
- deal of attention, and you will be much confined; yet, perhaps,
- contrasted with the existence you have lately led, it may appear
- tolerable."
- I reflected. Of course it ought to appear tolerable, I argued inwardly;
- but somehow, by some strange fatality, it would not. To live here, in
- this close room, the watcher of suffering--sometimes, perhaps, the butt
- of temper--through all that was to come of my youth; while all that was
- gone had passed, to say the least, not blissfully! My heart sunk one
- moment, then it revived; for though I forced myself to _realise_ evils,
- I think I was too prosaic to _idealise_, and consequently to exaggerate
- them.
- "My doubt is whether I should have strength for the undertaking," I
- observed.
- "That is my own scruple," said she; "for you look a worn-out creature."
- So I did. I saw myself in the glass, in my mourning-dress, a faded,
- hollow-eyed vision. Yet I thought little of the wan spectacle. The
- blight, I believed, was chiefly external: I still felt life at life's
- sources.
- "What else have you in view--anything?"
- "Nothing clear as yet: but I may find something."
- "So you imagine: perhaps you are right. Try your own method, then; and
- if it does not succeed, test mine. The chance I have offered shall be
- left open to you for three months."
- This was kind. I told her so, and expressed my gratitude. While I was
- speaking, a paroxysm of pain came on. I ministered to her; made the
- necessary applications, according to her directions, and, by the time
- she was relieved, a sort of intimacy was already formed between us. I,
- for my part, had learned from the manner in which she bore this attack,
- that she was a firm, patient woman (patient under physical pain, though
- sometimes perhaps excitable under long mental canker); and she, from
- the good-will with which I succoured her, discovered that she could
- influence my sympathies (such as they were). She sent for me the next
- day; for five or six successive days she claimed my company. Closer
- acquaintance, while it developed both faults and eccentricities,
- opened, at the same time, a view of a character I could respect. Stern
- and even morose as she sometimes was, I could wait on her and sit
- beside her with that calm which always blesses us when we are sensible
- that our manners, presence, contact, please and soothe the persons we
- serve. Even when she scolded me--which she did, now and then, very
- tartly--it was in such a way as did not humiliate, and left no sting;
- it was rather like an irascible mother rating her daughter, than a
- harsh mistress lecturing a dependant: lecture, indeed, she could not,
- though she could occasionally storm. Moreover, a vein of reason ever
- ran through her passion: she was logical even when fierce. Ere long a
- growing sense of attachment began to present the thought of staying
- with her as companion in quite a new light; in another week I had
- agreed to remain.
- Two hot, close rooms thus became my world; and a crippled old woman, my
- mistress, my friend, my all. Her service was my duty--her pain, my
- suffering--her relief, my hope--her anger, my punishment--her regard,
- my reward. I forgot that there were fields, woods, rivers, seas, an
- ever-changing sky outside the steam-dimmed lattice of this sick
- chamber; I was almost content to forget it. All within me became
- narrowed to my lot. Tame and still by habit, disciplined by destiny, I
- demanded no walks in the fresh air; my appetite needed no more than the
- tiny messes served for the invalid. In addition, she gave me the
- originality of her character to study: the steadiness of her virtues, I
- will add, the power of her passions, to admire; the truth of her
- feelings to trust. All these things she had, and for these things I
- clung to her.
- For these things I would have crawled on with her for twenty years, if
- for twenty years longer her life of endurance had been protracted. But
- another decree was written. It seemed I must be stimulated into action.
- I must be goaded, driven, stung, forced to energy. My little morsel of
- human affection, which I prized as if it were a solid pearl, must melt
- in my fingers and slip thence like a dissolving hailstone. My small
- adopted duty must be snatched from my easily contented conscience. I
- had wanted to compromise with Fate: to escape occasional great agonies
- by submitting to a whole life of privation and small pains. Fate would
- not so be pacified; nor would Providence sanction this shrinking sloth
- and cowardly indolence.
- One February night--I remember it well--there came a voice near Miss
- Marchmont's house, heard by every inmate, but translated, perhaps, only
- by one. After a calm winter, storms were ushering in the spring. I had
- put Miss Marchmont to bed; I sat at the fireside sewing. The wind was
- wailing at the windows; it had wailed all day; but, as night deepened,
- it took a new tone--an accent keen, piercing, almost articulate to the
- ear; a plaint, piteous and disconsolate to the nerves, trilled in every
- gust.
- "Oh, hush! hush!" I said in my disturbed mind, dropping my work, and
- making a vain effort to stop my ears against that subtle, searching
- cry. I had heard that very voice ere this, and compulsory observation
- had forced on me a theory as to what it boded. Three times in the
- course of my life, events had taught me that these strange accents in
- the storm--this restless, hopeless cry--denote a coming state of the
- atmosphere unpropitious to life. Epidemic diseases, I believed, were
- often heralded by a gasping, sobbing, tormented, long-lamenting east
- wind. Hence, I inferred, arose the legend of the Banshee. I fancied,
- too, I had noticed--but was not philosopher enough to know whether
- there was any connection between the circumstances--that we often at
- the same time hear of disturbed volcanic action in distant parts of the
- world; of rivers suddenly rushing above their banks; and of strange
- high tides flowing furiously in on low sea-coasts. "Our globe," I had
- said to myself, "seems at such periods torn and disordered; the feeble
- amongst us wither in her distempered breath, rushing hot from steaming
- volcanoes."
- I listened and trembled; Miss Marchmont slept.
- About midnight, the storm in one half-hour fell to a dead calm. The
- fire, which had been burning dead, glowed up vividly. I felt the air
- change, and become keen. Raising blind and curtain, I looked out, and
- saw in the stars the keen sparkle of a sharp frost.
- Turning away, the object that met my eyes was Miss Marchmont awake,
- lifting her head from the pillow, and regarding me with unusual
- earnestness.
- "Is it a fine night?" she asked.
- I replied in the affirmative.
- "I thought so," she said; "for I feel so strong, so well. Raise me. I
- feel young to-night," she continued: "young, light-hearted, and happy.
- What if my complaint be about to take a turn, and I am yet destined to
- enjoy health? It would be a miracle!"
- "And these are not the days of miracles," I thought to myself, and
- wondered to hear her talk so. She went on directing her conversation to
- the past, and seeming to recall its incidents, scenes, and personages,
- with singular vividness.
- "I love Memory to-night," she said: "I prize her as my best friend. She
- is just now giving me a deep delight: she is bringing back to my heart,
- in warm and beautiful life, realities--not mere empty ideas, but what
- were once realities, and that I long have thought decayed, dissolved,
- mixed in with grave-mould. I possess just now the hours, the thoughts,
- the hopes of my youth. I renew the love of my life--its only
- love--almost its only affection; for I am not a particularly good
- woman: I am not amiable. Yet I have had my feelings, strong and
- concentrated; and these feelings had their object; which, in its single
- self, was dear to me, as to the majority of men and women, are all the
- unnumbered points on which they dissipate their regard. While I loved,
- and while I was loved, what an existence I enjoyed! What a glorious
- year I can recall--how bright it comes back to me! What a living
- spring--what a warm, glad summer--what soft moonlight, silvering the
- autumn evenings--what strength of hope under the ice-bound waters and
- frost-hoar fields of that year's winter! Through that year my heart
- lived with Frank's heart. O my noble Frank--my faithful Frank--my
- _good_ Frank! so much better than myself--his standard in all things so
- much higher! This I can now see and say: if few women have suffered as
- I did in his loss, few have enjoyed what I did in his love. It was a
- far better kind of love than common; I had no doubts about it or him:
- it was such a love as honoured, protected, and elevated, no less than
- it gladdened her to whom it was given. Let me now ask, just at this
- moment, when my mind is so strangely clear,--let me reflect why it was
- taken from me? For what crime was I condemned, after twelve months of
- bliss, to undergo thirty years of sorrow?
- "I do not know," she continued after a pause: "I cannot--_cannot_ see
- the reason; yet at this hour I can say with sincerity, what I never
- tried to say before, Inscrutable God, Thy will be done! And at this
- moment I can believe that death will restore me to Frank. I never
- believed it till now."
- "He is dead, then?" I inquired in a low voice.
- "My dear girl," she said, "one happy Christmas Eve I dressed and
- decorated myself, expecting my lover, very soon to be my husband, would
- come that night to visit me. I sat down to wait. Once more I see that
- moment--I see the snow twilight stealing through the window over which
- the curtain was not dropped, for I designed to watch him ride up the
- white walk; I see and feel the soft firelight warming me, playing on my
- silk dress, and fitfully showing me my own young figure in a glass. I
- see the moon of a calm winter night, float full, clear, and cold, over
- the inky mass of shrubbery, and the silvered turf of my grounds. I
- wait, with some impatience in my pulse, but no doubt in my breast. The
- flames had died in the fire, but it was a bright mass yet; the moon was
- mounting high, but she was still visible from the lattice; the clock
- neared ten; he rarely tarried later than this, but once or twice he had
- been delayed so long.
- "Would he for once fail me? No--not even for once; and now he was
- coming--and coming fast--to atone for lost time. 'Frank! you furious
- rider,' I said inwardly, listening gladly, yet anxiously, to his
- approaching gallop, 'you shall be rebuked for this: I will tell you it
- is _my_ neck you are putting in peril; for whatever is yours is, in a
- dearer and tenderer sense, mine.' There he was: I saw him; but I think
- tears were in my eyes, my sight was so confused. I saw the horse; I
- heard it stamp--I saw at least a mass; I heard a clamour. _Was_ it a
- horse? or what heavy, dragging thing was it, crossing, strangely dark,
- the lawn. How could I name that thing in the moonlight before me? or
- how could I utter the feeling which rose in my soul?
- "I could only run out. A great animal--truly, Frank's black
- horse--stood trembling, panting, snorting before the door; a man held
- it, Frank, as I thought.
- "'What is the matter?' I demanded. Thomas, my own servant, answered by
- saying sharply, 'Go into the house, madam.' And then calling to another
- servant, who came hurrying from the kitchen as if summoned by some
- instinct, 'Ruth, take missis into the house directly.' But I was
- kneeling down in the snow, beside something that lay there--something
- that I had seen dragged along the ground--something that sighed, that
- groaned on my breast, as I lifted and drew it to me. He was not dead;
- he was not quite unconscious. I had him carried in; I refused to be
- ordered about and thrust from him. I was quite collected enough, not
- only to be my own mistress but the mistress of others. They had begun
- by trying to treat me like a child, as they always do with people
- struck by God's hand; but I gave place to none except the surgeon; and
- when he had done what he could, I took my dying Frank to myself. He had
- strength to fold me in his arms; he had power to speak my name; he
- heard me as I prayed over him very softly; he felt me as I tenderly and
- fondly comforted him.
- "'Maria,' he said, 'I am dying in Paradise.' He spent his last breath
- in faithful words for me. When the dawn of Christmas morning broke, my
- Frank was with God.
- "And that," she went on, "happened thirty years ago. I have suffered
- since. I doubt if I have made the best use of all my calamities. Soft,
- amiable natures they would have refined to saintliness; of strong, evil
- spirits they would have made demons; as for me, I have only been a
- woe-struck and selfish woman."
- "You have done much good," I said; for she was noted for her liberal
- almsgiving.
- "I have not withheld money, you mean, where it could assuage
- affliction. What of that? It cost me no effort or pang to give. But I
- think from this day I am about to enter a better frame of mind, to
- prepare myself for reunion with Frank. You see I still think of Frank
- more than of God; and unless it be counted that in thus loving the
- creature so much, so long, and so exclusively, I have not at least
- blasphemed the Creator, small is my chance of salvation. What do you
- think, Lucy, of these things? Be my chaplain, and tell me."
- This question I could not answer: I had no words. It seemed as if she
- thought I _had_ answered it.
- "Very right, my child. We should acknowledge God merciful, but not
- always for us comprehensible. We should accept our own lot, whatever it
- be, and try to render happy that of others. Should we not? Well,
- to-morrow I will begin by trying to make you happy. I will endeavour to
- do something for you, Lucy: something that will benefit you when I am
- dead. My head aches now with talking too much; still I am happy. Go to
- bed. The clock strikes two. How late you sit up; or rather how late I,
- in my selfishness, keep you up. But go now; have no more anxiety for
- me; I feel I shall rest well."
- She composed herself as if to slumber. I, too, retired to my crib in a
- closet within her room. The night passed in quietness; quietly her doom
- must at last have come: peacefully and painlessly: in the morning she
- was found without life, nearly cold, but all calm and undisturbed. Her
- previous excitement of spirits and change of mood had been the prelude
- of a fit; one stroke sufficed to sever the thread of an existence so
- long fretted by affliction.
- CHAPTER V.
- TURNING A NEW LEAF.
- My mistress being dead, and I once more alone, I had to look out for a
- new place. About this time I might be a little--a very little--shaken
- in nerves. I grant I was not looking well, but, on the contrary, thin,
- haggard, and hollow-eyed; like a sitter-up at night, like an
- overwrought servant, or a placeless person in debt. In debt, however, I
- was not; nor quite poor; for though Miss Marchmont had not had time to
- benefit me, as, on that last night, she said she intended, yet, after
- the funeral, my wages were duly paid by her second cousin, the heir, an
- avaricious-looking man, with pinched nose and narrow temples, who,
- indeed, I heard long afterwards, turned out a thorough miser: a direct
- contrast to his generous kinswoman, and a foil to her memory, blessed
- to this day by the poor and needy. The possessor, then, of fifteen
- pounds; of health, though worn, not broken, and of a spirit in similar
- condition; I might still; in comparison with many people, be regarded
- as occupying an enviable position. An embarrassing one it was, however,
- at the same time; as I felt with some acuteness on a certain day, of
- which the corresponding one in the next week was to see my departure
- from my present abode, while with another I was not provided.
- In this dilemma I went, as a last and sole resource, to see and consult
- an old servant of our family; once my nurse, now housekeeper at a grand
- mansion not far from Miss Marchmont's. I spent some hours with her; she
- comforted, but knew not how to advise me. Still all inward darkness, I
- left her about twilight; a walk of two miles lay before me; it was a
- clear, frosty night. In spite of my solitude, my poverty, and my
- perplexity, my heart, nourished and nerved with the vigour of a youth
- that had not yet counted twenty-three summers, beat light and not
- feebly. Not feebly, I am sure, or I should have trembled in that lonely
- walk, which lay through still fields, and passed neither village nor
- farmhouse, nor cottage: I should have quailed in the absence of
- moonlight, for it was by the leading of stars only I traced the dim
- path; I should have quailed still more in the unwonted presence of that
- which to-night shone in the north, a moving mystery--the Aurora
- Borealis. But this solemn stranger influenced me otherwise than through
- my fears. Some new power it seemed to bring. I drew in energy with the
- keen, low breeze that blew on its path. A bold thought was sent to my
- mind; my mind was made strong to receive it.
- "Leave this wilderness," it was said to me, "and go out hence."
- "Where?" was the query.
- I had not very far to look; gazing from this country parish in that
- flat, rich middle of England--I mentally saw within reach what I had
- never yet beheld with my bodily eyes: I saw London.
- The next day I returned to the hall, and asking once more to see the
- housekeeper, I communicated to her my plan.
- Mrs. Barrett was a grave, judicious woman, though she knew little more
- of the world than myself; but grave and judicious as she was, she did
- not charge me with being out of my senses; and, indeed, I had a staid
- manner of my own which ere now had been as good to me as cloak and hood
- of hodden grey, since under its favour I had been enabled to achieve
- with impunity, and even approbation, deeds that, if attempted with an
- excited and unsettled air, would in some minds have stamped me as a
- dreamer and zealot.
- The housekeeper was slowly propounding some difficulties, while she
- prepared orange-rind for marmalade, when a child ran past the window
- and came bounding into the room. It was a pretty child, and as it
- danced, laughing, up to me--for we were not strangers (nor, indeed, was
- its mother--a young married daughter of the house--a stranger)--I took
- it on my knee.
- Different as were our social positions now, this child's mother and I
- had been schoolfellows, when I was a girl of ten and she a young lady
- of sixteen; and I remembered her, good-looking, but dull, in a lower
- class than mine.
- I was admiring the boy's handsome dark eyes, when the mother, young
- Mrs. Leigh, entered. What a beautiful and kind-looking woman was the
- good-natured and comely, but unintellectual, girl become! Wifehood and
- maternity had changed her thus, as I have since seen them change others
- even less promising than she. Me she had forgotten. I was changed too,
- though not, I fear, for the better. I made no attempt to recall myself
- to her memory; why should I? She came for her son to accompany her in a
- walk, and behind her followed a nurse, carrying an infant. I only
- mention the incident because, in addressing the nurse, Mrs. Leigh spoke
- French (very bad French, by the way, and with an incorrigibly bad
- accent, again forcibly reminding me of our school-days): and I found
- the woman was a foreigner. The little boy chattered volubly in French
- too. When the whole party were withdrawn, Mrs. Barrett remarked that
- her young lady had brought that foreign nurse home with her two years
- ago, on her return from a Continental excursion; that she was treated
- almost as well as a governess, and had nothing to do but walk out with
- the baby and chatter French with Master Charles; "and," added Mrs.
- Barrett, "she says there are many Englishwomen in foreign families as
- well placed as she."
- I stored up this piece of casual information, as careful housewives
- store seemingly worthless shreds and fragments for which their
- prescient minds anticipate a possible use some day. Before I left my
- old friend, she gave me the address of a respectable old-fashioned inn
- in the City, which, she said, my uncles used to frequent in former days.
- In going to London, I ran less risk and evinced less enterprise than
- the reader may think. In fact, the distance was only fifty miles. My
- means would suffice both to take me there, to keep me a few days, and
- also to bring me back if I found no inducement to stay. I regarded it
- as a brief holiday, permitted for once to work-weary faculties, rather
- than as an adventure of life and death. There is nothing like taking
- all you do at a moderate estimate: it keeps mind and body tranquil;
- whereas grandiloquent notions are apt to hurry both into fever.
- Fifty miles were then a day's journey (for I speak of a time gone by:
- my hair, which, till a late period, withstood the frosts of time, lies
- now, at last white, under a white cap, like snow beneath snow). About
- nine o'clock of a wet February night I reached London.
- My reader, I know, is one who would not thank me for an elaborate
- reproduction of poetic first impressions; and it is well, inasmuch as I
- had neither time nor mood to cherish such; arriving as I did late, on a
- dark, raw, and rainy evening, in a Babylon and a wilderness, of which
- the vastness and the strangeness tried to the utmost any powers of
- clear thought and steady self-possession with which, in the absence of
- more brilliant faculties, Nature might have gifted me.
- When I left the coach, the strange speech of the cabmen and others
- waiting round, seemed to me odd as a foreign tongue. I had never before
- heard the English language chopped up in that way. However, I managed
- to understand and to be understood, so far as to get myself and trunk
- safely conveyed to the old inn whereof I had the address. How
- difficult, how oppressive, how puzzling seemed my flight! In London for
- the first time; at an inn for the first time; tired with travelling;
- confused with darkness; palsied with cold; unfurnished with either
- experience or advice to tell me how to act, and yet--to act obliged.
- Into the hands of common sense I confided the matter. Common sense,
- however, was as chilled and bewildered as all my other faculties, and
- it was only under the spur of an inexorable necessity that she
- spasmodically executed her trust. Thus urged, she paid the porter:
- considering the crisis, I did not blame her too much that she was
- hugely cheated; she asked the waiter for a room; she timorously called
- for the chambermaid; what is far more, she bore, without being wholly
- overcome, a highly supercilious style of demeanour from that young
- lady, when she appeared.
- I recollect this same chambermaid was a pattern of town prettiness and
- smartness. So trim her waist, her cap, her dress--I wondered how they
- had all been manufactured. Her speech had an accent which in its
- mincing glibness seemed to rebuke mine as by authority; her spruce
- attire flaunted an easy scorn to my plain country garb.
- "Well, it can't be helped," I thought, "and then the scene is new, and
- the circumstances; I shall gain good."
- Maintaining a very quiet manner towards this arrogant little maid, and
- subsequently observing the same towards the parsonic-looking,
- black-coated, white-neckclothed waiter, I got civility from them ere
- long. I believe at first they thought I was a servant; but in a little
- while they changed their minds, and hovered in a doubtful state between
- patronage and politeness.
- I kept up well till I had partaken of some refreshment, warmed myself
- by a fire, and was fairly shut into my own room; but, as I sat down by
- the bed and rested my head and arms on the pillow, a terrible
- oppression overcame me. All at once my position rose on me like a
- ghost. Anomalous, desolate, almost blank of hope it stood. What was I
- doing here alone in great London? What should I do on the morrow? What
- prospects had I in life? What friends had I on, earth? Whence did I
- come? Whither should I go? What should I do?
- I wet the pillow, my arms, and my hair, with rushing tears. A dark
- interval of most bitter thought followed this burst; but I did not
- regret the step taken, nor wish to retract it. A strong, vague
- persuasion that it was better to go forward than backward, and that I
- _could_ go forward--that a way, however narrow and difficult, would in
- time open--predominated over other feelings: its influence hushed them
- so far, that at last I became sufficiently tranquil to be able to say
- my prayers and seek my couch. I had just extinguished my candle and
- lain down, when a deep, low, mighty tone swung through the night. At
- first I knew it not; but it was uttered twelve times, and at the
- twelfth colossal hum and trembling knell, I said: "I lie in the shadow
- of St. Paul's."
- CHAPTER VI.
- LONDON.
- The next day was the first of March, and when I awoke, rose, and opened
- my curtain, I saw the risen sun struggling through fog. Above my head,
- above the house-tops, co-elevate almost with the clouds, I saw a
- solemn, orbed mass, dark blue and dim--THE DOME. While I looked, my
- inner self moved; my spirit shook its always-fettered wings half loose;
- I had a sudden feeling as if I, who never yet truly lived, were at last
- about to taste life. In that morning my soul grew as fast as Jonah's
- gourd.
- "I did well to come," I said, proceeding to dress with speed and care.
- "I like the spirit of this great London which I feel around me. Who but
- a coward would pass his whole life in hamlets; and for ever abandon his
- faculties to the eating rust of obscurity?"
- Being dressed, I went down; not travel-worn and exhausted, but tidy and
- refreshed. When the waiter came in with my breakfast, I managed to
- accost him sedately, yet cheerfully; we had ten minutes' discourse, in
- the course of which we became usefully known to each other.
- He was a grey-haired, elderly man; and, it seemed, had lived in his
- present place twenty years. Having ascertained this, I was sure he must
- remember my two uncles, Charles and Wilmot, who, fifteen, years ago,
- were frequent visitors here. I mentioned their names; he recalled them
- perfectly, and with respect. Having intimated my connection, my
- position in his eyes was henceforth clear, and on a right footing. He
- said I was like my uncle Charles: I suppose he spoke truth, because
- Mrs. Barrett was accustomed to say the same thing. A ready and obliging
- courtesy now replaced his former uncomfortably doubtful manner;
- henceforth I need no longer be at a loss for a civil answer to a
- sensible question.
- The street on which my little sitting-room window looked was narrow,
- perfectly quiet, and not dirty: the few passengers were just such as
- one sees in provincial towns: here was nothing formidable; I felt sure
- I might venture out alone.
- Having breakfasted, out I went. Elation and pleasure were in my heart:
- to walk alone in London seemed of itself an adventure. Presently I
- found myself in Paternoster Row--classic ground this. I entered a
- bookseller's shop, kept by one Jones: I bought a little book--a piece
- of extravagance I could ill afford; but I thought I would one day give
- or send it to Mrs. Barrett. Mr. Jones, a dried-in man of business,
- stood behind his desk: he seemed one of the greatest, and I one of the
- happiest of beings.
- Prodigious was the amount of life I lived that morning. Finding myself
- before St. Paul's, I went in; I mounted to the dome: I saw thence
- London, with its river, and its bridges, and its churches; I saw
- antique Westminster, and the green Temple Gardens, with sun upon them,
- and a glad, blue sky, of early spring above; and between them and it,
- not too dense, a cloud of haze.
- Descending, I went wandering whither chance might lead, in a still
- ecstasy of freedom and enjoyment; and I got--I know not how--I got into
- the heart of city life. I saw and felt London at last: I got into the
- Strand; I went up Cornhill; I mixed with the life passing along; I
- dared the perils of crossings. To do this, and to do it utterly alone,
- gave me, perhaps an irrational, but a real pleasure. Since those days,
- I have seen the West End, the parks, the fine squares; but I love the
- city far better. The city seems so much more in earnest: its business,
- its rush, its roar, are such serious things, sights, and sounds. The
- city is getting its living--the West End but enjoying its pleasure. At
- the West End you may be amused, but in the city you are deeply excited.
- Faint, at last, and hungry (it was years since I had felt such healthy
- hunger), I returned, about two o'clock, to my dark, old, and quiet inn.
- I dined on two dishes--a plain joint and vegetables; both seemed
- excellent: how much better than the small, dainty messes Miss
- Marchmont's cook used to send up to my kind, dead mistress and me, and
- to the discussion of which we could not bring half an appetite between
- us! Delightfully tired, I lay down, on three chairs for an hour (the
- room did not boast a sofa). I slept, then I woke and thought for two
- hours.
- My state of mind, and all accompanying circumstances, were just now
- such as most to favour the adoption of a new, resolute, and
- daring--perhaps desperate--line of action. I had nothing to lose.
- Unutterable loathing of a desolate existence past, forbade return. If I
- failed in what I now designed to undertake, who, save myself, would
- suffer? If I died far away from--home, I was going to say, but I had no
- home--from England, then, who would weep?
- I might suffer; I was inured to suffering: death itself had not, I
- thought, those terrors for me which it has for the softly reared. I
- had, ere this, looked on the thought of death with a quiet eye.
- Prepared, then, for any consequences, I formed a project.
- That same evening I obtained from my friend, the waiter, information
- respecting, the sailing of vessels for a certain continental port,
- Boue-Marine. No time, I found, was to be lost: that very night I must
- take my berth. I might, indeed, have waited till the morning before
- going on board, but would not run the risk of being too late.
- "Better take your berth at once, ma'am," counselled the waiter. I
- agreed with him, and having discharged my bill, and acknowledged my
- friend's services at a rate which I now know was princely, and which in
- his eyes must have seemed absurd--and indeed, while pocketing the cash,
- he smiled a faint smile which intimated his opinion of the donor's
- _savoir-faire_--he proceeded to call a coach. To the driver he also
- recommended me, giving at the same time an injunction about taking me,
- I think, to the wharf, and not leaving me to the watermen; which that
- functionary promised to observe, but failed in keeping his promise: on
- the contrary, he offered me up as an oblation, served me as a dripping
- roast, making me alight in the midst of a throng of watermen.
- This was an uncomfortable crisis. It was a dark night. The coachman
- instantly drove off as soon as he had got his fare: the watermen
- commenced a struggle for me and my trunk. Their oaths I hear at this
- moment: they shook my philosophy more than did the night, or the
- isolation, or the strangeness of the scene. One laid hands on my trunk.
- I looked on and waited quietly; but when another laid hands on me, I
- spoke up, shook off his touch, stepped at once into a boat, desired
- austerely that the trunk should be placed beside me--"Just
- there,"--which was instantly done; for the owner of the boat I had
- chosen became now an ally: I was rowed off.
- Black was the river as a torrent of ink; lights glanced on it from the
- piles of building round, ships rocked on its bosom. They rowed me up to
- several vessels; I read by lantern-light their names painted in great
- white letters on a dark ground. "The Ocean," "The Phoenix," "The
- Consort," "The Dolphin," were passed in turns; but "The Vivid" was my
- ship, and it seemed she lay further down.
- Down the sable flood we glided, I thought of the Styx, and of Charon
- rowing some solitary soul to the Land of Shades. Amidst the strange
- scene, with a chilly wind blowing in my face and midnight clouds
- dropping rain above my head; with two rude rowers for companions, whose
- insane oaths still tortured my ear, I asked myself if I was wretched or
- terrified. I was neither. Often in my life have I been far more so
- under comparatively safe circumstances. "How is this?" said I.
- "Methinks I am animated and alert, instead of being depressed and
- apprehensive?" I could not tell how it was.
- "THE VIVID" started out, white and glaring, from the black night at
- last.--"Here you are!" said the waterman, and instantly demanded six
- shillings.
- "You ask too much," I said. He drew off from the vessel and swore he
- would not embark me till I paid it. A young man, the steward as I found
- afterwards, was looking over the ship's side; he grinned a smile in
- anticipation of the coming contest; to disappoint him, I paid the
- money. Three times that afternoon I had given crowns where I should
- have given shillings; but I consoled myself with the reflection, "It is
- the price of experience."
- "They've cheated you!" said the steward exultingly when I got on board.
- I answered phlegmatically that "I knew it," and went below.
- A stout, handsome, and showy woman was in the ladies' cabin. I asked to
- be shown my berth; she looked hard at me, muttered something about its
- being unusual for passengers to come on board at that hour, and seemed
- disposed to be less than civil. What a face she had--so comely--so
- insolent and so selfish!
- "Now that I am on board, I shall certainly stay here," was my answer.
- "I will trouble you to show me my berth."
- She complied, but sullenly. I took off my bonnet, arranged my things,
- and lay down. Some difficulties had been passed through; a sort of
- victory was won: my homeless, anchorless, unsupported mind had again
- leisure for a brief repose. Till the "Vivid" arrived in harbour, no
- further action would be required of me; but then.... Oh! I could not
- look forward. Harassed, exhausted, I lay in a half-trance.
- The stewardess talked all night; not to me but to the young steward,
- her son and her very picture. He passed in and out of the cabin
- continually: they disputed, they quarrelled, they made it up again
- twenty times in the course of the night. She professed to be writing a
- letter home--she said to her father; she read passages of it aloud,
- heeding me no more than a stock--perhaps she believed me asleep.
- Several of these passages appeared to comprise family secrets, and bore
- special reference to one "Charlotte," a younger sister who, from the
- bearing of the epistle, seemed to be on the brink of perpetrating a
- romantic and imprudent match; loud was the protest of this elder lady
- against the distasteful union. The dutiful son laughed his mother's
- correspondence to scorn. She defended it, and raved at him. They were a
- strange pair. She might be thirty-nine or forty, and was buxom and
- blooming as a girl of twenty. Hard, loud, vain and vulgar, her mind and
- body alike seemed brazen and imperishable. I should think, from her
- childhood, she must have lived in public stations; and in her youth
- might very likely have been a barmaid.
- Towards morning her discourse ran on a new theme: "the Watsons," a
- certain expected family-party of passengers, known to her, it appeared,
- and by her much esteemed on account of the handsome profit realized in
- their fees. She said, "It was as good as a little fortune to her
- whenever this family crossed."
- At dawn all were astir, and by sunrise the passengers came on board.
- Boisterous was the welcome given by the stewardess to the "Watsons,"
- and great was the bustle made in their honour. They were four in
- number, two males and two females. Besides them, there was but one
- other passenger--a young lady, whom a gentlemanly, though
- languid-looking man escorted. The two groups offered a marked contrast.
- The Watsons were doubtless rich people, for they had the confidence of
- conscious wealth in their bearing; the women--youthful both of them,
- and one perfectly handsome, as far as physical beauty went--were
- dressed richly, gaily, and absurdly out of character for the
- circumstances. Their bonnets with bright flowers, their velvet cloaks
- and silk dresses, seemed better suited for park or promenade than for a
- damp packet deck. The men were of low stature, plain, fat, and vulgar;
- the oldest, plainest, greasiest, broadest, I soon found was the
- husband--the bridegroom I suppose, for she was very young--of the
- beautiful girl. Deep was my amazement at this discovery; and deeper
- still when I perceived that, instead of being desperately wretched in
- such a union, she was gay even to giddiness. "Her laughter," I
- reflected, "must be the mere frenzy of despair." And even while this
- thought was crossing my mind, as I stood leaning quiet and solitary
- against the ship's side, she came tripping up to me, an utter stranger,
- with a camp-stool in her hand, and smiling a smile of which the levity
- puzzled and startled me, though it showed a perfect set of perfect
- teeth, she offered me the accommodation of this piece of furniture. I
- declined it of course, with all the courtesy I could put into my
- manner; she danced off heedless and lightsome. She must have been
- good-natured; but what had made her marry that individual, who was at
- least as much like an oil-barrel as a man?
- The other lady passenger, with the gentleman-companion, was quite a
- girl, pretty and fair: her simple print dress, untrimmed straw-bonnet
- and large shawl, gracefully worn, formed a costume plain to quakerism:
- yet, for her, becoming enough. Before the gentleman quitted her, I
- observed him throwing a glance of scrutiny over all the passengers, as
- if to ascertain in what company his charge would be left. With a most
- dissatisfied air did his eye turn from the ladies with the gay flowers;
- he looked at me, and then he spoke to his daughter, niece, or whatever
- she was: she also glanced in my direction, and slightly curled her
- short, pretty lip. It might be myself, or it might be my homely
- mourning habit, that elicited this mark of contempt; more likely, both.
- A bell rang; her father (I afterwards knew that it was her father)
- kissed her, and returned to land. The packet sailed.
- Foreigners say that it is only English girls who can thus be trusted to
- travel alone, and deep is their wonder at the daring confidence of
- English parents and guardians. As for the "jeunes Meess," by some their
- intrepidity is pronounced masculine and "inconvenant," others regard
- them as the passive victims of an educational and theological system
- which wantonly dispenses with proper "surveillance." Whether this
- particular young lady was of the sort that can the most safely be left
- unwatched, I do not know: or, rather did not _then_ know; but it soon
- appeared that the dignity of solitude was not to her taste. She paced
- the deck once or twice backwards and forwards; she looked with a little
- sour air of disdain at the flaunting silks and velvets, and the bears
- which thereon danced attendance, and eventually she approached me and
- spoke.
- "Are you fond of a sea-voyage?" was her question.
- I explained that my _fondness_ for a sea-voyage had yet to undergo the
- test of experience; I had never made one.
- "Oh, how charming!" cried she. "I quite envy you the novelty: first
- impressions, you know, are so pleasant. Now I have made so many, I
- quite forget the first: I am quite _blasée_ about the sea and all that."
- I could not help smiling.
- "Why do you laugh at me?" she inquired, with a frank testiness that
- pleased me better than her other talk.
- "Because you are so young to be _blasée_ about anything."
- "I am seventeen" (a little piqued).
- "You hardly look sixteen. Do you like travelling alone?"
- "Bah! I care nothing about it. I have crossed the Channel ten times,
- alone; but then I take care never to be long alone: I always make
- friends."
- "You will scarcely make many friends this voyage, I think" (glancing at
- the Watson-group, who were now laughing and making a great deal of
- noise on deck).
- "Not of those odious men and women," said she: "such people should be
- steerage passengers. Are you going to school?"
- "No."
- "Where are you going?"
- "I have not the least idea--beyond, at least, the port of Boue-Marine."
- She stared, then carelessly ran on:
- "I am going to school. Oh, the number of foreign schools I have been at
- in my life! And yet I am quite an ignoramus. I know nothing--nothing in
- the world--I assure you; except that I play and dance beautifully,--and
- French and German of course I know, to speak; but I can't read or write
- them very well. Do you know they wanted me to translate a page of an
- easy German book into English the other day, and I couldn't do it. Papa
- was so mortified: he says it looks as if M. de Bassompierre--my
- godpapa, who pays all my school-bills--had thrown away all his money.
- And then, in matters of information--in history, geography, arithmetic,
- and so on, I am quite a baby; and I write English so badly--such
- spelling and grammar, they tell me. Into the bargain I have quite
- forgotten my religion; they call me a Protestant, you know, but really
- I am not sure whether I am one or not: I don't well know the difference
- between Romanism and Protestantism. However, I don't in the least care
- for that. I was a Lutheran once at Bonn--dear Bonn!--charming
- Bonn!--where there were so many handsome students. Every nice girl in
- our school had an admirer; they knew our hours for walking out, and
- almost always passed us on the promenade: 'Schönes Mädchen,' we used to
- hear them say. I was excessively happy at Bonn!"
- "And where are you now?" I inquired.
- "Oh! at--_chose_," said she.
- Now, Miss Ginevra Fanshawe (such was this young person's name) only
- substituted this word "_chose_" in temporary oblivion of the real name.
- It was a habit she had: "_chose_" came in at every turn in her
- conversation--the convenient substitute for any missing word in any
- language she might chance at the time to be speaking. French girls
- often do the like; from them she had caught the custom. "_Chose_,"
- however, I found in this instance, stood for Villette--the great
- capital of the great kingdom of Labassecour.
- "Do you like Villette?" I asked.
- "Pretty well. The natives, you know, are intensely stupid and vulgar;
- but there are some nice English families."
- "Are you in a school?"
- "Yes."
- "A good one?"
- "Oh, no! horrid: but I go out every Sunday, and care nothing about the
- _maîtresses_ or the _professeurs_, or the _élèves_, and send lessons
- _au diable_ (one daren't say that in English, you know, but it sounds
- quite right in French); and thus I get on charmingly.... You are
- laughing at me again?"
- "No--I am only smiling at my own thoughts."
- "What are they?" (Without waiting for an answer)--"Now, _do_ tell me
- where you are going."
- "Where Fate may lead me. My business is to earn a living where I can
- find it."
- "To earn!" (in consternation) "are you poor, then?"
- "As poor as Job."
- (After a pause)--"Bah! how unpleasant! But _I_ know what it is to be
- poor: they are poor enough at home--papa and mamma, and all of them.
- Papa is called Captain Fanshawe; he is an officer on half-pay, but
- well-descended, and some of our connections are great enough; but my
- uncle and godpapa De Bassompierre, who lives in France, is the only one
- that helps us: he educates us girls. I have five sisters and three
- brothers. By-and-by we are to marry--rather elderly gentlemen, I
- suppose, with cash: papa and mamma manage that. My sister Augusta is
- married now to a man much older-looking than papa. Augusta is very
- beautiful--not in my style--but dark; her husband, Mr. Davies, had the
- yellow fever in India, and he is still the colour of a guinea; but then
- he is rich, and Augusta has her carriage and establishment, and we all
- think she has done perfectly well. Now, this is better than 'earning a
- living,' as you say. By the way, are you clever?"
- "No--not at all."
- "You can play, sing, speak three or four languages?"
- "By no means."
- "Still I think you are clever" (a pause and a yawn).
- "Shall you be sea-sick?"
- "Shall you?"
- "Oh, immensely! as soon as ever we get in sight of the sea: I begin,
- indeed, to feel it already. I shall go below; and won't I order about
- that fat odious stewardess! Heureusement je sais faire aller mon monde."
- Down she went.
- It was not long before the other passengers followed her: throughout
- the afternoon I remained on deck alone. When I recall the tranquil, and
- even happy mood in which I passed those hours, and remember, at the
- same time, the position in which I was placed; its hazardous--some
- would have said its hopeless--character; I feel that, as--
- Stone walls do not a prison make,
- Nor iron bars--a cage,
- so peril, loneliness, an uncertain future, are not oppressive evils, so
- long as the frame is healthy and the faculties are employed; so long,
- especially, as Liberty lends us her wings, and Hope guides us by her
- star.
- I was not sick till long after we passed Margate, and deep was the
- pleasure I drank in with the sea-breeze; divine the delight I drew from
- the heaving Channel waves, from the sea-birds on their ridges, from the
- white sails on their dark distance, from the quiet yet beclouded sky,
- overhanging all. In my reverie, methought I saw the continent of
- Europe, like a wide dream-land, far away. Sunshine lay on it, making
- the long coast one line of gold; tiniest tracery of clustered town and
- snow-gleaming tower, of woods deep massed, of heights serrated, of
- smooth pasturage and veiny stream, embossed the metal-bright prospect.
- For background, spread a sky, solemn and dark blue, and--grand with
- imperial promise, soft with tints of enchantment--strode from north to
- south a God-bent bow, an arch of hope.
- Cancel the whole of that, if you please, reader--or rather let it
- stand, and draw thence a moral--an alliterative, text-hand copy--
- Day-dreams are delusions of the demon.
- Becoming excessively sick, I faltered down into the cabin.
- Miss Fanshawe's berth chanced to be next mine; and, I am sorry to say,
- she tormented me with an unsparing selfishness during the whole time of
- our mutual distress. Nothing could exceed her impatience and
- fretfulness. The Watsons, who were very sick too, and on whom the
- stewardess attended with shameless partiality, were stoics compared
- with her. Many a time since have I noticed, in persons of Ginevra
- Fanshawe's light, careless temperament, and fair, fragile style of
- beauty, an entire incapacity to endure: they seem to sour in adversity,
- like small beer in thunder. The man who takes such a woman for his
- wife, ought to be prepared to guarantee her an existence all sunshine.
- Indignant at last with her teasing peevishness, I curtly requested her
- "to hold her tongue." The rebuff did her good, and it was observable
- that she liked me no worse for it.
- As dark night drew on, the sea roughened: larger waves swayed strong
- against the vessel's side. It was strange to reflect that blackness and
- water were round us, and to feel the ship ploughing straight on her
- pathless way, despite noise, billow, and rising gale. Articles of
- furniture began to fall about, and it became needful to lash them to
- their places; the passengers grew sicker than ever; Miss Fanshawe
- declared, with groans, that she must die.
- "Not just yet, honey," said the stewardess. "We're just in port."
- Accordingly, in another quarter of an hour, a calm fell upon us all;
- and about midnight the voyage ended.
- I was sorry: yes, I was sorry. My resting-time was past; my
- difficulties--my stringent difficulties--recommenced. When I went on
- deck, the cold air and black scowl of the night seemed to rebuke me for
- my presumption in being where I was: the lights of the foreign sea-port
- town, glimmering round the foreign harbour, met me like unnumbered
- threatening eyes. Friends came on board to welcome the Watsons; a whole
- family of friends surrounded and bore away Miss Fanshawe; I--but I
- dared not for one moment dwell on a comparison of positions.
- Yet where should I go? I must go somewhere. Necessity dare not be nice.
- As I gave the stewardess her fee--and she seemed surprised at receiving
- a coin of more value than, from such a quarter, her coarse calculations
- had probably reckoned on--I said, "Be kind enough to direct me to some
- quiet, respectable inn, where I can go for the night."
- She not only gave me the required direction, but called a
- commissionaire, and bid him take charge of me, and--_not_ my trunk, for
- that was gone to the custom-house.
- I followed this man along a rudely-paved street, lit now by a fitful
- gleam of moonlight; he brought me to the inn. I offered him sixpence,
- which he refused to take; supposing it not enough, I changed it for a
- shilling; but this also he declined, speaking rather sharply, in a
- language to me unknown. A waiter, coming forward into the lamp-lit
- inn-passage, reminded me, in broken English, that my money was foreign
- money, not current here. I gave him a sovereign to change. This little
- matter settled, I asked for a bedroom; supper I could not take: I was
- still sea-sick and unnerved, and trembling all over. How deeply glad I
- was when the door of a very small chamber at length closed on me and my
- exhaustion. Again I might rest: though the cloud of doubt would be as
- thick to-morrow as ever; the necessity for exertion more urgent, the
- peril (of destitution) nearer, the conflict (for existence) more severe.
- CHAPTER VII.
- VILLETTE.
- I awoke next morning with courage revived and spirits refreshed:
- physical debility no longer enervated my judgment; my mind felt prompt
- and clear.
- Just as I finished dressing, a tap came to the door: I said, "Come in,"
- expecting the chambermaid, whereas a rough man walked in and said,--
- "Gif me your keys, Meess."
- "Why?" I asked.
- "Gif!" said he impatiently; and as he half-snatched them from my hand,
- he added, "All right! haf your tronc soon."
- Fortunately it did turn out all right: he was from the custom-house.
- Where to go to get some breakfast I could not tell; but I proceeded,
- not without hesitation, to descend.
- I now observed, what I had not noticed in my extreme weariness last
- night, viz. that this inn was, in fact, a large hotel; and as I slowly
- descended the broad staircase, halting on each step (for I was in
- wonderfully little haste to get down), I gazed at the high ceiling
- above me, at the painted walls around, at the wide windows which filled
- the house with light, at the veined marble I trod (for the steps were
- all of marble, though uncarpeted and not very clean), and contrasting
- all this with the dimensions of the closet assigned to me as a chamber,
- with the extreme modesty of its appointments, I fell into a
- philosophizing mood.
- Much I marvelled at the sagacity evinced by waiters and chamber-maids
- in proportioning the accommodation to the guest. How could inn-servants
- and ship-stewardesses everywhere tell at a glance that I, for instance,
- was an individual of no social significance, and little burdened by
- cash? They _did_ know it evidently: I saw quite well that they all, in
- a moment's calculation, estimated me at about the same fractional
- value. The fact seemed to me curious and pregnant: I would not disguise
- from myself what it indicated, yet managed to keep up my spirits pretty
- well under its pressure.
- Having at last landed in a great hall, full of skylight glare, I made
- my way somehow to what proved to be the coffee-room. It cannot be
- denied that on entering this room I trembled somewhat; felt uncertain,
- solitary, wretched; wished to Heaven I knew whether I was doing right
- or wrong; felt convinced that it was the last, but could not help
- myself. Acting in the spirit and with the calm of a fatalist, I sat
- down at a small table, to which a waiter presently brought me some
- breakfast; and I partook of that meal in a frame of mind not greatly
- calculated to favour digestion. There were many other people
- breakfasting at other tables in the room; I should have felt rather
- more happy if amongst them all I could have seen any women; however,
- there was not one--all present were men. But nobody seemed to think I
- was doing anything strange; one or two gentlemen glanced at me
- occasionally, but none stared obtrusively: I suppose if there was
- anything eccentric in the business, they accounted for it by this word
- "Anglaise!"
- Breakfast over, I must again move--in what direction? "Go to Villette,"
- said an inward voice; prompted doubtless by the recollection of this
- slight sentence uttered carelessly and at random by Miss Fanshawe, as
- she bid me good-by: "I wish you would come to Madame Beck's; she has
- some marmots whom you might look after; she wants an English
- gouvernante, or was wanting one two months ago."
- Who Madame Beck was, where she lived, I knew not; I had asked, but the
- question passed unheard: Miss Fanshawe, hurried away by her friends,
- left it unanswered. I presumed Villette to be her residence--to
- Villette I would go. The distance was forty miles. I knew I was
- catching at straws; but in the wide and weltering deep where I found
- myself, I would have caught at cobwebs. Having inquired about the means
- of travelling to Villette, and secured a seat in the diligence, I
- departed on the strength of this outline--this shadow of a project.
- Before you pronounce on the rashness of the proceeding, reader, look
- back to the point whence I started; consider the desert I had left,
- note how little I perilled: mine was the game where the player cannot
- lose and may win.
- Of an artistic temperament, I deny that I am; yet I must possess
- something of the artist's faculty of making the most of present
- pleasure: that is to say, when it is of the kind to my taste. I enjoyed
- that day, though we travelled slowly, though it was cold, though it
- rained. Somewhat bare, flat, and treeless was the route along which our
- journey lay; and slimy canals crept, like half-torpid green snakes,
- beside the road; and formal pollard willows edged level fields, tilled
- like kitchen-garden beds. The sky, too, was monotonously gray; the
- atmosphere was stagnant and humid; yet amidst all these deadening
- influences, my fancy budded fresh and my heart basked in sunshine.
- These feelings, however, were well kept in check by the secret but
- ceaseless consciousness of anxiety lying in wait on enjoyment, like a
- tiger crouched in a jungle. The breathing of that beast of prey was in
- my ear always; his fierce heart panted close against mine; he never
- stirred in his lair but I felt him: I knew he waited only for sun-down
- to bound ravenous from his ambush.
- I had hoped we might reach Villette ere night set in, and that thus I
- might escape the deeper embarrassment which obscurity seems to throw
- round a first arrival at an unknown bourne; but, what with our slow
- progress and long stoppages--what with a thick fog and small, dense
- rain--darkness, that might almost be felt, had settled on the city by
- the time we gained its suburbs.
- I know we passed through a gate where soldiers were stationed--so much
- I could see by lamplight; then, having left behind us the miry
- Chaussée, we rattled over a pavement of strangely rough and flinty
- surface. At a bureau, the diligence stopped, and the passengers
- alighted. My first business was to get my trunk; a small matter enough,
- but important to me. Understanding that it was best not to be
- importunate or over-eager about luggage, but to wait and watch quietly
- the delivery of other boxes till I saw my own, and then promptly claim
- and secure it, I stood apart; my eye fixed on that part of the vehicle
- in which I had seen my little portmanteau safely stowed, and upon which
- piles of additional bags and boxes were now heaped. One by one, I saw
- these removed, lowered, and seized on.
- I was sure mine ought to be by this time visible: it was not. I had
- tied on the direction-card with a piece of green ribbon, that I might
- know it at a glance: not a fringe or fragment of green was perceptible.
- Every package was removed; every tin-case and brown-paper parcel; the
- oilcloth cover was lifted; I saw with distinct vision that not an
- umbrella, cloak, cane, hat-box or band-box remained.
- And my portmanteau, with my few clothes and little pocket-book
- enclasping the remnant of my fifteen pounds, where were they?
- I ask this question now, but I could not ask it then. I could say
- nothing whatever; not possessing a phrase of _speaking_ French: and it
- was French, and French only, the whole world seemed now gabbling around
- me. _What_ should I do? Approaching the conductor, I just laid my hand
- on his arm, pointed to a trunk, thence to the diligence-roof, and
- tried to express a question with my eyes. He misunderstood me, seized
- the trunk indicated, and was about to hoist it on the vehicle.
- "Let that alone--will you?" said a voice in good English; then, in
- correction, "Qu'est-ce que vous faîtes donc? Cette malle est à moi."
- But I had heard the Fatherland accents; they rejoiced my heart; I
- turned: "Sir," said I, appealing to the stranger, without, in my
- distress, noticing what he was like, "I cannot speak French. May I
- entreat you to ask this man what he has done with my trunk?"
- Without discriminating, for the moment, what sort of face it was to
- which my eyes were raised and on which they were fixed, I felt in its
- expression half-surprise at my appeal and half-doubt of the wisdom of
- interference.
- "_Do_ ask him; I would do as much for you," said I.
- I don't know whether he smiled, but he said in a gentlemanly tone--that
- is to say, a tone not hard nor terrifying,--"What sort of trunk was
- yours?"
- I described it, including in my description the green ribbon. And
- forthwith he took the conductor under hand, and I felt, through all the
- storm of French which followed, that he raked him fore and aft.
- Presently he returned to me.
- "The fellow avers he was overloaded, and confesses that he removed your
- trunk after you saw it put on, and has left it behind at Boue-Marine
- with other parcels; he has promised, however, to forward it to-morrow;
- the day after, therefore, you will find it safe at this bureau."
- "Thank you," said I: but my heart sank.
- Meantime what should I do? Perhaps this English gentleman saw the
- failure of courage in my face; he inquired kindly, "Have you any
- friends in this city?"
- "No, and I don't know where to go."
- There was a little pause, in the course of which, as he turned more
- fully to the light of a lamp above him, I saw that he was a young,
- distinguished, and handsome man; he might be a lord, for anything I
- knew: nature had made him good enough for a prince, I thought. His face
- was very pleasant; he looked high but not arrogant, manly but not
- overbearing. I was turning away, in the deep consciousness of all
- absence of claim to look for further help from such a one as he.
- "Was all your money in your trunk?" he asked, stopping me.
- How thankful was I to be able to answer with truth--"No. I have enough
- in my purse" (for I had near twenty francs) "to keep me at a quiet inn
- till the day after to-morrow; but I am quite a stranger in Villette,
- and don't know the streets and the inns."
- "I can give you the address of such an inn as you want," said he; "and
- it is not far off: with my direction you will easily find it."
- He tore a leaf from his pocket-book, wrote a few words and gave it to
- me. I _did_ think him kind; and as to distrusting him, or his advice,
- or his address, I should almost as soon have thought of distrusting the
- Bible. There was goodness in his countenance, and honour in his bright
- eyes.
- "Your shortest way will be to follow the Boulevard and cross the park,"
- he continued; "but it is too late and too dark for a woman to go
- through the park alone; I will step with you thus far."
- He moved on, and I followed him, through the darkness and the small
- soaking rain. The Boulevard was all deserted, its path miry, the water
- dripping from its trees; the park was black as midnight. In the double
- gloom of trees and fog, I could not see my guide; I could only follow
- his tread. Not the least fear had I: I believe I would have followed
- that frank tread, through continual night, to the world's end.
- "Now," said he, when the park was traversed, "you will go along this
- broad street till you come to steps; two lamps will show you where they
- are: these steps you will descend: a narrower street lies below;
- following that, at the bottom you will find your inn. They speak
- English there, so your difficulties are now pretty well over.
- Good-night."
- "Good-night, sir," said I: "accept my sincerest thanks." And we parted.
- The remembrance of his countenance, which I am sure wore a light not
- unbenignant to the friendless--the sound in my ear of his voice, which
- spoke a nature chivalric to the needy and feeble, as well as the
- youthful and fair--were a sort of cordial to me long after. He was a
- true young English gentleman.
- On I went, hurrying fast through a magnificent street and square, with
- the grandest houses round, and amidst them the huge outline of more
- than one overbearing pile; which might be palace or church--I could not
- tell. Just as I passed a portico, two mustachioed men came suddenly
- from behind the pillars; they were smoking cigars: their dress implied
- pretensions to the rank of gentlemen, but, poor things! they were very
- plebeian in soul. They spoke with insolence, and, fast as I walked,
- they kept pace with me a long way. At last I met a sort of patrol, and
- my dreaded hunters were turned from the pursuit; but they had driven me
- beyond my reckoning: when I could collect my faculties, I no longer
- knew where I was; the staircase I must long since have passed. Puzzled,
- out of breath, all my pulses throbbing in inevitable agitation, I knew
- not where to turn. It was terrible to think of again encountering those
- bearded, sneering simpletons; yet the ground must be retraced, and the
- steps sought out.
- I came at last to an old and worn flight, and, taking it for granted
- that this must be the one indicated, I descended them. The street into
- which they led was indeed narrow, but it contained no inn. On I
- wandered. In a very quiet and comparatively clean and well-paved
- street, I saw a light burning over the door of a rather large house,
- loftier by a story than those round it. _This_ might be the inn at
- last. I hastened on: my knees now trembled under me: I was getting
- quite exhausted.
- No inn was this. A brass-plate embellished the great porte-cochère:
- "Pensionnat de Demoiselles" was the inscription; and beneath, a name,
- "Madame Beck."
- I started. About a hundred thoughts volleyed through my mind in a
- moment. Yet I planned nothing, and considered nothing: I had not time.
- Providence said, "Stop here; this is _your_ inn." Fate took me in her
- strong hand; mastered my will; directed my actions: I rang the
- door-bell.
- While I waited, I would not reflect. I fixedly looked at the
- street-stones, where the door-lamp shone, and counted them and noted
- their shapes, and the glitter of wet on their angles. I rang again.
- They opened at last. A bonne in a smart cap stood before me.
- "May I see Madame Beck?" I inquired.
- I believe if I had spoken French she would not have admitted me; but,
- as I spoke English, she concluded I was a foreign teacher come on
- business connected with the pensionnat, and, even at that late hour,
- she let me in, without a word of reluctance, or a moment of hesitation.
- The next moment I sat in a cold, glittering salon, with porcelain
- stove, unlit, and gilded ornaments, and polished floor. A pendule on
- the mantel-piece struck nine o'clock.
- A quarter of an hour passed. How fast beat every pulse in my frame! How
- I turned cold and hot by turns! I sat with my eyes fixed on the door--a
- great white folding-door, with gilt mouldings: I watched to see a leaf
- move and open. All had been quiet: not a mouse had stirred; the white
- doors were closed and motionless.
- "You ayre Engliss?" said a voice at my elbow. I almost bounded, so
- unexpected was the sound; so certain had I been of solitude.
- No ghost stood beside me, nor anything of spectral aspect; merely a
- motherly, dumpy little woman, in a large shawl, a wrapping-gown, and a
- clean, trim nightcap.
- I said I was English, and immediately, without further prelude, we fell
- to a most remarkable conversation. Madame Beck (for Madame Beck it
- was--she had entered by a little door behind me, and, being shod with
- the shoes of silence, I had heard neither her entrance nor
- approach)--Madame Beck had exhausted her command of insular speech when
- she said, "You ayre Engliss," and she now proceeded to work away
- volubly in her own tongue. I answered in mine. She partly understood
- me, but as I did not at all understand her--though we made together an
- awful clamour (anything like Madame's gift of utterance I had not
- hitherto heard or imagined)--we achieved little progress. She rang, ere
- long, for aid; which arrived in the shape of a "maîtresse," who had
- been partly educated in an Irish convent, and was esteemed a perfect
- adept in the English language. A bluff little personage this maîtresse
- was--Labassecourienne from top to toe: and how she did slaughter the
- speech of Albion! However, I told her a plain tale, which she
- translated. I told her how I had left my own country, intent on
- extending my knowledge, and gaining my bread; how I was ready to turn
- my hand to any useful thing, provided it was not wrong or degrading;
- how I would be a child's-nurse, or a lady's-maid, and would not refuse
- even housework adapted to my strength. Madame heard this; and,
- questioning her countenance, I almost thought the tale won her ear:
- "Il n'y a que les Anglaises pour ces sortes d'entreprises," said she:
- "sont-elles donc intrépides ces femmes là!"
- She asked my name, my age; she sat and looked at me--not pityingly, not
- with interest: never a gleam of sympathy, or a shade of compassion,
- crossed her countenance during the interview. I felt she was not one to
- be led an inch by her feelings: grave and considerate, she gazed,
- consulting her judgment and studying my narrative. A bell rang.
- "Voilà pour la prière du soir!" said she, and rose. Through her
- interpreter, she desired me to depart now, and come back on the morrow;
- but this did not suit me: I could not bear to return to the perils of
- darkness and the street. With energy, yet with a collected and
- controlled manner, I said, addressing herself personally, and not the
- maîtresse: "Be assured, madame, that by instantly securing my services,
- your interests will be served and not injured: you will find me one who
- will wish to give, in her labour, a full equivalent for her wages; and
- if you hire me, it will be better that I should stay here this night:
- having no acquaintance in Villette, and not possessing the language of
- the country, how can I secure a lodging?"
- "It is true," said she; "but at least you can give a reference?"
- "None."
- She inquired after my luggage: I told her when it would arrive. She
- mused. At that moment a man's step was heard in the vestibule, hastily
- proceeding to the outer door. (I shall go on with this part of my tale
- as if I had understood all that passed; for though it was then scarce
- intelligible to me, I heard it translated afterwards).
- "Who goes out now?" demanded Madame Beck, listening to the tread.
- "M. Paul," replied the teacher. "He came this evening to give a reading
- to the first class."
- "The very man I should at this moment most wish to see. Call him."
- The teacher ran to the salon door. M. Paul was summoned. He entered: a
- small, dark and spare man, in spectacles.
- "Mon cousin," began Madame, "I want your opinion. We know your skill in
- physiognomy; use it now. Read that countenance."
- The little man fixed on me his spectacles: A resolute compression of
- the lips, and gathering of the brow, seemed to say that he meant to see
- through me, and that a veil would be no veil for him.
- "I read it," he pronounced.
- "Et qu'en dites vous?"
- "Mais--bien des choses," was the oracular answer.
- "Bad or good?"
- "Of each kind, without doubt," pursued the diviner.
- "May one trust her word?"
- "Are you negotiating a matter of importance?"
- "She wishes me to engage her as bonne or gouvernante; tells a tale full
- of integrity, but gives no reference."
- "She is a stranger?"
- "An Englishwoman, as one may see."
- "She speaks French?"
- "Not a word."
- "She understands it?"
- "No."
- "One may then speak plainly in her presence?"
- "Doubtless."
- He gazed steadily. "Do you need her services?"
- "I could do with them. You know I am disgusted with Madame Svini."
- Still he scrutinized. The judgment, when it at last came, was as
- indefinite as what had gone before it.
- "Engage her. If good predominates in that nature, the action will bring
- its own reward; if evil--eh bien! ma cousine, ce sera toujours une
- bonne oeuvre." And with a bow and a "bon soir," this vague arbiter of
- my destiny vanished.
- And Madame did engage me that very night--by God's blessing I was
- spared the necessity of passing forth again into the lonesome, dreary,
- hostile street.
- CHAPTER VIII.
- MADAME BECK.
- Being delivered into the charge of the maîtresse, I was led through a
- long narrow passage into a foreign kitchen, very clean but very
- strange. It seemed to contain no means of cooking--neither fireplace
- nor oven; I did not understand that the great black furnace which
- filled one corner, was an efficient substitute for these. Surely pride
- was not already beginning its whispers in my heart; yet I felt a sense
- of relief when, instead of being left in the kitchen, as I half
- anticipated, I was led forward to a small inner room termed a
- "cabinet." A cook in a jacket, a short petticoat and sabots, brought my
- supper: to wit--some meat, nature unknown, served in an odd and acid,
- but pleasant sauce; some chopped potatoes, made savoury with, I know
- not what: vinegar and sugar, I think: a tartine, or slice of bread and
- butter, and a baked pear. Being hungry, I ate and was grateful.
- After the "prière du soir," Madame herself came to have another look at
- me. She desired me to follow her up-stairs. Through a series of the
- queerest little dormitories--which, I heard afterwards, had once been
- nuns' cells: for the premises were in part of ancient date--and through
- the oratory--a long, low, gloomy room, where a crucifix hung, pale,
- against the wall, and two tapers kept dim vigils--she conducted me to
- an apartment where three children were asleep in three tiny beds. A
- heated stove made the air of this room oppressive; and, to mend
- matters, it was scented with an odour rather strong than delicate: a
- perfume, indeed, altogether surprising and unexpected under the
- circumstances, being like the combination of smoke with some spirituous
- essence--a smell, in short, of whisky.
- Beside a table, on which flared the remnant of a candle guttering to
- waste in the socket, a coarse woman, heterogeneously clad in a broad
- striped showy silk dress, and a stuff apron, sat in a chair fast
- asleep. To complete the picture, and leave no doubt as to the state of
- matters, a bottle and an empty glass stood at the sleeping beauty's
- elbow.
- Madame contemplated this remarkable tableau with great calm; she
- neither smiled nor scowled; no impress of anger, disgust, or surprise,
- ruffled the equality of her grave aspect; she did not even wake the
- woman! Serenely pointing to a fourth bed, she intimated that it was to
- be mine; then, having extinguished the candle and substituted for it a
- night-lamp, she glided through an inner door, which she left ajar--the
- entrance to her own chamber, a large, well-furnished apartment; as was
- discernible through the aperture.
- My devotions that night were all thanksgiving. Strangely had I been led
- since morning--unexpectedly had I been provided for. Scarcely could I
- believe that not forty-eight hours had elapsed since I left London,
- under no other guardianship than that which protects the
- passenger-bird--with no prospect but the dubious cloud-tracery of hope.
- I was a light sleeper; in the dead of night I suddenly awoke. All was
- hushed, but a white figure stood in the room--Madame in her
- night-dress. Moving without perceptible sound, she visited the three
- children in the three beds; she approached me: I feigned sleep, and she
- studied me long. A small pantomime ensued, curious enough. I daresay
- she sat a quarter of an hour on the edge of my bed, gazing at my face.
- She then drew nearer, bent close over me; slightly raised my cap, and
- turned back the border so as to expose my hair; she looked at my hand
- lying on the bedclothes. This done, she turned to the chair where my
- clothes lay: it was at the foot of the bed. Hearing her touch and lift
- them, I opened my eyes with precaution, for I own I felt curious to see
- how far her taste for research would lead her. It led her a good way:
- every article did she inspect. I divined her motive for this
- proceeding, viz. the wish to form from the garments a judgment
- respecting the wearer, her station, means, neatness, &c. The end was
- not bad, but the means were hardly fair or justifiable. In my dress was
- a pocket; she fairly turned it inside out: she counted the money in my
- purse; she opened a little memorandum-book, coolly perused its
- contents, and took from between the leaves a small plaited lock of Miss
- Marchmont's grey hair. To a bunch of three keys, being those of my
- trunk, desk, and work-box, she accorded special attention: with these,
- indeed, she withdrew a moment to her own room. I softly rose in my bed
- and followed her with my eye: these keys, reader, were not brought back
- till they had left on the toilet of the adjoining room the impress of
- their wards in wax. All being thus done decently and in order, my
- property was returned to its place, my clothes were carefully refolded.
- Of what nature were the conclusions deduced from this scrutiny? Were
- they favourable or otherwise? Vain question. Madame's face of stone
- (for of stone in its present night aspect it looked: it had been human,
- and, as I said before, motherly, in the salon) betrayed no response.
- Her duty done--I felt that in her eyes this business was a duty--she
- rose, noiseless as a shadow: she moved towards her own chamber; at the
- door, she turned, fixing her eye on the heroine of the bottle, who
- still slept and loudly snored. Mrs. Svini (I presume this was Mrs.
- Svini, Anglicé or Hibernicé, Sweeny)--Mrs. Sweeny's doom was in Madame
- Beck's eye--an immutable purpose that eye spoke: Madame's visitations
- for shortcomings might be slow, but they were sure. All this was very
- un-English: truly I was in a foreign land.
- The morrow made me further acquainted with Mrs. Sweeny. It seems she
- had introduced herself to her present employer as an English lady in
- reduced circumstances: a native, indeed, of Middlesex, professing to
- speak the English tongue with the purest metropolitan accent.
- Madame--reliant on her own infallible expedients for finding out the
- truth in time--had a singular intrepidity in hiring service off-hand
- (as indeed seemed abundantly proved in my own case). She received Mrs.
- Sweeny as nursery-governess to her three children. I need hardly
- explain to the reader that this lady was in effect a native of Ireland;
- her station I do not pretend to fix: she boldly declared that she had
- "had the bringing-up of the son and daughter of a marquis." I think
- myself, she might possibly have been a hanger-on, nurse, fosterer, or
- washerwoman, in some Irish family: she spoke a smothered tongue,
- curiously overlaid with mincing cockney inflections. By some means or
- other she had acquired, and now held in possession, a wardrobe of
- rather suspicious splendour--gowns of stiff and costly silk, fitting
- her indifferently, and apparently made for other proportions than those
- they now adorned; caps with real lace borders, and--the chief item in
- the inventory, the spell by which she struck a certain awe through the
- household, quelling the otherwise scornfully disposed teachers and
- servants, and, so long as her broad shoulders _wore_ the folds of that
- majestic drapery, even influencing Madame herself--_a real Indian
- shawl_--"un véritable cachemire," as Madame Beck said, with unmixed
- reverence and amaze. I feel quite sure that without this "cachemire"
- she would not have kept her footing in the pensionnat for two days: by
- virtue of it, and it only, she maintained the same a month.
- But when Mrs. Sweeny knew that I was come to fill her shoes, then it
- was that she declared herself--then did she rise on Madame Beck in her
- full power--then come down on me with her concentrated weight. Madame
- bore this revelation and visitation so well, so stoically, that I for
- very shame could not support it otherwise than with composure. For one
- little moment Madame Beck absented herself from the room; ten minutes
- after, an agent of the police stood in the midst of us. Mrs. Sweeny and
- her effects were removed. Madame's brow had not been ruffled during the
- scene--her lips had not dropped one sharply-accented word.
- This brisk little affair of the dismissal was all settled before
- breakfast: order to march given, policeman called, mutineer expelled;
- "chambre d'enfans" fumigated and cleansed, windows thrown open, and
- every trace of the accomplished Mrs. Sweeny--even to the fine essence
- and spiritual fragrance which gave token so subtle and so fatal of the
- head and front of her offending--was annihilated from the Rue Fossette:
- all this, I say, was done between the moment of Madame Beck's issuing
- like Aurora from her chamber, and that in which she coolly sat down to
- pour out her first cup of coffee.
- About noon, I was summoned to dress Madame. (It appeared my place was
- to be a hybrid between gouvernante and lady's-maid.) Till noon, she
- haunted the house in her wrapping-gown, shawl, and soundless slippers.
- How would the lady-chief of an English school approve this custom?
- The dressing of her hair puzzled me; she had plenty of it: auburn,
- unmixed with grey: though she was forty years old. Seeing my
- embarrassment, she said, "You have not been a femme-de-chambre in your
- own country?" And taking the brush from my hand, and setting me aside,
- not ungently or disrespectfully, she arranged it herself. In performing
- other offices of the toilet, she half-directed, half-aided me, without
- the least display of temper or impatience. N.B.--That was the first and
- last time I was required to dress her. Henceforth, on Rosine, the
- portress, devolved that duty.
- When attired, Madame Beck appeared a personage of a figure rather short
- and stout, yet still graceful in its own peculiar way; that is, with
- the grace resulting from proportion of parts. Her complexion was fresh
- and sanguine, not too rubicund; her eye, blue and serene; her dark silk
- dress fitted her as a French sempstress alone can make a dress fit; she
- looked well, though a little bourgeoise; as bourgeoise, indeed, she
- was. I know not what of harmony pervaded her whole person; and yet her
- face offered contrast, too: its features were by no means such as are
- usually seen in conjunction with a complexion of such blended freshness
- and repose: their outline was stern: her forehead was high but narrow;
- it expressed capacity and some benevolence, but no expanse; nor did her
- peaceful yet watchful eye ever know the fire which is kindled in the
- heart or the softness which flows thence. Her mouth was hard: it could
- be a little grim; her lips were thin. For sensibility and genius, with
- all their tenderness and temerity, I felt somehow that Madame would be
- the right sort of Minos in petticoats.
- In the long run, I found she was something else in petticoats too. Her
- name was Modeste Maria Beck, née Kint: it ought to have been Ignacia.
- She was a charitable woman, and did a great deal of good. There never
- was a mistress whose rule was milder. I was told that she never once
- remonstrated with the intolerable Mrs. Sweeny, despite her tipsiness,
- disorder, and general neglect; yet Mrs. Sweeny had to go the moment her
- departure became convenient. I was told, too, that neither masters nor
- teachers were found fault with in that establishment; yet both masters
- and teachers were often changed: they vanished and others filled their
- places, none could well explain how.
- The establishment was both a pensionnat and an externat: the externes
- or day-pupils exceeded one hundred in number; the boarders were about a
- score. Madame must have possessed high administrative powers: she ruled
- all these, together with four teachers, eight masters, six servants,
- and three children, managing at the same time to perfection the pupils'
- parents and friends; and that without apparent effort; without bustle,
- fatigue, fever, or any symptom of undue, excitement: occupied she
- always was--busy, rarely. It is true that Madame had her own system for
- managing and regulating this mass of machinery; and a very pretty
- system it was: the reader has seen a specimen of it, in that small
- affair of turning my pocket inside out, and reading my private
- memoranda. "Surveillance," "espionage,"--these were her watchwords.
- Still, Madame knew what honesty was, and liked it--that is, when it did
- not obtrude its clumsy scruples in the way of her will and interest.
- She had a respect for "Angleterre;" and as to "les Anglaises," she
- would have the women of no other country about her own children, if she
- could help it.
- Often in the evening, after she had been plotting and counter-plotting,
- spying and receiving the reports of spies all day, she would come up to
- my room--a trace of real weariness on her brow--and she would sit down
- and listen while the children said their little prayers to me in
- English: the Lord's Prayer, and the hymn beginning "Gentle Jesus,"
- these little Catholics were permitted to repeat at my knee; and, when I
- had put them to bed, she would talk to me (I soon gained enough French
- to be able to understand, and even answer her) about England and
- Englishwomen, and the reasons for what she was pleased to term their
- superior intelligence, and more real and reliable probity. Very good
- sense she often showed; very sound opinions she often broached: she
- seemed to know that keeping girls in distrustful restraint, in blind
- ignorance, and under a surveillance that left them no moment and no
- corner for retirement, was not the best way to make them grow up honest
- and modest women; but she averred that ruinous consequences would ensue
- if any other method were tried with continental children: they were so
- accustomed to restraint, that relaxation, however guarded, would be
- misunderstood and fatally presumed on. She was sick, she would declare,
- of the means she had to use, but use them she must; and after
- discoursing, often with dignity and delicacy, to me, she would move
- away on her "souliers de silence," and glide ghost-like through the
- house, watching and spying everywhere, peering through every keyhole,
- listening behind every door.
- After all, Madame's system was not bad--let me do her justice. Nothing
- could be better than all her arrangements for the physical well-being
- of her scholars. No minds were overtasked: the lessons were well
- distributed and made incomparably easy to the learner; there was a
- liberty of amusement, and a provision for exercise which kept the girls
- healthy; the food was abundant and good: neither pale nor puny faces
- were anywhere to be seen in the Rue Fossette. She never grudged a
- holiday; she allowed plenty of time for sleeping, dressing, washing,
- eating; her method in all these matters was easy, liberal, salutary,
- and rational: many an austere English school-mistress would do vastly
- well to imitate her--and I believe many would be glad to do so, if
- exacting English parents would let them.
- As Madame Beck ruled by espionage, she of course had her staff of
- spies: she perfectly knew the quality of the tools she used, and while
- she would not scruple to handle the dirtiest for a dirty
- occasion--flinging this sort from her like refuse rind, after the
- orange has been duly squeezed--I have known her fastidious in seeking
- pure metal for clean uses; and when once a bloodless and rustless
- instrument was found, she was careful of the prize, keeping it in silk
- and cotton-wool. Yet, woe be to that man or woman who relied on her one
- inch beyond the point where it was her interest to be trustworthy:
- interest was the master-key of Madame's nature--the mainspring of her
- motives--the alpha and omega of her life. I have seen her _feelings_
- appealed to, and I have smiled in half-pity, half-scorn at the
- appellants. None ever gained her ear through that channel, or swayed
- her purpose by that means. On the contrary, to attempt to touch her
- heart was the surest way to rouse her antipathy, and to make of her a
- secret foe. It proved to her that she had no heart to be touched: it
- reminded her where she was impotent and dead. Never was the distinction
- between charity and mercy better exemplified than in her. While devoid
- of sympathy, she had a sufficiency of rational benevolence: she would
- give in the readiest manner to people she had never seen--rather,
- however, to classes than to individuals. "Pour les pauvres," she opened
- her purse freely--against _the poor man_, as a rule, she kept it
- closed. In philanthropic schemes for the benefit of society at large
- she took a cheerful part; no private sorrow touched her: no force or
- mass of suffering concentrated in one heart had power to pierce hers.
- Not the agony in Gethsemane, not the death on Calvary, could have wrung
- from her eyes one tear.
- I say again, Madame was a very great and a very capable woman. That
- school offered her for her powers too limited a sphere; she ought to
- have swayed a nation: she should have been the leader of a turbulent
- legislative assembly. Nobody could have browbeaten her, none irritated
- her nerves, exhausted her patience, or over-reached her astuteness. In
- her own single person, she could have comprised the duties of a first
- minister and a superintendent of police. Wise, firm, faithless; secret,
- crafty, passionless; watchful and inscrutable; acute and
- insensate--withal perfectly decorous--what more could be desired?
- The sensible reader will not suppose that I gained all the knowledge
- here condensed for his benefit in one month, or in one half-year. No!
- what I saw at first was the thriving outside of a large and flourishing
- educational establishment. Here was a great house, full of healthy,
- lively girls, all well-dressed and many of them handsome, gaining
- knowledge by a marvellously easy method, without painful exertion or
- useless waste of spirits; not, perhaps, making very rapid progress in
- anything; taking it easy, but still always employed, and never
- oppressed. Here was a corps of teachers and masters, more stringently
- tasked, as all the real head-labour was to be done by them, in order to
- save the pupils, yet having their duties so arranged that they relieved
- each other in quick succession whenever the work was severe: here, in
- short, was a foreign school; of which the life, movement, and variety
- made it a complete and most charming contrast to many English
- institutions of the same kind.
- Behind the house was a large garden, and, in summer, the pupils almost
- lived out of doors amongst the rose-bushes and the fruit-trees. Under
- the vast and vine-draped berceau, Madame would take her seat on summer
- afternoons, and send for the classes, in turns, to sit round her and
- sew and read. Meantime, masters came and went, delivering short and
- lively lectures, rather than lessons, and the pupils made notes of
- their instructions, or did _not_ make them--just as inclination
- prompted; secure that, in case of neglect, they could copy the notes of
- their companions. Besides the regular monthly _jours de sortie_, the
- Catholic fête-days brought a succession of holidays all the year round;
- and sometimes on a bright summer morning, or soft summer evening; the
- boarders were taken out for a long walk into the country, regaled with
- _gaufres_ and _vin blanc_, or new milk and _pain bis_, or _pistolets au
- beurre_ (rolls) and coffee. All this seemed very pleasant, and Madame
- appeared goodness itself; and the teachers not so bad but they might be
- worse; and the pupils, perhaps, a little noisy and rough, but types of
- health and glee.
- Thus did the view appear, seen through the enchantment of distance; but
- there came a time when distance was to melt for me--when I was to be
- called down from my watch-tower of the nursery, whence I had hitherto
- made my observations, and was to be compelled into closer intercourse
- with this little world of the Rue Fossette.
- I was one day sitting up-stairs, as usual, hearing the children their
- English lessons, and at the same time turning a silk dress for Madame,
- when she came sauntering into the room with that absorbed air and brow
- of hard thought she sometimes wore, and which made her look so little
- genial. Dropping into a seat opposite mine, she remained some minutes
- silent. Désirée, the eldest girl, was reading to me some little essay
- of Mrs. Barbauld's, and I was making her translate currently from
- English to French as she proceeded, by way of ascertaining that she
- comprehended what she read: Madame listened.
- Presently, without preface or prelude, she said, almost in the tone of
- one making an accusation, "Meess, in England you were a governess?"
- "No, Madame," said I smiling, "you are mistaken."
- "Is this your first essay at teaching--this attempt with my children?"
- I assured her it was. Again she became silent; but looking up, as I
- took a pin from the cushion, I found myself an object of study: she
- held me under her eye; she seemed turning me round in her
- thoughts--measuring my fitness for a purpose, weighing my value in a
- plan. Madame had, ere this, scrutinized all I had, and I believe she
- esteemed herself cognizant of much that I was; but from that day, for
- the space of about a fortnight, she tried me by new tests. She listened
- at the nursery door when I was shut in with the children; she followed
- me at a cautious distance when I walked out with them, stealing within
- ear-shot whenever the trees of park or boulevard afforded a sufficient
- screen: a strict preliminary process having thus been observed, she
- made a move forward.
- One morning, coming on me abruptly, and with the semblance of hurry,
- she said she found herself placed in a little dilemma. Mr. Wilson, the
- English master, had failed to come at his hour, she feared he was ill;
- the pupils were waiting in classe; there was no one to give a lesson;
- should I, for once, object to giving a short dictation exercise, just
- that the pupils might not have it to say they had missed their English
- lesson?
- "In classe, Madame?" I asked.
- "Yes, in classe: in the second division."
- "Where there are sixty pupils," said I; for I knew the number, and with
- my usual base habit of cowardice, I shrank into my sloth like a snail
- into its shell, and alleged incapacity and impracticability as a
- pretext to escape action. If left to myself, I should infallibly have
- let this chance slip. Inadventurous, unstirred by impulses of practical
- ambition, I was capable of sitting twenty years teaching infants the
- hornbook, turning silk dresses and making children's frocks. Not that
- true contentment dignified this infatuated resignation: my work had
- neither charm for my taste, nor hold on my interest; but it seemed to
- me a great thing to be without heavy anxiety, and relieved from
- intimate trial: the negation of severe suffering was the nearest
- approach to happiness I expected to know. Besides, I seemed to hold two
- lives--the life of thought, and that of reality; and, provided the
- former was nourished with a sufficiency of the strange necromantic joys
- of fancy, the privileges of the latter might remain limited to daily
- bread, hourly work, and a roof of shelter.
- "Come," said Madame, as I stooped more busily than ever over the
- cutting-out of a child's pinafore, "leave that work."
- "But Fifine wants it, Madame."
- "Fifine must want it, then, for I want _you_."
- And as Madame Beck did really want and was resolved to have me--as she
- had long been dissatisfied with the English master, with his
- shortcomings in punctuality, and his careless method of tuition--as,
- too, _she_ did not lack resolution and practical activity, whether _I_
- lacked them or not--she, without more ado, made me relinquish thimble
- and needle; my hand was taken into hers, and I was conducted
- down-stairs. When we reached the carré, a large square hall between the
- dwelling-house and the pensionnat, she paused, dropped my hand, faced,
- and scrutinized me. I was flushed, and tremulous from head to foot:
- tell it not in Gath, I believe I was crying. In fact, the difficulties
- before me were far from being wholly imaginary; some of them were real
- enough; and not the least substantial lay in my want of mastery over
- the medium through which I should be obliged to teach. I had, indeed,
- studied French closely since my arrival in Villette; learning its
- practice by day, and its theory in every leisure moment at night, to as
- late an hour as the rule of the house would allow candle-light; but I
- was far from yet being able to trust my powers of correct oral
- expression.
- "Dîtes donc," said Madame sternly, "vous sentez vous réellement trop
- faible?"
- I might have said "Yes," and gone back to nursery obscurity, and there,
- perhaps, mouldered for the rest of my life; but looking up at Madame, I
- saw in her countenance a something that made me think twice ere I
- decided. At that instant she did not wear a woman's aspect, but rather
- a man's. Power of a particular kind strongly limned itself in all her
- traits, and that power was not my kind of power: neither sympathy, nor
- congeniality, nor submission, were the emotions it awakened. I
- stood--not soothed, nor won, nor overwhelmed. It seemed as if a
- challenge of strength between opposing gifts was given, and I suddenly
- felt all the dishonour of my diffidence--all the pusillanimity of my
- slackness to aspire.
- "Will you," she said, "go backward or forward?" indicating with her
- hand, first, the small door of communication with the dwelling-house,
- and then the great double portals of the classes or schoolrooms.
- "En avant," I said.
- "But," pursued she, cooling as I warmed, and continuing the hard look,
- from very antipathy to which I drew strength and determination, "can
- you face the classes, or are you over-excited?"
- She sneered slightly in saying this: nervous excitability was not much
- to Madame's taste.
- "I am no more excited than this stone," I said, tapping the flag with
- my toe: "or than you," I added, returning her look.
- "Bon! But let me tell you these are not quiet, decorous, English girls
- you are going to encounter. Ce sont des Labassecouriennes, rondes,
- franches, brusques, et tant soit peu rebelles."
- I said: "I know; and I know, too, that though I have studied French
- hard since I came here, yet I still speak it with far too much
- hesitation--too little accuracy to be able to command their respect I
- shall make blunders that will lay me open to the scorn of the most
- ignorant. Still I mean to give the lesson."
- "They always throw over timid teachers," said she.
- "I know that too, Madame; I have heard how they rebelled against and
- persecuted Miss Turner"--a poor friendless English teacher, whom Madame
- had employed, and lightly discarded; and to whose piteous history I was
- no stranger.
- "C'est vrai," said she, coolly. "Miss Turner had no more command over
- them than a servant from the kitchen would have had. She was weak and
- wavering; she had neither tact nor intelligence, decision nor dignity.
- Miss Turner would not do for these girls at all."
- I made no reply, but advanced to the closed schoolroom door.
- "You will not expect aid from me, or from any one," said Madame. "That
- would at once set you down as incompetent for your office."
- I opened the door, let her pass with courtesy, and followed her. There
- were three schoolrooms, all large. That dedicated to the second
- division, where I was to figure, was considerably the largest, and
- accommodated an assemblage more numerous, more turbulent, and
- infinitely more unmanageable than the other two. In after days, when I
- knew the ground better, I used to think sometimes (if such a comparison
- may be permitted), that the quiet, polished, tame first division was to
- the robust, riotous, demonstrative second division, what the English
- House of Lords is to the House of Commons.
- The first glance informed me that many of the pupils were more than
- girls--quite young women; I knew that some of them were of noble family
- (as nobility goes in Labassecour), and I was well convinced that not
- one amongst them was ignorant of my position in Madame's household. As
- I mounted the estràde (a low platform, raised a step above the
- flooring), where stood the teacher's chair and desk, I beheld opposite
- to me a row of eyes and brows that threatened stormy weather--eyes full
- of an insolent light, and brows hard and unblushing as marble. The
- continental "female" is quite a different being to the insular "female"
- of the same age and class: I never saw such eyes and brows in England.
- Madame Beck introduced me in one cool phrase, sailed from the room, and
- left me alone in my glory.
- I shall never forget that first lesson, nor all the under-current of
- life and character it opened up to me. Then first did I begin rightly
- to see the wide difference that lies between the novelist's and poet's
- ideal "jeune fille" and the said "jeune fille" as she really is.
- It seems that three titled belles in the first row had sat down
- predetermined that a _bonne d'enfants_ should not give them lessons in
- English. They knew they had succeeded in expelling obnoxious teachers
- before now; they knew that Madame would at any time throw overboard a
- professeur or maitresse who became unpopular with the school--that she
- never assisted a weak official to retain his place--that if he had not
- strength to fight, or tact to win his way, down he went: looking at
- "Miss Snowe," they promised themselves an easy victory.
- Mesdemoiselles Blanche, Virginie, and Angélique opened the campaign by
- a series of titterings and whisperings; these soon swelled into murmurs
- and short laughs, which the remoter benches caught up and echoed more
- loudly. This growing revolt of sixty against one, soon became
- oppressive enough; my command of French being so limited, and exercised
- under such cruel constraint.
- Could I but have spoken in my own tongue, I felt as if I might have
- gained a hearing; for, in the first place, though I knew I looked a
- poor creature, and in many respects actually was so, yet nature had
- given me a voice that could make itself heard, if lifted in excitement
- or deepened by emotion. In the second place, while I had no flow, only
- a hesitating trickle of language, in ordinary circumstances, yet--under
- stimulus such as was now rife through the mutinous mass--I could, in
- English, have rolled out readily phrases stigmatizing their proceedings
- as such proceedings deserved to be stigmatized; and then with some
- sarcasm, flavoured with contemptuous bitterness for the ringleaders,
- and relieved with easy banter for the weaker but less knavish
- followers, it seemed to me that one might possibly get command over
- this wild herd, and bring them into training, at least. All I could now
- do was to walk up to Blanche--Mademoiselle de Melcy, a young
- baronne--the eldest, tallest, handsomest, and most vicious--stand
- before her desk, take from under her hand her exercise-book, remount
- the estrade, deliberately read the composition, which I found very
- stupid, and, as deliberately, and in the face of the whole school, tear
- the blotted page in two.
- This action availed to draw attention and check noise. One girl alone,
- quite in the background, persevered in the riot with undiminished
- energy. I looked at her attentively. She had a pale face, hair like
- night, broad strong eyebrows, decided features, and a dark, mutinous,
- sinister eye: I noted that she sat close by a little door, which door,
- I was well aware, opened into a small closet where books were kept. She
- was standing up for the purpose of conducting her clamour with freer
- energies. I measured her stature and calculated her strength. She seemed
- both tall and wiry; but, so the conflict were brief and the attack
- unexpected, I thought I might manage her.
- Advancing up the room, looking as cool and careless as I possibly
- could, in short, _ayant l'air de rien_, I slightly pushed the door and
- found it was ajar. In an instant, and with sharpness, I had turned on
- her. In another instant she occupied the closet, the door was shut, and
- the key in my pocket.
- It so happened that this girl, Dolores by name, and a Catalonian by
- race, was the sort of character at once dreaded and hated by all her
- associates; the act of summary justice above noted proved popular:
- there was not one present but, in her heart, liked to see it done. They
- were stilled for a moment; then a smile--not a laugh--passed from desk
- to desk: then--when I had gravely and tranquilly returned to the
- estrade, courteously requested silence, and commenced a dictation as if
- nothing at all had happened--the pens travelled peacefully over the
- pages, and the remainder of the lesson passed in order and industry.
- "C'est bien," said Madame Beck, when I came out of class, hot and a
- little exhausted. "Ca ira."
- She had been listening and peeping through a spy-hole the whole time.
- From that day I ceased to be nursery governess, and became English
- teacher. Madame raised my salary; but she got thrice the work out of me
- she had extracted from Mr. Wilson, at half the expense.
- CHAPTER IX.
- ISIDORE.
- My time was now well and profitably filled up. What with teaching
- others and studying closely myself, I had hardly a spare moment. It was
- pleasant. I felt I was getting, on; not lying the stagnant prey of
- mould and rust, but polishing my faculties and whetting them to a keen
- edge with constant use. Experience of a certain kind lay before me, on
- no narrow scale. Villette is a cosmopolitan city, and in this school
- were girls of almost every European nation, and likewise of very varied
- rank in life. Equality is much practised in Labassecour; though not
- republican in form, it is nearly so in substance, and at the desks of
- Madame Beck's establishment the young countess and the young bourgeoise
- sat side by side. Nor could you always by outward indications decide
- which was noble and which plebeian; except that, indeed, the latter had
- often franker and more courteous manners, while the former bore away
- the bell for a delicately-balanced combination of insolence and deceit.
- In the former there was often quick French blood mixed with the
- marsh-phlegm: I regret to say that the effect of this vivacious fluid
- chiefly appeared in the oilier glibness with which flattery and fiction
- ran from the tongue, and in a manner lighter and livelier, but quite
- heartless and insincere.
- To do all parties justice, the honest aboriginal Labassecouriennes had
- an hypocrisy of their own, too; but it was of a coarse order, such as
- could deceive few. Whenever a lie was necessary for their occasions,
- they brought it out with a careless ease and breadth altogether
- untroubled by the rebuke of conscience. Not a soul in Madame Beck's
- house, from the scullion to the directress herself, but was above being
- ashamed of a lie; they thought nothing of it: to invent might not be
- precisely a virtue, but it was the most venial of faults. "J'ai menti
- plusieurs fois," formed an item of every girl's and woman's monthly
- confession: the priest heard unshocked, and absolved unreluctant. If
- they had missed going to mass, or read a chapter of a novel, that was
- another thing: these were crimes whereof rebuke and penance were the
- unfailing weed.
- While yet but half-conscious of this state of things, and unlearned in
- its results, I got on in my new sphere very well. After the first few
- difficult lessons, given amidst peril and on the edge of a moral
- volcano that rumbled under my feet and sent sparks and hot fumes into
- my eyes, the eruptive spirit seemed to subside, as far as I was
- concerned. My mind was a good deal bent on success: I could not bear
- the thought of being baffled by mere undisciplined disaffection and
- wanton indocility, in this first attempt to get on in life. Many hours
- of the night I used to lie awake, thinking what plan I had best adopt
- to get a reliable hold on these mutineers, to bring this stiff-necked
- tribe under permanent influence. In, the first place, I saw plainly
- that aid in no shape was to be expected from Madame: her righteous plan
- was to maintain an unbroken popularity with the pupils, at any and
- every cost of justice or comfort to the teachers. For a teacher to seek
- her alliance in any crisis of insubordination was equivalent to
- securing her own expulsion. In intercourse with her pupils, Madame only
- took to herself what was pleasant, amiable, and recommendatory; rigidly
- requiring of her lieutenants sufficiency for every annoying crisis,
- where to act with adequate promptitude was to be unpopular. Thus, I
- must look only to myself.
- Imprimis--it was clear as the day that this swinish multitude were not
- to be driven by force. They were to be humoured, borne with very
- patiently: a courteous though sedate manner impressed them; a very rare
- flash of raillery did good. Severe or continuous mental application
- they could not, or would not, bear: heavy demand on the memory, the
- reason, the attention, they rejected point-blank. Where an English girl
- of not more than average capacity and docility would quietly take a
- theme and bind herself to the task of comprehension and mastery, a
- Labassecourienne would laugh in your face, and throw it back to you
- with the phrase,--"Dieu, que c'est difficile! Je n'en veux pas. Cela
- m'ennuie trop."
- A teacher who understood her business would take it back at once,
- without hesitation, contest, or expostulation--proceed with even
- exaggerated care to smoothe every difficulty, to reduce it to the level
- of their understandings, return it to them thus modified, and lay on
- the lash of sarcasm with unsparing hand. They would feel the sting,
- perhaps wince a little under it; but they bore no malice against this
- sort of attack, provided the sneer was not _sour_, but _hearty_, and
- that it held well up to them, in a clear, light, and bold type, so that
- she who ran might read, their incapacity, ignorance, and sloth. They
- would riot for three additional lines to a lesson; but I never knew
- them rebel against a wound given to their self-respect: the little they
- had of that quality was trained to be crushed, and it rather liked the
- pressure of a firm heel than otherwise.
- By degrees, as I acquired fluency and freedom in their language, and
- could make such application of its more nervous idioms as suited their
- case, the elder and more intelligent girls began rather to like me in
- their way: I noticed that whenever a pupil had been roused to feel in
- her soul the stirring of worthy emulation, or the quickening of honest
- shame, from that date she was won. If I could but once make their
- (usually large) ears burn under their thick glossy hair, all was
- comparatively well. By-and-by bouquets began to be laid on my desk in
- the morning; by way of acknowledgment for this little foreign
- attention, I used sometimes to walk with a select few during
- recreation. In the course of conversation it befel once or twice that I
- made an unpremeditated attempt to rectify some of their singularly
- distorted notions of principle; especially I expressed my ideas of the
- evil and baseness of a lie. In an unguarded moment, I chanced to say
- that, of the two errors; I considered falsehood worse than an
- occasional lapse in church-attendance. The poor girls were tutored to
- report in Catholic ears whatever the Protestant teacher said. An
- edifying consequence ensued. Something--an unseen, an indefinite, a
- nameless--something stole between myself and these my best pupils: the
- bouquets continued to be offered, but conversation thenceforth became
- impracticable. As I paced the alleys or sat in the berceau, a girl
- never came to my right hand but a teacher, as if by magic, appeared at
- my left. Also, wonderful to relate, Madame's shoes of silence brought
- her continually to my back, as quick, as noiseless and unexpected, as
- some wandering zephyr.
- The opinion of my Catholic acquaintance concerning my spiritual
- prospects was somewhat naïvely expressed to me on one occasion. A
- pensionnaire, to whom I had rendered some little service, exclaimed one
- day as she sat beside me: "Mademoiselle, what a pity you are a
- Protestant!"
- "Why, Isabelle?"
- "Parceque, quand vous serez morte--vous brûlerez tout de suite dans
- l'Enfer."
- "Croyez-vous?"
- "Certainement que j'y crois: tout le monde le sait; et d'ailleurs le
- prêtre me l'a dit."
- Isabelle was an odd, blunt little creature. She added, _sotto voce_:
- "Pour assurer votre salut là-haut, on ferait bien de vous brûler toute
- vive ici-bas."
- I laughed, as, indeed, it was impossible to do otherwise.
- * * * * *
- Has the reader forgotten Miss Ginevra Fanshawe? If so, I must be
- allowed to re-introduce that young lady as a thriving pupil of Madame
- Beck's; for such she was. On her arrival in the Rue Fossette, two or
- three days after my sudden settlement there, she encountered me with
- very little surprise. She must have had good blood in her veins, for
- never was any duchess more perfectly, radically, unaffectedly
- _nonchalante_ than she: a weak, transient amaze was all she knew of the
- sensation of wonder. Most of her other faculties seemed to be in the
- same flimsy condition: her liking and disliking, her love and hate,
- were mere cobweb and gossamer; but she had one thing about her that
- seemed strong and durable enough, and that was--her selfishness.
- She was not proud; and--_bonne d'enfants_ as I was--she would forthwith
- have made of me a sort of friend and confidant. She teased me with a
- thousand vapid complaints about school-quarrels and household economy:
- the cookery was not to her taste; the people about her, teachers and
- pupils, she held to be despicable, because they were foreigners. I bore
- with her abuse of the Friday's salt fish and hard eggs--with her
- invective against the soup, the bread, the coffee--with some patience
- for a time; but at last, wearied by iteration, I turned crusty, and put
- her to rights: a thing I ought to have done in the very beginning, for
- a salutary setting down always agreed with her.
- Much longer had I to endure her demands on me in the way of work. Her
- wardrobe, so far as concerned articles of external wear, was well and
- elegantly supplied; but there were other habiliments not so carefully
- provided: what she had, needed frequent repair. She hated
- needle-drudgery herself, and she would bring her hose, &c. to me in
- heaps, to be mended. A compliance of some weeks threatening to result
- in the establishment of an intolerable bore--I at last distinctly told
- her she must make up her mind to mend her own garments. She cried on
- receiving this information, and accused me of having ceased to be her
- friend; but I held by my decision, and let the hysterics pass as they
- could.
- Notwithstanding these foibles, and various others needless to
- mention--but by no means of a refined or elevating character--how
- pretty she was! How charming she looked, when she came down on a sunny
- Sunday morning, well-dressed and well-humoured, robed in pale lilac
- silk, and with her fair long curls reposing on her white shoulders.
- Sunday was a holiday which she always passed with friends resident in
- town; and amongst these friends she speedily gave me to understand was
- one who would fain become something more. By glimpses and hints it was
- shown me, and by the general buoyancy of her look and manner it was ere
- long proved, that ardent admiration--perhaps genuine love--was at her
- command. She called her suitor "Isidore:" this, however, she intimated
- was not his real name, but one by which it pleased her to baptize
- him--his own, she hinted, not being "very pretty." Once, when she had
- been bragging about the vehemence of "Isidore's" attachment, I asked if
- she loved him in return.
- "Comme cela," said she: "he is handsome, and he loves me to
- distraction, so that I am well amused. Ca suffit."
- Finding that she carried the thing on longer than, from her very fickle
- tastes, I had anticipated, I one day took it upon me to make serious
- inquiries as to whether the gentleman was such as her parents, and
- especially her uncle--on whom, it appeared, she was dependent--would be
- likely to approve. She allowed that this was very doubtful, as she did
- not believe "Isidore" had much money.
- "Do you encourage him?" I asked.
- "Furieusement sometimes," said she.
- "Without being certain that you will be permitted to marry him?"
- "Oh, how dowdyish you are! I don't want to be married. I am too young."
- "But if he loves you as much as you say, and yet it comes to nothing in
- the end, he will be made miserable."
- "Of course he will break his heart. I should be shocked and,
- disappointed if he didn't."
- "I wonder whether this M. Isidore is a fool?" said I.
- "He is, about me; but he is wise in other things, à ce qu'on dit. Mrs.
- Cholmondeley considers him extremely clever: she says he will push his
- way by his talents; all I know is, that he does little more than sigh
- in my presence, and that I can wind him round my little finger."
- Wishing to get a more definite idea of this love-stricken M. Isidore;
- whose position seemed to me of the least secure, I requested her to
- favour me with a personal description; but she could not describe: she
- had neither words nor the power of putting them together so as to make
- graphic phrases. She even seemed not properly to have noticed him:
- nothing of his looks, of the changes in his countenance, had touched
- her heart or dwelt in her memory--that he was "beau, mais plutôt bel
- homme que joli garçon," was all she could assert. My patience would
- often have failed, and my interest flagged, in listening to her, but
- for one thing. All the hints she dropped, all the details she gave,
- went unconsciously to prove, to my thinking, that M. Isidore's homage
- was offered with great delicacy and respect. I informed her very
- plainly that I believed him much too good for her, and intimated with
- equal plainness my impression that she was but a vain coquette. She
- laughed, shook her curls from her eyes, and danced away as if I had
- paid her a compliment.
- Miss Ginevra's school-studies were little better than nominal; there
- were but three things she practised in earnest, viz. music, singing,
- and dancing; also embroidering the fine cambric handkerchiefs which she
- could not afford to buy ready worked: such mere trifles as lessons in
- history, geography, grammar, and arithmetic, she left undone, or got
- others to do for her. Very much of her time was spent in visiting.
- Madame, aware that her stay at school was now limited to a certain
- period, which would not be extended whether she made progress or not,
- allowed her great licence in this particular. Mrs. Cholmondeley--her
- _chaperon_--a gay, fashionable lady, invited her whenever she had
- company at her own house, and sometimes took her to evening-parties at
- the houses of her acquaintance. Ginevra perfectly approved this mode of
- procedure: it had but one inconvenience; she was obliged to be well
- dressed, and she had not money to buy variety of dresses. All her
- thoughts turned on this difficulty; her whole soul was occupied with
- expedients for effecting its solution. It was wonderful to witness the
- activity of her otherwise indolent mind on this point, and to see the
- much-daring intrepidity to which she was spurred by a sense of
- necessity, and the wish to shine.
- She begged boldly of Mrs. Cholmondeley--boldly, I say: not with an air
- of reluctant shame, but in this strain:--
- "My darling Mrs. C., I have nothing in the world fit to wear for your
- party next week; you _must_ give me a book-muslin dress, and then a
- _ceinture bleu celeste_: _do_--there's an angel! will you?"
- The "darling Mrs. C." yielded at first; but finding that applications
- increased as they were complied with, she was soon obliged, like all
- Miss Fanshawe's friends, to oppose resistance to encroachment. After a
- while I heard no more of Mrs. Cholmondeley's presents; but still,
- visiting went on, and the absolutely necessary dresses continued to be
- supplied: also many little expensive _etcetera_--gloves, bouquets, even
- trinkets. These things, contrary to her custom, and even nature--for
- she was not secretive--were most sedulously kept out of sight for a
- time; but one evening, when she was going to a large party for which
- particular care and elegance of costume were demanded, she could not
- resist coming to my chamber to show herself in all her splendour.
- Beautiful she looked: so young, so fresh, and with a delicacy of skin
- and flexibility of shape altogether English, and not found in the list
- of continental female charms. Her dress was new, costly, and perfect. I
- saw at a glance that it lacked none of those finishing details which
- cost so much, and give to the general effect such an air of tasteful
- completeness.
- I viewed her from top to toe. She turned airily round that I might
- survey her on all sides. Conscious of her charms, she was in her best
- humour: her rather small blue eyes sparkled gleefully. She was going to
- bestow on me a kiss, in her school-girl fashion of showing her delights
- but I said, "Steady! Let us be Steady, and know what we are about, and
- find out the meaning of our magnificence"--and so put her off at arm's
- length, to undergo cooler inspection.
- "Shall I do?" was her question.
- "Do?" said I. "There are different ways of doing; and, by my word, I
- don't understand yours."
- "But how do I look?"
- "You look well dressed."
- She thought the praise not warm enough, and proceeded to direct
- attention to the various decorative points of her attire. "Look at this
- _parure_," said she. "The brooch, the ear-rings, the bracelets: no one
- in the school has such a set--not Madame herself."
- "I see them all." (Pause.) "Did M. de Bassompierre give you those
- jewels?"
- "My uncle knows nothing about them."
- "Were they presents from Mrs. Cholmondeley?"
- "Not they, indeed. Mrs. Cholmondeley is a mean, stingy creature; she
- never gives me anything now."
- I did not choose to ask any further questions, but turned abruptly away.
- "Now, old Crusty--old Diogenes" (these were her familiar terms for me
- when we disagreed), "what is the matter now?"
- "Take yourself away. I have no pleasure in looking at you or your
- _parure_."
- For an instant, she seemed taken by surprise.
- "What now, Mother Wisdom? I have not got into debt for it--that is, not
- for the jewels, nor the gloves, nor the bouquet. My dress is certainly
- not paid for, but uncle de Bassompierre will pay it in the bill: he
- never notices items, but just looks at the total; and he is so rich,
- one need not care about a few guineas more or less."
- "Will you go? I want to shut the door.... Ginevra, people may tell you
- you are very handsome in that ball-attire; but, in _my_ eyes, you will
- never look so pretty as you did in the gingham gown and plain straw
- bonnet you wore when I first saw you."
- "Other people have not your puritanical tastes," was her angry reply.
- "And, besides, I see no right you have to sermonize me."
- "Certainly! I have little right; and you, perhaps, have still less to
- come flourishing and fluttering into my chamber--a mere jay in borrowed
- plumes. I have not the least respect for your feathers, Miss Fanshawe;
- and especially the peacock's eyes you call a _parure_: very pretty
- things, if you had bought them with money which was your own, and which
- you could well spare, but not at all pretty under present
- circumstances."
- "On est là pour Mademoiselle Fanshawe!" was announced by the portress,
- and away she tripped.
- This semi-mystery of the _parure_ was not solved till two or three days
- afterwards, when she came to make a voluntary confession.
- "You need not be sulky with me," she began, "in the idea that I am
- running somebody, papa or M. de Bassompierre, deeply into debt. I
- assure you nothing remains unpaid for, but the few dresses I have
- lately had: all the rest is settled."
- "There," I thought, "lies the mystery; considering that they were not
- given you by Mrs. Cholmondeley, and that your own means are limited to
- a few shillings, of which I know you to be excessively careful."
- "Ecoutez!" she went on, drawing near and speaking in her most
- confidential and coaxing tone; for my "sulkiness" was inconvenient to
- her: she liked me to be in a talking and listening mood, even if I only
- talked to chide and listened to rail. "Ecoutez, chère grogneuse! I will
- tell you all how and about it; and you will then see, not only how
- right the whole thing is, but how cleverly managed. In the first place,
- I _must_ go out. Papa himself said that he wished me to see something
- of the world; he particularly remarked to Mrs. Cholmondeley, that,
- though I was a sweet creature enough, I had rather a
- bread-and-butter-eating, school-girl air; of which it was his special
- desire that I should get rid, by an introduction to society here,
- before I make my regular début in England. Well, then, if I go out, I
- _must_ dress. Mrs. Cholmondeley is turned shabby, and will give nothing
- more; it would be too hard upon uncle to make him pay for _all_ the
- things I need: _that_ you can't deny--_that_ agrees with your own
- preachments. Well, but SOMEBODY who heard me (quite by chance, I assure
- you) complaining to Mrs. Cholmondeley of my distressed circumstances,
- and what straits I was put to for an ornament or two--_somebody_, far
- from grudging one a present, was quite delighted at the idea of being
- permitted to offer some trifle. You should have seen what a _blanc-bec_
- he looked when he first spoke of it: how he hesitated and blushed, and
- positively trembled from fear of a repulse."
- "That will do, Miss Fanshawe. I suppose I am to understand that M.
- Isidore is the benefactor: that it is from him you have accepted that
- costly _parure_; that he supplies your bouquets and your gloves?"
- "You express yourself so disagreeably," said she, "one hardly knows how
- to answer; what I mean to say is, that I occasionally allow Isidore the
- pleasure and honour of expressing his homage by the offer of a trifle."
- "It comes to the same thing.... Now, Ginevra, to speak the plain truth,
- I don't very well understand these matters; but I believe you are doing
- very wrong--seriously wrong. Perhaps, however, you now feel certain
- that you will be able to marry M. Isidore; your parents and uncle have
- given their consent, and, for your part, you love him entirely?"
- "Mais pas du tout!" (she always had recourse to French when about to
- say something specially heartless and perverse). "Je suis sa reine,
- mais il n'est pas mon roi."
- "Excuse me, I must believe this language is mere nonsense and coquetry.
- There is nothing great about you, yet you are above profiting by the
- good nature and purse of a man to whom you feel absolute indifference.
- You love M. Isidore far more than you think, or will avow."
- "No. I danced with a young officer the other night, whom I love a
- thousand times more than he. I often wonder why I feel so very cold to
- Isidore, for everybody says he is handsome, and other ladies admire
- him; but, somehow, he bores me: let me see now how it is...."
- And she seemed to make an effort to reflect. In this I encouraged her.
- "Yes!" I said, "try to get a clear idea of the state of your mind. To
- me it seems in a great mess--chaotic as a rag-bag."
- "It is something in this fashion," she cried out ere long: "the man is
- too romantic and devoted, and he expects something more of me than I
- find it convenient to be. He thinks I am perfect: furnished with all
- sorts of sterling qualities and solid virtues, such as I never had, nor
- intend to have. Now, one can't help, in his presence, rather trying to
- justify his good opinion; and it does so tire one to be goody, and to
- talk sense,--for he really thinks I am sensible. I am far more at my
- ease with you, old lady--you, you dear crosspatch--who take me at my
- lowest, and know me to be coquettish, and ignorant, and flirting, and
- fickle, and silly, and selfish, and all the other sweet things you and
- I have agreed to be a part of my character."
- "This is all very well," I said, making a strenuous effort to preserve
- that gravity and severity which ran risk of being shaken by this
- whimsical candour, "but it does not alter that wretched business of the
- presents. Pack them up, Ginevra, like a good, honest girl, and send
- them back."
- "Indeed, I won't," said she, stoutly.
- "Then you are deceiving M. Isidore. It stands to reason that by
- accepting his presents you give him to understand he will one day
- receive an equivalent, in your regard..."
- "But he won't," she interrupted: "he has his equivalent now, in the
- pleasure of seeing me wear them--quite enough for him: he is only
- bourgeois."
- This phrase, in its senseless arrogance, quite cured me of the
- temporary weakness which had made me relax my tone and aspect. She
- rattled on:
- "My present business is to enjoy youth, and not to think of fettering
- myself, by promise or vow, to this man or that. When first I saw
- Isidore, I believed he would help me to enjoy it I believed he would be
- content with my being a pretty girl; and that we should meet and part
- and flutter about like two butterflies, and be happy. Lo, and behold! I
- find him at times as grave as a judge, and deep-feeling and thoughtful.
- Bah! Les penseurs, les hommes profonds et passionnés ne sont pas à mon
- goût. Le Colonel Alfred de Hamal suits me far better. Va pour les beaux
- fats et les jolis fripons! Vive les joies et les plaisirs! A bas les
- grandes passions et les sévères vertus!"
- She looked for an answer to this tirade. I gave none.
- "J'aime mon beau Colonel," she went on: "je n'aimerai jamais son rival.
- Je ne serai jamais femme de bourgeois, moi!"
- I now signified that it was imperatively necessary my apartment should
- be relieved of the honour of her presence: she went away laughing.
- CHAPTER X.
- DR JOHN.
- Madame Beck was a most consistent character; forbearing with all the
- world, and tender to no part of it. Her own children drew her into no
- deviation from the even tenor of her stoic calm. She was solicitous
- about her family, vigilant for their interests and physical well-being;
- but she never seemed to know the wish to take her little children upon
- her lap, to press their rosy lips with her own, to gather them in a
- genial embrace, to shower on them softly the benignant caress, the
- loving word.
- I have watched her sometimes sitting in the garden, viewing the little
- bees afar off, as they walked in a distant alley with Trinette, their
- _bonne_; in her mien spoke care and prudence. I know she often pondered
- anxiously what she called "leur avenir;" but if the youngest, a puny
- and delicate but engaging child, chancing to spy her, broke from its
- nurse, and toddling down the walk, came all eager and laughing and
- panting to clasp her knee, Madame would just calmly put out one hand,
- so as to prevent inconvenient concussion from the child's sudden onset:
- "Prends garde, mon enfant!" she would say unmoved, patiently permit it
- to stand near her a few moments, and then, without smile or kiss, or
- endearing syllable, rise and lead it back to Trinette.
- Her demeanour to the eldest girl was equally characteristic in another
- way. This was a vicious child. "Quelle peste que cette Désirée! Quel
- poison que cet enfant là!" were the expressions dedicated to her, alike
- in kitchen and in schoolroom. Amongst her other endowments she boasted
- an exquisite skill in the art, of provocation, sometimes driving her
- _bonne_ and the servants almost wild. She would steal to their attics,
- open their drawers and boxes, wantonly tear their best caps and soil
- their best shawls; she would watch her opportunity to get at the buffet
- of the salle-à-manger, where she would smash articles of porcelain or
- glass--or to the cupboard of the storeroom, where she would plunder the
- preserves, drink the sweet wine, break jars and bottles, and so
- contrive as to throw the onus of suspicion on the cook and the
- kitchen-maid. All this when Madame saw, and of which when she received
- report, her sole observation, uttered with matchless serenity, was:
- "Désirée a besoin d'une surveillance toute particulière." Accordingly
- she kept this promising olive-branch a good deal at her side. Never
- once, I believe, did she tell her faithfully of her faults, explain the
- evil of such habits, and show the results which must thence ensue.
- Surveillance must work the whole cure. It failed of course. Désirée was
- kept in some measure from the servants, but she teased and pillaged her
- mamma instead. Whatever belonging to Madame's work-table or toilet she
- could lay her hands on, she stole and hid. Madame saw all this, but she
- still pretended not to see: she had not rectitude of soul to confront
- the child with her vices. When an article disappeared whose value
- rendered restitution necessary, she would profess to think that Désirée
- had taken it away in play, and beg her to restore it. Désirée was not
- to be so cheated: she had learned to bring falsehood to the aid of
- theft, and would deny having touched the brooch, ring, or scissors.
- Carrying on the hollow system, the mother would calmly assume an air of
- belief, and afterwards ceaselessly watch and dog the child till she
- tracked her: to her hiding-places--some hole in the garden-wall--some
- chink or cranny in garret or out-house. This done, Madame would send
- Désirée out for a walk with her _bonne_, and profit by her absence to
- rob the robber. Désirée proved herself the true daughter of her astute
- parent, by never suffering either her countenance or manner to betray
- the least sign of mortification on discovering the loss.
- The second child, Fifine, was said to be like its dead father.
- Certainly, though the mother had given it her healthy frame, her blue
- eye and ruddy cheek, not from her was derived its moral being. It was
- an honest, gleeful little soul: a passionate, warm-tempered, bustling
- creature it was too, and of the sort likely to blunder often into
- perils and difficulties. One day it bethought itself to fall from top
- to bottom of a steep flight of stone steps; and when Madame, hearing
- the noise (she always heard every noise), issued from the
- salle-à-manger and picked it up, she said quietly,--"Cet enfant a un os
- cassé."
- At first we hoped this was not the case. It was, however, but too true:
- one little plump arm hung powerless.
- "Let Meess" (meaning me) "take her," said Madame; "et qu'on aille tout
- de suite chercher un fiacre."
- In a _fiacre_ she promptly, but with admirable coolness and
- self-possession, departed to fetch a surgeon.
- It appeared she did not find the family-surgeon at home; but that
- mattered not: she sought until she laid her hand on a substitute to her
- mind, and brought him back with her. Meantime I had cut the child's
- sleeve from its arm, undressed and put it to bed.
- We none of us, I suppose (by _we_ I mean the bonne, the cook, the
- portress, and myself, all which personages were now gathered in the
- small and heated chamber), looked very scrutinizingly at the new doctor
- when he came into the room. I, at least, was taken up with endeavouring
- to soothe Fifine; whose cries (for she had good lungs) were appalling
- to hear. These cries redoubled in intensity as the stranger approached
- her bed; when he took her up, "Let alone!" she cried passionately, in
- her broken English (for she spoke English as did the other children).
- "I will not you: I will Dr. Pillule!"
- "And Dr. Pillule is my very good friend," was the answer, in perfect
- English; "but he is busy at a place three leagues off, and I am come in
- his stead. So now, when we get a little calmer, we must commence
- business; and we will soon have that unlucky little arm bandaged and in
- right order."
- Hereupon he called for a glass of _eau sucrée_, fed her with some
- teaspoonfuls of the sweet liquid (Fifine was a frank gourmande; anybody
- could win her heart through her palate), promised her more when the
- operation should be over, and promptly went to work. Some assistance
- being needed, he demanded it of the cook, a robust, strong-armed woman;
- but she, the portress, and the nurse instantly fled. I did not like to
- touch that small, tortured limb, but thinking there was no alternative,
- my hand was already extended to do what was requisite. I was
- anticipated; Madame Beck had put out her own hand: hers was steady
- while mine trembled.
- "Ca vaudra mieux," said the doctor, turning from me to her.
- He showed wisdom in his choice. Mine would have been feigned stoicism,
- forced fortitude. Hers was neither forced nor feigned.
- "Merci, Madame; très bien, fort bien!" said the operator when he had
- finished. "Voilà un sang-froid bien opportun, et qui vaut mille élans
- de sensibilité déplacée."
- He was pleased with her firmness, she with his compliment. It was
- likely, too, that his whole general appearance, his voice, mien, and
- manner, wrought impressions in his favour. Indeed, when you looked well
- at him, and when a lamp was brought in--for it was evening and now
- waxing dusk--you saw that, unless Madame Beck had been less than woman,
- it could not well be otherwise. This young doctor (he _was_ young) had
- no common aspect. His stature looked imposingly tall in that little
- chamber, and amidst that group of Dutch-made women; his profile was
- clear, fine and expressive: perhaps his eye glanced from face to face
- rather too vividly, too quickly, and too often; but it had a most
- pleasant character, and so had his mouth; his chin was full, cleft,
- Grecian, and perfect. As to his smile, one could not in a hurry make up
- one's mind as to the descriptive epithet it merited; there was
- something in it that pleased, but something too that brought surging up
- into the mind all one's foibles and weak points: all that could lay one
- open to a laugh. Yet Fifine liked this doubtful smile, and thought the
- owner genial: much as he had hurt her, she held out her hand to bid him
- a friendly good-night. He patted the little hand kindly, and then he
- and Madame went down-stairs together; she talking in her highest tide
- of spirits and volubility, he listening with an air of good-natured
- amenity, dashed with that unconscious roguish archness I find it
- difficult to describe.
- I noticed that though he spoke French well, he spoke English better; he
- had, too, an English complexion, eyes, and form. I noticed more. As he
- passed me in leaving the room, turning his face in my direction one
- moment--not to address me, but to speak to Madame, yet so standing,
- that I almost necessarily looked up at him--a recollection which had
- been struggling to form in my memory, since the first moment I heard
- his voice, started up perfected. This was the very gentleman to whom I
- had spoken at the bureau; who had helped me in the matter of the trunk;
- who had been my guide through the dark, wet park. Listening, as he
- passed down the long vestibule out into the street, I recognised his
- very tread: it was the same firm and equal stride I had followed under
- the dripping trees.
- * * * * *
- It was, to be concluded that this young surgeon-physician's first visit
- to the Rue Fossette would be the last. The respectable Dr. Pillule
- being expected home the next day, there appeared no reason why his
- temporary substitute should again represent him; but the Fates had
- written their decree to the contrary.
- Dr. Pillule had been summoned to see a rich old hypochondriac at the
- antique university town of Bouquin-Moisi, and upon his prescribing
- change of air and travel as remedies, he was retained to accompany the
- timid patient on a tour of some weeks; it but remained, therefore, for
- the new doctor to continue his attendance at the Rue Fossette.
- I often saw him when he came; for Madame would not trust the little
- invalid to Trinette, but required me to spend much of my time in the
- nursery. I think he was skilful. Fifine recovered rapidly under his
- care, yet even her convalescence did not hasten his dismissal. Destiny
- and Madame Beck seemed in league, and both had ruled that he should
- make deliberate acquaintance with the vestibule, the private staircase
- and upper chambers of the Rue Fossette.
- No sooner did Fifine emerge from his hands than Désirée declared
- herself ill. That possessed child had a genius for simulation, and
- captivated by the attentions and indulgences of a sick-room, she came
- to the conclusion that an illness would perfectly accommodate her
- tastes, and took her bed accordingly. She acted well, and her mother
- still better; for while the whole case was transparent to Madame Beck
- as the day, she treated it with an astonishingly well-assured air of
- gravity and good faith.
- What surprised me was, that Dr. John (so the young Englishman had
- taught Fifine to call him, and we all took from her the habit of
- addressing him by this name, till it became an established custom, and
- he was known by no other in the Rue Fossette)--that Dr. John consented
- tacitly to adopt Madame's tactics, and to fall in with her manoeuvres.
- He betrayed, indeed, a period of comic doubt, cast one or two rapid
- glances from the child to the mother, indulged in an interval of
- self-consultation, but finally resigned himself with a good grace to
- play his part in the farce. Désirée eat like a raven, gambolled day and
- night in her bed, pitched tents with the sheets and blankets, lounged
- like a Turk amidst pillows and bolsters, diverted herself with throwing
- her shoes at her bonne and grimacing at her sisters--over-flowed, in
- short, with unmerited health and evil spirits; only languishing when
- her mamma and the physician paid their diurnal visit. Madame Beck, I
- knew, was glad, at any price, to have her daughter in bed out of the
- way of mischief; but I wondered that Dr. John did not tire of the
- business.
- Every day, on this mere pretext of a motive, he gave punctual
- attendance; Madame always received him with the same empressement, the
- same sunshine for himself, the same admirably counterfeited air of
- concern for her child. Dr. John wrote harmless prescriptions for the
- patient, and viewed her mother with a shrewdly sparkling eye. Madame
- caught his rallying looks without resenting them--she had too much good
- sense for that. Supple as the young doctor seemed, one could not
- despise him--this pliant part was evidently not adopted in the design
- to curry favour with his employer: while he liked his office at the
- pensionnat, and lingered strangely about the Rue Fossette, he was
- independent, almost careless in his carriage there; and yet, too, he
- was often thoughtful and preoccupied.
- It was not perhaps my business to observe the mystery of his bearing,
- or search out its origin or aim; but, placed as I was, I could hardly
- help it. He laid himself open to my observation, according to my
- presence in the room just that degree of notice and consequence a
- person of my exterior habitually expects: that is to say, about what is
- given to unobtrusive articles of furniture, chairs of ordinary joiner's
- work, and carpets of no striking pattern. Often, while waiting for
- Madame, he would muse, smile, watch, or listen like a man who thinks
- himself alone. I, meantime, was free to puzzle over his countenance and
- movements, and wonder what could be the meaning of that peculiar
- interest and attachment--all mixed up with doubt and strangeness, and
- inexplicably ruled by some presiding spell--which wedded him to this
- demi-convent, secluded in the built-up core of a capital. He, I
- believe, never remembered that I had eyes in my head, much less a brain
- behind them.
- Nor would he ever have found this out, but that one day, while he sat
- in the sunshine and I was observing the colouring of his hair,
- whiskers, and complexion--the whole being of such a tone as a strong
- light brings out with somewhat perilous force (indeed I recollect I was
- driven to compare his beamy head in my thoughts to that of the "golden
- image" which Nebuchadnezzar the king had set up), an idea new, sudden,
- and startling, riveted my attention with an over-mastering strength and
- power of attraction. I know not to this day how I looked at him: the
- force of surprise, and also of conviction, made me forget myself; and I
- only recovered wonted consciousness when I saw that his notice was
- arrested, and that it had caught my movement in a clear little oval
- mirror fixed in the side of the window recess--by the aid of which
- reflector Madame often secretly spied persons walking in the garden
- below. Though of so gay and sanguine a temperament, he was not without
- a certain nervous sensitiveness which made him ill at ease under a
- direct, inquiring gaze. On surprising me thus, he turned and said, in a
- tone which, though courteous, had just so much dryness in it as to mark
- a shade of annoyance, as well as to give to what was said the character
- of rebuke, "Mademoiselle does not spare me: I am not vain enough to
- fancy that it is my merits which attract her attention; it must then be
- some defect. Dare I ask--what?"
- I was confounded, as the reader may suppose, yet not with an
- irrecoverable confusion; being conscious that it was from no emotion of
- incautious admiration, nor yet in a spirit of unjustifiable
- inquisitiveness, that I had incurred this reproof. I might have cleared
- myself on the spot, but would not. I did not speak. I was not in the
- habit of speaking to him. Suffering him, then, to think what he chose
- and accuse me of what he would, I resumed some work I had dropped, and
- kept my head bent over it during the remainder of his stay. There is a
- perverse mood of the mind which is rather soothed than irritated by
- misconstruction; and in quarters where we can never be rightly known,
- we take pleasure, I think, in being consummately ignored. What honest
- man, on being casually taken for a housebreaker, does not feel rather
- tickled than vexed at the mistake?
- CHAPTER XI.
- THE PORTRESS'S CABINET.
- It was summer and very hot. Georgette, the youngest of Madame Beck's
- children, took a fever. Désirée, suddenly cured of her ailments, was,
- together with Fifine, packed off to Bonne-Maman, in the country, by way
- of precaution against infection. Medical aid was now really needed, and
- Madame, choosing to ignore the return of Dr. Pillule, who had been at
- home a week, conjured his English rival to continue his visits. One or
- two of the pensionnaires complained of headache, and in other respects
- seemed slightly to participate in Georgette's ailment. "Now, at last,"
- I thought, "Dr. Pillule must be recalled: the prudent directress will
- never venture to permit the attendance of so young a man on the pupils."
- The directress was very prudent, but she could also be intrepidly
- venturous. She actually introduced Dr. John to the school-division of
- the premises, and established him in attendance on the proud and
- handsome Blanche de Melcy, and the vain, flirting Angélique, her
- friend. Dr. John, I thought, testified a certain gratification at this
- mark of confidence; and if discretion of bearing could have justified
- the step, it would by him have been amply justified. Here, however, in
- this land of convents and confessionals, such a presence as his was not
- to be suffered with impunity in a "pensionnat de demoiselles." The
- school gossiped, the kitchen whispered, the town caught the rumour,
- parents wrote letters and paid visits of remonstrance. Madame, had she
- been weak, would now have been lost: a dozen rival educational houses
- were ready to improve this false step--if false step it were--to her
- ruin; but Madame was not weak, and little Jesuit though she might be,
- yet I clapped the hands of my heart, and with its voice cried "brava!"
- as I watched her able bearing, her skilled management, her temper and
- her firmness on this occasion.
- She met the alarmed parents with a good-humoured, easy grace for nobody
- matched her in, I know not whether to say the possession or the
- assumption of a certain "rondeur et franchise de bonne femme;" which on
- various occasions gained the point aimed at with instant and complete
- success, where severe gravity and serious reasoning would probably have
- failed.
- "Ce pauvre Docteur Jean!" she would say, chuckling and rubbing joyously
- her fat little white hands; "ce cher jeune homme! le meilleur créature
- du monde!" and go on to explain how she happened to be employing him
- for her own children, who were so fond of him they would scream
- themselves into fits at the thought of another doctor; how, where she
- had confidence for her own, she thought it natural to repose trust for
- others, and au reste, it was only the most temporary expedient in the
- world; Blanche and Angélique had the migraine; Dr. John had written a
- prescription; voilà tout!
- The parents' mouths were closed. Blanche and Angélique saved her all
- remaining trouble by chanting loud duets in their physician's praise;
- the other pupils echoed them, unanimously declaring that when they were
- ill they would have Dr. John and nobody else; and Madame laughed, and
- the parents laughed too. The Labassecouriens must have a large organ of
- philoprogenitiveness: at least the indulgence of offspring is carried
- by them to excessive lengths; the law of most households being the
- children's will. Madame now got credit for having acted on this
- occasion in a spirit of motherly partiality: she came off with flying
- colours; people liked her as a directress better than ever.
- To this day I never fully understood why she thus risked her interest
- for the sake of Dr. John. What people said, of course I know well: the
- whole house--pupils, teachers, servants included--affirmed that she was
- going to marry him. So they had settled it; difference of age seemed to
- make no obstacle in their eyes: it was to be so.
- It must be admitted that appearances did not wholly discountenance this
- idea; Madame seemed so bent on retaining his services, so oblivious of
- her former protégé, Pillule. She made, too, such a point of personally
- receiving his visits, and was so unfailingly cheerful, blithe, and
- benignant in her manner to him. Moreover, she paid, about this time,
- marked attention to dress: the morning dishabille, the nightcap and
- shawl, were discarded; Dr. John's early visits always found her with
- auburn braids all nicely arranged, silk dress trimly fitted on, neat
- laced brodequins in lieu of slippers: in short the whole toilette
- complete as a model, and fresh as a flower. I scarcely think, however,
- that her intention in this went further than just to show a very
- handsome man that she was not quite a plain woman; and plain she was
- not. Without beauty of feature or elegance of form, she pleased.
- Without youth and its gay graces, she cheered. One never tired of
- seeing her: she was never monotonous, or insipid, or colourless, or
- flat. Her unfaded hair, her eye with its temperate blue light, her
- cheek with its wholesome fruit-like bloom--these things pleased in
- moderation, but with constancy.
- Had she, indeed, floating visions of adopting Dr. John as a husband,
- taking him to her well-furnished home, endowing him with her savings,
- which were said to amount to a moderate competency, and making him
- comfortable for the rest of his life? Did Dr. John suspect her of such
- visions? I have met him coming out of her presence with a mischievous
- half-smile about his lips, and in his eyes a look as of masculine
- vanity elate and tickled. With all his good looks and good-nature, he
- was not perfect; he must have been very imperfect if he roguishly
- encouraged aims he never intended to be successful. But did he not
- intend them to be successful? People said he had no money, that he was
- wholly dependent upon his profession. Madame--though perhaps some
- fourteen years his senior--was yet the sort of woman never to grow old,
- never to wither, never to break down. They certainly were on good
- terms. _He_ perhaps was not in love; but how many people ever _do_
- love, or at least marry for love, in this world. We waited the end.
- For what _he_ waited, I do not know, nor for what he watched; but the
- peculiarity of his manner, his expectant, vigilant, absorbed, eager
- look, never wore off: it rather intensified. He had never been quite
- within the compass of my penetration, and I think he ranged farther and
- farther beyond it.
- One morning little Georgette had been more feverish and consequently
- more peevish; she was crying, and would not be pacified. I thought a
- particular draught ordered, disagreed with her, and I doubted whether
- it ought to be continued; I waited impatiently for the doctor's coming
- in order to consult him.
- The door-bell rang, he was admitted; I felt sure of this, for I heard
- his voice addressing the portress. It was his custom to mount straight
- to the nursery, taking about three degrees of the staircase at once,
- and coming upon us like a cheerful surprise. Five minutes
- elapsed--ten--and I saw and heard nothing of him. What could he be
- doing? Possibly waiting in the corridor below. Little Georgette still
- piped her plaintive wail, appealing to me by her familiar term,
- "Minnie, Minnie, me very poorly!" till my heart ached. I descended to
- ascertain why he did not come. The corridor was empty. Whither was he
- vanished? Was he with Madame in the _salle-à-manger?_ Impossible: I had
- left her but a short time since, dressing in her own chamber. I
- listened. Three pupils were just then hard at work practising in three
- proximate rooms--the dining-room and the greater and lesser
- drawing-rooms, between which and the corridor there was but the
- portress's cabinet communicating with the salons, and intended
- originally for a boudoir. Farther off, at a fourth instrument in the
- oratory, a whole class of a dozen or more were taking a singing lesson,
- and just then joining in a "barcarole" (I think they called it),
- whereof I yet remember these words "fraîchë," "brisë," and "Venisë."
- Under these circumstances, what could I hear? A great deal, certainly;
- had it only been to the purpose.
- Yes; I heard a giddy treble laugh in the above-mentioned little
- cabinet, close by the door of which I stood--that door half-unclosed; a
- man's voice in a soft, deep, pleading tone, uttered some, words,
- whereof I only caught the adjuration, "For God's sake!" Then, after a
- second's pause, forth issued Dr. John, his eye full shining, but not
- with either joy or triumph; his fair English cheek high-coloured; a
- baffled, tortured, anxious, and yet a tender meaning on his brow.
- The open door served me as a screen; but had I been full in his way, I
- believe he would have passed without seeing me. Some mortification,
- some strong vexation had hold of his soul: or rather, to write my
- impressions now as I received them at the time I should say some
- sorrow, some sense of injustice. I did not so much think his pride was
- hurt, as that his affections had been wounded--cruelly wounded, it
- seemed to me. But who was the torturer? What being in that house had
- him so much in her power? Madame I believed to be in her chamber; the
- room whence he had stepped was dedicated to the portress's sole use;
- and she, Rosine Matou, an unprincipled though pretty little French
- grisette, airy, fickle, dressy, vain, and mercenary--it was not,
- surely, to _her_ hand he owed the ordeal through which he seemed to
- have passed?
- But while I pondered, her voice, clear, though somewhat sharp, broke
- out in a lightsome French song, trilling through the door still ajar: I
- glanced in, doubting my senses. There at the table she sat in a smart
- dress of "jaconas rose," trimming a tiny blond cap: not a living thing
- save herself was in the room, except indeed some gold fish in a glass
- globe, some flowers in pots, and a broad July sunbeam.
- Here was a problem: but I must go up-stairs to ask about the medicine.
- Dr. John sat in a chair at Georgette's bedside; Madame stood before
- him; the little patient had been examined and soothed, and now lay
- composed in her crib. Madame Beck, as I entered, was discussing the
- physician's own health, remarking on some real or fancied change in his
- looks, charging him with over-work, and recommending rest and change of
- air. He listened good-naturedly, but with laughing indifference,
- telling her that she was "trop bonne," and that he felt perfectly well.
- Madame appealed to me--Dr. John following her movement with a slow
- glance which seemed to express languid surprise at reference being made
- to a quarter so insignificant.
- "What do you think, Miss Lucie?" asked Madame. "Is he not paler and
- thinner?"
- It was very seldom that I uttered more than monosyllables in Dr. John's
- presence; he was the kind of person with whom I was likely ever to
- remain the neutral, passive thing he thought me. Now, however, I took
- licence to answer in a phrase: and a phrase I purposely made quite
- significant.
- "He looks ill at this moment; but perhaps it is owing to some temporary
- cause: Dr. John may have been vexed or harassed." I cannot tell how he
- took this speech, as I never sought his face for information. Georgette
- here began to ask me in her broken English if she might have a glass of
- _eau sucrée_. I answered her in English. For the first time, I fancy,
- he noticed that I spoke his language; hitherto he had always taken me
- for a foreigner, addressing me as "Mademoiselle," and giving in French
- the requisite directions about the children's treatment. He seemed on
- the point of making a remark; but thinking better of it, held his
- tongue.
- Madame recommenced advising him; he shook his head, laughing, rose and
- bid her good-morning, with courtesy, but still with the regardless air
- of one whom too much unsolicited attention was surfeiting and spoiling.
- When he was gone, Madame dropped into the chair he had just left; she
- rested her chin in her hand; all that was animated and amiable vanished
- from her face: she looked stony and stern, almost mortified and morose.
- She sighed; a single, but a deep sigh. A loud bell rang for
- morning-school. She got up; as she passed a dressing-table with a glass
- upon it, she looked at her reflected image. One single white hair
- streaked her nut-brown tresses; she plucked it out with a shudder. In
- the full summer daylight, her face, though it still had the colour,
- could plainly be seen to have lost the texture of youth; and then,
- where were youth's contours? Ah, Madame! wise as you were, even _you_
- knew weakness. Never had I pitied Madame before, but my heart softened
- towards her, when she turned darkly from the glass. A calamity had come
- upon her. That hag Disappointment was greeting her with a grisly
- "All-hail," and her soul rejected the intimacy.
- But Rosine! My bewilderment there surpasses description. I embraced
- five opportunities of passing her cabinet that day, with a view to
- contemplating her charms, and finding out the secret of their
- influence. She was pretty, young, and wore a well-made dress. All very
- good points, and, I suppose, amply sufficient to account, in any
- philosophic mind, for any amount of agony and distraction in a young
- man, like Dr. John. Still, I could not help forming half a wish that
- the said doctor were my brother; or at least that he had a sister or a
- mother who would kindly sermonize him. I say _half_ a wish; I broke it,
- and flung it away before it became a whole one, discovering in good
- time its exquisite folly. "Somebody," I argued, "might as well
- sermonize Madame about her young physician: and what good would that
- do?"
- I believe Madame sermonized herself. She did not behave weakly, or make
- herself in any shape ridiculous. It is true she had neither strong
- feelings to overcome, nor tender feelings by which to be miserably
- pained. It is true likewise that she had an important avocation, a real
- business to fill her time, divert her thoughts, and divide her
- interest. It is especially true that she possessed a genuine good sense
- which is not given to all women nor to all men; and by dint of these
- combined advantages she behaved wisely--she behaved well. Brava! once
- more, Madame Beck. I saw you matched against an Apollyon of a
- predilection; you fought a good fight, and you overcame!
- CHAPTER XII.
- THE CASKET.
- Behind the house at the Rue Fossette there was a garden--large,
- considering that it lay in the heart of a city, and to my recollection
- at this day it seems pleasant: but time, like distance, lends to
- certain scenes an influence so softening; and where all is stone
- around, blank wall and hot pavement, how precious seems one shrub, how
- lovely an enclosed and planted spot of ground!
- There went a tradition that Madame Beck's house had in old days been a
- convent. That in years gone by--how long gone by I cannot tell, but I
- think some centuries--before the city had over-spread this quarter, and
- when it was tilled ground and avenue, and such deep and leafy seclusion
- as ought to embosom a religious house--that something had happened on
- this site which, rousing fear and inflicting horror, had left to the
- place the inheritance of a ghost-story. A vague tale went of a black
- and white nun, sometimes, on some night or nights of the year, seen in
- some part of this vicinage. The ghost must have been built out some
- ages ago, for there were houses all round now; but certain
- convent-relics, in the shape of old and huge fruit-trees, yet
- consecrated the spot; and, at the foot of one--a Methuselah of a
- pear-tree, dead, all but a few boughs which still faithfully renewed
- their perfumed snow in spring, and their honey-sweet pendants in
- autumn--you saw, in scraping away the mossy earth between the
- half-bared roots, a glimpse of slab, smooth, hard, and black. The
- legend went, unconfirmed and unaccredited, but still propagated, that
- this was the portal of a vault, imprisoning deep beneath that ground,
- on whose surface grass grew and flowers bloomed, the bones of a girl
- whom a monkish conclave of the drear middle ages had here buried alive
- for some sin against her vow. Her shadow it was that tremblers had
- feared, through long generations after her poor frame was dust; her
- black robe and white veil that, for timid eyes, moonlight and shade had
- mocked, as they fluctuated in the night-wind through the garden-thicket.
- Independently of romantic rubbish, however, that old garden had its
- charms. On summer mornings I used to rise early, to enjoy them alone;
- on summer evenings, to linger solitary, to keep tryste with the rising
- moon, or taste one kiss of the evening breeze, or fancy rather than
- feel the freshness of dew descending. The turf was verdant, the
- gravelled walks were white; sun-bright nasturtiums clustered beautiful
- about the roots of the doddered orchard giants. There was a large
- berceau, above which spread the shade of an acacia; there was a
- smaller, more sequestered bower, nestled in the vines which ran all
- along a high and grey wall, and gathered their tendrils in a knot of
- beauty, and hung their clusters in loving profusion about the favoured
- spot where jasmine and ivy met and married them.
- Doubtless at high noon, in the broad, vulgar middle of the day, when
- Madame Beck's large school turned out rampant, and externes and
- pensionnaires were spread abroad, vying with the denizens of the boys'
- college close at hand, in the brazen exercise of their lungs and
- limbs--doubtless _then_ the garden was a trite, trodden-down place
- enough. But at sunset or the hour of _salut_, when the externes were
- gone home, and the boarders quiet at their studies; pleasant was it
- then to stray down the peaceful alleys, and hear the bells of St. Jean
- Baptiste peal out with their sweet, soft, exalted sound.
- I was walking thus one evening, and had been detained farther within
- the verge of twilight than usual, by the still-deepening calm, the
- mellow coolness, the fragrant breathing with which flowers no sunshine
- could win now answered the persuasion of the dew. I saw by a light in
- the oratory window that the Catholic household were then gathered to
- evening prayer--a rite, from attendance on which, I now and then, as a
- Protestant, exempted myself.
- "One moment longer," whispered solitude and the summer moon, "stay with
- us: all is truly quiet now; for another quarter of an hour your
- presence will not be missed: the day's heat and bustle have tired you;
- enjoy these precious minutes."
- The windowless backs of houses built in this garden, and in particular
- the whole of one side, was skirted by the rear of a long line of
- premises--being the boarding-houses of the neighbouring college. This
- rear, however, was all blank stone, with the exception of certain attic
- loopholes high up, opening from the sleeping-rooms of the
- women-servants, and also one casement in a lower story said to mark the
- chamber or study of a master. But, though thus secure, an alley, which
- ran parallel with the very high wall on that side the garden, was
- forbidden to be entered by the pupils. It was called indeed "l'allée
- défendue," and any girl setting foot there would have rendered herself
- liable to as severe a penalty as the mild rules of Madame Beck's
- establishment permitted. Teachers might indeed go there with impunity;
- but as the walk was narrow, and the neglected shrubs were grown very
- thick and close on each side, weaving overhead a roof of branch and
- leaf which the sun's rays penetrated but in rare chequers, this alley
- was seldom entered even during day, and after dusk was carefully
- shunned.
- From the first I was tempted to make an exception to this rule of
- avoidance: the seclusion, the very gloom of the walk attracted me. For
- a long time the fear of seeming singular scared me away; but by
- degrees, as people became accustomed to me and my habits, and to such
- shades of peculiarity as were engrained in my nature--shades, certainly
- not striking enough to interest, and perhaps not prominent enough to
- offend, but born in and with me, and no more to be parted with than my
- identity--by slow degrees I became a frequenter of this strait and
- narrow path. I made myself gardener of some tintless flowers that grew
- between its closely-ranked shrubs; I cleared away the relics of past
- autumns, choking up a rustic seat at the far end. Borrowing of Goton,
- the cuisinière, a pail of water and a scrubbing-brush, I made this seat
- clean. Madame saw me at work and smiled approbation: whether sincerely
- or not I don't know; but she _seemed_ sincere.
- "Voyez-vous," cried she, "comme elle est propre, cette demoiselle
- Lucie? Vous aimez done cette allée, Meess?" "Yes," I said, "it is quiet
- and shady."
- "C'est juste," cried she with an air of bonté; and she kindly
- recommended me to confine myself to it as much as I chose, saying, that
- as I was not charged with the surveillance, I need not trouble myself
- to walk with the pupils: only I might permit her children to come
- there, to talk English with me.
- On the night in question, I was sitting on the hidden seat reclaimed
- from fungi and mould, listening to what seemed the far-off sounds of
- the city. Far off, in truth, they were not: this school was in the
- city's centre; hence, it was but five minutes' walk to the park, scarce
- ten to buildings of palatial splendour. Quite near were wide streets
- brightly lit, teeming at this moment with life: carriages were rolling
- through them to balls or to the opera. The same hour which tolled
- curfew for our convent, which extinguished each lamp, and dropped the
- curtain round each couch, rang for the gay city about us the summons to
- festal enjoyment. Of this contrast I thought not, however: gay
- instincts my nature had few; ball or opera I had never seen; and though
- often I had heard them described, and even wished to see them, it was
- not the wish of one who hopes to partake a pleasure if she could only
- reach it--who feels fitted to shine in some bright distant sphere,
- could she but thither win her way; it was no yearning to attain, no
- hunger to taste; only the calm desire to look on a new thing.
- A moon was in the sky, not a full moon, but a young crescent. I saw her
- through a space in the boughs overhead. She and the stars, visible
- beside her, were no strangers where all else was strange: my childhood
- knew them. I had seen that golden sign with the dark globe in its curve
- leaning back on azure, beside an old thorn at the top of an old field,
- in Old England, in long past days, just as it now leaned back beside a
- stately spire in this continental capital.
- Oh, my childhood! I had feelings: passive as I lived, little as I
- spoke, cold as I looked, when I thought of past days, I _could_ feel.
- About the present, it was better to be stoical; about the future--such
- a future as mine--to be dead. And in catalepsy and a dead trance, I
- studiously held the quick of my nature.
- At that time, I well remember whatever could excite--certain accidents
- of the weather, for instance, were almost dreaded by me, because they
- woke the being I was always lulling, and stirred up a craving cry I
- could not satisfy. One night a thunder-storm broke; a sort of hurricane
- shook us in our beds: the Catholics rose in panic and prayed to their
- saints. As for me, the tempest took hold of me with tyranny: I was
- roughly roused and obliged to live. I got up and dressed myself, and
- creeping outside the casement close by my bed, sat on its ledge, with
- my feet on the roof of a lower adjoining building. It was wet, it was
- wild, it was pitch-dark. Within the dormitory they gathered round the
- night-lamp in consternation, praying loud. I could not go in: too
- resistless was the delight of staying with the wild hour, black and
- full of thunder, pealing out such an ode as language never delivered to
- man--too terribly glorious, the spectacle of clouds, split and pierced
- by white and blinding bolts.
- I did long, achingly, then and for four and twenty hours afterwards,
- for something to fetch me out of my present existence, and lead me
- upwards and onwards. This longing, and all of a similar kind, it was
- necessary to knock on the head; which I did, figuratively, after the
- manner of Jael to Sisera, driving a nail through their temples. Unlike
- Sisera, they did not die: they were but transiently stunned, and at
- intervals would turn on the nail with a rebellious wrench: then did the
- temples bleed, and the brain thrill to its core.
- To-night, I was not so mutinous, nor so miserable. My Sisera lay quiet
- in the tent, slumbering; and if his pain ached through his slumbers,
- something like an angel--the ideal--knelt near, dropping balm on the
- soothed temples, holding before the sealed eyes a magic glass, of which
- the sweet, solemn visions were repeated in dreams, and shedding a
- reflex from her moonlight wings and robe over the transfixed sleeper,
- over the tent threshold, over all the landscape lying without. Jael,
- the stern woman; sat apart, relenting somewhat over her captive; but
- more prone to dwell on the faithful expectation of Heber coming home.
- By which words I mean that the cool peace and dewy sweetness of the
- night filled me with a mood of hope: not hope on any definite point,
- but a general sense of encouragement and heart-ease.
- Should not such a mood, so sweet, so tranquil, so unwonted, have been
- the harbinger of good? Alas, no good came of it! I Presently the rude
- Real burst coarsely in--all evil grovelling and repellent as she too
- often is.
- Amid the intense stillness of that pile of stone overlooking the walk,
- the trees, the high wall, I heard a sound; a casement [all the windows
- here are casements, opening on hinges] creaked. Ere I had time to look
- up and mark where, in which story, or by whom unclosed, a tree overhead
- shook, as if struck by a missile; some object dropped prone at my feet.
- Nine was striking by St. Jean Baptiste's clock; day was fading, but it
- was not dark: the crescent moon aided little, but the deep gilding of
- that point in heaven where the sun beamed last, and the crystalline
- clearness of a wide space above, sustained the summer twilight; even in
- my dark walk I could, by approaching an opening, have managed to read
- print of a small type. Easy was it to see then that the missile was a
- box, a small box of white and coloured ivory; its loose lid opened in
- my hand; violets lay within, violets smothering a closely folded bit of
- pink paper, a note, superscribed, "Pour la robe grise." I wore indeed a
- dress of French grey.
- Good. Was this a billet-doux? A thing I had heard of, but hitherto had
- not had the honour of seeing or handling. Was it this sort of commodity
- I held between my finger and thumb at this moment?
- Scarcely: I did not dream it for a moment. Suitor or admirer my very
- thoughts had not conceived. All the teachers had dreams of some lover;
- one (but she was naturally of a credulous turn) believed in a future
- husband. All the pupils above fourteen knew of some prospective
- bridegroom; two or three were already affianced by their parents, and
- had been so from childhood: but into the realm of feelings and hopes
- which such prospects open, my speculations, far less my presumptions,
- had never once had warrant to intrude. If the other teachers went into
- town, or took a walk on the boulevards, or only attended mass, they
- were very certain (according to the accounts brought back) to meet with
- some individual of the "opposite sex," whose rapt, earnest gaze assured
- them of their power to strike and to attract. I can't say that my
- experience tallied with theirs, in this respect. I went to church and I
- took walks, and am very well convinced that nobody minded me. There was
- not a girl or woman in the Rue Fossette who could not, and did not
- testify to having received an admiring beam from our young doctor's
- blue eyes at one time or other. I am obliged, however humbling it may
- sound, to except myself: as far as I was concerned, those blue eyes
- were guiltless, and calm as the sky, to whose tint theirs seemed akin.
- So it came to pass that I heard the others talk, wondered often at
- their gaiety, security, and self-satisfaction, but did not trouble
- myself to look up and gaze along the path they seemed so certain of
- treading. This then was no billet-doux; and it was in settled
- conviction to the contrary that I quietly opened it. Thus it ran--I
- translate:--
- "Angel of my dreams! A thousand, thousand thanks for the promise kept:
- scarcely did I venture to hope its fulfilment. I believed you, indeed,
- to be half in jest; and then you seemed to think the enterprise beset
- with such danger--the hour so untimely, the alley so strictly
- secluded--often, you said, haunted by that dragon, the English
- teacher--une véritable bégueule Britannique à ce que vous dites--espèce
- de monstre, brusque et rude comme un vieux caporal de grenadiers, et
- revêche comme une religieuse" (the reader will excuse my modesty in
- allowing this flattering sketch of my amiable self to retain the slight
- veil of the original tongue). "You are aware," went on this precious
- effusion, "that little Gustave, on account of his illness, has been
- removed to a master's chamber--that favoured chamber, whose lattice
- overlooks your prison-ground. There, I, the best uncle in the world, am
- admitted to visit him. How tremblingly I approached the window and
- glanced into your Eden--an Eden for me, though a desert for you!--how I
- feared to behold vacancy, or the dragon aforesaid! How my heart
- palpitated with delight when, through apertures in the envious boughs,
- I at once caught the gleam of your graceful straw-hat, and the waving
- of your grey dress--dress that I should recognise amongst a thousand.
- But why, my angel, will you not look up? Cruel, to deny me one ray of
- those adorable eyes!--how a single glance would have revived me! I
- write this in fiery haste; while the physician examines Gustave, I
- snatch an opportunity to enclose it in a small casket, together with a
- bouquet of flowers, the sweetest that blow--yet less sweet than thee,
- my Peri--my all-charming! ever thine-thou well knowest whom!"
- "I wish I did know whom," was my comment; and the wish bore even closer
- reference to the person addressed in this choice document, than to the
- writer thereof. Perhaps it was from the fiancé of one of the engaged
- pupils; and, in that case, there was no great harm done or
- intended--only a small irregularity. Several of the girls, the
- majority, indeed, had brothers or cousins at the neighbouring college.
- But "la robe grise, le chapeau de paille," here surely was a clue--a
- very confusing one. The straw-hat was an ordinary garden head-screen,
- common to a score besides myself. The grey dress hardly gave more
- definite indication. Madame Beck herself ordinarily wore a grey dress
- just now; another teacher, and three of the pensionnaires, had had grey
- dresses purchased of the same shade and fabric as mine: it was a sort
- of every-day wear which happened at that time to be in vogue.
- Meanwhile, as I pondered, I knew I must go in. Lights, moving in the
- dormitory, announced that prayers were over, and the pupils going to
- bed. Another half-hour and all doors would be locked--all lights
- extinguished. The front door yet stood open, to admit into the heated
- house the coolness of the summer night; from the portress's cabinet
- close by shone a lamp, showing the long vestibule with the two-leaved
- drawing-room doors on one side, the great street-door closing the vista.
- All at once, quick rang the bell--quick, but not loud--a cautious
- tinkle--a sort of warning metal whisper. Rosine darted from her cabinet
- and ran to open. The person she admitted stood with her two minutes in
- parley: there seemed a demur, a delay. Rosine came to the garden door,
- lamp in hand; she stood on the steps, lifting her lamp, looking round
- vaguely.
- "Quel conte!" she cried, with a coquettish laugh. "Personne n'y a été."
- "Let me pass," pleaded a voice I knew: "I ask but five minutes;" and a
- familiar shape, tall and grand (as we of the Rue Fossette all thought
- it), issued from the house, and strode down amongst the beds and walks.
- It was sacrilege--the intrusion of a man into that spot, at that hour;
- but he knew himself privileged, and perhaps he trusted to the friendly
- night. He wandered down the alleys, looking on this side and on
- that--he was lost in the shrubs, trampling flowers and breaking
- branches in his search--he penetrated at last the "forbidden walk."
- There I met him, like some ghost, I suppose.
- "Dr. John! it is found."
- He did not ask by whom, for with his quick eye he perceived that I held
- it in my hand.
- "Do not betray her," he said, looking at me as if I were indeed a
- dragon.
- "Were I ever so disposed to treachery, I cannot betray what I do not
- know," was my answer. "Read the note, and you will see how little it
- reveals."
- "Perhaps you have read it," I thought to myself; and yet I could not
- believe he wrote it: that could hardly be his style: besides, I was
- fool enough to think there would be a degree of hardship in his calling
- me such names. His own look vindicated him; he grew hot, and coloured
- as he read.
- "This is indeed too much: this is cruel, this is humiliating," were the
- words that fell from him.
- I thought it _was_ cruel, when I saw his countenance so moved. No
- matter whether he was to blame or not; somebody, it seemed to me, must
- be more to blame.
- "What shall you do about it?" he inquired of me. "Shall you tell Madame
- Beck what you have found, and cause a stir--an esclandre?"
- I thought I ought to tell, and said so; adding that I did not believe
- there would be either stir or esclandre: Madame was much too prudent to
- make a noise about an affair of that sort connected with her
- establishment.
- He stood looking down and meditating. He was both too proud and too
- honourable to entreat my secresy on a point which duty evidently
- commanded me to communicate. I wished to do right, yet loathed to
- grieve or injure him. Just then Rosine glanced out through the open
- door; she could not see us, though between the trees I could plainly
- see her: her dress was grey, like mine. This circumstance, taken in
- connection with prior transactions, suggested to me that perhaps the
- case, however deplorable, was one in which I was under no obligation
- whatever to concern myself. Accordingly, I said,--"If you can assure me
- that none of Madame Beck's pupils are implicated in this business, I
- shall be very happy to stand aloof from all interference. Take the
- casket, the bouquet, and the billet; for my part, I gladly forget the
- whole affair."
- "Look there!" he whispered suddenly, as his hand closed on what I
- offered, and at the same time he pointed through the boughs.
- I looked. Behold Madame, in shawl, wrapping-gown, and slippers, softly
- descending the steps, and stealing like a cat round the garden: in two
- minutes she would have been upon Dr. John. If _she_ were like a cat,
- however, _he_, quite as much, resembled a leopard: nothing could be
- lighter than his tread when he chose. He watched, and as she turned a
- corner, he took the garden at two noiseless bounds. She reappeared, and
- he was gone. Rosine helped him, instantly interposing the door between
- him and his huntress. I, too, might have got, away, but I preferred to
- meet Madame openly.
- Though it was my frequent and well-known custom to spend twilight in
- the garden, yet, never till now, had I remained so late. Full sure was
- I that Madame had missed--was come in search of me, and designed now to
- pounce on the defaulter unawares. I expected a reprimand. No. Madame
- was all goodness. She tendered not even a remonstrance; she testified
- no shade of surprise. With that consummate tact of hers, in which I
- believe she was never surpassed by living thing, she even professed
- merely to have issued forth to taste "la brise du soir."
- "Quelle belle nuit!" cried she, looking up at the stars--the moon was
- now gone down behind the broad tower of Jean Baptiste. "Qu'il fait bon?
- que l'air est frais!"
- And, instead of sending me in, she detained me to take a few turns with
- her down the principal alley. When at last we both re-entered, she
- leaned affably on my shoulder by way of support in mounting the
- front-door steps; at parting, her cheek was presented to my lips, and
- "Bon soir, my bonne amie; dormez bien!" was her kindly adieu for the
- night.
- I caught myself smiling as I lay awake and thoughtful on my
- couch--smiling at Madame. The unction, the suavity of her behaviour
- offered, for one who knew her, a sure token that suspicion of some kind
- was busy in her brain. From some aperture or summit of observation,
- through parted bough or open window, she had doubtless caught a
- glimpse, remote or near, deceptive or instructive, of that night's
- transactions. Finely accomplished as she was in the art of
- surveillance, it was next to impossible that a casket could be thrown
- into her garden, or an interloper could cross her walks to seek it,
- without that she, in shaken branch, passing shade, unwonted footfall,
- or stilly murmur (and though Dr. John had spoken very low in the few
- words he dropped me, yet the hum of his man's voice pervaded, I
- thought, the whole conventual ground)--without, I say, that she should
- have caught intimation of things extraordinary transpiring on her
- premises. _What_ things, she might by no means see, or at that time be
- able to discover; but a delicious little ravelled plot lay tempting her
- to disentanglement; and in the midst, folded round and round in
- cobwebs, had she not secured "Meess Lucie" clumsily involved, like the
- foolish fly she was?
- CHAPTER XIII.
- A SNEEZE OUT OF SEASON.
- I had occasion to smile--nay, to laugh, at Madame again, within the
- space of four and twenty hours after the little scene treated of in the
- last chapter.
- Villette owns a climate as variable, though not so humid, as that of
- any English town. A night of high wind followed upon that soft sunset,
- and all the next day was one of dry storm--dark, beclouded, yet
- rainless,--the streets were dim with sand and dust, whirled from the
- boulevards. I know not that even lovely weather would have tempted me
- to spend the evening-time of study and recreation where I had spent it
- yesterday. My alley, and, indeed, all the walks and shrubs in the
- garden, had acquired a new, but not a pleasant interest; their
- seclusion was now become precarious; their calm--insecure. That
- casement which rained billets, had vulgarized the once dear nook it
- overlooked; and elsewhere, the eyes of the flowers had gained vision,
- and the knots in the tree-boles listened like secret ears. Some plants
- there were, indeed, trodden down by Dr. John in his search, and his
- hasty and heedless progress, which I wished to prop up, water, and
- revive; some footmarks, too, he had left on the beds: but these, in
- spite of the strong wind, I found a moment's leisure to efface very
- early in the morning, ere common eyes had discovered them. With a
- pensive sort of content, I sat down to my desk and my German, while the
- pupils settled to their evening lessons; and the other teachers took up
- their needlework.
- The scene of the "etude du soir" was always the refectory, a much
- smaller apartment than any of the three classes or schoolrooms; for
- here none, save the boarders, were ever admitted, and these numbered
- only a score. Two lamps hung from the ceiling over the two tables;
- these were lit at dusk, and their kindling was the signal for
- school-books being set aside, a grave demeanour assumed, general
- silence enforced, and then commenced "la lecture pieuse." This said
- "lecture pieuse" was, I soon found, mainly designed as a wholesome
- mortification of the Intellect, a useful humiliation of the Reason; and
- such a dose for Common Sense as she might digest at her leisure, and
- thrive on as she best could.
- The book brought out (it was never changed, but when finished,
- recommenced) was a venerable volume, old as the hills--grey as the
- Hôtel de Ville.
- I would have given two francs for the chance of getting that book once
- into my hands, turning over the sacred yellow leaves, ascertaining the
- title, and perusing with my own eyes the enormous figments which, as an
- unworthy heretic, it was only permitted me to drink in with my
- bewildered ears. This book contained legends of the saints. Good God!
- (I speak the words reverently) what legends they were. What gasconading
- rascals those saints must have been, if they first boasted these
- exploits or invented these miracles. These legends, however, were no
- more than monkish extravagances, over which one laughed inwardly; there
- were, besides, priestly matters, and the priestcraft of the book was
- far worse than its monkery. The ears burned on each side of my head as
- I listened, perforce, to tales of moral martyrdom inflicted by Rome;
- the dread boasts of confessors, who had wickedly abused their office,
- trampling to deep degradation high-born ladies, making of countesses
- and princesses the most tormented slaves under the sun. Stories like
- that of Conrad and Elizabeth of Hungary, recurred again and again, with
- all its dreadful viciousness, sickening tyranny and black impiety:
- tales that were nightmares of oppression, privation, and agony.
- I sat out this "lecture pieuse" for some nights as well as I could, and
- as quietly too; only once breaking off the points of my scissors by
- involuntarily sticking them somewhat deep in the worm-eaten board of
- the table before me. But, at last, it made me so burning hot, and my
- temples, and my heart, and my wrist throbbed so fast, and my sleep
- afterwards was so broken with excitement, that I could sit no longer.
- Prudence recommended henceforward a swift clearance of my person from
- the place, the moment that guilty old book was brought out. No Mause
- Headrigg ever felt a stronger call to take up her testimony against
- Sergeant Bothwell, than I--to speak my mind in this matter of the
- popish "lecture pieuse." However, I did manage somehow to curb and rein
- in; and though always, as soon as Rosine came to light the lamps, I
- shot from the room quickly, yet also I did it quietly; seizing that
- vantage moment given by the little bustle before the dead silence, and
- vanishing whilst the boarders put their books away.
- When I vanished--it was into darkness; candles were not allowed to be
- carried about, and the teacher who forsook the refectory, had only the
- unlit hall, schoolroom, or bedroom, as a refuge. In winter I sought the
- long classes, and paced them fast to keep myself warm--fortunate if the
- moon shone, and if there were only stars, soon reconciled to their dim
- gleam, or even to the total eclipse of their absence. In summer it was
- never quite dark, and then I went up-stairs to my own quarter of the
- long dormitory, opened my own casement (that chamber was lit by five
- casements large as great doors), and leaning out, looked forth upon the
- city beyond the garden, and listened to band-music from the park or the
- palace-square, thinking meantime my own thoughts, living my own life,
- in my own still, shadow-world.
- This evening, fugitive as usual before the Pope and his works, I
- mounted the staircase, approached the dormitory, and quietly opened the
- door, which was always kept carefully shut, and which, like every other
- door in this house, revolved noiselessly on well-oiled hinges. Before I
- _saw_, I _felt_ that life was in the great room, usually void: not that
- there was either stir or breath, or rustle of sound, but Vacuum lacked,
- Solitude was not at home. All the white beds--the "lits d'ange," as
- they were poetically termed--lay visible at a glance; all were empty:
- no sleeper reposed therein. The sound of a drawer cautiously slid out
- struck my ear; stepping a little to one side, my vision took a free
- range, unimpeded by falling curtains. I now commanded my own bed and my
- own toilet, with a locked work-box upon it, and locked drawers
- underneath.
- Very good. A dumpy, motherly little body, in decent shawl and the
- cleanest of possible nightcaps, stood before this toilet, hard at work
- apparently doing me the kindness of "tidying out" the "meuble." Open
- stood the lid of the work-box, open the top drawer; duly and
- impartially was each succeeding drawer opened in turn: not an article
- of their contents but was lifted and unfolded, not a paper but was
- glanced over, not a little box but was unlidded; and beautiful was the
- adroitness, exemplary the care with which the search was accomplished.
- Madame wrought at it like a true star, "unhasting yet unresting." I
- will not deny that it was with a secret glee I watched her. Had I been
- a gentleman I believe Madame would have found favour in my eyes, she
- was so handy, neat, thorough in all she did: some people's movements
- provoke the soul by their loose awkwardness, hers--satisfied by their
- trim compactness. I stood, in short, fascinated; but it was necessary
- to make an effort to break this spell a retreat must be beaten. The
- searcher might have turned and caught me; there would have been nothing
- for it then but a scene, and she and I would have had to come all at
- once, with a sudden clash, to a thorough knowledge of each other: down
- would have gone conventionalities, away swept disguises, and _I_ should
- have looked into her eyes, and she into mine--we should have known that
- we could work together no more, and parted in this life for ever.
- Where was the use of tempting such a catastrophe? I was not angry, and
- had no wish in the world to leave her. I could hardly get another
- employer whose yoke would be so light and so, easy of carriage; and
- truly I liked Madame for her capital sense, whatever I might think of
- her principles: as to her system, it did me no harm; she might work me
- with it to her heart's content: nothing would come of the operation.
- Loverless and inexpectant of love, I was as safe from spies in my
- heart-poverty, as the beggar from thieves in his destitution of purse.
- I turned, then, and fled; descending the stairs with progress as swift
- and soundless as that of the spider, which at the same instant ran down
- the bannister.
- How I laughed when I reached the schoolroom. I knew now she had
- certainly seen Dr. John in the garden; I knew what her thoughts were.
- The spectacle of a suspicious nature so far misled by its own
- inventions, tickled me much. Yet as the laugh died, a kind of wrath
- smote me, and then bitterness followed: it was the rock struck, and
- Meribah's waters gushing out. I never had felt so strange and
- contradictory an inward tumult as I felt for an hour that evening:
- soreness and laughter, and fire, and grief, shared my heart between
- them. I cried hot tears: not because Madame mistrusted me--I did not
- care twopence for her mistrust--but for other reasons. Complicated,
- disquieting thoughts broke up the whole repose of my nature. However,
- that turmoil subsided: next day I was again Lucy Snowe.
- On revisiting my drawers, I found them all securely locked; the closest
- subsequent examination could not discover change or apparent
- disturbance in the position of one object. My few dresses were folded
- as I had left them; a certain little bunch of white violets that had
- once been silently presented to me by a stranger (a stranger to me, for
- we had never exchanged words), and which I had dried and kept for its
- sweet perfume between the folds of my best dress, lay there unstirred;
- my black silk scarf, my lace chemisette and collars, were unrumpled.
- Had she creased one solitary article, I own I should have felt much
- greater difficulty in forgiving her; but finding all straight and
- orderly, I said, "Let bygones be bygones. I am unharmed: why should I
- bear malice?"
- * * * * *
- A thing there was which puzzled myself, and I sought in my brain a key
- to that riddle almost as sedulously as Madame had sought a guide to
- useful knowledge in my toilet drawers. How was it that Dr. John, if he
- had not been accessory to the dropping of that casket into the garden,
- should have known that it _was_ dropped, and appeared so promptly on
- the spot to seek it? So strong was the wish to clear up this point that
- I began to entertain this daring suggestion: "Why may I not, in case I
- should ever have the opportunity, ask Dr. John himself to explain this
- coincidence?"
- And so long as Dr. John was absent, I really believed I had courage to
- test him with such a question.
- Little Georgette was now convalescent; and her physician accordingly
- made his visits very rare: indeed, he would have ceased them
- altogether, had not Madame insisted on his giving an occasional call
- till the child should be quite well.
- She came into the nursery one evening just after I had listened to
- Georgette's lisped and broken prayer, and had put her to bed. Taking
- the little one's hand, she said, "Cette enfant a toujours un peu de
- fièvre." And presently afterwards, looking at me with a quicker glance
- than was habitual to her quiet eye, "Le Docteur John l'a-t-il vue
- dernièrement? Non, n'est-ce pas?"
- Of course she knew this better than any other person in the house.
- "Well," she continued, "I am going out, pour faire quelques courses en
- fiacre. I shall call on Dr. John, and send him to the child. I will
- that he sees her this evening; her cheeks are flushed, her pulse is
- quick; _you_ will receive him--for my part, I shall be from home."
- Now the child was well enough, only warm with the warmth of July; it
- was scarcely less needful to send for a priest to administer extreme
- unction than for a doctor to prescribe a dose; also Madame rarely made
- "courses," as she called them, in the evening: moreover, this was the
- first time she had chosen to absent herself on the occasion of a visit
- from Dr. John. The whole arrangement indicated some plan; this I saw,
- but without the least anxiety. "Ha! ha! Madame," laughed Light-heart
- the Beggar, "your crafty wits are on the wrong tack."
- She departed, attired very smartly, in a shawl of price, and a certain
- _chapeau vert tendre_--hazardous, as to its tint, for any complexion
- less fresh than her own, but, to her, not unbecoming. I wondered what
- she intended: whether she really would send Dr. John or not; or whether
- indeed he would come: he might be engaged.
- Madame had charged me not to let Georgette sleep till the doctor came;
- I had therefore sufficient occupation in telling her nursery tales and
- palavering the little language for her benefit. I affected Georgette;
- she was a sensitive and a loving child: to hold her in my lap, or carry
- her in my arms, was to me a treat. To-night she would have me lay my
- head on the pillow of her crib; she even put her little arms round my
- neck. Her clasp, and the nestling action with which she pressed her
- cheek to mine, made me almost cry with a tender pain. Feeling of no
- kind abounded in that house; this pure little drop from a pure little
- source was too sweet: it penetrated deep, and subdued the heart, and
- sent a gush to the eyes. Half an hour or an hour passed; Georgette
- murmured in her soft lisp that she was growing sleepy. "And you _shall_
- sleep," thought I, "malgré maman and médecin, if they are not here in
- ten minutes."
- Hark! There was the ring, and there the tread, astonishing the
- staircase by the fleetness with which it left the steps behind. Rosine
- introduced Dr. John, and, with a freedom of manner not altogether
- peculiar to herself, but characteristic of the domestics of Villette
- generally, she stayed to hear what he had to say. Madame's presence
- would have awed her back to her own realm of the vestibule and the
- cabinet--for mine, or that of any other teacher or pupil, she cared not
- a jot. Smart, trim and pert, she stood, a hand in each pocket of her
- gay grisette apron, eyeing Dr. John with no more fear or shyness than
- if he had been a picture instead of a living gentleman.
- "Le marmot n'a rien, nest-ce pas?" said she, indicating Georgette with
- a jerk of her chin.
- "Pas beaucoup," was the answer, as the doctor hastily scribbled with
- his pencil some harmless prescription.
- "Eh bien!" pursued Rosine, approaching him quite near, while he put up
- his pencil. "And the box--did you get it? Monsieur went off like a
- coup-de-vent the other night; I had not time to ask him."
- "I found it: yes."
- "And who threw it, then?" continued Rosine, speaking quite freely the
- very words I should so much have wished to say, but had no address or
- courage to bring it out: how short some people make the road to a point
- which, for others, seems unattainable!
- "That may be my secret," rejoined Dr. John briefly, but with no sort
- of hauteur: he seemed quite to understand the Rosine or grisette
- character.
- "Mais enfin," continued she, nothing abashed, "monsieur knew it was
- thrown, since he came to seek it--how did he know?"
- "I was attending a little patient in the college near," said he, "and
- saw it dropped out of his chamber window, and so came to pick it up."
- How simple the whole explanation! The note had alluded to a physician
- as then examining "Gustave."
- "Ah ça!" pursued Rosine; "il n'y a donc rien là-dessous: pas de
- mystère, pas d'amourette, par exemple?"
- "Pas plus que sur ma main," responded the doctor, showing his palm.
- "Quel dommage!" responded the grisette: "et moi--à qui tout cela
- commençait à donner des idées."
- "Vraiment! vous en êtes pour vos frais," was the doctor's cool
- rejoinder.
- She pouted. The doctor could not help laughing at the sort of "moue"
- she made: when he laughed, he had something peculiarly good-natured and
- genial in his look. I saw his hand incline to his pocket.
- "How many times have you opened the door for me within this last
- month?" he asked.
- "Monsieur ought to have kept count of that," said Rosine, quite readily.
- "As if I had not something better to do!" rejoined he; but I saw him
- give her a piece of gold, which she took unscrupulously, and then
- danced off to answer the door-bell, ringing just now every five
- minutes, as the various servants came to fetch the half-boarders.
- The reader must not think too hardly of Rosine; on the whole, she was
- not a bad sort of person, and had no idea there could be any disgrace
- in grasping at whatever she could get, or any effrontery in chattering
- like a pie to the best gentleman in Christendom.
- I had learnt something from the above scene besides what concerned the
- ivory box: viz., that not on the robe de jaconas, pink or grey, nor yet
- on the frilled and pocketed apron, lay the blame of breaking Dr. John's
- heart: these items of array were obviously guiltless as Georgette's
- little blue tunic. So much the better. But who then was the culprit?
- What was the ground--what the origin--what the perfect explanation of
- the whole business? Some points had been cleared, but how many yet
- remained obscure as night!
- "However," I said to myself, "it is no affair of yours;" and turning
- from the face on which I had been unconsciously dwelling with a
- questioning gaze, I looked through the window which commanded the
- garden below. Dr. John, meantime, standing by the bed-side, was slowly
- drawing on his gloves and watching his little patient, as her eyes
- closed and her rosy lips parted in coming sleep. I waited till he
- should depart as usual, with a quick bow and scarce articulate
- "good-night.". Just as he took his hat, my eyes, fixed on the tall
- houses bounding the garden, saw the one lattice, already commemorated,
- cautiously open; forth from the aperture projected a hand and a white
- handkerchief; both waved. I know not whether the signal was answered
- from some viewless quarter of our own dwelling; but immediately after
- there fluttered from, the lattice a falling object, white and
- light--billet the second, of course.
- "There!" I ejaculated involuntarily.
- "Where?", asked Dr. John with energy, making direct for the window.
- "What, is it?"
- "They have gone and done it again," was my reply. "A handkerchief waved
- and something fell:" and I pointed to the lattice, now closed and
- looking hypocritically blank.
- "Go, at once; pick it up and bring it here," was his prompt direction;
- adding, "Nobody will take notice of _you: I_ should be seen."
- Straight I went. After some little search, I found a folded paper,
- lodged on the lower branch of a shrub; I seized and brought it direct
- to Dr. John. This time, I believe not even Rosine saw me.
- He instantly tore the billet into small pieces, without reading it. "It
- is not in the least _her_ fault, you must remember," he said, looking
- at me.
- "_Whose_ fault?" I asked. "_Who_ is it?"
- "You don't yet know, then?"
- "Not in the least."
- "Have you no guess?"
- "None."
- "If I knew you better, I might be tempted to risk some confidence, and
- thus secure you as guardian over a most innocent and excellent, but
- somewhat inexperienced being."
- "As a duenna?" I asked.
- "Yes," said he abstractedly. "What snares are round her!" he added,
- musingly: and now, certainly for the first time, he examined my face,
- anxious, doubtless, to see if any kindly expression there, would
- warrant him in recommending to my care and indulgence some ethereal
- creature, against whom powers of darkness were plotting. I felt no
- particular vocation to undertake the surveillance of ethereal
- creatures; but recalling the scene at the bureau, it seemed to me that
- I owed _him_ a good turn: if I _could_ help him then I would, and it
- lay not with me to decide how. With as little reluctance as might be, I
- intimated that "I was willing to do what I could towards taking care of
- any person in whom he might be interested.".
- "I am no farther interested than as a spectator," said he, with a
- modesty, admirable, as I thought, to witness. "I happen to be
- acquainted with the rather worthless character of the person, who, from
- the house opposite, has now twice invaded the sanctity of this place; I
- have also met in society the object at whom these vulgar attempts are
- aimed. Her exquisite superiority and innate refinement ought, one would
- think, to scare impertinence from her very idea. It is not so, however;
- and innocent, unsuspicious as she is, I would guard her from evil if I
- could. In person, however, I can do nothing I cannot come near her"--he
- paused.
- "Well, I am willing to help you," said I, "only tell me how." And
- busily, in my own mind, I ran over the list of our inmates, seeking
- this paragon, this pearl of great price, this gem without flaw. "It
- must be Madame," I concluded. "_She_ only, amongst us all, has the art
- even to _seem_ superior: but as to being unsuspicious, inexperienced,
- &c., Dr. John need not distract himself about that. However, this is
- just his whim, and I will not contradict him; he shall be humoured: his
- angel shall be an angel.
- "Just notify the quarter to which my care is to be directed," I
- continued gravely: chuckling, however, to myself over the thought of
- being set to chaperon Madame Beck or any of her pupils. Now Dr. John
- had a fine set of nerves, and he at once felt by instinct, what no more
- coarsely constituted mind would have detected; namely, that I was a
- little amused at him. The colour rose to his cheek; with half a smile
- he turned and took his hat--he was going. My heart smote me.
- "I will--I will help you," said I eagerly. "I will do what you wish. I
- will watch over your angel; I will take care of her, only tell me who
- she is."
- "But you _must_ know," said he then with earnestness, yet speaking very
- low. "So spotless, so good, so unspeakably beautiful! impossible that
- one house should contain two like her. I allude, of course--"
- Here the latch of Madame Beck's chamber-door (opening into the nursery)
- gave a sudden click, as if the hand holding it had been slightly
- convulsed; there was the suppressed explosion of an irrepressible
- sneeze. These little accidents will happen to the best of us.
- Madame--excellent woman! was then on duty. She had come home quietly,
- stolen up-stairs on tip-toe; she was in her chamber. If she had not
- sneezed, she would have heard all, and so should I; but that unlucky
- sternutation routed Dr. John. While he stood aghast, she came forward
- alert, composed, in the best yet most tranquil spirits: no novice to
- her habits but would have thought she had just come in, and scouted the
- idea of her ear having been glued to the key-hole for at least ten
- minutes. She affected to sneeze again, declared she was "enrhumée," and
- then proceeded volubly to recount her "courses en fiacre." The
- prayer-bell rang, and I left her with the doctor.
- CHAPTER XIV.
- THE FÊTE.
- As soon as Georgette was well, Madame sent her away into the country. I
- was sorry; I loved the child, and her loss made me poorer than before.
- But I must not complain. I lived in a house full of robust life; I
- might have had companions, and I chose solitude. Each of the teachers
- in turn made me overtures of special intimacy; I tried them all. One I
- found to be an honest woman, but a narrow thinker, a coarse feeler, and
- an egotist. The second was a Parisienne, externally refined--at heart,
- corrupt--without a creed, without a principle, without an affection:
- having penetrated the outward crust of decorum in this character, you
- found a slough beneath. She had a wonderful passion for presents; and,
- in this point, the third teacher--a person otherwise characterless and
- insignificant--closely resembled her. This last-named had also one
- other distinctive property--that of avarice. In her reigned the love of
- money for its own sake. The sight of a piece of gold would bring into
- her eyes a green glisten, singular to witness. She once, as a mark of
- high favour, took me up-stairs, and, opening a secret door, showed me a
- hoard--a mass of coarse, large coin--about fifteen guineas, in
- five-franc pieces. She loved this hoard as a bird loves its eggs. These
- were her savings. She would come and talk to me about them with an
- infatuated and persevering dotage, strange to behold in a person not
- yet twenty-five.
- The Parisienne, on the other hand, was prodigal and profligate (in
- disposition, that is: as to action, I do not know). That latter quality
- showed its snake-head to me but once, peeping out very cautiously. A
- curious kind of reptile it seemed, judging from the glimpse I got; its
- novelty whetted my curiosity: if it would have come out boldly, perhaps
- I might philosophically have stood my ground, and coolly surveyed the
- long thing from forked tongue to scaly tail-tip; but it merely rustled
- in the leaves of a bad novel; and, on encountering a hasty and
- ill-advised demonstration of wrath, recoiled and vanished, hissing. She
- hated me from that day.
- This Parisienne was always in debt; her salary being anticipated, not
- only in dress, but in perfumes, cosmetics, confectionery, and
- condiments. What a cold, callous epicure she was in all things! I see
- her now. Thin in face and figure, sallow in complexion, regular in
- features, with perfect teeth, lips like a thread, a large, prominent
- chin, a well-opened, but frozen eye, of light at once craving and
- ingrate. She mortally hated work, and loved what she called pleasure;
- being an insipid, heartless, brainless dissipation of time.
- Madame Beck knew this woman's character perfectly well. She once talked
- to me about her, with an odd mixture of discrimination, indifference,
- and antipathy. I asked why she kept her in the establishment. She
- answered plainly, "because it suited her interest to do so;" and
- pointed out a fact I had already noticed, namely, that Mademoiselle St.
- Pierre possessed, in an almost unique degree, the power of keeping
- order amongst her undisciplined ranks of scholars. A certain petrifying
- influence accompanied and surrounded her: without passion, noise, or
- violence, she held them in check as a breezeless frost-air might still
- a brawling stream. She was of little use as far as communication of
- knowledge went, but for strict surveillance and maintenance of rules
- she was invaluable. "Je sais bien qu'elle n'a pas de principes, ni,
- peut-être, de moeurs," admitted Madame frankly; but added with
- philosophy, "son maintien en classe est toujours convenable et rempli
- même d'une certaine dignité: c'est tout ce qu'il faut. Ni les élèves ni
- les parents ne regardent plus loin; ni, par conséquent, moi non plus."
- * * * * *
- A strange, frolicsome, noisy little world was this school: great pains
- were taken to hide chains with flowers: a subtle essence of Romanism
- pervaded every arrangement: large sensual indulgence (so to speak) was
- permitted by way of counterpoise to jealous spiritual restraint. Each
- mind was being reared in slavery; but, to prevent reflection from
- dwelling on this fact, every pretext for physical recreation was seized
- and made the most of. There, as elsewhere, the CHURCH strove to bring
- up her children robust in body, feeble in soul, fat, ruddy, hale,
- joyous, ignorant, unthinking, unquestioning. "Eat, drink, and live!"
- she says. "Look after your bodies; leave your souls to me. I hold their
- cure--guide their course: I guarantee their final fate." A bargain, in
- which every true Catholic deems himself a gainer. Lucifer just offers
- the same terms: "All this power will I give thee, and the glory of it;
- for that is delivered unto me, and to whomsoever I will I give it. If
- thou, therefore, wilt worship me, all shall be thine!"
- About this time--in the ripest glow of summer--Madame Beck's house
- became as merry a place as a school could well be. All day long the
- broad folding-doors and the two-leaved casements stood wide open:
- settled sunshine seemed naturalized in the atmosphere; clouds were far
- off, sailing away beyond sea, resting, no doubt, round islands such as
- England--that dear land of mists--but withdrawn wholly from the drier
- continent. We lived far more in the garden than under a roof: classes
- were held, and meals partaken of, in the "grand berceau." Moreover,
- there was a note of holiday preparation, which almost turned freedom
- into licence. The autumnal long vacation was but two months distant;
- but before that, a great day--an important ceremony--none other than
- the fête of Madame--awaited celebration.
- The conduct of this fête devolved chiefly on Mademoiselle St. Pierre:
- Madame herself being supposed to stand aloof, disinterestedly
- unconscious of what might be going forward in her honour. Especially,
- she never knew, never in the least suspected, that a subscription was
- annually levied on the whole school for the purchase of a handsome
- present. The polite tact of the reader will please to leave out of the
- account a brief, secret consultation on this point in Madame's own
- chamber.
- "What will you have this year?" was asked by her Parisian lieutenant.
- "Oh, no matter! Let it alone. Let the poor children keep their francs,"
- And Madame looked benign and modest.
- The St. Pierre would here protrude her chin; she knew Madame by heart;
- she always called her airs of "bonté"--"des grimaces." She never even
- professed to respect them one instant.
- "Vite!" she would say coldly. "Name the article. Shall it be jewellery
- or porcelain, haberdashery or silver?"
- "Eh bien! Deux ou trois cuillers, et autant de fourchettes en argent."
- And the result was a handsome case, containing 300 francs worth of
- plate.
- The programme of the fête-day's proceedings comprised: Presentation of
- plate, collation in the garden, dramatic performance (with pupils and
- teachers for actors), a dance and supper. Very gorgeous seemed the
- effect of the whole to me, as I well remember. Zélie St. Pierre
- understood these things and managed them ably.
- The play was the main point; a month's previous drilling being there
- required. The choice, too, of the actors required knowledge and care;
- then came lessons in elocution, in attitude, and then the fatigue of
- countless rehearsals. For all this, as may well be supposed, St. Pierre
- did not suffice: other management, other accomplishments than hers were
- requisite here. They were supplied in the person of a master--M. Paul
- Emanuel, professor of literature. It was never my lot to be present at
- the histrionic lessons of M. Paul, but I often saw him as he crossed
- the _carré_ (a square hall between the dwelling-house and
- school-house). I heard him, too, in the warm evenings, lecturing with
- open doors, and his name, with anecdotes of him, resounded in ones ears
- from all sides. Especially our former acquaintance, Miss Ginevra
- Fanshawe,--who had been selected to take a prominent part in the
- play--used, in bestowing upon me a large portion of her leisure, to
- lard her discourse with frequent allusions to his sayings and doings.
- She esteemed him hideously plain, and used to profess herself
- frightened almost into hysterics at the sound of his step or voice. A
- dark little man he certainly was; pungent and austere. Even to me he
- seemed a harsh apparition, with his close-shorn, black head, his broad,
- sallow brow, his thin cheek, his wide and quivering nostril, his
- thorough glance, and hurried bearing. Irritable he was; one heard that,
- as he apostrophized with vehemence the awkward squad under his orders.
- Sometimes he would break out on these raw amateur actresses with a
- passion of impatience at their falseness of conception, their coldness
- of emotion, their feebleness of delivery. "Ecoutez!" he would cry; and
- then his voice rang through the premises like a trumpet; and when,
- mimicking it, came the small pipe of a Ginevra, a Mathilde, or a
- Blanche, one understood why a hollow groan of scorn, or a fierce hiss
- of rage, rewarded the tame echo.
- "Vous n'êtes donc que des poupées," I heard him thunder. "Vous n'avez
- pas de passions--vous autres. Vous ne sentez donc rien? Votre chair est
- de neige, votre sang de glace! Moi, je veux que tout cela s'allume,
- qu'il ait une vie, une âme!"
- Vain resolve! And when he at last found it _was_ vain, he suddenly
- broke the whole business down. Hitherto he had been teaching them a
- grand tragedy; he tore the tragedy in morsels, and came next day with a
- compact little comic trifle. To this they took more kindly; he
- presently knocked it all into their smooth round pates.
- Mademoiselle St. Pierre always presided at M. Emanuel's lessons, and I
- was told that the polish of her manner, her seeming attention, her tact
- and grace, impressed that gentleman very favourably. She had, indeed,
- the art of pleasing, for a given time, whom she would; but the feeling
- would not last: in an hour it was dried like dew, vanished like
- gossamer.
- The day preceding Madame's fête was as much a holiday as the fête
- itself. It was devoted to clearing out, cleaning, arranging and
- decorating the three schoolrooms. All within-doors was the gayest
- bustle; neither up-stairs nor down could a quiet, isolated person find
- rest for the sole of her foot; accordingly, for my part, I took refuge
- in the garden. The whole day did I wander or sit there alone, finding
- warmth in the sun, shelter among the trees, and a sort of companionship
- in my own thoughts. I well remember that I exchanged but two sentences
- that day with any living being: not that I felt solitary; I was glad to
- be quiet. For a looker-on, it sufficed to pass through the rooms once
- or twice, observe what changes were being wrought, how a green-room and
- a dressing-room were being contrived, a little stage with scenery
- erected, how M. Paul Emanuel, in conjunction with Mademoiselle St.
- Pierre, was directing all, and how an eager band of pupils, amongst
- them Ginevra Fanshawe, were working gaily under his control.
- The great day arrived. The sun rose hot and unclouded, and hot and
- unclouded it burned on till evening. All the doors and all the windows
- were set open, which gave a pleasant sense of summer freedom--and
- freedom the most complete seemed indeed the order of the day. Teachers
- and pupils descended to breakfast in dressing-gowns and curl-papers:
- anticipating "avec délices" the toilette of the evening, they seemed to
- take a pleasure in indulging that forenoon in a luxury of slovenliness;
- like aldermen fasting in preparation for a feast. About nine o'clock
- A.M., an important functionary, the "coiffeur," arrived. Sacrilegious
- to state, he fixed his head-quarters in the oratory, and there, in
- presence of _bénitier_, candle, and crucifix, solemnised the mysteries
- of his art. Each girl was summoned in turn to pass through his hands;
- emerging from them with head as smooth as a shell, intersected by
- faultless white lines, and wreathed about with Grecian plaits that
- shone as if lacquered. I took my turn with the rest, and could hardly
- believe what the glass said when I applied to it for information
- afterwards; the lavished garlandry of woven brown hair amazed me--I
- feared it was not all my own, and it required several convincing pulls
- to give assurance to the contrary. I then acknowledged in the coiffeur
- a first-rate artist--one who certainly made the most of indifferent
- materials.
- The oratory closed, the dormitory became the scene of ablutions,
- arrayings and bedizenings curiously elaborate. To me it was, and ever
- must be an enigma, how they contrived to spend so much time in doing so
- little. The operation seemed close, intricate, prolonged: the result
- simple. A clear white muslin dress, a blue sash (the Virgin's colours),
- a pair of white, or straw-colour kid gloves--such was the gala uniform,
- to the assumption whereof that houseful of teachers and pupils devoted
- three mortal hours. But though simple, it must be allowed the array was
- perfect--perfect in fashion, fit, and freshness; every head being also
- dressed with exquisite nicety, and a certain compact taste--suiting the
- full, firm comeliness of Labassecourien contours, though too stiff for
- any more flowing and flexible style of beauty--the general effect was,
- on the whole, commendable.
- In beholding this diaphanous and snowy mass, I well remember feeling
- myself to be a mere shadowy spot on a field of light; the courage was
- not in me to put on a transparent white dress: something thin I must
- wear--the weather and rooms being too hot to give substantial fabrics
- sufferance, so I had sought through a dozen shops till I lit upon a
- crape-like material of purple-gray--the colour, in short, of dun mist,
- lying on a moor in bloom. My _tailleuse_ had kindly made it as well as
- she could: because, as she judiciously observed, it was "si triste--si
- pen voyant," care in the fashion was the more imperative: it was well
- she took this view of the matter, for I, had no flower, no jewel to
- relieve it: and, what was more, I had no natural rose of complexion.
- We become oblivious of these deficiencies in the uniform routine of
- daily drudgery, but they _will_ force upon us their unwelcome blank on
- those bright occasions when beauty should shine.
- However, in this same gown of shadow, I felt at home and at ease; an
- advantage I should not have enjoyed in anything more brilliant or
- striking. Madame Beck, too, kept me in countenance; her dress was
- almost as quiet as mine, except that she wore a bracelet, and a large
- brooch bright with gold and fine stones. We chanced to meet on the
- stairs, and she gave me a nod and smile of approbation. Not that she
- thought I was looking well--a point unlikely to engage her
- interest--but she considered me dressed "convenablement," "décemment,"
- and la Convenance et la Décence were the two calm deities of Madame's
- worship. She even paused, laid on my shoulder her gloved hand, holding
- an embroidered and perfumed handkerchief, and confided to my ear a
- sarcasm on the other teachers (whom she had just been complimenting to
- their faces). "Nothing so absurd," she said, "as for des femmes mûres
- 'to dress themselves like girls of fifteen'--quant à la. St. Pierre,
- elle a l'air d'une vieille coquette qui fait l'ingénue."
- Being dressed at least a couple of hours before anybody else, I felt a
- pleasure in betaking myself--not to the garden, where servants were
- busy propping up long tables, placing seats, and spreading cloths in
- readiness for the collation but to the schoolrooms, now empty, quiet,
- cool, and clean; their walls fresh stained, their planked floors fresh
- scoured and scarce dry; flowers fresh gathered adorning the recesses in
- pots, and draperies, fresh hung, beautifying the great windows.
- Withdrawing to the first classe, a smaller and neater room than the
- others, and taking from the glazed bookcase, of which I kept the key, a
- volume whose title promised some interest, I sat down to read. The
- glass-door of this "classe," or schoolroom, opened into the large
- berceau; acacia-boughs caressed its panes, as they stretched across to
- meet a rose-bush blooming by the opposite lintel: in this rose-bush
- bees murmured busy and happy. I commenced reading. Just as the stilly
- hum, the embowering shade, the warm, lonely calm of my retreat were
- beginning to steal meaning from the page, vision from my eyes, and to
- lure me along the track of reverie, down into some deep dell of
- dreamland--just then, the sharpest ring of the street-door bell to
- which that much-tried instrument had ever thrilled, snatched me back to
- consciousness.
- Now the bell had been ringing all the morning, as workmen, or servants,
- or _coiffeurs_, or _tailleuses_, went and came on their several
- errands. Moreover, there was good reason to expect it would ring all
- the afternoon, since about one hundred externes were yet to arrive in
- carriages or fiacres: nor could it be expected to rest during the
- evening, when parents and friends would gather thronging to the play.
- Under these circumstances, a ring--even a sharp ring--was a matter of
- course: yet this particular peal had an accent of its own, which chased
- my dream, and startled my book from my knee.
- I was stooping to pick up this last, when--firm, fast, straight--right
- on through vestibule--along corridor, across carré, through first
- division, second division, grand salle--strode a step, quick, regular,
- intent. The closed door of the first classe--my sanctuary--offered no
- obstacle; it burst open, and a paletôt and a bonnet grec filled the
- void; also two eyes first vaguely struck upon, and then hungrily dived
- into me.
- "C'est cela!" said a voice. "Je la connais: c'est l'Anglaise. Tant pis.
- Toute Anglaise, et, par conséquent, toute bégueule qu'elle soit--elle
- fera mon affaire, ou je saurai pourquoi."
- Then, with a certain stern politeness (I suppose he thought I had not
- caught the drift of his previous uncivil mutterings), and in a jargon
- the most execrable that ever was heard, "Meess----, play you must: I am
- planted there."
- "What can I do for you, M. Paul Emanuel?" I inquired: for M. Paul
- Emanuel it was, and in a state of no little excitement.
- "Play you must. I will not have you shrink, or frown, or make the
- prude. I read your skull that night you came; I see your moyens: play
- you can; play you must."
- "But how, M. Paul? What do you mean?"
- "There is no time to be lost," he went on, now speaking in French; "and
- let us thrust to the wall all reluctance, all excuses, all minauderies.
- You must take a part."
- "In the vaudeville?"
- "In the vaudeville. You have said it."
- I gasped, horror-struck. _What_ did the little man mean?
- "Listen!" he said. "The case shall be stated, and you shall then answer
- me Yes, or No; and according to your answer shall I ever after estimate
- you."
- The scarce-suppressed impetus of a most irritable nature glowed in his
- cheek, fed with sharp shafts his glances, a nature--the injudicious,
- the mawkish, the hesitating, the sullen, the affected, above all, the
- unyielding, might quickly render violent and implacable. Silence and
- attention was the best balm to apply: I listened.
- "The whole matter is going to fail," he began. "Louise Vanderkelkov has
- fallen ill--at least so her ridiculous mother asserts; for my part, I
- feel sure she might play if she would: it is only good-will that lacks.
- She was charged with a _rôle_, as you know, or do _not_ know--it is
- equal: without that _rôle_ the play is stopped. There are now but a few
- hours in which to learn it: not a girl in this school would hear
- reason, and accept the task. Forsooth, it is not an interesting, not an
- amiable, part; their vile _amour-propre_--that base quality of which
- women have so much--would revolt from it. Englishwomen are either the
- best or the worst of their sex. Dieu sait que je les déteste comme la
- peste, ordinairement" (this between his recreant teeth). "I apply to an
- Englishwoman to rescue me. What is her answer--Yes, or No?"
- A thousand objections rushed into my mind. The foreign language, the
- limited time, the public display... Inclination recoiled, Ability
- faltered, Self-respect (that "vile quality") trembled. "Non, non, non!"
- said all these; but looking up at M. Paul, and seeing in his vexed,
- fiery, and searching eye, a sort of appeal behind all its menace, my
- lips dropped the word "oui". For a moment his rigid countenance relaxed
- with a quiver of content: quickly bent up again, however, he went on,--
- "Vite à l'ouvrage! Here is the book; here is your _rôle_: read." And I
- read. He did not commend; at some passages he scowled and stamped. He
- gave me a lesson: I diligently imitated. It was a disagreeable part--a
- man's--an empty-headed fop's. One could put into it neither heart nor
- soul: I hated it. The play--a mere trifle--ran chiefly on the efforts
- of a brace of rivals to gain the hand of a fair coquette. One lover was
- called the "Ours," a good and gallant but unpolished man, a sort of
- diamond in the rough; the other was a butterfly, a talker, and a
- traitor: and I was to be the butterfly, talker, and traitor.
- I did my best--which was bad, I know: it provoked M. Paul; he fumed.
- Putting both hands to the work, I endeavoured to do better than my
- best; I presume he gave me credit for good intentions; he professed to
- be partially content. "Ca ira!" he cried; and as voices began sounding
- from the garden, and white dresses fluttering among the trees, he
- added: "You must withdraw: you must be alone to learn this. Come with
- me."
- Without being allowed time or power to deliberate, I found myself in
- the same breath convoyed along as in a species of whirlwind, up-stairs,
- up two pair of stairs, nay, actually up three (for this fiery little
- man seemed as by instinct to know his way everywhere); to the solitary
- and lofty attic was I borne, put in and locked in, the key being, in
- the door, and that key he took with him and vanished.
- The attic was no pleasant place: I believe he did not know how
- unpleasant it was, or he never would have locked me in with so little
- ceremony. In this summer weather, it was hot as Africa; as in winter,
- it was always cold as Greenland. Boxes and lumber filled it; old
- dresses draped its unstained wall--cobwebs its unswept ceiling. Well
- was it known to be tenanted by rats, by black beetles, and by
- cockroaches--nay, rumour affirmed that the ghostly Nun of the garden
- had once been seen here. A partial darkness obscured one end, across
- which, as for deeper mystery, an old russet curtain was drawn, by way
- of screen to a sombre band of winter cloaks, pendent each from its pin,
- like a malefactor from his gibbet. From amongst these cloaks, and
- behind that curtain, the Nun was said to issue. I did not believe this,
- nor was I troubled by apprehension thereof; but I saw a very dark and
- large rat, with a long tail, come gliding out from that squalid alcove;
- and, moreover, my eye fell on many a black-beetle, dotting the floor.
- These objects discomposed me more, perhaps, than it would be wise to
- say, as also did the dust, lumber, and stifling heat of the place. The
- last inconvenience would soon have become intolerable, had I not found
- means to open and prop up the skylight, thus admitting some freshness.
- Underneath this aperture I pushed a large empty chest, and having
- mounted upon it a smaller box, and wiped from both the dust, I gathered
- my dress (my best, the reader must remember, and therefore a legitimate
- object of care) fastidiously around me, ascended this species of
- extempore throne, and being seated, commenced the acquisition of my
- task; while I learned, not forgetting to keep a sharp look-out on the
- black-beetles and cockroaches, of which, more even, I believe, than of
- the rats, I sat in mortal dread.
- My impression at first was that I had undertaken what it really was
- impossible to perform, and I simply resolved to do my best and be
- resigned to fail. I soon found, however, that one part in so short a
- piece was not more than memory could master at a few hours' notice. I
- learned and learned on, first in a whisper, and then aloud. Perfectly
- secure from human audience, I acted my part before the garret-vermin.
- Entering into its emptiness, frivolity, and falsehood, with a spirit
- inspired by scorn and impatience, I took my revenge on this "fat," by
- making him as fatuitous as I possibly could.
- In this exercise the afternoon passed: day began to glide into evening;
- and I, who had eaten nothing since breakfast, grew excessively hungry.
- Now I thought of the collation, which doubtless they were just then
- devouring in the garden far below. (I had seen in the vestibule a
- basketful of small _pâtés à la crême_, than which nothing in the whole
- range of cookery seemed to me better). A _pâté_, or a square of cake,
- it seemed to me would come very _àpropos;_ and as my relish for those
- dainties increased, it began to appear somewhat hard that I should pass
- my holiday, fasting and in prison. Remote as was the attic from the
- street-door and vestibule, yet the ever-tinkling bell was faintly
- audible here; and also the ceaseless roll of wheels, on the tormented
- pavement. I knew that the house and garden were thronged, and that all
- was gay and glad below; here it began to grow dusk: the beetles were
- fading from my sight; I trembled lest they should steal on me a march,
- mount my throne unseen, and, unsuspected, invade my skirts. Impatient
- and apprehensive, I recommenced the rehearsal of my part merely to kill
- time. Just as I was concluding, the long-delayed rattle of the key in
- the lock came to my ear--no unwelcome sound. M. Paul (I could just see
- through the dusk that it _was_ M. Paul, for light enough still lingered
- to show the velvet blackness of his close-shorn head, and the sallow
- ivory of his brow) looked in.
- "Brava!" cried he, holding the door open and remaining at the
- threshold. "J'ai tout entendu. C'est assez bien. Encore!"
- A moment I hesitated.
- "Encore!" said he sternly. "Et point de grimaces! A bas la timidité!"
- Again I went through the part, but not half so well as I had spoken it
- alone.
- "Enfin, elle sait," said he, half dissatisfied, "and one cannot be
- fastidious or exacting under the circumstances." Then he added, "You
- may yet have twenty minutes for preparation: au revoir!" And he was
- going.
- "Monsieur," I called out, taking courage.
- "Eh bien! Qu'est-ce que c'est, Mademoiselle?"
- "J'ai bien faim."
- "Comment, vous avez faim! Et la collation?"
- "I know nothing about it. I have not seen it, shut up here."
- "Ah! C'est vrai," cried he.
- In a moment my throne was abdicated, the attic evacuated; an inverse
- repetition of the impetus which had brought me up into the attic,
- instantly took me down--down--down to the very kitchen. I thought I
- should have gone to the cellar. The cook was imperatively ordered to
- produce food, and I, as imperatively, was commanded to eat. To my great
- joy this food was limited to coffee and cake: I had feared wine and
- sweets, which I did not like. How he guessed that I should like a
- _petit pâté à la crême_ I cannot tell; but he went out and procured me
- one from some quarter. With considerable willingness I ate and drank,
- keeping the _petit pâté_ till the last, as a _bonne bouche_. M. Paul
- superintended my repast, and almost forced upon me more than I could
- swallow.
- "A la bonne heure," he cried, when I signified that I really could take
- no more, and, with uplifted hands, implored to be spared the additional
- roll on which he had just spread butter. "You will set me down as a
- species of tyrant and Bluebeard, starving women in a garret; whereas,
- after all, I am no such thing. Now, Mademoiselle, do you feel courage
- and strength to appear?"
- I said, I thought I did; though, in truth, I was perfectly confused,
- and could hardly tell how I felt: but this little man was of the order
- of beings who must not be opposed, unless you possessed an all-dominant
- force sufficient to crush him at once.
- "Come then," said he, offering his hand.
- I gave him mine, and he set off with a rapid walk, which obliged me to
- run at his side in order to keep pace. In the carré he stopped a
- moment: it was lit with large lamps; the wide doors of the classes were
- open, and so were the equally wide garden-doors; orange-trees in tubs,
- and tall flowers in pots, ornamented these portals on each side; groups
- of ladies and gentlemen in evening-dress stood and walked amongst the
- flowers. Within, the long vista of the school-rooms presented a
- thronging, undulating, murmuring, waving, streaming multitude, all
- rose, and blue, and half translucent white. There were lustres burning
- overhead; far off there was a stage, a solemn green curtain, a row of
- footlights.
- "Nest-ce pas que c'est beau?" demanded my companion.
- I should have said it was, but my heart got up into my throat. M. Paul
- discovered this, and gave me a side-scowl and a little shake for my
- pains.
- "I will do my best, but I wish it was over," said I; then I asked: "Are
- we to walk through that crowd?"
- "By no means: I manage matters better: we pass through the
- garden--here."
- In an instant we were out of doors: the cool, calm night revived me
- somewhat. It was moonless, but the reflex from the many glowing windows
- lit the court brightly, and even the alleys--dimly. Heaven was
- cloudless, and grand with the quiver of its living fires. How soft are
- the nights of the Continent! How bland, balmy, safe! No sea-fog; no
- chilling damp: mistless as noon, and fresh as morning.
- Having crossed court and garden, we reached the glass door of the first
- classe. It stood open, like all other doors that night; we passed, and
- then I was ushered into a small cabinet, dividing the first classe from
- the grand salle. This cabinet dazzled me, it was so full of light: it
- deafened me, it was clamorous with voices: it stifled me, it was so
- hot, choking, thronged.
- "De l'ordre! Du silence!" cried M. Paul. "Is this chaos?", he demanded;
- and there was a hush. With a dozen words, and as many gestures, he
- turned out half the persons present, and obliged the remnant to fall
- into rank. Those left were all in costume: they were the performers,
- and this was the green-room. M. Paul introduced me. All stared and some
- tittered. It was a surprise: they had not expected the Englishwoman
- would play in a _vaudeville_. Ginevra Fanshawe, beautifully dressed for
- her part, and looking fascinatingly pretty, turned on me a pair of eyes
- as round as beads. In the highest spirit, unperturbed by fear or
- bashfulness, delighted indeed at the thought of shining off before
- hundreds--my entrance seemed to transfix her with amazement in the
- midst of her joy. She would have exclaimed, but M. Paul held her and
- all the rest in check.
- Having surveyed and criticized the whole troop, he turned to me.
- "You, too, must be dressed for your part."
- "Dressed--dressed like a man!" exclaimed Zélie St. Pierre, darting
- forwards; adding with officiousness, "I will dress her myself."
- To be dressed like a man did not please, and would not suit me. I had
- consented to take a man's name and part; as to his dress--_halte là!_
- No. I would keep my own dress, come what might. M. Paul might storm,
- might rage: I would keep my own dress. I said so, with a voice as
- resolute in intent, as it was low, and perhaps unsteady in utterance.
- He did not immediately storm or rage, as I fully thought he would he
- stood silent. But Zélie again interposed.
- "She will make a capital _petit-mâitre_. Here are the garments,
- all--all complete: somewhat too large, but--I will arrange all that.
- Come, chère amie--belle Anglaise!"
- And she sneered, for I was not "belle." She seized my hand, she was
- drawing me away. M. Paul stood impassable--neutral.
- "You must not resist," pursued St. Pierre--for resist I did. "You will
- spoil all, destroy the mirth of the piece, the enjoyment of the
- company, sacrifice everything to your _amour-propre_. This would be too
- bad--monsieur will never permit this?"
- She sought his eye. I watched, likewise, for a glance. He gave her one,
- and then he gave me one. "Stop!" he said slowly, arresting St. Pierre,
- who continued her efforts to drag me after her. Everybody awaited the
- decision. He was not angry, not irritated; I perceived that, and took
- heart.
- "You do not like these clothes?" he asked, pointing to the masculine
- vestments.
- "I don't object to some of them, but I won't have them all."
- "How must it be, then? How accept a man's part, and go on the stage
- dressed as a woman? This is an amateur affair, it is true--a
- _vaudeville de pensionnat;_ certain modifications I might sanction, yet
- something you must have to announce you as of the nobler sex."
- "And I will, Monsieur; but it must be arranged in my own way: nobody
- must meddle; the things must not be forced upon me. Just let me dress
- myself."
- Monsieur, without another word, took the costume from St. Pierre, gave
- it to me, and permitted me to pass into the dressing-room. Once alone,
- I grew calm, and collectedly went to work. Retaining my woman's garb
- without the slightest retrenchment, I merely assumed, in addition, a
- little vest, a collar, and cravat, and a paletôt of small dimensions;
- the whole being the costume of a brother of one of the pupils. Having
- loosened my hair out of its braids, made up the long back-hair close,
- and brushed the front hair to one side, I took my hat and gloves in my
- hand and came out. M. Paul was waiting, and so were the others. He
- looked at me. "That may pass in a pensionnat," he pronounced. Then
- added, not unkindly, "Courage, mon ami! Un peu de sangfroid--un peu
- d'aplomb, M. Lucien, et tout ira bien."
- St. Pierre sneered again, in her cold snaky manner.
- I was irritable, because excited, and I could not help turning upon her
- and saying, that if she were not a lady and I a gentleman, I should
- feel disposed to call her out.
- "After the play, after the play," said M. Paul. "I will then divide my
- pair of pistols between you, and we will settle the dispute according
- to form: it will only be the old quarrel of France and England."
- But now the moment approached for the performance to commence. M. Paul,
- setting us before him, harangued us briefly, like a general addressing
- soldiers about to charge. I don't know what he said, except that he
- recommended each to penetrate herself with a sense of her personal
- insignificance. God knows I thought this advice superfluous for some of
- us. A bell tinkled. I and two more were ushered on to the stage. The
- bell tinkled again. I had to speak the very first words.
- "Do not look at the crowd, nor think of it," whispered M. Paul in my
- ear. "Imagine yourself in the garret, acting to the rats."
- He vanished. The curtain drew up--shrivelled to the ceiling: the bright
- lights, the long room, the gay throng, burst upon us. I thought of the
- black-beetles, the old boxes, the worm-eaten bureau. I said my say
- badly; but I said it. That first speech was the difficulty; it revealed
- to me this fact, that it was not the crowd I feared so much as my own
- voice. Foreigners and strangers, the crowd were nothing to me. Nor did
- I think of them. When my tongue once got free, and my voice took its
- true pitch, and found its natural tone, I thought of nothing but the
- personage I represented--and of M. Paul, who was listening, watching,
- prompting in the side-scenes.
- By-and-by, feeling the right power come--the spring demanded gush and
- rise inwardly--I became sufficiently composed to notice my
- fellow-actors. Some of them played very well; especially Ginevra
- Fanshawe, who had to coquette between two suitors, and managed
- admirably: in fact she was in her element. I observed that she once or
- twice threw a certain marked fondness and pointed partiality into her
- manner towards me--the fop. With such emphasis and animation did she
- favour me, such glances did she dart out into the listening and
- applauding crowd, that to me--who knew her--it presently became evident
- she was acting _at_ some one; and I followed her eye, her smile, her
- gesture, and ere long discovered that she had at least singled out a
- handsome and distinguished aim for her shafts; full in the path of
- those arrows--taller than other spectators, and therefore more sure to
- receive them--stood, in attitude quiet but intent, a well-known
- form--that of Dr. John.
- The spectacle seemed somehow suggestive. There was language in Dr.
- John's look, though I cannot tell what he said; it animated me: I drew
- out of it a history; I put my idea into the part I performed; I threw
- it into my wooing of Ginevra. In the "Ours," or sincere lover, I saw
- Dr. John. Did I pity him, as erst? No, I hardened my heart, rivalled
- and out-rivalled him. I knew myself but a fop, but where _he_ was
- outcast _I_ could please. Now I know I acted as if wishful and resolute
- to win and conquer. Ginevra seconded me; between us we half-changed the
- nature of the _rôle_, gilding it from top to toe. Between the acts M.
- Paul, told us he knew not what possessed us, and half expostulated.
- "C'est peut-être plus beau que votre modèle," said he, "mais ce n'est
- pas juste." I know not what possessed me either; but somehow, my
- longing was to eclipse the "Ours," _i.e._, Dr. John. Ginevra was
- tender; how could I be otherwise than chivalric? Retaining the letter,
- I recklessly altered the spirit of the _rôle_. Without heart, without
- interest, I could not play it at all. It must be played--in went the
- yearned-for seasoning--thus favoured, I played it with relish.
- What I felt that night, and what I did, I no more expected to feel and
- do, than to be lifted in a trance to the seventh heaven. Cold,
- reluctant, apprehensive, I had accepted a part to please another: ere
- long, warming, becoming interested, taking courage, I acted to please
- myself. Yet the next day, when I thought it over, I quite disapproved
- of these amateur performances; and though glad that I had obliged M.
- Paul, and tried my own strength for once, I took a firm resolution,
- never to be drawn into a similar affair. A keen relish for dramatic
- expression had revealed itself as part of my nature; to cherish and
- exercise this new-found faculty might gift me with a world of delight,
- but it would not do for a mere looker-on at life: the strength and
- longing must be put by; and I put them by, and fastened them in with
- the lock of a resolution which neither Time nor Temptation has since
- picked.
- No sooner was the play over, and _well_ over, than the choleric and
- arbitrary M. Paul underwent a metamorphosis. His hour of managerial
- responsibility past, he at once laid aside his magisterial austerity;
- in a moment he stood amongst us, vivacious, kind, and social, shook
- hands with us all round, thanked us separately, and announced his
- determination that each of us should in turn be his partner in the
- coming ball. On his claiming my promise, I told him I did not dance.
- "For once I must," was the answer; and if I had not slipped aside and
- kept out of his way, he would have compelled me to this second
- performance. But I had acted enough for one evening; it was time I
- retired into myself and my ordinary life. My dun-coloured dress did
- well enough under a paletôt on the stage, but would not suit a waltz or
- a quadrille. Withdrawing to a quiet nook, whence unobserved I could
- observe--the ball, its splendours and its pleasures, passed before me
- as a spectacle.
- Again Ginevra Fanshawe was the belle, the fairest and the gayest
- present; she was selected to open the ball: very lovely she looked,
- very gracefully she danced, very joyously she smiled. Such scenes were
- her triumphs--she was the child of pleasure. Work or suffering found
- her listless and dejected, powerless and repining; but gaiety expanded
- her butterfly's wings, lit up their gold-dust and bright spots, made
- her flash like a gem, and flush like a flower. At all ordinary diet and
- plain beverage she would pout; but she fed on creams and ices like a
- humming-bird on honey-paste: sweet wine was her element, and sweet cake
- her daily bread. Ginevra lived her full life in a ball-room; elsewhere
- she drooped dispirited.
- Think not, reader, that she thus bloomed and sparkled for the mere sake
- of M. Paul, her partner, or that she lavished her best graces that
- night for the edification of her companions only, or for that of the
- parents and grand-parents, who filled the carré, and lined the
- ball-room; under circumstances so insipid and limited, with motives so
- chilly and vapid, Ginevra would scarce have deigned to walk one
- quadrille, and weariness and fretfulness would have replaced animation
- and good-humour, but she knew of a leaven in the otherwise heavy festal
- mass which lighted the whole; she tasted a condiment which gave it
- zest; she perceived reasons justifying the display of her choicest
- attractions.
- In the ball-room, indeed, not a single male spectator was to be seen
- who was not married and a father--M. Paul excepted--that gentleman,
- too, being the sole creature of his sex permitted to lead out a pupil
- to the dance; and this exceptional part was allowed him, partly as a
- matter of old-established custom (for he was a kinsman of Madame
- Beck's, and high in her confidence), partly because he would always
- have his own way and do as he pleased, and partly because--wilful,
- passionate, partial, as he might be--he was the soul of honour, and
- might be trusted with a regiment of the fairest and purest; in perfect
- security that under his leadership they would come to no harm. Many of
- the girls--it may be noted in parenthesis--were not pure-minded at all,
- very much otherwise; but they no more dare betray their natural
- coarseness in M. Paul's presence, than they dare tread purposely on his
- corns, laugh in his face during a stormy apostrophe, or speak above
- their breath while some crisis of irritability was covering his human
- visage with the mask of an intelligent tiger. M. Paul, then, might
- dance with whom he would--and woe be to the interference which put him
- out of step.
- Others there were admitted as spectators--with (seeming) reluctance,
- through prayers, by influence, under restriction, by special and
- difficult exercise of Madame Beck's gracious good-nature, and whom she
- all the evening--with her own personal surveillance--kept far aloof at
- the remotest, drearest, coldest, darkest side of the carré--a small,
- forlorn band of "jeunes gens;" these being all of the best families,
- grown-up sons of mothers present, and whose sisters were pupils in the
- school. That whole evening was Madame on duty beside these "jeunes
- gens"--attentive to them as a mother, but strict with them as a dragon.
- There was a sort of cordon stretched before them, which they wearied
- her with prayers to be permitted to pass, and just to revive themselves
- by one dance with that "belle blonde," or that "jolie brune," or "cette
- jeune fille magnifique aux cheveux noirs comme le jais."
- "Taisez-vous!" Madame would reply, heroically and inexorably. "Vous ne
- passerez pas à moins que ce ne soit sur mon cadavre, et vous ne
- danserez qu'avec la nonnette du jardin" (alluding to the legend). And
- she majestically walked to and fro along their disconsolate and
- impatient line, like a little Bonaparte in a mouse-coloured silk gown.
- Madame knew something of the world; Madame knew much of human nature. I
- don't think that another directress in Villette would have dared to
- admit a "jeune homme" within her walls; but Madame knew that by
- granting such admission, on an occasion like the present, a bold stroke
- might be struck, and a great point gained.
- In the first place, the parents were made accomplices to the deed, for
- it was only through their mediation it was brought about. Secondly: the
- admission of these rattlesnakes, so fascinating and so dangerous,
- served to draw out Madame precisely in her strongest character--that of
- a first-rate _surveillante_. Thirdly: their presence furnished a most
- piquant ingredient to the entertainment: the pupils knew it, and saw
- it, and the view of such golden apples shining afar off, animated them
- with a spirit no other circumstance could have kindled. The children's
- pleasure spread to the parents; life and mirth circulated quickly round
- the ball-room; the "jeunes gens" themselves, though restrained, were
- amused: for Madame never permitted them to feel dull--and thus Madame
- Beck's fête annually ensured a success unknown to the fête of any other
- directress in the land.
- I observed that Dr. John was at first permitted to walk at large
- through the classes: there was about him a manly, responsible look,
- that redeemed his youth, and half-expiated his beauty; but as soon as
- the ball began, Madame ran up to him.
- "Come, Wolf; come," said she, laughing: "you wear sheep's clothing, but
- you must quit the fold notwithstanding. Come; I have a fine menagerie
- of twenty here in the carré: let me place you amongst my collection."
- "But first suffer me to have one dance with one pupil of my choice."
- "Have you the face to ask such a thing? It is madness: it is impiety.
- Sortez, sortez, au plus vite."
- She drove him before her, and soon had him enclosed within the cordon.
- Ginevra being, I suppose, tired with dancing, sought me out in my
- retreat. She threw herself on the bench beside me, and (a demonstration
- I could very well have dispensed with) cast her arms round my neck.
- "Lucy Snowe! Lucy Snowe!" she cried in a somewhat sobbing voice, half
- hysterical.
- "What in the world is the matter?" I drily said.
- "How do I look--how do I look to-night?" she demanded.
- "As usual," said I; "preposterously vain."
- "Caustic creature! You never have a kind word for me; but in spite of
- you, and all other envious detractors, I know I am beautiful; I feel
- it, I see it--for there is a great looking-glass in the dressing-room,
- where I can view my shape from head to foot. Will you go with me now,
- and let us two stand before it?"
- "I will, Miss Fanshawe: you shall be humoured even to the top of your
- bent."
- The dressing-room was very near, and we stepped in. Putting her arm
- through mine, she drew me to the mirror. Without resistance
- remonstrance, or remark, I stood and let her self-love have its feast
- and triumph: curious to see how much it could swallow--whether it was
- possible it could feed to satiety--whether any whisper of consideration
- for others could penetrate her heart, and moderate its vainglorious
- exultation.
- Not at all. She turned me and herself round; she viewed us both on all
- sides; she smiled, she waved her curls, she retouched her sash, she
- spread her dress, and finally, letting go my arm, and curtseying with
- mock respect, she said: "I would not be you for a kingdom."
- The remark was too _naïve_ to rouse anger; I merely said: "Very good."
- "And what would _you_ give to be ME?" she inquired.
- "Not a bad sixpence--strange as it may sound," I replied. "You are but
- a poor creature."
- "You don't think so in your heart."
- "No; for in my heart you have not the outline of a place: I only
- occasionally turn you over in my brain."
- "Well, but," said she, in an expostulatory tone, "just listen to the
- difference of our positions, and then see how happy am I, and how
- miserable are you."
- "Go on; I listen."
- "In the first place: I am the daughter of a gentleman of family, and
- though my father is not rich, I have expectations from an uncle. Then,
- I am just eighteen, the finest age possible. I have had a continental
- education, and though I can't spell, I have abundant accomplishments. I
- _am_ pretty; _you_ can't deny that; I may have as many admirers as I
- choose. This very night I have been breaking the hearts of two
- gentlemen, and it is the dying look I had from one of them just now,
- which puts me in such spirits. I do so like to watch them turn red and
- pale, and scowl and dart fiery glances at each other, and languishing
- ones at me. There is _me_--happy ME; now for _you_, poor soul!
- "I suppose you are nobody's daughter, since you took care of little
- children when you first came to Villette: you have no relations; you
- can't call yourself young at twenty-three; you have no attractive
- accomplishments--no beauty. As to admirers, you hardly know what they
- are; you can't even talk on the subject: you sit dumb when the other
- teachers quote their conquests. I believe you never were in love, and
- never will be: you don't know the feeling, and so much the better, for
- though you might have your own heart broken, no living heart will you
- ever break. Isn't it all true?"
- "A good deal of it is true as gospel, and shrewd besides. There must be
- good in you, Ginevra, to speak so honestly; that snake, Zélie St.
- Pierre, could not utter what you have uttered. Still, Miss Fanshawe,
- hapless as I am, according to your showing, sixpence I would not give
- to purchase you, body and soul."
- "Just because I am not clever, and that is all _you_ think of. Nobody
- in the world but you cares for cleverness."
- "On the contrary, I consider you _are_ clever, in your way--very smart
- indeed. But you were talking of breaking hearts--that edifying
- amusement into the merits of which I don't quite enter; pray on whom
- does your vanity lead you to think you have done execution to-night?"
- She approached her lips to my ear--"Isidore and Alfred de Hamal are
- both here," she whispered.
- "Oh! they are? I should like to see them."
- "There's a dear creature! your curiosity is roused at last. Follow me,
- I will point them out."
- She proudly led the way--"But you cannot see them well from the
- classes," said she, turning, "Madame keeps them too far off. Let us
- cross the garden, enter by the corridor, and get close to them behind:
- we shall be scolded if we are seen, but never mind."
- For once, I did not mind. Through the garden we went--penetrated into
- the corridor by a quiet private entrance, and approaching the _carré_,
- yet keeping in the corridor shade, commanded a near view of the band of
- "jeunes gens."
- I believe I could have picked out the conquering de Hamal even
- undirected. He was a straight-nosed, very correct-featured little
- dandy. I say _little_ dandy, though he was not beneath the middle
- standard in stature; but his lineaments were small, and so were his
- hands and feet; and he was pretty and smooth, and as trim as a doll: so
- nicely dressed, so nicely curled, so booted and gloved and cravated--he
- was charming indeed. I said so. "What, a dear personage!" cried I, and
- commended Ginevra's taste warmly; and asked her what she thought de
- Hamal might have done with the precious fragments of that heart she had
- broken--whether he kept them in a scent-vial, and conserved them in
- otto of roses? I observed, too, with deep rapture of approbation, that
- the colonel's hands were scarce larger than Miss Fanshawe's own, and
- suggested that this circumstance might be convenient, as he could wear
- her gloves at a pinch. On his dear curls, I told her I doated: and as
- to his low, Grecian brow, and exquisite classic headpiece, I confessed
- I had no language to do such perfections justice.
- "And if he were your lover?" suggested the cruelly exultant Ginevra.
- "Oh! heavens, what bliss!" said I; "but do not be inhuman, Miss
- Fanshawe: to put such thoughts into my head is like showing poor
- outcast Cain a far, glimpse of Paradise."
- "You like him, then?"
- "As I like sweets, and jams, and comfits, and conservatory flowers."
- Ginevra admired my taste, for all these things were her adoration; she
- could then readily credit that they were mine too.
- "Now for Isidore," I went on. I own I felt still more curious to see
- him than his rival; but Ginevra was absorbed in the latter.
- "Alfred was admitted here to-night," said she, "through the influence
- of his aunt, Madame la Baronne de Dorlodot; and now, having seen him,
- can you not understand why I have been in such spirits all the evening,
- and acted so well, and danced with such life, and why I am now happy as
- a queen? Dieu! Dieu! It was such good fun to glance first at him and
- then at the other, and madden them both."
- "But that other--where is he? Show me Isidore."
- "I don't like."
- "Why not?"
- "I am ashamed of him."
- "For what reason?"
- "Because--because" (in a whisper) "he has such--such whiskers,
- orange--red--there now!"
- "The murder is out," I subjoined. "Never mind, show him all the same; I
- engage not to faint."
- She looked round. Just then an English voice spoke behind her and me.
- "You are both standing in a draught; you must leave this corridor."
- "There is no draught, Dr. John," said I, turning.
- "She takes cold so easily," he pursued, looking at Ginevra with extreme
- kindness. "She is delicate; she must be cared for: fetch her a shawl."
- "Permit me to judge for myself," said Miss Fanshawe, with hauteur. "I
- want no shawl."
- "Your dress is thin, you have been dancing, you are heated."
- "Always preaching," retorted she; "always coddling and admonishing."
- The answer Dr. John would have given did not come; that his heart was
- hurt became evident in his eye; darkened, and saddened, and pained, he
- turned a little aside, but was patient. I knew where there were plenty
- of shawls near at hand; I ran and fetched one.
- "She shall wear this, if I have strength to make her," said I, folding
- it well round her muslin dress, covering carefully her neck and her
- arms. "Is that Isidore?" I asked, in a somewhat fierce whisper.
- She pushed up her lip, smiled, and nodded.
- "Is _that_ Isidore?" I repeated, giving her a shake: I could have given
- her a dozen.
- "C'est lui-même," said she. "How coarse he is, compared with the
- Colonel-Count! And then--oh ciel!--the whiskers!"
- Dr. John now passed on.
- "The Colonel-Count!" I echoed. "The doll--the puppet--the manikin--the
- poor inferior creature! A mere lackey for Dr. John his valet, his
- foot-boy! Is it possible that fine generous gentleman--handsome as a
- vision--offers you his honourable hand and gallant heart, and promises
- to protect your flimsy person and feckless mind through the storms and
- struggles of life--and you hang back--you scorn, you sting, you torture
- him! Have you power to do this? Who gave you that power? Where is it?
- Does it lie all in your beauty--your pink and white complexion, and
- your yellow hair? Does this bind his soul at your feet, and bend his
- neck under your yoke? Does this purchase for you his affection, his
- tenderness, his thoughts, his hopes, his interest, his noble, cordial
- love--and will you not have it? Do you scorn it? You are only
- dissembling: you are not in earnest: you love him; you long for him;
- but you trifle with his heart to make him more surely yours?"
- "Bah! How you run on! I don't understand half you have said."
- I had got her out into the garden ere this. I now set her down on a
- seat and told her she should not stir till she had avowed which she
- meant in the end to accept--the man or the monkey.
- "Him you call the man," said she, "is bourgeois, sandy-haired, and
- answers to the name of John!--cela suffit: je n'en veux pas. Colonel de
- Hamal is a gentleman of excellent connections, perfect manners, sweet
- appearance, with pale interesting face, and hair and eyes like an
- Italian. Then too he is the most delightful company possible--a man
- quite in my way; not sensible and serious like the other; but one with
- whom I can talk on equal terms--who does not plague and bore, and
- harass me with depths, and heights, and passions, and talents for which
- I have no taste. There now. Don't hold me so fast."
- I slackened my grasp, and she darted off. I did not care to pursue her.
- Somehow I could not avoid returning once more in the direction of the
- corridor to get another glimpse of Dr. John; but I met him on the
- garden-steps, standing where the light from a window fell broad. His
- well-proportioned figure was not to be mistaken, for I doubt whether
- there was another in that assemblage his equal. He carried his hat in
- his hand; his uncovered head, his face and fine brow were most handsome
- and manly. _His_ features were not delicate, not slight like those of a
- woman, nor were they cold, frivolous, and feeble; though well cut, they
- were not so chiselled, so frittered away, as to lose in expression or
- significance what they gained in unmeaning symmetry. Much feeling spoke
- in them at times, and more sat silent in his eye. Such at least were my
- thoughts of him: to me he seemed all this. An inexpressible sense of
- wonder occupied me, as I looked at this man, and reflected that _he_
- could not be slighted.
- It was, not my intention to approach or address him in the garden, our
- terms of acquaintance not warranting such a step; I had only meant to
- view him in the crowd--myself unseen: coming upon him thus alone, I
- withdrew. But he was looking out for me, or rather for her who had been
- with me: therefore he descended the steps, and followed me down the
- alley.
- "You know Miss Fanshawe? I have often wished to ask whether you knew
- her," said he.
- "Yes: I know her."
- "Intimately?"
- "Quite as intimately as I wish."
- "What have you done with her now?"
- "Am I her keeper?" I felt inclined to ask; but I simply answered, "I
- have shaken her well, and would have shaken her better, but she escaped
- out of my hands and ran away."
- "Would you favour me," he asked, "by watching over her this one
- evening, and observing that she does nothing imprudent--does not, for
- instance, run out into the night-air immediately after dancing?"
- "I may, perhaps, look after her a little; since you wish it; but she
- likes her own way too well to submit readily to control."
- "She is so young, so thoroughly artless," said he.
- "To me she is an enigma," I responded.
- "Is she?" he asked--much interested. "How?"
- "It would be difficult to say how--difficult, at least, to tell _you_
- how."
- "And why me?"
- "I wonder she is not better pleased that you are so much her friend."
- "But she has not the slightest idea how much I _am_ her friend. That is
- precisely the point I cannot teach her. May I inquire did she ever
- speak of me to you?"
- "Under the name of 'Isidore' she has talked about you often; but I must
- add that it is only within the last ten minutes I have discovered that
- you and 'Isidore' are identical. It is only, Dr. John, within that
- brief space of time I have learned that Ginevra Fanshawe is the person,
- under this roof, in whom you have long been interested--that she is the
- magnet which attracts you to the Rue Fossette, that for her sake you
- venture into this garden, and seek out caskets dropped by rivals."
- "You know all?"
- "I know so much."
- "For more than a year I have been accustomed to meet her in society.
- Mrs. Cholmondeley, her friend, is an acquaintance of mine; thus I see
- her every Sunday. But you observed that under the name of 'Isidore' she
- often spoke of me: may I--without inviting you to a breach of
- confidence--inquire what was the tone, what the feeling of her remarks?
- I feel somewhat anxious to know, being a little tormented with
- uncertainty as to how I stand with her."
- "Oh, she varies: she shifts and changes like the wind."
- "Still, you can gather some general idea--?"
- "I can," thought I, "but it would not do to communicate that general
- idea to you. Besides, if I said she did not love you, I know you would
- not believe me."
- "You are silent," he pursued. "I suppose you have no good news to
- impart. No matter. If she feels for me positive coldness and aversion,
- it is a sign I do not deserve her."
- "Do you doubt yourself? Do you consider yourself the inferior of
- Colonel de Hamal?"
- "I love Miss Fanshawe far more than de Hamal loves any human being, and
- would care for and guard her better than he. Respecting de Hamal, I
- fear she is under an illusion; the man's character is known to me, all
- his antecedents, all his scrapes. He is not worthy of your beautiful
- young friend."
- "My 'beautiful young friend' ought to know that, and to know or feel
- who is worthy of her," said I. "If her beauty or her brains will not
- serve her so far, she merits the sharp lesson of experience."
- "Are you not a little severe?"
- "I am excessively severe--more severe than I choose to show you. You
- should hear the strictures with which I favour my 'beautiful young
- friend,' only that you would be unutterably shocked at my want of
- tender considerateness for her delicate nature."
- "She is so lovely, one cannot but be loving towards her. You--every
- woman older than herself, must feel for such a simple, innocent,
- girlish fairy a sort of motherly or elder-sisterly fondness. Graceful
- angel! Does not your heart yearn towards her when she pours into your
- ear her pure, childlike confidences? How you are privileged!" And he
- sighed.
- "I cut short these confidences somewhat abruptly now and then," said I.
- "But excuse me, Dr. John, may I change the theme for one instant? What
- a god-like person is that de Hamal! What a nose on his face--perfect!
- Model one in putty or clay, you could not make a better or straighter,
- or neater; and then, such classic lips and chin--and his
- bearing--sublime."
- "De Hamal is an unutterable puppy, besides being a very white-livered
- hero."
- "You, Dr. John, and every man of a less-refined mould than he, must
- feel for him a sort of admiring affection, such as Mars and the coarser
- deities may be supposed to have borne the young, graceful Apollo."
- "An unprincipled, gambling little jackanapes!" said Dr. John curtly,
- "whom, with one hand, I could lift up by the waistband any day, and lay
- low in the kennel if I liked."
- "The sweet seraph!" said I. "What a cruel idea! Are you not a little
- severe, Dr. John?"
- And now I paused. For the second time that night I was going beyond
- myself--venturing out of what I looked on as my natural
- habits--speaking in an unpremeditated, impulsive strain, which startled
- me strangely when I halted to reflect. On rising that morning, had I
- anticipated that before night I should have acted the part of a gay
- lover in a vaudeville; and an hour after, frankly discussed with Dr.
- John the question of his hapless suit, and rallied him on his
- illusions? I had no more presaged such feats than I had looked forward
- to an ascent in a balloon, or a voyage to Cape Horn.
- The Doctor and I, having paced down the walk, were now returning; the
- reflex from the window again lit his face: he smiled, but his eye was
- melancholy. How I wished that he could feel heart's-ease! How I grieved
- that he brooded over pain, and pain from such a cause! He, with his
- great advantages, _he_ to love in vain! I did not then know that the
- pensiveness of reverse is the best phase for some minds; nor did I
- reflect that some herbs, "though scentless when entire, yield fragrance
- when they're bruised."
- "Do not be sorrowful, do not grieve," I broke out. "If there is in
- Ginevra one spark of worthiness of your affection, she will--she _must_
- feel devotion in return. Be cheerful, be hopeful, Dr. John. Who should
- hope, if not you?"
- In return for this speech I got--what, it must be supposed, I
- deserved--a look of surprise: I thought also of some disapprobation. We
- parted, and I went into the house very chill. The clocks struck and the
- bells tolled midnight; people were leaving fast: the fête was over; the
- lamps were fading. In another hour all the dwelling-house, and all the
- pensionnat, were dark and hushed. I too was in bed, but not asleep. To
- me it was not easy to sleep after a day of such excitement.
- CHAPTER XV.
- THE LONG VACATION.
- Following Madame Beck's fête, with its three preceding weeks of
- relaxation, its brief twelve hours' burst of hilarity and dissipation,
- and its one subsequent day of utter languor, came a period of reaction;
- two months of real application, of close, hard study. These two months,
- being the last of the "année scolaire," were indeed the only genuine
- working months in the year. To them was procrastinated--into them
- concentrated, alike by professors, mistresses, and pupils--the main
- burden of preparation for the examinations preceding the distribution
- of prizes. Candidates for rewards had then to work in good earnest;
- masters and teachers had to set their shoulders to the wheel, to urge
- on the backward, and diligently aid and train the more promising. A
- showy demonstration--a telling exhibition--must be got up for public
- view, and all means were fair to this end.
- I scarcely noted how the other teachers went to work; I had my own
- business to mind; and _my_ task was not the least onerous, being to
- imbue some ninety sets of brains with a due tincture of what they
- considered a most complicated and difficult science, that of the
- English language; and to drill ninety tongues in what, for them, was an
- almost impossible pronunciation--the lisping and hissing dentals of the
- Isles.
- The examination-day arrived. Awful day! Prepared for with anxious care,
- dressed for with silent despatch--nothing vaporous or fluttering
- now--no white gauze or azure streamers; the grave, close, compact was
- the order of the toilette. It seemed to me that I was this day,
- especially doomed--the main burden and trial falling on me alone of all
- the female teachers. The others were not expected to examine in the
- studies they taught; the professor of literature, M. Paul, taking upon
- himself this duty. He, this school autocrat, gathered all and sundry
- reins into the hollow of his one hand; he irefully rejected any
- colleague; he would not have help. Madame herself, who evidently rather
- wished to undertake the examination in geography--her favourite study,
- which she taught well--was forced to succumb, and be subordinate to her
- despotic kinsman's direction. The whole staff of instructors, male and
- female, he set aside, and stood on the examiner's estrade alone. It
- irked him that he was forced to make one exception to this rule. He
- could not manage English: he was obliged to leave that branch of
- education in the English teacher's hands; which he did, not without a
- flash of naïve jealousy.
- A constant crusade against the "amour-propre" of every human being but
- himself, was the crotchet of this able, but fiery and grasping little
- man. He had a strong relish for public representation in his own
- person, but an extreme abhorrence of the like display in any other. He
- quelled, he kept down when he could; and when he could not, he fumed
- like a bottled storm.
- On the evening preceding the examination-day, I was walking in the
- garden, as were the other teachers and all the boarders. M. Emanuel
- joined me in the "allée défendue;" his cigar was at his lips; his
- paletôt--a most characteristic garment of no particular shape--hung
- dark and menacing; the tassel of his bonnet grec sternly shadowed his
- left temple; his black whiskers curled like those of a wrathful cat;
- his blue eye had a cloud in its glitter.
- "Ainsi," he began, abruptly fronting and arresting me, "vous allez
- trôner comme une reine; demain--trôner à mes côtés? Sans doute vous
- savourez d'avance les délices de l'autorité. Je crois voir en je ne
- sais quoi de rayonnante, petite ambitieuse!"
- Now the fact was, he happened to be entirely mistaken. I did not--could
- not--estimate the admiration or the good opinion of tomorrow's audience
- at the same rate he did. Had that audience numbered as many personal
- friends and acquaintance for me as for him, I know not how it might
- have been: I speak of the case as it stood. On me school-triumphs shed
- but a cold lustre. I had wondered--and I wondered now--how it was that
- for him they seemed to shine as with hearth-warmth and hearth-glow.
- _He_ cared for them perhaps too much; _I_, probably, too little.
- However, I had my own fancies as well as he. I liked, for instance, to
- see M. Emanuel jealous; it lit up his nature, and woke his spirit; it
- threw all sorts of queer lights and shadows over his dun face, and into
- his violet-azure eyes (he used to say that his black hair and blue eyes
- were "une de ses beautés"). There was a relish in his anger; it was
- artless, earnest, quite unreasonable, but never hypocritical. I uttered
- no disclaimer then of the complacency he attributed to me; I merely
- asked where the English examination came in--whether at the
- commencement or close of the day?
- "I hesitate," said he, "whether at the very beginning, before many
- persons are come, and when your aspiring nature will not be gratified
- by a large audience, or quite at the close, when everybody is tired,
- and only a jaded and worn-out attention will be at your service."
- "Que vous êtes dur, Monsieur!" I said, affecting dejection.
- "One ought to be 'dur' with you. You are one of those beings who must
- be _kept down_. I know you! I know you! Other people in this house see
- you pass, and think that a colourless shadow has gone by. As for me, I
- scrutinized your face once, and it sufficed."
- "You are satisfied that you understand me?"
- Without answering directly, he went on, "Were you not gratified when
- you succeeded in that vaudeville? I watched you and saw a passionate
- ardour for triumph in your physiognomy. What fire shot into the glance!
- Not mere light, but flame: je me tiens pour averti."
- "What feeling I had on that occasion, Monsieur--and pardon me, if I
- say, you immensely exaggerate both its quality and quantity--was quite
- abstract. I did not care for the vaudeville. I hated the part you
- assigned me. I had not the slightest sympathy with the audience below
- the stage. They are good people, doubtless, but do I know them? Are
- they anything to me? Can I care for being brought before their view
- again to-morrow? Will the examination be anything but a task to me--a
- task I wish well over?"
- "Shall I take it out of your hands?"
- "With all my heart; if you do not fear failure."
- "But I should fail. I only know three phrases of English, and a few
- words: par exemple, de sonn, de mone, de stares--est-ce bien dit? My
- opinion is that it would be better to give up the thing altogether: to
- have no English examination, eh?"
- "If Madame consents, I consent."
- "Heartily?"
- "Very heartily."
- He smoked his cigar in silence. He turned suddenly.
- "Donnez-moi la main," said he, and the spite and jealousy melted out of
- his face, and a generous kindliness shone there instead.
- "Come, we will not be rivals, we will be friends," he pursued. "The
- examination shall take place, and I will choose a good moment; and
- instead of vexing and hindering, as I felt half-inclined ten minutes
- ago--for I have my malevolent moods: I always had from childhood--I
- will aid you sincerely. After all, you are solitary and a stranger, and
- have your way to make and your bread to earn; it may be well that you
- should become known. We will be friends: do you agree?"
- "Out of my heart, Monsieur. I am glad of a friend. I like that better
- than a triumph."
- "Pauvrette?" said he, and turned away and left the alley.
- The examination passed over well; M. Paul was as good as his word, and
- did his best to make my part easy. The next day came the distribution
- of prizes; that also passed; the school broke up; the pupils went home,
- and now began the long vacation.
- That vacation! Shall I ever forget it? I think not. Madame Beck went,
- the first day of the holidays, to join her children at the sea-side;
- all the three teachers had parents or friends with whom they took
- refuge; every professor quitted the city; some went to Paris, some to
- Boue-Marine; M. Paul set forth on a pilgrimage to Rome; the house was
- left quite empty, but for me, a servant, and a poor deformed and
- imbecile pupil, a sort of crétin, whom her stepmother in a distant
- province would not allow to return home.
- My heart almost died within me; miserable longings strained its chords.
- How long were the September days! How silent, how lifeless! How vast
- and void seemed the desolate premises! How gloomy the forsaken
- garden--grey now with the dust of a town summer departed. Looking
- forward at the commencement of those eight weeks, I hardly knew how I
- was to live to the end. My spirits had long been gradually sinking; now
- that the prop of employment was withdrawn, they went down fast. Even to
- look forward was not to hope: the dumb future spoke no comfort, offered
- no promise, gave no inducement to bear present evil in reliance on
- future good. A sorrowful indifference to existence often pressed on
- me--a despairing resignation to reach betimes the end of all things
- earthly. Alas! When I had full leisure to look on life as life must be
- looked on by such as me, I found it but a hopeless desert: tawny sands,
- with no green fields, no palm-tree, no well in view. The hopes which
- are dear to youth, which bear it up and lead it on, I knew not and
- dared not know. If they knocked at my heart sometimes, an inhospitable
- bar to admission must be inwardly drawn. When they turned away thus
- rejected, tears sad enough sometimes flowed: but it could not be
- helped: I dared not give such guests lodging. So mortally did I fear
- the sin and weakness of presumption.
- Religious reader, you will preach to me a long sermon about what I have
- just written, and so will you, moralist: and you, stern sage: you,
- stoic, will frown; you, cynic, sneer; you, epicure, laugh. Well, each
- and all, take it your own way. I accept the sermon, frown, sneer, and
- laugh; perhaps you are all right: and perhaps, circumstanced like me,
- you would have been, like me, wrong. The first month was, indeed, a
- long, black, heavy month to me.
- The crétin did not seem unhappy. I did my best to feed her well and
- keep her warm, and she only asked food and sunshine, or when that
- lacked, fire. Her weak faculties approved of inertion: her brain, her
- eyes, her ears, her heart slept content; they could not wake to work,
- so lethargy was their Paradise.
- Three weeks of that vacation were hot, fair, and dry, but the fourth
- and fifth were tempestuous and wet. I do not know why that change in
- the atmosphere made a cruel impression on me, why the raging storm and
- beating rain crushed me with a deadlier paralysis than I had
- experienced while the air had remained serene; but so it was; and my
- nervous system could hardly support what it had for many days and
- nights to undergo in that huge empty house. How I used to pray to
- Heaven for consolation and support! With what dread force the
- conviction would grasp me that Fate was my permanent foe, never to be
- conciliated. I did not, in my heart, arraign the mercy or justice of
- God for this; I concluded it to be a part of his great plan that some
- must deeply suffer while they live, and I thrilled in the certainty
- that of this number, I was one.
- It was some relief when an aunt of the crétin, a kind old woman, came
- one day, and took away my strange, deformed companion. The hapless
- creature had been at times a heavy charge; I could not take her out
- beyond the garden, and I could not leave her a minute alone: for her
- poor mind, like her body, was warped: its propensity was to evil. A
- vague bent to mischief, an aimless malevolence, made constant vigilance
- indispensable. As she very rarely spoke, and would sit for hours
- together moping and mowing, and distorting her features with
- indescribable grimaces, it was more like being prisoned with some
- strange tameless animal, than associating with a human being. Then
- there were personal attentions to be rendered which required the nerve
- of a hospital nurse; my resolution was so tried, it sometimes fell
- dead-sick. These duties should not have fallen on me; a servant, now
- absent, had rendered them hitherto, and in the hurry of holiday
- departure, no substitute to fill this office had been provided. This
- tax and trial were by no means the least I have known in life. Still,
- menial and distasteful as they were, my mental pain was far more
- wasting and wearing. Attendance on the crétin deprived me often of the
- power and inclination to swallow a meal, and sent me faint to the fresh
- air, and the well or fountain in the court; but this duty never wrung
- my heart, or brimmed my eyes, or scalded my cheek with tears hot as
- molten metal.
- The crétin being gone, I was free to walk out. At first I lacked
- courage to venture very far from the Rue Fossette, but by degrees I
- sought the city gates, and passed them, and then went wandering away
- far along chaussées, through fields, beyond cemeteries, Catholic and
- Protestant, beyond farmsteads, to lanes and little woods, and I know
- not where. A goad thrust me on, a fever forbade me to rest; a want of
- companionship maintained in my soul the cravings of a most deadly
- famine. I often walked all day, through the burning noon and the arid
- afternoon, and the dusk evening, and came back with moonrise.
- While wandering in solitude, I would sometimes picture the present
- probable position of others, my acquaintance. There was Madame Beck at
- a cheerful watering-place with her children, her mother, and a whole
- troop of friends who had sought the same scene of relaxation. Zélie St.
- Pierre was at Paris, with her relatives; the other teachers were at
- their homes. There was Ginevra Fanshawe, whom certain of her
- connections had carried on a pleasant tour southward. Ginevra seemed to
- me the happiest. She was on the route of beautiful scenery; these
- September suns shone for her on fertile plains, where harvest and
- vintage matured under their mellow beam. These gold and crystal moons
- rose on her vision over blue horizons waved in mounted lines.
- But all this was nothing; I too felt those autumn suns and saw those
- harvest moons, and I almost wished to be covered in with earth and
- turf, deep out of their influence; for I could not live in their light,
- nor make them comrades, nor yield them affection. But Ginevra had a
- kind of spirit with her, empowered to give constant strength and
- comfort, to gladden daylight and embalm darkness; the best of the good
- genii that guard humanity curtained her with his wings, and canopied
- her head with his bending form. By True Love was Ginevra followed:
- never could she be alone. Was she insensible to this presence? It
- seemed to me impossible: I could not realize such deadness. I imagined
- her grateful in secret, loving now with reserve; but purposing one day
- to show how much she loved: I pictured her faithful hero half conscious
- of her coy fondness, and comforted by that consciousness: I conceived
- an electric chord of sympathy between them, a fine chain of mutual
- understanding, sustaining union through a separation of a hundred
- leagues--carrying, across mound and hollow, communication by prayer and
- wish. Ginevra gradually became with me a sort of heroine. One day,
- perceiving this growing illusion, I said, "I really believe my nerves
- are getting overstretched: my mind has suffered somewhat too much a
- malady is growing upon it--what shall I do? How shall I keep well?"
- Indeed there was no way to keep well under the circumstances. At last a
- day and night of peculiarly agonizing depression were succeeded by
- physical illness, I took perforce to my bed. About this time the Indian
- summer closed and the equinoctial storms began; and for nine dark and
- wet days, of which the hours rushed on all turbulent, deaf,
- dishevelled--bewildered with sounding hurricane--I lay in a strange
- fever of the nerves and blood. Sleep went quite away. I used to rise in
- the night, look round for her, beseech her earnestly to return. A
- rattle of the window, a cry of the blast only replied--Sleep never
- came!
- I err. She came once, but in anger. Impatient of my importunity she
- brought with her an avenging dream. By the clock of St. Jean Baptiste,
- that dream remained scarce fifteen minutes--a brief space, but
- sufficing to wring my whole frame with unknown anguish; to confer a
- nameless experience that had the hue, the mien, the terror, the very
- tone of a visitation from eternity. Between twelve and one that night a
- cup was forced to my lips, black, strong, strange, drawn from no well,
- but filled up seething from a bottomless and boundless sea. Suffering,
- brewed in temporal or calculable measure, and mixed for mortal lips,
- tastes not as this suffering tasted. Having drank and woke, I thought
- all was over: the end come and past by. Trembling fearfully--as
- consciousness returned--ready to cry out on some fellow-creature to
- help me, only that I knew no fellow-creature was near enough to catch
- the wild summons--Goton in her far distant attic could not hear--I rose
- on my knees in bed. Some fearful hours went over me: indescribably was
- I torn, racked and oppressed in mind. Amidst the horrors of that dream
- I think the worst lay here. Methought the well-loved dead, who had
- loved _me_ well in life, met me elsewhere, alienated: galled was my
- inmost spirit with an unutterable sense of despair about the future.
- Motive there was none why I should try to recover or wish to live; and
- yet quite unendurable was the pitiless and haughty voice in which Death
- challenged me to engage his unknown terrors. When I tried to pray I
- could only utter these words: "From my youth up Thy terrors have I
- suffered with a troubled mind."
- Most true was it.
- On bringing me my tea next morning Goton urged me to call in a doctor.
- I would not: I thought no doctor could cure me.
- One evening--and I was not delirious: I was in my sane mind, I got
- up--I dressed myself, weak and shaking. The solitude and the stillness
- of the long dormitory could not be borne any longer; the ghastly white
- beds were turning into spectres--the coronal of each became a
- death's-head, huge and sun-bleached--dead dreams of an elder world and
- mightier race lay frozen in their wide gaping eyeholes. That evening
- more firmly than ever fastened into my soul the conviction that Fate
- was of stone, and Hope a false idol--blind, bloodless, and of granite
- core. I felt, too, that the trial God had appointed me was gaining its
- climax, and must now be turned by my own hands, hot, feeble, trembling
- as they were. It rained still, and blew; but with more clemency, I
- thought, than it had poured and raged all day. Twilight was falling,
- and I deemed its influence pitiful; from the lattice I saw coming
- night-clouds trailing low like banners drooping. It seemed to me that
- at this hour there was affection and sorrow in Heaven above for all
- pain suffered on earth beneath; the weight of my dreadful dream became
- alleviated--that insufferable thought of being no more loved--no more
- owned, half-yielded to hope of the contrary--I was sure this hope would
- shine clearer if I got out from under this house-roof, which was
- crushing as the slab of a tomb, and went outside the city to a certain
- quiet hill, a long way distant in the fields. Covered with a cloak (I
- could not be delirious, for I had sense and recollection to put on warm
- clothing), forth I set. The bells of a church arrested me in passing;
- they seemed to call me in to the _salut_, and I went in. Any solemn
- rite, any spectacle of sincere worship, any opening for appeal to God
- was as welcome to me then as bread to one in extremity of want. I knelt
- down with others on the stone pavement. It was an old solemn church,
- its pervading gloom not gilded but purpled by light shed through
- stained glass.
- Few worshippers were assembled, and, the _salut_ over, half of them
- departed. I discovered soon that those left remained to confess. I did
- not stir. Carefully every door of the church was shut; a holy quiet
- sank upon, and a solemn shade gathered about us. After a space,
- breathless and spent in prayer, a penitent approached the confessional.
- I watched. She whispered her avowal; her shrift was whispered back; she
- returned consoled. Another went, and another. A pale lady, kneeling
- near me, said in a low, kind voice:--"Go you now, I am not quite
- prepared."
- Mechanically obedient, I rose and went. I knew what I was about; my
- mind had run over the intent with lightning-speed. To take this step
- could not make me more wretched than I was; it might soothe me.
- The priest within the confessional never turned his eyes to regard me;
- he only quietly inclined his ear to my lips. He might be a good man,
- but this duty had become to him a sort of form: he went through it with
- the phlegm of custom. I hesitated; of the formula of confession I was
- ignorant: instead of commencing, then, with the prelude usual, I
- said:--"Mon père, je suis Protestante."
- He directly turned. He was not a native priest: of that class, the cast
- of physiognomy is, almost invariably, grovelling: I saw by his profile
- and brow he was a Frenchman; though grey and advanced in years, he did
- not, I think, lack feeling or intelligence. He inquired, not unkindly,
- why, being a Protestant, I came to him?
- I said I was perishing for a word of advice or an accent of comfort. I
- had been living for some weeks quite alone; I had been ill; I had a
- pressure of affliction on my mind of which it would hardly any longer
- endure the weight.
- "Was it a sin, a crime?" he inquired, somewhat startled. I reassured
- him on this point, and, as well as I could, I showed him the mere
- outline of my experience.
- He looked thoughtful, surprised, puzzled. "You take me unawares," said
- he. "I have not had such a case as yours before: ordinarily we know our
- routine, and are prepared; but this makes a great break in the common
- course of confession. I am hardly furnished with counsel fitting the
- circumstances."
- Of course, I had not expected he would be; but the mere relief of
- communication in an ear which was human and sentient, yet
- consecrated--the mere pouring out of some portion of long accumulating,
- long pent-up pain into a vessel whence it could not be again
- diffused--had done me good. I was already solaced.
- "Must I go, father?" I asked of him as he sat silent.
- "My daughter," he said kindly--and I am sure he was a kind man: he had
- a compassionate eye--"for the present you had better go: but I assure
- you your words have struck me. Confession, like other things, is apt to
- become formal and trivial with habit. You have come and poured your
- heart out; a thing seldom done. I would fain think your case over, and
- take it with me to my oratory. Were you of our faith I should know what
- to say--a mind so tossed can find repose but in the bosom of retreat,
- and the punctual practice of piety. The world, it is well known, has no
- satisfaction for that class of natures. Holy men have bidden penitents
- like you to hasten their path upward by penance, self-denial, and
- difficult good works. Tears are given them here for meat and
- drink--bread of affliction and waters of affliction--their recompence
- comes hereafter. It is my own conviction that these impressions under
- which you are smarting are messengers from God to bring you back to the
- true Church. You were made for our faith: depend upon it our faith
- alone could heal and help you--Protestantism is altogether too dry,
- cold, prosaic for you. The further I look into this matter, the more
- plainly I see it is entirely out of the common order of things. On no
- account would I lose sight of you. Go, my daughter, for the present;
- but return to me again."
- I rose and thanked him. I was withdrawing when he signed me to return.
- "You must not come to this church," said he: "I see you are ill, and
- this church is too cold; you must come to my house: I live----" (and he
- gave me his address). "Be there to-morrow morning at ten."
- In reply to this appointment, I only bowed; and pulling down my veil,
- and gathering round me my cloak, I glided away.
- Did I, do you suppose, reader, contemplate venturing again within that
- worthy priest's reach? As soon should I have thought of walking into a
- Babylonish furnace. That priest had arms which could influence me: he
- was naturally kind, with a sentimental French kindness, to whose
- softness I knew myself not wholly impervious. Without respecting some
- sorts of affection, there was hardly any sort having a fibre of root in
- reality, which I could rely on my force wholly to withstand. Had I gone
- to him, he would have shown me all that was tender, and comforting, and
- gentle, in the honest Popish superstition. Then he would have tried to
- kindle, blow and stir up in me the zeal of good works. I know not how
- it would all have ended. We all think ourselves strong in some points;
- we all know ourselves weak in many; the probabilities are that had I
- visited Numero 10, Rue des Mages, at the hour and day appointed, I
- might just now, instead of writing this heretic narrative, be counting
- my beads in the cell of a certain Carmelite convent on the Boulevard of
- Crécy, in Villette. There was something of Fénélon about that benign
- old priest; and whatever most of his brethren may be, and whatever I
- may think of his Church and creed (and I like neither), of himself I
- must ever retain a grateful recollection. He was kind when I needed
- kindness; he did me good. May Heaven bless him!
- Twilight had passed into night, and the lamps were lit in the streets
- ere I issued from that sombre church. To turn back was now become
- possible to me; the wild longing to breathe this October wind on the
- little hill far without the city walls had ceased to be an imperative
- impulse, and was softened into a wish with which Reason could cope: she
- put it down, and I turned, as I thought, to the Rue Fossette. But I had
- become involved in a part of the city with which I was not familiar; it
- was the old part, and full of narrow streets of picturesque, ancient,
- and mouldering houses. I was much too weak to be very collected, and I
- was still too careless of my own welfare and safety to be cautious; I
- grew embarrassed; I got immeshed in a network of turns unknown. I was
- lost and had no resolution to ask guidance of any passenger.
- If the storm had lulled a little at sunset, it made up now for lost
- time. Strong and horizontal thundered the current of the wind from
- north-west to south-east; it brought rain like spray, and sometimes a
- sharp hail, like shot: it was cold and pierced me to the vitals. I bent
- my head to meet it, but it beat me back. My heart did not fail at all
- in this conflict; I only wished that I had wings and could ascend the
- gale, spread and repose my pinions on its strength, career in its
- course, sweep where it swept. While wishing this, I suddenly felt
- colder where before I was cold, and more powerless where before I was
- weak. I tried to reach the porch of a great building near, but the mass
- of frontage and the giant spire turned black and vanished from my eyes.
- Instead of sinking on the steps as I intended, I seemed to pitch
- headlong down an abyss. I remember no more.
- CHAPTER XVI.
- AULD LANG SYNE.
- Where my soul went during that swoon I cannot tell. Whatever she saw,
- or wherever she travelled in her trance on that strange night she kept
- her own secret; never whispering a word to Memory, and baffling
- imagination by an indissoluble silence. She may have gone upward, and
- come in sight of her eternal home, hoping for leave to rest now, and
- deeming that her painful union with matter was at last dissolved. While
- she so deemed, an angel may have warned her away from heaven's
- threshold, and, guiding her weeping down, have bound her, once more,
- all shuddering and unwilling, to that poor frame, cold and wasted, of
- whose companionship she was grown more than weary.
- I know she re-entered her prison with pain, with reluctance, with a
- moan and a long shiver. The divorced mates, Spirit and Substance, were
- hard to re-unite: they greeted each other, not in an embrace, but a
- racking sort of struggle. The returning sense of sight came upon me,
- red, as if it swam in blood; suspended hearing rushed back loud, like
- thunder; consciousness revived in fear: I sat up appalled, wondering
- into what region, amongst what strange beings I was waking. At first I
- knew nothing I looked on: a wall was not a wall--a lamp not a lamp. I
- should have understood what we call a ghost, as well as I did the
- commonest object: which is another way of intimating that all my eye
- rested on struck it as spectral. But the faculties soon settled each in
- his place; the life-machine presently resumed its wonted and regular
- working.
- Still, I knew not where I was; only in time I saw I had been removed
- from the spot where I fell: I lay on no portico-step; night and tempest
- were excluded by walls, windows, and ceiling. Into some house I had
- been carried--but what house?
- I could only think of the pensionnat in the Rue Fossette. Still
- half-dreaming, I tried hard to discover in what room they had put me;
- whether the great dormitory, or one of the little dormitories. I was
- puzzled, because I could not make the glimpses of furniture I saw
- accord with my knowledge of any of these apartments. The empty white
- beds were wanting, and the long line of large windows. "Surely,"
- thought I, "it is not to Madame Beck's own chamber they have carried
- me!" And here my eye fell on an easy-chair covered with blue damask.
- Other seats, cushioned to match, dawned on me by degrees; and at last I
- took in the complete fact of a pleasant parlour, with a wood fire on a
- clear-shining hearth, a carpet where arabesques of bright blue relieved
- a ground of shaded fawn; pale walls over which a slight but endless
- garland of azure forget-me-nots ran mazed and bewildered amongst myriad
- gold leaves and tendrils. A gilded mirror filled up the space between
- two windows, curtained amply with blue damask. In this mirror I saw
- myself laid, not in bed, but on a sofa. I looked spectral; my eyes
- larger and more hollow, my hair darker than was natural, by contrast
- with my thin and ashen face. It was obvious, not only from the
- furniture, but from the position of windows, doors, and fireplace, that
- this was an unknown room in an unknown house.
- Hardly less plain was it that my brain was not yet settled; for, as I
- gazed at the blue arm-chair, it appeared to grow familiar; so did a
- certain scroll-couch, and not less so the round centre-table, with a
- blue-covering, bordered with autumn-tinted foliage; and, above all, two
- little footstools with worked covers, and a small ebony-framed chair,
- of which the seat and back were also worked with groups of brilliant
- flowers on a dark ground.
- Struck with these things, I explored further. Strange to say, old
- acquaintance were all about me, and "auld lang syne" smiled out of
- every nook. There were two oval miniatures over the mantel-piece, of
- which I knew by heart the pearls about the high and powdered "heads;"
- the velvets circling the white throats; the swell of the full muslin
- kerchiefs: the pattern of the lace sleeve-ruffles. Upon the
- mantel-shelf there were two china vases, some relics of a diminutive
- tea-service, as smooth as enamel and as thin as egg-shell, and a white
- centre ornament, a classic group in alabaster, preserved under glass.
- Of all these things I could have told the peculiarities, numbered the
- flaws or cracks, like any _clairvoyante_. Above all, there was a pair
- of handscreens, with elaborate pencil-drawings finished like line
- engravings; these, my very eyes ached at beholding again, recalling
- hours when they had followed, stroke by stroke and touch by touch, a
- tedious, feeble, finical, school-girl pencil held in these fingers, now
- so skeleton-like.
- Where was I? Not only in what spot of the world, but in what year of
- our Lord? For all these objects were of past days, and of a distant
- country. Ten years ago I bade them good-by; since my fourteenth year
- they and I had never met. I gasped audibly, "Where am I?"
- A shape hitherto unnoticed, stirred, rose, came forward: a shape
- inharmonious with the environment, serving only to complicate the
- riddle further. This was no more than a sort of native bonne, in a
- common-place bonne's cap and print-dress. She spoke neither French nor
- English, and I could get no intelligence from her, not understanding
- her phrases of dialect. But she bathed my temples and forehead with
- some cool and perfumed water, and then she heightened the cushion on
- which I reclined, made signs that I was not to speak, and resumed her
- post at the foot of the sofa.
- She was busy knitting; her eyes thus drawn from me, I could gaze on her
- without interruption. I did mightily wonder how she came there, or what
- she could have to do among the scenes, or with the days of my girlhood.
- Still more I marvelled what those scenes and days could now have to do
- with me.
- Too weak to scrutinize thoroughly the mystery, I tried to settle it by
- saying it was a mistake, a dream, a fever-fit; and yet I knew there
- could be no mistake, and that I was not sleeping, and I believed I was
- sane. I wished the room had not been so well lighted, that I might not
- so clearly have seen the little pictures, the ornaments, the screens,
- the worked chair. All these objects, as well as the blue-damask
- furniture, were, in fact, precisely the same, in every minutest detail,
- with those I so well remembered, and with which I had been so
- thoroughly intimate, in the drawing-room of my godmother's house at
- Bretton. Methought the apartment only was changed, being of different
- proportions and dimensions.
- I thought of Bedreddin Hassan, transported in his sleep from Cairo to
- the gates of Damascus. Had a Genius stooped his dark wing down the
- storm to whose stress I had succumbed, and gathering me from the
- church-steps, and "rising high into the air," as the eastern tale said,
- had he borne me over land and ocean, and laid me quietly down beside a
- hearth of Old England? But no; I knew the fire of that hearth burned
- before its Lares no more--it went out long ago, and the household gods
- had been carried elsewhere.
- The bonne turned again to survey me, and seeing my eyes wide open, and,
- I suppose, deeming their expression perturbed and excited, she put down
- her knitting. I saw her busied for a moment at a little stand; she
- poured out water, and measured drops from a phial: glass in hand, she
- approached me. What dark-tinged draught might she now be offering? what
- Genii-elixir or Magi-distillation?
- It was too late to inquire--I had swallowed it passively, and at once.
- A tide of quiet thought now came gently caressing my brain; softer and
- softer rose the flow, with tepid undulations smoother than balm. The
- pain of weakness left my limbs, my muscles slept. I lost power to move;
- but, losing at the same time wish, it was no privation. That kind bonne
- placed a screen between me and the lamp; I saw her rise to do this, but
- do not remember seeing her resume her place: in the interval between
- the two acts, I "fell on sleep."
- * * * * *
- At waking, lo! all was again changed. The light of high day surrounded
- me; not, indeed, a warm, summer light, but the leaden gloom of raw and
- blustering autumn. I felt sure now that I was in the pensionnat--sure
- by the beating rain on the casement; sure by the "wuther" of wind
- amongst trees, denoting a garden outside; sure by the chill, the
- whiteness, the solitude, amidst which I lay. I say _whiteness_--for the
- dimity curtains, dropped before a French bed, bounded my view.
- I lifted them; I looked out. My eye, prepared to take in the range of a
- long, large, and whitewashed chamber, blinked baffled, on encountering
- the limited area of a small cabinet--a cabinet with seagreen walls;
- also, instead of five wide and naked windows, there was one high
- lattice, shaded with muslin festoons: instead of two dozen little
- stands of painted wood, each holding a basin and an ewer, there was a
- toilette-table dressed, like a lady for a ball, in a white robe over a
- pink skirt; a polished and large glass crowned, and a pretty
- pin-cushion frilled with lace, adorned it. This toilette, together with
- a small, low, green and white chintz arm-chair, a washstand topped with
- a marble slab, and supplied with utensils of pale greenware,
- sufficiently furnished the tiny chamber.
- Reader; I felt alarmed! Why? you will ask. What was there in this
- simple and somewhat pretty sleeping-closet to startle the most timid?
- Merely this--These articles of furniture could not be real, solid
- arm-chairs, looking-glasses, and washstands--they must be the ghosts of
- such articles; or, if this were denied as too wild an hypothesis--and,
- confounded as I was, I _did_ deny it--there remained but to conclude
- that I had myself passed into an abnormal state of mind; in short, that
- I was very ill and delirious: and even then, mine was the strangest
- figment with which delirium had ever harassed a victim.
- I knew--I was obliged to know--the green chintz of that little chair;
- the little snug chair itself, the carved, shining-black, foliated frame
- of that glass; the smooth, milky-green of the china vessels on the
- stand; the very stand too, with its top of grey marble, splintered at
- one corner;--all these I was compelled to recognise and to hail, as
- last night I had, perforce, recognised and hailed the rosewood, the
- drapery, the porcelain, of the drawing-room.
- Bretton! Bretton! and ten years ago shone reflected in that mirror. And
- why did Bretton and my fourteenth year haunt me thus? Why, if they came
- at all, did they not return complete? Why hovered before my distempered
- vision the mere furniture, while the rooms and the locality were gone?
- As to that pincushion made of crimson satin, ornamented with gold beads
- and frilled with thread-lace, I had the same right to know it as to
- know the screens--I had made it myself. Rising with a start from the
- bed, I took the cushion in my hand and examined it. There was the
- cipher "L. L. B." formed in gold beds, and surrounded with an oval
- wreath embroidered in white silk. These were the initials of my
- godmother's name--Lonisa Lucy Bretton.
- "Am I in England? Am I at Bretton?" I muttered; and hastily pulling up
- the blind with which the lattice was shrouded, I looked out to try and
- discover _where_ I was; half-prepared to meet the calm, old, handsome
- buildings and clean grey pavement of St. Ann's Street, and to see at
- the end the towers of the minster: or, if otherwise, fully expectant of
- a town view somewhere, a rue in Villette, if not a street in a pleasant
- and ancient English city.
- I looked, on the contrary, through a frame of leafage, clustering round
- the high lattice, and forth thence to a grassy mead-like level, a
- lawn-terrace with trees rising from the lower ground beyond--high
- forest-trees, such as I had not seen for many a day. They were now
- groaning under the gale of October, and between their trunks I traced
- the line of an avenue, where yellow leaves lay in heaps and drifts, or
- were whirled singly before the sweeping west wind. Whatever landscape
- might lie further must have been flat, and these tall beeches shut it
- out. The place seemed secluded, and was to me quite strange: I did not
- know it at all.
- Once more I lay down. My bed stood in a little alcove; on turning my
- face to the wall, the room with its bewildering accompaniments became
- excluded. Excluded? No! For as I arranged my position in this hope,
- behold, on the green space between the divided and looped-up curtains,
- hung a broad, gilded picture-frame enclosing a portrait. It was
- drawn--well drawn, though but a sketch--in water-colours; a head, a
- boy's head, fresh, life-like, speaking, and animated. It seemed a youth
- of sixteen, fair-complexioned, with sanguine health in his cheek; hair
- long, not dark, and with a sunny sheen; penetrating eyes, an arch
- mouth, and a gay smile. On the whole a most pleasant face to look at,
- especially for, those claiming a right to that youth's
- affections--parents, for instance, or sisters. Any romantic little
- school-girl might almost have loved it in its frame. Those eyes looked
- as if when somewhat older they would flash a lightning-response to
- love: I cannot tell whether they kept in store the steady-beaming shine
- of faith. For whatever sentiment met him in form too facile, his lips
- menaced, beautifully but surely, caprice and light esteem.
- Striving to take each new discovery as quietly as I could, I whispered
- to myself--
- "Ah! that portrait used to hang in the breakfast-room, over the
- mantel-piece: somewhat too high, as I thought. I well remember how I
- used to mount a music-stool for the purpose of unhooking it, holding it
- in my hand, and searching into those bonny wells of eyes, whose glance
- under their hazel lashes seemed like a pencilled laugh; and well I
- liked to note the colouring of the cheek, and the expression of the
- mouth." I hardly believed fancy could improve on the curve of that
- mouth, or of the chin; even _my_ ignorance knew that both were
- beautiful, and pondered perplexed over this doubt: "How it was that
- what charmed so much, could at the same time so keenly pain?" Once, by
- way of test, I took little Missy Home, and, lifting her in my arms,
- told her to look at the picture.
- "Do you like it, Polly?" I asked. She never answered, but gazed long,
- and at last a darkness went trembling through her sensitive eye, as she
- said, "Put me down." So I put her down, saying to myself: "The child
- feels it too."
- All these things do I now think over, adding, "He had his faults, yet
- scarce ever was a finer nature; liberal, suave, impressible." My
- reflections closed in an audibly pronounced word, "Graham!"
- "Graham!" echoed a sudden voice at the bedside. "Do you want Graham?"
- I looked. The plot was but thickening; the wonder but culminating. If
- it was strange to see that well-remembered pictured form on the wall,
- still stranger was it to turn and behold the equally well-remembered
- living form opposite--a woman, a lady, most real and substantial, tall,
- well-attired, wearing widow's silk, and such a cap as best became her
- matron and motherly braids of hair. Hers, too, was a good face; too
- marked, perhaps, now for beauty, but not for sense or character. She
- was little changed; something sterner, something more robust--but she
- was my godmother: still the distinct vision of Mrs. Bretton.
- I kept quiet, yet internally _I_ was much agitated: my pulse fluttered,
- and the blood left my cheek, which turned cold.
- "Madam, where am I?" I inquired.
- "In a very safe asylum; well protected for the present; make your mind
- quite easy till you get a little better; you look ill this morning."
- "I am so entirely bewildered, I do not know whether I can trust my
- senses at all, or whether they are misleading me in every particular:
- but you speak English, do you not, madam?"
- "I should think you might hear that: it would puzzle me to hold a long
- discourse in French."
- "You do not come from England?"
- "I am lately arrived thence. Have you been long in this country? You
- seem to know my son?"
- "Do, I, madam? Perhaps I do. Your son--the picture there?"
- "That is his portrait as a youth. While looking at it, you pronounced
- his name."
- "Graham Bretton?"
- She nodded.
- "I speak to Mrs. Bretton, formerly of Bretton, ----shire?"
- "Quite right; and you, I am told, are an English teacher in a foreign
- school here: my son recognised you as such."
- "How was I found, madam, and by whom?"
- "My son shall tell you that by-and-by," said she; "but at present you
- are too confused and weak for conversation: try to eat some breakfast,
- and then sleep."
- Notwithstanding all I had undergone--the bodily fatigue, the
- perturbation of spirits, the exposure to weather--it seemed that I was
- better: the fever, the real malady which had oppressed my frame, was
- abating; for, whereas during the last nine days I had taken no solid
- food, and suffered from continual thirst, this morning, on breakfast
- being offered, I experienced a craving for nourishment: an inward
- faintness which caused me eagerly to taste the tea this lady offered,
- and to eat the morsel of dry toast she allowed in accompaniment. It was
- only a morsel, but it sufficed; keeping up my strength till some two or
- three hours afterwards, when the bonne brought me a little cup of broth
- and a biscuit.
- As evening began to darken, and the ceaseless blast still blew wild and
- cold, and the rain streamed on, deluge-like, I grew weary--very weary
- of my bed. The room, though pretty, was small: I felt it confining: I
- longed for a change. The increasing chill and gathering gloom, too,
- depressed me; I wanted to see--to feel firelight. Besides, I kept
- thinking of the son of that tall matron: when should I see him?
- Certainly not till I left my room.
- At last the bonne came to make my bed for the night. She prepared to
- wrap me in a blanket and place me in the little chintz chair; but,
- declining these attentions, I proceeded to dress myself:
- The business was just achieved, and I was sitting down to take breath,
- when Mrs. Bretton once more appeared.
- "Dressed!" she exclaimed, smiling with that smile I so well knew--a
- pleasant smile, though not soft. "You are quite better then? Quite
- strong--eh?"
- She spoke to me so much as of old she used to speak that I almost
- fancied she was beginning to know me. There was the same sort of
- patronage in her voice and manner that, as a girl, I had always
- experienced from her--a patronage I yielded to and even liked; it was
- not founded on conventional grounds of superior wealth or station (in
- the last particular there had never been any inequality; her degree was
- mine); but on natural reasons of physical advantage: it was the shelter
- the tree gives the herb. I put a request without further ceremony.
- "Do let me go down-stairs, madam; I am so cold and dull here."
- "I desire nothing better, if you are strong enough to bear the change,"
- was her reply. "Come then; here is an arm." And she offered me hers: I
- took it, and we descended one flight of carpeted steps to a landing
- where a tall door, standing open, gave admission into the blue-damask
- room. How pleasant it was in its air of perfect domestic comfort! How
- warm in its amber lamp-light and vermilion fire-flush! To render the
- picture perfect, tea stood ready on the table--an English tea, whereof
- the whole shining service glanced at me familiarly; from the solid
- silver urn, of antique pattern, and the massive pot of the same metal,
- to the thin porcelain cups, dark with purple and gilding. I knew the
- very seed-cake of peculiar form, baked in a peculiar mould, which
- always had a place on the tea-table at Bretton. Graham liked it, and
- there it was as of yore--set before Graham's plate with the silver
- knife and fork beside it. Graham was then expected to tea: Graham was
- now, perhaps, in the house; ere many minutes I might see him.
- "Sit down--sit down," said my conductress, as my step faltered a little
- in passing to the hearth. She seated me on the sofa, but I soon passed
- behind it, saying the fire was too hot; in its shade I found another
- seat which suited me better. Mrs. Bretton was never wont to make a fuss
- about any person or anything; without remonstrance she suffered me to
- have my own way. She made the tea, and she took up the newspaper. I
- liked to watch every action of my godmother; all her movements were so
- young: she must have been now above fifty, yet neither her sinews nor
- her spirit seemed yet touched by the rust of age. Though portly, she
- was alert, and though serene, she was at times impetuous--good health
- and an excellent temperament kept her green as in her spring.
- While she read, I perceived she listened--listened for her son. She was
- not the woman ever to confess herself uneasy, but there was yet no lull
- in the weather, and if Graham were out in that hoarse wind--roaring
- still unsatisfied--I well knew his mother's heart would be out with him.
- "Ten minutes behind his time," said she, looking at her watch; then, in
- another minute, a lifting of her eyes from the page, and a slight
- inclination of her head towards the door, denoted that she heard some
- sound. Presently her brow cleared; and then even my ear, less
- practised, caught the iron clash of a gate swung to, steps on gravel,
- lastly the door-bell. He was come. His mother filled the teapot from
- the urn, she drew nearer the hearth the stuffed and cushioned blue
- chair--her own chair by right, but I saw there was one who might with
- impunity usurp it. And when that _one_ came up the stairs--which he
- soon did, after, I suppose, some such attention to the toilet as the
- wild and wet night rendered necessary, and strode straight in--
- "Is it you, Graham?" said his mother, hiding a glad smile and speaking
- curtly.
- "Who else should it be, mamma?" demanded the Unpunctual, possessing
- himself irreverently of the abdicated throne.
- "Don't you deserve cold tea, for being late?"
- "I shall not get my deserts, for the urn sings cheerily."
- "Wheel yourself to the table, lazy boy: no seat will serve you but
- mine; if you had one spark of a sense of propriety, you would always
- leave that chair for the Old Lady."
- "So I should; only the dear Old Lady persists in leaving it for me. How
- is your patient, mamma?"
- "Will she come forward and speak for herself?" said Mrs. Bretton,
- turning to my corner; and at this invitation, forward I came. Graham
- courteously rose up to greet me. He stood tall on the hearth, a figure
- justifying his mother's unconcealed pride.
- "So you are come down," said he; "you must be better then--much better.
- I scarcely expected we should meet thus, or here. I was alarmed last
- night, and if I had not been forced to hurry away to a dying patient, I
- certainly would not have left you; but my mother herself is something
- of a doctress, and Martha an excellent nurse. I saw the case was a
- fainting-fit, not necessarily dangerous. What brought it on, I have yet
- to learn, and all particulars; meantime, I trust you really do feel
- better?"
- "Much better," I said calmly. "Much better, I thank you, Dr. John."
- For, reader, this tall young man--this darling son--this host of
- mine--this Graham Bretton, _was_ Dr. John: he, and no other; and, what
- is more, I ascertained this identity scarcely with surprise. What is
- more, when I heard Graham's step on the stairs, I knew what manner of
- figure would enter, and for whose aspect to prepare my eyes. The
- discovery was not of to-day, its dawn had penetrated my perceptions
- long since. Of course I remembered young Bretton well; and though ten
- years (from sixteen to twenty-six) may greatly change the boy as they
- mature him to the man, yet they could bring no such utter difference as
- would suffice wholly to blind my eyes, or baffle my memory. Dr. John
- Graham Bretton retained still an affinity to the youth of sixteen: he
- had his eyes; he had some of his features; to wit, all the
- excellently-moulded lower half of the face; I found him out soon. I
- first recognised him on that occasion, noted several chapters back,
- when my unguardedly-fixed attention had drawn on me the mortification
- of an implied rebuke. Subsequent observation confirmed, in every point,
- that early surmise. I traced in the gesture, the port, and the habits
- of his manhood, all his boy's promise. I heard in his now deep tones
- the accent of former days. Certain turns of phrase, peculiar to him of
- old, were peculiar to him still; and so was many a trick of eye and
- lip, many a smile, many a sudden ray levelled from the irid, under his
- well-charactered brow.
- To _say_ anything on the subject, to _hint_ at my discovery, had not
- suited my habits of thought, or assimilated with my system of feeling.
- On the contrary, I had preferred to keep the matter to myself. I liked
- entering his presence covered with a cloud he had not seen through,
- while he stood before me under a ray of special illumination which
- shone all partial over his head, trembled about his feet, and cast
- light no farther.
- Well I knew that to him it could make little difference, were I to come
- forward and announce, "This is Lucy Snowe!" So I kept back in my
- teacher's place; and as he never asked my name, so I never gave it. He
- heard me called "Miss," and "Miss Lucy;" he never heard the surname,
- "Snowe." As to spontaneous recognition--though I, perhaps, was still
- less changed than he--the idea never approached his mind, and why
- should I suggest it?
- During tea, Dr. John was kind, as it was his nature to be; that meal
- over, and the tray carried out, he made a cosy arrangement of the
- cushions in a corner of the sofa, and obliged me to settle amongst
- them. He and his mother also drew to the fire, and ere we had sat ten
- minutes, I caught the eye of the latter fastened steadily upon me.
- Women are certainly quicker in some things than men.
- "Well," she exclaimed, presently, "I have seldom seen a stronger
- likeness! Graham, have you observed it?"
- "Observed what? What ails the Old Lady now? How you stare, mamma! One
- would think you had an attack of second sight."
- "Tell me, Graham, of whom does that young lady remind you?" pointing to
- me.
- "Mamma, you put her out of countenance. I often tell you abruptness is
- your fault; remember, too, that to you she is a stranger, and does not
- know your ways."
- "Now, when she looks down; now, when she turns sideways, who is she
- like, Graham?"
- "Indeed, mamma, since you propound the riddle, I think you ought to
- solve it!"
- "And you have known her some time, you say--ever since you first began
- to attend the school in the Rue Fossette:--yet you never mentioned to
- me that singular resemblance!"
- "I could not mention a thing of which I never thought, and which I do
- not now acknowledge. What _can_ you mean?"
- "Stupid boy! look at her."
- Graham did look: but this was not to be endured; I saw how it must end,
- so I thought it best to anticipate.
- "Dr. John," I said, "has had so much to do and think of, since he and I
- shook hands at our last parting in St. Ann's Street, that, while I
- readily found out Mr. Graham Bretton, some months ago, it never
- occurred to me as possible that he should recognise Lucy Snowe."
- "Lucy Snowe! I thought so! I knew it!" cried Mrs. Bretton. And she at
- once stepped across the hearth and kissed me. Some ladies would,
- perhaps, have made a great bustle upon such a discovery without being
- particularly glad of it; but it was not my godmother's habit to make a
- bustle, and she preferred all sentimental demonstrations in bas-relief.
- So she and I got over the surprise with few words and a single salute;
- yet I daresay she was pleased, and I know I was. While we renewed old
- acquaintance, Graham, sitting opposite, silently disposed of his
- paroxysm of astonishment.
- "Mamma calls me a stupid boy, and I think I am so," at length he said;
- "for, upon my honour, often as I have seen you, I never once suspected
- this fact: and yet I perceive it all now. Lucy Snowe! To be sure! I
- recollect her perfectly, and there she sits; not a doubt of it. But,"
- he added, "you surely have not known me as an old acquaintance all this
- time, and never mentioned it."
- "That I have," was my answer.
- Dr. John commented not. I supposed he regarded my silence as eccentric,
- but he was indulgent in refraining from censure. I daresay, too, he
- would have deemed it impertinent to have interrogated me very closely,
- to have asked me the why and wherefore of my reserve; and, though he
- might feel a little curious, the importance of the case was by no means
- such as to tempt curiosity to infringe on discretion.
- For my part, I just ventured to inquire whether he remembered the
- circumstance of my once looking at him very fixedly; for the slight
- annoyance he had betrayed on that occasion still lingered sore on my
- mind.
- "I think I do!" said he: "I think I was even cross with you."
- "You considered me a little bold; perhaps?" I inquired.
- "Not at all. Only, shy and retiring as your general manner was, I
- wondered what personal or facial enormity in me proved so magnetic to
- your usually averted eyes."
- "You see how it was now?"
- "Perfectly."
- And here Mrs. Bretton broke in with many, many questions about past
- times; and for her satisfaction I had to recur to gone-by troubles, to
- explain causes of seeming estrangement, to touch on single-handed
- conflict with Life, with Death, with Grief, with Fate. Dr. John
- listened, saying little. He and she then told me of changes they had
- known: even with them all had not gone smoothly, and fortune had
- retrenched her once abundant gifts. But so courageous a mother, with
- such a champion in her son, was well fitted to fight a good fight with
- the world, and to prevail ultimately. Dr. John himself was one of those
- on whose birth benign planets have certainly smiled. Adversity might
- set against him her most sullen front: he was the man to beat her down
- with smiles. Strong and cheerful, and firm and courteous; not rash, yet
- valiant; he was the aspirant to woo Destiny herself, and to win from
- her stone eyeballs a beam almost loving.
- In the profession he had adopted, his success was now quite decided.
- Within the last three months he had taken this house (a small château,
- they told me, about half a league without the Porte de Crécy); this
- country site being chosen for the sake of his mother's health, with
- which town air did not now agree. Hither he had invited Mrs. Bretton,
- and she, on leaving England, had brought with her such residue
- furniture of the former St. Ann's Street mansion as she had thought fit
- to keep unsold. Hence my bewilderment at the phantoms of chairs, and
- the wraiths of looking-glasses, tea-urns, and teacups.
- As the clock struck eleven, Dr. John stopped his mother.
- "Miss Snowe must retire now," he said; "she is beginning to look very
- pale. To-morrow I will venture to put some questions respecting the
- cause of her loss of health. She is much changed, indeed, since last
- July, when I saw her enact with no little spirit the part of a very
- killing fine gentleman. As to last night's catastrophe, I am sure
- thereby hangs a tale, but we will inquire no further this evening.
- Good-night, Miss Lucy."
- And so he kindly led me to the door, and holding a wax-candle, lighted
- me up the one flight of stairs.
- When I had said my prayers, and when I was undressed and laid down, I
- felt that I still had friends. Friends, not professing vehement
- attachment, not offering the tender solace of well-matched and
- congenial relationship; on whom, therefore, but moderate demand of
- affection was to be made, of whom but moderate expectation formed; but
- towards whom my heart softened instinctively, and yearned with an
- importunate gratitude, which I entreated Reason betimes to check.
- "Do not let me think of them too often, too much, too fondly," I
- implored: "let me be content with a temperate draught of this living
- stream: let me not run athirst, and apply passionately to its welcome
- waters: let me not imagine in them a sweeter taste than earth's
- fountains know. Oh! would to God I may be enabled to feel enough
- sustained by an occasional, amicable intercourse, rare, brief,
- unengrossing and tranquil: quite tranquil!"
- Still repeating this word, I turned to my pillow; and _still_ repeating
- it, I steeped that pillow with tears.
- CHAPTER XVII.
- LA TERRASSE.
- These struggles with the natural character, the strong native bent of
- the heart, may seem futile and fruitless, but in the end they do good.
- They tend, however slightly, to give the actions, the conduct, that
- turn which Reason approves, and which Feeling, perhaps, too often
- opposes: they certainly make a difference in the general tenour of a
- life, and enable it to be better regulated, more equable, quieter on
- the surface; and it is on the surface only the common gaze will fall.
- As to what lies below, leave that with God. Man, your equal, weak as
- you, and not fit to be your judge, may be shut out thence: take it to
- your Maker--show Him the secrets of the spirit He gave--ask Him how you
- are to bear the pains He has appointed--kneel in His presence, and pray
- with faith for light in darkness, for strength in piteous weakness, for
- patience in extreme need. Certainly, at some hour, though perhaps not
- _your_ hour, the waiting waters will stir; in _some_ shape, though
- perhaps not the shape you dreamed, which your heart loved, and for
- which it bled, the healing herald will descend, the cripple and the
- blind, and the dumb, and the possessed will be led to bathe. Herald,
- come quickly! Thousands lie round the pool, weeping and despairing, to
- see it, through slow years, stagnant. Long are the "times" of Heaven:
- the orbits of angel messengers seem wide to mortal vision; they may
- enring ages: the cycle of one departure and return may clasp unnumbered
- generations; and dust, kindling to brief suffering life, and through
- pain, passing back to dust, may meanwhile perish out of memory again,
- and yet again. To how many maimed and mourning millions is the first
- and sole angel visitant, him easterns call Azrael!
- I tried to get up next morning, but while I was dressing, and at
- intervals drinking cold water from the _carafe_ on my washstand, with
- design to brace up that trembling weakness which made dressing so
- difficult, in came Mrs. Bretton.
- "Here is an absurdity!" was her morning accost. "Not so," she added,
- and dealing with me at once in her own brusque, energetic fashion--that
- fashion which I used formerly to enjoy seeing applied to her son, and
- by him vigorously resisted--in two minutes she consigned me captive to
- the French bed.
- "There you lie till afternoon," said she. "My boy left orders before he
- went out that such should be the case, and I can assure you my son is
- master and must be obeyed. Presently you shall have breakfast."
- Presently she brought that meal--brought it with her own active
- hands--not leaving me to servants. She seated herself on the bed while
- I ate. Now it is not everybody, even amongst our respected friends and
- esteemed acquaintance, whom we like to have near us, whom we like to
- watch us, to wait on us, to approach us with the proximity of a nurse
- to a patient. It is not every friend whose eye is a light in a sick
- room, whose presence is there a solace: but all this was Mrs. Bretton
- to me; all this she had ever been. Food or drink never pleased me so
- well as when it came through her hands. I do not remember the occasion
- when her entrance into a room had not made that room cheerier. Our
- natures own predilections and antipathies alike strange. There are
- people from whom we secretly shrink, whom we would personally avoid,
- though reason confesses that they are good people: there are others
- with faults of temper, &c., evident enough, beside whom we live
- content, as if the air about them did us good. My godmother's lively
- black eye and clear brunette cheek, her warm, prompt hand, her
- self-reliant mood, her decided bearing, were all beneficial to me as
- the atmosphere of some salubrious climate. Her son used to call her
- "the old lady;" it filled me with pleasant wonder to note how the
- alacrity and power of five-and-twenty still breathed from her and
- around her.
- "I would bring my work here," she said, as she took from me the emptied
- teacup, "and sit with you the whole day, if that overbearing John
- Graham had not put his veto upon such a proceeding. 'Now, mamma,' he
- said, when he went out, 'take notice, you are not to knock up your
- god-daughter with gossip,' and he particularly desired me to keep close
- to my own quarters, and spare you my fine company. He says, Lucy, he
- thinks you have had a nervous fever, judging from your look,--is that
- so?"
- I replied that I did not quite know what my ailment had been, but that
- I had certainly suffered a good deal especially in mind. Further, on
- this subject, I did not consider it advisable to dwell, for the details
- of what I had undergone belonged to a portion of my existence in which
- I never expected my godmother to take a share. Into what a new region
- would such a confidence have led that hale, serene nature! The
- difference between her and me might be figured by that between the
- stately ship cruising safe on smooth seas, with its full complement of
- crew, a captain gay and brave, and venturous and provident; and the
- life-boat, which most days of the year lies dry and solitary in an old,
- dark boat-house, only putting to sea when the billows run high in rough
- weather, when cloud encounters water, when danger and death divide
- between them the rule of the great deep. No, the "Louisa Bretton" never
- was out of harbour on such a night, and in such a scene: her crew could
- not conceive it; so the half-drowned life-boat man keeps his own
- counsel, and spins no yarns.
- She left me, and I lay in bed content: it was good of Graham to
- remember me before he went out.
- My day was lonely, but the prospect of coming evening abridged and
- cheered it. Then, too, I felt weak, and rest seemed welcome; and after
- the morning hours were gone by,--those hours which always bring, even
- to the necessarily unoccupied, a sense of business to be done, of tasks
- waiting fulfilment, a vague impression of obligation to be
- employed--when this stirring time was past, and the silent descent of
- afternoon hushed housemaid steps on the stairs and in the chambers, I
- then passed into a dreamy mood, not unpleasant.
- My calm little room seemed somehow like a cave in the sea. There was no
- colour about it, except that white and pale green, suggestive of foam
- and deep water; the blanched cornice was adorned with shell-shaped
- ornaments, and there were white mouldings like dolphins in the
- ceiling-angles. Even that one touch of colour visible in the red satin
- pincushion bore affinity to coral; even that dark, shining glass might
- have mirrored a mermaid. When I closed my eyes, I heard a gale,
- subsiding at last, bearing upon the house-front like a settling swell
- upon a rock-base. I heard it drawn and withdrawn far, far off, like a
- tide retiring from a shore of the upper world--a world so high above
- that the rush of its largest waves, the dash of its fiercest breakers,
- could sound down in this submarine home, only like murmurs and a
- lullaby.
- Amidst these dreams came evening, and then Martha brought a light; with
- her aid I was quickly dressed, and stronger now than in the morning, I
- made my way down to the blue saloon unassisted.
- Dr. John, it appears, had concluded his round of professional calls
- earlier than usual; his form was the first object that met my eyes as I
- entered the parlour; he stood in that window-recess opposite the door,
- reading the close type of a newspaper by such dull light as closing day
- yet gave. The fire shone clear, but the lamp stood on the table unlit,
- and tea was not yet brought up.
- As to Mrs. Bretton, my active godmother--who, I afterwards found, had
- been out in the open air all day--lay half-reclined in her
- deep-cushioned chair, actually lost in a nap. Her son seeing me, came
- forward. I noticed that he trod carefully, not to wake the sleeper; he
- also spoke low: his mellow voice never had any sharpness in it;
- modulated as at present, it was calculated rather to soothe than
- startle slumber.
- "This is a quiet little château," he observed, after inviting me to sit
- near the casement. "I don't know whether you may have noticed it in
- your walks: though, indeed, from the chaussée it is not visible; just a
- mile beyond the Porte de Crécy, you turn down a lane which soon becomes
- an avenue, and that leads you on, through meadow and shade, to the very
- door of this house. It is not a modern place, but built somewhat in the
- old style of the Basse-Ville. It is rather a manoir than a château;
- they call it 'La Terrasse,' because its front rises from a broad turfed
- walk, whence steps lead down a grassy slope to the avenue. See yonder!
- The moon rises: she looks well through the tree-boles."
- Where, indeed, does the moon not look well? What is the scene, confined
- or expansive, which her orb does not hallow? Rosy or fiery, she mounted
- now above a not distant bank; even while we watched her flushed ascent,
- she cleared to gold, and in very brief space, floated up stainless into
- a now calm sky. Did moonlight soften or sadden Dr. Bretton? Did it
- touch him with romance? I think it did. Albeit of no sighing mood, he
- sighed in watching it: sighed to himself quietly. No need to ponder the
- cause or the course of that sigh; I knew it was wakened by beauty; I
- knew it pursued Ginevra. Knowing this, the idea pressed upon me that it
- was in some sort my duty to speak the name he meditated. Of course he
- was ready for the subject: I saw in his countenance a teeming plenitude
- of comment, question and interest; a pressure of language and
- sentiment, only checked, I thought, by sense of embarrassment how to
- begin. To spare him this embarrassment was my best, indeed my sole use.
- I had but to utter the idol's name, and love's tender litany would flow
- out. I had just found a fitting phrase, "You know that Miss Fanshawe is
- gone on a tour with the Cholmondeleys," and was opening my lips to
- speak to it, when he scattered my plans by introducing another theme.
- "The first thing this morning," said he, putting his sentiment in his
- pocket, turning from the moon, and sitting down, "I went to the Rue
- Fossette, and told the cuisinière that you were safe and in good hands.
- Do you know that I actually found that she had not yet discovered your
- absence from the house: she thought you safe in the great dormitory.
- With what care you must have been waited on!"
- "Oh! all that is very conceivable," said I. "Goton could do nothing for
- me but bring me a little tisane and a crust of bread, and I had
- rejected both so often during the past week, that the good woman got
- tired of useless journeys from the dwelling-house kitchen to the
- school-dormitory, and only came once a day at noon to make my bed. I
- believe, however, that she is a good-natured creature, and would have
- been delighted to cook me côtelettes de mouton, if I could have eaten
- them."
- "What did Madame Beck mean by leaving you alone?"
- "Madame Beck could not foresee that I should fall ill."
- "Your nervous system bore a good share of the suffering?"
- "I am not quite sure what my nervous system is, but I was dreadfully
- low-spirited."
- "Which disables me from helping you by pill or potion. Medicine can
- give nobody good spirits. My art halts at the threshold of
- Hypochondria: she just looks in and sees a chamber of torture, but can
- neither say nor do much. Cheerful society would be of use; you should
- be as little alone as possible; you should take plenty of exercise."
- Acquiescence and a pause followed these remarks. They sounded all
- right, I thought, and bore the safe sanction of custom, and the
- well-worn stamp of use.
- "Miss Snowe," recommenced Dr. John--my health, nervous system included,
- being now, somewhat to my relief, discussed and done with--"is it
- permitted me to ask what your religion is? Are you a Catholic?"
- I looked up in some surprise--"A Catholic? No! Why suggest such an
- idea?"
- "The manner in which you were consigned to me last night made me doubt."
- "I consigned to you? But, indeed, I forget. It yet remains for me to
- learn how I fell into your hands."
- "Why, under circumstances that puzzled me. I had been in attendance all
- day yesterday on a case of singularly interesting and critical
- character; the disease being rare, and its treatment doubtful: I saw a
- similar and still finer case in a hospital in Paris; but that will not
- interest you. At last a mitigation of the patient's most urgent
- symptoms (acute pain is one of its accompaniments) liberated me, and I
- set out homeward. My shortest way lay through the Basse-Ville, and as
- the night was excessively dark, wild, and wet, I took it. In riding
- past an old church belonging to a community of Béguines, I saw by a
- lamp burning over the porch or deep arch of the entrance, a priest
- lifting some object in his arms. The lamp was bright enough to reveal
- the priest's features clearly, and I recognised him; he was a man I
- have often met by the sick beds of both rich and poor: and chiefly the
- latter. He is, I think, a good old man, far better than most of his
- class in this country; superior, indeed, in every way, better informed,
- as well as more devoted to duty. Our eyes met; he called on me to stop:
- what he supported was a woman, fainting or dying. I alighted.
- "'This person is one of your countrywomen,' he said: 'save her, if she
- is not dead.'
- "My countrywoman, on examination, turned out to be the English teacher
- at Madame Beck's pensionnat. She was perfectly unconscious, perfectly
- bloodless, and nearly cold.
- "'What does it all mean?' was my inquiry.
- "He communicated a curious account; that you had been to him that
- evening at confessional; that your exhausted and suffering appearance,
- coupled with some things you had said--"
- "Things I had said? I wonder what things!"
- "Awful crimes, no doubt; but he did not tell me what: there, you know,
- the seal of the confessional checked his garrulity, and my curiosity.
- Your confidences, however, had not made an enemy of the good father; it
- seems he was so struck, and felt so sorry that you should be out on
- such a night alone, that he had esteemed it a Christian duty to watch
- you when you quitted the church, and so to manage as not to lose sight
- of you, till you should have reached home. Perhaps the worthy man
- might, half unconsciously, have blent in this proceeding some little of
- the subtlety of his class: it might have been his resolve to learn the
- locality of your home--did you impart that in your confession?"
- "I did not: on the contrary, I carefully avoided the shadow of any
- indication: and as to my confession, Dr. John, I suppose you will think
- me mad for taking such a step, but I could not help it: I suppose it
- was all the fault of what you call my 'nervous system.' I cannot put
- the case into words, but my days and nights were grown intolerable: a
- cruel sense of desolation pained my mind: a feeling that would make its
- way, rush out, or kill me--like (and this you will understand, Dr.
- John) the current which passes through the heart, and which, if
- aneurism or any other morbid cause obstructs its natural channels,
- seeks abnormal outlet. I wanted companionship, I wanted friendship, I
- wanted counsel. I could find none of these in closet or chamber, so I
- went and sought them in church and confessional. As to what I said, it
- was no confidence, no narrative. I have done nothing wrong: my life has
- not been active enough for any dark deed, either of romance or reality:
- all I poured out was a dreary, desperate complaint."
- "Lucy, you ought to travel for about six months: why, your calm nature
- is growing quite excitable! Confound Madame Beck! Has the little buxom
- widow no bowels, to condemn her best teacher to solitary confinement?"
- "It was not Madame Beck's fault," said I; "it is no living being's
- fault, and I won't hear any one blamed."
- "Who is in the wrong, then, Lucy?"
- "Me--Dr. John--me; and a great abstraction on whose wide shoulders I
- like to lay the mountains of blame they were sculptured to bear: me and
- Fate."
- "'Me' must take better care in future," said Dr. John--smiling, I
- suppose, at my bad grammar.
- "Change of air--change of scene; those are my prescriptions," pursued
- the practical young doctor. "But to return to our muttons, Lucy. As
- yet, Père Silas, with all his tact (they say he is a Jesuit), is no
- wiser than you choose him to be; for, instead of returning to the Rue
- Fossette, your fevered wanderings--there must have been high fever--"
- "No, Dr. John: the fever took its turn that night--now, don't make out
- that I was delirious, for I know differently."
- "Good! you were as collected as myself at this moment, no doubt. Your
- wanderings had taken an opposite direction to the pensionnat. Near the
- Béguinage, amidst the stress of flood and gust, and in the perplexity
- of darkness, you had swooned and fallen. The priest came to your
- succour, and the physician, as we have seen, supervened. Between us we
- procured a fiacre and brought you here. Père Silas, old as he is, would
- carry you up-stairs, and lay you on that couch himself. He would
- certainly have remained with you till suspended animation had been
- restored: and so should I, but, at that juncture, a hurried messenger
- arrived from the dying patient I had scarcely left--the last duties
- were called for--the physician's last visit and the priest's last rite;
- extreme unction could not be deferred. Père Silas and myself departed
- together, my mother was spending the evening abroad; we gave you in
- charge to Martha, leaving directions, which it seems she followed
- successfully. Now, are you a Catholic?"
- "Not yet," said I, with a smile. "And never let Père Silas know where I
- live, or he will try to convert me; but give him my best and truest
- thanks when you see him, and if ever I get rich I will send him money
- for his charities. See, Dr. John, your mother wakes; you ought to ring
- for tea."
- Which he did; and, as Mrs. Bretton sat up--astonished and indignant at
- herself for the indulgence to which she had succumbed, and fully
- prepared to deny that she had slept at all--her son came gaily to the
- attack.
- "Hushaby, mamma! Sleep again. You look the picture of innocence in your
- slumbers."
- "My slumbers, John Graham! What are you talking about? You know I never
- _do_ sleep by day: it was the slightest doze possible."
- "Exactly! a seraph's gentle lapse--a fairy's dream. Mamma, under such
- circumstances, you always remind me of Titania."
- "That is because you, yourself, are so like Bottom."
- "Miss Snowe--did you ever hear anything like mamma's wit? She is a most
- sprightly woman of her size and age."
- "Keep your compliments to yourself, sir, and do not neglect your own
- size: which seems to me a good deal on the increase. Lucy, has he not
- rather the air of an incipient John Bull? He used to be slender as an
- eel, and now I fancy in him a sort of heavy dragoon bent--a beef-eater
- tendency. Graham, take notice! If you grow fat I disown you."
- "As if you could not sooner disown your own personality! I am
- indispensable to the old lady's happiness, Lucy. She would pine away in
- green and yellow melancholy if she had not my six feet of iniquity to
- scold. It keeps her lively--it maintains the wholesome ferment of her
- spirits."
- The two were now standing opposite to each other, one on each side the
- fire-place; their words were not very fond, but their mutual looks
- atoned for verbal deficiencies. At least, the best treasure of Mrs.
- Bretton's life was certainly casketed in her son's bosom; her dearest
- pulse throbbed in his heart. As to him, of course another love shared
- his feelings with filial love, and, no doubt, as the new passion was
- the latest born, so he assigned it in his emotions Benjamin's portion.
- Ginevra! Ginevra! Did Mrs. Bretton yet know at whose feet her own young
- idol had laid his homage? Would she approve that choice? I could not
- tell; but I could well guess that if she knew Miss Fanshawe's conduct
- towards Graham: her alternations between coldness and coaxing, and
- repulse and allurement; if she could at all suspect the pain with which
- she had tried him; if she could have seen, as I had seen, his fine
- spirits subdued and harassed, his inferior preferred before him, his
- subordinate made the instrument of his humiliation--_then_ Mrs. Bretton
- would have pronounced Ginevra imbecile, or perverted, or both. Well--I
- thought so too.
- That second evening passed as sweetly as the first--_more_ sweetly
- indeed: we enjoyed a smoother interchange of thought; old troubles were
- not reverted to, acquaintance was better cemented; I felt happier,
- easier, more at home. That night--instead of crying myself asleep--I
- went down to dreamland by a pathway bordered with pleasant thoughts.
- CHAPTER XVIII.
- WE QUARREL.
- During the first days of my stay at the Terrace, Graham never took a
- seat near me, or in his frequent pacing of the room approached the
- quarter where I sat, or looked pre-occupied, or more grave than usual,
- but I thought of Miss Fanshawe and expected her name to leap from his
- lips. I kept my ear and mind in perpetual readiness for the tender
- theme; my patience was ordered to be permanently under arms, and my
- sympathy desired to keep its cornucopia replenished and ready for
- outpouring. At last, and after a little inward struggle, which I saw
- and respected, he one day launched into the topic. It was introduced
- delicately; anonymously as it were.
- "Your friend is spending her vacation in travelling, I hear?"
- "Friend, forsooth!" thought I to myself: but it would not do to
- contradict; he must have his own way; I must own the soft impeachment:
- friend let it be. Still, by way of experiment, I could not help asking
- whom he meant?
- He had taken a seat at my work-table; he now laid hands on a reel of
- thread which he proceeded recklessly to unwind.
- "Ginevra--Miss Fanshawe, has accompanied the Cholmondeleys on a tour
- through the south of France?"
- "She has."
- "Do you and she correspond?"
- "It will astonish you to hear that I never once thought of making
- application for that privilege."
- "You have seen letters of her writing?"
- "Yes; several to her uncle."
- "They will not be deficient in wit and _naïveté_; there is so much
- sparkle, and so little art in her soul?"
- "She writes comprehensively enough when she writes to M. de
- Bassompierre: he who runs may read." (In fact, Ginevra's epistles to
- her wealthy kinsman were commonly business documents, unequivocal
- applications for cash.)
- "And her handwriting? It must be pretty, light, ladylike, I should
- think?"
- It was, and I said so.
- "I verily believe that all she does is well done," said Dr. John; and
- as I seemed in no hurry to chime in with this remark, he added "You,
- who know her, could you name a point in which she is deficient?"
- "She does several things very well." ("Flirtation amongst the rest,"
- subjoined I, in thought.)
- "When do you suppose she will return to town?" he soon inquired.
- "Pardon me, Dr. John, I must explain. You honour me too much in
- ascribing to me a degree of intimacy with Miss Fanshawe I have not the
- felicity to enjoy. I have never been the depositary of her plans and
- secrets. You will find her particular friends in another sphere than
- mine: amongst the Cholmondeleys, for instance."
- He actually thought I was stung with a kind of jealous pain similar to
- his own!
- "Excuse her," he said; "judge her indulgently; the glitter of fashion
- misleads her, but she will soon find out that these people are hollow,
- and will return to you with augmented attachment and confirmed trust. I
- know something of the Cholmondeleys: superficial, showy, selfish
- people; depend on it, at heart Ginevra values you beyond a score of
- such."
- "You are very kind," I said briefly.
- A disclaimer of the sentiments attributed to me burned on my lips, but
- I extinguished the flame. I submitted to be looked upon as the
- humiliated, cast-off, and now pining confidante of the distinguished
- Miss Fanshawe: but, reader, it was a hard submission.
- "Yet, you see," continued Graham, "while I comfort _you_, I cannot take
- the same consolation to myself; I cannot hope she will do me justice.
- De Hamal is most worthless, yet I fear he pleases her: wretched
- delusion!"
- My patience really gave way, and without notice: all at once. I suppose
- illness and weakness had worn it and made it brittle.
- "Dr. Bretton," I broke out, "there is no delusion like your own. On all
- points but one you are a man, frank, healthful, right-thinking,
- clear-sighted: on this exceptional point you are but a slave. I
- declare, where Miss Fanshawe is concerned, you merit no respect; nor
- have you mine."
- I got up, and left the room very much excited.
- This little scene took place in the morning; I had to meet him again in
- the evening, and then I saw I had done mischief. He was not made of
- common clay, not put together out of vulgar materials; while the
- outlines of his nature had been shaped with breadth and vigour, the
- details embraced workmanship of almost feminine delicacy: finer, much
- finer, than you could be prepared to meet with; than you could believe
- inherent in him, even after years of acquaintance. Indeed, till some
- over-sharp contact with his nerves had betrayed, by its effects, their
- acute sensibility, this elaborate construction must be ignored; and the
- more especially because the sympathetic faculty was not prominent in
- him: to feel, and to seize quickly another's feelings, are separate
- properties; a few constructions possess both, some neither. Dr. John
- had the one in exquisite perfection; and because I have admitted that
- he was not endowed with the other in equal degree, the reader will
- considerately refrain from passing to an extreme, and pronouncing him
- _un_sympathizing, unfeeling: on the contrary, he was a kind, generous
- man. Make your need known, his hand was open. Put your grief into
- words, he turned no deaf ear. Expect refinements of perception,
- miracles of intuition, and realize disappointment. This night, when Dr.
- John entered the room, and met the evening lamp, I saw well and at one
- glance his whole mechanism.
- To one who had named him "slave," and, on any point, banned him from
- respect, he must now have peculiar feelings. That the epithet was well
- applied, and the ban just, might be; he put forth no denial that it was
- so: his mind even candidly revolved that unmanning possibility. He
- sought in this accusation the cause of that ill-success which had got
- so galling a hold on his mental peace: Amid the worry of a
- self-condemnatory soliloquy, his demeanour seemed grave, perhaps cold,
- both to me and his mother. And yet there was no bad feeling, no malice,
- no rancour, no littleness in his countenance, beautiful with a man's
- best beauty, even in its depression. When I placed his chair at the
- table, which I hastened to do, anticipating the servant, and when I
- handed him his tea, which I did with trembling care, he said: "Thank
- you, Lucy," in as kindly a tone of his full pleasant voice as ever my
- ear welcomed.
- For my part, there was only one plan to be pursued; I must expiate my
- culpable vehemence, or I must not sleep that night. This would not do
- at all; I could not stand it: I made no pretence of capacity to wage
- war on this footing. School solitude, conventual silence and
- stagnation, anything seemed preferable to living embroiled with Dr.
- John. As to Ginevra, she might take the silver wings of a dove, or any
- other fowl that flies, and mount straight up to the highest place,
- among the highest stars, where her lover's highest flight of fancy
- chose to fix the constellation of her charms: never more be it mine to
- dispute the arrangement. Long I tried to catch his eye. Again and again
- that eye just met mine; but, having nothing to say, it withdrew, and I
- was baffled. After tea, he sat, sad and quiet, reading a book. I wished
- I could have dared to go and sit near him, but it seemed that if I
- ventured to take that step, he would infallibly evince hostility and
- indignation. I longed to speak out, and I dared not whisper. His mother
- left the room; then, moved by insupportable regret, I just murmured the
- words "Dr. Bretton."
- He looked up from his book; his eyes were not cold or malevolent, his
- mouth was not cynical; he was ready and willing to hear what I might
- have to say: his spirit was of vintage too mellow and generous to sour
- in one thunder-clap.
- "Dr. Bretton, forgive my hasty words: _do, do_ forgive them."
- He smiled that moment I spoke. "Perhaps I deserved them, Lucy. If you
- don't respect me, I am sure it is because I am not respectable. I fear,
- I am an awkward fool: I must manage badly in some way, for where I wish
- to please, it seems I don't please."
- "Of that you cannot be sure; and even if such be the case, is it the
- fault of your character, or of another's perceptions? But now, let me
- unsay what I said in anger. In one thing, and in all things, I deeply
- respect you. If you think scarcely enough of yourself, and too much of
- others, what is that but an excellence?"
- "Can I think too much of Ginevra?"
- "_I_ believe you may; _you_ believe you can't. Let us agree to differ.
- Let me be pardoned; that is what I ask."
- "Do you think I cherish ill-will for one warm word?"
- "I see you do not and cannot; but just say, 'Lucy, I forgive you!' Say
- that, to ease me of the heart-ache."
- "Put away your heart-ache, as I will put away mine; for you wounded me
- a little, Lucy. Now, when the pain is gone, I more than forgive: I feel
- grateful, as to a sincere well-wisher."
- "I _am_ your sincere well-wisher: you are right."
- Thus our quarrel ended.
- Reader, if in the course of this work, you find that my opinion of Dr.
- John undergoes modification, excuse the seeming inconsistency. I give
- the feeling as at the time I felt it; I describe the view of character
- as it appeared when discovered.
- He showed the fineness of his nature by being kinder to me after that
- misunderstanding than before. Nay, the very incident which, by my
- theory, must in some degree estrange me and him, changed, indeed,
- somewhat our relations; but not in the sense I painfully anticipated.
- An invisible, but a cold something, very slight, very transparent, but
- very chill: a sort of screen of ice had hitherto, all through our two
- lives, glazed the medium through which we exchanged intercourse. Those
- few warm words, though only warm with anger, breathed on that frail
- frost-work of reserve; about this time, it gave note of dissolution. I
- think from that day, so long as we continued friends, he never in
- discourse stood on topics of ceremony with me. He seemed to know that
- if he would but talk about himself, and about that in which he was most
- interested, my expectation would always be answered, my wish always
- satisfied. It follows, as a matter of course, that I continued to hear
- much of "Ginevra."
- "Ginevra!" He thought her so fair, so good; he spoke so lovingly of her
- charms, her sweetness, her innocence, that, in spite of my plain prose
- knowledge of the reality, a kind of reflected glow began to settle on
- her idea, even for me. Still, reader, I am free to confess, that he
- often talked nonsense; but I strove to be unfailingly patient with him.
- I had had my lesson: I had learned how severe for me was the pain of
- crossing, or grieving, or disappointing him. In a strange and new
- sense, I grew most selfish, and quite powerless to deny myself the
- delight of indulging his mood, and being pliant to his will. He still
- seemed to me most absurd when he obstinately doubted, and desponded
- about his power to win in the end Miss Fanshawe's preference. The fancy
- became rooted in my own mind more stubbornly than ever, that she was
- only coquetting to goad him, and that, at heart, she coveted everyone
- of his words and looks. Sometimes he harassed me, in spite of my
- resolution to bear and hear; in the midst of the indescribable
- gall-honey pleasure of thus bearing and hearing, he struck so on the
- flint of what firmness I owned, that it emitted fire once and again. I
- chanced to assert one day, with a view to stilling his impatience, that
- in my own mind, I felt positive Miss Fanshawe _must_ intend eventually
- to accept him.
- "Positive! It was easy to say so, but had I any grounds for such
- assurance?"
- "The best grounds."
- "Now, Lucy, _do_ tell me what!"
- "You know them as well as I; and, knowing them, Dr. John, it really
- amazes me that you should not repose the frankest confidence in her
- fidelity. To doubt, under the circumstances, is almost to insult."
- "Now you are beginning to speak fast and to breathe short; but speak a
- little faster and breathe a little shorter, till you have given an
- explanation--a full explanation: I must have it."
- "You shall, Dr. John. In some cases, you are a lavish, generous man:
- you are a worshipper ever ready with the votive offering should Père
- Silas ever convert _you_, you will give him abundance of alms for his
- poor, you will supply his altar with tapers, and the shrine of your
- favourite saint you will do your best to enrich: Ginevra, Dr. John--"
- "Hush!" said he, "don't go on."
- "Hush, I will _not_: and go on I _will_: Ginevra has had her hands
- filled from your hands more times than I can count. You have sought for
- her the costliest flowers; you have busied your brain in devising gifts
- the most delicate: such, one would have thought, as only a woman could
- have imagined; and in addition, Miss Fanshawe owns a set of ornaments,
- to purchase which your generosity must have verged on extravagance."
- The modesty Ginevra herself had never evinced in this matter, now
- flushed all over the face of her admirer.
- "Nonsense!" he said, destructively snipping a skein of silk with my
- scissors. "I offered them to please myself: I felt she did me a favour
- in accepting them."
- "She did more than a favour, Dr. John: she pledged her very honour that
- she would make you some return; and if she cannot pay you in affection,
- she ought to hand out a business-like equivalent, in the shape of some
- rouleaux of gold pieces."
- "But you don't understand her; she is far too disinterested to care for
- my gifts, and too simple-minded to know their value."
- I laughed out: I had heard her adjudge to every jewel its price; and
- well I knew money-embarrassment, money-schemes; money's worth, and
- endeavours to realise supplies, had, young as she was, furnished the
- most frequent, and the favourite stimulus of her thoughts for years.
- He pursued. "You should have seen her whenever I have laid on her lap
- some trifle; so cool, so unmoved: no eagerness to take, not even
- pleasure in contemplating. Just from amiable reluctance to grieve me,
- she would permit the bouquet to lie beside her, and perhaps consent to
- bear it away. Or, if I achieved the fastening of a bracelet on her
- ivory arm, however pretty the trinket might be (and I always carefully
- chose what seemed to _me_ pretty, and what of course was not
- valueless), the glitter never dazzled her bright eyes: she would hardly
- cast one look on my gift."
- "Then, of course, not valuing it, she would unloose, and return it to
- you?"
- "No; for such a repulse she was too good-natured. She would consent to
- seem to forget what I had done, and retain the offering with lady-like
- quiet and easy oblivion. Under such circumstances, how can a man build
- on acceptance of his presents as a favourable symptom? For my part,
- were I to offer her all I have, and she to take it, such is her
- incapacity to be swayed by sordid considerations, I should not venture
- to believe the transaction advanced me one step."
- "Dr. John," I began, "Love is blind;" but just then a blue subtle ray
- sped sideways from Dr. John's eye: it reminded me of old days, it
- reminded me of his picture: it half led me to think that part, at
- least, of his professed persuasion of Miss Fanshawe's _naïveté_ was
- assumed; it led me dubiously to conjecture that perhaps, in spite of
- his passion for her beauty, his appreciation of her foibles might
- possibly be less mistaken, more clear-sighted, than from his general
- language was presumable. After all it might be only a chance look, or
- at best the token of a merely momentary impression. Chance or
- intentional real or imaginary, it closed the conversation.
- CHAPTER XIX.
- THE CLEOPATRA.
- My stay at La Terrasse was prolonged a fortnight beyond the close of
- the vacation. Mrs. Bretton's kind management procured me this respite.
- Her son having one day delivered the dictum that "Lucy was not yet
- strong enough to go back to that den of a pensionnat," she at once
- drove over to the Rue Fossette, had an interview with the directress,
- and procured the indulgence, on the plea of prolonged rest and change
- being necessary to perfect recovery. Hereupon, however, followed an
- attention I could very well have dispensed with, viz--a polite call
- from Madame Beck.
- That lady--one fine day--actually came out in a fiacre as far as the
- château. I suppose she had resolved within herself to see what manner
- of place Dr. John inhabited. Apparently, the pleasant site and neat
- interior surpassed her expectations; she eulogized all she saw,
- pronounced the blue salon "une pièce magnifique," profusely
- congratulated me on the acquisition of friends, "tellement dignes,
- aimables, et respectables," turned also a neat compliment in my favour,
- and, upon Dr. John coming in, ran up to him with the utmost buoyancy,
- opening at the same time such a fire of rapid language, all sparkling
- with felicitations and protestations about his "château,"--"madame sa
- mère, la digne châtelaine:" also his looks; which, indeed, were very
- flourishing, and at the moment additionally embellished by the
- good-natured but amused smile with which he always listened to Madame's
- fluent and florid French. In short, Madame shone in her very best phase
- that day, and came in and went out quite a living catherine-wheel of
- compliments, delight, and affability. Half purposely, and half to ask
- some question about school-business, I followed her to the carriage,
- and looked in after she was seated and the door closed. In that brief
- fraction of time what a change had been wrought! An instant ago, all
- sparkles and jests, she now sat sterner than a judge and graver than a
- sage. Strange little woman!
- I went back and teased Dr. John about Madame's devotion to him. How he
- laughed! What fun shone in his eyes as he recalled some of her fine
- speeches, and repeated them, imitating her voluble delivery! He had an
- acute sense of humour, and was the finest company in the world--when he
- could forget Miss Fanshawe.
- * * * * *
- To "sit in sunshine calm and sweet" is said to be excellent for weak
- people; it gives them vital force. When little Georgette Beck was
- recovering from her illness, I used to take her in my arms and walk
- with her in the garden by the hour together, beneath a certain wall
- hung with grapes, which the Southern sun was ripening: that sun
- cherished her little pale frame quite as effectually as it mellowed and
- swelled the clustering fruit.
- There are human tempers, bland, glowing, and genial, within whose
- influence it is as good for the poor in spirit to live, as it is for
- the feeble in frame to bask in the glow of noon. Of the number of these
- choice natures were certainly both Dr. Bretton's and his mother's. They
- liked to communicate happiness, as some like to occasion misery: they
- did it instinctively; without fuss, and apparently with little
- consciousness; the means to give pleasure rose spontaneously in their
- minds. Every day while I stayed with them, some little plan was
- proposed which resulted in beneficial enjoyment. Fully occupied as was
- Dr. John's time, he still made it in his way to accompany us in each
- brief excursion. I can hardly tell how he managed his engagements; they
- were numerous, yet by dint of system, he classed them in an order which
- left him a daily period of liberty. I often saw him hard-worked, yet
- seldom over-driven, and never irritated, confused, or oppressed. What
- he did was accomplished with the ease and grace of all-sufficing
- strength; with the bountiful cheerfulness of high and unbroken
- energies. Under his guidance I saw, in that one happy fortnight, more
- of Villette, its environs, and its inhabitants, than I had seen in the
- whole eight months of my previous residence. He took me to places of
- interest in the town, of whose names I had not before so much as heard;
- with willingness and spirit he communicates much noteworthy
- information. He never seemed to think it a trouble to talk to me, and,
- I am sure, it was never a task to me to listen. It was not his way to
- treat subjects coldly and vaguely; he rarely generalized, never prosed.
- He seemed to like nice details almost as much as I liked them myself:
- he seemed observant of character: and not superficially observant,
- either. These points gave the quality of interest to his discourse; and
- the fact of his speaking direct from his own resources, and not
- borrowing or stealing from books--here a dry fact, and there a trite
- phrase, and elsewhere a hackneyed opinion--ensured a freshness, as
- welcome as it was rare. Before my eyes, too, his disposition seemed to
- unfold another phase; to pass to a fresh day: to rise in new and nobler
- dawn.
- His mother possessed a good development of benevolence, but he owned a
- better and larger. I found, on accompanying him to the Basse-Ville--the
- poor and crowded quarter of the city--that his errands there were as
- much those of the philanthropist as the physician. I understood
- presently that cheerfully, habitually, and in single-minded
- unconsciousness of any special merit distinguishing his deeds--he was
- achieving, amongst a very wretched population, a world of active good.
- The lower orders liked him well; his poor, patients in the hospitals
- welcomed him with a sort of enthusiasm.
- But stop--I must not, from the faithful narrator, degenerate into the
- partial eulogist. Well, full well, do I know that Dr. John was not
- perfect, anymore than I am perfect. Human fallibility leavened him
- throughout: there was no hour, and scarcely a moment of the time I
- spent with him that in act or speech, or look, he did not betray
- something that was not of a god. A god could not have the cruel vanity
- of Dr. John, nor his sometime levity. No immortal could have resembled
- him in his occasional temporary oblivion of all but the present--in his
- passing passion for that present; shown not coarsely, by devoting it to
- material indulgence, but selfishly, by extracting from it whatever it
- could yield of nutriment to his masculine self-love: his delight was to
- feed that ravenous sentiment, without thought of the price of
- provender, or care for the cost of keeping it sleek and high-pampered.
- The reader is requested to note a seeming contradiction in the two
- views which have been given of Graham Bretton--the public and
- private--the out-door and the in-door view. In the first, the public,
- he is shown oblivious of self; as modest in the display of his
- energies, as earnest in their exercise. In the second, the fireside
- picture, there is expressed consciousness of what he has and what he
- is; pleasure in homage, some recklessness in exciting, some vanity in
- receiving the same. Both portraits are correct.
- It was hardly possible to oblige Dr. John quietly and in secret. When
- you thought that the fabrication of some trifle dedicated to his use
- had been achieved unnoticed, and that, like other men, he would use it
- when placed ready for his use, and never ask whence it came, he amazed
- you by a smilingly-uttered observation or two, proving that his eye had
- been on the work from commencement to close: that he had noted the
- design, traced its progress, and marked its completion. It pleased him
- to be thus served, and he let his pleasure beam in his eye and play
- about his mouth.
- This would have been all very well, if he had not added to such kindly
- and unobtrusive evidence a certain wilfulness in discharging what he
- called debts. When his mother worked for him, he paid her by showering
- about her his bright animal spirits, with even more affluence than his
- gay, taunting, teasing, loving wont. If Lucy Snowe were discovered to
- have put her hand to such work, he planned, in recompence, some
- pleasant recreation.
- I often felt amazed at his perfect knowledge of Villette; a knowledge
- not merely confined to its open streets, but penetrating to all its
- galleries, salles, and cabinets: of every door which shut in an object
- worth seeing, of every museum, of every hall, sacred to art or science,
- he seemed to possess the "Open! Sesame." I never had a head for
- science, but an ignorant, blind, fond instinct inclined me to art. I
- liked to visit the picture-galleries, and I dearly liked to be left
- there alone. In company, a wretched idiosyncracy forbade me to see much
- or to feel anything. In unfamiliar company, where it was necessary to
- maintain a flow of talk on the subjects in presence, half an hour would
- knock me up, with a combined pressure of physical lassitude and entire
- mental incapacity. I never yet saw the well-reared child, much less the
- educated adult, who could not put me to shame, by the sustained
- intelligence of its demeanour under the ordeal of a conversable,
- sociable visitation of pictures, historical sights or buildings, or any
- lions of public interest. Dr. Bretton was a cicerone after my own
- heart; he would take me betimes, ere the galleries were filled, leave
- me there for two or three hours, and call for me when his own
- engagements were discharged. Meantime, I was happy; happy, not always
- in admiring, but in examining, questioning, and forming conclusions. In
- the commencement of these visits, there was some misunderstanding and
- consequent struggle between Will and Power. The former faculty exacted
- approbation of that which it was considered orthodox to admire; the
- latter groaned forth its utter inability to pay the tax; it was then
- self-sneered at, spurred up, goaded on to refine its taste, and whet
- its zest. The more it was chidden, however, the more it wouldn't
- praise. Discovering gradually that a wonderful sense of fatigue
- resulted from these conscientious efforts, I began to reflect whether I
- might not dispense with that great labour, and concluded eventually
- that I might, and so sank supine into a luxury of calm before
- ninety-nine out of a hundred of the exhibited frames.
- It seemed to me that an original and good picture was just as scarce as
- an original and good book; nor did I, in the end, tremble to say to
- myself, standing before certain _chef-d'oeuvres_ bearing great names,
- "These are not a whit like nature. Nature's daylight never had that
- colour: never was made so turbid, either by storm or cloud, as it is
- laid out there, under a sky of indigo: and that indigo is not ether;
- and those dark weeds plastered upon it are not trees." Several very
- well executed and complacent-looking fat women struck me as by no means
- the goddesses they appeared to consider themselves. Many scores of
- marvellously-finished little Flemish pictures, and also of sketches,
- excellent for fashion-books displaying varied costumes in the
- handsomest materials, gave evidence of laudable industry whimsically
- applied. And yet there were fragments of truth here and there which
- satisfied the conscience, and gleams of light that cheered the vision.
- Nature's power here broke through in a mountain snow-storm; and there
- her glory in a sunny southern day. An expression in this portrait
- proved clear insight into character; a face in that historical
- painting, by its vivid filial likeness, startlingly reminded you that
- genius gave it birth. These exceptions I loved: they grew dear as
- friends.
- One day, at a quiet early hour, I found myself nearly alone in a
- certain gallery, wherein one particular picture of portentous size, set
- up in the best light, having a cordon of protection stretched before
- it, and a cushioned bench duly set in front for the accommodation of
- worshipping connoisseurs, who, having gazed themselves off their feet,
- might be fain to complete the business sitting: this picture, I say,
- seemed to consider itself the queen of the collection.
- It represented a woman, considerably larger, I thought, than the life.
- I calculated that this lady, put into a scale of magnitude, suitable
- for the reception of a commodity of bulk, would infallibly turn from
- fourteen to sixteen stone. She was, indeed, extremely well fed: very
- much butcher's meat--to say nothing of bread, vegetables, and
- liquids--must she have consumed to attain that breadth and height, that
- wealth of muscle, that affluence of flesh. She lay half-reclined on a
- couch: why, it would be difficult to say; broad daylight blazed round
- her; she appeared in hearty health, strong enough to do the work of two
- plain cooks; she could not plead a weak spine; she ought to have been
- standing, or at least sitting bolt upright. She, had no business to
- lounge away the noon on a sofa. She ought likewise to have worn decent
- garments; a gown covering her properly, which was not the case: out of
- abundance of material--seven-and-twenty yards, I should say, of
- drapery--she managed to make inefficient raiment. Then, for the
- wretched untidiness surrounding her, there could be no excuse. Pots and
- pans--perhaps I ought to say vases and goblets--were rolled here and
- there on the foreground; a perfect rubbish of flowers was mixed amongst
- them, and an absurd and disorderly mass of curtain upholstery smothered
- the couch and cumbered the floor. On referring to the catalogue, I
- found that this notable production bore the name "Cleopatra."
- Well, I was sitting wondering at it (as the bench was there, I thought
- I might as well take advantage of its accommodation), and thinking that
- while some of the details--as roses, gold cups, jewels, &c., were very
- prettily painted, it was on the whole an enormous piece of claptrap;
- the room, almost vacant when I entered, began to fill. Scarcely
- noticing this circumstance (as, indeed, it did not matter to me) I
- retained my seat; rather to rest myself than with a view to studying
- this huge, dark-complexioned gipsy-queen; of whom, indeed, I soon
- tired, and betook myself for refreshment to the contemplation of some
- exquisite little pictures of still life: wild-flowers, wild-fruit,
- mossy woodnests, casketing eggs that looked like pearls seen through
- clear green sea-water; all hung modestly beneath that coarse and
- preposterous canvas.
- Suddenly a light tap visited my shoulder. Starting, turning, I met a
- face bent to encounter mine; a frowning, almost a shocked face it was.
- "Que faites-vous ici?" said a voice.
- "Mais, Monsieur, je m'amuse."
- "Vous vous amusez! et à quoi, s'il vous plait? Mais d'abord, faites-moi
- le plaisir de vous lever; prenez mon bras, et allons de l'autre côté."
- I did precisely as I was bid. M. Paul Emanuel (it was he) returned from
- Rome, and now a travelled man, was not likely to be less tolerant of
- insubordination now, than before this added distinction laurelled his
- temples.
- "Permit me to conduct you to your party," said he, as we crossed the
- room.
- "I have no party."
- "You are not alone?"
- "Yes, Monsieur."
- "Did you come here unaccompanied?"
- "No, Monsieur. Dr. Bretton brought me here."
- "Dr. Bretton and Madame his mother, of course?"
- "No; only Dr. Bretton."
- "And he told you to look at _that_ picture?"
- "By no means; I found it out for myself."
- M. Paul's hair was shorn close as raven down, or I think it would have
- bristled on his head. Beginning now to perceive his drift, I had a
- certain pleasure in keeping cool, and working him up.
- "Astounding insular audacity!" cried the Professor. "Singulières femmes
- que ces Anglaises!"
- "What is the matter, Monsieur?"
- "Matter! How dare you, a young person, sit coolly down, with the
- self-possession of a garçon, and look at _that_ picture?"
- "It is a very ugly picture, but I cannot at all see why I should not
- look at it."
- "Bon! bon! Speak no more of it. But you ought not to be here alone."
- "If, however, I have no society--no _party_, as you say? And then, what
- does it signify whether I am alone, or accompanied? nobody meddles with
- me."
- "Taisez-vous, et asseyez-vous là--là!"--setting down a chair with
- emphasis in a particularly dull corner, before a series of most
- specially dreary "cadres."
- "Mais, Monsieur?"
- "Mais, Mademoiselle, asseyez-vous, et ne bougez
- pas--entendez-vous?--jusqu'à ce qu'on vienne vous chercher, ou que je
- vous donne la permission."
- "Quel triste coin!" cried I, "et quelles laids tableaux!"
- And "laids," indeed, they were; being a set of four, denominated in the
- catalogue "La vie d'une femme." They were painted rather in a
- remarkable style--flat, dead, pale, and formal. The first represented a
- "Jeune Fille," coming out of a church-door, a missal in her hand, her
- dress very prim, her eyes cast down, her mouth pursed up--the image of
- a most villanous little precocious she-hypocrite. The second, a
- "Mariée," with a long white veil, kneeling at a prie-dieu in her
- chamber, holding her hands plastered together, finger to finger, and
- showing the whites of her eyes in a most exasperating manner. The
- third, a "Jeune Mère," hanging disconsolate over a clayey and puffy
- baby with a face like an unwholesome full moon. The fourth, a "Veuve,"
- being a black woman, holding by the hand a black little girl, and the
- twain studiously surveying an elegant French monument, set up in a
- corner of some Père la Chaise. All these four "Anges" were grim and
- grey as burglars, and cold and vapid as ghosts. What women to live
- with! insincere, ill-humoured, bloodless, brainless nonentities! As bad
- in their way as the indolent gipsy-giantess, the Cleopatra, in hers.
- It was impossible to keep one's attention long confined to these
- master-pieces, and so, by degrees, I veered round, and surveyed the
- gallery.
- A perfect crowd of spectators was by this time gathered round the
- Lioness, from whose vicinage I had been banished; nearly half this
- crowd were ladies, but M. Paul afterwards told me, these were "des
- dames," and it was quite proper for them to contemplate what no
- "demoiselle" ought to glance at. I assured him plainly I could not
- agree in this doctrine, and did not see the sense of it; whereupon,
- with his usual absolutism, he merely requested my silence, and also, in
- the same breath, denounced my mingled rashness and ignorance. A more
- despotic little man than M. Paul never filled a professor's chair. I
- noticed, by the way, that he looked at the picture himself quite at his
- ease, and for a very long while: he did not, however, neglect to glance
- from time to time my way, in order, I suppose, to make sure that I was
- obeying orders, and not breaking bounds. By-and-by, he again accosted
- me.
- "Had I not been ill?" he wished to know: "he understood I had."
- "Yes, but I was now quite well."
- "Where had I spent the vacation?"
- "Chiefly in the Rue Fossette; partly with Madame Bretton."
- "He had heard that I was left alone in the Rue Fossette; was that so?"
- "Not quite alone: Marie Broc" (the crétin) "was with me."
- He shrugged his shoulders; varied and contradictory expressions played
- rapidly over his countenance. Marie Broc was well known to M. Paul; he
- never gave a lesson in the third division (containing the least
- advanced pupils), that she did not occasion in him a sharp conflict
- between antagonistic impressions. Her personal appearance, her
- repulsive manners, her often unmanageable disposition, irritated his
- temper, and inspired him with strong antipathy; a feeling he was too
- apt to conceive when his taste was offended or his will thwarted. On
- the other hand, her misfortunes, constituted a strong claim on his
- forbearance and compassion--such a claim as it was not in his nature to
- deny; hence resulted almost daily drawn battles between impatience and
- disgust on the one hand, pity and a sense of justice on the other; in
- which, to his credit be it said, it was very seldom that the former
- feelings prevailed: when they did, however, M. Paul showed a phase of
- character which had its terrors. His passions were strong, his
- aversions and attachments alike vivid; the force he exerted in holding
- both in check by no means mitigated an observer's sense of their
- vehemence. With such tendencies, it may well be supposed he often
- excited in ordinary minds fear and dislike; yet it was an error to fear
- him: nothing drove him so nearly frantic as the tremor of an
- apprehensive and distrustful spirit; nothing soothed him like
- confidence tempered with gentleness. To evince these sentiments,
- however, required a thorough comprehension of his nature; and his
- nature was of an order rarely comprehended.
- "How did you get on with Marie Broc?" he asked, after some minutes'
- silence.
- "Monsieur, I did my best; but it was terrible to be alone with her!"
- "You have, then, a weak heart! You lack courage; and, perhaps, charity.
- Yours are not the qualities which might constitute a Sister of Mercy."
- [He was a religious little man, in his way: the self-denying and
- self-sacrificing part of the Catholic religion commanded the homage of
- his soul.]
- "I don't know, indeed: I took as good care of her as I could; but when
- her aunt came to fetch her away, it was a great relief."
- "Ah! you are an egotist. There are women who have nursed hospitals-full
- of similar unfortunates. You could not do that?"
- "Could Monsieur do it himself?"
- "Women who are worthy the name ought infinitely to surpass; our coarse,
- fallible, self-indulgent sex, in the power to perform such duties."
- "I washed her, I kept her clean, I fed her, I tried to amuse her; but
- she made mouths at me instead of speaking."
- "You think you did great things?"
- "No; but as great as I _could_ do."
- "Then limited are your powers, for in tending one idiot you fell sick."
- "Not with that, Monsieur; I had a nervous fever: my mind was ill."
- "Vraiment! Vous valez peu de chose. You are not cast in an heroic
- mould; your courage will not avail to sustain you in solitude; it
- merely gives you the temerity to gaze with sang-froid at pictures of
- Cleopatra."
- It would have been easy to show anger at the teasing, hostile tone of
- the little man. I had never been angry with him yet, however, and had
- no present disposition to begin.
- "Cleopatra!" I repeated, quietly. "Monsieur, too, has been looking at
- Cleopatra; what does he think of her?"
- "Cela ne vaut rien," he responded. "Une femme superbe--une taille
- d'impératrice, des formes de Junon, mais une personne dont je ne
- voudrais ni pour femme, ni pour fille, ni pour soeur. Aussi vous ne
- jeterez plus un seul coup d'oeil de sa côté."
- "But I have looked at her a great many times while Monsieur has been
- talking: I can see her quite well from this corner."
- "Turn to the wall and study your four pictures of a woman's life."
- "Excuse me, M. Paul; they are too hideous: but if you admire them,
- allow me to vacate my seat and leave you to their contemplation."
- "Mademoiselle," he said, grimacing a half-smile, or what he intended
- for a smile, though it was but a grim and hurried manifestation. "You
- nurslings of Protestantism astonish me. You unguarded Englishwomen walk
- calmly amidst red-hot ploughshares and escape burning. I believe, if
- some of you were thrown into Nebuchadnezzar's hottest furnace you would
- issue forth untraversed by the smell of fire."
- "Will Monsieur have the goodness to move an inch to one side?"
- "How! At what are you gazing now? You are not recognising an
- acquaintance amongst that group of jeunes gens?"
- "I think so--Yes, I see there a person I know."
- In fact, I had caught a glimpse of a head too pretty to belong to any
- other than the redoubted Colonel de Hamal. What a very finished, highly
- polished little pate it was! What a figure, so trim and natty! What
- womanish feet and hands! How daintily he held a glass to one of his
- optics! with what admiration he gazed upon the Cleopatra! and then, how
- engagingly he tittered and whispered a friend at his elbow! Oh, the man
- of sense! Oh, the refined gentleman of superior taste and tact! I
- observed him for about ten minutes, and perceived that he was
- exceedingly taken with this dusk and portly Venus of the Nile. So much
- was I interested in his bearing, so absorbed in divining his character
- by his looks and movements, I temporarily forgot M. Paul; in the
- interim a group came between that gentleman and me; or possibly his
- scruples might have received another and worse shock from my present
- abstraction, causing him to withdraw voluntarily: at any rate, when I
- again looked round, he was gone.
- My eye, pursuant of the search, met not him, but another and dissimilar
- figure, well seen amidst the crowd, for the height as well as the port
- lent each its distinction. This way came Dr. John, in visage, in shape,
- in hue, as unlike the dark, acerb, and caustic little professor, as the
- fruit of the Hesperides might be unlike the sloe in the wild thicket;
- as the high-couraged but tractable Arabian is unlike the rude and
- stubborn "sheltie." He was looking for me, but had not yet explored the
- corner where the schoolmaster had just put me. I remained quiet; yet
- another minute I would watch.
- He approached de Hamal; he paused near him; I thought he had a pleasure
- in looking over his head; Dr. Bretton, too, gazed on the Cleopatra. I
- doubt if it were to his taste: he did not simper like the little Count;
- his mouth looked fastidious, his eye cool; without demonstration he
- stepped aside, leaving room for others to approach. I saw now that he
- was waiting, and, rising, I joined him.
- We took one turn round the gallery; with Graham it was very pleasant to
- take such a turn. I always liked dearly to hear what he had to say
- about either pictures or books; because without pretending to be a
- connoisseur, he always spoke his thought, and that was sure to be
- fresh: very often it was also just and pithy. It was pleasant also to
- tell him some things he did not know--he listened so kindly, so
- teachably; unformalized by scruples lest so to bend his bright handsome
- head, to gather a woman's rather obscure and stammering explanation,
- should imperil the dignity of his manhood. And when he communicated
- information in return, it was with a lucid intelligence that left all
- his words clear graven on the memory; no explanation of his giving, no
- fact of his narrating, did I ever forget.
- As we left the gallery, I asked him what he thought of the Cleopatra
- (after making him laugh by telling him how Professor Emanuel had sent
- me to the right about, and taking him to see the sweet series of
- pictures recommended to my attention.)
- "Pooh!" said he. "My mother is a better-looking woman. I heard some
- French fops, yonder, designating her as 'le type du voluptueux;' if so,
- I can only say, 'le voluptueux' is little to my liking. Compare that
- mulatto with Ginevra!"
- CHAPTER XX.
- THE CONCERT.
- One morning, Mrs. Bretton, coming promptly into my room, desired me to
- open my drawers and show her my dresses; which I did, without a word.
- "That will do," said she, when she had turned them over. "You must have
- a new one."
- She went out. She returned presently with a dressmaker. She had me
- measured. "I mean," said she, "to follow my own taste, and to have my
- own way in this little matter."
- Two days after came home--a pink dress!
- "That is not for me," I said, hurriedly, feeling that I would almost as
- soon clothe myself in the costume of a Chinese lady of rank.
- "We shall see whether it is for you or not," rejoined my godmother,
- adding with her resistless decision: "Mark my words. You will wear it
- this very evening."
- I thought I should not; I thought no human force should avail to put me
- into it. A pink dress! I knew it not. It knew not me. I had not proved
- it.
- My godmother went on to decree that I was to go with her and Graham to
- a concert that same night: which concert, she explained, was a grand
- affair to be held in the large salle, or hall, of the principal musical
- society. The most advanced of the pupils of the Conservatoire were to
- perform: it was to be followed by a lottery "au bénéfice des pauvres;"
- and to crown all, the King, Queen, and Prince of Labassecour were to be
- present. Graham, in sending tickets, had enjoined attention to costume
- as a compliment due to royalty: he also recommended punctual readiness
- by seven o'clock.
- About six, I was ushered upstairs. Without any force at all, I found
- myself led and influenced by another's will, unconsulted, unpersuaded,
- quietly overruled. In short, the pink dress went on, softened by some
- drapery of black lace. I was pronounced to be en grande tenue, and
- requested to look in the glass. I did so with some fear and trembling;
- with more fear and trembling, I turned away. Seven o'clock struck; Dr.
- Bretton was come; my godmother and I went down. _She_ was clad in brown
- velvet; as I walked in her shadow, how I envied her those folds of
- grave, dark majesty! Graham stood in the drawing-room doorway.
- "I _do_ hope he will not think I have been decking myself out to draw
- attention," was my uneasy aspiration.
- "Here, Lucy, are some flowers," said he, giving me a bouquet. He took
- no further notice of my dress than was conveyed in a kind smile and
- satisfied nod, which calmed at once my sense of shame and fear of
- ridicule. For the rest; the dress was made with extreme simplicity,
- guiltless of flounce or furbelow; it was but the light fabric and
- bright tint which scared me, and since Graham found in it nothing
- absurd, my own eye consented soon to become reconciled.
- I suppose people who go every night to places of public amusement, can
- hardly enter into the fresh gala feeling with which an opera or a
- concert is enjoyed by those for whom it is a rarity: I am not sure that
- I expected great pleasure from the concert, having but a very vague
- notion of its nature, but I liked the drive there well. The snug
- comfort of the close carriage on a cold though fine night, the pleasure
- of setting out with companions so cheerful and friendly, the sight of
- the stars glinting fitfully through the trees as we rolled along the
- avenue; then the freer burst of the night-sky when we issued forth to
- the open chaussée, the passage through the city gates, the lights there
- burning, the guards there posted, the pretence of inspection, to which
- we there submitted, and which amused us so much--all these small
- matters had for me, in their novelty, a peculiarly exhilarating charm.
- How much of it lay in the atmosphere of friendship diffused about me, I
- know not: Dr. John and his mother were both in their finest mood,
- contending animatedly with each other the whole way, and as frankly
- kind to me as if I had been of their kin.
- Our way lay through some of the best streets of Villette, streets
- brightly lit, and far more lively now than at high noon. How brilliant
- seemed the shops! How glad, gay, and abundant flowed the tide of life
- along the broad pavement! While I looked, the thought of the Rue
- Fossette came across me--of the walled-in garden and school-house, and
- of the dark, vast "classes," where, as at this very hour, it was my
- wont to wander all solitary, gazing at the stars through the high,
- blindless windows, and listening to the distant voice of the reader in
- the refectory, monotonously exercised upon the "lecture pieuse." Thus
- must I soon again listen and wander; and this shadow of the future
- stole with timely sobriety across the radiant present.
- By this time we had got into a current of carriages all tending in one
- direction, and soon the front of a great illuminated building blazed
- before us. Of what I should see within this building, I had, as before
- intimated, but an imperfect idea; for no place of public entertainment
- had it ever been my lot to enter yet.
- We alighted under a portico where there was a great bustle and a great
- crowd, but I do not distinctly remember further details, until I found
- myself mounting a majestic staircase wide and easy of ascent, deeply
- and softly carpeted with crimson, leading up to great doors closed
- solemnly, and whose panels were also crimson-clothed.
- I hardly noticed by what magic these doors were made to roll back--Dr.
- John managed these points; roll back they did, however, and within was
- disclosed a hall--grand, wide, and high, whose sweeping circular walls,
- and domed hollow ceiling, seemed to me all dead gold (thus with nice
- art was it stained), relieved by cornicing, fluting, and garlandry,
- either bright, like gold burnished, or snow-white, like alabaster, or
- white and gold mingled in wreaths of gilded leaves and spotless lilies:
- wherever drapery hung, wherever carpets were spread, or cushions
- placed, the sole colour employed was deep crimson. Pendent from the
- dome, flamed a mass that dazzled me--a mass, I thought, of
- rock-crystal, sparkling with facets, streaming with drops, ablaze with
- stars, and gorgeously tinged with dews of gems dissolved, or fragments
- of rainbows shivered. It was only the chandelier, reader, but for me it
- seemed the work of eastern genii: I almost looked to see if a huge,
- dark, cloudy hand--that of the Slave of the Lamp--were not hovering in
- the lustrous and perfumed atmosphere of the cupola, guarding its
- wondrous treasure.
- We moved on--I was not at all conscious whither--but at some turn we
- suddenly encountered another party approaching from the opposite
- direction. I just now see that group, as it flashed--upon me for one
- moment. A handsome middle-aged lady in dark velvet; a gentleman who
- might be her son--the best face, the finest figure, I thought, I had
- ever seen; a third person in a pink dress and black lace mantle.
- I noted them all--the third person as well as the other two--and for
- the fraction of a moment believed them all strangers, thus receiving an
- impartial impression of their appearance. But the impression was hardly
- felt and not fixed, before the consciousness that I faced a great
- mirror, filling a compartment between two pillars, dispelled it: the
- party was our own party. Thus for the first, and perhaps only time in
- my life, I enjoyed the "giftie" of seeing myself as others see me. No
- need to dwell on the result. It brought a jar of discord, a pang of
- regret; it was not flattering, yet, after all, I ought to be thankful;
- it might have been worse.
- At last, we were seated in places commanding a good general view of
- that vast and dazzling, but warm and cheerful hall. Already it was
- filled, and filled with a splendid assemblage. I do not know that the
- women were very beautiful, but their dresses were so perfect; and
- foreigners, even such as are ungraceful in domestic privacy, seem to
- posses the art of appearing graceful in public: however blunt and
- boisterous those every-day and home movements connected with peignoir
- and papillotes, there is a slide, a bend, a carriage of the head and
- arms, a mien of the mouth and eyes, kept nicely in reserve for gala
- use--always brought out with the grande toilette, and duly put on with
- the "parure."
- Some fine forms there were here and there, models of a peculiar style
- of beauty; a style, I think, never seen in England; a solid, firm-set,
- sculptural style. These shapes have no angles: a caryatid in marble is
- almost as flexible; a Phidian goddess is not more perfect in a certain
- still and stately sort. They have such features as the Dutch painters
- give to their madonnas: low-country classic features, regular but
- round, straight but stolid; and for their depth of expressionless calm,
- of passionless peace, a polar snow-field could alone offer a type.
- Women of this order need no ornament, and they seldom wear any; the
- smooth hair, closely braided, supplies a sufficient contrast to the
- smoother cheek and brow; the dress cannot be too simple; the rounded
- arm and perfect neck require neither bracelet nor chain.
- With one of these beauties I once had the honour and rapture to be
- perfectly acquainted: the inert force of the deep, settled love she
- bore herself, was wonderful; it could only be surpassed by her proud
- impotency to care for any other living thing. Of blood, her cool veins
- conducted no flow; placid lymph filled and almost obstructed her
- arteries.
- Such a Juno as I have described sat full in our view--a sort of mark
- for all eyes, and quite conscious that so she was, but proof to the
- magnetic influence of gaze or glance: cold, rounded, blonde, and
- beauteous as the white column, capitalled with gilding, which rose at
- her side.
- Observing that Dr. John's attention was much drawn towards her, I
- entreated him in a low voice "for the love of heaven to shield well his
- heart. You need not fall in love with _that_ lady," I said, "because, I
- tell you beforehand, you might die at her feet, and she would not love
- you again."
- "Very well," said he, "and how do you know that the spectacle of her
- grand insensibility might not with me be the strongest stimulus to
- homage? The sting of desperation is, I think, a wonderful irritant to
- my emotions: but" (shrugging his shoulders) "you know nothing about
- these things; I'll address myself to my mother. Mamma, I'm in a
- dangerous way."
- "As if that interested me!" said Mrs. Bretton.
- "Alas! the cruelty of my lot!" responded her son. "Never man had a more
- unsentimental mother than mine: she never seems to think that such a
- calamity can befall her as a daughter-in-law."
- "If I don't, it is not for want of having that same calamity held over
- my head: you have threatened me with it for the last ten years. 'Mamma,
- I am going to be married soon!' was the cry before you were well out of
- jackets."
- "But, mother, one of these days it will be realized. All of a sudden,
- when you think you are most secure, I shall go forth like Jacob or
- Esau, or any other patriarch, and take me a wife: perhaps of these
- which are of the daughters of the land."
- "At your peril, John Graham! that is all."
- "This mother of mine means me to be an old bachelor. What a jealous old
- lady it is! But now just look at that splendid creature in the pale
- blue satin dress, and hair of paler brown, with 'reflets satinés' as
- those of her robe. Would you not feel proud, mamma, if I were to bring
- that goddess home some day, and introduce her to you as Mrs. Bretton,
- junior?"
- "You will bring no goddess to La Terrasse: that little château will not
- contain two mistresses; especially if the second be of the height,
- bulk, and circumference of that mighty doll in wood and wax, and kid
- and satin."
- "Mamma, she would fill your blue chair so admirably!"
- "Fill my chair? I defy the foreign usurper! a rueful chair should it be
- for her: but hush, John Graham! Hold your tongue, and use your eyes."
- During the above skirmish, the hall, which, I had thought, seemed full
- at the entrance, continued to admit party after party, until the
- semicircle before the stage presented one dense mass of heads, sloping
- from floor to ceiling. The stage, too, or rather the wide temporary
- platform, larger than any stage, desert half an hour since, was now
- overflowing with life; round two grand pianos, placed about the centre,
- a white flock of young girls, the pupils of the Conservatoire, had
- noiselessly poured. I had noticed their gathering, while Graham and his
- mother were engaged in discussing the belle in blue satin, and had
- watched with interest the process of arraying and marshalling them. Two
- gentlemen, in each of whom I recognised an acquaintance, officered this
- virgin troop. One, an artistic-looking man, bearded, and with long
- hair, was a noted pianiste, and also the first music-teacher in
- Villette; he attended twice a week at Madame Beck's pensionnat, to give
- lessons to the few pupils whose parents were rich enough to allow their
- daughters the privilege of his instructions; his name was M. Josef
- Emanuel, and he was half-brother to M. Paul: which potent personage was
- now visible in the person of the second gentleman.
- M. Paul amused me; I smiled to myself as I watched him, he seemed so
- thoroughly in his element--standing conspicuous in presence of a wide
- and grand assemblage, arranging, restraining, over-aweing about one
- hundred young ladies. He was, too, so perfectly in earnest--so
- energetic, so intent, and, above all, so absolute: and yet what
- business had he there? What had he to do with music or the
- Conservatoire--he who could hardly distinguish one note from another? I
- knew that it was his love of display and authority which had brought
- him there--a love not offensive, only because so naive. It presently
- became obvious that his brother, M. Josef, was as much under his
- control as were the girls themselves. Never was such a little hawk of a
- man as that M. Paul! Ere long, some noted singers and musicians dawned
- upon the platform: as these stars rose, the comet-like professor set.
- Insufferable to him were all notorieties and celebrities: where he
- could not outshine, he fled.
- And now all was prepared: but one compartment of the hall waited to be
- filled--a compartment covered with crimson, like the grand staircase
- and doors, furnished with stuffed and cushioned benches, ranged on each
- side of two regal chairs, placed solemnly under a canopy.
- A signal was given, the doors rolled back, the assembly stood up, the
- orchestra burst out, and, to the welcome of a choral burst, enter the
- King, the Queen, the Court of Labassecour.
- Till then, I had never set eyes on living king or queen; it may
- consequently be conjectured how I strained my powers of vision to take
- in these specimens of European royalty. By whomsoever majesty is beheld
- for the first time, there will always be experienced a vague surprise
- bordering on disappointment, that the same does not appear seated, en
- permanence, on a throne, bonneted with a crown, and furnished, as to
- the hand, with a sceptre. Looking out for a king and queen, and seeing
- only a middle-aged soldier and a rather young lady, I felt half
- cheated, half pleased.
- Well do I recall that King--a man of fifty, a little bowed, a little
- grey: there was no face in all that assembly which resembled his. I had
- never read, never been told anything of his nature or his habits; and
- at first the strong hieroglyphics graven as with iron stylet on his
- brow, round his eyes, beside his mouth, puzzled and baffled instinct.
- Ere long, however, if I did not know, at least I felt, the meaning of
- those characters written without hand. There sat a silent sufferer--a
- nervous, melancholy man. Those eyes had looked on the visits of a
- certain ghost--had long waited the comings and goings of that strangest
- spectre, Hypochondria. Perhaps he saw her now on that stage, over
- against him, amidst all that brilliant throng. Hypochondria has that
- wont, to rise in the midst of thousands--dark as Doom, pale as Malady,
- and well-nigh strong as Death. Her comrade and victim thinks to be
- happy one moment--"Not so," says she; "I come." And she freezes the
- blood in his heart, and beclouds the light in his eye.
- Some might say it was the foreign crown pressing the King's brows which
- bent them to that peculiar and painful fold; some might quote the
- effects of early bereavement. Something there might be of both these;
- but these are embittered by that darkest foe of
- humanity--constitutional melancholy. The Queen, his wife, knew this: it
- seemed to me, the reflection of her husband's grief lay, a subduing
- shadow, on her own benignant face. A mild, thoughtful, graceful woman
- that princess seemed; not beautiful, not at all like the women of solid
- charms and marble feelings described a page or two since. Hers was a
- somewhat slender shape; her features, though distinguished enough, were
- too suggestive of reigning dynasties and royal lines to give
- unqualified pleasure. The expression clothing that profile was
- agreeable in the present instance; but you could not avoid connecting
- it with remembered effigies, where similar lines appeared, under phase
- ignoble; feeble, or sensual, or cunning, as the case might be. The
- Queen's eye, however, was her own; and pity, goodness, sweet sympathy,
- blessed it with divinest light. She moved no sovereign, but a
- lady--kind, loving, elegant. Her little son, the Prince of Labassecour,
- and young Duc de Dindonneau, accompanied her: he leaned on his mother's
- knee; and, ever and anon, in the course of that evening, I saw her
- observant of the monarch at her side, conscious of his beclouded
- abstraction, and desirous to rouse him from it by drawing his attention
- to their son. She often bent her head to listen to the boy's remarks,
- and would then smilingly repeat them to his sire. The moody King
- started, listened, smiled, but invariably relapsed as soon as his good
- angel ceased speaking. Full mournful and significant was that
- spectacle! Not the less so because, both for the aristocracy and the
- honest bourgeoisie of Labassecour, its peculiarity seemed to be wholly
- invisible: I could not discover that one soul present was either struck
- or touched.
- With the King and Queen had entered their court, comprising two or
- three foreign ambassadors; and with them came the elite of the
- foreigners then resident in Villette. These took possession of the
- crimson benches; the ladies were seated; most of the men remained
- standing: their sable rank, lining the background, looked like a dark
- foil to the splendour displayed in front. Nor was this splendour
- without varying light and shade and gradation: the middle distance was
- filled with matrons in velvets and satins, in plumes and gems; the
- benches in the foreground, to the Queen's right hand, seemed devoted
- exclusively to young girls, the flower--perhaps, I should rather say,
- the bud--of Villette aristocracy. Here were no jewels, no head-dresses,
- no velvet pile or silken sheen purity, simplicity, and aërial grace
- reigned in that virgin band. Young heads simply braided, and fair forms
- (I was going to write _sylph_ forms, but that would have been quite
- untrue: several of these "jeunes filles," who had not numbered more
- than sixteen or seventeen years, boasted contours as robust and solid
- as those of a stout Englishwoman of five-and-twenty)--fair forms robed
- in white, or pale rose, or placid blue, suggested thoughts of heaven
- and angels. I knew a couple, at least, of these "rose et blanche"
- specimens of humanity. Here was a pair of Madame Beck's late
- pupils--Mesdemoiselles Mathilde and Angélique: pupils who, during their
- last year at school, ought to have been in the first class, but whose
- brains never got them beyond the second division. In English, they had
- been under my own charge, and hard work it was to get them to translate
- rationally a page of _The Vicar of Wakefield_. Also during three months
- I had one of them for my vis-à-vis at table, and the quantity of
- household bread, butter, and stewed fruit, she would habitually consume
- at "second déjeuner" was a real world's wonder--to be exceeded only by
- the fact of her actually pocketing slices she could not eat. Here be
- truths--wholesome truths, too.
- I knew another of these seraphs--the prettiest, or, at any rate, the
- least demure and hypocritical looking of the lot: she was seated by the
- daughter of an English peer, also an honest, though haughty-looking
- girl: both had entered in the suite of the British embassy. She (_i.e._
- my acquaintance) had a slight, pliant figure, not at all like the forms
- of the foreign damsels: her hair, too, was not close-braided, like a
- shell or a skull-cap of satin; it looked _like_ hair, and waved from
- her head, long, curled, and flowing. She chatted away volubly, and
- seemed full of a light-headed sort of satisfaction with herself and her
- position. I did not look at Dr. Bretton; but I knew that he, too, saw
- Ginevra Fanshawe: he had become so quiet, he answered so briefly his
- mother's remarks, he so often suppressed a sigh. Why should he sigh? He
- had confessed a taste for the pursuit of love under difficulties; here
- was full gratification for that taste. His lady-love beamed upon him
- from a sphere above his own: he could not come near her; he was not
- certain that he could win from her a look. I watched to see if she
- would so far favour him. Our seat was not far from the crimson benches;
- we must inevitably be seen thence, by eyes so quick and roving as Miss
- Fanshawe's, and very soon those optics of hers were upon us: at least,
- upon Dr. and Mrs. Bretton. I kept rather in the shade and out of sight,
- not wishing to be immediately recognised: she looked quite steadily at
- Dr. John, and then she raised a glass to examine his mother; a minute
- or two afterwards she laughingly whispered her neighbour; upon the
- performance commencing, her rambling attention was attracted to the
- platform.
- On the concert I need not dwell; the reader would not care to have my
- impressions thereanent: and, indeed, it would not be worth while to
- record them, as they were the impressions of an ignorance crasse. The
- young ladies of the Conservatoire, being very much frightened, made
- rather a tremulous exhibition on the two grand pianos. M. Josef Emanuel
- stood by them while they played; but he had not the tact or influence
- of his kinsman, who, under similar circumstances, would certainly have
- _compelled_ pupils of his to demean themselves with heroism and
- self-possession. M. Paul would have placed the hysteric débutantes
- between two fires--terror of the audience, and terror of himself--and
- would have inspired them with the courage of desperation, by making the
- latter terror incomparably the greater: M. Josef could not do this.
- Following the white muslin pianistes, came a fine, full-grown, sulky
- lady in white satin. She sang. Her singing just affected me like the
- tricks of a conjuror: I wondered how she did it--how she made her voice
- run up and down, and cut such marvellous capers; but a simple Scotch
- melody, played by a rude street minstrel, has often moved me more
- deeply.
- Afterwards stepped forth a gentleman, who, bending his body a good deal
- in the direction of the King and Queen, and frequently approaching his
- white-gloved hand to the region of his heart, vented a bitter outcry
- against a certain "fausse Isabelle." I thought he seemed especially to
- solicit the Queen's sympathy; but, unless I am egregiously mistaken,
- her Majesty lent her attention rather with the calm of courtesy than
- the earnestness of interest. This gentleman's state of mind was very
- harrowing, and I was glad when he wound up his musical exposition of
- the same.
- Some rousing choruses struck me as the best part of the evening's
- entertainment. There were present deputies from all the best provincial
- choral societies; genuine, barrel-shaped, native Labassecouriens. These
- worthies gave voice without mincing the matter their hearty exertions
- had at least this good result--the ear drank thence a satisfying sense
- of power.
- Through the whole performance--timid instrumental duets, conceited
- vocal solos, sonorous, brass-lunged choruses--my attention gave but one
- eye and one ear to the stage, the other being permanently retained in
- the service of Dr. Bretton: I could not forget him, nor cease to
- question how he was feeling, what he was thinking, whether he was
- amused or the contrary. At last he spoke.
- "And how do you like it all, Lucy? You are very quiet," he said, in his
- own cheerful tone.
- "I am quiet," I said, "because I am so very, _very_ much interested:
- not merely with the music, but with everything about me."
- He then proceeded to make some further remarks, with so much equanimity
- and composure that I began to think he had really not seen what I had
- seen, and I whispered--"Miss Fanshawe is here: have you noticed her?"
- "Oh, yes! and I observed that you noticed her too."
- "Is she come with Mrs. Cholmondeley, do you think?"
- "Mrs. Cholmondeley is there with a very grand party. Yes; Ginevra was
- in _her_ train; and Mrs. Cholmondeley was in Lady ----'s train, who was
- in the Queen's train. If this were not one of the compact little minor
- European courts, whose very formalities are little more imposing than
- familiarities, and whose gala grandeur is but homeliness in Sunday
- array, it would sound all very fine."
- "Ginevra saw you, I think?"
- "So do I think so. I have had my eye on her several times since you
- withdrew yours; and I have had the honour of witnessing a little
- spectacle which you were spared."
- I did not ask what; I waited voluntary information, which was presently
- given.
- "Miss Fanshawe," he said, "has a companion with her--a lady of rank. I
- happen to know Lady Sara by sight; her noble mother has called me in
- professionally. She is a proud girl, but not in the least insolent, and
- I doubt whether Ginevra will have gained ground in her estimation by
- making a butt of her neighbours."
- "What neighbours?"
- "Merely myself and my mother. As to me it is all very natural: nothing,
- I suppose, can be fairer game than the young bourgeois doctor; but my
- mother! I never saw her ridiculed before. Do you know, the curling lip,
- and sarcastically levelled glass thus directed, gave me a most curious
- sensation?"
- "Think nothing of it, Dr. John: it is not worth while. If Ginevra were
- in a giddy mood, as she is eminently to-night, she would make no
- scruple of laughing at that mild, pensive Queen, or that melancholy
- King. She is not actuated by malevolence, but sheer, heedless folly. To
- a feather-brained school-girl nothing is sacred."
- "But you forget: I have not been accustomed to look on Miss Fanshawe in
- the light of a feather-brained school-girl. Was she not my
- divinity--the angel of my career?"
- "Hem! There was your mistake."
- "To speak the honest truth, without any false rant or assumed romance,
- there actually was a moment, six months ago, when I thought her divine.
- Do you remember our conversation about the presents? I was not quite
- open with you in discussing that subject: the warmth with which you
- took it up amused me. By way of having the full benefit of your lights,
- I allowed you to think me more in the dark than I really was. It was
- that test of the presents which first proved Ginevra mortal. Still her
- beauty retained its fascination: three days--three hours ago, I was
- very much her slave. As she passed me to-night, triumphant in beauty,
- my emotions did her homage; but for one luckless sneer, I should yet be
- the humblest of her servants. She might have scoffed at _me_, and,
- while wounding, she would not soon have alienated me: through myself,
- she could not in ten years have done what, in a moment, she has done
- through my mother."
- He held his peace awhile. Never before had I seen so much fire, and so
- little sunshine in Dr. John's blue eye as just now.
- "Lucy," he recommenced, "look well at my mother, and say, without fear
- or favour, in what light she now appears to you."
- "As she always does--an English, middle-class gentlewoman; well, though
- gravely dressed, habitually independent of pretence, constitutionally
- composed and cheerful."
- "So she seems to me--bless her! The merry may laugh _with_ mamma, but
- the weak only will laugh _at_ her. She shall not be ridiculed, with my
- consent, at least; nor without my--my scorn--my antipathy--my--"
- He stopped: and it was time--for he was getting excited--more it seemed
- than the occasion warranted. I did not then know that he had witnessed
- double cause for dissatisfaction with Miss Fanshawe. The glow of his
- complexion, the expansion of his nostril, the bold curve which disdain
- gave his well-cut under lip, showed him in a new and striking phase.
- Yet the rare passion of the constitutionally suave and serene, is not a
- pleasant spectacle; nor did I like the sort of vindictive thrill which
- passed through his strong young frame.
- "Do I frighten you, Lucy?" he asked.
- "I cannot tell why you are so very angry."
- "For this reason," he muttered in my ear. "Ginevra is neither a pure
- angel, nor a pure-minded woman."
- "Nonsense! you exaggerate: she has no great harm in her."
- "Too much for me. _I_ can see where _you_ are blind. Now dismiss the
- subject. Let me amuse myself by teasing mamma: I will assert that she
- is flagging. Mamma, pray rouse yourself."
- "John, I will certainly rouse you if you are not better conducted. Will
- you and Lucy be silent, that I may hear the singing?"
- They were then thundering in a chorus, under cover of which all the
- previous dialogue had taken place.
- "_You_ hear the singing, mamma! Now, I will wager my studs, which are
- genuine, against your paste brooch--"
- "My paste brooch, Graham? Profane boy! you know that it is a stone of
- value."
- "Oh! that is one of your superstitions: you were cheated in the
- business."
- "I am cheated in fewer things than you imagine. How do you happen to be
- acquainted with young ladies of the court, John? I have observed two of
- them pay you no small attention during the last half-hour."
- "I wish you would not observe them."
- "Why not? Because one of them satirically levels her eyeglass at me?
- She is a pretty, silly girl: but are you apprehensive that her titter
- will discomfit the old lady?"
- "The sensible, admirable old lady! Mother, you are better to me than
- ten wives yet."
- "Don't be demonstrative, John, or I shall faint, and you will have to
- carry me out; and if that burden were laid upon you, you would reverse
- your last speech, and exclaim, 'Mother, ten wives could hardly be worse
- to me than you are!'"
- * * * * *
- The concert over, the Lottery "au bénéfice des pauvres" came next: the
- interval between was one of general relaxation, and the pleasantest
- imaginable stir and commotion. The white flock was cleared from the
- platform; a busy throng of gentlemen crowded it instead, making
- arrangements for the drawing; and amongst these--the busiest of
- all--re-appeared that certain well-known form, not tall but active,
- alive with the energy and movement of three tall men. How M. Paul did
- work! How he issued directions, and, at the same time, set his own
- shoulder to the wheel! Half-a-dozen assistants were at his beck to
- remove the pianos, &c.; no matter, he must add to their strength his
- own. The redundancy of his alertness was half-vexing, half-ludicrous:
- in my mind I both disapproved and derided most of this fuss. Yet, in
- the midst of prejudice and annoyance, I could not, while watching,
- avoid perceiving a certain not disagreeable naïveté in all he did and
- said; nor could I be blind to certain vigorous characteristics of his
- physiognomy, rendered conspicuous now by the contrast with a throng of
- tamer faces: the deep, intent keenness of his eye, the power of his
- forehead, pale, broad, and full--the mobility of his most flexible
- mouth. He lacked the calm of force, but its movement and its fire he
- signally possessed.
- Meantime the whole hall was in a stir; most people rose and remained
- standing, for a change; some walked about, all talked and laughed. The
- crimson compartment presented a peculiarly animated scene. The long
- cloud of gentlemen, breaking into fragments, mixed with the rainbow
- line of ladies; two or three officer-like men approached the King and
- conversed with him. The Queen, leaving her chair, glided along the rank
- of young ladies, who all stood up as she passed; and to each in turn I
- saw her vouchsafe some token of kindness--a gracious word, look or
- smile. To the two pretty English girls, Lady Sara and Ginevra Fanshawe,
- she addressed several sentences; as she left them, both, and especially
- the latter, seemed to glow all over with gratification. They were
- afterwards accosted by several ladies, and a little circle of gentlemen
- gathered round them; amongst these--the nearest to Ginevra--stood the
- Count de Hamal.
- "This room is stiflingly hot," said Dr. Bretton, rising with sudden
- impatience. "Lucy--mother--will you come a moment to the fresh air?"
- "Go with him, Lucy," said Mrs. Bretton. "I would rather keep my seat."
- Willingly would I have kept mine also, but Graham's desire must take
- precedence of my own; I accompanied him.
- We found the night-air keen; or at least I did: he did not seem to feel
- it; but it was very still, and the star-sown sky spread cloudless. I
- was wrapped in a fur shawl. We took some turns on the pavement; in
- passing under a lamp, Graham encountered my eye.
- "You look pensive, Lucy: is it on my account?"
- "I was only fearing that you were grieved."
- "Not at all: so be of good cheer--as I am. Whenever I die, Lucy, my
- persuasion is that it will not be of heart-complaint. I may be stung, I
- may seem to droop for a time, but no pain or malady of sentiment has
- yet gone through my whole system. You have always seen me cheerful at
- home?"
- "Generally."
- "I am glad she laughed at my mother. I would not give the old lady for
- a dozen beauties. That sneer did me all the good in the world. Thank
- you, Miss Fanshawe!" And he lifted his hat from his waved locks, and
- made a mock reverence.
- "Yes," he said, "I thank her. She has made me feel that nine parts in
- ten of my heart have always been sound as a bell, and the tenth bled
- from a mere puncture: a lancet-prick that will heal in a trice."
- "You are angry just now, heated and indignant; you will think and feel
- differently to-morrow."
- "_I_ heated and indignant! You don't know me. On the contrary, the heat
- is gone: I am as cool as the night--which, by the way, may be too cool
- for you. We will go back."
- "Dr. John, this is a sudden change."
- "Not it: or if it be, there are good reasons for it--two good reasons:
- I have told you one. But now let us re-enter."
- We did not easily regain our seats; the lottery was begun, and all was
- excited confusion; crowds blocked the sort of corridor along which we
- had to pass: it was necessary to pause for a time. Happening to glance
- round--indeed I half fancied I heard my name pronounced--I saw quite
- near, the ubiquitous, the inevitable M. Paul. He was looking at me
- gravely and intently: at me, or rather at my pink dress--sardonic
- comment on which gleamed in his eye. Now it was his habit to indulge in
- strictures on the dress, both of the teachers and pupils, at Madame
- Beck's--a habit which the former, at least, held to be an offensive
- impertinence: as yet I had not suffered from it--my sombre daily attire
- not being calculated to attract notice. I was in no mood to permit any
- new encroachment to-night: rather than accept his banter, I would
- ignore his presence, and accordingly steadily turned my face to the
- sleeve of Dr. John's coat; finding in that same black sleeve a prospect
- more redolent of pleasure and comfort, more genial, more friendly, I
- thought, than was offered by the dark little Professor's unlovely
- visage. Dr. John seemed unconsciously to sanction the preference by
- looking down and saying in his kind voice, "Ay, keep close to my side,
- Lucy: these crowding burghers are no respecters of persons."
- I could not, however, be true to myself. Yielding to some influence,
- mesmeric or otherwise--an influence unwelcome, displeasing, but
- effective--I again glanced round to see if M. Paul was gone. No, there
- he stood on the same spot, looking still, but with a changed eye; he
- had penetrated my thought, and read my wish to shun him. The mocking
- but not ill-humoured gaze was turned to a swarthy frown, and when I
- bowed, with a view to conciliation, I got only the stiffest and
- sternest of nods in return.
- "Whom have you made angry, Lucy?" whispered Dr. Bretton, smiling. "Who
- is that savage-looking friend of yours?"
- "One of the professors at Madame Beck's: a very cross little man."
- "He looks mighty cross just now: what have you done to him? What is it
- all about? Ah, Lucy, Lucy! tell me the meaning of this."
- "No mystery, I assure you. M. Emanuel is very exigeant, and because I
- looked at your coat-sleeve, instead of curtseying and dipping to him,
- he thinks I have failed in respect."
- "The little--" began Dr. John: I know not what more he would have
- added, for at that moment I was nearly thrown down amongst the feet of
- the crowd. M. Paul had rudely pushed past, and was elbowing his way
- with such utter disregard to the convenience and security of all
- around, that a very uncomfortable pressure was the consequence.
- "I think he is what he himself would call 'méchant,'" said Dr. Bretton.
- I thought so, too.
- Slowly and with difficulty we made our way along the passage, and at
- last regained our seats. The drawing of the lottery lasted nearly an
- hour; it was an animating and amusing scene; and as we each held
- tickets, we shared in the alternations of hope and fear raised by each
- turn of the wheel. Two little girls, of five and six years old, drew
- the numbers: and the prizes were duly proclaimed from the platform.
- These prizes were numerous, though of small value. It so fell out that
- Dr. John and I each gained one: mine was a cigar-case, his a lady's
- head-dress--a most airy sort of blue and silver turban, with a streamer
- of plumage on one side, like a snowy cloud. He was excessively anxious
- to make an exchange; but I could not be brought to hear reason, and to
- this day I keep my cigar-case: it serves, when I look at it, to remind
- me of old times, and one happy evening.
- Dr. John, for his part, held his turban at arm's length between his
- finger and thumb, and looked at it with a mixture of reverence and
- embarrassment highly provocative of laughter. The contemplation over,
- he was about coolly to deposit the delicate fabric on the ground
- between his feet; he seemed to have no shadow of an idea of the
- treatment or stowage it ought to receive: if his mother had not come to
- the rescue, I think he would finally have crushed it under his arm like
- an opera-hat; she restored it to the band-box whence it had issued.
- Graham was quite cheerful all the evening, and his cheerfulness seemed
- natural and unforced. His demeanour, his look, is not easily described;
- there was something in it peculiar, and, in its way, original. I read
- in it no common mastery of the passions, and a fund of deep and healthy
- strength which, without any exhausting effort, bore down Disappointment
- and extracted her fang. His manner, now, reminded me of qualities I had
- noticed in him when professionally engaged amongst the poor, the
- guilty, and the suffering, in the Basse-Ville: he looked at once
- determined, enduring, and sweet-tempered. Who could help liking him?
- _He_ betrayed no weakness which harassed all your feelings with
- considerations as to how its faltering must be propped; from _him_
- broke no irritability which startled calm and quenched mirth; _his_
- lips let fall no caustic that burned to the bone; _his_ eye shot no
- morose shafts that went cold, and rusty, and venomed through your
- heart: beside him was rest and refuge--around him, fostering sunshine.
- And yet he had neither forgiven nor forgotten Miss Fanshawe. Once
- angered, I doubt if Dr. Bretton were to be soon propitiated--once
- alienated, whether he were ever to be reclaimed. He looked at her more
- than once; not stealthily or humbly, but with a movement of hardy, open
- observation. De Hamal was now a fixture beside her; Mrs. Cholmondeley
- sat near, and they and she were wholly absorbed in the discourse,
- mirth, and excitement, with which the crimson seats were as much astir
- as any plebeian part of the hall. In the course of some apparently
- animated discussion, Ginevra once or twice lifted her hand and arm; a
- handsome bracelet gleamed upon the latter. I saw that its gleam
- flickered in Dr. John's eye--quickening therein a derisive, ireful
- sparkle; he laughed:----
- "I think," he said, "I will lay my turban on my wonted altar of
- offerings; there, at any rate, it would be certain to find favour: no
- grisette has a more facile faculty of acceptance. Strange! for after
- all, I know she is a girl of family."
- "But you don't know her education, Dr. John," said I. "Tossed about all
- her life from one foreign school to another, she may justly proffer the
- plea of ignorance in extenuation of most of her faults. And then, from
- what she says, I believe her father and mother were brought up much as
- she has been brought up."
- "I always understood she had no fortune; and once I had pleasure in the
- thought," said he.
- "She tells me," I answered, "that they are poor at home; she always
- speaks quite candidly on such points: you never find her lying, as
- these foreigners will often lie. Her parents have a large family: they
- occupy such a station and possess such connections as, in their
- opinion, demand display; stringent necessity of circumstances and
- inherent thoughtlessness of disposition combined, have engendered
- reckless unscrupulousness as to how they obtain the means of sustaining
- a good appearance. This is the state of things, and the only state of
- things, she has seen from childhood upwards."
- "I believe it--and I thought to mould her to something better: but,
- Lucy, to speak the plain truth, I have felt a new thing to-night, in
- looking at her and de Hamal. I felt it before noticing the impertinence
- directed at my mother. I saw a look interchanged between them
- immediately after their entrance, which threw a most unwelcome light on
- my mind."
- "How do you mean? You have been long aware of the flirtation they keep
- up?"
- "Ay, flirtation! That might be an innocent girlish wile to lure on the
- true lover; but what I refer to was not flirtation: it was a look
- marking mutual and secret understanding--it was neither girlish nor
- innocent. No woman, were she as beautiful as Aphrodite, who could give
- or receive such a glance, shall ever be sought in marriage by me: I
- would rather wed a paysanne in a short petticoat and high cap--and be
- sure that she was honest."
- I could not help smiling. I felt sure he now exaggerated the case:
- Ginevra, I was certain, was honest enough, with all her giddiness. I
- told him so. He shook his head, and said he would not be the man to
- trust her with his honour.
- "The only thing," said I, "with which you may safely trust her. She
- would unscrupulously damage a husband's purse and property, recklessly
- try his patience and temper: I don't think she would breathe, or let
- another breathe, on his honour."
- "You are becoming her advocate," said he. "Do you wish me to resume my
- old chains?"
- "No: I am glad to see you free, and trust that free you will long
- remain. Yet be, at the same time, just."
- "I am so: just as Rhadamanthus, Lucy. When once I am thoroughly
- estranged, I cannot help being severe. But look! the King and Queen are
- rising. I like that Queen: she has a sweet countenance. Mamma, too, is
- excessively tired; we shall never get the old lady home if we stay
- longer."
- "I tired, John?" cried Mrs. Bretton, looking at least as animated and
- as wide-awake as her son. "I would undertake to sit you out yet: leave
- us both here till morning, and we should see which would look the most
- jaded by sunrise."
- "I should not like to try the experiment; for, in truth, mamma, you are
- the most unfading of evergreens and the freshest of matrons. It must
- then be on the plea of your son's delicate nerves and fragile
- constitution that I found a petition for our speedy adjournment."
- "Indolent young man! You wish you were in bed, no doubt; and I suppose
- you must be humoured. There is Lucy, too, looking quite done up. For
- shame, Lucy! At your age, a week of evenings-out would not have made me
- a shade paler. Come away, both of you; and you may laugh at the old
- lady as much as you please, but, for my part, I shall take charge of
- the bandbox and turban."
- Which she did accordingly. I offered to relieve her, but was shaken off
- with kindly contempt: my godmother opined that I had enough to do to
- take care of myself. Not standing on ceremony now, in the midst of the
- gay "confusion worse confounded" succeeding to the King and Queen's
- departure, Mrs. Bretton preceded us, and promptly made us a lane
- through the crowd. Graham followed, apostrophizing his mother as the
- most flourishing grisette it had ever been his good fortune to see
- charged with carriage of a bandbox; he also desired me to mark her
- affection for the sky-blue turban, and announced his conviction that
- she intended one day to wear it.
- The night was now very cold and very dark, but with little delay we
- found the carriage. Soon we were packed in it, as warm and as snug as
- at a fire-side; and the drive home was, I think, still pleasanter than
- the drive to the concert. Pleasant it was, even though the
- coachman--having spent in the shop of a "marchand de vin" a portion of
- the time we passed at the concert--drove us along the dark and solitary
- chaussée far past the turn leading down to La Terrasse; we, who were
- occupied in talking and laughing, not noticing the aberration till, at
- last, Mrs. Bretton intimated that, though she had always thought the
- château a retired spot, she did not know it was situated at the world's
- end, as she declared seemed now to be the case, for she believed we had
- been an hour and a half en route, and had not yet taken the turn down
- the avenue.
- Then Graham looked out, and perceiving only dim-spread fields, with
- unfamiliar rows of pollards and limes ranged along their else invisible
- sunk-fences, began to conjecture how matters were, and calling a halt
- and descending, he mounted the box and took the reins himself. Thanks
- to him, we arrived safe at home about an hour and a half beyond our
- time.
- Martha had not forgotten us; a cheerful fire was burning, and a neat
- supper spread in the dining-room: we were glad of both. The winter dawn
- was actually breaking before we gained our chambers. I took off my pink
- dress and lace mantle with happier feelings than I had experienced in
- putting them on. Not all, perhaps, who had shone brightly arrayed at
- that concert could say the same; for not all had been satisfied with
- friendship--with its calm comfort and modest hope.
- CHAPTER XXI.
- REACTION.
- Yet three days, and then I must go back to the _pensionnat_. I almost
- numbered the moments of these days upon the clock; fain would I have
- retarded their flight; but they glided by while I watched them: they
- were already gone while I yet feared their departure.
- "Lucy will not leave us to-day," said Mrs. Bretton, coaxingly at
- breakfast; "she knows we can procure a second respite."
- "I would not ask for one if I might have it for a word," said I. "I
- long to get the good-by over, and to be settled in the Rue Fossette
- again. I must go this morning: I must go directly; my trunk is packed
- and corded."
- It appeared; however, that my going depended upon Graham; he had said
- he would accompany, me, and it so fell out that he was engaged all day,
- and only returned home at dusk. Then ensued a little combat of words.
- Mrs. Bretton and her son pressed me to remain one night more. I could
- have cried, so irritated and eager was I to be gone. I longed to leave
- them as the criminal on the scaffold longs for the axe to descend: that
- is, I wished the pang over. How much I wished it, they could not tell.
- On these points, mine was a state of mind out of their experience.
- It was dark when Dr. John handed me from the carriage at Madame Beck's
- door. The lamp above was lit; it rained a November drizzle, as it had
- rained all day: the lamplight gleamed on the wet pavement. Just such a
- night was it as that on which, not a year ago, I had first stopped at
- this very threshold; just similar was the scene. I remembered the very
- shapes of the paving-stones which I had noted with idle eye, while,
- with a thick-beating heart, I waited the unclosing of that door at
- which I stood--a solitary and a suppliant. On that night, too, I had
- briefly met him who now stood with me. Had I ever reminded him of that
- rencontre, or explained it? I had not, nor ever felt the inclination to
- do so: it was a pleasant thought, laid by in my own mind, and best kept
- there.
- Graham rung the bell. The door was instantly opened, for it was just
- that period of the evening when the half-boarders took their
- departure--consequently, Rosine was on the alert.
- "Don't come in," said I to him; but he stepped a moment into the
- well-lighted vestibule. I had not wished him to see that "the water
- stood in my eyes," for his was too kind a nature ever to be needlessly
- shown such signs of sorrow. He always wished to heal--to relieve--when,
- physician as he was, neither cure nor alleviation were, perhaps, in his
- power.
- "Keep up your courage, Lucy. Think of my mother and myself as true
- friends. We will not forget you."
- "Nor will I forget you, Dr. John."
- My trunk was now brought in. We had shaken hands; he had turned to go,
- but he was not satisfied: he had not done or said enough to content his
- generous impulses.
- "Lucy,"--stepping after me--"shall you feel very solitary here?"
- "At first I shall."
- "Well, my mother will soon call to see you; and, meantime, I'll tell
- you what I'll do. I'll write--just any cheerful nonsense that comes
- into my head--shall I?"
- "Good, gallant heart!" thought I to myself; but I shook my head,
- smiling, and said, "Never think of it: impose on yourself no such task.
- _You_ write to _me_!--you'll not have time."
- "Oh! I will find or make time. Good-by!"
- He was gone. The heavy door crashed to: the axe had fallen--the pang
- was experienced.
- Allowing myself no time to think or feel--swallowing tears as if they
- had been wine--I passed to Madame's sitting-room to pay the necessary
- visit of ceremony and respect. She received me with perfectly
- well-acted cordiality--was even demonstrative, though brief, in her
- welcome. In ten minutes I was dismissed. From the salle-à-manger I
- proceeded to the refectory, where pupils and teachers were now
- assembled for evening study: again I had a welcome, and one not, I
- think, quite hollow. That over, I was free to repair to the dormitory.
- "And will Graham really write?" I questioned, as I sank tired on the
- edge of the bed.
- Reason, coming stealthily up to me through the twilight of that long,
- dim chamber, whispered sedately--"He may write once. So kind is his
- nature, it may stimulate him for once to make the effort. But it
- _cannot_ be continued--it _may_ not be repeated. Great were that folly
- which should build on such a promise--insane that credulity which
- should mistake the transitory rain-pool, holding in its hollow one
- draught, for the perennial spring yielding the supply of seasons."
- I bent my head: I sat thinking an hour longer. Reason still whispered
- me, laying on my shoulder a withered hand, and frostily touching my ear
- with the chill blue lips of eld.
- "If," muttered she, "if he _should_ write, what then? Do you meditate
- pleasure in replying? Ah, fool! I warn you! Brief be your answer. Hope
- no delight of heart--no indulgence of intellect: grant no expansion to
- feeling--give holiday to no single faculty: dally with no friendly
- exchange: foster no genial intercommunion...."
- "But I have talked to Graham and you did not chide," I pleaded.
- "No," said she, "I needed not. Talk for you is good discipline. You
- converse imperfectly. While you speak, there can be no oblivion of
- inferiority--no encouragement to delusion: pain, privation, penury
- stamp your language...."
- "But," I again broke in, "where the bodily presence is weak and the
- speech contemptible, surely there cannot be error in making written
- language the medium of better utterance than faltering lips can
- achieve?"
- Reason only answered, "At your peril you cherish that idea, or suffer
- its influence to animate any writing of yours!"
- "But if I feel, may I _never_ express?"
- "_Never!_" declared Reason.
- I groaned under her bitter sternness. Never--never--oh, hard word! This
- hag, this Reason, would not let me look up, or smile, or hope: she
- could not rest unless I were altogether crushed, cowed, broken-in, and
- broken-down. According to her, I was born only to work for a piece of
- bread, to await the pains of death, and steadily through all life to
- despond. Reason might be right; yet no wonder we are glad at times to
- defy her, to rush from under her rod and give a truant hour to
- Imagination--_her_ soft, bright foe, _our_ sweet Help, our divine Hope.
- We shall and must break bounds at intervals, despite the terrible
- revenge that awaits our return. Reason is vindictive as a devil: for me
- she was always envenomed as a step-mother. If I have obeyed her it has
- chiefly been with the obedience of fear, not of love. Long ago I should
- have died of her ill-usage her stint, her chill, her barren board, her
- icy bed, her savage, ceaseless blows; but for that kinder Power who
- holds my secret and sworn allegiance. Often has Reason turned me out by
- night, in mid-winter, on cold snow, flinging for sustenance the gnawed
- bone dogs had forsaken: sternly has she vowed her stores held nothing
- more for me--harshly denied my right to ask better things.... Then,
- looking up, have I seen in the sky a head amidst circling stars, of
- which the midmost and the brightest lent a ray sympathetic and attent.
- A spirit, softer and better than Human Reason, has descended with quiet
- flight to the waste--bringing all round her a sphere of air borrowed of
- eternal summer; bringing perfume of flowers which cannot
- fade--fragrance of trees whose fruit is life; bringing breezes pure
- from a world whose day needs no sun to lighten it. My hunger has this
- good angel appeased with food, sweet and strange, gathered amongst
- gleaning angels, garnering their dew-white harvest in the first fresh
- hour of a heavenly day; tenderly has she assuaged the insufferable
- fears which weep away life itself--kindly given rest to deadly
- weariness--generously lent hope and impulse to paralyzed despair.
- Divine, compassionate, succourable influence! When I bend the knee to
- other than God, it shall be at thy white and winged feet, beautiful on
- mountain or on plain. Temples have been reared to the Sun--altars
- dedicated to the Moon. Oh, greater glory! To thee neither hands build,
- nor lips consecrate: but hearts, through ages, are faithful to thy
- worship. A dwelling thou hast, too wide for walls, too high for dome--a
- temple whose floors are space--rites whose mysteries transpire in
- presence, to the kindling, the harmony of worlds!
- Sovereign complete! thou hadst, for endurance, thy great army of
- martyrs; for achievement, thy chosen band of worthies. Deity
- unquestioned, thine essence foils decay!
- This daughter of Heaven remembered me to-night; she saw me weep, and
- she came with comfort: "Sleep," she said. "Sleep, sweetly--I gild thy
- dreams!"
- She kept her word, and watched me through a night's rest; but at dawn
- Reason relieved the guard. I awoke with a sort of start; the rain was
- dashing against the panes, and the wind uttering a peevish cry at
- intervals; the night-lamp was dying on the black circular stand in the
- middle of the dormitory: day had already broken. How I pity those whom
- mental pain stuns instead of rousing! This morning the pang of waking
- snatched me out of bed like a hand with a giant's gripe. How quickly I
- dressed in the cold of the raw dawn! How deeply I drank of the ice-cold
- water in my carafe! This was always my cordial, to which, like other
- dram-drinkers, I had eager recourse when unsettled by chagrin.
- Ere long the bell rang its _réveillée_ to the whole school. Being
- dressed, I descended alone to the refectory, where the stove was lit
- and the air was warm; through the rest of the house it was cold, with
- the nipping severity of a continental winter: though now but the
- beginning of November, a north wind had thus early brought a wintry
- blight over Europe: I remember the black stoves pleased me little when
- I first came; but now I began to associate with them a sense of
- comfort, and liked them, as in England we like a fireside.
- Sitting down before this dark comforter, I presently fell into a deep
- argument with myself on life and its chances, on destiny and her
- decrees. My mind, calmer and stronger now than last night, made for
- itself some imperious rules, prohibiting under deadly penalties all
- weak retrospect of happiness past; commanding a patient journeying
- through the wilderness of the present, enjoining a reliance on faith--a
- watching of the cloud and pillar which subdue while they guide, and awe
- while they illumine--hushing the impulse to fond idolatry, checking the
- longing out-look for a far-off promised land whose rivers are, perhaps,
- never to be, reached save in dying dreams, whose sweet pastures are to
- be viewed but from the desolate and sepulchral summit of a Nebo.
- By degrees, a composite feeling of blended strength and pain wound
- itself wirily round my heart, sustained, or at least restrained, its
- throbbings, and made me fit for the day's work. I lifted my head.
- As I said before, I was sitting near the stove, let into the wall
- beneath the refectory and the carré, and thus sufficing to heat both
- apartments. Piercing the same wall, and close beside the stove, was a
- window, looking also into the carré; as I looked up a cap-tassel, a
- brow, two eyes, filled a pane of that window; the fixed gaze of those
- two eyes hit right against my own glance: they were watching me. I had
- not till that moment known that tears were on my cheek, but I felt them
- now.
- This was a strange house, where no corner was sacred from intrusion,
- where not a tear could be shed, nor a thought pondered, but a spy was
- at hand to note and to divine. And this new, this out-door, this male
- spy, what business had brought him to the premises at this unwonted
- hour? What possible right had he to intrude on me thus? No other
- professor would have dared to cross the carré before the class-bell
- rang. M. Emanuel took no account of hours nor of claims: there was some
- book of reference in the first-class library which he had occasion to
- consult; he had come to seek it: on his way he passed the refectory. It
- was very much his habit to wear eyes before, behind, and on each side
- of him: he had seen me through the little window--he now opened the
- refectory door, and there he stood.
- "Mademoiselle, vous êtes triste."
- "Monsieur, j'en ai bien le droit."
- "Vous êtes malade de coeur et d'humeur," he pursued. "You are at once
- mournful and mutinous. I see on your cheek two tears which I know are
- hot as two sparks, and salt as two crystals of the sea. While I speak
- you eye me strangely. Shall I tell you of what I am reminded while
- watching you?"
- "Monsieur, I shall be called away to prayers shortly; my time for
- conversation is very scant and brief at this hour--excuse----"
- "I excuse everything," he interrupted; "my mood is so meek, neither
- rebuff nor, perhaps, insult could ruffle it. You remind me, then, of a
- young she wild creature, new caught, untamed, viewing with a mixture of
- fire and fear the first entrance of the breaker-in."
- Unwarrantable accost!--rash and rude if addressed to a pupil; to a
- teacher inadmissible. He thought to provoke a warm reply; I had seen
- him vex the passionate to explosion before now. In me his malice should
- find no gratification; I sat silent.
- "You look," said he, "like one who would snatch at a draught of sweet
- poison, and spurn wholesome bitters with disgust."
- "Indeed, I never liked bitters; nor do I believe them wholesome. And to
- whatever is sweet, be it poison or food, you cannot, at least, deny its
- own delicious quality--sweetness. Better, perhaps, to die quickly a
- pleasant death, than drag on long a charmless life."
- "Yet," said he, "you should take your bitter dose duly and daily, if I
- had the power to administer it; and, as to the well-beloved poison, I
- would, perhaps, break the very cup which held it."
- I sharply turned my head away, partly because his presence utterly
- displeased me, and partly because I wished to shun questions: lest, in
- my present mood, the effort of answering should overmaster self-command.
- "Come," said he, more softly, "tell me the truth--you grieve at being
- parted from friends--is it not so?"
- The insinuating softness was not more acceptable than the inquisitorial
- curiosity. I was silent. He came into the room, sat down on the bench
- about two yards from me, and persevered long, and, for him, patiently,
- in attempts to draw me into conversation--attempts necessarily
- unavailing, because I _could_ not talk. At last I entreated to be let
- alone. In uttering the request, my voice faltered, my head sank on my
- arms and the table. I wept bitterly, though quietly. He sat a while
- longer. I did not look up nor speak, till the closing door and his
- retreating step told me that he was gone. These tears proved a relief.
- I had time to bathe my eyes before breakfast, and I suppose I appeared
- at that meal as serene as any other person: not, however, quite as
- jocund-looking as the young lady who placed herself in the seat
- opposite mine, fixed on me a pair of somewhat small eyes twinkling
- gleefully, and frankly stretched across the table a white hand to be
- shaken. Miss Fanshawe's travels, gaieties, and flirtations agreed with
- her mightily; she had become quite plump, her cheeks looked as round as
- apples. I had seen her last in elegant evening attire. I don't know
- that she looked less charming now in her school-dress, a kind of
- careless peignoir of a dark-blue material, dimly and dingily plaided
- with black. I even think this dusky wrapper gave her charms a triumph;
- enhancing by contrast the fairness of her skin, the freshness of her
- bloom, the golden beauty of her tresses.
- "I am glad you are come back, Timon," said she. Timon was one of her
- dozen names for me. "You don't know how often I have wanted you in this
- dismal hole."
- "Oh, have you? Then, of course, if you wanted me, you have something
- for me to do: stockings to mend, perhaps." I never gave Ginevra a
- minute's or a farthing's credit for disinterestedness.
- "Crabbed and crusty as ever!" said she. "I expected as much: it would
- not be you if you did not snub one. But now, come, grand-mother, I hope
- you like coffee as much, and pistolets as little as ever: are you
- disposed to barter?"
- "Take your own way."
- This way consisted in a habit she had of making me convenient. She did
- not like the morning cup of coffee; its school brewage not being strong
- or sweet enough to suit her palate; and she had an excellent appetite,
- like any other healthy school-girl, for the morning pistolets or rolls,
- which were new-baked and very good, and of which a certain allowance
- was served to each. This allowance being more than I needed, I gave
- half to Ginevra; never varying in my preference, though many others
- used to covet the superfluity; and she in return would sometimes give
- me a portion of her coffee. This morning I was glad of the draught;
- hunger I had none, and with thirst I was parched. I don't know why I
- chose to give my bread rather to Ginevra than to another; nor why, if
- two had to share the convenience of one drinking-vessel, as sometimes
- happened--for instance, when we took a long walk into the country, and
- halted for refreshment at a farm--I always contrived that she should be
- my convive, and rather liked to let her take the lion's share, whether
- of the white beer, the sweet wine, or the new milk: so it was, however,
- and she knew it; and, therefore, while we wrangled daily, we were never
- alienated.
- After breakfast my custom was to withdraw to the first classe, and sit
- and read, or think (oftenest the latter) there alone, till the
- nine-o'clock bell threw open all doors, admitted the gathered rush of
- externes and demi-pensionnaires, and gave the signal for entrance on
- that bustle and business to which, till five P.M., there was no relax.
- I was just seated this morning, when a tap came to the door.
- "Pardon, Mademoiselle," said a pensionnaire, entering gently; and
- having taken from her desk some necessary book or paper, she withdrew
- on tip-toe, murmuring as she passed me, "Que mademoiselle est
- appliquée!"
- Appliquée, indeed! The means of application were spread before me, but
- I was doing nothing; and had done nothing, and meant to do nothing.
- Thus does the world give us credit for merits we have not. Madame Beck
- herself deemed me a regular bas-bleu, and often and solemnly used to
- warn me not to study too much, lest "the blood should all go to my
- head." Indeed, everybody in the Rue Fossette held a superstition that
- "Meess Lucie" was learned; with the notable exception of M. Emanuel,
- who, by means peculiar to himself, and quite inscrutable to me, had
- obtained a not inaccurate inkling of my real qualifications, and used
- to take quiet opportunities of chuckling in my ear his malign glee over
- their scant measure. For my part, I never troubled myself about this
- penury. I dearly like to think my own thoughts; I had great pleasure in
- reading a few books, but not many: preferring always those on whose
- style or sentiment the writer's individual nature was plainly stamped;
- flagging inevitably over characterless books, however clever and
- meritorious: perceiving well that, as far as my own mind was concerned,
- God had limited its powers and, its action--thankful, I trust, for the
- gift bestowed, but unambitious of higher endowments, not restlessly
- eager after higher culture.
- The polite pupil was scarcely gone, when, unceremoniously, without tap,
- in burst a second intruder. Had I been blind I should have known who
- this was. A constitutional reserve of manner had by this time told with
- wholesome and, for me, commodious effect, on the manners of my
- co-inmates; rarely did I now suffer from rude or intrusive treatment.
- When I first came, it would happen once and again that a blunt German
- would clap me on the shoulder, and ask me to run a race; or a riotous
- Labassecourienne seize me by the arm and drag me towards the
- playground: urgent proposals to take a swing at the "Pas de Géant," or
- to join in a certain romping hide-and-seek game called "Un, deux,
- trois," were formerly also of hourly occurrence; but all these little
- attentions had ceased some time ago--ceased, too, without my finding it
- necessary to be at the trouble of point-blank cutting them short. I had
- now no familiar demonstration to dread or endure, save from one
- quarter; and as that was English I could bear it. Ginevra Fanshawe made
- no scruple of--at times--catching me as I was crossing the carré,
- whirling me round in a compulsory waltz, and heartily enjoying the
- mental and physical discomfiture her proceeding induced. Ginevra
- Fanshawe it was who now broke in upon "my learned leisure." She carried
- a huge music-book under her arm.
- "Go to your practising," said I to her at once: "away with you to the
- little salon!"
- "Not till I have had a talk with you, chère amie. I know where you have
- been spending your vacation, and how you have commenced sacrificing to
- the graces, and enjoying life like any other belle. I saw you at the
- concert the other night, dressed, actually, like anybody else. Who is
- your tailleuse?"
- "Tittle-tattle: how prettily it begins! My tailleuse!--a fiddlestick!
- Come, sheer off, Ginevra. I really don't want your company."
- "But when I want yours so much, ange farouche, what does a little
- reluctance on your part signify? Dieu merci! we know how to manoeuvre
- with our gifted compatriote--the learned 'ourse Britannique.' And so,
- Ourson, you know Isidore?"
- "I know John Bretton."
- "Oh, hush!" (putting her fingers in her ears) "you crack my tympanums
- with your rude Anglicisms. But, how is our well-beloved John? Do tell
- me about him. The poor man must be in a sad way. What did he say to my
- behaviour the other night? Wasn't I cruel?"
- "Do you think I noticed you?"
- "It was a delightful evening. Oh, that divine de Hamal! And then to
- watch the other sulking and dying in the distance; and the old lady--my
- future mamma-in-law! But I am afraid I and Lady Sara were a little rude
- in quizzing her."
- "Lady Sara never quizzed her at all; and for what _you_ did, don't make
- yourself in the least uneasy: Mrs. Bretton will survive _your_ sneer."
- "She may: old ladies are tough; but that poor son of hers! Do tell me
- what he said: I saw he was terribly cut up."
- "He said you looked as if at heart you were already Madame de Hamal."
- "Did he?" she cried with delight. "He noticed that? How charming! I
- thought he would be mad with jealousy.
- "Ginevra, have you seriously done with Dr. Bretton? Do you want him to
- give you up?"
- "Oh! you know he _can't_ do that: but wasn't he mad?"
- "Quite mad," I assented; "as mad as a March hare."
- "Well, and how _ever_ did you get him home?"
- "How _ever_, indeed! Have you no pity on his poor mother and me? Fancy
- us holding him tight down in the carriage, and he raving between us,
- fit to drive everybody delirious. The very coachman went wrong,
- somehow, and we lost our way."
- "You don't say so? You are laughing at me. Now, Lucy Snowe--"
- "I assure you it is fact--and fact, also, that Dr. Bretton would _not_
- stay in the carriage: he broke from us, and _would_ ride outside."
- "And afterwards?"
- "Afterwards--when he _did_ reach home--the scene transcends
- description."
- "Oh, but describe it--you know it is such fun!"
- "Fun for _you_, Miss Fanshawe? but" (with stern gravity) "you know the
- proverb--'What is sport to one may be death to another.'"
- "Go on, there's a darling Timon."
- "Conscientiously, I cannot, unless you assure me you have some heart."
- "I have--such an immensity, you don't know!"
- "Good! In that case, you will be able to conceive Dr. Graham Bretton
- rejecting his supper in the first instance--the chicken, the sweetbread
- prepared for his refreshment, left on the table untouched. Then----but
- it is of no use dwelling at length on the harrowing details. Suffice it
- to say, that never, in the most stormy fits and moments of his infancy,
- had his mother such work to tuck the sheets about him as she had that
- night."
- "He wouldn't lie still?"
- "He wouldn't lie still: there it was. The sheets might be tucked in,
- but the thing was to keep them tucked in."
- "And what did he say?"
- "Say! Can't you imagine him demanding his divine Ginevra,
- anathematizing that demon, de Hamal--raving about golden locks, blue
- eyes, white arms, glittering bracelets?"
- "No, did he? He saw the bracelet?"
- "Saw the bracelet? Yes, as plain as I saw it: and, perhaps, for the
- first time, he saw also the brand-mark with which its pressure has
- encircled your arm. Ginevra" (rising, and changing my tone), "come, we
- will have an end of this. Go away to your practising."
- And I opened the door.
- "But you have not told me all."
- "You had better not wait until I _do_ tell you all. Such extra
- communicativeness could give you no pleasure. March!"
- "Cross thing!" said she; but she obeyed: and, indeed, the first classe
- was my territory, and she could not there legally resist a notice of
- quittance from me.
- Yet, to speak the truth, never had I been less dissatisfied with her
- than I was then. There was pleasure in thinking of the contrast between
- the reality and my description--to remember Dr. John enjoying the drive
- home, eating his supper with relish, and retiring to rest with
- Christian composure. It was only when I saw him really unhappy that I
- felt really vexed with the fair, frail cause of his suffering.
- * * * * *
- A fortnight passed; I was getting once more inured to the harness of
- school, and lapsing from the passionate pain of change to the palsy of
- custom. One afternoon, in crossing the carré, on my way to the first
- classe, where I was expected to assist at a lesson of "style and
- literature," I saw, standing by one of the long and large windows,
- Rosine, the portress. Her attitude, as usual, was quite nonchalante.
- She always "stood at ease;" one of her hands rested in her
- apron-pocket, the other at this moment held to her eyes a letter,
- whereof Mademoiselle coolly perused the address, and deliberately
- studied the seal.
- A letter! The shape of a letter similar to that had haunted my brain in
- its very core for seven days past. I had dreamed of a letter last
- night. Strong magnetism drew me to that letter now; yet, whether I
- should have ventured to demand of Rosine so much as a glance at that
- white envelope, with the spot of red wax in the middle, I know not. No;
- I think I should have sneaked past in terror of a rebuff from
- Disappointment: my heart throbbed now as if I already heard the tramp
- of her approach. Nervous mistake! It was the rapid step of the
- Professor of Literature measuring the corridor. I fled before him.
- Could I but be seated quietly at my desk before his arrival, with the
- class under my orders all in disciplined readiness, he would, perhaps,
- exempt me from notice; but, if caught lingering in the carré, I should
- be sure to come in for a special harangue. I had time to get seated, to
- enforce perfect silence, to take out my work, and to commence it amidst
- the profoundest and best trained hush, ere M. Emanuel entered with his
- vehement burst of latch and panel, and his deep, redundant bow,
- prophetic of choler.
- As usual he broke upon us like a clap of thunder; but instead of
- flashing lightning-wise from the door to the estrade, his career halted
- midway at my desk. Setting his face towards me and the window, his back
- to the pupils and the room, he gave me a look--such a look as might
- have licensed me to stand straight up and demand what he meant--a look
- of scowling distrust.
- "Voilà! pour vous," said he, drawing his hand from his waist-coat, and
- placing on my desk a letter--the very letter I had seen in Rosine's
- hand--the letter whose face of enamelled white and single Cyclop's-eye
- of vermilion-red had printed themselves so clear and perfect on the
- retina of an inward vision. I knew it, I felt it to be the letter of my
- hope, the fruition of my wish, the release from my doubt, the ransom
- from my terror. This letter M. Paul, with his unwarrantably interfering
- habits, had taken from the portress, and now delivered it himself.
- I might have been angry, but had not a second for the sensation. Yes: I
- held in my hand not a slight note, but an envelope, which must, at
- least, contain a sheet: it felt not flimsy, but firm, substantial,
- satisfying. And here was the direction, "Miss Lucy Snowe," in a clean,
- clear, equal, decided hand; and here was the seal, round, full, deftly
- dropped by untremulous fingers, stamped with the well-cut impress of
- initials, "J. G. B." I experienced a happy feeling--a glad emotion
- which went warm to my heart, and ran lively through all my veins. For
- once a hope was realized. I held in my hand a morsel of real solid joy:
- not a dream, not an image of the brain, not one of those shadowy
- chances imagination pictures, and on which humanity starves but cannot
- live; not a mess of that manna I drearily eulogized awhile ago--which,
- indeed, at first melts on the lips with an unspeakable and
- preternatural sweetness, but which, in the end, our souls full surely
- loathe; longing deliriously for natural and earth-grown food, wildly
- praying Heaven's Spirits to reclaim their own spirit-dew and
- essence--an aliment divine, but for mortals deadly. It was neither
- sweet hail nor small coriander-seed--neither slight wafer, nor luscious
- honey, I had lighted on; it was the wild, savoury mess of the hunter,
- nourishing and salubrious meat, forest-fed or desert-reared, fresh,
- healthful, and life-sustaining. It was what the old dying patriarch
- demanded of his son Esau, promising in requital the blessing of his
- last breath. It was a godsend; and I inwardly thanked the God who had
- vouchsafed it. Outwardly I only thanked man, crying, "Thank you, thank
- you, Monsieur!"
- Monsieur curled his lip, gave me a vicious glance of the eye, and
- strode to his estrade. M. Paul was not at all a good little man, though
- he had good points.
- Did I read my letter there and then? Did I consume the venison at once
- and with haste, as if Esau's shaft flew every day?
- I knew better. The cover with its address--the seal, with its three
- clear letters--was bounty and abundance for the present. I stole from
- the room, I procured the key of the great dormitory, which was kept
- locked by day. I went to my bureau; with a sort of haste and trembling
- lest Madame should creep up-stairs and spy me, I opened a drawer,
- unlocked a box, and took out a case, and--having feasted my eyes with
- one more look, and approached the seal with a mixture of awe and shame
- and delight, to my lips--I folded the untasted treasure, yet all fair
- and inviolate, in silver paper, committed it to the case, shut up box
- and drawer, reclosed, relocked the dormitory, and returned to class,
- feeling as if fairy tales were true, and fairy gifts no dream. Strange,
- sweet insanity! And this letter, the source of my joy, I had not yet
- read: did not yet know the number of its lines.
- When I re-entered the schoolroom, behold M. Paul raging like a
- pestilence! Some pupil had not spoken audibly or distinctly enough to
- suit his ear and taste, and now she and others were weeping, and he was
- raving from his estrade, almost livid. Curious to mention, as I
- appeared, he fell on me.
- "Was I the mistress of these girls? Did I profess to teach them the
- conduct befitting ladies?--and did I permit and, he doubted not,
- encourage them to strangle their mother-tongue in their throats, to
- mince and mash it between their teeth, as if they had some base cause
- to be ashamed of the words they uttered? Was this modesty? He knew
- better. It was a vile pseudo sentiment--the offspring or the forerunner
- of evil. Rather than submit to this mopping and mowing, this mincing
- and grimacing, this, grinding of a noble tongue, this general
- affectation and sickening stubbornness of the pupils of the first
- class, he would throw them up for a set of insupportable petites
- maîtresses, and confine himself to teaching the ABC to the babies of
- the third division."
- What could I say to all this? Really nothing; and I hoped he would
- allow me to be silent. The storm recommenced.
- "Every answer to his queries was then refused? It seemed to be
- considered in _that_ place--that conceited boudoir of a first classe,
- with its pretentious book-cases, its green-baized desks, its rubbish of
- flower-stands, its trash of framed pictures and maps, and its foreign
- surveillante, forsooth!--it seemed to be the fashion to think _there_
- that the Professor of Literature was not worthy of a reply! These were
- new ideas; imported, he did not doubt, straight from 'la Grande
- Bretagne:' they savoured of island insolence and arrogance."
- Lull the second--the girls, not one of whom was ever known to weep a
- tear for the rebukes of any other master, now all melting like
- snow-statues before the intemperate heat of M. Emanuel: I not yet much
- shaken, sitting down, and venturing to resume my work.
- Something--either in my continued silence or in the movement of my
- hand, stitching--transported M. Emanuel beyond the last boundary of
- patience; he actually sprang from his estrade. The stove stood near my
- desk, he attacked it; the little iron door was nearly dashed from its
- hinges, the fuel was made to fly.
- "Est-ce que vous avez l'intention de m'insulter?" said he to me, in a
- low, furious voice, as he thus outraged, under pretence of arranging
- the fire.
- It was time to soothe him a little if possible.
- "Mais, Monsieur," said I, "I would not insult you for the world. I
- remember too well that you once said we should be friends."
- I did not intend my voice to falter, but it did: more, I think, through
- the agitation of late delight than in any spasm of present fear. Still
- there certainly was something in M. Paul's anger--a kind of passion of
- emotion--that specially tended to draw tears. I was not unhappy, nor
- much afraid, yet I wept.
- "Allons, allons!" said he presently, looking round and seeing the
- deluge universal. "Decidedly I am a monster and a ruffian. I have only
- one pocket-handkerchief," he added, "but if I had twenty, I would offer
- you each one. Your teacher shall be your representative. Here, Miss
- Lucy."
- And he took forth and held out to me a clean silk handkerchief. Now a
- person who did not know M. Paul, who was unused to him and his
- impulses, would naturally have bungled at this offer--declined
- accepting the same--et cetera. But I too plainly felt this would never
- do: the slightest hesitation would have been fatal to the incipient
- treaty of peace. I rose and met the handkerchief half-way, received it
- with decorum, wiped therewith my eyes, and, resuming my seat, and
- retaining the flag of truce in my hand and on my lap, took especial
- care during the remainder of the lesson to touch neither needle nor
- thimble, scissors nor muslin. Many a jealous glance did M. Paul cast at
- these implements; he hated them mortally, considering sewing a source
- of distraction from the attention due to himself. A very eloquent
- lesson he gave, and very kind and friendly was he to the close. Ere he
- had done, the clouds were dispersed and the sun shining out--tears were
- exchanged for smiles.
- In quitting the room he paused once more at my desk.
- "And your letter?" said he, this time not quite fiercely.
- "I have not yet read it, Monsieur."
- "Ah! it is too good to read at once; you save it, as, when I was a boy,
- I used to save a peach whose bloom was very ripe?"
- The guess came so near the truth, I could not prevent a suddenly-rising
- warmth in my face from revealing as much.
- "You promise yourself a pleasant moment," said he, "in reading that
- letter; you will open it when alone--n'est-ce pas? Ah! a smile answers.
- Well, well! one should not be too harsh; 'la jeunesse n'a qu'un temps.'"
- "Monsieur, Monsieur!" I cried, or rather whispered after him, as he
- turned to go, "do not leave me under a mistake. This is merely a
- friend's letter. Without reading it, I can vouch for that."
- "Je conçois, je conçois: on sait ce que c'est qu'un ami. Bonjour,
- Mademoiselle!"
- "But, Monsieur, here is your handkerchief."
- "Keep it, keep it, till the letter is read, then bring it me; I shall
- read the billet's tenor in your eyes."
- When he was gone, the pupils having already poured out of the
- schoolroom into the berceau, and thence into the garden and court to
- take their customary recreation before the five-o'clock dinner, I stood
- a moment thinking, and absently twisting the handkerchief round my arm.
- For some reason--gladdened, I think, by a sudden return of the golden
- glimmer of childhood, roused by an unwonted renewal of its buoyancy,
- made merry by the liberty of the closing hour, and, above all, solaced
- at heart by the joyous consciousness of that treasure in the case, box,
- drawer up-stairs,--I fell to playing with the handkerchief as if it
- were a ball, casting it into the air and catching it--as it fell. The
- game was stopped by another hand than mine--a hand emerging from a
- paletôt-sleeve and stretched over my shoulder; it caught the
- extemporised plaything and bore it away with these sullen words:
- "Je vois bien que vous vous moquez de moi et de mes effets."
- Really that little man was dreadful: a mere sprite of caprice and,
- ubiquity: one never knew either his whim or his whereabout.
- CHAPTER XXII.
- THE LETTER.
- When all was still in the house; when dinner was over and the noisy
- recreation-hour past; when darkness had set in, and the quiet lamp of
- study was lit in the refectory; when the externes were gone home, the
- clashing door and clamorous bell hushed for the evening; when Madame
- was safely settled in the salle-à-manger in company with her mother and
- some friends; I then glided to the kitchen, begged a bougie for one
- half-hour for a particular occasion, found acceptance of my petition at
- the hands of my friend Goton, who answered, "Mais certainement,
- chou-chou, vous en aurez deux, si vous voulez;" and, light in hand, I
- mounted noiseless to the dormitory.
- Great was my chagrin to find in that apartment a pupil gone to bed
- indisposed,--greater when I recognised, amid the muslin nightcap
- borders, the "figure chiffonnée" of Mistress Ginevra Fanshawe; supine
- at this moment, it is true--but certain to wake and overwhelm me with
- chatter when the interruption would be least acceptable: indeed, as I
- watched her, a slight twinkling of the eyelids warned me that the
- present appearance of repose might be but a ruse, assumed to cover sly
- vigilance over "Timon's" movements; she was not to be trusted. And I
- had so wished to be alone, just to read my precious letter in peace.
- Well, I must go to the classes. Having sought and found my prize in its
- casket, I descended. Ill-luck pursued me. The classes were undergoing
- sweeping and purification by candle-light, according to hebdomadal
- custom: benches were piled on desks, the air was dim with dust, damp
- coffee-grounds (used by Labassecourien housemaids instead of
- tea-leaves) darkened the floor; all was hopeless confusion. Baffled,
- but not beaten, I withdrew, bent as resolutely as ever on finding
- solitude _somewhere_.
- Taking a key whereof I knew the repository, I mounted three staircases
- in succession, reached a dark, narrow, silent landing, opened a
- worm-eaten door, and dived into the deep, black, cold garret. Here none
- would follow me--none interrupt--not Madame herself. I shut the
- garret-door; I placed my light on a doddered and mouldy chest of
- drawers; I put on a shawl, for the air was ice-cold; I took my letter;
- trembling with sweet impatience, I broke its seal.
- "Will it be long--will it be short?" thought I, passing my hand across
- my eyes to dissipate the silvery dimness of a suave, south-wind shower.
- It was long.
- "Will it be cool?--will it be kind?"
- It was kind.
- To my checked, bridled, disciplined expectation, it seemed very kind:
- to my longing and famished thought it seemed, perhaps, kinder than it
- was.
- So little had I hoped, so much had I feared; there was a fulness of
- delight in this taste of fruition--such, perhaps, as many a human being
- passes through life without ever knowing. The poor English teacher in
- the frosty garret, reading by a dim candle guttering in the wintry air,
- a letter simply good-natured--nothing more; though that good-nature
- then seemed to me godlike--was happier than most queens in palaces.
- Of course, happiness of such shallow origin could be but brief; yet,
- while it lasted it was genuine and exquisite: a bubble--but a sweet
- bubble--of real honey-dew. Dr. John had written to me at length; he had
- written to me with pleasure; he had written with benignant mood,
- dwelling with sunny satisfaction on scenes that had passed before his
- eyes and mine,--on places we had visited together--on conversations we
- had held--on all the little subject-matter, in short, of the last few
- halcyon weeks. But the cordial core of the delight was, a conviction
- the blithe, genial language generously imparted, that it had been
- poured out not merely to content _me_--but to gratify _himself_. A
- gratification he might never more desire, never more seek--an
- hypothesis in every point of view approaching the certain; but _that_
- concerned the future. This present moment had no pain, no blot, no
- want; full, pure, perfect, it deeply blessed me. A passing seraph
- seemed to have rested beside me, leaned towards my heart, and reposed
- on its throb a softening, cooling, healing, hallowing wing. Dr. John,
- you pained me afterwards: forgiven be every ill--freely forgiven--for
- the sake of that one dear remembered good!
- Are there wicked things, not human, which envy human bliss? Are there
- evil influences haunting the air, and poisoning it for man? What was
- near me?
- Something in that vast solitary garret sounded strangely. Most surely
- and certainly I heard, as it seemed, a stealthy foot on that floor: a
- sort of gliding out from the direction of the black recess haunted by
- the malefactor cloaks. I turned: my light was dim; the room was
- long--but as I live! I saw in the middle of that ghostly chamber a
- figure all black and white; the skirts straight, narrow, black; the
- head bandaged, veiled, white.
- Say what you will, reader--tell me I was nervous or mad; affirm that I
- was unsettled by the excitement of that letter; declare that I dreamed;
- this I vow--I saw there--in that room--on that night--an image like--a
- NUN.
- I cried out; I sickened. Had the shape approached me I might have
- swooned. It receded: I made for the door. How I descended all the
- stairs I know not. By instinct I shunned the refectory, and shaped my
- course to Madame's sitting-room: I burst in. I said--
- "There is something in the grenier; I have been there: I saw something.
- Go and look at it, all of you!"
- I said, "All of you;" for the room seemed to me full of people, though
- in truth there were but four present: Madame Beck; her mother, Madame
- Kint, who was out of health, and now staying with her on a visit; her
- brother, M. Victor Kint, and another gentleman, who, when I entered the
- room, was conversing with the old lady, and had his back towards the
- door.
- My mortal fear and faintness must have made me deadly pale. I felt cold
- and shaking. They all rose in consternation; they surrounded me. I
- urged them to go to the grenier; the sight of the gentlemen did me good
- and gave me courage: it seemed as if there were some help and hope,
- with men at hand. I turned to the door, beckoning them to follow. They
- wanted to stop me, but I said they must come this way: they must see
- what I had seen--something strange, standing in the middle of the
- garret. And, now, I remembered my letter, left on the drawers with the
- light. This precious letter! Flesh or spirit must be defied for its
- sake. I flew up-stairs, hastening the faster as I knew I was followed:
- they were obliged to come.
- Lo! when I reached the garret-door, all within was dark as a pit: the
- light was out. Happily some one--Madame, I think, with her usual calm
- sense--had brought a lamp from the room; speedily, therefore, as they
- came up, a ray pierced the opaque blackness. There stood the bougie
- quenched on the drawers; but where was the letter? And I looked for
- _that_ now, and not for the nun.
- "My letter! my letter!" I panted and plained, almost beside myself. I
- groped on the floor, wringing my hands wildly. Cruel, cruel doom! To
- have my bit of comfort preternaturally snatched from me, ere I had well
- tasted its virtue!
- I don't know what the others were doing; I could not watch them: they
- asked me questions I did not answer; they ransacked all corners; they
- prattled about this and that disarrangement of cloaks, a breach or
- crack in the sky-light--I know not what. "Something or somebody has
- been here," was sagely averred.
- "Oh! they have taken my letter!" cried the grovelling, groping,
- monomaniac.
- "What letter, Lucy? My dear girl, what letter?" asked a known voice in
- my ear. Could I believe that ear? No: and I looked up. Could I trust my
- eyes? Had I recognised the tone? Did I now look on the face of the
- writer of that very letter? Was this gentleman near me in this dim
- garret, John Graham--Dr. Bretton himself?
- Yes: it was. He had been called in that very evening to prescribe for
- some access of illness in old Madame Kint; he was the second gentleman
- present in the salle-à-manger when I entered.
- "Was it _my_ letter, Lucy?"
- "Your own: yours--the letter you wrote to me. I had come here to read
- it quietly. I could not find another spot where it was possible to have
- it to myself. I had saved it all day--never opened it till this
- evening: it was scarcely glanced over: I _cannot bear_ to lose it. Oh,
- my letter!"
- "Hush! don't cry and distress yourself so cruelly. What is it worth?
- Hush! Come out of this cold room; they are going to send for the police
- now to examine further: we need not stay here--come, we will go down."
- A warm hand, taking my cold fingers, led me down to a room where there
- was a fire. Dr. John and I sat before the stove. He talked to me and
- soothed me with unutterable goodness, promising me twenty letters for
- the one lost. If there are words and wrongs like knives, whose
- deep-inflicted lacerations never heal--cutting injuries and insults of
- serrated and poison-dripping edge--so, too, there are consolations of
- tone too fine for the ear not fondly and for ever to retain their echo:
- caressing kindnesses--loved, lingered over through a whole life,
- recalled with unfaded tenderness, and answering the call with undimmed
- shine, out of that raven cloud foreshadowing Death himself. I have been
- told since that Dr. Bretton was not nearly so perfect as I thought him:
- that his actual character lacked the depth, height, compass, and
- endurance it possessed in my creed. I don't know: he was as good to me
- as the well is to the parched wayfarer--as the sun to the shivering
- jailbird. I remember him heroic. Heroic at this moment will I hold him
- to be.
- He asked me, smiling, why I cared for his letter so very much. I
- thought, but did not say, that I prized it like the blood in my veins.
- I only answered that I had so few letters to care for.
- "I am sure you did not read it," said he; "or you would think nothing
- of it!"
- "I read it, but only once. I want to read it again. I am sorry it is
- lost." And I could not help weeping afresh.
- "Lucy, Lucy, my poor little god-sister (if there be such a
- relationship), here--_here_ is your letter. Why is it not better worth
- such tears, and such tenderly exaggerating faith?"
- Curious, characteristic manoeuvre! His quick eye had seen the letter on
- the floor where I sought it; his hand, as quick, had snatched it up. He
- had hidden it in his waistcoat pocket. If my trouble had wrought with a
- whit less stress and reality, I doubt whether he would ever have
- acknowledged or restored it. Tears of temperature one degree cooler
- than those I shed would only have amused Dr. John.
- Pleasure at regaining made me forget merited reproach for the teasing
- torment; my joy was great; it could not be concealed: yet I think it
- broke out more in countenance than language. I said little.
- "Are you satisfied now?" asked Dr. John.
- I replied that I was--satisfied and happy.
- "Well then," he proceeded, "how do you feel physically? Are you growing
- calmer? Not much: for you tremble like a leaf still."
- It seemed to me, however, that I was sufficiently calm: at least I felt
- no longer terrified. I expressed myself composed.
- "You are able, consequently, to tell me what you saw? Your account was
- quite vague, do you know? You looked white as the wall; but you only
- spoke of 'something,' not defining _what_. Was it a man? Was it an
- animal? What was it?"
- "I never will tell exactly what I saw," said I, "unless some one else
- sees it too, and then I will give corroborative testimony; but
- otherwise, I shall be discredited and accused of dreaming."
- "Tell me," said Dr. Bretton; "I will hear it in my professional
- character: I look on you now from a professional point of view, and I
- read, perhaps, all you would conceal--in your eye, which is curiously
- vivid and restless: in your cheek, which the blood has forsaken; in
- your hand, which you cannot steady. Come, Lucy, speak and tell me."
- "You would laugh--?"
- "If you don't tell me you shall have no more letters."
- "You are laughing now."
- "I will again take away that single epistle: being mine, I think I have
- a right to reclaim it."
- I felt raillery in his words: it made me grave and quiet; but I folded
- up the letter and covered it from sight.
- "You may hide it, but I can possess it any moment I choose. You don't
- know my skill in sleight of hand; I might practise as a conjuror if I
- liked. Mamma says sometimes, too, that I have a harmonizing property of
- tongue and eye; but you never saw that in me--did you, Lucy?"
- "Indeed--indeed--when you were a mere boy I used to see both: far more
- then than now--for now you are strong, and strength dispenses with
- subtlety. But still,--Dr. John, you have what they call in this country
- 'un air fin,' that nobody can, mistake. Madame Beck saw it, and--"
- "And liked it," said he, laughing, "because she has it herself. But,
- Lucy, give me that letter--you don't really care for it."
- To this provocative speech I made no answer. Graham in mirthful mood
- must not be humoured too far. Just now there was a new sort of smile
- playing about his lips--very sweet, but it grieved me somehow--a new
- sort of light sparkling in his eyes: not hostile, but not reassuring. I
- rose to go--I bid him good-night a little sadly.
- His sensitiveness--that peculiar, apprehensive, detective faculty of
- his--felt in a moment the unspoken complaint--the scarce-thought
- reproach. He asked quietly if I was offended. I shook my head as
- implying a negative.
- "Permit me, then, to speak a little seriously to you before you go. You
- are in a highly nervous state. I feel sure from what is apparent in
- your look and manner, however well controlled, that whilst alone this
- evening in that dismal, perishing sepulchral garret--that dungeon under
- the leads, smelling of damp and mould, rank with phthisis and catarrh:
- a place you never ought to enter--that you saw, or _thought_ you saw,
- some appearance peculiarly calculated to impress the imagination. I
- know that you _are_ not, nor ever were, subject to material terrors,
- fears of robbers, &c.--I am not so sure that a visitation, bearing a
- spectral character, would not shake your very mind. Be calm now. This
- is all a matter of the nerves, I see: but just specify the vision."
- "You will tell nobody?"
- "Nobody--most certainly. You may trust me as implicitly as you did Père
- Silas. Indeed, the doctor is perhaps the safer confessor of the two,
- though he has not grey hair."
- "You will not laugh?"
- "Perhaps I may, to do you good: but not in scorn. Lucy, I feel as a
- friend towards you, though your timid nature is slow to trust."
- He now looked like a friend: that indescribable smile and sparkle were
- gone; those formidable arched curves of lip, nostril, eyebrow, were
- depressed; repose marked his attitude--attention sobered his aspect.
- Won to confidence, I told him exactly what I had seen: ere now I had
- narrated to him the legend of the house--whiling away with that
- narrative an hour of a certain mild October afternoon, when he and I
- rode through Bois l'Etang.
- He sat and thought, and while he thought, we heard them all coming
- down-stairs.
- "Are they going to interrupt?" said he, glancing at the door with an
- annoyed expression.
- "They will not come here," I answered; for we were in the little salon
- where Madame never sat in the evening, and where it was by mere chance
- that heat was still lingering in the stove. They passed the door and
- went on to the salle-à-manger.
- "Now," he pursued, "they will talk about thieves, burglars, and so on:
- let them do so--mind you say nothing, and keep your resolution of
- describing your nun to nobody. She may appear to you again: don't
- start."
- "You think then," I said, with secret horror, "she came out of my
- brain, and is now gone in there, and may glide out again at an hour and
- a day when I look not for her?"
- "I think it a case of spectral illusion: I fear, following on and
- resulting from long-continued mental conflict."
- "Oh, Doctor John--I shudder at the thought of being liable to such an
- illusion! It seemed so real. Is there no cure?--no preventive?"
- "Happiness is the cure--a cheerful mind the preventive: cultivate both."
- No mockery in this world ever sounds to me so hollow as that of being
- told to _cultivate_ happiness. What does such advice mean? Happiness is
- not a potato, to be planted in mould, and tilled with manure. Happiness
- is a glory shining far down upon us out of Heaven. She is a divine dew
- which the soul, on certain of its summer mornings, feels dropping upon
- it from the amaranth bloom and golden fruitage of Paradise.
- "Cultivate happiness!" I said briefly to the doctor: "do _you_
- cultivate happiness? How do you manage?"
- "I am a cheerful fellow by nature: and then ill-luck has never dogged
- me. Adversity gave me and my mother one passing scowl and brush, but we
- defied her, or rather laughed at her, and she went by.".
- "There is no cultivation in all this."
- "I do not give way to melancholy."
- "Yes: I have seen you subdued by that feeling."
- "About Ginevra Fanshawe--eh?"
- "Did she not sometimes make you miserable?"
- "Pooh! stuff! nonsense! You see I am better now."
- If a laughing eye with a lively light, and a face bright with beaming
- and healthy energy, could attest that he was better, better he
- certainly was.
- "You do not look much amiss, or greatly out of condition," I allowed.
- "And why, Lucy, can't you look and feel as I do--buoyant, courageous,
- and fit to defy all the nuns and flirts in Christendom? I would give
- gold on the spot just to see you snap your fingers. Try the manoeuvre."
- "If I were to bring Miss Fanshawe into your presence just now?"
- "I vow, Lucy, she should not move me: or, she should move me but by one
- thing--true, yes, and passionate love. I would accord forgiveness at no
- less a price."
- "Indeed! a smile of hers would have been a fortune to you a while
- since."
- "Transformed, Lucy: transformed! Remember, you once called me a slave!
- but I am a free man now!"
- He stood up: in the port of his head, the carriage of his figure, in
- his beaming eye and mien, there revealed itself a liberty which was
- more than ease--a mood which was disdain of his past bondage.
- "Miss Fanshawe," he pursued, "has led me through a phase of feeling
- which is over: I have entered another condition, and am now much
- disposed to exact love for love--passion for passion--and good measure
- of it, too."
- "Ah, Doctor! Doctor! you said it was your nature to pursue Love under
- difficulties--to be charmed by a proud insensibility!".
- He laughed, and answered, "My nature varies: the mood of one hour is
- sometimes the mockery of the next. Well, Lucy" (drawing on his gloves),
- "will the Nun come again to-night, think you?"
- "I don't think she will."
- "Give her my compliments, if she does--Dr. John's compliments--and
- entreat her to have the goodness to wait a visit from him. Lucy, was
- she a pretty nun? Had she a pretty face? You have not told me that yet;
- and _that_ is the really important point."
- "She had a white cloth over her face," said I, "but her eyes glittered."
- "Confusion to her goblin trappings!" cried he, irreverently: "but at
- least she had handsome eyes--bright and soft."
- "Cold and fixed," was the reply.
- "No, no, we'll none of her: she shall not haunt you, Lucy. Give her
- that shake of the hand, if she comes again. Will she stand _that_, do
- you think?"
- I thought it too kind and cordial for a ghost to stand: and so was the
- smile which matched it, and accompanied his "Good-night."
- * * * * *
- And had there been anything in the garret? What did they discover? I
- believe, on the closest examination, their discoveries amounted to very
- little. They talked, at first, of the cloaks being disturbed; but
- Madame Beck told me afterwards she thought they hung much as usual: and
- as for the broken pane in the skylight, she affirmed that aperture was
- rarely without one or more panes broken or cracked: and besides, a
- heavy hail-storm had fallen a few days ago. Madame questioned me very
- closely as to what I had seen, but I only described an obscure figure
- clothed in black: I took care not to breathe the word "nun," certain
- that this word would at once suggest to her mind an idea of romance and
- unreality. She charged me to say nothing on the subject to any servant,
- pupil, or teacher, and highly commended my discretion in coming to her
- private salle-à-manger, instead of carrying the tale of horror to the
- school refectory. Thus the subject dropped. I was left secretly and
- sadly to wonder, in my own mind, whether that strange thing was of this
- world, or of a realm beyond the grave; or whether indeed it was only
- the child of malady, and I of that malady the prey.
- CHAPTER XXIII.
- VASHTI.
- To wonder sadly, did I say? No: a new influence began to act upon my
- life, and sadness, for a certain space, was held at bay. Conceive a
- dell, deep-hollowed in forest secresy; it lies in dimness and mist: its
- turf is dank, its herbage pale and humid. A storm or an axe makes a
- wide gap amongst the oak-trees; the breeze sweeps in; the sun looks
- down; the sad, cold dell becomes a deep cup of lustre; high summer
- pours her blue glory and her golden light out of that beauteous sky,
- which till now the starved hollow never saw.
- A new creed became mine--a belief in happiness.
- It was three weeks since the adventure of the garret, and I possessed
- in that case, box, drawer up-stairs, casketed with that first letter,
- four companions like to it, traced by the same firm pen, sealed with
- the same clear seal, full of the same vital comfort. Vital comfort it
- seemed to me then: I read them in after years; they were kind letters
- enough--pleasing letters, because composed by one well pleased; in the
- two last there were three or four closing lines half-gay, half-tender,
- "by _feeling_ touched, but not subdued." Time, dear reader, mellowed
- them to a beverage of this mild quality; but when I first tasted their
- elixir, fresh from the fount so honoured, it seemed juice of a divine
- vintage: a draught which Hebe might fill, and the very gods approve.
- Does the reader, remembering what was said some pages back, care to ask
- how I answered these letters: whether under the dry, stinting check of
- Reason, or according to the full, liberal impulse of Feeling?
- To speak truth, I compromised matters; I served two masters: I bowed
- down in the houses of Rimmon, and lifted the heart at another shrine. I
- wrote to these letters two answers--one for my own relief, the other
- for Graham's perusal.
- To begin with: Feeling and I turned Reason out of doors, drew against
- her bar and bolt, then we sat down, spread our paper, dipped in the ink
- an eager pen, and, with deep enjoyment, poured out our sincere heart.
- When we had done--when two sheets were covered with the language of a
- strongly-adherent affection, a rooted and active gratitude--(once, for
- all, in this parenthesis, I disclaim, with the utmost scorn, every
- sneaking suspicion of what are called "warmer feelings:" women do not
- entertain these "warmer feelings" where, from the commencement, through
- the whole progress of an acquaintance, they have never once been
- cheated of the conviction that, to do so would be to commit a mortal
- absurdity: nobody ever launches into Love unless he has seen or dreamed
- the rising of Hope's star over Love's troubled waters)--when, then, I
- had given expression to a closely-clinging and deeply-honouring
- attachment--an attachment that wanted to attract to itself and take to
- its own lot all that was painful in the destiny of its object; that
- would, if it could, have absorbed and conducted away all storms and
- lightnings from an existence viewed with a passion of solicitude--then,
- just at that moment, the doors of my heart would shake, bolt and bar
- would yield, Reason would leap in vigorous and revengeful, snatch the
- full sheets, read, sneer, erase, tear up, re-write, fold, seal, direct,
- and send a terse, curt missive of a page. She did right.
- I did not live on letters only: I was visited, I was looked after; once
- a week I was taken out to La Terrasse; always I was made much of. Dr.
- Bretton failed not to tell me _why_ he was so kind: "To keep away the
- nun," he said; "he was determined to dispute with her her prey. He had
- taken," he declared, "a thorough dislike to her, chiefly on account of
- that white face-cloth, and those cold grey eyes: the moment he heard of
- those odious particulars," he affirmed, "consummate disgust had incited
- him to oppose her; he was determined to try whether he or she was the
- cleverest, and he only wished she would once more look in upon me when
- he was present:" but _that_ she never did. In short, he regarded me
- scientifically in the light of a patient, and at once exercised his
- professional skill, and gratified his natural benevolence, by a course
- of cordial and attentive treatment.
- One evening, the first in December, I was walking by myself in the
- carré; it was six o'clock; the classe-doors were closed; but within,
- the pupils, rampant in the licence of evening recreation, were
- counterfeiting a miniature chaos. The carré was quite dark, except a
- red light shining under and about the stove; the wide glass-doors and
- the long windows were frosted over; a crystal sparkle of starlight,
- here and there spangling this blanched winter veil, and breaking with
- scattered brilliance the paleness of its embroidery, proved it a clear
- night, though moonless. That I should dare to remain thus alone in
- darkness, showed that my nerves were regaining a healthy tone: I
- thought of the nun, but hardly feared her; though the staircase was
- behind me, leading up, through blind, black night, from landing to
- landing, to the haunted grenier. Yet I own my heart quaked, my pulse
- leaped, when I suddenly heard breathing and rustling, and turning, saw
- in the deep shadow of the steps a deeper shadow still--a shape that
- moved and descended. It paused a while at the classe-door, and then it
- glided before me. Simultaneously came a clangor of the distant
- door-bell. Life-like sounds bring life-like feelings: this shape was
- too round and low for my gaunt nun: it was only Madame Beck on duty.
- "Mademoiselle Lucy!" cried Rosine, bursting in, lamp in hand, from the
- corridor, "on est là pour vous au salon."
- Madame saw me, I saw Madame, Rosine saw us both: there was no mutual
- recognition. I made straight for the salon. There I found what I own I
- anticipated I should find--Dr. Bretton; but he was in evening-dress.
- "The carriage is at the door," said he; "my mother has sent it to take
- you to the theatre; she was going herself, but an arrival has prevented
- her: she immediately said, 'Take Lucy in my place.' Will you go?"
- "Just now? I am not dressed," cried I, glancing despairingly at my dark
- merino.
- "You have half an hour to dress. I should have given you notice, but I
- only determined on going since five o'clock, when I heard there was to
- be a genuine regale in the presence of a great actress."
- And he mentioned a name that thrilled me--a name that, in those days,
- could thrill Europe. It is hushed now: its once restless echoes are all
- still; she who bore it went years ago to her rest: night and oblivion
- long since closed above her; but _then_ her day--a day of Sirius--stood
- at its full height, light and fervour.
- "I'll go; I will be ready in ten minutes," I vowed. And away I flew,
- never once checked, reader, by the thought which perhaps at this moment
- checks you: namely, that to go anywhere with Graham and without Mrs.
- Bretton could be objectionable. I could not have conceived, much less
- have expressed to Graham, such thought--such scruple--without risk of
- exciting a tyrannous self-contempt: of kindling an inward fire of shame
- so quenchless, and so devouring, that I think it would soon have licked
- up the very life in my veins. Besides, my godmother, knowing her son,
- and knowing me, would as soon have thought of chaperoning a sister with
- a brother, as of keeping anxious guard over our incomings and outgoings.
- The present was no occasion for showy array; my dun mist crape would
- suffice, and I sought the same in the great oak-wardrobe in the
- dormitory, where hung no less than forty dresses. But there had been
- changes and reforms, and some innovating hand had pruned this same
- crowded wardrobe, and carried divers garments to the grenier--my crape
- amongst the rest. I must fetch it. I got the key, and went aloft
- fearless, almost thoughtless. I unlocked the door, I plunged in. The
- reader may believe it or not, but when I thus suddenly entered, that
- garret was not wholly dark as it should have been: from one point there
- shone a solemn light, like a star, but broader. So plainly it shone,
- that it revealed the deep alcove with a portion of the tarnished
- scarlet curtain drawn over it. Instantly, silently, before my eyes, it
- vanished; so did the curtain and alcove: all that end of the garret
- became black as night. I ventured no research; I had not time nor will;
- snatching my dress, which hung on the wall, happily near the door, I
- rushed out, relocked the door with convulsed haste, and darted
- downwards to the dormitory.
- But I trembled too much to dress myself: impossible to arrange hair or
- fasten hooks-and-eyes with such fingers, so I called Rosine and bribed
- her to help me. Rosine liked a bribe, so she did her best, smoothed and
- plaited my hair as well as a coiffeur would have done, placed the lace
- collar mathematically straight, tied the neck-ribbon accurately--in
- short, did her work like the neat-handed Phillis she could be when she
- chose. Having given me my handkerchief and gloves, she took the candle
- and lighted me down-stairs. After all, I had forgotten my shawl; she
- ran back to fetch it; and I stood with Dr. John in the vestibule,
- waiting.
- "What is this, Lucy?" said he, looking down at me narrowly. "Here is
- the old excitement. Ha! the nun again?"
- But I utterly denied the charge: I was vexed to be suspected of a
- second illusion. He was sceptical.
- "She has been, as sure as I live," said he; "her figure crossing your
- eyes leaves on them a peculiar gleam and expression not to be mistaken."
- "She has _not_ been," I persisted: for, indeed, I could deny her
- apparition with truth.
- "The old symptoms are there," he affirmed: "a particular pale, and what
- the Scotch call a 'raised' look."
- He was so obstinate, I thought it better to tell him what I really
- _had_ seen. Of course with him it was held to be another effect of the
- same cause: it was all optical illusion--nervous malady, and so on. Not
- one bit did I believe him; but I dared not contradict: doctors are so
- self-opinionated, so immovable in their dry, materialist views.
- Rosine brought the shawl, and I was bundled into the carriage.
- * * * * *
- The theatre was full--crammed to its roof: royal and noble were there:
- palace and hotel had emptied their inmates into those tiers so thronged
- and so hushed. Deeply did I feel myself privileged in having a place
- before that stage; I longed to see a being of whose powers I had heard
- reports which made me conceive peculiar anticipations. I wondered if
- she would justify her renown: with strange curiosity, with feelings
- severe and austere, yet of riveted interest, I waited. She was a study
- of such nature as had not encountered my eyes yet: a great and new
- planet she was: but in what shape? I waited her rising.
- She rose at nine that December night: above the horizon I saw her come.
- She could shine yet with pale grandeur and steady might; but that star
- verged already on its judgment-day. Seen near, it was a chaos--hollow,
- half-consumed: an orb perished or perishing--half lava, half glow.
- I had heard this woman termed "plain," and I expected bony harshness
- and grimness--something large, angular, sallow. What I saw was the
- shadow of a royal Vashti: a queen, fair as the day once, turned pale
- now like twilight, and wasted like wax in flame.
- For awhile--a long while--I thought it was only a woman, though an
- unique woman, who moved in might and grace before this multitude.
- By-and-by I recognised my mistake. Behold! I found upon her something
- neither of woman nor of man: in each of her eyes sat a devil. These
- evil forces bore her through the tragedy, kept up her feeble
- strength--for she was but a frail creature; and as the action rose and
- the stir deepened, how wildly they shook her with their passions of the
- pit! They wrote HELL on her straight, haughty brow. They tuned her
- voice to the note of torment. They writhed her regal face to a demoniac
- mask. Hate and Murder and Madness incarnate she stood.
- It was a marvellous sight: a mighty revelation.
- It was a spectacle low, horrible, immoral.
- Swordsmen thrust through, and dying in their blood on the arena sand;
- bulls goring horses disembowelled, made a meeker vision for the
- public--a milder condiment for a people's palate--than Vashti torn by
- seven devils: devils which cried sore and rent the tenement they
- haunted, but still refused to be exorcised.
- Suffering had struck that stage empress; and she stood before her
- audience neither yielding to, nor enduring, nor, in finite measure,
- resenting it: she stood locked in struggle, rigid in resistance. She
- stood, not dressed, but draped in pale antique folds, long and regular
- like sculpture. A background and entourage and flooring of deepest
- crimson threw her out, white like alabaster--like silver: rather, be it
- said, like Death.
- Where was the artist of the Cleopatra? Let him come and sit down and
- study this different vision. Let him seek here the mighty brawn, the
- muscle, the abounding blood, the full-fed flesh he worshipped: let all
- materialists draw nigh and look on.
- I have said that she does not _resent_ her grief. No; the weakness of
- that word would make it a lie. To her, what hurts becomes immediately
- embodied: she looks on it as a thing that can be attacked, worried
- down, torn in shreds. Scarcely a substance herself, she grapples to
- conflict with abstractions. Before calamity she is a tigress; she rends
- her woes, shivers them in convulsed abhorrence. Pain, for her, has no
- result in good: tears water no harvest of wisdom: on sickness, on death
- itself, she looks with the eye of a rebel. Wicked, perhaps, she is, but
- also she is strong; and her strength has conquered Beauty, has overcome
- Grace, and bound both at her side, captives peerlessly fair, and docile
- as fair. Even in the uttermost frenzy of energy is each maenad movement
- royally, imperially, incedingly upborne. Her hair, flying loose in
- revel or war, is still an angel's hair, and glorious under a halo.
- Fallen, insurgent, banished, she remembers the heaven where she
- rebelled. Heaven's light, following her exile, pierces its confines,
- and discloses their forlorn remoteness.
- Place now the Cleopatra, or any other slug, before her as an obstacle,
- and see her cut through the pulpy mass as the scimitar of Saladin clove
- the down cushion. Let Paul Peter Rubens wake from the dead, let him
- rise out of his cerements, and bring into this presence all the army of
- his fat women; the magian power or prophet-virtue gifting that slight
- rod of Moses, could, at one waft, release and re-mingle a sea
- spell-parted, whelming the heavy host with the down-rush of overthrown
- sea-ramparts.
- Vashti was not good, I was told; and I have said she did not look good:
- though a spirit, she was a spirit out of Tophet. Well, if so much of
- unholy force can arise from below, may not an equal efflux of sacred
- essence descend one day from above?
- What thought Dr. Graham of this being?
- For long intervals I forgot to look how he demeaned himself, or to
- question what he thought. The strong magnetism of genius drew my heart
- out of its wonted orbit; the sunflower turned from the south to a
- fierce light, not solar--a rushing, red, cometary light--hot on vision
- and to sensation. I had seen acting before, but never anything like
- this: never anything which astonished Hope and hushed Desire; which
- outstripped Impulse and paled Conception; which, instead of merely
- irritating imagination with the thought of what _might_ be done, at the
- same time fevering the nerves because it was _not_ done, disclosed
- power like a deep, swollen winter river, thundering in cataract, and
- bearing the soul, like a leaf, on the steep and steelly sweep of its
- descent.
- Miss Fanshawe, with her usual ripeness of judgment, pronounced Dr.
- Bretton a serious, impassioned man, too grave and too impressible. Not
- in such light did I ever see him: no such faults could I lay to his
- charge. His natural attitude was not the meditative, nor his natural
- mood the sentimental; _impressionable_ he was as dimpling water, but,
- almost as water, _unimpressible:_ the breeze, the sun, moved him--metal
- could not grave, nor fire brand.
- Dr. John _could_ think and think well, but he was rather a man of
- action than of thought; he _could_ feel, and feel vividly in his way,
- but his heart had no chord for enthusiasm: to bright, soft, sweet
- influences his eyes and lips gave bright, soft, sweet welcome,
- beautiful to see as dyes of rose and silver, pearl and purple, imbuing
- summer clouds; for what belonged to storm, what was wild and intense,
- dangerous, sudden, and flaming, he had no sympathy, and held with it no
- communion. When I took time and regained inclination to glance at him,
- it amused and enlightened me to discover that he was watching that
- sinister and sovereign Vashti, not with wonder, nor worship, nor yet
- dismay, but simply with intense curiosity. Her agony did not pain him,
- her wild moan--worse than a shriek--did not much move him; her fury
- revolted him somewhat, but not to the point of horror. Cool young
- Briton! The pale cliffs of his own England do not look down on the
- tides of the Channel more calmly than he watched the Pythian
- inspiration of that night.
- Looking at his face, I longed to know his exact opinions, and at last I
- put a question tending to elicit them. At the sound of my voice he
- awoke as if out of a dream; for he had been thinking, and very intently
- thinking, his own thoughts, after his own manner. "How did he like
- Vashti?" I wished to know.
- "Hm-m-m," was the first scarce articulate but expressive answer; and
- then such a strange smile went wandering round his lips, a smile so
- critical, so almost callous! I suppose that for natures of that order
- his sympathies _were_ callous. In a few terse phrases he told me his
- opinion of, and feeling towards, the actress: he judged her as a woman,
- not an artist: it was a branding judgment.
- That night was already marked in my book of life, not with white, but
- with a deep-red cross. But I had not done with it yet; and other
- memoranda were destined to be set down in characters of tint indelible.
- Towards midnight, when the deepening tragedy blackened to the
- death-scene, and all held their breath, and even Graham bit his
- under-lip, and knit his brow, and sat still and struck--when the whole
- theatre was hushed, when the vision of all eyes centred in one point,
- when all ears listened towards one quarter--nothing being seen but the
- white form sunk on a seat, quivering in conflict with her last, her
- worst-hated, her visibly-conquering foe--nothing heard but her throes,
- her gaspings, breathing yet of mutiny, panting still defiance; when, as
- it seemed, an inordinate will, convulsing a perishing mortal frame,
- bent it to battle with doom and death, fought every inch of ground,
- sold every drop of blood, resisted to the latest the rape of every
- faculty, _would_ see, _would_ hear, _would_ breathe, _would_ live, up
- to, within, well-nigh _beyond_ the moment when death says to all sense
- and all being--"Thus far and no farther!"--
- Just then a stir, pregnant with omen, rustled behind the scenes--feet
- ran, voices spoke. What was it? demanded the whole house. A flame, a
- smell of smoke replied.
- "Fire!" rang through the gallery. "Fire!" was repeated, re-echoed,
- yelled forth: and then, and faster than pen can set it down, came
- panic, rushing, crushing--a blind, selfish, cruel chaos.
- And Dr. John? Reader, I see him yet, with his look of comely courage
- and cordial calm.
- "Lucy will sit still, I know," said he, glancing down at me with the
- same serene goodness, the same repose of firmness that I have seen in
- him when sitting at his side amid the secure peace of his mother's
- hearth. Yes, thus adjured, I think I would have sat still under a
- rocking crag: but, indeed, to sit still in actual circumstances was my
- instinct; and at the price of my very life, I would not have moved to
- give him trouble, thwart his will, or make demands on his attention. We
- were in the stalls, and for a few minutes there was a most terrible,
- ruthless pressure about us.
- "How terrified are the women!" said he; "but if the men were not almost
- equally so, order might be maintained. This is a sorry scene: I see
- fifty selfish brutes at this moment, each of whom, if I were near, I
- could conscientiously knock down. I see some women braver than some
- men. There is one yonder--Good God!"
- While Graham was speaking, a young girl who had been very quietly and
- steadily clinging to a gentleman before us, was suddenly struck from
- her protector's arms by a big, butcherly intruder, and hurled under the
- feet of the crowd. Scarce two seconds lasted her disappearance. Graham
- rushed forwards; he and the gentleman, a powerful man though
- grey-haired, united their strength to thrust back the throng; her head
- and long hair fell back over his shoulder: she seemed unconscious.
- "Trust her with me; I am a medical man," said Dr. John.
- "If you have no lady with you, be it so," was the answer. "Hold her,
- and I will force a passage: we must get her to the air."
- "I have a lady," said Graham; "but she will be neither hindrance nor
- incumbrance."
- He summoned me with his eye: we were separated. Resolute, however, to
- rejoin him, I penetrated the living barrier, creeping under where I
- could not get between or over.
- "Fasten on me, and don't leave go," he said; and I obeyed him.
- Our pioneer proved strong and adroit; he opened the dense mass like a
- wedge; with patience and toil he at last bored through the
- flesh-and-blood rock--so solid, hot, and suffocating--and brought us to
- the fresh, freezing night.
- "You are an Englishman!" said he, turning shortly on Dr. Bretton, when
- we got into the street.
- "An Englishman. And I speak to a countryman?" was the reply.
- "Right. Be good enough to stand here two minutes, whilst I find my
- carriage."
- "Papa, I am not hurt," said a girlish voice; "am I with papa?"
- "You are with a friend, and your father is close at hand."
- "Tell him I am not hurt, except just in my shoulder. Oh, my shoulder!
- They trod just here."
- "Dislocation, perhaps!" muttered the Doctor: "let us hope there is no
- worse injury done. Lucy, lend a hand one instant."
- And I assisted while he made some arrangement of drapery and position
- for the ease of his suffering burden. She suppressed a moan, and lay in
- his arms quietly and patiently.
- "She is very light," said Graham, "like a child!" and he asked in my
- ear, "Is she a child, Lucy? Did you notice her age?"
- "I am not a child--I am a person of seventeen," responded the patient,
- demurely and with dignity. Then, directly after: "Tell papa to come; I
- get anxious."
- The carriage drove up; her father relieved Graham; but in the exchange
- from one bearer to another she was hurt, and moaned again.
- "My darling!" said the father, tenderly; then turning to Graham, "You
- said, sir, you are a medical man?"
- "I am: Dr. Bretton, of La Terrasse."
- "Good. Will you step into my carriage?"
- "My own carriage is here: I will seek it, and accompany you."
- "Be pleased, then, to follow us." And he named his address: "The Hôtel
- Crécy, in the Rue Crécy."
- We followed; the carriage drove fast; myself and Graham were silent.
- This seemed like an adventure.
- Some little time being lost in seeking our own equipage, we reached the
- hotel perhaps about ten minutes after these strangers. It was an hotel
- in the foreign sense: a collection of dwelling-houses, not an inn--a
- vast, lofty pile, with a huge arch to its street-door, leading through
- a vaulted covered way, into a square all built round.
- We alighted, passed up a wide, handsome public staircase, and stopped
- at Numéro 2 on the second landing; the first floor comprising the abode
- of I know not what "prince Russe," as Graham informed me. On ringing
- the bell at a second great door, we were admitted to a suite of very
- handsome apartments. Announced by a servant in livery, we entered a
- drawing-room whose hearth glowed with an English fire, and whose walls
- gleamed with foreign mirrors. Near the hearth appeared a little group:
- a slight form sunk in a deep arm-chair, one or two women busy about it,
- the iron-grey gentleman anxiously looking on.
- "Where is Harriet? I wish Harriet would come to me," said the girlish
- voice, faintly.
- "Where is Mrs. Hurst?" demanded the gentleman impatiently and somewhat
- sternly of the man-servant who had admitted us.
- "I am sorry to say she is gone out of town, sir; my young lady gave her
- leave till to-morrow."
- "Yes--I did--I did. She is gone to see her sister; I said she might go:
- I remember now," interposed the young lady; "but I am so sorry, for
- Manon and Louison cannot understand a word I say, and they hurt me
- without meaning to do so."
- Dr. John and the gentleman now interchanged greetings; and while they
- passed a few minutes in consultation, I approached the easy-chair, and
- seeing what the faint and sinking girl wished to have done, I did it
- for her.
- I was still occupied in the arrangement, when Graham drew near; he was
- no less skilled in surgery than medicine, and, on examination, found
- that no further advice than his own was necessary to the treatment of
- the present case. He ordered her to be carried to her chamber, and
- whispered to me:--"Go with the women, Lucy; they seem but dull; you can
- at least direct their movements, and thus spare her some pain. She must
- be touched very tenderly."
- The chamber was a room shadowy with pale-blue hangings, vaporous with
- curtainings and veilings of muslin; the bed seemed to me like
- snow-drift and mist--spotless, soft, and gauzy. Making the women stand
- apart, I undressed their mistress, without their well-meaning but
- clumsy aid. I was not in a sufficiently collected mood to note with
- separate distinctness every detail of the attire I removed, but I
- received a general impression of refinement, delicacy, and perfect
- personal cultivation; which, in a period of after-thought, offered in
- my reflections a singular contrast to notes retained of Miss Ginevra
- Fanshawe's appointments.
- The girl was herself a small, delicate creature, but made like a model.
- As I folded back her plentiful yet fine hair, so shining and soft, and
- so exquisitely tended, I had under my observation a young, pale, weary,
- but high-bred face. The brow was smooth and clear; the eyebrows were
- distinct, but soft, and melting to a mere trace at the temples; the
- eyes were a rich gift of nature--fine and full, large, deep, seeming to
- hold dominion over the slighter subordinate features--capable,
- probably, of much significance at another hour and under other
- circumstances than the present, but now languid and suffering. Her skin
- was perfectly fair, the neck and hands veined finely like the petals of
- a flower; a thin glazing of the ice of pride polished this delicate
- exterior, and her lip wore a curl--I doubt not inherent and
- unconscious, but which, if I had seen it first with the accompaniments
- of health and state, would have struck me as unwarranted, and proving
- in the little lady a quite mistaken view of life and her own
- consequence.
- Her demeanour under the Doctor's hands at first excited a smile; it was
- not puerile--rather, on the whole, patient and firm--but yet, once or
- twice she addressed him with suddenness and sharpness, saying that he
- hurt her, and must contrive to give her less pain; I saw her large
- eyes, too, settle on his face like the solemn eyes of some pretty,
- wondering child. I know not whether Graham felt this examination: if he
- did, he was cautious not to check or discomfort it by any retaliatory
- look. I think he performed his work with extreme care and gentleness,
- sparing her what pain he could; and she acknowledged as much, when he
- had done, by the words:--"Thank you, Doctor, and good-night," very
- gratefully pronounced as she uttered them, however, it was with a
- repetition of the serious, direct gaze, I thought, peculiar in its
- gravity and intentness.
- The injuries, it seems, were not dangerous: an assurance which her
- father received with a smile that almost made one his friend--it was so
- glad and gratified. He now expressed his obligations to Graham with as
- much earnestness as was befitting an Englishman addressing one who has
- served him, but is yet a stranger; he also begged him to call the next
- day.
- "Papa," said a voice from the veiled couch, "thank the lady, too; is
- she there?"
- I opened the curtain with a smile, and looked in at her. She lay now at
- comparative ease; she looked pretty, though pale; her face was
- delicately designed, and if at first sight it appeared proud, I believe
- custom might prove it to be soft.
- "I thank the lady very sincerely," said her father: "I fancy she has
- been very good to my child. I think we scarcely dare tell Mrs. Hurst
- who has been her substitute and done her work; she will feel at once
- ashamed and jealous."
- And thus, in the most friendly spirit, parting greetings were
- interchanged; and refreshment having been hospitably offered, but by
- us, as it was late, refused, we withdrew from the Hôtel Crécy.
- On our way back we repassed the theatre. All was silence and darkness:
- the roaring, rushing crowd all vanished and gone--the damps, as well as
- the incipient fire, extinct and forgotten. Next morning's papers
- explained that it was but some loose drapery on which a spark had
- fallen, and which had blazed up and been quenched in a moment.
- CHAPTER XXIV.
- M. DE BASSOMPIERRE.
- Those who live in retirement, whose lives have fallen amid the
- seclusion of schools or of other walled-in and guarded dwellings, are
- liable to be suddenly and for a long while dropped out of the memory of
- their friends, the denizens of a freer world. Unaccountably, perhaps,
- and close upon some space of unusually frequent intercourse--some
- congeries of rather exciting little circumstances, whose natural sequel
- would rather seem to be the quickening than the suspension of
- communication--there falls a stilly pause, a wordless silence, a long
- blank of oblivion. Unbroken always is this blank; alike entire and
- unexplained. The letter, the message once frequent, are cut off; the
- visit, formerly periodical, ceases to occur; the book, paper, or other
- token that indicated remembrance, comes no more.
- Always there are excellent reasons for these lapses, if the hermit but
- knew them. Though he is stagnant in his cell, his connections without
- are whirling in the very vortex of life. That void interval which
- passes for him so slowly that the very clocks seem at a stand, and the
- wingless hours plod by in the likeness of tired tramps prone to rest at
- milestones--that same interval, perhaps, teems with events, and pants
- with hurry for his friends.
- The hermit--if he be a sensible hermit--will swallow his own thoughts,
- and lock up his own emotions during these weeks of inward winter. He
- will know that Destiny designed him to imitate, on occasion, the
- dormouse, and he will be conformable: make a tidy ball of himself,
- creep into a hole of life's wall, and submit decently to the drift
- which blows in and soon blocks him up, preserving him in ice for the
- season.
- Let him say, "It is quite right: it ought to be so, since so it is."
- And, perhaps, one day his snow-sepulchre will open, spring's softness
- will return, the sun and south-wind will reach him; the budding of
- hedges, and carolling of birds, and singing of liberated streams, will
- call him to kindly resurrection. _Perhaps_ this may be the case,
- perhaps not: the frost may get into his heart and never thaw more; when
- spring comes, a crow or a pie may pick out of the wall only his
- dormouse-bones. Well, even in that case, all will be right: it is to be
- supposed he knew from the first he was mortal, and must one day go the
- way of all flesh, "As well soon as syne."
- Following that eventful evening at the theatre, came for me seven weeks
- as bare as seven sheets of blank paper: no word was written on one of
- them; not a visit, not a token.
- About the middle of that time I entertained fancies that something had
- happened to my friends at La Terrasse. The mid-blank is always a
- beclouded point for the solitary: his nerves ache with the strain of
- long expectancy; the doubts hitherto repelled gather now to a mass
- and--strong in accumulation--roll back upon him with a force which
- savours of vindictiveness. Night, too, becomes an unkindly time, and
- sleep and his nature cannot agree: strange starts and struggles harass
- his couch: the sinister band of bad dreams, with horror of calamity,
- and sick dread of entire desertion at their head, join the league
- against him. Poor wretch! He does his best to bear up, but he is a
- poor, pallid, wasting wretch, despite that best.
- Towards the last of these long seven weeks I admitted, what through the
- other six I had jealously excluded--the conviction that these blanks
- were inevitable: the result of circumstances, the fiat of fate, a part
- of my life's lot and--above all--a matter about whose origin no
- question must ever be asked, for whose painful sequence no murmur ever
- uttered. Of course I did not blame myself for suffering: I thank God I
- had a truer sense of justice than to fall into any imbecile
- extravagance of self-accusation; and as to blaming others for silence,
- in my reason I well knew them blameless, and in my heart acknowledged
- them so: but it was a rough and heavy road to travel, and I longed for
- better days.
- I tried different expedients to sustain and fill existence: I commenced
- an elaborate piece of lace-work, I studied German pretty hard, I
- undertook a course of regular reading of the driest and thickest books
- in the library; in all my efforts I was as orthodox as I knew how to
- be. Was there error somewhere? Very likely. I only know the result was
- as if I had gnawed a file to satisfy hunger, or drank brine to quench
- thirst.
- My hour of torment was the post-hour. Unfortunately, I knew it too
- well, and tried as vainly as assiduously to cheat myself of that
- knowledge; dreading the rack of expectation, and the sick collapse of
- disappointment which daily preceded and followed upon that
- well-recognised ring.
- I suppose animals kept in cages, and so scantily fed as to be always
- upon the verge of famine, await their food as I awaited a letter.
- Oh!--to speak truth, and drop that tone of a false calm which long to
- sustain, outwears nature's endurance--I underwent in those seven weeks
- bitter fears and pains, strange inward trials, miserable defections of
- hope, intolerable encroachments of despair. This last came so near me
- sometimes that her breath went right through me. I used to feel it like
- a baleful air or sigh, penetrate deep, and make motion pause at my
- heart, or proceed only under unspeakable oppression. The letter--the
- well-beloved letter--would not come; and it was all of sweetness in
- life I had to look for.
- In the very extremity of want, I had recourse again, and yet again, to
- the little packet in the case--the five letters. How splendid that
- month seemed whose skies had beheld the rising of these five stars! It
- was always at night I visited them, and not daring to ask every evening
- for a candle in the kitchen, I bought a wax taper and matches to light
- it, and at the study-hour stole up to the dormitory and feasted on my
- crust from the Barmecide's loaf. It did not nourish me: I pined on it,
- and got as thin as a shadow: otherwise I was not ill.
- Reading there somewhat late one evening, and feeling that the power to
- read was leaving me--for the letters from incessant perusal were losing
- all sap and significance: my gold was withering to leaves before my
- eyes, and I was sorrowing over the disillusion--suddenly a quick
- tripping foot ran up the stairs. I knew Ginevra Fanshawe's step: she
- had dined in town that afternoon; she was now returned, and would come
- here to replace her shawl, &c. in the wardrobe.
- Yes: in she came, dressed in bright silk, with her shawl falling from
- her shoulders, and her curls, half-uncurled in the damp of night,
- drooping careless and heavy upon her neck. I had hardly time to
- recasket my treasures and lock them up when she was at my side her
- humour seemed none of the best.
- "It has been a stupid evening: they are stupid people," she began.
- "Who? Mrs. Cholmondeley? I thought you always found her house charming?"
- "I have not been to Mrs. Cholmondeley's."
- "Indeed! Have you made new acquaintance?"
- "My uncle de Bassompierre is come."
- "Your uncle de Bassompierre! Are you not glad?--I thought he was a
- favourite."
- "You thought wrong: the man is odious; I hate him."
- "Because he is a foreigner? or for what other reason of equal weight?"
- "He is not a foreigner. The man is English enough, goodness knows; and
- had an English name till three or four years ago; but his mother was a
- foreigner, a de Bassompierre, and some of her family are dead and have
- left him estates, a title, and this name: he is quite a great man now."
- "Do you hate him for that reason?"
- "Don't I know what mamma says about him? He is not my own uncle, but
- married mamma's sister. Mamma detests him; she says he killed aunt
- Ginevra with unkindness: he looks like a bear. Such a dismal evening!"
- she went on. "I'll go no more to his big hotel. Fancy me walking into a
- room alone, and a great man fifty years old coming forwards, and after
- a few minutes' conversation actually turning his back upon me, and then
- abruptly going out of the room. Such odd ways! I daresay his conscience
- smote him, for they all say at home I am the picture of aunt Ginevra.
- Mamma often declares the likeness is quite ridiculous."
- "Were you the only visitor?"
- "The only visitor? Yes; then there was missy, my cousin: little
- spoiled, pampered thing."
- "M. de Bassompierre has a daughter?"
- "Yes, yes: don't tease one with questions. Oh, dear! I am so tired."
- She yawned. Throwing herself without ceremony on my bed she added, "It
- seems Mademoiselle was nearly crushed to a jelly in a hubbub at the
- theatre some weeks ago."
- "Ah! indeed. And they live at a large hotel in the Rue Crécy?"
- "Justement. How do _you_ know?"
- "I have been there."
- "Oh, you have? Really! You go everywhere in these days. I suppose
- Mother Bretton took you. She and Esculapius have the _entrée_ of the de
- Bassompierre apartments: it seems 'my son John' attended missy on the
- occasion of her accident--Accident? Bah! All affectation! I don't think
- she was squeezed more than she richly deserves for her airs. And now
- there is quite an intimacy struck up: I heard something about 'auld
- lang syne,' and what not. Oh, how stupid they all were!"
- "_All!_ You said you were the only visitor."
- "Did I? You see one forgets to particularize an old woman and her boy."
- "Dr. and Mrs. Bretton were at M. de Bassompierre's this evening?"
- "Ay, ay! as large as life; and missy played the hostess. What a
- conceited doll it is!"
- Soured and listless, Miss Fanshawe was beginning to disclose the causes
- of her prostrate condition. There had been a retrenchment of incense, a
- diversion or a total withholding of homage and attention coquetry had
- failed of effect, vanity had undergone mortification. She lay fuming in
- the vapours.
- "Is Miss de Bassompierre quite well now?" I asked.
- "As well as you or I, no doubt; but she is an affected little thing,
- and gave herself invalid airs to attract medical notice. And to see the
- old dowager making her recline on a couch, and 'my son John'
- prohibiting excitement, etcetera--faugh! the scene was quite sickening."
- "It would not have been so if the object of attention had been changed:
- if you had taken Miss de Bassompierre's place."
- "Indeed! I hate 'my son John!'"
- "'My son John!'--whom do you indicate by that name? Dr. Bretton's
- mother never calls him so."
- "Then she ought. A clownish, bearish John he is."
- "You violate the truth in saying so; and as the whole of my patience is
- now spun off the distaff, I peremptorily desire you to rise from that
- bed, and vacate this room."
- "Passionate thing! Your face is the colour of a coquelicot. I wonder
- what always makes you so mighty testy à l'endroit du gros Jean? 'John
- Anderson, my Joe, John!' Oh, the distinguished name!"
- Thrilling with exasperation, to which it would have been sheer folly to
- have given vent--for there was no contending with that unsubstantial
- feather, that mealy-winged moth--I extinguished my taper, locked my
- bureau, and left her, since she would not leave me. Small-beer as she
- was, she had turned insufferably acid.
- The morrow was Thursday and a half-holiday. Breakfast was over; I had
- withdrawn to the first classe. The dreaded hour, the post-hour, was
- nearing, and I sat waiting it, much as a ghost-seer might wait his
- spectre. Less than ever was a letter probable; still, strive as I
- would, I could not forget that it was possible. As the moments
- lessened, a restlessness and fear almost beyond the average assailed
- me. It was a day of winter east wind, and I had now for some time
- entered into that dreary fellowship with the winds and their changes,
- so little known, so incomprehensible to the healthy. The north and east
- owned a terrific influence, making all pain more poignant, all sorrow
- sadder. The south could calm, the west sometimes cheer: unless, indeed,
- they brought on their wings the burden of thunder-clouds, under the
- weight and warmth of which all energy died.
- Bitter and dark as was this January day, I remember leaving the classe,
- and running down without bonnet to the bottom of the long garden, and
- then lingering amongst the stripped shrubs, in the forlorn hope that
- the postman's ring might occur while I was out of hearing, and I might
- thus be spared the thrill which some particular nerve or nerves, almost
- gnawed through with the unremitting tooth of a fixed idea, were
- becoming wholly unfit to support. I lingered as long as I dared without
- fear of attracting attention by my absence. I muffled my head in my
- apron, and stopped my ears in terror of the torturing clang, sure to be
- followed by such blank silence, such barren vacuum for me. At last I
- ventured to re-enter the first classe, where, as it was not yet nine
- o'clock, no pupils had been admitted. The first thing seen was a white
- object on my black desk, a white, flat object. The post had, indeed,
- arrived; by me unheard. Rosine had visited my cell, and, like some
- angel, had left behind her a bright token of her presence. That shining
- thing on the desk was indeed a letter, a real letter; I saw so much at
- the distance of three yards, and as I had but one correspondent on
- earth, from that one it must come. He remembered me yet. How deep a
- pulse of gratitude sent new life through my heart.
- Drawing near, bending and looking on the letter, in trembling but
- almost certain hope of seeing a known hand, it was my lot to find, on
- the contrary, an autograph for the moment deemed unknown--a pale female
- scrawl, instead of a firm, masculine character. I then thought fate was
- _too_ hard for me, and I said, audibly, "This is cruel."
- But I got over that pain also. Life is still life, whatever its pangs:
- our eyes and ears and their use remain with us, though the prospect of
- what pleases be wholly withdrawn, and the sound of what consoles be
- quite silenced.
- I opened the billet: by this time I had recognised its handwriting as
- perfectly familiar. It was dated "La Terrasse," and it ran thus:--
- "DEAR LUCY,--It occurs to me to inquire what you have been doing with
- yourself for the last month or two? Not that I suspect you would have
- the least difficulty in giving an account of your proceedings. I
- daresay you have been just as busy and as happy as ourselves at La
- Terrasse. As to Graham, his professional connection extends daily: he
- is so much sought after, so much engaged, that I tell him he will grow
- quite conceited. Like a right good mother, as I am, I do my best to
- keep him down: no flattery does he get from me, as you know. And yet,
- Lucy, he is a fine fellow: his mother's heart dances at the sight of
- him. After being hurried here and there the whole day, and passing the
- ordeal of fifty sorts of tempers, and combating a hundred caprices, and
- sometimes witnessing cruel sufferings--perhaps, occasionally, as I tell
- him, inflicting them--at night he still comes home to me in such
- kindly, pleasant mood, that really, I seem to live in a sort of moral
- antipodes, and on these January evenings my day rises when other
- people's night sets in.
- "Still he needs keeping in order, and correcting, and repressing, and I
- do him that good service; but the boy is so elastic there is no such
- thing as vexing him thoroughly. When I think I have at last driven him
- to the sullens, he turns on me with jokes for retaliation: but you know
- him and all his iniquities, and I am but an elderly simpleton to make
- him the subject of this epistle.
- "As for me, I have had my old Bretton agent here on a visit, and have
- been plunged overhead and ears in business matters. I do so wish to
- regain for Graham at least some part of what his father left him. He
- laughs to scorn my anxiety on this point, bidding me look and see how
- he can provide for himself and me too, and asking what the old lady can
- possibly want that she has not; hinting about sky-blue turbans;
- accusing me of an ambition to wear diamonds, keep livery servants, have
- an hotel, and lead the fashion amongst the English clan in Villette.
- "Talking of sky-blue turbans, I wish you had been with us the other
- evening. He had come in really tired, and after I had given him his
- tea, he threw himself into my chair with his customary presumption. To
- my great delight, he dropped asleep. (You know how he teases me about
- being drowsy; I, who never, by any chance, close an eye by daylight.)
- While he slept, I thought he looked very bonny, Lucy: fool as I am to
- be so proud of him; but who can help it? Show me his peer. Look where I
- will, I see nothing like him in Villette. Well, I took it into my head
- to play him a trick: so I brought out the sky-blue turban, and handling
- it with gingerly precaution, I managed to invest his brows with this
- grand adornment. I assure you it did not at all misbecome him; he
- looked quite Eastern, except that he is so fair. Nobody, however, can
- accuse him of having red hair _now_--it is genuine chestnut--a dark,
- glossy chestnut; and when I put my large cashmere about him, there was
- as fine a young bey, dey, or pacha improvised as you would wish to see.
- "It was good entertainment; but only half-enjoyed, since I was alone:
- you should have been there.
- "In due time my lord awoke: the looking-glass above the fireplace soon
- intimated to him his plight: as you may imagine, I now live under
- threat and dread of vengeance.
- "But to come to the gist of my letter. I know Thursday is a
- half-holiday in the Rue Fossette: be ready, then, by five in the
- afternoon, at which hour I will send the carriage to take you out to La
- Terrasse. Be sure to come: you may meet some old acquaintance. Good-by,
- my wise, dear, grave little god-daughter.--Very truly yours,
- "LOUISA BRETTON."
- Now, a letter like that sets one to rights! I might still be sad after
- reading that letter, but I was more composed; not exactly cheered,
- perhaps, but relieved. My friends, at least, were well and happy: no
- accident had occurred to Graham; no illness had seized his
- mother--calamities that had so long been my dream and thought. Their
- feelings for me too were--as they had been. Yet, how strange it was to
- look on Mrs. Bretton's seven weeks and contrast them with my seven
- weeks! Also, how very wise it is in people placed in an exceptional
- position to hold their tongues and not rashly declare how such position
- galls them! The world can understand well enough the process of
- perishing for want of food: perhaps few persons can enter into or
- follow out that of going mad from solitary confinement. They see the
- long-buried prisoner disinterred, a maniac or an idiot!--how his senses
- left him--how his nerves, first inflamed, underwent nameless agony, and
- then sunk to palsy--is a subject too intricate for examination, too
- abstract for popular comprehension. Speak of it! you might almost as
- well stand up in an European market-place, and propound dark sayings in
- that language and mood wherein Nebuchadnezzar, the imperial
- hypochondriac, communed with his baffled Chaldeans. And long, long may
- the minds to whom such themes are no mystery--by whom their bearings
- are sympathetically seized--be few in number, and rare of rencounter.
- Long may it be generally thought that physical privations alone merit
- compassion, and that the rest is a figment. When the world was younger
- and haler than now, moral trials were a deeper mystery still: perhaps
- in all the land of Israel there was but one Saul--certainly but one
- David to soothe or comprehend him.
- The keen, still cold of the morning was succeeded, later in the day, by
- a sharp breathing from Russian wastes: the cold zone sighed over the
- temperate zone, and froze it fast. A heavy firmament, dull, and thick
- with snow, sailed up from the north, and settled over expectant Europe.
- Towards afternoon began the descent. I feared no carriage would come,
- the white tempest raged so dense and wild. But trust my godmother! Once
- having asked, she would have her guest. About six o'clock I was lifted
- from the carriage over the already blocked-up front steps of the
- château, and put in at the door of La Terrasse.
- Running through the vestibule, and up-stairs to the drawing-room, there
- I found Mrs. Bretton--a summer-day in her own person. Had I been twice
- as cold as I was, her kind kiss and cordial clasp would have warmed me.
- Inured now for so long a time to rooms with bare boards, black benches,
- desks, and stoves, the blue saloon seemed to me gorgeous. In its
- Christmas-like fire alone there was a clear and crimson splendour which
- quite dazzled me.
- When my godmother had held my hand for a little while, and chatted with
- me, and scolded me for having become thinner than when she last saw me,
- she professed to discover that the snow-wind had disordered my hair,
- and sent me up-stairs to make it neat and remove my shawl.
- Repairing to my own little sea-green room, there also I found a bright
- fire, and candles too were lit: a tall waxlight stood on each side the
- great looking glass; but between the candles, and before the glass,
- appeared something dressing itself--an airy, fairy thing--small,
- slight, white--a winter spirit.
- I declare, for one moment I thought of Graham and his spectral
- illusions. With distrustful eye I noted the details of this new vision.
- It wore white, sprinkled slightly with drops of scarlet; its girdle was
- red; it had something in its hair leafy, yet shining--a little wreath
- with an evergreen gloss. Spectral or not, here truly was nothing
- frightful, and I advanced.
- Turning quick upon me, a large eye, under long lashes, flashed over me,
- the intruder: the lashes were as dark as long, and they softened with
- their pencilling the orb they guarded.
- "Ah! you are come!" she breathed out, in a soft, quiet voice, and she
- smiled slowly, and gazed intently.
- I knew her now. Having only once seen that sort of face, with that cast
- of fine and delicate featuring, I could not but know her.
- "Miss de Bassompierre," I pronounced.
- "No," was the reply, "not Miss de Bassompierre for _you!_" I did not
- inquire who then she might be, but waited voluntary information.
- "You are changed, but still you are yourself," she said, approaching
- nearer. "I remember you well--your countenance, the colour of your
- hair, the outline of your face...."
- I had moved to the fire, and she stood opposite, and gazed into me; and
- as she gazed, her face became gradually more and more expressive of
- thought and feeling, till at last a dimness quenched her clear vision.
- "It makes me almost cry to look so far back," said she: "but as to
- being sorry, or sentimental, don't think it: on the contrary, I am
- quite pleased and glad."
- Interested, yet altogether at fault, I knew not what to say. At last I
- stammered, "I think I never met you till that night, some weeks ago,
- when you were hurt...?"
- She smiled. "You have forgotten then that I have sat on your knee, been
- lifted in your arms, even shared your pillow? You no longer remember
- the night when I came crying, like a naughty little child as I was, to
- your bedside, and you took me in. You have no memory for the comfort
- and protection by which you soothed an acute distress? Go back to
- Bretton. Remember Mr. Home."
- At last I saw it all. "And you are little Polly?"
- "I am Paulina Mary Home de Bassompierre."
- How time can change! Little Polly wore in her pale, small features, her
- fairy symmetry, her varying expression, a certain promise of interest
- and grace; but Paulina Mary was become beautiful--not with the beauty
- that strikes the eye like a rose--orbed, ruddy, and replete; not with
- the plump, and pink, and flaxen attributes of her blond cousin Ginevra;
- but her seventeen years had brought her a refined and tender charm
- which did not lie in complexion, though hers was fair and clear; nor in
- outline, though her features were sweet, and her limbs perfectly
- turned; but, I think, rather in a subdued glow from the soul outward.
- This was not an opaque vase, of material however costly, but a lamp
- chastely lucent, guarding from extinction, yet not hiding from worship,
- a flame vital and vestal. In speaking of her attractions, I would not
- exaggerate language; but, indeed, they seemed to me very real and
- engaging. What though all was on a small scale, it was the perfume
- which gave this white violet distinction, and made it superior to the
- broadest camelia--the fullest dahlia that ever bloomed.
- "Ah! and you remember the old time at Bretton?"
- "Better," said she, "better, perhaps, than you. I remember it with
- minute distinctness: not only the time, but the days of the time, and
- the hours of the days."
- "You must have forgotten some things?"
- "Very little, I imagine."
- "You were then a little creature of quick feelings: you must, long ere
- this, have outgrown the impressions with which joy and grief, affection
- and bereavement, stamped your mind ten years ago."
- "You think I have forgotten whom I liked, and in what degree I liked
- them when a child?"
- "The sharpness must be gone--the point, the poignancy--the deep imprint
- must be softened away and effaced?"
- "I have a good memory for those days."
- She looked as if she had. Her eyes were the eyes of one who can
- remember; one whose childhood does not fade like a dream, nor whose
- youth vanish like a sunbeam. She would not take life, loosely and
- incoherently, in parts, and let one season slip as she entered on
- another: she would retain and add; often review from the commencement,
- and so grow in harmony and consistency as she grew in years. Still I
- could not quite admit the conviction that _all_ the pictures which now
- crowded upon me were vivid and visible to her. Her fond attachments,
- her sports and contests with a well-loved playmate, the patient, true
- devotion of her child's heart, her fears, her delicate reserves, her
- little trials, the last piercing pain of separation.... I retraced
- these things, and shook my head incredulous. She persisted. "The child
- of seven years lives yet in the girl of seventeen," said she.
- "You used to be excessively fond of Mrs. Bretton," I remarked,
- intending to test her. She set me right at once.
- "Not _excessively_ fond," said she; "I liked her: I respected her as I
- should do now: she seems to me very little altered."
- "She is not much changed," I assented.
- We were silent a few minutes. Glancing round the room she said, "There
- are several things here that used to be at Bretton! I remember that
- pincushion and that looking-glass."
- Evidently she was not deceived in her estimate of her own memory; not,
- at least, so far.
- "You think, then, you would have known Mrs. Bretton?" I went on.
- "I perfectly remembered her; the turn of her features, her olive
- complexion, and black hair, her height, her walk, her voice."
- "Dr. Bretton, of course," I pursued, "would be out of the question:
- and, indeed, as I saw your first interview with him, I am aware that he
- appeared to you as a stranger."
- "That first night I was puzzled," she answered.
- "How did the recognition between him and your father come about?"
- "They exchanged cards. The names Graham Bretton and Home de
- Bassompierre gave rise to questions and explanations. That was on the
- second day; but before then I was beginning to know something."
- "How--know something?"
- "Why," she said, "how strange it is that most people seem so slow to
- feel the truth--not to see, but _feel_! When Dr. Bretton had visited me
- a few times, and sat near and talked to me; when I had observed the
- look in his eyes, the expression about his mouth, the form of his chin,
- the carriage of his head, and all that we _do_ observe in persons who
- approach us--how could I avoid being led by association to think of
- Graham Bretton? Graham was slighter than he, and not grown so tall, and
- had a smoother face, and longer and lighter hair, and spoke--not so
- deeply--more like a girl; but yet _he_ is Graham, just as _I_ am little
- Polly, or you are Lucy Snowe."
- I thought the same, but I wondered to find my thoughts hers: there are
- certain things in which we so rarely meet with our double that it seems
- a miracle when that chance befalls.
- "You and Graham were once playmates."
- "And do you remember that?" she questioned in her turn.
- "No doubt he will remember it also," said I.
- "I have not asked him: few things would surprise me so much as to find
- that he did. I suppose his disposition is still gay and careless?"
- "Was it so formerly? Did it so strike you? Do you thus remember him?"
- "I scarcely remember him in any other light. Sometimes he was studious;
- sometimes he was merry: but whether busy with his books or disposed for
- play, it was chiefly the books or game he thought of; not much heeding
- those with whom he read or amused himself."
- "Yet to you he was partial."
- "Partial to me? Oh, no! he had other playmates--his school-fellows; I
- was of little consequence to him, except on Sundays: yes, he was kind
- on Sundays. I remember walking with him hand-in-hand to St. Mary's, and
- his finding the places in my prayer-book; and how good and still he was
- on Sunday evenings! So mild for such a proud, lively boy; so patient
- with all my blunders in reading; and so wonderfully to be depended on,
- for he never spent those evenings from home: I had a constant fear that
- he would accept some invitation and forsake us; but he never did, nor
- seemed ever to wish to do it. Thus, of course, it can be no more. I
- suppose Sunday will now be Dr. Bretton's dining-out day....?"
- "Children, come down!" here called Mrs. Bretton from below. Paulina
- would still have lingered, but I inclined to descend: we went down.
- CHAPTER XXV.
- THE LITTLE COUNTESS.
- Cheerful as my godmother naturally was, and entertaining as, for our
- sakes, she made a point of being, there was no true enjoyment that
- evening at La Terrasse, till, through the wild howl of the
- winter-night, were heard the signal sounds of arrival. How often, while
- women and girls sit warm at snug fire-sides, their hearts and
- imaginations are doomed to divorce from the comfort surrounding their
- persons, forced out by night to wander through dark ways, to dare
- stress of weather, to contend with the snow-blast, to wait at lonely
- gates and stiles in wildest storms, watching and listening to see and
- hear the father, the son, the husband coming home.
- Father and son came at last to the château: for the Count de
- Bassompierre that night accompanied Dr. Bretton. I know not which of
- our trio heard the horses first; the asperity, the violence of the
- weather warranted our running down into the hall to meet and greet the
- two riders as they came in; but they warned us to keep our distance:
- both were white--two mountains of snow; and indeed Mrs. Bretton, seeing
- their condition, ordered them instantly to the kitchen; prohibiting
- them, at their peril, from setting foot on her carpeted staircase till
- they had severally put off that mask of Old Christmas they now
- affected. Into the kitchen, however, we could not help following them:
- it was a large old Dutch kitchen, picturesque and pleasant. The little
- white Countess danced in a circle about her equally white sire,
- clapping her hands and crying, "Papa, papa, you look like an enormous
- Polar bear."
- The bear shook himself, and the little sprite fled far from the frozen
- shower. Back she came, however, laughing, and eager to aid in removing
- the arctic disguise. The Count, at last issuing from his dreadnought,
- threatened to overwhelm her with it as with an avalanche.
- "Come, then," said she, bending to invite the fall, and when it was
- playfully advanced above her head, bounding out of reach like some
- little chamois.
- Her movements had the supple softness, the velvet grace of a kitten;
- her laugh was clearer than the ring of silver and crystal; as she took
- her sire's cold hands and rubbed them, and stood on tiptoe to reach his
- lips for a kiss, there seemed to shine round her a halo of loving
- delight. The grave and reverend seignor looked down on her as men _do_
- look on what is the apple of their eye.
- "Mrs. Bretton," said he: "what am I to do with this daughter or
- daughterling of mine? She neither grows in wisdom nor in stature. Don't
- you find her pretty nearly as much the child as she was ten years ago?"
- "She cannot be more the child than this great boy of mine," said Mrs.
- Bretton, who was in conflict with her son about some change of dress
- she deemed advisable, and which he resisted. He stood leaning against
- the Dutch dresser, laughing and keeping her at arm's length.
- "Come, mamma," said he, "by way of compromise, and to secure for us
- inward as well as outward warmth, let us have a Christmas wassail-cup,
- and toast Old England here, on the hearth."
- So, while the Count stood by the fire, and Paulina Mary still danced to
- and fro--happy in the liberty of the wide hall-like kitchen--Mrs.
- Bretton herself instructed Martha to spice and heat the wassail-bowl,
- and, pouring the draught into a Bretton flagon, it was served round,
- reaming hot, by means of a small silver vessel, which I recognised as
- Graham's christening-cup.
- "Here's to Auld Lang Syne!" said the Count; holding the glancing cup on
- high. Then, looking at Mrs. Bretton.--
- "We twa ha' paidlet i' the burn
- Fra morning sun till dine,
- But seas between us braid ha' roared
- Sin' auld lane syne.
- "And surely ye'll be your pint-stoup,
- And surely I'll be mine;
- And we'll taste a cup o' kindness yet
- For auld lang syne."
- "Scotch! Scotch!" cried Paulina; "papa is talking Scotch; and Scotch he
- is, partly. We are Home and de Bassompierre, Caledonian and Gallic."
- "And is that a Scotch reel you are dancing, you Highland fairy?" asked
- her father. "Mrs. Bretton, there will be a green ring growing up in the
- middle of your kitchen shortly. I would not answer for her being quite
- cannie: she is a strange little mortal."
- "Tell Lucy to dance with me, papa; there is Lucy Snowe."
- Mr. Home (there was still quite as much about him of plain Mr. Home as
- of proud Count de Bassompierre) held his hand out to me, saying kindly,
- "he remembered me well; and, even had his own memory been less
- trustworthy, my name was so often on his daughter's lips, and he had
- listened to so many long tales about me, I should seem like an old
- acquaintance."
- Every one now had tasted the wassail-cup except Paulina, whose pas de
- fée, ou de fantaisie, nobody thought of interrupting to offer so
- profanatory a draught; but she was not to be overlooked, nor baulked of
- her mortal privileges.
- "Let me taste," said she to Graham, as he was putting the cup on the
- shelf of the dresser out of her reach.
- Mrs. Bretton and Mr. Home were now engaged in conversation. Dr. John
- had not been unobservant of the fairy's dance; he had watched it, and
- he had liked it. To say nothing of the softness and beauty of the
- movements, eminently grateful to his grace-loving eye, that ease in his
- mother's house charmed him, for it set _him_ at ease: again she seemed
- a child for him--again, almost his playmate. I wondered how he would
- speak to her; I had not yet seen him address her; his first words
- proved that the old days of "little Polly" had been recalled to his
- mind by this evening's child-like light-heartedness.
- "Your ladyship wishes for the tankard?"
- "I think I said so. I think I intimated as much."
- "Couldn't consent to a step of the kind on any account. Sorry for it,
- but couldn't do it."
- "Why? I am quite well now: it can't break my collar-bone again, or
- dislocate my shoulder. Is it wine?"
- "No; nor dew."
- "I don't want dew; I don't like dew: but what is it?"
- "Ale--strong ale--old October; brewed, perhaps, when I was born."
- "It must be curious: is it good?"
- "Excessively good."
- And he took it down, administered to himself a second dose of this
- mighty elixir, expressed in his mischievous eyes extreme contentment
- with the same, and solemnly replaced the cup on the shelf.
- "I should like a little," said Paulina, looking up; "I never had any
- 'old October:' is it sweet?"
- "Perilously sweet," said Graham.
- She continued to look up exactly with the countenance of a child that
- longs for some prohibited dainty. At last the Doctor relented, took it
- down, and indulged himself in the gratification of letting her taste
- from his hand; his eyes, always expressive in the revelation of
- pleasurable feelings, luminously and smilingly avowed that it _was_ a
- gratification; and he prolonged it by so regulating the position of the
- cup that only a drop at a time could reach the rosy, sipping lips by
- which its brim was courted.
- "A little more--a little more," said she, petulantly touching his hand
- with the forefinger, to make him incline the cup more generously and
- yieldingly. "It smells of spice and sugar, but I can't taste it; your
- wrist is so stiff, and you are so stingy."
- He indulged her, whispering, however, with gravity: "Don't tell my
- mother or Lucy; they wouldn't approve."
- "Nor do I," said she, passing into another tone and manner as soon as
- she had fairly assayed the beverage, just as if it had acted upon her
- like some disenchanting draught, undoing the work of a wizard: "I find
- it anything but sweet; it is bitter and hot, and takes away my breath.
- Your old October was only desirable while forbidden. Thank you, no
- more."
- And, with a slight bend--careless, but as graceful as her dance--she
- glided from him and rejoined her father.
- I think she had spoken truth: the child of seven was in the girl of
- seventeen.
- Graham looked after her a little baffled, a little puzzled; his eye was
- on her a good deal during the rest of the evening, but she did not seem
- to notice him.
- As we ascended to the drawing-room for tea, she took her father's arm:
- her natural place seemed to be at his side; her eyes and her ears were
- dedicated to him. He and Mrs. Bretton were the chief talkers of our
- little party, and Paulina was their best listener, attending closely to
- all that was said, prompting the repetition of this or that trait or
- adventure.
- "And where were you at such a time, papa? And what did you say then?
- And tell Mrs. Bretton what happened on that occasion." Thus she drew
- him out.
- She did not again yield to any effervescence of glee; the infantine
- sparkle was exhaled for the night: she was soft, thoughtful, and
- docile. It was pretty to see her bid good-night; her manner to Graham
- was touched with dignity: in her very slight smile and quiet bow spoke
- the Countess, and Graham could not but look grave, and bend responsive.
- I saw he hardly knew how to blend together in his ideas the dancing
- fairy and delicate dame.
- Next day, when we were all assembled round the breakfast-table,
- shivering and fresh from the morning's chill ablutions, Mrs. Bretton
- pronounced a decree that nobody, who was not forced by dire necessity,
- should quit her house that day.
- Indeed, egress seemed next to impossible; the drift darkened the lower
- panes of the casement, and, on looking out, one saw the sky and air
- vexed and dim, the wind and snow in angry conflict. There was no fall
- now, but what had already descended was torn up from the earth, whirled
- round by brief shrieking gusts, and cast into a hundred fantastic forms.
- The Countess seconded Mrs. Bretton.
- "Papa shall not go out," said she, placing a seat for herself beside
- her father's arm-chair. "I will look after him. You won't go into town,
- will you, papa?"
- "Ay, and No," was the answer. "If you and Mrs. Bretton are _very_ good
- to me, Polly--kind, you know, and attentive; if you pet me in a very
- nice manner, and make much of me, I may possibly be induced to wait an
- hour after breakfast and see whether this razor-edged wind settles.
- But, you see, you give me no breakfast; you offer me nothing: you let
- me starve."
- "Quick! please, Mrs. Bretton, and pour out the coffee," entreated
- Paulina, "whilst I take care of the Count de Bassompierre in other
- respects: since he grew into a Count, he has needed _so_ much
- attention."
- She separated and prepared a roll.
- "There, papa, are your 'pistolets' charged," said she. "And there is
- some marmalade, just the same sort of marmalade we used to have at
- Bretton, and which you said was as good as if it had been conserved in
- Scotland--"
- "And which your little ladyship used to beg for my boy--do you remember
- that?" interposed Mrs. Bretton. "Have you forgotten how you would come
- to my elbow and touch my sleeve with the whisper, 'Please, ma'am,
- something good for Graham--a little marmalade, or honey, or jam?"'
- "No, mamma," broke in Dr. John, laughing, yet reddening; "it surely was
- not so: I could not have cared for these things."
- "Did he or did he not, Paulina?"
- "He liked them," asserted Paulina.
- "Never blush for it, John," said Mr. Home, encouragingly. "I like them
- myself yet, and always did. And Polly showed her sense in catering for
- a friend's material comforts: it was I who put her into the way of such
- good manners--nor do I let her forget them. Polly, offer me a small
- slice of that tongue."
- "There, papa: but remember you are only waited upon with this
- assiduity; on condition of being persuadable, and reconciling yourself
- to La Terrasse for the day."
- "Mrs. Bretton," said the Count, "I want to get rid of my daughter--to
- send her to school. Do you know of any good school?"
- "There is Lucy's place--Madame Beck's."
- "Miss Snowe is in a school?"
- "I am a teacher," I said, and was rather glad of the opportunity of
- saying this. For a little while I had been feeling as if placed in a
- false position. Mrs. Bretton and son knew my circumstances; but the
- Count and his daughter did not. They might choose to vary by some
- shades their hitherto cordial manner towards me, when aware of my grade
- in society. I spoke then readily: but a swarm of thoughts I had not
- anticipated nor invoked, rose dim at the words, making me sigh
- involuntarily. Mr. Home did not lift his eyes from his breakfast-plate
- for about two minutes, nor did he speak; perhaps he had not caught the
- words--perhaps he thought that on a confession of that nature,
- politeness would interdict comment: the Scotch are proverbially proud;
- and homely as was Mr. Home in look, simple in habits and tastes, I have
- all along intimated that he was not without his share of the national
- quality. Was his a pseudo pride? was it real dignity? I leave the
- question undecided in its wide sense. Where it concerned me
- individually I can only answer: then, and always, he showed himself a
- true-hearted gentleman.
- By nature he was a feeler and a thinker; over his emotions and his
- reflections spread a mellowing of melancholy; more than a mellowing: in
- trouble and bereavement it became a cloud. He did not know much about
- Lucy Snowe; what he knew, he did not very accurately comprehend: indeed
- his misconceptions of my character often made me smile; but he saw my
- walk in life lay rather on the shady side of the hill: he gave me
- credit for doing my endeavour to keep the course honestly straight; he
- would have helped me if he could: having no opportunity of helping, he
- still wished me well. When he did look at me, his eye was kind; when he
- did speak, his voice was benevolent.
- "Yours," said he, "is an arduous calling. I wish you health and
- strength to win in it--success."
- His fair little daughter did not take the information quite so
- composedly: she fixed on me a pair of eyes wide with wonder--almost
- with dismay.
- "Are you a teacher?" cried she. Then, having paused on the unpalatable
- idea, "Well, I never knew what you were, nor ever thought of asking:
- for me, you were always Lucy Snowe."
- "And what am I now?" I could not forbear inquiring.
- "Yourself, of course. But do you really teach here, in Villette?"
- "I really do."
- "And do you like it?"
- "Not always."
- "And why do you go on with it?"
- Her father looked at, and, I feared, was going to check her; but he
- only said, "Proceed, Polly, proceed with that catechism--prove yourself
- the little wiseacre you are. If Miss Snowe were to blush and look
- confused, I should have to bid you hold your tongue; and you and I
- would sit out the present meal in some disgrace; but she only smiles,
- so push her hard, multiply the cross-questions. Well, Miss Snowe, why
- do you go on with it?"
- "Chiefly, I fear, for the sake of the money I get."
- "Not then from motives of pure philanthropy? Polly and I were clinging
- to that hypothesis as the most lenient way of accounting for your
- eccentricity."
- "No--no, sir. Rather for the roof of shelter I am thus enabled to keep
- over my head; and for the comfort of mind it gives me to think that
- while I can work for myself, I am spared the pain of being a burden to
- anybody."
- "Papa, say what you will, I pity Lucy."
- "Take up that pity, Miss de Bassompierre; take it up in both hands, as
- you might a little callow gosling squattering out of bounds without
- leave; put it back in the warm nest of a heart whence it issued, and
- receive in your ear this whisper. If my Polly ever came to know by
- experience the uncertain nature of this world's goods, I should like
- her to act as Lucy acts: to work for herself, that she might burden
- neither kith nor kin."
- "Yes, papa," said she, pensively and tractably. "But poor Lucy! I
- thought she was a rich lady, and had rich friends."
- "You thought like a little simpleton. _I_ never thought so. When I had
- time to consider Lucy's manner and aspect, which was not often, I saw
- she was one who had to guard and not be guarded; to act and not be
- served: and this lot has, I imagine, helped her to an experience for
- which, if she live long enough to realize its full benefit, she may yet
- bless Providence. But this school," he pursued, changing his tone from
- grave to gay: "would Madame Beck admit my Polly, do you think, Miss
- Lucy?"
- I said, there needed but to try Madame; it would soon be seen: she was
- fond of English pupils. "If you, sir," I added, "will but take Miss de
- Bassompierre in your carriage this very afternoon, I think I can answer
- for it that Rosine, the portress, will not be very slow in answering
- your ring; and Madame, I am sure, will put on her best pair of gloves
- to come into the salon to receive you."
- "In that case," responded Mr. Home, "I see no sort of necessity there
- is for delay. Mrs. Hurst can send what she calls her young lady's
- 'things' after her; Polly can settle down to her horn-book before
- night; and you, Miss Lucy, I trust, will not disdain to cast an
- occasional eye upon her, and let me know, from time to time, how she
- gets on. I hope you approve of the arrangement, Countess de
- Bassompierre?"
- The Countess hemmed and hesitated. "I thought," said she, "I thought I
- had finished my education--"
- "That only proves how much we may be mistaken in our thoughts. I hold a
- far different opinion, as most of these will who have been auditors of
- your profound knowledge of life this morning. Ah, my little girl, thou
- hast much to learn; and papa ought to have taught thee more than he has
- done! Come, there is nothing for it but to try Madame Beck; and the
- weather seems settling, and I have finished my breakfast--"
- "But, papa!"
- "Well?"
- "I see an obstacle."
- "I don't at all."
- "It is enormous, papa; it can never be got over; it is as large as you
- in your greatcoat, and the snowdrift on the top."
- "And, like that snowdrift, capable of melting?"
- "No! it is of too--too solid flesh: it is just your own self. Miss
- Lucy, warn Madame Beck not to listen to any overtures about taking me,
- because, in the end, it would turn out that she would have to take papa
- too: as he is so teasing, I will just tell tales about him. Mrs.
- Bretton and all of you listen: About five years ago, when I was twelve
- years old, he took it into his head that he was spoiling me; that I was
- growing unfitted for the world, and I don't know what, and nothing
- would serve or satisfy him, but I must go to school. I cried, and so
- on; but M. de Bassompierre proved hard-hearted, quite firm and flinty,
- and to school I went. What was the result? In the most admirable
- manner, papa came to school likewise: every other day he called to see
- me. Madame Aigredoux grumbled, but it was of no use; and so, at last,
- papa and I were both, in a manner, expelled. Lucy can just tell Madame
- Beck this little trait: it is only fair to let her know what she has to
- expect."
- Mrs. Bretton asked Mr. Home what he had to say in answer to this
- statement. As he made no defence, judgment was given against him, and
- Paulina triumphed.
- But she had other moods besides the arch and naïve. After breakfast;
- when the two elders withdrew--I suppose to talk over certain of Mrs.
- Bretton's business matters--and the Countess, Dr. Bretton, and I, were
- for a short time alone together--all the child left her; with us, more
- nearly her companions in age, she rose at once to the little lady: her
- very face seemed to alter; that play of feature, and candour of look,
- which, when she spoke to her father, made it quite dimpled and round,
- yielded to an aspect more thoughtful, and lines distincter and less
- _mobile_.
- No doubt Graham noted the change as well as I. He stood for some
- minutes near the window, looking out at the snow; presently he,
- approached the hearth, and entered into conversation, but not quite
- with his usual ease: fit topics did not seem to rise to his lips; he
- chose them fastidiously, hesitatingly, and consequently infelicitously:
- he spoke vaguely of Villette--its inhabitants, its notable sights and
- buildings. He was answered by Miss de Bassompierre in quite womanly
- sort; with intelligence, with a manner not indeed wholly
- disindividualized: a tone, a glance, a gesture, here and there, rather
- animated and quick than measured and stately, still recalled little
- Polly; but yet there was so fine and even a polish, so calm and
- courteous a grace, gilding and sustaining these peculiarities, that a
- less sensitive man than Graham would not have ventured to seize upon
- them as vantage points, leading to franker intimacy.
- Yet while Dr. Bretton continued subdued, and, for him, sedate, he was
- still observant. Not one of those petty impulses and natural breaks
- escaped him. He did not miss one characteristic movement, one
- hesitation in language, or one lisp in utterance. At times, in speaking
- fast, she still lisped; but coloured whenever such lapse occurred, and
- in a painstaking, conscientious manner, quite as amusing as the slight
- error, repeated the word more distinctly.
- Whenever she did this, Dr. Bretton smiled. Gradually, as they
- conversed, the restraint on each side slackened: might the conference
- have but been prolonged, I believe it would soon have become genial:
- already to Paulina's lip and cheek returned the wreathing, dimpling
- smile; she lisped once, and forgot to correct herself. And Dr. John, I
- know not how _he_ changed, but change he did. He did not grow gayer--no
- raillery, no levity sparkled across his aspect--but his position seemed
- to become one of more pleasure to himself, and he spoke his augmented
- comfort in readier language, in tones more suave. Ten years ago this
- pair had always found abundance to say to each other; the intervening
- decade had not narrowed the experience or impoverished the intelligence
- of either: besides, there are certain natures of which the mutual
- influence is such, that the more they say, the more they have to say.
- For these out of association grows adhesion, and out of adhesion,
- amalgamation.
- Graham, however, must go: his was a profession whose claims are neither
- to be ignored nor deferred. He left the room; but before he could leave
- the house there was a return. I am sure he came back--not for the
- paper, or card in his desk, which formed his ostensible errand--but to
- assure himself, by one more glance, that Paulina's aspect was really
- such as memory was bearing away: that he had not been viewing her
- somehow by a partial, artificial light, and making a fond mistake. No!
- he found the impression true--rather, indeed, he gained than lost by
- this return: he took away with him a parting look--shy, but very
- soft--as beautiful, as innocent, as any little fawn could lift out of
- its cover of fern, or any lamb from its meadow-bed.
- Being left alone, Paulina and I kept silence for some time: we both
- took out some work, and plied a mute and diligent task. The white-wood
- workbox of old days was now replaced by one inlaid with precious
- mosaic, and furnished with implements of gold; the tiny and trembling
- fingers that could scarce guide the needle, though tiny still, were now
- swift and skilful: but there was the same busy knitting of the brow,
- the same little dainty mannerisms, the same quick turns and
- movements--now to replace a stray tress, and anon to shake from the
- silken skirt some imaginary atom of dust--some clinging fibre of thread.
- That morning I was disposed for silence: the austere fury of the
- winter-day had on me an awing, hushing influence. That passion of
- January, so white and so bloodless, was not yet spent: the storm had
- raved itself hoarse, but seemed no nearer exhaustion. Had Ginevra
- Fanshawe been my companion in that drawing-room, she would not have
- suffered me to muse and listen undisturbed. The presence just gone from
- us would have been her theme; and how she would have rung the changes
- on one topic! how she would have pursued and pestered me with questions
- and surmises--worried and oppressed me with comments and confidences I
- did not want, and longed to avoid.
- Paulina Mary cast once or twice towards me a quiet but penetrating
- glance of her dark, full eye; her lips half opened, as if to the
- impulse of coming utterance: but she saw and delicately respected my
- inclination for silence.
- "This will not hold long," I thought to myself; for I was not
- accustomed to find in women or girls any power of self-control, or
- strength of self-denial. As far as I knew them, the chance of a gossip
- about their usually trivial secrets, their often very washy and paltry
- feelings, was a treat not to be readily foregone.
- The little Countess promised an exception: she sewed till she was tired
- of sewing, and then she took a book.
- As chance would have it, she had sought it in Dr. Bretton's own
- compartment of the bookcase; and it proved to be an old Bretton
- book--some illustrated work of natural history. Often had I seen her
- standing at Graham's side, resting that volume on his knee, and reading
- to his tuition; and, when the lesson was over, begging, as a treat,
- that he would tell her all about the pictures. I watched her keenly:
- here was a true test of that memory she had boasted; would her
- recollections now be faithful?
- Faithful? It could not be doubted. As she turned the leaves, over her
- face passed gleam after gleam of expression, the least intelligent of
- which was a full greeting to the Past. And then she turned to the
- title-page, and looked at the name written in the schoolboy hand. She
- looked at it long; nor was she satisfied with merely looking: she
- gently passed over the characters the tips of her fingers, accompanying
- the action with an unconscious but tender smile, which converted the
- touch into a caress. Paulina loved the Past; but the peculiarity of
- this little scene was, that she _said_ nothing: she could feel without
- pouring out her feelings in a flux of words.
- She now occupied herself at the bookcase for nearly an hour; taking
- down volume after volume, and renewing her acquaintance with each. This
- done, she seated herself on a low stool, rested her cheek on her hand,
- and thought, and still was mute.
- The sound of the front door opened below, a rush of cold wind, and her
- father's voice speaking to Mrs. Bretton in the hall, startled her at
- last. She sprang up: she was down-stairs in one second.
- "Papa! papa! you are not going out?"
- "My pet, I must go into town."
- "But it is too--_too_ cold, papa."
- And then I heard M. de Bassompierre showing to her how he was well
- provided against the weather; and how he was going to have the
- carriage, and to be quite snugly sheltered; and, in short, proving that
- she need not fear for his comfort.
- "But you will promise to come back here this evening, before it is
- quite dark;--you and Dr. Bretton, both, in the carriage? It is not fit
- to ride."
- "Well, if I see the Doctor, I will tell him a lady has laid on him her
- commands to take care of his precious health and come home early under
- my escort."
- "Yes, you must say a lady; and he will think it is his mother, and be
- obedient. And, papa, mind to come soon, for I _shall_ watch and listen."
- The door closed, and the carriage rolled softly through the snow; and
- back returned the Countess, pensive and anxious.
- She _did_ listen, and watch, when evening closed; but it was in
- stillest sort: walking the drawing-room with quite noiseless step. She
- checked at intervals her velvet march; inclined her ear, and consulted
- the night sounds: I should rather say, the night silence; for now, at
- last, the wind was fallen. The sky, relieved of its avalanche, lay
- naked and pale: through the barren boughs of the avenue we could see it
- well, and note also the polar splendour of the new-year moon--an orb
- white as a world of ice. Nor was it late when we saw also the return of
- the carriage.
- Paulina had no dance of welcome for this evening. It was with a sort of
- gravity that she took immediate possession of her father, as he entered
- the room; but she at once made him her entire property, led him to the
- seat of her choice, and, while softly showering round him honeyed words
- of commendation for being so good and coming home so soon, you would
- have thought it was entirely by the power of her little hands he was
- put into his chair, and settled and arranged; for the strong man seemed
- to take pleasure in wholly yielding himself to this dominion-potent
- only by love.
- Graham did not appear till some minutes after the Count. Paulina half
- turned when his step was heard: they spoke, but only a word or two;
- their fingers met a moment, but obviously with slight contact. Paulina
- remained beside her father; Graham threw himself into a seat on the
- other side of the room.
- It was well that Mrs. Bretton and Mr. Home had a great deal to say to
- each other--almost an inexhaustible fund of discourse in old
- recollections; otherwise, I think, our party would have been but a
- still one that evening.
- After tea, Paulina's quick needle and pretty golden thimble were busily
- plied by the lamp-light, but her tongue rested, and her eyes seemed
- reluctant to raise often their lids, so smooth and so full-fringed.
- Graham, too, must have been tired with his day's work: he listened
- dutifully to his elders and betters, said very little himself, and
- followed with his eye the gilded glance of Paulina's thimble; as if it
- had been some bright moth on the wing, or the golden head of some
- darting little yellow serpent.
- CHAPTER XXVI.
- A BURIAL.
- From this date my life did not want variety; I went out a good deal,
- with the entire consent of Madame Beck, who perfectly approved the
- grade of my acquaintance. That worthy directress had never from the
- first treated me otherwise than with respect; and when she found that I
- was liable to frequent invitations from a château and a great hotel,
- respect improved into distinction.
- Not that she was fulsome about it: Madame, in all things worldly, was
- in nothing weak; there was measure and sense in her hottest pursuit of
- self-interest, calm and considerateness in her closest clutch of gain;
- without, then, laying herself open to my contempt as a time-server and
- a toadie, she marked with tact that she was pleased people connected
- with her establishment should frequent such associates as must
- cultivate and elevate, rather than those who might deteriorate and
- depress. She never praised either me or my friends; only once when she
- was sitting in the sun in the garden, a cup of coffee at her elbow and
- the Gazette in her hand, looking very comfortable, and I came up and
- asked leave of absence for the evening, she delivered herself in this
- gracious sort:--
- "Oui, oui, ma bonne amie: je vous donne la permission de coeur et de
- gré. Votre travail dans ma maison a toujours été admirable, rempli de
- zèle et de discrétion: vous avez bien le droit de vous amuser. Sortez
- donc tant que vous voudrez. Quant à votre choix de connaissances, j'en
- suis contente; c'est sage, digne, laudable."
- She closed her lips and resumed the Gazette.
- The reader will not too gravely regard the little circumstance that
- about this time the triply-enclosed packet of five letters temporarily
- disappeared from my bureau. Blank dismay was naturally my first
- sensation on making the discovery; but in a moment I took heart of
- grace.
- "Patience!" whispered I to myself. "Let me say nothing, but wait
- peaceably; they will come back again."
- And they did come back: they had only been on a short visit to Madame's
- chamber; having passed their examination, they came back duly and
- truly: I found them all right the next day.
- I wonder what she thought of my correspondence? What estimate did she
- form of Dr. John Bretton's epistolary powers? In what light did the
- often very pithy thoughts, the generally sound, and sometimes original
- opinions, set, without pretension, in an easily-flowing, spirited
- style, appear to her? How did she like that genial, half humorous vein,
- which to me gave such delight? What did she think of the few kind words
- scattered here and there--not thickly, as the diamonds were scattered in
- the valley of Sindbad, but sparely, as those gems lie in unfabled beds?
- Oh, Madame Beck! how seemed these things to you?
- I think in Madame Beck's eyes the five letters found a certain favour.
- One day after she had _borrowed_ them of me (in speaking of so suave a
- little woman, one ought to use suave terms), I caught her examining me
- with a steady contemplative gaze, a little puzzled, but not at all
- malevolent. It was during that brief space between lessons, when the
- pupils turned out into the court for a quarter of an hour's recreation;
- she and I remained in the first classe alone: when I met her eye, her
- thoughts forced themselves partially through her lips.
- "Il y a," said she, "quelquechose de bien remarquable dans le caractère
- Anglais."
- "How, Madame?"
- She gave a little laugh, repeating the word "how" in English.
- "Je ne saurais vous dire 'how;' mais, enfin, les Anglais ont des idées
- à eux, en amitié, en amour, en tout. Mais au moins il n'est pas besoin
- de les surveiller," she added, getting up and trotting away like the
- compact little pony she was.
- "Then I hope," murmured I to myself, "you will graciously let alone my
- letters for the future."
- Alas! something came rushing into my eyes, dimming utterly their
- vision, blotting from sight the schoolroom, the garden, the bright
- winter sun, as I remembered that never more would letters, such as she
- had read, come to me. I had seen the last of them. That goodly river on
- whose banks I had sojourned, of whose waves a few reviving drops had
- trickled to my lips, was bending to another course: it was leaving my
- little hut and field forlorn and sand-dry, pouring its wealth of waters
- far away. The change was right, just, natural; not a word could be
- said: but I loved my Rhine, my Nile; I had almost worshipped my Ganges,
- and I grieved that the grand tide should roll estranged, should vanish
- like a false mirage. Though stoical, I was not quite a stoic; drops
- streamed fast on my hands, on my desk: I wept one sultry shower, heavy
- and brief.
- But soon I said to myself, "The Hope I am bemoaning suffered and made
- me suffer much: it did not die till it was full time: following an
- agony so lingering, death ought to be welcome."
- Welcome I endeavoured to make it. Indeed, long pain had made patience a
- habit. In the end I closed the eyes of my dead, covered its face, and
- composed its limbs with great calm.
- The letters, however, must be put away, out of sight: people who have
- undergone bereavement always jealously gather together and lock away
- mementos: it is not supportable to be stabbed to the heart each moment
- by sharp revival of regret.
- One vacant holiday afternoon (the Thursday) going to my treasure, with
- intent to consider its final disposal, I perceived--and this time with
- a strong impulse of displeasure--that it had been again tampered with:
- the packet was there, indeed, but the ribbon which secured it had been
- untied and retied; and by other symptoms I knew that my drawer had been
- visited.
- This was a little too much. Madame Beck herself was the soul of
- discretion, besides having as strong a brain and sound a judgment as
- ever furnished a human head; that she should know the contents of my
- casket, was not pleasant, but might be borne. Little Jesuit
- inquisitress as she was, she could see things in a true light, and
- understand them in an unperverted sense; but the idea that she had
- ventured to communicate information, thus gained, to others; that she
- had, perhaps, amused herself with a companion over documents, in my
- eyes most sacred, shocked me cruelly. Yet, that such was the case I now
- saw reason to fear; I even guessed her confidant. Her kinsman, M. Paul
- Emanuel, had spent yesterday evening with her: she was much in the
- habit of consulting him, and of discussing with him matters she
- broached to no one else. This very morning, in class, that gentleman
- had favoured me with a glance which he seemed to have borrowed from
- Vashti, the actress; I had not at the moment comprehended that blue,
- yet lurid, flash out of his angry eye; but I read its meaning now.
- _He_, I believed, was not apt to regard what concerned me from a fair
- point of view, nor to judge me with tolerance and candour: I had always
- found him severe and suspicious: the thought that these letters, mere
- friendly letters as they were, had fallen once, and might fall again,
- into his hands, jarred my very soul.
- What should I do to prevent this? In what corner of this strange house
- was it possible to find security or secresy? Where could a key be a
- safeguard, or a padlock a barrier?
- In the grenier? No, I did not like the grenier. Besides, most of the
- boxes and drawers there were mouldering, and did not lock. Rats, too,
- gnawed their way through the decayed wood; and mice made nests amongst
- the litter of their contents: my dear letters (most dear still, though
- Ichabod was written on their covers) might be consumed by vermin;
- certainly the writing would soon become obliterated by damp. No; the
- grenier would not do--but where then?
- While pondering this problem, I sat in the dormitory window-seat. It
- was a fine frosty afternoon; the winter sun, already setting, gleamed
- pale on the tops of the garden-shrubs in the "allée défendue." One
- great old pear-tree--the nun's pear-tree--stood up a tall dryad
- skeleton, grey, gaunt, and stripped. A thought struck me--one of those
- queer fantastic thoughts that will sometimes strike solitary people. I
- put on my bonnet, cloak, and furs, and went out into the city.
- Bending my steps to the old historical quarter of the town, whose hoax
- and overshadowed precincts I always sought by instinct in melancholy
- moods, I wandered on from street to street, till, having crossed a half
- deserted "place" or square, I found myself before a sort of broker's
- shop; an ancient place, full of ancient things. What I wanted was a
- metal box which might be soldered, or a thick glass jar or bottle which
- might be stoppered or sealed hermetically. Amongst miscellaneous heaps,
- I found and purchased the latter article.
- I then made a little roll of my letters, wrapped them in oiled silk,
- bound them with twine, and, having put them in the bottle, got the old
- Jew broker to stopper, seal, and make it air-tight. While obeying my
- directions, he glanced at me now and then suspiciously from under his
- frost-white eyelashes. I believe he thought there was some evil deed on
- hand. In all this I had a dreary something--not pleasure--but a sad,
- lonely satisfaction. The impulse under which I acted, the mood
- controlling me, were similar to the impulse and the mood which had
- induced me to visit the confessional. With quick walking I regained the
- pensionnat just at dark, and in time for dinner.
- At seven o'clock the moon rose. At half-past seven, when the pupils and
- teachers were at study, and Madame Beck was with her mother and
- children in the salle-à-manger, when the half-boarders were all gone
- home, and Rosine had left the vestibule, and all was still--I shawled
- myself, and, taking the sealed jar, stole out through the first-classe
- door, into the berceau and thence into the "allée défendue."
- Methusaleh, the pear-tree, stood at the further end of this walk, near
- my seat: he rose up, dim and gray, above the lower shrubs round him.
- Now Methusaleh, though so very old, was of sound timber still; only
- there was a hole, or rather a deep hollow, near his root. I knew there
- was such a hollow, hidden partly by ivy and creepers growing thick
- round; and there I meditated hiding my treasure. But I was not only
- going to hide a treasure--I meant also to bury a grief. That grief over
- which I had lately been weeping, as I wrapped it in its winding-sheet,
- must be interred.
- Well, I cleared away the ivy, and found the hole; it was large enough
- to receive the jar, and I thrust it deep in. In a tool-shed at the
- bottom of the garden, lay the relics of building-materials, left by
- masons lately employed to repair a part of the premises. I fetched
- thence a slate and some mortar, put the slate on the hollow, secured it
- with cement, covered the hole with black mould, and, finally, replaced
- the ivy. This done, I rested, leaning against the tree; lingering, like
- any other mourner, beside a newly-sodded grave.
- The air of the night was very still, but dim with a peculiar mist,
- which changed the moonlight into a luminous haze. In this air, or this
- mist, there was some quality--electrical, perhaps--which acted in
- strange sort upon me. I felt then as I had felt a year ago in
- England--on a night when the aurora borealis was streaming and sweeping
- round heaven, when, belated in lonely fields, I had paused to watch
- that mustering of an army with banners--that quivering of serried
- lances--that swift ascent of messengers from below the north star to
- the dark, high keystone of heaven's arch. I felt, not happy, far
- otherwise, but strong with reinforced strength.
- If life be a war, it seemed my destiny to conduct it single-handed. I
- pondered now how to break up my winter-quarters--to leave an encampment
- where food and forage failed. Perhaps, to effect this change, another
- pitched battle must be fought with fortune; if so, I had a mind to the
- encounter: too poor to lose, God might destine me to gain. But what
- road was open?--what plan available?
- On this question I was still pausing, when the moon, so dim hitherto,
- seemed to shine out somewhat brighter: a ray gleamed even white before
- me, and a shadow became distinct and marked. I looked more narrowly, to
- make out the cause of this well-defined contrast appearing a little
- suddenly in the obscure alley: whiter and blacker it grew on my eye: it
- took shape with instantaneous transformation. I stood about three yards
- from a tall, sable-robed, snowy-veiled woman.
- Five minutes passed. I neither fled nor shrieked. She was there still.
- I spoke.
- "Who are you? and why do you come to me?"
- She stood mute. She had no face--no features: all below her brow was
- masked with a white cloth; but she had eyes, and they viewed me.
- I felt, if not brave, yet a little desperate; and desperation will
- often suffice to fill the post and do the work of courage. I advanced
- one step. I stretched out my hand, for I meant to touch her. She seemed
- to recede. I drew nearer: her recession, still silent, became swift. A
- mass of shrubs, full-leaved evergreens, laurel and dense yew,
- intervened between me and what I followed. Having passed that obstacle,
- I looked and saw nothing. I waited. I said,--"If you have any errand to
- men, come back and deliver it." Nothing spoke or re-appeared.
- This time there was no Dr. John to whom to have recourse: there was no
- one to whom I dared whisper the words, "I have again seen the nun."
- * * * * *
- Paulina Mary sought my frequent presence in the Rue Crécy. In the old
- Bretton days, though she had never professed herself fond of me, my
- society had soon become to her a sort of unconscious necessary. I used
- to notice that if I withdrew to my room, she would speedily come
- trotting after me, and opening the door and peeping in, say, with her
- little peremptory accent,--"Come down. Why do you sit here by yourself?
- You must come into the parlour."
- In the same spirit she urged me now--"Leave the Rue Fossette," she
- said, "and come and live with us. Papa would give you far more than
- Madame Beck gives you."
- Mr. Home himself offered me a handsome sum--thrice my present
- salary--if I would accept the office of companion to his daughter. I
- declined. I think I should have declined had I been poorer than I was,
- and with scantier fund of resource, more stinted narrowness of future
- prospect. I had not that vocation. I could teach; I could give lessons;
- but to be either a private governess or a companion was unnatural to
- me. Rather than fill the former post in any great house, I would
- deliberately have taken a housemaid's place, bought a strong pair of
- gloves, swept bedrooms and staircases, and cleaned stoves and locks, in
- peace and independence. Rather than be a companion, I would have made
- shirts and starved.
- I was no bright lady's shadow--not Miss de Bassompierre's. Overcast
- enough it was my nature often to be; of a subdued habit I was: but the
- dimness and depression must both be voluntary--such as kept me docile
- at my desk, in the midst of my now well-accustomed pupils in Madame
- Beck's first classe; or alone, at my own bedside, in her dormitory, or
- in the alley and seat which were called mine, in her garden: my
- qualifications were not convertible, nor adaptable; they could not be
- made the foil of any gem, the adjunct of any beauty, the appendage of
- any greatness in Christendom. Madame Beck and I, without assimilating,
- understood each other well. I was not _her_ companion, nor her
- children's governess; she left me free: she tied me to nothing--not to
- herself--not even to her interests: once, when she had for a fortnight
- been called from home by a near relation's illness, and on her return,
- all anxious and full of care about her establishment, lest something in
- her absence should have gone wrong finding that matters had proceeded
- much as usual, and that there was no evidence of glaring neglect--she
- made each of the teachers a present, in acknowledgment of steadiness.
- To my bedside she came at twelve o'clock at night, and told me she had
- no present for me: "I must make fidelity advantageous to the St.
- Pierre," said she; "if I attempt to make it advantageous to you, there
- will arise misunderstanding between us--perhaps separation. One thing,
- however, I _can_ do to please you--leave you alone with your liberty:
- c'est-ce que je ferai." She kept her word. Every slight shackle she had
- ever laid on me, she, from that time, with quiet hand removed. Thus I
- had pleasure in voluntarily respecting her rules: gratification in
- devoting double time, in taking double pains with the pupils she
- committed to my charge.
- As to Mary de Bassompierre, I visited her with pleasure, though I would
- not live with her. My visits soon taught me that it was unlikely even
- my occasional and voluntary society would long be indispensable to her.
- M. de Bassompierre, for his part, seemed impervious to this conjecture,
- blind to this possibility; unconscious as any child to the signs, the
- likelihoods, the fitful beginnings of what, when it drew to an end, he
- might not approve.
- Whether or not he would cordially approve, I used to speculate.
- Difficult to say. He was much taken up with scientific interests; keen,
- intent, and somewhat oppugnant in what concerned his favourite
- pursuits, but unsuspicious and trustful in the ordinary affairs of
- life. From all I could gather, he seemed to regard his "daughterling"
- as still but a child, and probably had not yet admitted the notion that
- others might look on her in a different light: he would speak of what
- should be done when "Polly" was a woman, when she should be grown up;
- and "Polly," standing beside his chair, would sometimes smile and take
- his honoured head between her little hands, and kiss his iron-grey
- locks; and, at other times, she would pout and toss her curls: but she
- never said, "Papa, I _am_ grown up."
- She had different moods for different people. With her father she
- really was still a child, or child-like, affectionate, merry, and
- playful. With me she was serious, and as womanly as thought and feeling
- could make her. With Mrs. Bretton she was docile and reliant, but not
- expansive. With Graham she was shy, at present very shy; at moments she
- tried to be cold; on occasion she endeavoured to shun him. His step
- made her start; his entrance hushed her; when he spoke, her answers
- failed of fluency; when he took leave, she remained self-vexed and
- disconcerted. Even her father noticed this demeanour in her.
- "My little Polly," he said once, "you live too retired a life; if you
- grow to be a woman with these shy manners, you will hardly be fitted
- for society. You really make quite a stranger of Dr. Bretton: how is
- this? Don't you remember that, as a little girl, you used to be rather
- partial to him?"
- "_Rather_, papa," echoed she, with her slightly dry, yet gentle and
- simple tone.
- "And you don't like him now? What has he done?"
- "Nothing. Y--e--s, I like him a little; but we are grown strange to
- each other."
- "Then rub it off, Polly; rub the rust and the strangeness off. Talk
- away when he is here, and have no fear of him?"
- "_He_ does not talk much. Is he afraid of me, do you think, papa?"
- "Oh, to be sure, what man would not be afraid of such a little silent
- lady?"
- "Then tell him some day not to mind my being silent. Say that it is my
- way, and that I have no unfriendly intention."
- "Your way, you little chatter-box? So far from being your way, it is
- only your whim!"
- "Well, I'll improve, papa."
- And very pretty was the grace with which, the next day, she tried to
- keep her word. I saw her make the effort to converse affably with Dr.
- John on general topics. The attention called into her guest's face a
- pleasurable glow; he met her with caution, and replied to her in his
- softest tones, as if there was a kind of gossamer happiness hanging in
- the air which he feared to disturb by drawing too deep a breath.
- Certainly, in her timid yet earnest advance to friendship, it could not
- be denied that there was a most exquisite and fairy charm.
- When the Doctor was gone, she approached her father's chair.
- "Did I keep my word, papa? Did I behave better?"
- "My Polly behaved like a queen. I shall become quite proud of her if
- this improvement continues. By-and-by we shall see her receiving my
- guests with quite a calm, grand manner. Miss Lucy and I will have to
- look about us, and polish up all our best airs and graces lest we
- should be thrown into the shade. Still, Polly, there is a little
- flutter, a little tendency to stammer now and then, and even, to lisp
- as you lisped when you were six years old."
- "No, papa," interrupted she indignantly, "that can't be true."
- "I appeal to Miss Lucy. Did she not, in answering Dr. Bretton's
- question as to whether she had ever seen the palace of the Prince of
- Bois l'Etang, say, 'yeth,' she had been there 'theveral' times?"
- "Papa, you are satirical, you are méchant! I can pronounce all the
- letters of the alphabet as clearly as you can. But tell me this you are
- very particular in making me be civil to Dr. Bretton, do you like him
- yourself?"
- "To be sure: for old acquaintance sake I like him: then he is a very
- good son to his mother; besides being a kind-hearted fellow and clever
- in his profession: yes, the callant is well enough."
- "_Callant_! Ah, Scotchman! Papa, is it the Edinburgh or the Aberdeen
- accent you have?"
- "Both, my pet, both: and doubtless the Glaswegian into the bargain. It
- is that which enables me to speak French so well: a gude Scots tongue
- always succeeds well at the French."
- "_The_ French! Scotch again: incorrigible papa. You, too, need
- schooling."
- "Well, Polly, you must persuade Miss Snowe to undertake both you and
- me; to make you steady and womanly, and me refined and classical."
- The light in which M. de Bassompierre evidently regarded "Miss Snowe,"
- used to occasion me much inward edification. What contradictory
- attributes of character we sometimes find ascribed to us, according to
- the eye with which we are viewed! Madame Beck esteemed me learned and
- blue; Miss Fanshawe, caustic, ironic, and cynical; Mr. Home, a model
- teacher, the essence of the sedate and discreet: somewhat conventional,
- perhaps, too strict, limited, and scrupulous, but still the pink and
- pattern of governess-correctness; whilst another person, Professor Paul
- Emanuel, to wit, never lost an opportunity of intimating his opinion
- that mine was rather a fiery and rash nature--adventurous, indocile,
- and audacious. I smiled at them all. If any one knew me it was little
- Paulina Mary.
- As I would not be Paulina's nominal and paid companion, genial and
- harmonious as I began to find her intercourse, she persuaded me to join
- her in some study, as a regular and settled means of sustaining
- communication: she proposed the German language, which, like myself,
- she found difficult of mastery. We agreed to take our lessons in the
- Rue Crécy of the same mistress; this arrangement threw us together for
- some hours of every week. M. de Bassompierre seemed quite pleased: it
- perfectly met his approbation, that Madame Minerva Gravity should
- associate a portion of her leisure with that of his fair and dear child.
- That other self-elected judge of mine, the professor in the Rue
- Fossette, discovering by some surreptitious spying means, that I was no
- longer so stationary as hitherto, but went out regularly at certain
- hours of certain days, took it upon himself to place me under
- surveillance. People said M. Emanuel had been brought up amongst
- Jesuits. I should more readily have accredited this report had his
- manoeuvres been better masked. As it was, I doubted it. Never was a
- more undisguised schemer, a franker, looser intriguer. He would analyze
- his own machinations: elaborately contrive plots, and forthwith indulge
- in explanatory boasts of their skill. I know not whether I was more
- amused or provoked, by his stepping up to me one morning and whispering
- solemnly that he "had his eye on me: _he_ at least would discharge the
- duty of a friend, and not leave me entirely to my own devices. My
- proceedings seemed at present very unsettled: he did not know what to
- make of them: he thought his cousin Beck very much to blame in
- suffering this sort of fluttering inconsistency in a teacher attached
- to her house. What had a person devoted to a serious calling, that of
- education, to do with Counts and Countesses, hotels and châteaux? To
- him, I seemed altogether 'en l'air.' On his faith, he believed I went
- out six days in the seven."
- I said, "Monsieur exaggerated. I certainly had enjoyed the advantage of
- a little change lately, but not before it had become necessary; and the
- privilege was by no means exercised in excess."
- "Necessary! How was it necessary? I was well enough, he supposed?
- Change necessary! He would recommend me to look at the Catholic
- 'religieuses,' and study _their_ lives. _They_ asked no change."
- I am no judge of what expression crossed my face when he thus spoke,
- but it was one which provoked him: he accused me of being reckless,
- worldly, and epicurean; ambitious of greatness, and feverishly athirst
- for the pomps and vanities of life. It seems I had no "dévouement," no
- "récueillement" in my character; no spirit of grace, faith, sacrifice,
- or self-abasement. Feeling the inutility of answering these charges, I
- mutely continued the correction of a pile of English exercises.
- "He could see in me nothing Christian: like many other Protestants, I
- revelled in the pride and self-will of paganism."
- I slightly turned from him, nestling still closer under the wing of
- silence.
- A vague sound grumbled between his teeth; it could not surely be a
- "juron:" he was too religious for that; but I am certain I heard the
- word _sacré_. Grievous to relate, the same word was repeated, with the
- unequivocal addition of _mille_ something, when I passed him about two
- hours afterwards in the corridor, prepared to go and take my German
- lesson in the Rue Crécy. Never was a better little man, in some points,
- than M. Paul: never, in others, a more waspish little despot.
- * * * * *
- Our German mistress, Fräulein Anna Braun, was a worthy, hearty woman,
- of about forty-five; she ought, perhaps, to have lived in the days of
- Queen Elizabeth, as she habitually consumed, for her first and second
- breakfasts, beer and beef: also, her direct and downright Deutsch
- nature seemed to suffer a sensation of cruel restraint from what she
- called our English reserve; though we thought we were very cordial with
- her: but we did not slap her on the shoulder, and if we consented to
- kiss her cheek, it was done quietly, and without any explosive smack.
- These omissions oppressed and depressed her considerably; still, on the
- whole, we got on very well. Accustomed to instruct foreign girls, who
- hardly ever will think and study for themselves--who have no idea of
- grappling with a difficulty, and overcoming it by dint of reflection or
- application--our progress, which in truth was very leisurely, seemed to
- astound her. In her eyes, we were a pair of glacial prodigies, cold,
- proud, and preternatural.
- The young Countess _was_ a little proud, a little fastidious: and
- perhaps, with her native delicacy and beauty, she had a right to these
- feelings; but I think it was a total mistake to ascribe them to me. I
- never evaded the morning salute, which Paulina would slip when she
- could; nor was a certain little manner of still disdain a weapon known
- in my armoury of defence; whereas, Paulina always kept it clear, fine,
- and bright, and any rough German sally called forth at once its steelly
- glisten.
- Honest Anna Braun, in some measure, felt this difference; and while she
- half-feared, half-worshipped Paulina, as a sort of dainty nymph--an
- Undine--she took refuge with me, as a being all mortal, and of easier
- mood.
- A book we liked well to read and translate was Schiller's Ballads;
- Paulina soon learned to read them beautifully; the Fräulein would
- listen to her with a broad smile of pleasure, and say her voice sounded
- like music. She translated them, too, with a facile flow of language,
- and in a strain of kindred and poetic fervour: her cheek would flush,
- her lips tremblingly smile, her beauteous eyes kindle or melt as she
- went on. She learnt the best by heart, and would often recite them when
- we were alone together. One she liked well was "Des Mädchens Klage:"
- that is, she liked well to repeat the words, she found plaintive melody
- in the sound; the sense she would criticise. She murmured, as we sat
- over the fire one evening:--
- Du Heilige, rufe dein Kind zurück,
- Ich habe genossen das irdische Glück,
- Ich habe gelebt und geliebet!
- "Lived and loved!" said she, "is that the summit of earthly happiness,
- the end of life--to love? I don't think it is. It may be the extreme of
- mortal misery, it may be sheer waste of time, and fruitless torture of
- feeling. If Schiller had said to _be_ loved, he might have come nearer
- the truth. Is not that another thing, Lucy, to be loved?"
- "I suppose it may be: but why consider the subject? What is love to
- you? What do you know about it?"
- She crimsoned, half in irritation, half in shame.
- "Now, Lucy," she said, "I won't take that from you. It may be well for
- papa to look on me as a baby: I rather prefer that he should thus view
- me; but _you_ know and shall learn to acknowledge that I am verging on
- my nineteenth year."
- "No matter if it were your twenty-ninth; we will anticipate no feelings
- by discussion and conversation; we will not talk about love."
- "Indeed, indeed!" said she--all in hurry and heat--"you may think to
- check and hold me in, as much as you please; but I _have_ talked about
- it, and heard about it too; and a great deal and lately, and
- disagreeably and detrimentally: and in a way you wouldn't approve."
- And the vexed, triumphant, pretty, naughty being laughed. I could not
- discern what she meant, and I would not ask her: I was nonplussed.
- Seeing, however, the utmost innocence in her countenance--combined with
- some transient perverseness and petulance--I said at last,--
- "Who talks to you disagreeably and detrimentally on such matters? Who
- that has near access to you would dare to do it?"
- "Lucy," replied she more softly, "it is a person who makes me miserable
- sometimes; and I wish she would keep away--I don't want her."
- "But who, Paulina, can it be? You puzzle me much."
- "It is--it is my cousin Ginevra. Every time she has leave to visit Mrs.
- Cholmondeley she calls here, and whenever she finds me alone she begins
- to talk about her admirers. Love, indeed! You should hear all she has
- to say about love."
- "Oh, I have heard it," said I, quite coolly; "and on the whole, perhaps
- it is as well you should have heard it too: it is not to be regretted,
- it is all right. Yet, surely, Ginevra's mind cannot influence yours.
- You can look over both her head and her heart."
- "She does influence me very much. She has the art of disturbing my
- happiness and unsettling my opinions. She hurts me through the feelings
- and people dearest to me."
- "What does she say, Paulina? Give me some idea. There may be
- counteraction of the damage done."
- "The people I have longest and most esteemed are degraded by her. She
- does not spare Mrs. Bretton--she does not spare.... Graham."
- "No, I daresay: and how does she mix up these with her sentiment and
- her...._love_? She does mix them, I suppose?"
- "Lucy, she is insolent; and, I believe, false. You know Dr. Bretton. We
- both know him. He may be careless and proud; but when was he ever mean
- or slavish? Day after day she shows him to me kneeling at her feet,
- pursuing her like her shadow. She--repulsing him with insult, and he
- imploring her with infatuation. Lucy, is it true? Is any of it true?"
- "It may be true that he once thought her handsome: does she give him
- out as still her suitor?"
- "She says she might marry him any day: he only waits her consent."
- "It is these tales which have caused that reserve in your manner
- towards Graham which your father noticed."
- "They have certainly made me all doubtful about his character. As
- Ginevra speaks, they do not carry with them the sound of unmixed truth:
- I believe she exaggerates--perhaps invents--but I want to know how far."
- "Suppose we bring Miss Fanshawe to some proof. Give her an opportunity
- of displaying the power she boasts."
- "I could do that to-morrow. Papa has asked some gentlemen to dinner,
- all savants. Graham, who, papa is beginning to discover, is a savant,
- too--skilled, they say, in more than one branch of science--is among
- the number. Now I should be miserable to sit at table unsupported,
- amidst such a party. I could not talk to Messieurs A---- and Z----, the
- Parisian Academicians: all my new credit for manner would be put in
- peril. You and Mrs. Bretton must come for my sake; Ginevra, at a word,
- will join you."
- "Yes; then I will carry a message of invitation, and she shall have the
- chance of justifying her character for veracity."
- CHAPTER XXVII.
- THE HÔTEL CRÉCY.
- The morrow turned out a more lively and busy day than we--or than I, at
- least--had anticipated. It seems it was the birthday of one of the young
- princes of Labassecour--the eldest, I think, the Duc de Dindonneau, and
- a general holiday was given in his honour at the schools, and
- especially at the principal "Athénée," or college. The youth of that
- institution had also concocted, and were to present a loyal address;
- for which purpose they were to be assembled in the public building
- where the yearly examinations were conducted, and the prizes
- distributed. After the ceremony of presentation, an oration, or
- "discours," was to follow from one of the professors.
- Several of M. de Bassompierre's friends--the savants--being more or less
- connected with the Athénée, they were expected to attend on this
- occasion; together with the worshipful municipality of Villette, M. le
- Chevalier Staas, the burgomaster, and the parents and kinsfolk of the
- Athenians in general. M. de Bassompierre was engaged by his friends to
- accompany them; his fair daughter would, of course, be of the party,
- and she wrote a little note to Ginevra and myself, bidding us come
- early that we might join her.
- As Miss Fanshawe and I were dressing in the dormitory of the Rue
- Fossette, she (Miss F.) suddenly burst into a laugh.
- "What now?" I asked; for she had suspended the operation of arranging
- her attire, and was gazing at me.
- "It seems so odd," she replied, with her usual half-honest
- half-insolent unreserve, "that you and I should now be so much on a
- level, visiting in the same sphere; having the same connections."
- "Why, yes," said I; "I had not much respect for the connections you
- chiefly frequented awhile ago: Mrs. Cholmondeley and Co. would never
- have suited me at all."
- "Who _are_ you, Miss Snowe?" she inquired, in a tone of such
- undisguised and unsophisticated curiosity, as made me laugh in my turn.
- "You used to call yourself a nursery governess; when you first came
- here you really had the care of the children in this house: I have seen
- you carry little Georgette in your arms, like a bonne--few governesses
- would have condescended so far--and now Madame Beck treats you with
- more courtesy than she treats the Parisienne, St. Pierre; and that
- proud chit, my cousin, makes you her bosom friend!"
- "Wonderful!" I agreed, much amused at her mystification. "Who am I
- indeed? Perhaps a personage in disguise. Pity I don't look the
- character."
- "I wonder you are not more flattered by all this," she went on; "you
- take it with strange composure. If you really are the nobody I once
- thought you, you must be a cool hand."
- "The nobody you once thought me!" I repeated, and my face grew a little
- hot; but I would not be angry: of what importance was a school-girl's
- crude use of the terms nobody and somebody? I confined myself,
- therefore, to the remark that I had merely met with civility; and asked
- "what she saw in civility to throw the recipient into a fever of
- confusion?"
- "One can't help wondering at some things," she persisted.
- "Wondering at marvels of your own manufacture. Are you ready at last?"
- "Yes; let me take your arm."
- "I would rather not: we will walk side by side."
- When she took my arm, she always leaned upon me her whole weight; and,
- as I was not a gentleman, or her lover, I did not like it.
- "There, again!" she cried. "I thought, by offering to take your arm, to
- intimate approbation of your dress and general appearance: I meant it
- as a compliment."
- "You did? You meant, in short, to express that you are not ashamed to
- be seen in the street with me? That if Mrs. Cholmondeley should be
- fondling her lapdog at some window, or Colonel de Hamal picking his
- teeth in a balcony, and should catch a glimpse of us, you would not
- quite blush for your companion?"
- "Yes," said she, with that directness which was her best point--which
- gave an honest plainness to her very fibs when she told them--which
- was, in short, the salt, the sole preservative ingredient of a
- character otherwise not formed to keep.
- I delegated the trouble of commenting on this "yes" to my countenance;
- or rather, my under-lip voluntarily anticipated my tongue of course,
- reverence and solemnity were not the feelings expressed in the look I
- gave her.
- "Scornful, sneering creature!" she went on, as we crossed a great
- square, and entered the quiet, pleasant park, our nearest way to the
- Rue Crécy. "Nobody in this world was ever such a Turk to me as you are!"
- "You bring it on yourself: let me alone: have the sense to be quiet: I
- will let you alone."
- "As if one _could_ let you alone, when you are so peculiar and so
- mysterious!"
- "The mystery and peculiarity being entirely the conception of your own
- brain--maggots--neither more nor less, be so good as to keep them out
- of my sight."
- "But _are_ you anybody?" persevered she, pushing her hand, in spite of
- me, under my arm; and that arm pressed itself with inhospitable
- closeness against my side, by way of keeping out the intruder.
- "Yes," I said, "I am a rising character: once an old lady's companion,
- then a nursery-governess, now a school-teacher."
- "Do--_do_ tell me who you are? I'll not repeat it," she urged, adhering
- with ludicrous tenacity to the wise notion of an incognito she had got
- hold of; and she squeezed the arm of which she had now obtained full
- possession, and coaxed and conjured till I was obliged to pause in the
- park to laugh. Throughout our walk she rang the most fanciful changes
- on this theme; proving, by her obstinate credulity, or incredulity, her
- incapacity to conceive how any person not bolstered up by birth or
- wealth, not supported by some consciousness of name or connection,
- could maintain an attitude of reasonable integrity. As for me, it quite
- sufficed to my mental tranquillity that I was known where it imported
- that known I should be; the rest sat on me easily: pedigree, social
- position, and recondite intellectual acquisition, occupied about the
- same space and place in my interests and thoughts; they were my
- third-class lodgers--to whom could be assigned only the small
- sitting-room and the little back bedroom: even if the dining and
- drawing-rooms stood empty, I never confessed it to them, as thinking
- minor accommodations better suited to their circumstances. The world, I
- soon learned, held a different estimate: and I make no doubt, the world
- is very right in its view, yet believe also that I am not quite wrong
- in mine.
- There are people whom a lowered position degrades morally, to whom loss
- of connection costs loss of self-respect: are not these justified in
- placing the highest value on that station and association which is
- their safeguard from debasement? If a man feels that he would become
- contemptible in his own eyes were it generally known that his ancestry
- were simple and not gentle, poor and not rich, workers and not
- capitalists, would it be right severely to blame him for keeping these
- fatal facts out of sight--for starting, trembling, quailing at the
- chance which threatens exposure? The longer we live, the more out
- experience widens; the less prone are we to judge our neighbour's
- conduct, to question the world's wisdom: wherever an accumulation of
- small defences is found, whether surrounding the prude's virtue or the
- man of the world's respectability, there, be sure, it is needed.
- We reached the Hôtel Crécy; Paulina was ready; Mrs. Bretton was with
- her; and, under her escort and that of M. de Bassompierre, we were soon
- conducted to the place of assembly, and seated in good seats, at a
- convenient distance from the Tribune. The youth of the Athénée were
- marshalled before us, the municipality and their bourgmestre were in
- places of honour, the young princes, with their tutors, occupied a
- conspicuous position, and the body of the building was crowded with the
- aristocracy and first burghers of the town.
- Concerning the identity of the professor by whom the "discours" was to
- be delivered, I had as yet entertained neither care nor question. Some
- vague expectation I had that a savant would stand up and deliver a
- formal speech, half dogmatism to the Athenians, half flattery to the
- princes.
- The Tribune was yet empty when we entered, but in ten minutes after it
- was filled; suddenly, in a second of time, a head, chest, and arms grew
- above the crimson desk. This head I knew: its colour, shape, port,
- expression, were familiar both to me and Miss Fanshawe; the blackness
- and closeness of cranium, the amplitude and paleness of brow, the
- blueness and fire of glance, were details so domesticated in the
- memory, and so knit with many a whimsical association, as almost by
- this their sudden apparition, to tickle fancy to a laugh. Indeed, I
- confess, for my part, I did laugh till I was warm; but then I bent my
- head, and made my handkerchief and a lowered veil the sole confidants
- of my mirth.
- I think I was glad to see M. Paul; I think it was rather pleasant than
- otherwise, to behold him set up there, fierce and frank, dark and
- candid, testy and fearless, as when regnant on his estrade in class.
- His presence was such a surprise: I had not once thought of expecting
- him, though I knew he filled the chair of Belles Lettres in the
- college. With _him_ in that Tribune, I felt sure that neither formalism
- nor flattery would be our doom; but for what was vouchsafed us, for
- what was poured suddenly, rapidly, continuously, on our heads--I own I
- was not prepared.
- He spoke to the princes, the nobles, the magistrates, and the burghers,
- with just the same ease, with almost the same pointed, choleric
- earnestness, with which he was wont to harangue the three divisions of
- the Rue Fossette. The collegians he addressed, not as schoolboys, but
- as future citizens and embryo patriots. The times which have since come
- on Europe had not been foretold yet, and M. Emanuel's spirit seemed new
- to me. Who would have thought the flat and fat soil of Labassecour
- could yield political convictions and national feelings, such as were
- now strongly expressed? Of the bearing of his opinions I need here give
- no special indication; yet it may be permitted me to say that I
- believed the little man not more earnest than right in what he said:
- with all his fire he was severe and sensible; he trampled Utopian
- theories under his heel; he rejected wild dreams with scorn;--but when
- he looked in the face of tyranny--oh, then there opened a light in his
- eye worth seeing; and when he spoke of injustice, his voice gave no
- uncertain sound, but reminded me rather of the band-trumpet, ringing at
- twilight from the park.
- I do not think his audience were generally susceptible of sharing his
- flame in its purity; but some of the college youth caught fire as he
- eloquently told them what should be their path and endeavour in their
- country's and in Europe's future. They gave him a long, loud, ringing
- cheer, as he concluded: with all his fierceness, he was their favourite
- professor.
- As our party left the Hall, he stood at the entrance; he saw and knew
- me, and lifted his hat; he offered his hand in passing, and uttered the
- words "Qu'en dites vous?"--question eminently characteristic, and
- reminding me, even in this his moment of triumph, of that inquisitive
- restlessness, that absence of what I considered desirable self-control,
- which were amongst his faults. He should not have cared just then to
- ask what I thought, or what anybody thought, but he _did_ care, and he
- was too natural to conceal, too impulsive to repress his wish. Well! if
- I blamed his over-eagerness, I liked his _naiveté_. I would have
- praised him: I had plenty of praise in my heart; but, alas! no words on
- my lips. Who _has_ words at the right moment? I stammered some lame
- expressions; but was truly glad when other people, coming up with
- profuse congratulations, covered my deficiency by their redundancy.
- A gentleman introduced him to M. de Bassompierre; and the Count, who
- had likewise been highly gratified, asked him to join his friends (for
- the most part M. Emanuel's likewise), and to dine with them at the
- Hôtel Crécy. He declined dinner, for he was a man always somewhat shy
- at meeting the advances of the wealthy: there was a strength of sturdy
- independence in the stringing of his sinews--not obtrusive, but
- pleasant enough to discover as one advanced in knowledge of his
- character; he promised, however, to step in with his friend, M. A----,
- a French Academician, in the course of the evening.
- At dinner that day, Ginevra and Paulina each looked, in her own way,
- very beautiful; the former, perhaps, boasted the advantage in material
- charms, but the latter shone pre-eminent for attractions more subtle
- and spiritual: for light and eloquence of eye, for grace of mien, for
- winning variety of expression. Ginevra's dress of deep crimson relieved
- well her light curls, and harmonized with her rose-like bloom.
- Paulina's attire--in fashion close, though faultlessly neat, but in
- texture clear and white--made the eye grateful for the delicate life of
- her complexion, for the soft animation of her countenance, for the
- tender depth of her eyes, for the brown shadow and bounteous flow of
- her hair--darker than that of her Saxon cousin, as were also her
- eyebrows, her eyelashes, her full irids, and large mobile pupils.
- Nature having traced all these details slightly, and with a careless
- hand, in Miss Fanshawe's case; and in Miss de Bassompierre's, wrought
- them to a high and delicate finish.
- Paulina was awed by the savants, but not quite to mutism: she conversed
- modestly, diffidently; not without effort, but with so true a
- sweetness, so fine and penetrating a sense, that her father more than
- once suspended his own discourse to listen, and fixed on her an eye of
- proud delight. It was a polite Frenchman, M. Z----, a very learned, but
- quite a courtly man, who had drawn her into discourse. I was charmed
- with her French; it was faultless--the structure correct, the idioms
- true, the accent pure; Ginevra, who had lived half her life on the
- Continent, could do nothing like it not that words ever failed Miss
- Fanshawe, but real accuracy and purity she neither possessed, nor in
- any number of years would acquire. Here, too, M. de Bassompierre was
- gratified; for, on the point of language, he was critical.
- Another listener and observer there was; one who, detained by some
- exigency of his profession, had come in late to dinner. Both ladies
- were quietly scanned by Dr. Bretton, at the moment of taking his seat
- at the table; and that guarded survey was more than once renewed. His
- arrival roused Miss Fanshawe, who had hitherto appeared listless: she
- now became smiling and complacent, talked--though what she said was
- rarely to the purpose--or rather, was of a purpose somewhat
- mortifyingly below the standard of the occasion. Her light,
- disconnected prattle might have gratified Graham once; perhaps it
- pleased him still: perhaps it was only fancy which suggested the
- thought that, while his eye was filled and his ear fed, his taste, his
- keen zest, his lively intelligence, were not equally consulted and
- regaled. It is certain that, restless and exacting as seemed the demand
- on his attention, he yielded courteously all that was required: his
- manner showed neither pique nor coolness: Ginevra was his neighbour,
- and to her, during dinner, he almost exclusively confined his notice.
- She appeared satisfied, and passed to the drawing-room in very good
- spirits.
- Yet, no sooner had we reached that place of refuge, than she again
- became flat and listless: throwing herself on a couch, she denounced
- both the "discours" and the dinner as stupid affairs, and inquired of
- her cousin how she could hear such a set of prosaic "gros-bonnets" as
- her father gathered about him. The moment the gentlemen were heard to
- move, her railings ceased: she started up, flew to the piano, and
- dashed at it with spirit. Dr. Bretton entering, one of the first, took
- up his station beside her. I thought he would not long maintain that
- post: there was a position near the hearth to which I expected to see
- him attracted: this position he only scanned with his eye; while _he_
- looked, others drew in. The grace and mind of Paulina charmed these
- thoughtful Frenchmen: the fineness of her beauty, the soft courtesy of
- her manner, her immature, but real and inbred tact, pleased their
- national taste; they clustered about her, not indeed to talk science;
- which would have rendered her dumb, but to touch on many subjects in
- letters, in arts, in actual life, on which it soon appeared that she
- had both read and reflected. I listened. I am sure that though Graham
- stood aloof, he listened too: his hearing as well as his vision was
- very fine, quick, discriminating. I knew he gathered the conversation;
- I felt that the mode in which it was sustained suited him
- exquisitely--pleased him almost to pain.
- In Paulina there was more force, both of feeling and character; than
- most people thought--than Graham himself imagined--than she would ever
- show to those who did not wish to see it. To speak truth, reader, there
- is no excellent beauty, no accomplished grace, no reliable refinement,
- without strength as excellent, as complete, as trustworthy. As well
- might you look for good fruit and blossom on a rootless and sapless
- tree, as for charms that will endure in a feeble and relaxed nature.
- For a little while, the blooming semblance of beauty may flourish round
- weakness; but it cannot bear a blast: it soon fades, even in serenest
- sunshine. Graham would have started had any suggestive spirit whispered
- of the sinew and the stamina sustaining that delicate nature; but I who
- had known her as a child, knew or guessed by what a good and strong
- root her graces held to the firm soil of reality.
- While Dr. Bretton listened, and waited an opening in the magic circle,
- his glance restlessly sweeping the room at intervals, lighted by chance
- on me, where I sat in a quiet nook not far from my godmother and M. de
- Bassompierre, who, as usual, were engaged in what Mr. Home called "a
- two-handed crack:" what the Count would have interpreted as a
- tête-à-tête. Graham smiled recognition, crossed the room, asked me how
- I was, told me I looked pale. I also had my own smile at my own
- thought: it was now about three months since Dr. John had spoken to
- me--a lapse of which he was not even conscious. He sat down, and became
- silent. His wish was rather to look than converse. Ginevra and Paulina
- were now opposite to him: he could gaze his fill: he surveyed both
- forms--studied both faces.
- Several new guests, ladies as well as gentlemen, had entered the room
- since dinner, dropping in for the evening conversation; and amongst the
- gentlemen, I may incidentally observe, I had already noticed by
- glimpses, a severe, dark, professorial outline, hovering aloof in an
- inner saloon, seen only in vista. M. Emanuel knew many of the gentlemen
- present, but I think was a stranger to most of the ladies, excepting
- myself; in looking towards the hearth, he could not but see me, and
- naturally made a movement to approach; seeing, however, Dr. Bretton
- also, he changed his mind and held back. If that had been all, there
- would have been no cause for quarrel; but not satisfied with holding
- back, he puckered up his eyebrows, protruded his lip, and looked so
- ugly that I averted my eyes from the displeasing spectacle. M. Joseph
- Emanuel had arrived, as well as his austere brother, and at this very
- moment was relieving Ginevra at the piano. What a master-touch
- succeeded her school-girl jingle! In what grand, grateful tones the
- instrument acknowledged the hand of the true artist!
- "Lucy," began Dr. Bretton, breaking silence and smiling, as Ginevra
- glided before him, casting a glance as she passed by, "Miss Fanshawe is
- certainly a fine girl."
- Of course I assented.
- "Is there," he pursued, "another in the room as lovely?"
- "I think there is not another as handsome."
- "I agree with you, Lucy: you and I do often agree in opinion, in taste,
- I think; or at least in judgment."
- "Do we?" I said, somewhat doubtfully.
- "I believe if you had been a boy, Lucy, instead of a girl--my mother's
- god-son instead of her god-daughter, we should have been good friends:
- our opinions would have melted into each other."
- He had assumed a bantering air: a light, half-caressing, half-ironic,
- shone aslant in his eye. Ah, Graham! I have given more than one
- solitary moment to thoughts and calculations of your estimate of Lucy
- Snowe: was it always kind or just? Had Lucy been intrinsically the same
- but possessing the additional advantages of wealth and station, would
- your manner to her, your value for her, have been quite what they
- actually were? And yet by these questions I would not seriously infer
- blame. No; you might sadden and trouble me sometimes; but then mine was
- a soon-depressed, an easily-deranged temperament--it fell if a cloud
- crossed the sun. Perhaps before the eye of severe equity I should stand
- more at fault than you.
- Trying, then, to keep down the unreasonable pain which thrilled my
- heart, on thus being made to feel that while Graham could devote to
- others the most grave and earnest, the manliest interest, he had no
- more than light raillery for Lucy, the friend of lang syne, I inquired
- calmly,--"On what points are we so closely in accordance?"
- "We each have an observant faculty. You, perhaps, don't give me credit
- for the possession; yet I have it."
- "But you were speaking of tastes: we may see the same objects, yet
- estimate them differently?"
- "Let us bring it to the test. Of course, you cannot but render homage
- to the merits of Miss Fanshawe: now, what do you think of others in the
- room?--my mother, for instance; or the lions yonder, Messieurs A----
- and Z----; or, let us say, that pale little lady, Miss de Bassompierre?"
- "You know what I think of your mother. I have not thought of Messieurs
- A---- and Z----."
- "And the other?"
- "I think she is, as you say, a pale little lady--pale, certainly, just
- now, when she is fatigued with over-excitement."
- "You don't remember her as a child?"
- "I wonder, sometimes, whether you do."
- "I had forgotten her; but it is noticeable, that circumstances,
- persons, even words and looks, that had slipped your memory, may, under
- certain conditions, certain aspects of your own or another's mind,
- revive."
- "That is possible enough."
- "Yet," he continued, "the revival is imperfect--needs confirmation,
- partakes so much of the dim character of a dream, or of the airy one of
- a fancy, that the testimony of a witness becomes necessary for
- corroboration. Were you not a guest at Bretton ten years ago, when Mr.
- Home brought his little girl, whom we then called 'little Polly,' to
- stay with mamma?"
- "I was there the night she came, and also the morning she went away."
- "Rather a peculiar child, was she not? I wonder how I treated her. Was
- I fond of children in those days? Was there anything gracious or kindly
- about me--great, reckless, schoolboy as I was? But you don't recollect
- me, of course?"
- "You have seen your own picture at La Terrasse. It is like you
- personally. In manner, you were almost the same yesterday as to-day."
- "But, Lucy, how is that? Such an oracle really whets my curiosity. What
- am I to-day? What was I the yesterday of ten years back?"
- "Gracious to whatever pleased you--unkindly or cruel to nothing."
- "There you are wrong; I think I was almost a brute to _you_, for
- instance."
- "A brute! No, Graham: I should never have patiently endured brutality."
- "_This_, however, I _do_ remember: quiet Lucy Snowe tasted nothing of
- my grace."
- "As little of your cruelty."
- "Why, had I been Nero himself, I could not have tormented a being
- inoffensive as a shadow."
- I smiled; but I also hushed a groan. Oh!--I just wished he would let me
- alone--cease allusion to me. These epithets--these attributes I put
- from me. His "quiet Lucy Snowe," his "inoffensive shadow," I gave him
- back; not with scorn, but with extreme weariness: theirs was the
- coldness and the pressure of lead; let him whelm me with no such
- weight. Happily, he was soon on another theme.
- "On what terms were 'little Polly' and I? Unless my recollections
- deceive me, we were not foes--"
- "You speak very vaguely. Do you think little Polly's memory, not more
- definite?"
- "Oh! we don't talk of 'little Polly' _now_. Pray say, Miss de
- Bassompierre; and, of course, such a stately personage remembers
- nothing of Bretton. Look at her large eyes, Lucy; can they read a word
- in the page of memory? Are they the same which I used to direct to a
- horn-book? She does not know that I partly taught her to read."
- "In the Bible on Sunday nights?"
- "She has a calm, delicate, rather fine profile now: once what a little
- restless, anxious countenance was hers! What a thing is a child's
- preference--what a bubble! Would you believe it? that lady was fond of
- me!"
- "I think she was in some measure fond of you," said I, moderately.
- "You don't remember then? _I_ had forgotten; but I remember _now_. She
- liked me the best of whatever there was at Bretton."
- "You thought so."
- "I quite well recall it. I wish I could tell her all I recall; or
- rather, I wish some one, you for instance, would go behind and whisper
- it all in her ear, and I could have the delight--here, as I sit--of
- watching her look under the intelligence. Could you manage that, think
- you, Lucy, and make me ever grateful?"
- "Could I manage to make you ever grateful?" said I. "No, _I could
- not_." And I felt my fingers work and my hands interlock: I felt, too,
- an inward courage, warm and resistant. In this matter I was not
- disposed to gratify Dr. John: not at all. With now welcome force, I
- realized his entire misapprehension of my character and nature. He
- wanted always to give me a role not mine. Nature and I opposed him. He
- did not at all guess what I felt: he did not read my eyes, or face, or
- gestures; though, I doubt not, all spoke. Leaning towards me coaxingly,
- he said, softly, "_Do_ content me, Lucy."
- And I would have contented, or, at least, I would clearly have
- enlightened him, and taught him well never again to expect of me the
- part of officious soubrette in a love drama; when, following his, soft,
- eager, murmur, meeting almost his pleading, mellow--"_Do_ content me,
- Lucy!" a sharp hiss pierced my ear on the other side.
- "Petite chatte, doucerette, coquette!" sibillated the sudden
- boa-constrictor; "vous avez l'air bien triste, soumis, rêveur, mais
- vous ne l'êtes pas: c'est moi qui vous le dis: Sauvage! la flamme à
- l'âme, l'éclair aux yeux!"
- "Oui; j'ai la flamme à l'âme, et je dois l'avoir!" retorted I, turning
- in just wrath: but Professor Emanuel had hissed his insult and was gone.
- The worst of the matter was, that Dr. Bretton, whose ears, as I have
- said, were quick and fine, caught every word of this apostrophe; he put
- his handkerchief to his face, and laughed till he shook.
- "Well done, Lucy," cried he; "capital! petite chatte, petite coquette!
- Oh, I must tell my mother! Is it true, Lucy, or half-true? I believe it
- is: you redden to the colour of Miss Fanshawe's gown. And really, by my
- word, now I examine him, that is the same little man who was so savage
- with you at the concert: the very same, and in his soul he is frantic
- at this moment because he sees me laughing. Oh! I must tease him."
- And Graham, yielding to his bent for mischief, laughed, jested, and
- whispered on till I could bear no more, and my eyes filled.
- Suddenly he was sobered: a vacant space appeared near Miss de
- Bassompierre; the circle surrounding her seemed about to dissolve. This
- movement was instantly caught by Graham's eye--ever-vigilant, even
- while laughing; he rose, took his courage in both hands, crossed the
- room, and made the advantage his own. Dr. John, throughout his whole
- life, was a man of luck--a man of success. And why? Because he had the
- eye to see his opportunity, the heart to prompt to well-timed action,
- the nerve to consummate a perfect work. And no tyrant-passion dragged
- him back; no enthusiasms, no foibles encumbered his way. How well he
- looked at this very moment! When Paulina looked up as he reached her
- side, her glance mingled at once with an encountering glance, animated,
- yet modest; his colour, as he spoke to her, became half a blush, half a
- glow. He stood in her presence brave and bashful: subdued and
- unobtrusive, yet decided in his purpose and devoted in his ardour. I
- gathered all this by one view. I did not prolong my observation--time
- failed me, had inclination served: the night wore late; Ginevra and I
- ought already to have been in the Rue Fossette. I rose, and bade
- good-night to my godmother and M. de Bassompierre.
- I know not whether Professor Emanuel had noticed my reluctant
- acceptance of Dr. Bretton's badinage, or whether he perceived that I
- was pained, and that, on the whole, the evening had not been one flow
- of exultant enjoyment for the volatile, pleasure-loving Mademoiselle
- Lucie; but, as I was leaving the room, he stepped up and inquired
- whether I had any one to attend me to the Rue Fossette. The professor
- _now_ spoke politely, and even deferentially, and he looked apologetic
- and repentant; but I could not recognise his civility at a word, nor
- meet his contrition with crude, premature oblivion. Never hitherto had
- I felt seriously disposed to resent his brusqueries, or freeze before
- his fierceness; what he had said to-night, however, I considered
- unwarranted: my extreme disapprobation of the proceeding must be
- marked, however slightly. I merely said:--"I am provided with
- attendance."
- Which was true, as Ginevra and I were to be sent home in the carriage;
- and I passed him with the sliding obeisance with which he was wont to
- be saluted in classe by pupils crossing his estrade.
- Having sought my shawl, I returned to the vestibule. M. Emanuel stood
- there as if waiting. He observed that the night was fine.
- "Is it?" I said, with a tone and manner whose consummate chariness and
- frostiness I could not but applaud. It was so seldom I could properly
- act out my own resolution to be reserved and cool where I had been
- grieved or hurt, that I felt almost proud of this one successful
- effort. That "Is it?" sounded just like the manner of other people. I
- had heard hundreds of such little minced, docked, dry phrases, from the
- pursed-up coral lips of a score of self-possessed, self-sufficing
- misses and mesdemoiselles. That M. Paul would not stand any prolonged
- experience of this sort of dialogue I knew; but he certainly merited a
- sample of the curt and arid. I believe he thought so himself, for he
- took the dose quietly. He looked at my shawl and objected to its
- lightness. I decidedly told him it was as heavy as I wished. Receding
- aloof, and standing apart, I leaned on the banister of the stairs,
- folded my shawl about me, and fixed my eyes on a dreary religious
- painting darkening the wall.
- Ginevra was long in coming: tedious seemed her loitering. M. Paul was
- still there; my ear expected from his lips an angry tone. He came
- nearer. "Now for another hiss!" thought I: had not the action been too
- uncivil I could have, stopped my ears with my fingers in terror of the
- thrill. Nothing happens as we expect: listen for a coo or a murmur; it
- is then you will hear a cry of prey or pain. Await a piercing shriek,
- an angry threat, and welcome an amicable greeting, a low kind whisper.
- M. Paul spoke gently:--"Friends," said he, "do not quarrel for a word.
- Tell me, was it I or ce grand fat d'Anglais" (so he profanely
- denominated Dr. Bretton), "who made your eyes so humid, and your cheeks
- so hot as they are even now?"
- "I am not conscious of you, monsieur, or of any other having excited
- such emotion as you indicate," was my answer; and in giving it, I again
- surpassed my usual self, and achieved a neat, frosty falsehood.
- "But what did I say?" he pursued; "tell me: I was angry: I have
- forgotten my words; what were they?"
- "Such as it is best to forget!" said I, still quite calm and chill.
- "Then it was _my_ words which wounded you? Consider them unsaid: permit
- my retractation; accord my pardon."
- "I am not angry, Monsieur."
- "Then you are worse than angry--grieved. Forgive me, Miss Lucy."
- "M. Emanuel, I _do_ forgive you."
- "Let me hear you say, in the voice natural to you, and not in that
- alien tone, 'Mon ami, je vous pardonne.'"
- He made me smile. Who could help smiling at his wistfulness, his
- simplicity, his earnestness?
- "Bon!" he cried. "Voilà que le jour va poindre! Dites donc, mon ami."
- "Monsieur Paul, je vous pardonne."
- "I will have no monsieur: speak the other word, or I shall not believe
- you sincere: another effort--_mon ami_, or else in English,--my friend!"
- Now, "my friend" had rather another sound and significancy than "_mon
- ami_;" it did not breathe the same sense of domestic and intimate
- affection; "_mon ami_" I could _not_ say to M. Paul; "my friend," I
- could, and did say without difficulty. This distinction existed not for
- him, however, and he was quite satisfied with the English phrase. He
- smiled. You should have seen him smile, reader; and you should have
- marked the difference between his countenance now, and that he wore
- half an hour ago. I cannot affirm that I had ever witnessed the smile
- of pleasure, or content, or kindness round M. Paul's lips, or in his
- eyes before. The ironic, the sarcastic, the disdainful, the
- passionately exultant, I had hundreds of times seen him express by what
- he called a smile, but any illuminated sign of milder or warmer
- feelings struck me as wholly new in his visage. It changed it as from a
- mask to a face: the deep lines left his features; the very complexion
- seemed clearer and fresher; that swart, sallow, southern darkness which
- spoke his Spanish blood, became displaced by a lighter hue. I know not
- that I have ever seen in any other human face an equal metamorphosis
- from a similar cause. He now took me to the carriage: at the same
- moment M. de Bassompierre came out with his niece.
- In a pretty humour was Mistress Fanshawe; she had found the evening a
- grand failure: completely upset as to temper, she gave way to the most
- uncontrolled moroseness as soon as we were seated, and the
- carriage-door closed. Her invectives against Dr. Bretton had something
- venomous in them. Having found herself impotent either to charm or
- sting him, hatred was her only resource; and this hatred she expressed
- in terms so unmeasured and proportion so monstrous, that, after
- listening for a while with assumed stoicism, my outraged sense of
- justice at last and suddenly caught fire. An explosion ensued: for I
- could be passionate, too; especially with my present fair but faulty
- associate, who never failed to stir the worst dregs of me. It was well
- that the carriage-wheels made a tremendous rattle over the flinty
- Choseville pavement, for I can assure the reader there was neither dead
- silence nor calm discussion within the vehicle. Half in earnest, half
- in seeming, I made it my business to storm down Ginevra. She had set
- out rampant from the Rue Crécy; it was necessary to tame her before we
- reached the Rue Fossette: to this end it was indispensable to show up
- her sterling value and high deserts; and this must be done in language
- of which the fidelity and homeliness might challenge comparison with
- the compliments of a John Knox to a Mary Stuart. This was the right
- discipline for Ginevra; it suited her. I am quite sure she went to bed
- that night all the better and more settled in mind and mood, and slept
- all the more sweetly for having undergone a sound moral drubbing.
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
- THE WATCHGUARD.
- M. Paul Emanuel owned an acute sensitiveness to the annoyance of
- interruption, from whatsoever cause occurring, during his lessons: to
- pass through the classe under such circumstances was considered by the
- teachers and pupils of the school, individually and collectively, to be
- as much as a woman's or girl's life was worth.
- Madame Beck herself, if forced to the enterprise, would "skurry"
- through, retrenching her skirts, and carefully coasting the formidable
- estrade, like a ship dreading breakers. As to Rosine, the portress--on
- whom, every half-hour, devolved the fearful duty of fetching pupils out
- of the very heart of one or other of the divisions to take their
- music-lessons in the oratory, the great or little saloon, the
- salle-à-manger, or some other piano-station--she would, upon her second
- or third attempt, frequently become almost tongue-tied from excess of
- consternation--a sentiment inspired by the unspeakable looks levelled
- at her through a pair of dart-dealing spectacles.
- One morning I was sitting in the carré, at work upon a piece of
- embroidery which one of the pupils had commenced but delayed to finish,
- and while my fingers wrought at the frame, my ears regaled themselves
- with listening to the crescendos and cadences of a voice haranguing in
- the neighbouring classe, in tones that waxed momentarily more unquiet,
- more ominously varied. There was a good strong partition-wall between
- me and the gathering storm, as well as a facile means of flight through
- the glass-door to the court, in case it swept this way; so I am afraid
- I derived more amusement than alarm from these thickening symptoms.
- Poor Rosine was not safe: four times that blessed morning had she made
- the passage of peril; and now, for the fifth time, it became her
- dangerous duty to snatch, as it were, a brand from the burning--a pupil
- from under M. Paul's nose.
- "Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!" cried she. "Que vais-je devenir? Monsieur va me
- tuer, je suis sûre; car il est d'une colère!"
- Nerved by the courage of desperation, she opened the door.
- "Mademoiselle La Malle au piano!" was her cry.
- Ere she could make good her retreat, or quite close the door, this
- voice uttered itself:--
- "Dès ce moment!--la classe est défendue. La première qui ouvrira cette
- porte, ou passera par cette division, sera pendue--fut-ce Madame Beck
- elle-même!"
- Ten minutes had not succeeded the promulgation of this decree when
- Rosine's French pantoufles were again heard shuffling along the
- corridor.
- "Mademoiselle," said she, "I would not for a five-franc piece go into
- that classe again just now: Monsieur's lunettes are really terrible;
- and here is a commissionaire come with a message from the Athénée. I
- have told Madame Beck I dare not deliver it, and she says I am to
- charge you with it."
- "Me? No, that is rather too bad! It is not in my line of duty. Come,
- come, Rosine! bear your own burden. Be brave--charge once more!"
- "I, Mademoiselle?--impossible! Five times I have crossed him this day.
- Madame must really hire a gendarme for this service. Ouf! Je n'en puis
- plus!"
- "Bah! you are only a coward. What is the message?"
- "Precisely of the kind with which Monsieur least likes to be pestered:
- an urgent summons to go directly to the Athénée, as there is an
- official visitor--inspector--I know not what--arrived, and Monsieur
- _must_ meet him: you know how he hates a _must_."
- Yes, I knew well enough. The restive little man detested spur or curb:
- against whatever was urgent or obligatory, he was sure to revolt.
- However, I accepted the responsibility--not, certainly, without fear,
- but fear blent with other sentiments, curiosity, amongst them. I opened
- the door, I entered, I closed it behind me as quickly and quietly as a
- rather unsteady hand would permit; for to be slow or bustling, to
- rattle a latch, or leave a door gaping wide, were aggravations of crime
- often more disastrous in result than the main crime itself. There I
- stood then, and there he sat; his humour was visibly bad--almost at its
- worst; he had been giving a lesson in arithmetic--for he gave lessons
- on any and every subject that struck his fancy--and arithmetic being a
- dry subject, invariably disagreed with him: not a pupil but trembled
- when he spoke of figures. He sat, bent above his desk: to look up at
- the sound of an entrance, at the occurrence of a direct breach of his
- will and law, was an effort he could not for the moment bring himself
- to make. It was quite as well: I thus gained time to walk up the long
- classe; and it suited my idiosyncracy far better to encounter the near
- burst of anger like his, than to bear its menace at a distance.
- At his estrade I paused, just in front; of course I was not worthy of
- immediate attention: he proceeded with his lesson. Disdain would not
- do: he must hear and he must answer my message.
- Not being quite tall enough to lift my head over his desk, elevated
- upon the estrade, and thus suffering eclipse in my present position, I
- ventured to peep round, with the design, at first, of merely getting a
- better view of his face, which had struck me when I entered as bearing
- a close and picturesque resemblance to that of a black and sallow
- tiger. Twice did I enjoy this side-view with impunity, advancing and
- receding unseen; the third time my eye had scarce dawned beyond the
- obscuration of the desk, when it was caught and transfixed through its
- very pupil--transfixed by the "lunettes." Rosine was right; these
- utensils had in them a blank and immutable terror, beyond the mobile
- wrath of the wearer's own unglazed eyes.
- I now found the advantage of proximity: these short-sighted "lunettes"
- were useless for the inspection of a criminal under Monsieur's nose;
- accordingly, he doffed them, and he and I stood on more equal terms.
- I am glad I was not really much afraid of him--that, indeed, close in
- his presence, I felt no terror at all; for upon his demanding cord and
- gibbet to execute the sentence recently pronounced, I was able to
- furnish him with a needleful of embroidering thread with such
- accommodating civility as could not but allay some portion at least of
- his surplus irritation. Of course I did not parade this courtesy before
- public view: I merely handed the thread round the angle of the desk,
- and attached it, ready noosed, to the barred back of the Professor's
- chair.
- "Que me voulez-vous?" said he in a growl of which the music was wholly
- confined to his chest and throat, for he kept his teeth clenched; and
- seemed registering to himself an inward vow that nothing earthly should
- wring from him a smile.
- My answer commenced uncompromisingly: "Monsieur," I said, "je veux
- l'impossible, des choses inouïes;" and thinking it best not to mince
- matters, but to administer the "douche" with decision, in a low but
- quick voice, I delivered the Athenian message, floridly exaggerating
- its urgency.
- Of course, he would not hear a word of it. "He would not go; he would
- not leave his present class, let all the officials of Villette send for
- him. He would not put himself an inch out of his way at the bidding of
- king, cabinet, and chambers together."
- I knew, however, that he _must_ go; that, talk as he would, both his
- duty and interest commanded an immediate and literal compliance with
- the summons: I stood, therefore, waiting in silence, as if he had not
- yet spoken. He asked what more I wanted.
- "Only Monsieur's answer to deliver to the commissionaire."
- He waved an impatient negative.
- I ventured to stretch my hand to the bonnet-grec which lay in grim
- repose on the window-sill. He followed this daring movement with his
- eye, no doubt in mixed pity and amazement at its presumption.
- "Ah!" he muttered, "if it came to that--if Miss Lucy meddled with his
- bonnet-grec--she might just put it on herself, turn garçon for the
- occasion, and benevolently go to the Athénée in his stead."
- With great respect, I laid the bonnet on the desk, where its tassel
- seemed to give me an awful nod.
- "I'll write a note of apology--that will do!" said he, still bent on
- evasion.
- Knowing well it would _not_ do, I gently pushed the bonnet towards his
- hand. Thus impelled, it slid down the polished slope of the varnished
- and unbaized desk, carried before it the light steel-framed "lunettes,"
- and, fearful to relate, they fell to the estrade. A score of times ere
- now had I seen them fall and receive no damage--_this_ time, as Lucy
- Snowe's hapless luck would have it, they so fell that each clear pebble
- became a shivered and shapeless star.
- Now, indeed, dismay seized me--dismay and regret. I knew the value of
- these "lunettes": M. Paul's sight was peculiar, not easily fitted, and
- these glasses suited him. I had heard him call them his treasures: as I
- picked them up, cracked and worthless, my hand trembled. Frightened
- through all my nerves I was to see the mischief I had done, but I think
- I was even more sorry than afraid. For some seconds I dared not look
- the bereaved Professor in the face; he was the first to speak.
- "Là!" said he: "me voilà veuf de mes lunettes! I think Mademoiselle
- Lucy will now confess that the cord and gallows are amply earned; she
- trembles in anticipation of her doom. Ah, traitress! traitress! You are
- resolved to have me quite blind and helpless in your hands!"
- I lifted my eyes: his face, instead of being irate, lowering, and
- furrowed, was overflowing with the smile, coloured with the bloom I had
- seen brightening it that evening at the Hotel Crécy. He was not
- angry--not even grieved. For the real injury he showed himself full of
- clemency; under the real provocation, patient as a saint. This event,
- which seemed so untoward--which I thought had ruined at once my chance
- of successful persuasion--proved my best help. Difficult of management
- so long as I had done him no harm, he became graciously pliant as soon
- as I stood in his presence a conscious and contrite offender.
- Still gently railing at me as "une forte femme--une Anglaise
- terrible--une petite casse-tout"--he declared that he dared not but
- obey one who had given such an instance of her dangerous prowess; it
- was absolutely like the "grand Empereur smashing the vase to inspire
- dismay." So, at last, crowning himself with his bonnet-grec, and taking
- his ruined "lunettes" from my hand with a clasp of kind pardon and
- encouragement, he made his bow, and went off to the Athénée in
- first-rate humour and spirits.
- * * * * *
- After all this amiability, the reader will be sorry for my sake to hear
- that I was quarrelling with M. Paul again before night; yet so it was,
- and I could not help it.
- It was his occasional custom--and a very laudable, acceptable custom,
- too--to arrive of an evening, always à l'improviste, unannounced, burst
- in on the silent hour of study, establish a sudden despotism over us
- and our occupations, cause books to be put away, work-bags to be
- brought out, and, drawing forth a single thick volume, or a handful of
- pamphlets, substitute for the besotted "lecture pieuse," drawled by a
- sleepy pupil, some tragedy made grand by grand reading, ardent by fiery
- action--some drama, whereof, for my part, I rarely studied the
- intrinsic merit; for M. Emanuel made it a vessel for an outpouring, and
- filled it with his native verve and passion like a cup with a vital
- brewage. Or else he would flash through our conventual darkness a
- reflex of a brighter world, show us a glimpse of the current literature
- of the day, read us passages from some enchanting tale, or the last
- witty feuilleton which had awakened laughter in the saloons of Paris;
- taking care always to expunge, with the severest hand, whether from
- tragedy, melodrama, tale, or essay, whatever passage, phrase, or word,
- could be deemed unsuited to an audience of "jeunes filles." I noticed
- more than once, that where retrenchment without substitute would have
- left unmeaning vacancy, or introduced weakness, he could, and did,
- improvise whole paragraphs, no less vigorous than irreproachable; the
- dialogue--the description--he engrafted was often far better than that
- he pruned away.
- Well, on the evening in question, we were sitting silent as nuns in a
- "retreat," the pupils studying, the teachers working. I remember my
- work; it was a slight matter of fancy, and it rather interested me; it
- had a purpose; I was not doing it merely to kill time; I meant it when
- finished as a gift; and the occasion of presentation being near, haste
- was requisite, and my fingers were busy.
- We heard the sharp bell-peal which we all knew; then the rapid step
- familiar to each ear: the words "Voilà Monsieur!" had scarcely broken
- simultaneously from every lip, when the two-leaved door split (as split
- it always did for his admission--such a slow word as "open" is
- inefficient to describe his movements), and he stood in the midst of us.
- There were two study tables, both long and flanked with benches; over
- the centre of each hung a lamp; beneath this lamp, on either side the
- table, sat a teacher; the girls were arranged to the right hand and the
- left; the eldest and most studious nearest the lamps or tropics; the
- idlers and little ones towards the north and south poles. Monsieur's
- habit was politely to hand a chair to some teacher, generally Zélie St.
- Pierre, the senior mistress; then to take her vacated seat; and thus
- avail himself of the full beam of Cancer or Capricorn, which, owing to
- his near sight, he needed.
- As usual, Zélie rose with alacrity, smiling to the whole extent of her
- mouth, and the full display of her upper and under rows of teeth--that
- strange smile which passes from ear to ear, and is marked only by a
- sharp thin curve, which fails to spread over the countenance, and
- neither dimples the cheek nor lights the eye. I suppose Monsieur did
- not see her, or he had taken a whim that he would not notice her, for
- he was as capricious as women are said to be; then his "lunettes" (he
- had got another pair) served him as an excuse for all sorts of little
- oversights and shortcomings. Whatever might be his reason, he passed by
- Zélie, came to the other side of the table, and before I could start up
- to clear the way, whispered, "Ne bougez pas," and established himself
- between me and Miss Fanshawe, who always would be my neighbour, and
- have her elbow in my side, however often I declared to her, "Ginevra, I
- wish you were at Jericho."
- It was easy to say, "Ne bougez pas;" but how could I help it? I must
- make him room, and I must request the pupils to recede that _I_ might
- recede. It was very well for Ginevra to be gummed to me, "keeping
- herself warm," as she said, on the winter evenings, and harassing my
- very heart with her fidgetings and pokings, obliging me, indeed,
- sometimes to put an artful pin in my girdle by way of protection
- against her elbow; but I suppose M. Emanuel was not to be subjected to
- the same kind of treatment, so I swept away my working materials, to
- clear space for his book, and withdrew myself to make room for his
- person; not, however, leaving more than a yard of interval, just what
- any reasonable man would have regarded as a convenient, respectful
- allowance of bench. But M. Emanuel never _was_ reasonable; flint and
- tinder that he was! he struck and took fire directly.
- "Vous ne voulez pas de moi pour voisin," he growled: "vous vous donnez
- des airs de caste; vous me traitez en paria;" he scowled. "Soit! je
- vais arranger la chose!" And he set to work.
- "Levez vous toutes, Mesdemoiselles!" cried he.
- The girls rose. He made them all file off to the other table. He then
- placed me at one extremity of the long bench, and having duly and
- carefully brought me my work-basket, silk, scissors, all my implements,
- he fixed himself quite at the other end.
- At this arrangement, highly absurd as it was, not a soul in the room
- dared to laugh; luckless for the giggler would have been the giggle. As
- for me, I took it with entire coolness. There I sat, isolated and cut
- off from human intercourse; I sat and minded my work, and was quiet,
- and not at all unhappy.
- "Est ce assez de distance?" he demanded.
- "Monsieur en est l'arbitre," said I.
- "Vous savez bien que non. C'est vous qui avez crée ce vide immense: moi
- je n'y ai pas mis la main."
- And with this assertion he commenced the reading.
- For his misfortune he had chosen a French translation of what he called
- "un drame de Williams Shackspire; le faux dieu," he further announced,
- "de ces sots païens, les Anglais." How far otherwise he would have
- characterized him had his temper not been upset, I scarcely need
- intimate.
- Of course, the translation being French, was very inefficient; nor did
- I make any particular effort to conceal the contempt which some of its
- forlorn lapses were calculated to excite. Not that it behoved or
- beseemed me to say anything: but one can occasionally _look_ the
- opinion it is forbidden to embody in words. Monsieur's lunettes being
- on the alert, he gleaned up every stray look; I don't think he lost
- one: the consequence was, his eyes soon discarded a screen, that their
- blaze might sparkle free, and he waxed hotter at the north pole to
- which he had voluntarily exiled himself, than, considering the general
- temperature of the room, it would have been reasonable to become under
- the vertical ray of Cancer itself.
- The reading over, it appeared problematic whether he would depart with
- his anger unexpressed, or whether he would give it vent. Suppression
- was not much in his habits; but still, what had been done to him
- definite enough to afford matter for overt reproof? I had not uttered a
- sound, and could not justly be deemed amenable to reprimand or penalty
- for having permitted a slightly freer action than usual to the muscles
- about my eyes and mouth.
- The supper, consisting of bread, and milk diluted with tepid water, was
- brought in. In respectful consideration of the Professor's presence,
- the rolls and glasses were allowed to stand instead of being
- immediately handed round.
- "Take your supper, ladies," said he, seeming to be occupied in making
- marginal notes to his "Williams Shackspire." They took it. I also
- accepted a roll and glass, but being now more than ever interested in
- my work, I kept my seat of punishment, and wrought while I munched my
- bread and sipped my beverage, the whole with easy _sang-froid_; with a
- certain snugness of composure, indeed, scarcely in my habits, and
- pleasantly novel to my feelings. It seemed as if the presence of a
- nature so restless, chafing, thorny as that of M. Paul absorbed all
- feverish and unsettling influences like a magnet, and left me none but
- such as were placid and harmonious.
- He rose. "Will he go away without saying another word?" Yes; he turned
- to the door.
- No: he _re_-turned on his steps; but only, perhaps, to take his
- pencil-case, which had been left on the table.
- He took it--shut the pencil in and out, broke its point against the
- wood, re-cut and pocketed it, and . . . walked promptly up to me.
- The girls and teachers, gathered round the other table, were talking
- pretty freely: they always talked at meals; and, from the constant
- habit of speaking fast and loud at such times, did not now subdue their
- voices much.
- M. Paul came and stood behind me. He asked at what I was working; and I
- said I was making a watchguard.
- He asked, "For whom?" And I answered, "For a gentleman--one of my
- friends."
- M. Paul stooped down and proceeded--as novel-writers say, and, as was
- literally true in his case--to "hiss" into my ear some poignant words.
- He said that, of all the women he knew, I was the one who could make
- herself the most consummately unpleasant: I was she with whom it was
- least possible to live on friendly terms. I had a "caractère
- intraitable," and perverse to a miracle. How I managed it, or what
- possessed me, he, for his part, did not know; but with whatever pacific
- and amicable intentions a person accosted me--crac! I turned concord to
- discord, good-will to enmity. He was sure, he--M. Paul--wished me well
- enough; he had never done me any harm that he knew of; he might, at
- least, he supposed, claim a right to be regarded as a neutral
- acquaintance, guiltless of hostile sentiments: yet, how I behaved to
- him! With what pungent vivacities--what an impetus of mutiny--what a
- "fougue" of injustice!
- Here I could not avoid opening my eyes somewhat wide, and even slipping
- in a slight interjectional observation: "Vivacities? Impetus? Fougue? I
- didn't know...."
- "Chut! à l'instant! There! there I went--vive comme la poudre!" He was
- sorry--he was very sorry: for my sake he grieved over the hapless
- peculiarity. This "emportement," this "chaleur"--generous, perhaps, but
- excessive--would yet, he feared, do me a mischief. It was a pity: I was
- not--he believed, in his soul--wholly without good qualities: and would
- I but hear reason, and be more sedate, more sober, less "en l'air,"
- less "coquette," less taken by show, less prone to set an undue value
- on outside excellence--to make much of the attentions of people
- remarkable chiefly for so many feet of stature, "des couleurs de
- poupée," "un nez plus ou moins bien fait," and an enormous amount of
- fatuity--I might yet prove an useful, perhaps an exemplary character.
- But, as it was--And here, the little man's voice was for a minute
- choked.
- I would have looked up at him, or held out my hand, or said a soothing
- word; but I was afraid, if I stirred, I should either laugh or cry; so
- odd, in all this, was the mixture of the touching and the absurd.
- I thought he had nearly done: but no; he sat down that he might go on
- at his ease.
- "While he, M. Paul, was on these painful topics, he would dare my anger
- for the sake of my good, and would venture to refer to a change he had
- noticed in my dress. He was free to confess that when he first knew
- me--or, rather, was in the habit of catching a passing glimpse of me
- from time to time--I satisfied him on this point: the gravity, the
- austere simplicity, obvious in this particular, were such as to inspire
- the highest hopes for my best interests. What fatal influence had
- impelled me lately to introduce flowers under the brim of my bonnet, to
- wear 'des cols brodés,' and even to appear on one occasion in a
- _scarlet gown_--he might indeed conjecture, but, for the present, would
- not openly declare."
- Again I interrupted, and this time not without an accent at once
- indignant and horror-struck.
- "Scarlet, Monsieur Paul? It was not scarlet! It was pink, and pale pink
- too, and further subdued by black lace."
- "Pink or scarlet, yellow or crimson, pea-green or sky-blue, it was all
- one: these were all flaunting, giddy colours; and as to the lace I
- talked of, _that_ was but a 'colifichet de plus.'" And he sighed over
- my degeneracy. "He could not, he was sorry to say, be so particular on
- this theme as he could wish: not possessing the exact names of these
- 'babioles,' he might run into small verbal errors which would not fail
- to lay him open to my sarcasm, and excite my unhappily sudden and
- passionate disposition. He would merely say, in general terms--and in
- these general terms he knew he was correct--that my costume had of late
- assumed 'des façons mondaines,' which it wounded him to see."
- What "façons mondaines" he discovered in my present winter merino and
- plain white collar, I own it puzzled me to guess: and when I asked him,
- he said it was all made with too much attention to effect--and besides,
- "had I not a bow of ribbon at my neck?"
- "And if you condemn a bow of ribbon for a lady, Monsieur, you would
- necessarily disapprove of a thing like this for a gentleman?"--holding
- up my bright little chainlet of silk and gold. His sole reply was a
- groan--I suppose over my levity.
- After sitting some minutes in silence, and watching the progress of the
- chain, at which I now wrought more assiduously than ever, he inquired:
- "Whether what he had just said would have the effect of making me
- entirely detest him?"
- I hardly remember what answer I made, or how it came about; I don't
- think I spoke at all, but I know we managed to bid good-night on
- friendly terms: and, even after M. Paul had reached the door, he turned
- back just to explain, "that he would not be understood to speak in
- entire condemnation of the scarlet dress" ("Pink! pink!" I threw in);
- "that he had no intention to deny it the merit of _looking_ rather
- well" (the fact was, M. Emanuel's taste in colours decidedly leaned to
- the brilliant); "only he wished to counsel me, whenever, I wore it, to
- do so in the same spirit as if its material were 'bure,' and its hue
- 'gris de poussière.'"
- "And the flowers under my bonnet, Monsieur?" I asked. "They are very
- little ones--?"
- "Keep them little, then," said he. "Permit them not to become
- full-blown."
- "And the bow, Monsieur--the bit of ribbon?"
- "Va pour le ruban!" was the propitious answer.
- And so we settled it.
- * * * * *
- "Well done, Lucy Snowe!" cried I to myself; "you have come in for a
- pretty lecture--brought on yourself a 'rude savant,' and all through
- your wicked fondness for worldly vanities! Who would have thought it?
- You deemed yourself a melancholy sober-sides enough! Miss Fanshawe
- there regards you as a second Diogenes. M. de Bassompierre, the other
- day, politely turned the conversation when it ran on the wild gifts of
- the actress Vashti, because, as he kindly said, 'Miss Snowe looked
- uncomfortable.' Dr. John Bretton knows you only as 'quiet Lucy'--'a
- creature inoffensive as a shadow;' he has said, and you have heard him
- say it: 'Lucy's disadvantages spring from over-gravity in tastes and
- manner--want of colour in character and costume.' Such are your own and
- your friends' impressions; and behold! there starts up a little man,
- differing diametrically from all these, roundly charging you with being
- too airy and cheery--too volatile and versatile--too flowery and
- coloury. This harsh little man--this pitiless censor--gathers up all
- your poor scattered sins of vanity, your luckless chiffon of
- rose-colour, your small fringe of a wreath, your small scrap of ribbon,
- your silly bit of lace, and calls you to account for the lot, and for
- each item. You are well habituated to be passed by as a shadow in
- Life's sunshine: it is a new thing to see one testily lifting his hand
- to screen his eyes, because you tease him with an obtrusive ray."
- CHAPTER XXIX.
- MONSIEUR'S FÊTE.
- I was up the next morning an hour before daybreak, and finished my
- guard, kneeling on the dormitory floor beside the centre stand, for the
- benefit of such expiring glimmer as the night-lamp afforded in its last
- watch.
- All my materials--my whole stock of beads and silk--were used up before
- the chain assumed the length and richness I wished; I had wrought it
- double, as I knew, by the rule of contraries, that to, suit the
- particular taste whose gratification was in view, an effective
- appearance was quite indispensable. As a finish to the ornament, a
- little gold clasp was needed; fortunately I possessed it in the
- fastening of my sole necklace; I duly detached and re-attached it, then
- coiled compactly the completed guard; and enclosed it in a small box I
- had bought for its brilliancy, made of some tropic shell of the colour
- called "nacarat," and decked with a little coronal of sparkling blue
- stones. Within the lid of the box, I carefully graved with my scissors'
- point certain initials.
- * * * * *
- The reader will, perhaps, remember the description of Madame Beck's
- fête; nor will he have forgotten that at each anniversary, a handsome
- present was subscribed for and offered by the school. The observance of
- this day was a distinction accorded to none but Madame, and, in a
- modified form, to her kinsman and counsellor, M. Emanuel. In the latter
- case it was an honour spontaneously awarded, not plotted and contrived
- beforehand, and offered an additional proof, amongst many others, of
- the estimation in which--despite his partialities, prejudices, and
- irritabilities--the professor of literature was held by his pupils. No
- article of value was offered to him: he distinctly gave it to be
- understood, that he would accept neither plate nor jewellery. Yet he
- liked a slight tribute; the cost, the money-value, did not touch him: a
- diamond ring, a gold snuff-box, presented, with pomp, would have
- pleased him less than a flower, or a drawing, offered simply and with
- sincere feelings. Such was his nature. He was a man, not wise in his
- generation, yet could he claim a filial sympathy with "the dayspring on
- high."
- M. Paul's fête fell on the first of March and a Thursday. It proved a
- fine sunny day; and being likewise the morning on which it was
- customary to attend mass; being also otherwise distinguished by the
- half-holiday which permitted the privilege of walking out, shopping, or
- paying visits in the afternoon: these combined considerations induced a
- general smartness and freshness of dress. Clean collars were in vogue;
- the ordinary dingy woollen classe-dress was exchanged for something
- lighter and clearer. Mademoiselle Zélie St. Pierre, on this particular
- Thursday, even assumed a "robe de soie," deemed in economical
- Labassecour an article of hazardous splendour and luxury; nay, it was
- remarked that she sent for a "coiffeur" to dress her hair that morning;
- there were pupils acute enough to discover that she had bedewed her
- handkerchief and her hands with a new and fashionable perfume. Poor
- Zélie! It was much her wont to declare about this time, that she was
- tired to death of a life of seclusion and labour; that she longed to
- have the means and leisure for relaxation; to have some one to work for
- her--a husband who would pay her debts (she was woefully encumbered
- with debt), supply her wardrobe, and leave her at liberty, as she said,
- to "goûter un peu les plaisirs." It had long been rumoured, that her
- eye was upon M. Emanuel. Monsieur Emanuel's eye was certainly often
- upon her. He would sit and watch her perseveringly for minutes
- together. I have seen him give her a quarter-of-an-hour's gaze, while
- the class was silently composing, and he sat throned on his estrade,
- unoccupied. Conscious always of this basilisk attention, she would
- writhe under it, half-flattered, half-puzzled, and Monsieur would
- follow her sensations, sometimes looking appallingly acute; for in some
- cases, he had the terrible unerring penetration of instinct, and
- pierced in its hiding-place the last lurking thought of the heart, and
- discerned under florid veilings the bare; barren places of the spirit:
- yes, and its perverted tendencies, and its hidden false curves--all
- that men and women would not have known--the twisted spine, the
- malformed limb that was born with them, and far worse, the stain or
- disfigurement they have perhaps brought on themselves. No calamity so
- accursed but M. Emanuel could pity and forgive, if it were acknowledged
- candidly; but where his questioning eyes met dishonest denial--where
- his ruthless researches found deceitful concealment--oh, then, he could
- be cruel, and I thought wicked! he would exultantly snatch the screen
- from poor shrinking wretches, passionately hurry them to the summit of
- the mount of exposure, and there show them all naked, all false--poor
- living lies--the spawn of that horrid Truth which cannot be looked on
- unveiled. He thought he did justice; for my part I doubt whether man
- has a right to do such justice on man: more than once in these his
- visitations, I have felt compelled to give tears to his victims, and
- not spared ire and keen reproach to himself. He deserved it; but it was
- difficult to shake him in his firm conviction that the work was
- righteous and needed.
- Breakfast being over and mass attended, the school-bell rang and the
- rooms filled: a very pretty spectacle was presented in classe. Pupils
- and teachers sat neatly arrayed, orderly and expectant, each bearing in
- her hand the bouquet of felicitation--the prettiest spring-flowers all
- fresh, and filling the air with their fragrance: I only had no bouquet.
- I like to see flowers growing, but when they are gathered, they cease
- to please. I look on them as things rootless and perishable; their
- likeness to life makes me sad. I never offer flowers to those I love; I
- never wish to receive them from hands dear to me. Mademoiselle St.
- Pierre marked my empty hands--she could not believe I had been so
- remiss; with avidity her eye roved over and round me: surely I must
- have some solitary symbolic flower somewhere: some small knot of
- violets, something to win myself praise for taste, commendation for
- ingenuity. The unimaginative "Anglaise" proved better than the
- Parisienne's fears: she sat literally unprovided, as bare of bloom or
- leaf as the winter tree. This ascertained, Zélie smiled, well pleased.
- "How wisely you have acted to keep your money, Miss Lucie," she said:
- "silly I have gone and thrown away two francs on a bouquet of hot-house
- flowers!"
- And she showed with pride her splendid nosegay.
- But hush! a step: _the_ step. It came prompt, as usual, but with a
- promptitude, we felt disposed to flatter ourselves, inspired by other
- feelings than mere excitability of nerve and vehemence of intent. We
- thought our Professor's "foot-fall" (to speak romantically) had in it a
- friendly promise this morning; and so it had.
- He entered in a mood which made him as good as a new sunbeam to the
- already well-lit first classe. The morning light playing amongst our
- plants and laughing on our walls, caught an added lustre from M. Paul's
- all-benignant salute. Like a true Frenchman (though I don't know why I
- should say so, for he was of strain neither French nor Labassecourien),
- he had dressed for the "situation" and the occasion. Not by the vague
- folds, sinister and conspirator-like, of his soot-dark paletôt were the
- outlines of his person obscured; on the contrary, his figure (such as
- it was, I don't boast of it) was well set off by a civilized coat and a
- silken vest quite pretty to behold. The defiant and pagan bonnet-grec
- had vanished: bare-headed, he came upon us, carrying a Christian hat in
- his gloved hand. The little man looked well, very well; there was a
- clearness of amity in his blue eye, and a glow of good feeling on his
- dark complexion, which passed perfectly in the place of beauty: one
- really did not care to observe that his nose, though far from small,
- was of no particular shape, his cheek thin, his brow marked and square,
- his mouth no rose-bud: one accepted him as he was, and felt his
- presence the reverse of damping or insignificant.
- He passed to his desk; he placed on the same his hat and gloves. "Bon
- jour, mes amies," said he, in a tone that somehow made amends to some
- amongst us for many a sharp snap and savage snarl: not a jocund,
- good-fellow tone, still less an unctuous priestly, accent, but a voice
- he had belonging to himself--a voice used when his heart passed the
- words to his lips. That same heart did speak sometimes; though an
- irritable, it was not an ossified organ: in its core was a place,
- tender beyond a man's tenderness; a place that humbled him to little
- children, that bound him to girls and women to whom, rebel as he would,
- he could not disown his affinity, nor quite deny that, on the whole, he
- was better with them than with his own sex.
- "We all wish Monsieur a good day, and present to him our
- congratulations on the anniversary of his fête," said Mademoiselle
- Zélie, constituting herself spokeswoman of the assembly; and advancing
- with no more twists of affectation than were with her indispensable to
- the achievement of motion, she laid her costly bouquet before him. He
- bowed over it.
- The long train of offerings followed: all the pupils, sweeping past
- with the gliding step foreigners practise, left their tributes as they
- went by. Each girl so dexterously adjusted her separate gift, that when
- the last bouquet was laid on the desk, it formed the apex to a blooming
- pyramid--a pyramid blooming, spreading, and towering with such
- exuberance as, in the end, to eclipse the hero behind it. This ceremony
- over, seats were resumed, and we sat in dead silence, expectant of a
- speech.
- I suppose five minutes might have elapsed, and the hush remained
- unbroken; ten--and there was no sound.
- Many present began, doubtless, to wonder for what Monsieur waited; as
- well they might. Voiceless and viewless, stirless and wordless, he kept
- his station behind the pile of flowers.
- At last there issued forth a voice, rather deep, as if it spoke out of
- a hollow:--
- "Est-ce là tout?"
- Mademoiselle Zélie looked round.
- "You have all presented your bouquets?" inquired she of the pupils.
- Yes; they had all given their nosegays, from the eldest to the
- youngest, from the tallest to the most diminutive. The senior mistress
- signified as much.
- "Est-ce là tout?" was reiterated in an intonation which, deep before,
- had now descended some notes lower.
- "Monsieur," said Mademoiselle St. Pierre, rising, and this time
- speaking with her own sweet smile, "I have the honour to tell you that,
- with a single exception, every person in classe has offered her
- bouquet. For Meess Lucie, Monsieur will kindly make allowance; as a
- foreigner she probably did not know our customs, or did not appreciate
- their significance. Meess Lucie has regarded this ceremony as too
- frivolous to be honoured by her observance."
- "Famous!" I muttered between my teeth: "you are no bad speaker, Zélie,
- when you begin."
- The answer vouchsafed to Mademoiselle St Pierre from the estrade was
- given in the gesticulation of a hand from behind the pyramid. This
- manual action seemed to deprecate words, to enjoin silence.
- A form, ere long, followed the hand. Monsieur emerged from his eclipse;
- and producing himself on the front of his estrade, and gazing straight
- and fixedly before him at a vast "mappe-monde" covering the wall
- opposite, he demanded a third time, and now in really tragic tones--
- "Est-ce là tout?"
- I might yet have made all right, by stepping forwards and slipping into
- his hand the ruddy little shell-box I at that moment held tight in my
- own. It was what I had fully purposed to do; but, first, the comic side
- of Monsieur's behaviour had tempted me to delay, and now, Mademoiselle
- St. Pierre's affected interference provoked contumacity. The reader not
- having hitherto had any cause to ascribe to Miss Snowe's character the
- most distant pretensions to perfection, will be scarcely surprised to
- learn that she felt too perverse to defend herself from any imputation
- the Parisienne might choose to insinuate and besides, M. Paul was so
- tragic, and took my defection so seriously, he deserved to be vexed. I
- kept, then, both my box and my countenance, and sat insensate as any
- stone.
- "It is well!" dropped at length from the lips of M. Paul; and having
- uttered this phrase, the shadow of some great paroxysm--the swell of
- wrath, scorn, resolve--passed over his brow, rippled his lips, and
- lined his cheeks. Gulping down all further comment, he launched into
- his customary "discours."
- I can't at all remember what this "discours" was; I did not listen to
- it: the gulping-down process, the abrupt dismissal of his mortification
- or vexation, had given me a sensation which half-counteracted the
- ludicrous effect of the reiterated "Est-ce là tout?"
- Towards the close of the speech there came a pleasing diversion my
- attention was again amusingly arrested.
- Owing to some little accidental movement--I think I dropped my thimble
- on the floor, and in stooping to regain it, hit the crown of my head
- against the sharp corner of my desk; which casualties (exasperating to
- me, by rights, if to anybody) naturally made a slight bustle--M. Paul
- became irritated, and dismissing his forced equanimity, and casting to
- the winds that dignity and self-control with which he never cared long
- to encumber himself, he broke forth into the strain best calculated to
- give him ease.
- I don't know how, in the progress of his "discours," he had contrived
- to cross the Channel and land on British ground; but there I found him
- when I began to listen.
- Casting a quick, cynical glance round the room--a glance which scathed,
- or was intended to scathe, as it crossed me--he fell with fury upon
- "les Anglaises."
- Never have I heard English women handled as M. Paul that morning
- handled them: he spared nothing--neither their minds, morals, manners,
- nor personal appearance. I specially remember his abuse of their tall
- stature, their long necks, their thin arms, their slovenly dress, their
- pedantic education, their impious scepticism(!), their insufferable
- pride, their pretentious virtue: over which he ground his teeth
- malignantly, and looked as if, had he dared, he would have said
- singular things. Oh! he was spiteful, acrid, savage; and, as a natural
- consequence, detestably ugly.
- "Little wicked venomous man!" thought I; "am I going to harass myself
- with fears of displeasing you, or hurting your feelings? No, indeed;
- you shall be indifferent to me, as the shabbiest bouquet in your
- pyramid."
- I grieve to say I could not quite carry out this resolution. For some
- time the abuse of England and the English found and left me stolid: I
- bore it some fifteen minutes stoically enough; but this hissing
- cockatrice was determined to sting, and he said such things at
- last--fastening not only upon our women, but upon our greatest names
- and best men; sullying, the shield of Britannia, and dabbling the union
- jack in mud--that I was stung. With vicious relish he brought up the
- most spicy current continental historical falsehoods--than which
- nothing can be conceived more offensive. Zélie, and the whole class,
- became one grin of vindictive delight; for it is curious to discover
- how these clowns of Labassecour secretly hate England. At last, I
- struck a sharp stroke on my desk, opened my lips, and let loose this
- cry:--
- "Vive l'Angleterre, l'Histoire et les Héros! A bas la France, la
- Fiction et les Faquins!"
- The class was struck of a heap. I suppose they thought me mad. The
- Professor put up his handkerchief, and fiendishly smiled into its
- folds. Little monster of malice! He now thought he had got the victory,
- since he had made me angry. In a second he became good-humoured. With
- great blandness he resumed the subject of his flowers; talked
- poetically and symbolically of their sweetness, perfume, purity,
- etcetera; made Frenchified comparisons between the "jeunes filles" and
- the sweet blossoms before him; paid Mademoiselle St. Pierre a very
- full-blown compliment on the superiority of her bouquet; and ended by
- announcing that the first really fine, mild, and balmy morning in
- spring, he intended to take the whole class out to breakfast in the
- country. "Such of the class, at least," he added, with emphasis, "as he
- could count amongst the number of his friends."
- "Donc je n'y serai pas," declared I, involuntarily.
- "Soit!" was his response; and, gathering his flowers in his arms, he
- flashed out of classe; while I, consigning my work, scissors, thimble,
- and the neglected little box, to my desk, swept up-stairs. I don't know
- whether _he_ felt hot and angry, but I am free to confess that _I_ did.
- Yet with a strange evanescent anger, I had not sat an hour on the edge
- of my bed, picturing and repicturing his look, manner, words ere I
- smiled at the whole scene. A little pang of regret I underwent that the
- box had not been offered. I had meant to gratify him. Fate would not
- have it so.
- In the course of the afternoon, remembering that desks in classe were
- by no means inviolate repositories, and thinking that it was as well to
- secure the box, on account of the initials in the lid, P. C. D. E., for
- Paul Carl (or Carlos) David Emanuel--such was his full name--these
- foreigners must always have a string of baptismals--I descended to the
- schoolroom.
- It slept in holiday repose. The day pupils were all gone home, the
- boarders were out walking, the teachers, except the surveillante of the
- week, were in town, visiting or shopping; the suite of divisions was
- vacant; so was the grande salle, with its huge solemn globe hanging in
- the midst, its pair of many-branched chandeliers, and its horizontal
- grand piano closed, silent, enjoying its mid-week Sabbath. I rather
- wondered to find the first classe door ajar; this room being usually
- locked when empty, and being then inaccessible to any save Madame Beck
- and myself, who possessed a duplicate key. I wondered still more, on
- approaching, to hear a vague movement as of life--a step, a chair
- stirred, a sound like the opening of a desk.
- "It is only Madame Beck doing inspection duty," was the conclusion
- following a moment's reflection. The partially-opened door gave
- opportunity for assurance on this point. I looked. Behold! not the
- inspecting garb of Madame Beck--the shawl and the clean cap--but the
- coat, and the close-shorn, dark head of a man. This person occupied my
- chair; his olive hand held my desk open, his nose was lost to view
- amongst my papers. His back was towards me, but there could not be a
- moment's question about identity. Already was the attire of ceremony
- discarded: the cherished and ink-stained paletôt was resumed; the
- perverse bonnet-grec lay on the floor, as if just dropped from the
- hand, culpably busy.
- Now I knew, and I had long known, that that hand of M. Emanuel's was on
- the most intimate terms with my desk; that it raised and lowered the
- lid, ransacked and arranged the contents, almost as familiarly as my
- own. The fact was not dubious, nor did he wish it to be so: he left
- signs of each visit palpable and unmistakable; hitherto, however, I had
- never caught him in the act: watch as I would, I could not detect the
- hours and moments of his coming. I saw the brownie's work in exercises
- left overnight full of faults, and found next morning carefully
- corrected: I profited by his capricious good-will in loans full welcome
- and refreshing. Between a sallow dictionary and worn-out grammar would
- magically grow a fresh interesting new work, or a classic, mellow and
- sweet in its ripe age. Out of my work-basket would laughingly peep a
- romance, under it would lurk the pamphlet, the magazine, whence last
- evening's reading had been extracted. Impossible to doubt the source
- whence these treasures flowed: had there been no other indication, one
- condemning and traitor peculiarity, common to them all, settled the
- question--_they smelt of cigars_. This was very shocking, of course:
- _I_ thought so at first, and used to open the window with some bustle,
- to air my desk, and with fastidious finger and thumb, to hold the
- peccant brochures forth to the purifying breeze. I was cured of that
- formality suddenly. Monsieur caught me at it one day, understood the
- inference, instantly relieved my hand of its burden, and, in another
- moment, would have thrust the same into the glowing stove. It chanced
- to be a book, on the perusal of which I was bent; so for once I proved
- as decided and quicker than himself; recaptured the spoil, and--having
- saved this volume--never hazarded a second. With all this, I had never
- yet been able to arrest in his visits the freakish, friendly,
- cigar-loving phantom.
- But now at last I had him: there he was--the very brownie himself; and
- there, curling from his lips, was the pale blue breath of his Indian
- darling: he was smoking into my desk: it might well betray him.
- Provoked at this particular, and yet pleased to surprise him--pleased,
- that is, with the mixed feeling of the housewife who discovers at last
- her strange elfin ally busy in the dairy at the untimely churn--I
- softly stole forward, stood behind him, bent with precaution over his
- shoulder.
- My heart smote me to see that--after this morning's hostility, after my
- seeming remissness, after the puncture experienced by his feelings, and
- the ruffling undergone by his temper--he, all willing to forget and
- forgive, had brought me a couple of handsome volumes, of which the
- title and authorship were guarantees for interest. Now, as he sat
- bending above the desk, he was stirring up its contents; but with
- gentle and careful hand; disarranging indeed, but not harming. My heart
- smote me: as I bent over him, as he sat unconscious, doing me what good
- he could, and I daresay not feeling towards me unkindly, my morning's
- anger quite melted: I did not dislike Professor Emanuel.
- I think he heard me breathe. He turned suddenly: his temperament was
- nervous, yet he never started, and seldom changed colour: there was
- something hardy about him.
- "I thought you were gone into town with the other teachers," said he,
- taking a grim gripe of his self-possession, which half-escaped him--"It
- is as well you are not. Do you think I care for being caught? Not I. I
- often visit your desk."
- "Monsieur, I know it."
- "You find a brochure or tome now and then; but you don't read them,
- because they have passed under this?"--touching his cigar.
- "They have, and are no better for the process; but I read them."
- "Without pleasure?"
- "Monsieur must not be contradicted."
- "Do you like them, or any of them?--are they acceptable?" "Monsieur has
- seen me reading them a hundred times, and knows I have not so many
- recreations as to undervalue those he provides."
- "I mean well; and, if you see that I mean well, and derive some little
- amusement from my efforts, why can we not be friends?"
- "A fatalist would say--because we cannot."
- "This morning," he continued, "I awoke in a bright mood, and came into
- classe happy; you spoiled my day."
- "No, Monsieur, only an hour or two of it, and that unintentionally."
- "Unintentionally! No. It was my fête-day; everybody wished me happiness
- but you. The little children of the third division gave each her knot
- of violets, lisped each her congratulation:--you--nothing. Not a bud,
- leaf, whisper--not a glance. Was this unintentional?"
- "I meant no harm."
- "Then you really did not know our custom? You were unprepared? You
- would willingly have laid out a few centimes on a flower to give me
- pleasure, had you been aware that it was expected? Say so, and all is
- forgotten, and the pain soothed."
- "I did know that it was expected: I _was_ prepared; yet I laid out no
- centimes on flowers."
- "It is well--you do right to be honest. I should almost have hated you
- had you flattered and lied. Better declare at once 'Paul Carl
- Emanuel--je te déteste, mon garçon!'--than smile an interest, look an
- affection, and be false and cold at heart. False and cold I don't think
- you are; but you have made a great mistake in life, that I believe; I
- think your judgment is warped--that you are indifferent where you ought
- to be grateful--and perhaps devoted and infatuated, where you ought to
- be cool as your name. Don't suppose that I wish you to have a passion
- for me, Mademoiselle; Dieu vous en garde! What do you start for?
- Because I said passion? Well, I say it again. There is such a word, and
- there is such a thing--though not within these walls, thank heaven! You
- are no child that one should not speak of what exists; but I only
- uttered the word--the thing, I assure you, is alien to my whole life
- and views. It died in the past--in the present it lies buried--its
- grave is deep-dug, well-heaped, and many winters old: in the future
- there will be a resurrection, as I believe to my souls consolation; but
- all will then be changed--form and feeling: the mortal will have put on
- immortality--it will rise, not for earth, but heaven. All I say to
- _you_, Miss Lucy Snowe, is--that you ought to treat Professor Paul
- Emanuel decently."
- I could not, and did not contradict such a sentiment.
- "Tell me," he pursued, "when it is _your_ fête-day, and I will not
- grudge a few centimes for a small offering."
- "You will be like me, Monsieur: this cost more than a few centimes, and
- I did not grudge its price."
- And taking from the open desk the little box, I put it into his hand.
- "It lay ready in my lap this morning," I continued; "and if Monsieur
- had been rather more patient, and Mademoiselle St. Pierre less
- interfering--perhaps I should say, too, if _I_ had been calmer and
- wiser--I should have given it then."
- He looked at the box: I saw its clear warm tint and bright azure
- circlet, pleased his eyes. I told him to open it.
- "My initials!" said he, indicating the letters in the lid. "Who told
- you I was called Carl David?"
- "A little bird, Monsieur."
- "Does it fly from me to you? Then one can tie a message under its wing
- when needful."
- He took out the chain--a trifle indeed as to value, but glossy with
- silk and sparkling with beads. He liked that too--admired it artlessly,
- like a child.
- "For me?"
- "Yes, for you."
- "This is the thing you were working at last night?"
- "The same."
- "You finished it this morning?"
- "I did."
- "You commenced it with the intention that it should be mine?"
- "Undoubtedly."
- "And offered on my fête-day?"
- "Yes."
- "This purpose continued as you wove it?"
- Again I assented.
- "Then it is not necessary that I should cut out any portion--saying,
- this part is not mine: it was plaited under the idea and for the
- adornment of another?"
- "By no means. It is neither necessary, nor would it be just."
- "This object is _all_ mine?"
- "That object is yours entirely."
- Straightway Monsieur opened his paletôt, arranged the guard splendidly
- across his chest, displaying as much and suppressing as little as he
- could: for he had no notion of concealing what he admired and thought
- decorative. As to the box, he pronounced it a superb bonbonnière--he
- was fond of bonbons, by the way--and as he always liked to share with
- others what pleased himself, he would give his "dragées" as freely as
- he lent his books. Amongst the kind brownie's gifts left in my desk, I
- forgot to enumerate many a paper of chocolate comfits. His tastes in
- these matters were southern, and what we think infantine. His simple
- lunch consisted frequently of a "brioche," which, as often as not, he
- shared with some child of the third division.
- "A présent c'est un fait accompli," said he, re-adjusting his paletôt;
- and we had no more words on the subject. After looking over the two
- volumes he had brought, and cutting away some pages with his penknife
- (he generally pruned before lending his books, especially if they were
- novels, and sometimes I was a little provoked at the severity of his
- censorship, the retrenchments interrupting the narrative), he rose,
- politely touched his bonnet-grec, and bade me a civil good-day.
- "We are friends now," thought I, "till the next time we quarrel."
- We _might_ have quarrelled again that very same evening, but, wonderful
- to relate, failed, for once, to make the most of our opportunity.
- Contrary to all expectation, M. Paul arrived at the study-hour. Having
- seen so much of him in the morning, we did not look for his presence at
- night. No sooner were we seated at lessons, however, than he appeared.
- I own I was glad to see him, so glad that I could not help greeting his
- arrival with a smile; and when he made his way to the same seat about
- which so serious a misunderstanding had formerly arisen, I took good
- care not to make too much room for him; he watched with a jealous,
- side-long look, to see whether I shrank away, but I did not, though the
- bench was a little crowded. I was losing the early impulse to recoil
- from M. Paul. Habituated to the paletôt and bonnet-grec, the
- neighbourhood of these garments seemed no longer uncomfortable or very
- formidable. I did not now sit restrained, "asphyxiée" (as he used to
- say) at his side; I stirred when I wished to stir, coughed when it was
- necessary, even yawned when I was tired--did, in short, what I pleased,
- blindly reliant upon his indulgence. Nor did my temerity, this evening
- at least, meet the punishment it perhaps merited; he was both indulgent
- and good-natured; not a cross glance shot from his eyes, not a hasty
- word left his lips. Till the very close of the evening, he did not
- indeed address me at all, yet I felt, somehow, that he was full of
- friendliness. Silence is of different kinds, and breathes different
- meanings; no words could inspire a pleasanter content than did M.
- Paul's worldless presence. When the tray came in, and the bustle of
- supper commenced, he just said, as he retired, that he wished me a good
- night and sweet dreams; and a good night and sweet dreams I had.
- CHAPTER XXX.
- M. PAUL.
- Yet the reader is advised not to be in any hurry with his kindly
- conclusions, or to suppose, with an over-hasty charity, that from that
- day M. Paul became a changed character--easy to live with, and no
- longer apt to flash danger and discomfort round him.
- No; he was naturally a little man of unreasonable moods. When
- over-wrought, which he often was, he became acutely irritable; and,
- besides, his veins were dark with a livid belladonna tincture, the
- essence of jealousy. I do not mean merely the tender jealousy of the
- heart, but that sterner, narrower sentiment whose seat is in the head.
- I used to think, as I sat looking at M. Paul, while he was knitting his
- brow or protruding his lip over some exercise of mine, which had not as
- many faults as he wished (for he liked me to commit faults: a knot of
- blunders was sweet to him as a cluster of nuts), that he had points of
- resemblance to Napoleon Bonaparte. I think so still.
- In a shameless disregard of magnanimity, he resembled the great
- Emperor. M. Paul would have quarrelled with twenty learned women, would
- have unblushingly carried on a system of petty bickering and
- recrimination with a whole capital of coteries, never troubling himself
- about loss or lack of dignity. He would have exiled fifty Madame de
- Staëls, if, they had annoyed, offended, outrivalled, or opposed him.
- I well remember a hot episode of his with a certain Madame Panache--a
- lady temporarily employed by Madame Beck to give lessons in history.
- She was clever--that is, she knew a good deal; and, besides, thoroughly
- possessed the art of making the most of what she knew; of words and
- confidence she held unlimited command. Her personal appearance was far
- from destitute of advantages; I believe many people would have
- pronounced her "a fine woman;" and yet there were points in her robust
- and ample attractions, as well as in her bustling and demonstrative
- presence, which, it appeared, the nice and capricious tastes of M. Paul
- could not away with. The sound of her voice, echoing through the carré,
- would put him into a strange taking; her long free step--almost
- stride--along the corridor, would often make him snatch up his papers
- and decamp on the instant.
- With malicious intent he bethought himself, one day, to intrude on her
- class; as quick as lightning he gathered her method of instruction; it
- differed from a pet plan of his own. With little ceremony, and less
- courtesy, he pointed out what he termed her errors. Whether he expected
- submission and attention, I know not; he met an acrid opposition,
- accompanied by a round reprimand for his certainly unjustifiable
- interference.
- Instead of withdrawing with dignity, as he might still have done, he
- threw down the gauntlet of defiance. Madame Panache, bellicose as a
- Penthesilea, picked it up in a minute. She snapped her fingers in the
- intermeddler's face; she rushed upon him with a storm of words. M.
- Emanuel was eloquent; but Madame Panache was voluble. A system of
- fierce antagonism ensued. Instead of laughing in his sleeve at his fair
- foe, with all her sore amour-propre and loud self-assertion, M. Paul
- detested her with intense seriousness; he honoured her with his earnest
- fury; he pursued her vindictively and implacably, refusing to rest
- peaceably in his bed, to derive due benefit from his meals, or even
- serenely to relish his cigar, till she was fairly rooted out of the
- establishment. The Professor conquered, but I cannot say that the
- laurels of this victory shadowed gracefully his temples. Once I
- ventured to hint as much. To my great surprise he allowed that I might
- be right, but averred that when brought into contact with either men or
- women of the coarse, self-complacent quality, whereof Madame Panache
- was a specimen, he had no control over his own passions; an unspeakable
- and active aversion impelled him to a war of extermination.
- Three months afterwards, hearing that his vanquished foe had met with
- reverses, and was likely to be really distressed for want of
- employment, he forgot his hatred, and alike active in good and evil, he
- moved heaven and earth till he found her a place. Upon her coming to
- make up former differences, and thank him for his recent kindness, the
- old voice--a little loud--the old manner--a little forward--so acted
- upon him that in ten minutes he started up and bowed her, or rather
- himself, out of the room, in a transport of nervous irritation.
- To pursue a somewhat audacious parallel, in a love of power, in an
- eager grasp after supremacy, M. Emanuel was like Bonaparte. He was a
- man not always to be submitted to. Sometimes it was needful to resist;
- it was right to stand still, to look up into his eyes and tell him that
- his requirements went beyond reason--that his absolutism verged on
- tyranny.
- The dawnings, the first developments of peculiar talent appearing
- within his range, and under his rule, curiously excited, even disturbed
- him. He watched its struggle into life with a scowl; he held back his
- hand--perhaps said, "Come on if you have strength," but would not aid
- the birth.
- When the pang and peril of the first conflict were over, when the
- breath of life was drawn, when he saw the lungs expand and contract,
- when he felt the heart beat and discovered life in the eye, he did not
- yet offer to foster.
- "Prove yourself true ere I cherish you," was his ordinance; and how
- difficult he made that proof! What thorns and briers, what flints, he
- strewed in the path of feet not inured to rough travel! He watched
- tearlessly--ordeals that he exacted should be passed
- through--fearlessly. He followed footprints that, as they approached
- the bourne, were sometimes marked in blood--followed them grimly,
- holding the austerest police-watch over the pain-pressed pilgrim. And
- when at last he allowed a rest, before slumber might close the eyelids,
- he opened those same lids wide, with pitiless finger and thumb, and
- gazed deep through the pupil and the irids into the brain, into the
- heart, to search if Vanity, or Pride, or Falsehood, in any of its
- subtlest forms, was discoverable in the furthest recess of existence.
- If, at last, he let the neophyte sleep, it was but a moment; he woke
- him suddenly up to apply new tests: he sent him on irksome errands when
- he was staggering with weariness; he tried the temper, the sense, and
- the health; and it was only when every severest test had been applied
- and endured, when the most corrosive aquafortis had been used, and
- failed to tarnish the ore, that he admitted it genuine, and, still in
- clouded silence, stamped it with his deep brand of approval.
- I speak not ignorant of these evils.
- Till the date at which the last chapter closes, M. Paul had not been my
- professor--he had not given me lessons, but about that time,
- accidentally hearing me one day acknowledge an ignorance of some branch
- of education (I think it was arithmetic), which would have disgraced a
- charity-school boy, as he very truly remarked, he took me in hand,
- examined me first, found me, I need not say, abundantly deficient, gave
- me some books and appointed me some tasks.
- He did this at first with pleasure, indeed with unconcealed exultation,
- condescending to say that he believed I was "bonne et pas trop faible"
- (i.e. well enough disposed, and not wholly destitute of parts), but,
- owing he supposed to adverse circumstances, "as yet in a state of
- wretchedly imperfect mental development."
- The beginning of all effort has indeed with me been marked by a
- preternatural imbecility. I never could, even in forming a common
- acquaintance, assert or prove a claim to average quickness. A
- depressing and difficult passage has prefaced every new page I have
- turned in life.
- So long as this passage lasted, M. Paul was very kind, very good, very
- forbearing; he saw the sharp pain inflicted, and felt the weighty
- humiliation imposed by my own sense of incapacity; and words can hardly
- do justice to his tenderness and helpfulness. His own eyes would
- moisten, when tears of shame and effort clouded mine; burdened as he
- was with work, he would steal half his brief space of recreation to
- give to me.
- But, strange grief! when that heavy and overcast dawn began at last to
- yield to day; when my faculties began to struggle themselves, free, and
- my time of energy and fulfilment came; when I voluntarily doubled,
- trebled, quadrupled the tasks he set, to please him as I thought, his
- kindness became sternness; the light changed in his eyes from a beam to
- a spark; he fretted, he opposed, he curbed me imperiously; the more I
- did, the harder I worked, the less he seemed content. Sarcasms of which
- the severity amazed and puzzled me, harassed my ears; then flowed out
- the bitterest inuendoes against the "pride of intellect." I was vaguely
- threatened with I know not what doom, if I ever trespassed the limits
- proper to my sex, and conceived a contraband appetite for unfeminine
- knowledge. Alas! I had no such appetite. What I loved, it joyed me by
- any effort to content; but the noble hunger for science in the
- abstract--the godlike thirst after discovery--these feelings were known
- to me but by briefest flashes.
- Yet, when M. Paul sneered at me, I wanted to possess them more fully;
- his injustice stirred in me ambitious wishes--it imparted a strong
- stimulus--it gave wings to aspiration.
- In the beginning, before I had penetrated to motives, that
- uncomprehended sneer of his made my heart ache, but by-and-by it only
- warmed the blood in my veins, and sent added action to my pulses.
- Whatever my powers--feminine or the contrary--God had given them, and I
- felt resolute to be ashamed of no faculty of his bestowal.
- The combat was very sharp for a time. I seemed to have lost M. Paul's
- affection; he treated me strangely. In his most unjust moments he would
- insinuate that I had deceived him when I appeared, what he called
- "faible"--that is incompetent; he said I had feigned a false
- incapacity. Again, he would turn suddenly round and accuse me of the
- most far-fetched imitations and impossible plagiarisms, asserting that
- I had extracted the pith out of books I had not so much as heard
- of--and over the perusal of which I should infallibly have fallen down
- in a sleep as deep as that of Eutychus.
- Once, upon his preferring such an accusation, I turned upon him--I rose
- against him. Gathering an armful of his books out of my desk, I filled
- my apron and poured them in a heap upon his estrade, at his feet.
- "Take them away, M. Paul," I said, "and teach me no more. I never asked
- to be made learned, and you compel me to feel very profoundly that
- learning is not happiness."
- And returning to my desk, I laid my head on my arms, nor would I speak
- to him for two days afterwards. He pained and chagrined me. His
- affection had been very sweet and dear--a pleasure new and
- incomparable: now that this seemed withdrawn, I cared not for his
- lessons.
- The books, however, were not taken away; they were all restored with
- careful hand to their places, and he came as usual to teach me. He made
- his peace somehow--too readily, perhaps: I ought to have stood out
- longer, but when he looked kind and good, and held out his hand with
- amity, memory refused to reproduce with due force his oppressive
- moments. And then, reconcilement is always sweet!
- On a certain morning a message came from my godmother, inviting me to
- attend some notable lecture to be delivered in the same public rooms
- before described. Dr. John had brought the message himself, and
- delivered it verbally to Rosine, who had not scrupled to follow the
- steps of M. Emanuel, then passing to the first classe, and, in his
- presence, stand "carrément" before my desk, hand in apron-pocket, and
- rehearse the same, saucily and aloud, concluding with the words, "Qu'il
- est vraiment beau, Mademoiselle, ce jeune docteur! Quels yeux--quel
- regard! Tenez! J'en ai le coeur tout ému!"
- When she was gone, my professor demanded of me why I suffered "cette
- fille effrontée, cette créature sans pudeur," to address me in such
- terms.
- I had no pacifying answer to give. The terms were precisely such as
- Rosine--a young lady in whose skull the organs of reverence and reserve
- were not largely developed--was in the constant habit of using.
- Besides, what she said about the young doctor was true enough. Graham
- _was_ handsome; he had fine eyes and a thrilling glance. An
- observation to that effect actually formed itself into sound on my lips.
- "Elle ne dit que la vérité," I said.
- "Ah! vous trouvez?"
- "Mais, sans doute."
- The lesson to which we had that day to submit was such as to make us
- very glad when it terminated. At its close, the released, pupils rushed
- out, half-trembling, half-exultant. I, too, was going. A mandate to
- remain arrested me. I muttered that I wanted some fresh air sadly--the
- stove was in a glow, the classe over-heated. An inexorable voice merely
- recommended silence; and this salamander--for whom no room ever seemed
- too hot--sitting down between my desk and the stove--a situation in
- which he ought to have felt broiled, but did not--proceeded to confront
- me with--a Greek quotation!
- In M. Emanuel's soul rankled a chronic suspicion that I knew both Greek
- and Latin. As monkeys are said to have the power of speech if they
- would but use it, and are reported to conceal this faculty in fear of
- its being turned to their detriment, so to me was ascribed a fund of
- knowledge which I was supposed criminally and craftily to conceal. The
- privileges of a "classical education," it was insinuated, had been
- mine; on flowers of Hymettus I had revelled; a golden store, hived in
- memory, now silently sustained my efforts, and privily nurtured my wits.
- A hundred expedients did M. Paul employ to surprise my secret--to
- wheedle, to threaten, to startle it out of me. Sometimes he placed
- Greek and Latin books in my way, and then watched me, as Joan of Arc's
- jailors tempted her with the warrior's accoutrements, and lay in wait
- for the issue. Again he quoted I know not what authors and passages,
- and while rolling out their sweet and sounding lines (the classic tones
- fell musically from his lips--for he had a good voice--remarkable for
- compass, modulation, and matchless expression), he would fix on me a
- vigilant, piercing, and often malicious eye. It was evident he
- sometimes expected great demonstrations; they never occurred, however;
- not comprehending, of course I could neither be charmed nor annoyed.
- Baffled--almost angry--he still clung to his fixed idea; my
- susceptibilities were pronounced marble--my face a mask. It appeared as
- if he could not be brought to accept the homely truth, and take me for
- what I was: men, and women too, must have delusion of some sort; if not
- made ready to their hand, they will invent exaggeration for themselves.
- At moments I _did_ wish that his suspicions had been better founded.
- There were times when I would have given my right hand to possess the
- treasures he ascribed to me. He deserved condign punishment for his
- testy crotchets. I could have gloried in bringing home to him his worst
- apprehensions astoundingly realized. I could have exulted to burst on
- his vision, confront and confound his "lunettes," one blaze of
- acquirements. Oh! why did nobody undertake to make me clever while I
- was young enough to learn, that I might, by one grand, sudden, inhuman
- revelation--one cold, cruel, overwhelming triumph--have for ever
- crushed the mocking spirit out of Paul Carl David Emanuel!
- Alas! no such feat was in my power. To-day, as usual, his quotations
- fell ineffectual: he soon shifted his ground.
- "Women of intellect" was his next theme: here he was at home. A "woman
- of intellect," it appeared, was a sort of "lusus naturae," a luckless
- accident, a thing for which there was neither place nor use in
- creation, wanted neither as wife nor worker. Beauty anticipated her in
- the first office. He believed in his soul that lovely, placid, and
- passive feminine mediocrity was the only pillow on which manly thought
- and sense could find rest for its aching temples; and as to work, male
- mind alone could work to any good practical result--hein?
- This "hein?" was a note of interrogation intended to draw from me
- contradiction or objection. However, I only said--"Cela ne me regarde
- pas: je ne m'en soucie pas;" and presently added--"May I go, Monsieur?
- They have rung the bell for the second déjeuner" (_i.e._ luncheon).
- "What of that? You are not hungry?"
- "Indeed I was," I said; "I had had nothing since breakfast, at seven,
- and should have nothing till dinner, at five, if I missed this bell."
- "Well, he was in the same plight, but I might share with him."
- And he broke in two the "brioche" intended for his own refreshment, and
- gave me half. Truly his bark was worse than his bite; but the really
- formidable attack was yet to come. While eating his cake, I could not
- forbear expressing my secret wish that I really knew all of which he
- accused me.
- "Did I sincerely feel myself to be an ignoramus?" he asked, in a
- softened tone.
- If I had replied meekly by an unqualified affirmative, I believe he
- would have stretched out his hand, and we should have been friends on
- the spot, but I answered--
- "Not exactly. I am ignorant, Monsieur, in the knowledge you ascribe to
- me, but I _sometimes_, not _always_, feel a knowledge of my own."
- "What did I mean?" he inquired, sharply.
- Unable to answer this question in a breath, I evaded it by change of
- subject. He had now finished his half of the brioche feeling sure that
- on so trifling a fragment he could not have satisfied his appetite, as
- indeed I had not appeased mine, and inhaling the fragrance of baked
- apples afar from the refectory, I ventured to inquire whether he did
- not also perceive that agreeable odour. He confessed that he did. I
- said if he would let me out by the garden-door, and permit me just to
- run across the court, I would fetch him a plateful; and added that I
- believed they were excellent, as Goton had a very good method of
- baking, or rather stewing fruit, putting in a little spice, sugar, and
- a glass or two of vin blanc--might I go?
- "Petite gourmande!" said he, smiling, "I have not forgotten how pleased
- you were with the pâté â la crême I once gave you, and you know very
- well, at this moment, that to fetch the apples for me will be the same
- as getting them for yourself. Go, then, but come back quickly."
- And at last he liberated me on parole. My own plan was to go and return
- with speed and good faith, to put the plate in at the door, and then to
- vanish incontinent, leaving all consequences for future settlement.
- That intolerably keen instinct of his seemed to have anticipated my
- scheme: he met me at the threshold, hurried me into the room, and fixed
- me in a minute in my former seat. Taking the plate of fruit from my
- hand, he divided the portion intended only for himself, and ordered me
- to eat my share. I complied with no good grace, and vexed, I suppose,
- by my reluctance, he opened a masked and dangerous battery. All he had
- yet said, I could count as mere sound and fury, signifying nothing: not
- so of the present attack.
- It consisted in an unreasonable proposition with which he had before
- afflicted me: namely, that on the next public examination-day I should
- engage--foreigner as I was--to take my place on the first form of
- first-class pupils, and with them improvise a composition in French, on
- any subject any spectator might dictate, without benefit of grammar or
- lexicon.
- I knew what the result of such an experiment would be. I, to whom
- nature had denied the impromptu faculty; who, in public, was by nature
- a cypher; whose time of mental activity, even when alone, was not under
- the meridian sun; who needed the fresh silence of morning, or the
- recluse peace of evening, to win from the Creative Impulse one evidence
- of his presence, one proof of his force; I, with whom that Impulse was
- the most intractable, the most capricious, the most maddening of
- masters (him before me always excepted)--a deity which sometimes, under
- circumstances--apparently propitious, would not speak when questioned,
- would not hear when appealed to, would not, when sought, be found; but
- would stand, all cold, all indurated, all granite, a dark Baal with
- carven lips and blank eye-balls, and breast like the stone face of a
- tomb; and again, suddenly, at some turn, some sound, some
- long-trembling sob of the wind, at some rushing past of an unseen
- stream of electricity, the irrational demon would wake unsolicited,
- would stir strangely alive, would rush from its pedestal like a
- perturbed Dagon, calling to its votary for a sacrifice, whatever the
- hour--to its victim for some blood, or some breath, whatever the
- circumstance or scene--rousing its priest, treacherously promising
- vaticination, perhaps filling its temple with a strange hum of oracles,
- but sure to give half the significance to fateful winds, and grudging
- to the desperate listener even a miserable remnant--yielding it
- sordidly, as though each word had been a drop of the deathless ichor of
- its own dark veins. And this tyrant I was to compel into bondage, and
- make it improvise a theme, on a school estrade, between a Mathilde and
- a Coralie, under the eye of a Madame Beck, for the pleasure, and to the
- inspiration of a bourgeois of Labassecour!
- Upon this argument M. Paul and I did battle more than once--strong
- battle, with confused noise of demand and rejection, exaction and
- repulse.
- On this particular day I was soundly rated. "The obstinacy of my whole
- sex," it seems, was concentrated in me; I had an "orgueil de diable." I
- feared to fail, forsooth! What did it matter whether I failed or not?
- Who was I that I should not fail, like my betters? It would do me good
- to fail. He wanted to see me worsted (I knew he did), and one minute he
- paused to take breath.
- "Would I speak now, and be tractable?"
- "Never would I be tractable in this matter. Law itself should not
- compel me. I would pay a fine, or undergo an imprisonment, rather than
- write for a show and to order, perched up on a platform."
- "Could softer motives influence me? Would I yield for friendship's
- sake?"
- "Not a whit, not a hair-breadth. No form of friendship under the sun
- had a right to exact such a concession. No true friendship would harass
- me thus."
- He supposed then (with a sneer--M. Paul could sneer supremely, curling
- his lip, opening his nostrils, contracting his eyelids)--he supposed
- there was but one form of appeal to which I would listen, and of that
- form it was not for him to make use.
- "Under certain persuasions, from certain quarters, je vous vois d'ici,"
- said he, "eagerly subscribing to the sacrifice, passionately arming for
- the effort."
- "Making a simpleton, a warning, and an example of myself, before a
- hundred and fifty of the 'papas' and 'mammas' of Villette."
- And here, losing patience, I broke out afresh with a cry that I wanted
- to be liberated--to get out into the air--I was almost in a fever.
- "Chut!" said the inexorable, "this was a mere pretext to run away; _he_
- was not hot, with the stove close at his back; how could I suffer,
- thoroughly screened by his person?"
- "I did not understand his constitution. I knew nothing of the natural
- history of salamanders. For my own part, I was a phlegmatic islander,
- and sitting in an oven did not agree with me; at least, might I step to
- the well, and get a glass of water--the sweet apples had made me
- thirsty?"
- "If that was all, he would do my errand."
- He went to fetch the water. Of course, with a door only on the latch
- behind me, I lost not my opportunity. Ere his return, his half-worried
- prey had escaped.
- CHAPTER XXXI.
- THE DRYAD.
- The spring was advancing, and the weather had turned suddenly warm.
- This change of temperature brought with it for me, as probably for many
- others, temporary decrease of strength. Slight exertion at this time
- left me overcome with fatigue--sleepless nights entailed languid days.
- One Sunday afternoon, having walked the distance of half a league to
- the Protestant church, I came back weary and exhausted; and taking
- refuge in my solitary sanctuary, the first classe, I was glad to sit
- down, and to make of my desk a pillow for my arms and head.
- Awhile I listened to the lullaby of bees humming in the berceau, and
- watched, through the glass door and the tender, lightly-strewn spring
- foliage, Madame Beck and a gay party of friends, whom she had
- entertained that day at dinner after morning mass, walking in the
- centre-alley under orchard boughs dressed at this season in blossom,
- and wearing a colouring as pure and warm as mountain-snow at sun-rise.
- My principal attraction towards this group of guests lay, I remember,
- in one figure--that of a handsome young girl whom I had seen before as
- a visitor at Madame Beck's, and of whom I had been vaguely told that
- she was a "filleule," or god-daughter, of M. Emanuel's, and that
- between her mother, or aunt, or some other female relation of hers, and
- the Professor, had existed of old a special friendship. M. Paul was not
- of the holiday band to-day, but I had seen this young girl with him ere
- now, and as far as distant observation could enable me to judge, she
- seemed to enjoy him with the frank ease of a ward with an indulgent
- guardian. I had seen her run up to him, put her arm through his, and
- hang upon him. Once, when she did so, a curious sensation had struck
- through me--a disagreeable anticipatory sensation--one of the family of
- presentiments, I suppose--but I refused to analyze or dwell upon it.
- While watching this girl, Mademoiselle Sauveur by name, and following
- the gleam of her bright silk robe (she was always richly dressed, for
- she was said to be wealthy) through the flowers and the glancing leaves
- of tender emerald, my eyes became dazzled--they closed; my lassitude,
- the warmth of the day, the hum of bees and birds, all lulled me, and at
- last I slept.
- Two hours stole over me. Ere I woke, the sun had declined out of sight
- behind the towering houses, the garden and the room were grey, bees had
- gone homeward, and the flowers were closing; the party of guests, too,
- had vanished; each alley was void.
- On waking, I felt much at ease--not chill, as I ought to have been
- after sitting so still for at least two hours; my cheek and arms were
- not benumbed by pressure against the hard desk. No wonder. Instead of
- the bare wood on which I had laid them, I found a thick shawl,
- carefully folded, substituted for support, and another shawl (both
- taken from the corridor where such things hung) wrapped warmly round me.
- Who had done this? Who was my friend? Which of the teachers? Which of
- the pupils? None, except St. Pierre, was inimical to me; but which of
- them had the art, the thought, the habit, of benefiting thus tenderly?
- Which of them had a step so quiet, a hand so gentle, but I should have
- heard or felt her, if she had approached or touched me in a day-sleep?
- As to Ginevra Fanshawe, that bright young creature was not gentle at
- all, and would certainly have pulled me out of my chair, if she had
- meddled in the matter. I said at last: "It is Madame Beck's doing; she
- has come in, seen me asleep, and thought I might take cold. She
- considers me a useful machine, answering well the purpose for which it
- was hired; so would not have me needlessly injured. And now,"
- methought, "I'll take a walk; the evening is fresh, and not very chill."
- So I opened the glass door and stepped into the berceau.
- I went to my own alley: had it been dark, or even dusk, I should have
- hardly ventured there, for I had not yet forgotten the curious illusion
- of vision (if illusion it were) experienced in that place some months
- ago. But a ray of the setting sun burnished still the grey crown of
- Jean Baptiste; nor had all the birds of the garden yet vanished into
- their nests amongst the tufted shrubs and thick wall-ivy. I paced up
- and down, thinking almost the same thoughts I had pondered that night
- when I buried my glass jar--how I should make some advance in life,
- take another step towards an independent position; for this train of
- reflection, though not lately pursued, had never by me been wholly
- abandoned; and whenever a certain eye was averted from me, and a
- certain countenance grew dark with unkindness and injustice, into that
- track of speculation did I at once strike; so that, little by little, I
- had laid half a plan.
- "Living costs little," said I to myself, "in this economical town of
- Villette, where people are more sensible than I understand they are in
- dear old England--infinitely less worried about appearance, and less
- emulous of display--where nobody is in the least ashamed to be quite as
- homely and saving as he finds convenient. House-rent, in a prudently
- chosen situation, need not be high. When I shall have saved one
- thousand francs, I will take a tenement with one large room, and two or
- three smaller ones, furnish the first with a few benches and desks, a
- black tableau, an estrade for myself; upon it a chair and table, with a
- sponge and some white chalks; begin with taking day-pupils, and so work
- my way upwards. Madame Beck's commencement was--as I have often heard
- her say--from no higher starting-point, and where is she now? All these
- premises and this garden are hers, bought with her money; she has a
- competency already secured for old age, and a flourishing establishment
- under her direction, which will furnish a career for her children.
- "Courage, Lucy Snowe! With self-denial and economy now, and steady
- exertion by-and-by, an object in life need not fail you. Venture not to
- complain that such an object is too selfish, too limited, and lacks
- interest; be content to labour for independence until you have proved,
- by winning that prize, your right to look higher. But afterwards, is
- there nothing more for me in life--no true home--nothing to be dearer
- to me than myself, and by its paramount preciousness, to draw from me
- better things than I care to culture for myself only? Nothing, at whose
- feet I can willingly lay down the whole burden of human egotism, and
- gloriously take up the nobler charge of labouring and living for
- others? I suppose, Lucy Snowe, the orb of your life is not to be so
- rounded: for you, the crescent-phase must suffice. Very good. I see a
- huge mass of my fellow-creatures in no better circumstances. I see that
- a great many men, and more women, hold their span of life on conditions
- of denial and privation. I find no reason why I should be of the few
- favoured. I believe in some blending of hope and sunshine sweetening
- the worst lots. I believe that this life is not all; neither the
- beginning nor the end. I believe while I tremble; I trust while I weep."
- So this subject is done with. It is right to look our life-accounts
- bravely in the face now and then, and settle them honestly. And he is a
- poor self-swindler who lies to himself while he reckons the items, and
- sets down under the head--happiness that which is misery. Call
- anguish--anguish, and despair--despair; write both down in strong
- characters with a resolute pen: you will the better pay your debt to
- Doom. Falsify: insert "privilege" where you should have written "pain;"
- and see if your mighty creditor will allow the fraud to pass, or accept
- the coin with which you would cheat him. Offer to the strongest--if the
- darkest angel of God's host--water, when he has asked blood--will he
- take it? Not a whole pale sea for one red drop. I settled another
- account.
- Pausing before Methusaleh--the giant and patriarch of the garden--and
- leaning my brow against his knotty trunk, my foot rested on the stone
- sealing the small sepulchre at his root; and I recalled the passage of
- feeling therein buried; I recalled Dr. John; my warm affection for him;
- my faith in his excellence; my delight in his grace. What was become of
- that curious one-sided friendship which was half marble and half life;
- only on one hand truth, and on the other perhaps a jest?
- Was this feeling dead? I do not know, but it was buried. Sometimes I
- thought the tomb unquiet, and dreamed strangely of disturbed earth, and
- of hair, still golden, and living, obtruded through coffin-chinks.
- Had I been too hasty? I used to ask myself; and this question would
- occur with a cruel sharpness after some brief chance interview with Dr.
- John. He had still such kind looks, such a warm hand; his voice still
- kept so pleasant a tone for my name; I never liked "Lucy" so well as
- when he uttered it. But I learned in time that this benignity, this
- cordiality, this music, belonged in no shape to me: it was a part of
- himself; it was the honey of his temper; it was the balm of his mellow
- mood; he imparted it, as the ripe fruit rewards with sweetness the
- rifling bee; he diffused it about him, as sweet plants shed their
- perfume. Does the nectarine love either the bee or bird it feeds? Is
- the sweetbriar enamoured of the air?
- "Good-night, Dr. John; you are good, you are beautiful; but you are not
- mine. Good-night, and God bless you!"
- Thus I closed my musings. "Good-night" left my lips in sound; I heard
- the words spoken, and then I heard an echo--quite close.
- "Good-night, Mademoiselle; or, rather, good-evening--the sun is scarce
- set; I hope you slept well?"
- I started, but was only discomposed a moment; I knew the voice and
- speaker.
- "Slept, Monsieur! When? where?"
- "You may well inquire when--where. It seems you turn day into night,
- and choose a desk for a pillow; rather hard lodging--?"
- "It was softened for me, Monsieur, while I slept. That unseen,
- gift-bringing thing which haunts my desk, remembered me. No matter how
- I fell asleep; I awoke pillowed and covered."
- "Did the shawls keep you warm?"
- "Very warm. Do you ask thanks for them?"
- "No. You looked pale in your slumbers: are you home-sick?"
- "To be home-sick, one must have a home; which I have not."
- "Then you have more need of a careful friend. I scarcely know any one,
- Miss Lucy, who needs a friend more absolutely than you; your very
- faults imperatively require it. You want so much checking, regulating,
- and keeping down."
- This idea of "keeping down" never left M. Paul's head; the most
- habitual subjugation would, in my case, have failed to relieve him of
- it. No matter; what did it signify? I listened to him, and did not
- trouble myself to be too submissive; his occupation would have been
- gone had I left him nothing to "keep down."
- "You need watching, and watching over," he pursued; "and it is well for
- you that I see this, and do my best to discharge both duties. I watch
- you and others pretty closely, pretty constantly, nearer and oftener
- than you or they think. Do you see that window with a light in it?"
- He pointed to a lattice in one of the college boarding-houses.
- "That," said he, "is a room I have hired, nominally for a
- study--virtually for a post of observation. There I sit and read for
- hours together: it is my way--my taste. My book is this garden; its
- contents are human nature--female human nature. I know you all by
- heart. Ah! I know you well--St. Pierre, the Parisienne--cette
- maîtresse-femme, my cousin Beck herself."
- "It is not right, Monsieur."
- "Comment? it is not right? By whose creed? Does some dogma of Calvin or
- Luther condemn it? What is that to me? I am no Protestant. My rich
- father (for, though I have known poverty, and once starved for a year
- in a garret in Rome--starved wretchedly, often on a meal a day, and
- sometimes not that--yet I was born to wealth)--my rich father was a
- good Catholic; and he gave me a priest and a Jesuit for a tutor. I
- retain his lessons; and to what discoveries, grand Dieu! have they not
- aided me!"
- "Discoveries made by stealth seem to me dishonourable discoveries."
- "Puritaine! I doubt it not. Yet see how my Jesuit's system works. You
- know the St. Pierre?"
- "Partially."
- He laughed. "You say right--_'partially'_; whereas _I_ know her
- _thoroughly_; there is the difference. She played before me the
- amiable; offered me patte de velours; caressed, flattered, fawned on
- me. Now, I am accessible to a woman's flattery--accessible against my
- reason. Though never pretty, she was--when I first knew her--young, or
- knew how to look young. Like all her countrywomen, she had the art of
- dressing--she had a certain cool, easy, social assurance, which spared
- me the pain of embarrassment--"
- "Monsieur, that must have been unnecessary. I never saw you embarrassed
- in my life."
- "Mademoiselle, you know little of me; I can be embarrassed as a petite
- pensionnaire; there is a fund of modesty and diffidence in my nature--"
- "Monsieur, I never saw it."
- "Mademoiselle, it is there. You ought to have seen it."
- "Monsieur, I have observed you in public--on platforms, in tribunes,
- before titles and crowned heads--and you were as easy as you are in the
- third division."
- "Mademoiselle, neither titles nor crowned heads excite my modesty; and
- publicity is very much my element. I like it well, and breathe in it
- quite freely;--but--but, in short, here is the sentiment brought into
- action, at this very moment; however, I disdain to be worsted by it.
- If, Mademoiselle, I were a marrying man (which I am not; and you may
- spare yourself the trouble of any sneer you may be contemplating at the
- thought), and found it necessary to ask a lady whether she could look
- upon me in the light of a future husband, then would it be proved that
- I am as I say--modest."
- I quite believed him now; and, in believing, I honoured him with a
- sincerity of esteem which made my heart ache.
- "As to the St. Pierre," he went on, recovering himself, for his voice
- had altered a little, "she once intended to be Madame Emanuel; and I
- don't know whither I might have been led, but for yonder little lattice
- with the light. Ah, magic lattice! what miracles of discovery hast thou
- wrought! Yes," he pursued, "I have seen her rancours, her vanities, her
- levities--not only here, but elsewhere: I have witnessed what bucklers
- me against all her arts: I am safe from poor Zélie."
- "And my pupils," he presently recommenced, "those blondes jeunes
- filles--so mild and meek--I have seen the most reserved--romp like
- boys, the demurest--snatch grapes from the walls, shake pears from the
- trees. When the English teacher came, I saw her, marked her early
- preference for this alley, noticed her taste for seclusion, watched her
- well, long before she and I came to speaking terms; do you recollect my
- once coming silently and offering you a little knot of white violets
- when we were strangers?"
- "I recollect it. I dried the violets, kept them, and have them still."
- "It pleased me when you took them peacefully and promptly, without
- prudery--that sentiment which I ever dread to excite, and which, when
- it is revealed in eye or gesture, I vindictively detest. To return. Not
- only did _I_ watch you; but often--especially at eventide--another
- guardian angel was noiselessly hovering near: night after night my
- cousin Beck has stolen down yonder steps, and glidingly pursued your
- movements when you did not see her."
- "But, Monsieur, you could not from the distance of that window see what
- passed in this garden at night?"
- "By moonlight I possibly might with a glass--I use a glass--but the
- garden itself is open to me. In the shed, at the bottom, there is a
- door leading into a court, which communicates with the college; of that
- door I possess the key, and thus come and go at pleasure. This
- afternoon I came through it, and found you asleep in classe; again this
- evening I have availed myself of the same entrance."
- I could not help saying, "If you were a wicked, designing man, how
- terrible would all this be!"
- His attention seemed incapable of being arrested by this view of the
- subject: he lit his cigar, and while he puffed it, leaning against a
- tree, and looking at me in a cool, amused way he had when his humour
- was tranquil, I thought proper to go on sermonizing him: he often
- lectured me by the hour together--I did not see why I should not speak
- my mind for once. So I told him my impressions concerning his
- Jesuit-system.
- "The knowledge it brings you is bought too dear, Monsieur; this coming
- and going by stealth degrades your own dignity."
- "My dignity!" he cried, laughing; "when did you ever see me trouble my
- head about my dignity? It is you, Miss Lucy, who are 'digne.' How
- often, in your high insular presence, have I taken a pleasure in
- trampling upon, what you are pleased to call, my dignity; tearing it,
- scattering it to the winds, in those mad transports you witness with
- such hauteur, and which I know you think very like the ravings of a
- third-rate London actor."
- "Monsieur, I tell you every glance you cast from that lattice is a
- wrong done to the best part of your own nature. To study the human
- heart thus, is to banquet secretly and sacrilegiously on Eve's apples.
- I wish you were a Protestant."
- Indifferent to the wish, he smoked on. After a space of smiling yet
- thoughtful silence, he said, rather suddenly--"I have seen other
- things."
- "What other things?"
- Taking the weed from his lips, he threw the remnant amongst the shrubs,
- where, for a moment, it lay glowing in the gloom.
- "Look, at it," said he: "is not that spark like an eye watching you and
- me?"
- He took a turn down the walk; presently returning, he went on:--"I have
- seen, Miss Lucy, things to me unaccountable, that have made me watch
- all night for a solution, and I have not yet found it."
- The tone was peculiar; my veins thrilled; he saw me shiver.
- "Are you afraid? Whether is it of my words or that red jealous eye just
- winking itself out?"
- "I am cold; the night grows dark and late, and the air is changed; it
- is time to go in."
- "It is little past eight, but you shall go in soon. Answer me only this
- question."
- Yet he paused ere he put it. The garden was truly growing dark; dusk
- had come on with clouds, and drops of rain began to patter through the
- trees. I hoped he would feel this, but, for the moment, he seemed too
- much absorbed to be sensible of the change.
- "Mademoiselle, do you Protestants believe in the supernatural?"
- "There is a difference of theory and belief on this point amongst
- Protestants as amongst other sects," I answered. "Why, Monsieur, do you
- ask such a question?"
- "Why do you shrink and speak so faintly? Are you superstitious?"
- "I am constitutionally nervous. I dislike the discussion of such
- subjects. I dislike it the more because--"
- "You believe?"
- "No: but it has happened to me to experience impressions--"
- "Since you came here?"
- "Yes; not many months ago."
- "Here?--in this house?"
- "Yes."
- "Bon! I am glad of it. I knew it, somehow; before you told me. I was
- conscious of rapport between you and myself. You are patient, and I am
- choleric; you are quiet and pale, and I am tanned and fiery; you are a
- strict Protestant, and I am a sort of lay Jesuit: but we are
- alike--there is affinity between us. Do you see it, Mademoiselle, when
- you look in the glass? Do you observe that your forehead is shaped like
- mine--that your eyes are cut like mine? Do you hear that you have some
- of my tones of voice? Do you know that you have many of my looks? I
- perceive all this, and believe that you were born under my star. Yes,
- you were born under my star! Tremble! for where that is the case with
- mortals, the threads of their destinies are difficult to disentangle;
- knottings and catchings occur--sudden breaks leave damage in the web.
- But these 'impressions,' as you say, with English caution. I, too, have
- had my 'impressions.'"
- "Monsieur, tell me them."
- "I desire no better, and intend no less. You know the legend of this
- house and garden?"
- "I know it. Yes. They say that hundreds of years ago a nun was buried
- here alive at the foot of this very tree, beneath the ground which now
- bears us."
- "And that in former days a nun's ghost used to come and go here."
- "Monsieur, what if it comes and goes here still?"
- "Something comes and goes here: there is a shape frequenting this house
- by night, different to any forms that show themselves by day. I have
- indisputably seen a something, more than once; and to me its conventual
- weeds were a strange sight, saying more than they can do to any other
- living being. A nun!"
- "Monsieur, I, too, have seen it."
- "I anticipated that. Whether this nun be flesh and blood, or something
- that remains when blood is dried, and flesh is wasted, her business is
- as much with you as with me, probably. Well, I mean to make it out; it
- has baffled me so far, but I mean to follow up the mystery. I mean--"
- Instead of telling what he meant, he raised his head suddenly; I made
- the same movement in the same instant; we both looked to one point--the
- high tree shadowing the great berceau, and resting some of its boughs
- on the roof of the first classe. There had been a strange and
- inexplicable sound from that quarter, as if the arms of that tree had
- swayed of their own motion, and its weight of foliage had rushed and
- crushed against the massive trunk. Yes; there scarce stirred a breeze,
- and that heavy tree was convulsed, whilst the feathery shrubs stood
- still. For some minutes amongst the wood and leafage a rending and
- heaving went on. Dark as it was, it seemed to me that something more
- solid than either night-shadow, or branch-shadow, blackened out of the
- boles. At last the struggle ceased. What birth succeeded this travail?
- What Dryad was born of these throes? We watched fixedly. A sudden bell
- rang in the house--the prayer-bell. Instantly into our alley there
- came, out of the berceau, an apparition, all black and white. With a
- sort of angry rush-close, close past our faces--swept swiftly the very
- NUN herself! Never had I seen her so clearly. She looked tall of
- stature, and fierce of gesture. As she went, the wind rose sobbing; the
- rain poured wild and cold; the whole night seemed to feel her.
- CHAPTER XXXII.
- THE FIRST LETTER.
- Where, it becomes time to inquire, was Paulina Mary? How fared my
- intercourse with the sumptuous Hôtel Crécy? That intercourse had, for
- an interval, been suspended by absence; M. and Miss de Bassompierre had
- been travelling, dividing some weeks between the provinces and capital
- of France. Chance apprised me of their return very shortly after it
- took place.
- I was walking one mild afternoon on a quiet boulevard, wandering slowly
- on, enjoying the benign April sun, and some thoughts not unpleasing,
- when I saw before me a group of riders, stopping as if they had just
- encountered, and exchanging greetings in the midst of the broad,
- smooth, linden-bordered path; on one side a middle-aged gentleman and
- young lady, on the other--a young and handsome man. Very graceful was
- the lady's mien, choice her appointments, delicate and stately her
- whole aspect. Still, as I looked, I felt they were known to me, and,
- drawing a little nearer, I fully recognised them all: the Count Home de
- Bassompierre, his daughter, and Dr. Graham Bretton.
- How animated was Graham's face! How true, how warm, yet how retiring
- the joy it expressed! This was the state of things, this the
- combination of circumstances, at once to attract and enchain, to subdue
- and excite Dr. John. The pearl he admired was in itself of great price
- and truest purity, but he was not the man who, in appreciating the gem,
- could forget its setting. Had he seen Paulina with the same youth,
- beauty, and grace, but on foot, alone, unguarded, and in simple attire,
- a dependent worker, a demi-grisette, he would have thought her a pretty
- little creature, and would have loved with his eye her movements and
- her mien, but it required other than this to conquer him as he was now
- vanquished, to bring him safe under dominion as now, without loss, and
- even with gain to his manly honour, one saw that he was reduced; there
- was about Dr. John all the man of the world; to satisfy himself did not
- suffice; society must approve--the world must admire what he did, or he
- counted his measures false and futile. In his victrix he required all
- that was here visible--the imprint of high cultivation, the
- consecration of a careful and authoritative protection, the adjuncts
- that Fashion decrees, Wealth purchases, and Taste adjusts; for these
- conditions his spirit stipulated ere it surrendered: they were here to
- the utmost fulfilled; and now, proud, impassioned, yet fearing, he did
- homage to Paulina as his sovereign. As for her, the smile of feeling,
- rather than of conscious power, slept soft in her eyes.
- They parted. He passed me at speed, hardly feeling the earth he
- skimmed, and seeing nothing on either hand. He looked very handsome;
- mettle and purpose were roused in him fully.
- "Papa, there is Lucy!" cried a musical, friendly voice. "Lucy, dear
- Lucy--_do_ come here!"
- I hastened to her. She threw back her veil, and stooped from her saddle
- to kiss me.
- "I was coming to see you to-morrow," said she; "but now to-morrow you
- will come and see me."
- She named the hour, and I promised compliance.
- The morrow's evening found me with her--she and I shut into her own
- room. I had not seen her since that occasion when her claims were
- brought into comparison with those of Ginevra Fanshawe, and had so
- signally prevailed; she had much to tell me of her travels in the
- interval. A most animated, rapid speaker was she in such a tête-à-tête,
- a most lively describer; yet with her artless diction and clear soft
- voice, she never seemed to speak too fast or to say too much. My own
- attention I think would not soon have flagged, but by-and-by, she
- herself seemed to need some change of subject; she hastened to wind up
- her narrative briefly. Yet why she terminated with so concise an
- abridgment did not immediately appear; silence followed--a restless
- silence, not without symptoms of abstraction. Then, turning to me, in a
- diffident, half-appealing voice--"Lucy--"
- "Well, I am at your side."
- "Is my cousin Ginevra still at Madame Beck's?"
- "Your cousin is still there; you must be longing to see her."
- "No--not much."
- "You want to invite her to spend another evening?"
- "No... I suppose she still talks about being married?"
- "Not to any one you care for."
- "But of course she still thinks of Dr. Bretton? She cannot have changed
- her mind on that point, because it was so fixed two months ago."
- "Why, you know, it does not matter. You saw the terms on which they
- stood."
- "There was a little misunderstanding that evening, certainly; does she
- seem unhappy?"
- "Not she. To change the subject. Have you heard or seen nothing of, or
- from, Graham during your absence?"
- "Papa had letters from him once or twice about business, I think. He
- undertook the management of some affair which required attention while
- we were away. Dr. Bretton seems to respect papa, and to have pleasure
- in obliging him."
- "Yes: you met him yesterday on the boulevard; you would be able to
- judge from his aspect that his friends need not be painfully anxious
- about his health?"
- "Papa seems to have thought with you. I could not help smiling. He is
- not particularly observant, you know, because he is often thinking of
- other things than what pass before his eyes; but he said, as Dr.
- Bretton rode away, Really it does a man good to see the spirit and
- energy of that boy.' He called Dr. Bretton a boy; I believe he almost
- thinks him so, just as he thinks me a little girl; he was not speaking
- to me, but dropped that remark to himself. Lucy...."
- Again fell the appealing accent, and at the same instant she left her
- chair, and came and sat on the stool at my feet.
- I liked her. It is not a declaration I have often made concerning my
- acquaintance, in the course of this book: the reader will bear with it
- for once. Intimate intercourse, close inspection, disclosed in Paulina
- only what was delicate, intelligent, and sincere; therefore my regard
- for her lay deep. An admiration more superficial might have been more
- demonstrative; mine, however, was quiet.
- "What have you to ask of Lucy?" said I; "be brave, and speak out."
- But there was no courage in her eye; as it met mine, it fell; and there
- was no coolness on her cheek--not a transient surface-blush, but a
- gathering inward excitement raised its tint and its temperature.
- "Lucy, I _do_ wish to know your thoughts of Dr. Bretton. Do, _do_ give
- me your real opinion of his character, his disposition."
- "His character stands high, and deservedly high."
- "And his disposition? Tell me about his disposition," she urged; "you
- know him well."
- "I know him pretty well."
- "You know his home-side. You have seen him with his mother; speak of
- him as a son."
- "He is a fine-hearted son; his mother's comfort and hope, her pride and
- pleasure."
- She held my hand between hers, and at each favourable word gave it a
- little caressing stroke.
- "In what other way is he good, Lucy?"
- "Dr. Bretton is benevolent--humanely disposed towards all his race, Dr.
- Bretton would have benignity for the lowest savage, or the worst
- criminal."
- "I heard some gentlemen, some of papa's friends, who were talking about
- him, say the same. They say many of the poor patients at the hospitals,
- who tremble before some pitiless and selfish surgeons, welcome him."
- "They are right; I have witnessed as much. He once took me over a
- hospital; I saw how he was received: your father's friends are right."
- The softest gratitude animated her eye as she lifted it a moment. She
- had yet more to say, but seemed hesitating about time and place. Dusk
- was beginning to reign; her parlour fire already glowed with twilight
- ruddiness; but I thought she wished the room dimmer, the hour later.
- "How quiet and secluded we feel here!" I remarked, to reassure her.
- "Do we? Yes; it is a still evening, and I shall not be called down to
- tea; papa is dining out."
- Still holding my hand, she played with the fingers unconsciously,
- dressed them, now in her own rings, and now circled them with a twine
- of her beautiful hair; she patted the palm against her hot cheek, and
- at last, having cleared a voice that was naturally liquid as a lark's,
- she said:--
- "You must think it rather strange that I should talk so much about Dr.
- Bretton, ask so many questions, take such an interest, but--".
- "Not at all strange; perfectly natural; you like him."
- "And if I did," said she, with slight quickness, "is that a reason why
- I should talk? I suppose you think me weak, like my cousin Ginevra?"
- "If I thought you one whit like Madame Ginevra, I would not sit here
- waiting for your communications. I would get up, walk at my ease about
- the room, and anticipate all you had to say by a round lecture. Go on."
- "I mean to go on," retorted she; "what else do you suppose I mean to
- do?"
- And she looked and spoke--the little Polly of Bretton--petulant,
- sensitive.
- "If," said she, emphatically, "if I liked Dr. John till I was fit to
- die for liking him, that alone could not license me to be otherwise
- than dumb--dumb as the grave--dumb as you, Lucy Snowe--you know it--and
- you know you would despise me if I failed in self-control, and whined
- about some rickety liking that was all on my side."
- "It is true I little respect women or girls who are loquacious either
- in boasting the triumphs, or bemoaning the mortifications, of feelings.
- But as to you, Paulina, speak, for I earnestly wish to hear you. Tell
- me all it will give you pleasure or relief to tell: I ask no more."
- "Do you care for me, Lucy?"
- "Yes, I do, Paulina."
- "And I love you. I had an odd content in being with you even when I was
- a little, troublesome, disobedient girl; it was charming to me then to
- lavish on you my naughtiness and whims. Now you are acceptable to me,
- and I like to talk with and trust you. So listen, Lucy."
- And she settled herself, resting against my arm--resting gently, not
- with honest Mistress Fanshawe's fatiguing and selfish weight.
- "A few minutes since you asked whether we had not heard from Graham
- during our absence, and I said there were two letters for papa on
- business; this was true, but I did not tell you all."
- "You evaded?"
- "I shuffled and equivocated, you know. However, I am going to speak the
- truth now; it is getting darker; one can talk at one's ease. Papa often
- lets me open the letter-bag and give him out the contents. One morning,
- about three weeks ago, you don't know how surprised I was to find,
- amongst a dozen letters for M. de Bassompierre, a note addressed to
- Miss de Bassompierre. I spied it at once, amidst all the rest; the
- handwriting was not strange; it attracted me directly. I was going to
- say, 'Papa, here is another letter from Dr. Bretton;' but the 'Miss'
- struck me mute. I actually never received a letter from a gentleman
- before. Ought I to have shown it to papa, and let him open it and read
- it first? I could not for my life, Lucy. I know so well papa's ideas
- about me: he forgets my age; he thinks I am a mere school-girl; he is
- not aware that other people see I am grown up as tall as I shall be;
- so, with a curious mixture of feelings, some of them self-reproachful,
- and some so fluttering and strong, I cannot describe them, I gave papa
- his twelve letters--his herd of possessions--and kept back my one, my
- ewe-lamb. It lay in my lap during breakfast, looking up at me with an
- inexplicable meaning, making me feel myself a thing double-existent--a
- child to that dear papa, but no more a child to myself. After breakfast
- I carried my letter up-stairs, and having secured myself by turning the
- key in the door, I began to study the outside of my treasure: it was
- some minutes before I could get over the direction and penetrate the
- seal; one does not take a strong place of this kind by instant
- storm--one sits down awhile before it, as beleaguers say. Graham's hand
- is like himself, Lucy, and so is his seal--all clear, firm, and
- rounded--no slovenly splash of wax--a full, solid, steady drop--a
- distinct impress; no pointed turns harshly pricking the optic nerve,
- but a clean, mellow, pleasant manuscript, that soothes you as you read.
- It is like his face--just like the chiselling of his features: do you
- know his autograph?"
- "I have seen it: go on."
- "The seal was too beautiful to be broken, so I cut it round with my
- scissors. On the point of reading the letter at last, I once more drew
- back voluntarily; it was too soon yet to drink that draught--the
- sparkle in the cup was so beautiful--I would watch it yet a minute.
- Then I remembered all at once that I had not said my prayers that
- morning. Having heard papa go down to breakfast a little earlier than
- usual, I had been afraid of keeping him waiting, and had hastened to
- join him as soon as dressed, thinking no harm to put off prayers till
- afterwards. Some people would say I ought to have served God first and
- then man; but I don't think heaven could be jealous of anything I might
- do for papa. I believe I am superstitious. A voice seemed now to say
- that another feeling than filial affection was in question--to urge me
- to pray before I dared to read what I so longed to read--to deny myself
- yet a moment, and remember first a great duty. I have had these
- impulses ever since I can remember. I put the letter down and said my
- prayers, adding, at the end, a strong entreaty that whatever happened,
- I might not be tempted or led to cause papa any sorrow, and might
- never, in caring for others, neglect him. The very thought of such a
- possibility, so pierced my heart that it made me cry. But still, Lucy,
- I felt that in time papa would have to be taught the truth, managed,
- and induced to hear reason.
- "I read the letter. Lucy, life is said to be all disappointment. _I_
- was not disappointed. Ere I read, and while I read, my heart did more
- than throb--it trembled fast--every quiver seemed like the pant of an
- animal athirst, laid down at a well and drinking; and the well proved
- quite full, gloriously clear; it rose up munificently of its own
- impulse; I saw the sun through its gush, and not a mote, Lucy, no moss,
- no insect, no atom in the thrice-refined golden gurgle.
- "Life," she went on, "is said to be full of pain to some. I have read
- biographies where the wayfarer seemed to journey on from suffering to
- suffering; where Hope flew before him fast, never alighting so near, or
- lingering so long, as to give his hand a chance of one realizing grasp.
- I have read of those who sowed in tears, and whose harvest, so far from
- being reaped in joy, perished by untimely blight, or was borne off by
- sudden whirlwind; and, alas! some of these met the winter with empty
- garners, and died of utter want in the darkest and coldest of the year."
- "Was it their fault, Paulina, that they of whom you speak thus died?"
- "Not always their fault. Some of them were good endeavouring people. I
- am not endeavouring, nor actively good, yet God has caused me to grow
- in sun, due moisture, and safe protection, sheltered, fostered, taught,
- by my dear father; and now--now--another comes. Graham loves me."
- For some minutes we both paused on this climax.
- "Does your father know?" I inquired, in a low voice.
- "Graham spoke with deep respect of papa, but implied that he dared not
- approach that quarter as yet; he must first prove his worth: he added
- that he must have some light respecting myself and my own feelings ere
- he ventured to risk a step in the matter elsewhere."
- "How did you reply?"
- "I replied briefly, but I did not repulse him. Yet I almost trembled
- for fear of making the answer too cordial: Graham's tastes are so
- fastidious. I wrote it three times--chastening and subduing the phrases
- at every rescript; at last, having confected it till it seemed to me to
- resemble a morsel of ice flavoured with ever so slight a zest of fruit
- or sugar, I ventured to seal and despatch it."
- "Excellent, Paulina! Your instinct is fine; you understand Dr. Bretton."
- "But how must I manage about papa? There I am still in pain."
- "Do not manage at all. Wait now. Only maintain no further
- correspondence till your father knows all, and gives his sanction."
- "Will he ever give it?"
- "Time will show. Wait."
- "Dr. Bretton wrote one other letter, deeply grateful for my calm, brief
- note; but I anticipated your advice, by saying, that while my
- sentiments continued the same, I could not, without my father's
- knowledge, write again."
- "You acted as you ought to have done; so Dr. Bretton will feel: it will
- increase his pride in you, his love for you, if either be capable of
- increase. Paulina, that gentle hoar-frost of yours, surrounding so much
- pure, fine flame, is a priceless privilege of nature."
- "You see I feel Graham's disposition," said she. "I feel that no
- delicacy can be too exquisite for his treatment."
- "It is perfectly proved that you comprehend him, and then--whatever Dr.
- Bretton's disposition, were he one who expected to be more nearly
- met--you would still act truthfully, openly, tenderly, with your
- father."
- "Lucy, I trust I shall thus act always. Oh, it will be pain to wake
- papa from his dream, and tell him I am no more a little girl!"
- "Be in no hurry to do so, Paulina. Leave the revelation to Time and
- your kind Fate. I also have noticed the gentleness of her cares for
- you: doubt not she will benignantly order the circumstances, and fitly
- appoint the hour. Yes: I have thought over your life just as you have
- yourself thought it over; I have made comparisons like those to which
- you adverted. We know not the future, but the past has been propitious.
- "As a child I feared for you; nothing that has life was ever more
- susceptible than your nature in infancy: under harshness or neglect,
- neither your outward nor your inward self would have ripened to what
- they now are. Much pain, much fear, much struggle, would have troubled
- the very lines of your features, broken their regularity, would have
- harassed your nerves into the fever of habitual irritation; you would
- have lost in health and cheerfulness, in grace and sweetness.
- Providence has protected and cultured you, not only for your own sake,
- but I believe for Graham's. His star, too, was fortunate: to develop
- fully the best of his nature, a companion like you was needed: there
- you are, ready. You must be united. I knew it the first day I saw you
- together at La Terrasse. In all that mutually concerns you and Graham
- there seems to me promise, plan, harmony. I do not think the sunny
- youth of either will prove the forerunner of stormy age. I think it is
- deemed good that you two should live in peace and be happy--not as
- angels, but as few are happy amongst mortals. Some lives _are_ thus
- blessed: it is God's will: it is the attesting trace and lingering
- evidence of Eden. Other lives run from the first another course. Other
- travellers encounter weather fitful and gusty, wild and
- variable--breast adverse winds, are belated and overtaken by the early
- closing winter night. Neither can this happen without the sanction of
- God; and I know that, amidst His boundless works, is somewhere stored
- the secret of this last fate's justice: I know that His treasures
- contain the proof as the promise of its mercy."
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
- M. PAUL KEEPS HIS PROMISE.
- On the first of May, we had all--i.e. the twenty boarders and the four
- teachers--notice to rise at five o'clock of the morning, to be dressed
- and ready by six, to put ourselves under the command of M. le
- Professeur Emanuel, who was to head our march forth from Villette, for
- it was on this day he proposed to fulfil his promise of taking us to
- breakfast in the country. I, indeed, as the reader may perhaps
- remember, had not had the honour of an invitation when this excursion
- was first projected--rather the contrary; but on my now making allusion
- to this fact, and wishing to know how it was to be, my ear received a
- pull, of which I did not venture to challenge the repetition by
- raising, further difficulties.
- "Je vous conseille de vous faire prier," said M. Emanuel, imperially
- menacing the other ear. One Napoleonic compliment, however, was enough,
- so I made up my mind to be of the party.
- The morning broke calm as summer, with singing of birds in the garden,
- and a light dew-mist that promised heat. We all said it would be warm,
- and we all felt pleasure in folding away heavy garments, and in
- assuming the attire suiting a sunny season. The clean fresh print
- dress, and the light straw bonnet, each made and trimmed as the French
- workwoman alone can make and trim, so as to unite the utterly
- unpretending with the perfectly becoming, was the rule of costume.
- Nobody flaunted in faded silk; nobody wore a second-hand best article.
- At six the bell rang merrily, and we poured down the staircase, through
- the carré, along the corridor, into the vestibule. There stood our
- Professor, wearing, not his savage-looking paletôt and severe
- bonnet-grec, but a young-looking belted blouse and cheerful straw hat.
- He had for us all the kindest good-morrow, and most of us for him had a
- thanksgiving smile. We were marshalled in order and soon started.
- The streets were yet quiet, and the boulevards were fresh and peaceful
- as fields. I believe we were very happy as we walked along. This chief
- of ours had the secret of giving a certain impetus to happiness when he
- would; just as, in an opposite mood, he could give a thrill to fear.
- He did not lead nor follow us, but walked along the line, giving a word
- to every one, talking much to his favourites, and not wholly neglecting
- even those he disliked. It was rather my wish, for a reason I had, to
- keep slightly aloof from notice, and being paired with Ginevra
- Fanshawe, bearing on my arm the dear pressure of that angel's not
- unsubstantial limb--(she continued in excellent case, and I can assure
- the reader it was no trifling business to bear the burden of her
- loveliness; many a time in the course of that warm day I wished to
- goodness there had been less of the charming commodity)--however,
- having her, as I said, I tried to make her useful by interposing her
- always between myself and M. Paul, shifting my place, according as I
- heard him coming up to the right hand or the left. My private motive
- for this manoeuvre might be traced to the circumstance of the new print
- dress I wore, being pink in colour--a fact which, under our present
- convoy, made me feel something as I have felt, when, clad in a shawl
- with a red border, necessitated to traverse a meadow where pastured a
- bull.
- For awhile, the shifting system, together with some modifications in
- the arrangement of a black silk scarf, answered my purpose; but,
- by-and-by, he found out, that whether he came to this side or to that,
- Miss Fanshawe was still his neighbour. The course of acquaintance
- between Ginevra and him had never run so smooth that his temper did not
- undergo a certain crisping process whenever he heard her English
- accent: nothing in their dispositions fitted; they jarred if they came
- in contact; he held her empty and affected; she deemed him bearish,
- meddling, repellent.
- At last, when he had changed his place for about the sixth time,
- finding still the same untoward result to the experiment--he thrust his
- head forward, settled his eyes on mine, and demanded with impatience,
- "Qu'est-ce que c'est? Vous me jouez des tours?"
- The words were hardly out of his mouth, however, ere, with his
- customary quickness, he seized the root of this proceeding: in vain I
- shook out the long fringe, and spread forth the broad end of my scarf.
- "A-h-h! c'est la robe rose!" broke from his lips, affecting me very
- much like the sudden and irate low of some lord of the meadow.
- "It is only cotton," I alleged, hurriedly; "and cheaper, and washes
- better than any other colour."
- "Et Mademoiselle Lucy est coquette comme dix Parisiennes," he answered.
- "A-t-on jamais vu une Anglaise pareille. Regardez plutôt son chapeau,
- et ses gants, et ses brodequins!" These articles of dress were just
- like what my companions wore; certainly not one whit smarter--perhaps
- rather plainer than most--but Monsieur had now got hold of his text,
- and I began to chafe under the expected sermon. It went off, however,
- as mildly as the menace of a storm sometimes passes on a summer day. I
- got but one flash of sheet lightning in the shape of a single bantering
- smile from his eyes; and then he said, "Courage!--à vrai dire je ne
- suis pas fâché, peut-être même suis je content qu'on s'est fait si
- belle pour ma petite fête."
- "Mais ma robe n'est pas belle, Monsieur--elle n'est que propre."
- "J'aime la propreté," said he. In short, he was not to be dissatisfied;
- the sun of good humour was to triumph on this auspicious morning; it
- consumed scudding clouds ere they sullied its disk.
- And now we were in the country, amongst what they called "les bois et
- les petits sentiers." These woods and lanes a month later would offer
- but a dusty and doubtful seclusion: now, however, in their May
- greenness and morning repose, they looked very pleasant.
- We reached a certain well, planted round, in the taste of Labassecour,
- with an orderly circle of lime-trees: here a halt was called; on the
- green swell of ground surrounding this well, we were ordered to be
- seated, Monsieur taking his place in our midst, and suffering us to
- gather in a knot round him. Those who liked him more than they feared,
- came close, and these were chiefly little ones; those who feared more
- than they liked, kept somewhat aloof; those in whom much affection had
- given, even to what remained of fear, a pleasurable zest, observed the
- greatest distance.
- He began to tell us a story. Well could he narrate: in such a diction
- as children love, and learned men emulate; a diction simple in its
- strength, and strong in its simplicity. There were beautiful touches in
- that little tale; sweet glimpses of feeling and hues of description
- that, while I listened, sunk into my mind, and since have never faded.
- He tinted a twilight scene--I hold it in memory still--such a picture I
- have never looked on from artist's pencil.
- I have said, that, for myself, I had no impromptu faculty; and perhaps
- that very deficiency made me marvel the more at one who possessed it in
- perfection. M. Emanuel was not a man to write books; but I have heard
- him lavish, with careless, unconscious prodigality, such mental wealth
- as books seldom boast; his mind was indeed my library, and whenever it
- was opened to me, I entered bliss. Intellectually imperfect as I was, I
- could read little; there were few bound and printed volumes that did
- not weary me--whose perusal did not fag and blind--but his tomes of
- thought were collyrium to the spirit's eyes; over their contents,
- inward sight grew clear and strong. I used to think what a delight it
- would be for one who loved him better than he loved himself, to gather
- and store up those handfuls of gold-dust, so recklessly flung to
- heaven's reckless winds.
- His story done, he approached the little knoll where I and Ginevra sat
- apart. In his usual mode of demanding an opinion (he had not reticence
- to wait till it was voluntarily offered) he asked, "Were you
- interested?"
- According to my wonted undemonstrative fashion, I simply
- answered--"Yes."
- "Was it good?"
- "Very good."
- "Yet I could not write that down," said he.
- "Why not, Monsieur?"
- "I hate the mechanical labour; I hate to stoop and sit still. I could
- dictate it, though, with pleasure, to an amanuensis who suited me.
- Would Mademoiselle Lucy write for me if I asked her?"
- "Monsieur would be too quick; he would urge me, and be angry if my pen
- did not keep pace with his lips."
- "Try some day; let us see the monster I can make of myself under the
- circumstances. But just now, there is no question of dictation; I mean
- to make you useful in another office. Do you see yonder farm-house?"
- "Surrounded with trees? Yes."
- "There we are to breakfast; and while the good fermière makes the café
- au lait in a caldron, you and five others, whom I shall select, will
- spread with butter half a hundred rolls."
- Having formed his troop into line once more, he marched us straight on
- the farm, which, on seeing our force, surrendered without capitulation.
- Clean knives and plates, and fresh butter being provided, half-a-dozen
- of us, chosen by our Professor, set to work under his directions, to
- prepare for breakfast a huge basket of rolls, with which the baker had
- been ordered to provision the farm, in anticipation of our coming.
- Coffee and chocolate were already made hot; cream and new-laid eggs
- were added to the treat, and M. Emanuel, always generous, would have
- given a large order for "jambon" and "confitures" in addition, but that
- some of us, who presumed perhaps upon our influence, insisted that it
- would be a most reckless waste of victual. He railed at us for our
- pains, terming us "des ménagères avares;" but we let him talk, and
- managed the economy of the repast our own way.
- With what a pleasant countenance he stood on the farm-kitchen hearth
- looking on! He was a man whom it made happy to see others happy; he
- liked to have movement, animation, abundance and enjoyment round him.
- We asked where he would sit. He told us, we knew well he was our slave,
- and we his tyrants, and that he dared not so much as choose a chair
- without our leave; so we set him the farmer's great chair at the head
- of the long table, and put him into it.
- Well might we like him, with all his passions and hurricanes, when he
- could be so benignant and docile at times, as he was just now. Indeed,
- at the worst, it was only his nerves that were irritable, not his
- temper that was radically bad; soothe, comprehend, comfort him, and he
- was a lamb; he would not harm a fly. Only to the very stupid, perverse,
- or unsympathizing, was he in the slightest degree dangerous.
- Mindful always of his religion, he made the youngest of the party say a
- little prayer before we began breakfast, crossing himself as devotedly
- as a woman. I had never seen him pray before, or make that pious sign;
- he did it so simply, with such child-like faith, I could not help
- smiling pleasurably as I watched; his eyes met my smile; he just
- stretched out his kind hand, saying, "Donnez-moi la main! I see we
- worship the same God, in the same spirit, though by different rites."
- Most of M. Emanuel's brother Professors were emancipated free-thinkers,
- infidels, atheists; and many of them men whose lives would not bear
- scrutiny; he was more like a knight of old, religious in his way, and
- of spotless fame. Innocent childhood, beautiful youth were safe at his
- side. He had vivid passions, keen feelings, but his pure honour and his
- artless piety were the strong charm that kept the lions couchant.
- That breakfast was a merry meal, and the merriment was not mere vacant
- clatter: M. Paul originated, led, controlled and heightened it; his
- social, lively temper played unfettered and unclouded; surrounded only
- by women and children there was nothing to cross and thwart him; he had
- his own way, and a pleasant way it was.
- The meal over, the party were free to run and play in the meadows; a
- few stayed to help the farmer's wife to put away her earthenware. M.
- Paul called me from among these to come out and sit near him under a
- tree--whence he could view the troop gambolling, over a wide
- pasture--and read to him whilst he took his cigar. He sat on a rustic
- bench, and I at the tree-root. While I read (a pocket-classic--a
- Corneille--I did not like it, but he did, finding therein beauties I
- never could be brought to perceive), he listened with a sweetness of
- calm the more impressive from the impetuosity of his general nature;
- the deepest happiness filled his blue eye and smoothed his broad
- forehead. I, too, was happy--happy with the bright day, happier with
- his presence, happiest with his kindness.
- He asked, by-and-by, if I would not rather run to my companions than
- sit there? I said, no; I felt content to be where he was. He asked
- whether, if I were his sister, I should always be content to stay with
- a brother such as he. I said, I believed I should; and I felt it.
- Again, he inquired whether, if he were to leave Villette, and go far
- away, I should be sorry; and I dropped Corneille, and made no reply.
- "Petite soeur," said he; "how long could you remember me if we were
- separated?"
- "That, Monsieur, I can never tell, because I do not know how long it
- will be before I shall cease to remember everything earthly."
- "If I were to go beyond seas for two--three--five years, should you
- welcome me on my return?"
- "Monsieur, how could I live in the interval?"
- "Pourtant j'ai été pour vous bien dur, bien exigeant."
- I hid my face with the book, for it was covered with tears. I asked him
- why he talked so; and he said he would talk so no more, and cheered me
- again with the kindest encouragement. Still, the gentleness with which
- he treated me during the rest of the day, went somehow to my heart. It
- was too tender. It was mournful. I would rather he had been abrupt,
- whimsical, and irate as was his wont.
- When hot noon arrived--for the day turned out as we had anticipated,
- glowing as June--our shepherd collected his sheep from the pasture, and
- proceeded to lead us all softly home. But we had a whole league to
- walk, thus far from Villette was the farm where he had breakfasted; the
- children, especially, were tired with their play; the spirits of most
- flagged at the prospect of this mid-day walk over chaussées flinty,
- glaring, and dusty. This state of things had been foreseen and provided
- for. Just beyond the boundary of the farm we met two spacious vehicles
- coming to fetch us--such conveyances as are hired out purposely for the
- accommodation of school-parties; here, with good management, room was
- found for all, and in another hour M. Paul made safe consignment of his
- charge at the Rue Fossette. It had been a pleasant day: it would have
- been perfect, but for the breathing of melancholy which had dimmed its
- sunshine a moment.
- That tarnish was renewed the same evening.
- Just about sunset, I saw M. Emanuel come out of the front-door,
- accompanied by Madame Beck. They paced the centre-alley for nearly an
- hour, talking earnestly: he--looking grave, yet restless; she--wearing
- an amazed, expostulatory, dissuasive air.
- I wondered what was under discussion; and when Madame Beck re-entered
- the house as it darkened, leaving her kinsman Paul yet lingering in the
- garden, I said to myself--"He called me 'petite soeur' this morning. If
- he were really my brother, how I should like to go to him just now, and
- ask what it is that presses on his mind. See how he leans against that
- tree, with his arms crossed and his brow bent. He wants consolation, I
- know: Madame does not console: she only remonstrates. What now----?"
- Starting from quiescence to action, M. Paul came striding erect and
- quick down the garden. The carré doors were yet open: I thought he was
- probably going to water the orange-trees in the tubs, after his
- occasional custom; on reaching the court, however, he took an abrupt
- turn and made for the berceau and the first-classe glass door. There,
- in that first classe I was, thence I had been watching him; but there I
- could not find courage to await his approach. He had turned so
- suddenly, he strode so fast, he looked so strange; the coward within me
- grew pale, shrank and--not waiting to listen to reason, and hearing the
- shrubs crush and the gravel crunch to his advance--she was gone on the
- wings of panic.
- Nor did I pause till I had taken sanctuary in the oratory, now empty.
- Listening there with beating pulses, and an unaccountable, undefined
- apprehension, I heard him pass through all the schoolrooms, clashing
- the doors impatiently as he went; I heard him invade the refectory
- which the "lecture pieuse" was now holding under hallowed constraint; I
- heard him pronounce these words--"Où est Mademoiselle Lucie?"
- And just as, summoning my courage, I was preparing to go down and do
- what, after all, I most wished to do in the world--viz., meet him--the
- wiry voice of St. Pierre replied glibly and falsely, "Elle est au lit."
- And he passed, with the stamp of vexation, into the corridor. There
- Madame Beck met, captured, chid, convoyed to the street-door, and
- finally dismissed him.
- As that street-door closed, a sudden amazement at my own perverse
- proceeding struck like a blow upon me. I felt from the first it was me
- he wanted--me he was seeking--and had not I wanted him too? What, then,
- had carried me away? What had rapt me beyond his reach? He had
- something to tell: he was going to tell me that something: my ear
- strained its nerve to hear it, and I had made the confidence
- impossible. Yearning to listen and console, while I thought audience
- and solace beyond hope's reach--no sooner did opportunity suddenly and
- fully arrive, than I evaded it as I would have evaded the levelled
- shaft of mortality.
- Well, my insane inconsistency had its reward. Instead of the comfort,
- the certain satisfaction, I might have won--could I but have put
- choking panic down, and stood firm two minutes--here was dead blank,
- dark doubt, and drear suspense.
- I took my wages to my pillow, and passed the night counting them.
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
- MALEVOLA.
- Madame Beck called me on Thursday afternoon, and asked whether I had
- any occupation to hinder me from going into town and executing some
- little commissions for her at the shops.
- Being disengaged, and placing myself at her service, I was presently
- furnished with a list of the wools, silks, embroidering thread,
- etcetera, wanted in the pupils' work, and having equipped myself in a
- manner suiting the threatening aspect of a cloudy and sultry day, I was
- just drawing the spring-bolt of the street-door, in act to issue forth,
- when Madame's voice again summoned me to the salle-à-manger.
- "Pardon, Meess Lucie!" cried she, in the seeming haste of an impromptu
- thought, "I have just recollected one more errand for you, if your
- good-nature will not deem itself over-burdened?"
- Of course I "confounded myself" in asseverations to the contrary; and
- Madame, running into the little salon, brought thence a pretty basket,
- filled with fine hothouse fruit, rosy, perfect, and tempting, reposing
- amongst the dark green, wax-like leaves, and pale yellow stars of, I
- know not what, exotic plant.
- "There," she said, "it is not heavy, and will not shame your neat
- toilette, as if it were a household, servant-like detail. Do me the
- favour to leave this little basket at the house of Madame Walravens,
- with my felicitations on her fête. She lives down in the old town,
- Numéro 3, Rue des Mages. I fear you will find the walk rather long, but
- you have the whole afternoon before you, and do not hurry; if you are
- not back in time for dinner, I will order a portion to be saved, or
- Goton, with whom you are a favourite, will have pleasure in tossing up
- some trifle, for your especial benefit. You shall not be forgotten, ma
- bonne Meess. And oh! please!" (calling me back once more) "be sure to
- insist on seeing Madame Walravens herself, and giving the basket into
- her own hands, in order that there may be no mistake, for she is rather
- a punctilious personage. Adieu! Au revoir!"
- And at last I got away. The shop commissions took some time to execute,
- that choosing and matching of silks and wools being always a tedious
- business, but at last I got through my list. The patterns for the
- slippers, the bell-ropes, the cabas were selected--the slides and
- tassels for the purses chosen--the whole "tripotage," in short, was off
- my mind; nothing but the fruit and the felicitations remained to be
- attended to.
- I rather liked the prospect of a long walk, deep into the old and grim
- Basse-Ville; and I liked it no worse because the evening sky, over the
- city, was settling into a mass of black-blue metal, heated at the rim,
- and inflaming slowly to a heavy red.
- I fear a high wind, because storm demands that exertion of strength and
- use of action I always yield with pain; but the sullen down-fall, the
- thick snow-descent, or dark rush of rain, ask only resignation--the
- quiet abandonment of garments and person to be, drenched. In return, it
- sweeps a great capital clean before you; it makes you a quiet path
- through broad, grand streets; it petrifies a living city as if by
- eastern enchantment; it transforms a Villette into a Tadmor. Let, then,
- the rains fall, and the floods descend--only I must first get rid of
- this basket of fruit.
- An unknown clock from an unknown tower (Jean Baptiste's voice was now
- too distant to be audible) was tolling the third quarter past five,
- when I reached that street and house whereof Madame Beck had given me
- the address. It was no street at all; it seemed rather to be part of a
- square: it was quiet, grass grew between the broad grey flags, the
- houses were large and looked very old--behind them rose the appearance
- of trees, indicating gardens at the back. Antiquity brooded above this
- region, business was banished thence. Rich men had once possessed this
- quarter, and once grandeur had made her seat here. That church, whose
- dark, half-ruinous turrets overlooked the square, was the venerable and
- formerly opulent shrine of the Magi. But wealth and greatness had long
- since stretched their gilded pinions and fled hence, leaving these
- their ancient nests, perhaps to house Penury for a time, or perhaps to
- stand cold and empty, mouldering untenanted in the course of winters.
- As I crossed this deserted "place," on whose pavement drops almost as
- large as a five-franc piece were now slowly darkening, I saw, in its
- whole expanse, no symptom or evidence of life, except what was given in
- the figure of an infirm old priest, who went past, bending and propped
- on a staff--the type of eld and decay.
- He had issued from the very house to which I was directed; and when I
- paused before the door just closed after him, and rang the bell, he
- turned to look at me. Nor did he soon avert his gaze; perhaps he
- thought me, with my basket of summer fruit, and my lack of the dignity
- age confers, an incongruous figure in such a scene. I know, had a young
- ruddy-faced bonne opened the door to admit me, I should have thought
- such a one little in harmony with her dwelling; but, when I found
- myself confronted by a very old woman, wearing a very antique peasant
- costume, a cap alike hideous and costly, with long flaps of native
- lace, a petticoat and jacket of cloth, and sabots more like little
- boats than shoes, it seemed all right, and soothingly in character.
- The expression of her face was not quite so soothing as the cut of her
- costume; anything more cantankerous I have seldom seen; she would
- scarcely reply to my inquiry after Madame Walravens; I believe she
- would have snatched the basket of fruit from my hand, had not the old
- priest, hobbling up, checked her, and himself lent an ear to the
- message with which I was charged.
- His apparent deafness rendered it a little difficult to make him fully
- understand that I must see Madame Walravens, and consign the fruit into
- her own hands. At last, however, he comprehended the fact that such
- were my orders, and that duty enjoined their literal fulfilment.
- Addressing the aged bonne, not in French, but in the aboriginal tongue
- of Labassecour, he persuaded her, at last, to let me cross the
- inhospitable threshold, and himself escorting me up-stairs, I was
- ushered into a sort of salon, and there left.
- The room was large, and had a fine old ceiling, and almost church-like
- windows of coloured-glass; but it was desolate, and in the shadow of a
- coming storm, looked strangely lowering. Within--opened a smaller room;
- there, however, the blind of the single casement was closed; through
- the deep gloom few details of furniture were apparent. These few I
- amused myself by puzzling to make out; and, in particular, I was
- attracted by the outline of a picture on the wall.
- By-and-by the picture seemed to give way: to my bewilderment, it shook,
- it sunk, it rolled back into nothing; its vanishing left an opening
- arched, leading into an arched passage, with a mystic winding stair;
- both passage and stair were of cold stone, uncarpeted and unpainted.
- Down this donjon stair descended a tap, tap, like a stick; soon there
- fell on the steps a shadow, and last of all, I was aware of a substance.
- Yet, was it actual substance, this appearance approaching me? this
- obstruction, partially darkening the arch?
- It drew near, and I saw it well. I began to comprehend where I was.
- Well might this old square be named quarter of the Magi--well might the
- three towers, overlooking it, own for godfathers three mystic sages of
- a dead and dark art. Hoar enchantment here prevailed; a spell had
- opened for me elf-land--that cell-like room, that vanishing picture,
- that arch and passage, and stair of stone, were all parts of a fairy
- tale. Distincter even than these scenic details stood the chief
- figure--Cunegonde, the sorceress! Malevola, the evil fairy. How was she?
- She might be three feet high, but she had no shape; her skinny hands
- rested upon each other, and pressed the gold knob of a wand-like ivory
- staff. Her face was large, set, not upon her shoulders, but before her
- breast; she seemed to have no neck; I should have said there were a
- hundred years in her features, and more perhaps in her eyes--her
- malign, unfriendly eyes, with thick grey brows above, and livid lids
- all round. How severely they viewed me, with a sort of dull displeasure!
- This being wore a gown of brocade, dyed bright blue, full-tinted as the
- gentianella flower, and covered with satin foliage in a large pattern;
- over the gown a costly shawl, gorgeously bordered, and so large for
- her, that its many-coloured fringe swept the floor. But her chief
- points were her jewels: she had long, clear earrings, blazing with a
- lustre which could not be borrowed or false; she had rings on her
- skeleton hands, with thick gold hoops, and stones--purple, green, and
- blood-red. Hunchbacked, dwarfish, and doting, she was adorned like a
- barbarian queen.
- "Que me voulez-vous?" said she, hoarsely, with the voice rather of male
- than of female old age; and, indeed, a silver beard bristled her chin.
- I delivered my basket and my message.
- "Is that all?" she demanded.
- "It is all," said I.
- "Truly, it was well worth while," she answered. "Return to Madame Beck,
- and tell her I can buy fruit when I want it, et quant à ses
- félicitations, je m'en moque!" And this courteous dame turned her back.
- Just as she turned, a peal of thunder broke, and a flash of lightning
- blazed broad over salon and boudoir. The tale of magic seemed to
- proceed with due accompaniment of the elements. The wanderer, decoyed
- into the enchanted castle, heard rising, outside, the spell-wakened
- tempest.
- What, in all this, was I to think of Madame Beck? She owned strange
- acquaintance; she offered messages and gifts at an unique shrine, and
- inauspicious seemed the bearing of the uncouth thing she worshipped.
- There went that sullen Sidonia, tottering and trembling like palsy
- incarnate, tapping her ivory staff on the mosaic parquet, and muttering
- venomously as she vanished.
- Down washed the rain, deep lowered the welkin; the clouds, ruddy a
- while ago, had now, through all their blackness, turned deadly pale, as
- if in terror. Notwithstanding my late boast about not fearing a shower,
- I hardly liked to go out under this waterspout. Then the gleams of
- lightning were very fierce, the thunder crashed very near; this storm
- had gathered immediately above Villette; it seemed to have burst at the
- zenith; it rushed down prone; the forked, slant bolts pierced athwart
- vertical torrents; red zigzags interlaced a descent blanched as white
- metal: and all broke from a sky heavily black in its swollen abundance.
- Leaving Madame Walravens' inhospitable salon, I betook myself to her
- cold staircase; there was a seat on the landing--there I waited.
- Somebody came gliding along the gallery just above; it was the old
- priest.
- "Indeed Mademoiselle shall not sit there," said he. "It would
- displeasure our benefactor if he knew a stranger was so treated in this
- house."
- And he begged me so earnestly to return to the salon, that, without
- discourtesy, I could not but comply. The smaller room was better
- furnished and more habitable than the larger; thither he introduced me.
- Partially withdrawing the blind, he disclosed what seemed more like an
- oratory than a boudoir, a very solemn little chamber, looking as if it
- were a place rather dedicated to relics and remembrance, than designed
- for present use and comfort.
- The good father sat down, as if to keep me company; but instead of
- conversing, he took out a book, fastened on the page his eyes, and
- employed his lips in whispering--what sounded like a prayer or litany.
- A yellow electric light from the sky gilded his bald head; his figure
- remained in shade--deep and purple; he sat still as sculpture; he
- seemed to forget me for his prayers; he only looked up when a fiercer
- bolt, or a harsher, closer rattle told of nearing danger; even then, it
- was not in fear, but in seeming awe, he raised his eyes. I too was
- awe-struck; being, however, under no pressure of slavish terror, my
- thoughts and observations were free.
- To speak truth, I was beginning to fancy that the old priest resembled
- that Père Silas, before whom I had kneeled in the church of the
- Béguinage. The idea was vague, for I had seen my confessor only in dusk
- and in profile, yet still I seemed to trace a likeness: I thought also
- I recognized the voice. While I watched him, he betrayed, by one lifted
- look, that he felt my scrutiny; I turned to note the room; that too had
- its half mystic interest.
- Beside a cross of curiously carved old ivory, yellow with time, and
- sloped above a dark-red _prie-dieu_, furnished duly, with rich missal
- and ebon rosary--hung the picture whose dim outline had drawn my eyes
- before--the picture which moved, fell away with the wall and let in
- phantoms. Imperfectly seen, I had taken it for a Madonna; revealed by
- clearer light, it proved to be a woman's portrait in a nun's dress. The
- face, though not beautiful, was pleasing; pale, young, and shaded with
- the dejection of grief or ill health. I say again it was not beautiful;
- it was not even intellectual; its very amiability was the amiability of
- a weak frame, inactive passions, acquiescent habits: yet I looked long
- at that picture, and could not choose but look.
- The old priest, who at first had seemed to me so deaf and infirm, must
- yet have retained his faculties in tolerable preservation; absorbed in
- his book as he appeared, without once lifting his head, or, as far as I
- knew, turning his eyes, he perceived the point towards which my
- attention was drawn, and, in a slow distinct voice, dropped, concerning
- it, these four observations:--
- "She was much beloved.
- "She gave herself to God.
- "She died young.
- "She is still remembered, still wept."
- "By that aged lady, Madame Walravens?" I inquired, fancying that I had
- discovered in the incurable grief of bereavement, a key to that same
- aged lady's desperate ill-humour.
- The father shook his head with half a smile.
- "No, no," said he; "a grand-dame's affection for her children's
- children may be great, and her sorrow for their loss, lively; but it is
- only the affianced lover, to whom Fate, Faith, and Death have trebly
- denied the bliss of union, who mourns what he has lost, as Justine
- Marie is still mourned."
- I thought the father rather wished to be questioned, and therefore I
- inquired who had lost and who still mourned "Justine Marie." I got, in
- reply, quite a little romantic narrative, told not unimpressively, with
- the accompaniment of the now subsiding storm. I am bound to say it
- might have been made much more truly impressive, if there had been less
- French, Rousseau-like sentimentalizing and wire-drawing; and rather
- more healthful carelessness of effect. But the worthy father was
- obviously a Frenchman born and bred (I became more and more persuaded
- of his resemblance to my confessor)--he was a true son of Rome; when he
- did lift his eyes, he looked at me out of their corners, with more and
- sharper subtlety than, one would have thought, could survive the wear
- and tear of seventy years. Yet, I believe, he was a good old man.
- The hero of his tale was some former pupil of his, whom he now called
- his benefactor, and who, it appears, had loved this pale Justine Marie,
- the daughter of rich parents, at a time when his own worldly prospects
- were such as to justify his aspiring to a well-dowered hand. The
- pupil's father--once a rich banker--had failed, died, and left behind
- him only debts and destitution. The son was then forbidden to think of
- Marie; especially that old witch of a grand-dame I had seen, Madame
- Walravens, opposed the match with all the violence of a temper which
- deformity made sometimes demoniac. The mild Marie had neither the
- treachery to be false, nor the force to be quite staunch to her lover;
- she gave up her first suitor, but, refusing to accept a second with a
- heavier purse, withdrew to a convent, and there died in her noviciate.
- Lasting anguish, it seems, had taken possession of the faithful heart
- which worshipped her, and the truth of that love and grief had been
- shown in a manner which touched even me, as I listened.
- Some years after Justine Marie's death, ruin had come on her house too:
- her father, by nominal calling a jeweller, but who also dealt a good
- deal on the Bourse, had been concerned in some financial transactions
- which entailed exposure and ruinous fines. He died of grief for the
- loss, and shame for the infamy. His old hunchbacked mother and his
- bereaved wife were left penniless, and might have died too of want; but
- their lost daughter's once-despised, yet most true-hearted suitor,
- hearing of the condition of these ladies, came with singular
- devotedness to the rescue. He took on their insolent pride the revenge
- of the purest charity--housing, caring for, befriending them, so as no
- son could have done it more tenderly and efficiently. The mother--on
- the whole a good woman--died blessing him; the strange, godless,
- loveless, misanthrope grandmother lived still, entirely supported by
- this self-sacrificing man. Her, who had been the bane of his life,
- blighting his hope, and awarding him, for love and domestic happiness,
- long mourning and cheerless solitude, he treated with the respect a
- good son might offer a kind mother. He had brought her to this house,
- "and," continued the priest, while genuine tears rose to his eyes,
- "here, too, he shelters me, his old tutor, and Agnes, a superannuated
- servant of his father's family. To our sustenance, and to other
- charities, I know he devotes three-parts of his income, keeping only
- the fourth to provide himself with bread and the most modest
- accommodations. By this arrangement he has rendered it impossible to
- himself ever to marry: he has given himself to God and to his
- angel-bride as much as if he were a priest, like me."
- The father had wiped away his tears before he uttered these last words,
- and in pronouncing them, he for one instant raised his eyes to mine. I
- caught this glance, despite its veiled character; the momentary gleam
- shot a meaning which struck me.
- These Romanists are strange beings. Such a one among them--whom you
- know no more than the last Inca of Peru, or the first Emperor of
- China--knows you and all your concerns; and has his reasons for saying
- to you so and so, when you simply thought the communication sprang
- impromptu from the instant's impulse: his plan in bringing it about
- that you shall come on such a day, to such a place, under such and such
- circumstances, when the whole arrangement seems to your crude
- apprehension the ordinance of chance, or the sequel of exigency. Madame
- Beck's suddenly-recollected message and present, my artless embassy to
- the Place of the Magi, the old priest accidentally descending the steps
- and crossing the square, his interposition on my behalf with the bonne
- who would have sent me away, his reappearance on the staircase, my
- introduction to this room, the portrait, the narrative so affably
- volunteered--all these little incidents, taken as they fell out, seemed
- each independent of its successor; a handful of loose beads: but
- threaded through by that quick-shot and crafty glance of a Jesuit-eye,
- they dropped pendent in a long string, like that rosary on the
- prie-dieu. Where lay the link of junction, where the little clasp of
- this monastic necklace? I saw or felt union, but could not yet find the
- spot, or detect the means of connection.
- Perhaps the musing-fit into which I had by this time fallen, appeared
- somewhat suspicious in its abstraction; he gently interrupted:
- "Mademoiselle," said he, "I trust you have not far to go through these
- inundated streets?"
- "More than half a league."
- "You live----?"
- "In the Rue Fossette."
- "Not" (with animation), "not at the pensionnat of Madame Beck?"
- "The same."
- "Donc" (clapping his hands), "donc, vous devez connaître mon noble
- élève, mon Paul?"
- "Monsieur Paul Emanuel, Professor of Literature?"
- "He and none other."
- A brief silence fell. The spring of junction seemed suddenly to have
- become palpable; I felt it yield to pressure.
- "Was it of M. Paul you have been speaking?" I presently inquired. "Was
- he your pupil and the benefactor of Madame Walravens?"
- "Yes, and of Agnes, the old servant: and moreover, (with a certain
- emphasis), he was and _is_ the lover, true, constant and eternal, of
- that saint in heaven--Justine Marie."
- "And who, father, are _you?_" I continued; and though I accentuated the
- question, its utterance was well nigh superfluous; I was ere this quite
- prepared for the answer which actually came.
- "I, daughter, am Père Silas; that unworthy son of Holy Church whom you
- once honoured with a noble and touching confidence, showing me the core
- of a heart, and the inner shrine of a mind whereof, in solemn truth, I
- coveted the direction, in behalf of the only true faith. Nor have I for
- a day lost sight of you, nor for an hour failed to take in you a rooted
- interest. Passed under the discipline of Rome, moulded by her high
- training, inoculated with her salutary doctrines, inspired by the zeal
- she alone gives--I realize what then might be your spiritual rank, your
- practical value; and I envy Heresy her prey."
- This struck me as a special state of things--I half-realized myself in
- that condition also; passed under discipline, moulded, trained,
- inoculated, and so on. "Not so," thought I, but I restrained
- deprecation, and sat quietly enough.
- "I suppose M. Paul does not live here?" I resumed, pursuing a theme
- which I thought more to the purpose than any wild renegade dreams.
- "No; he only comes occasionally to worship his beloved saint, to make
- his confession to me, and to pay his respects to her he calls his
- mother. His own lodging consists but of two rooms: he has no servant,
- and yet he will not suffer Madame Walravens to dispose of those
- splendid jewels with which you see her adorned, and in which she takes
- a puerile pride as the ornaments of her youth, and the last relics of
- her son the jeweller's wealth."
- "How often," murmured I to myself, "has this man, this M. Emanuel,
- seemed to me to lack magnanimity in trifles, yet how great he is in
- great things!"
- I own I did not reckon amongst the proofs of his greatness, either the
- act of confession, or the saint-worship.
- "How long is it since that lady died?" I inquired, looking at Justine
- Marie.
- "Twenty years. She was somewhat older than M. Emanuel; he was then very
- young, for he is not much beyond forty."
- "Does he yet weep her?"
- "His heart will weep her always: the essence of Emanuel's nature
- is--constancy."
- This was said with marked emphasis.
- And now the sun broke out pallid and waterish; the rain yet fell, but
- there was no more tempest: that hot firmament had cloven and poured out
- its lightnings. A longer delay would scarce leave daylight for my
- return, so I rose, thanked the father for his hospitality and his tale,
- was benignantly answered by a "pax vobiscum," which I made kindly
- welcome, because it seemed uttered with a true benevolence; but I liked
- less the mystic phrase accompanying it.
- "Daughter, you _shall_ be what you _shall_ be!" an oracle that made me
- shrug my shoulders as soon as I had got outside the door. Few of us
- know what we are to come to certainly, but for all that had happened
- yet, I had good hopes of living and dying a sober-minded Protestant:
- there was a hollowness within, and a flourish around "Holy Church"
- which tempted me but moderately. I went on my way pondering many
- things. Whatever Romanism may be, there are good Romanists: this man,
- Emanuel, seemed of the best; touched with superstition, influenced by
- priestcraft, yet wondrous for fond faith, for pious devotion, for
- sacrifice of self, for charity unbounded. It remained to see how Rome,
- by her agents, handled such qualities; whether she cherished them for
- their own sake and for God's, or put them out to usury and made booty
- of the interest.
- By the time I reached home, it was sundown. Goton had kindly saved me a
- portion of dinner, which indeed I needed. She called me into the little
- cabinet to partake of it, and there Madame Beck soon made her
- appearance, bringing me a glass of wine.
- "Well," began she, chuckling, "and what sort of a reception did Madame
- Walravens give you? Elle est drôle, n'est-ce pas?"
- I told her what had passed, delivering verbatim the courteous message
- with which I had been charged.
- "Oh la singulière petite bossue!" laughed she. "Et figurez-vous qu'elle
- me déteste, parcequ'elle me croit amoureuse de mon cousin Paul; ce
- petit dévot qui n'ose pas bouger, à moins que son confesseur ne lui
- donne la permission! Au reste" (she went on), "if he wanted to marry
- ever so much--soit moi, soit une autre--he could not do it; he has too
- large a family already on his hands: Mère Walravens, Père Silas, Dame
- Agnes, and a whole troop of nameless paupers. There never was a man
- like him for laying on himself burdens greater than he can bear,
- voluntarily incurring needless responsibilities. Besides, he harbours a
- romantic idea about some pale-faced Marie Justine--personnage assez
- niaise à ce que je pense" (such was Madame's irreverent remark), "who
- has been an angel in heaven, or elsewhere, this score of years, and to
- whom he means to go, free from all earthly ties, pure comme un lis, à
- ce qu'il dit. Oh, you would laugh could you but know half M. Emanuel's
- crotchets and eccentricities! But I hinder you from taking refreshment,
- ma bonne Meess, which you must need; eat your supper, drink your wine,
- oubliez les anges, les bossues, et surtout, les Professeurs--et bon
- soir!"
- CHAPTER XXXV
- FRATERNITY.
- "Oubliez les Professeurs." So said Madame Beck. Madame Beck was a wise
- woman, but she should not have uttered those words. To do so was a
- mistake. That night she should have left me calm--not excited,
- indifferent, not interested, isolated in my own estimation and that of
- others--not connected, even in idea, with this second person whom I was
- to forget.
- Forget him? Ah! they took a sage plan to make me forget him--the
- wiseheads! They showed me how good he was; they made of my dear little
- man a stainless little hero. And then they had prated about his manner
- of loving. What means had I, before this day, of being certain whether
- he could love at all or not?
- I had known him jealous, suspicious; I had seen about him certain
- tendernesses, fitfulnesses--a softness which came like a warm air, and
- a ruth which passed like early dew, dried in the heat of his
- irritabilities: _this_ was all I had seen. And they, Père Silas and
- Modeste Maria Beck (that these two wrought in concert I could not
- doubt) opened up the adytum of his heart--showed me one grand love, the
- child of this southern nature's youth, born so strong and perfect, that
- it had laughed at Death himself, despised his mean rape of matter,
- clung to immortal spirit, and in victory and faith, had watched beside
- a tomb twenty years.
- This had been done--not idly: this was not a mere hollow indulgence of
- sentiment; he had proven his fidelity by the consecration of his best
- energies to an unselfish purpose, and attested it by limitless personal
- sacrifices: for those once dear to her he prized--he had laid down
- vengeance, and taken up a cross.
- Now, as for Justine Marie, I knew what she was as well as if I had seen
- her. I knew she was well enough; there were girls like her in Madame
- Beck's school--phlegmatics--pale, slow, inert, but kind-natured,
- neutral of evil, undistinguished for good.
- If she wore angels' wings, I knew whose poet-fancy conferred them. If
- her forehead shone luminous with the reflex of a halo, I knew in the
- fire of whose irids that circlet of holy flame had generation.
- Was I, then, to be frightened by Justine Marie? Was the picture of a
- pale dead nun to rise, an eternal barrier? And what of the charities
- which absorbed his worldly goods? What of his heart sworn to virginity?
- Madame Beck--Père Silas--you should not have suggested these questions.
- They were at once the deepest puzzle, the strongest obstruction, and
- the keenest stimulus, I had ever felt. For a week of nights and days I
- fell asleep--I dreamt, and I woke upon these two questions. In the
- whole world there was no answer to them, except where one dark little
- man stood, sat, walked, lectured, under the head-piece of a bandit
- bonnet-grec, and within the girth of a sorry paletôt, much be-inked,
- and no little adust.
- After that visit to the Rue des Mages, I _did_ want to see him again. I
- felt as if--knowing what I now knew--his countenance would offer a page
- more lucid, more interesting than ever; I felt a longing to trace in it
- the imprint of that primitive devotedness, the signs of that
- half-knightly, half-saintly chivalry which the priest's narrative
- imputed to his nature. He had become my Christian hero: under that
- character I wanted to view him.
- Nor was opportunity slow to favour; my new impressions underwent her
- test the next day. Yes: I was granted an interview with my "Christian
- hero"--an interview not very heroic, or sentimental, or biblical, but
- lively enough in its way.
- About three o'clock of the afternoon, the peace of the first
- classe--safely established, as it seemed, under the serene sway of
- Madame Beck, who, _in propriâ personâ_ was giving one of her orderly
- and useful lessons--this peace, I say, suffered a sudden fracture by
- the wild inburst of a paletôt.
- Nobody at the moment was quieter than myself. Eased of responsibility
- by Madame Beck's presence, soothed by her uniform tones, pleased and
- edified with her clear exposition of the subject in hand (for she
- taught well), I sat bent over my desk, drawing--that is, copying an
- elaborate line engraving, tediously working up my copy to the finish of
- the original, for that was my practical notion of art; and, strange to
- say, I took extreme pleasure in the labour, and could even produce
- curiously finical Chinese facsimiles of steel or mezzotint
- plates--things about as valuable as so many achievements in
- worsted-work, but I thought pretty well of them in those days.
- What was the matter? My drawing, my pencils, my precious copy, gathered
- into one crushed-up handful, perished from before my sight; I myself
- appeared to be shaken or emptied out of my chair, as a solitary and
- withered nutmeg might be emptied out of a spice-box by an excited cook.
- That chair and my desk, seized by the wild paletôt, one under each
- sleeve, were borne afar; in a second, I followed the furniture; in two
- minutes they and I were fixed in the centre of the grand salle--a vast
- adjoining room, seldom used save for dancing and choral
- singing-lessons--fixed with an emphasis which seemed to prohibit the
- remotest hope of our ever being permitted to stir thence again.
- Having partially collected my scared wits, I found myself in the
- presence of two men, gentlemen, I suppose I should say--one dark, the
- other light--one having a stiff, half-military air, and wearing a
- braided surtout; the other partaking, in garb and bearing, more of the
- careless aspect of the student or artist class: both flourishing in
- full magnificence of moustaches, whiskers, and imperial. M. Emanuel
- stood a little apart from these; his countenance and eyes expressed
- strong choler; he held forth his hand with his tribune gesture.
- "Mademoiselle," said he, "your business is to prove to these gentlemen
- that I am no liar. You will answer, to the best of your ability, such
- questions as they shall put. You will also write on such theme as they
- shall select. In their eyes, it appears, I hold the position of an
- unprincipled impostor. I write essays; and, with deliberate forgery,
- sign to them my pupils' names, and boast of them as their work. You
- will disprove this charge."
- Grand ciel! Here was the show-trial, so long evaded, come on me like a
- thunder-clap. These two fine, braided, mustachioed, sneering
- personages, were none other than dandy professors of the
- college--Messieurs Boissec and Rochemorte--a pair of cold-blooded fops
- and pedants, sceptics, and scoffers. It seems that M. Paul had been
- rashly exhibiting something I had written--something, he had never once
- praised, or even mentioned, in my hearing, and which I deemed
- forgotten. The essay was not remarkable at all; it only _seemed_
- remarkable, compared with the average productions of foreign
- school-girls; in an English establishment it would have passed scarce
- noticed. Messieurs Boissec and Rochemorte had thought proper to
- question its genuineness, and insinuate a cheat; I was now to bear my
- testimony to the truth, and to be put to the torture of their
- examination.
- A memorable scene ensued.
- They began with classics. A dead blank. They went on to French history.
- I hardly knew Mérovée from Pharamond. They tried me in various
- 'ologies, and still only got a shake of the head, and an unchanging "Je
- n'en sais rien."
- After an expressive pause, they proceeded to matters of general
- information, broaching one or two subjects which I knew pretty well,
- and on which I had often reflected. M. Emanuel, who had hitherto stood
- looking on, dark as the winter-solstice, brightened up somewhat; he
- thought I should now show myself at least no fool.
- He learned his error. Though answers to the questions surged up fast,
- my mind filling like a rising well, ideas were there, but not words. I
- either _could_ not, or _would_ not speak--I am not sure which: partly,
- I think, my nerves had got wrong, and partly my humour was crossed.
- I heard one of my examiners--he of the braided surtout--whisper to his
- co-professor, "Est-elle donc idiote?"
- "Yes," I thought, "an idiot she is, and always will be, for such as
- you."
- But I suffered--suffered cruelly; I saw the damps gather on M. Paul's
- brow, and his eye spoke a passionate yet sad reproach. He would not
- believe in my total lack of popular cleverness; he thought I _could_ be
- prompt if I _would_.
- At last, to relieve him, the professors, and myself, I stammered out:
- "Gentlemen, you had better let me go; you will get no good of me; as
- you say, I am an idiot."
- I wish I could have spoken with calm and dignity, or I wish my sense
- had sufficed to make me hold my tongue; that traitor tongue tripped,
- faltered. Beholding the judges cast on M. Emanuel a hard look of
- triumph, and hearing the distressed tremor of my own voice, out I burst
- in a fit of choking tears. The emotion was far more of anger than
- grief; had I been a man and strong, I could have challenged that pair
- on the spot--but it _was_ emotion, and I would rather have been
- scourged than betrayed it.
- The incapables! Could they not see at once the crude hand of a novice
- in that composition they called a forgery? The subject was classical.
- When M. Paul dictated the trait on which the essay was to turn, I heard
- it for the first time; the matter was new to me, and I had no material
- for its treatment. But I got books, read up the facts, laboriously
- constructed a skeleton out of the dry bones of the real, and then
- clothed them, and tried to breathe into them life, and in this last aim
- I had pleasure. With me it was a difficult and anxious time till my
- facts were found, selected, and properly jointed; nor could I rest from
- research and effort till I was satisfied of correct anatomy; the
- strength of my inward repugnance to the idea of flaw or falsity
- sometimes enabled me to shun egregious blunders; but the knowledge was
- not there in my head, ready and mellow; it had not been sown in Spring,
- grown in Summer, harvested in Autumn, and garnered through Winter;
- whatever I wanted I must go out and gather fresh; glean of wild herbs
- my lapful, and shred them green into the pot. Messieurs Boissec and
- Rochemorte did not perceive this. They mistook my work for the work of
- a ripe scholar.
- They would not yet let me go: I must sit down and write before them. As
- I dipped my pen in the ink with a shaking hand, and surveyed the white
- paper with eyes half-blinded and overflowing, one of my judges began
- mincingly to apologize for the pain he caused.
- "Nous agissons dans l'intérêt de la vérité. Nous ne voulons pas vous
- blesser," said he.
- Scorn gave me nerve. I only answered,--
- "Dictate, Monsieur."
- Rochemorte named this theme: "Human Justice."
- Human Justice! What was I to make of it? Blank, cold abstraction,
- unsuggestive to me of one inspiring idea; and there stood M. Emanuel,
- sad as Saul, and stern as Joab, and there triumphed his accusers.
- At these two I looked. I was gathering my courage to tell them that I
- would neither write nor speak another word for their satisfaction, that
- their theme did not suit, nor their presence inspire me, and that,
- notwithstanding, whoever threw the shadow of a doubt on M. Emanuel's
- honour, outraged that truth of which they had announced themselves
- the--champions: I _meant_ to utter all this, I say, when suddenly, a
- light darted on memory.
- Those two faces looking out of the forest of long hair, moustache, and
- whisker--those two cold yet bold, trustless yet presumptuous
- visages--were the same faces, the very same that, projected in full
- gaslight from behind the pillars of a portico, had half frightened me
- to death on the night of my desolate arrival in Villette. These, I felt
- morally certain, were the very heroes who had driven a friendless
- foreigner beyond her reckoning and her strength, chased her breathless
- over a whole quarter of the town.
- "Pious mentors!" thought I. "Pure guides for youth! If Human Justice'
- were what she ought to be, you two would scarce hold your present post,
- or enjoy your present credit."
- An idea once seized, I fell to work. "Human Justice" rushed before me
- in novel guise, a red, random beldame, with arms akimbo. I saw her in
- her house, the den of confusion: servants called to her for orders or
- help which she did not give; beggars stood at her door waiting and
- starving unnoticed; a swarm of children, sick and quarrelsome, crawled
- round her feet, and yelled in her ears appeals for notice, sympathy,
- cure, redress. The honest woman cared for none of these things. She had
- a warm seat of her own by the fire, she had her own solace in a short
- black pipe, and a bottle of Mrs. Sweeny's soothing syrup; she smoked
- and she sipped, and she enjoyed her paradise; and whenever a cry of the
- suffering souls about her pierced her ears too keenly--my jolly dame
- seized the poker or the hearth-brush: if the offender was weak,
- wronged, and sickly, she effectually settled him: if he was strong,
- lively, and violent, she only menaced, then plunged her hand in her
- deep pouch, and flung a liberal shower of sugar-plums.
- Such was the sketch of "Human Justice," scratched hurriedly on paper,
- and placed at the service of Messrs. Boissec and Rochemorte. M. Emanuel
- read it over my shoulder. Waiting no comment, I curtsied to the trio,
- and withdrew.
- After school that day, M. Paul and I again met. Of course the meeting
- did not at first run smooth; there was a crow to pluck with him; that
- forced examination could not be immediately digested. A crabbed
- dialogue terminated in my being called "une petite moqueuse et
- sans-coeur," and in Monsieur's temporary departure.
- Not wishing him to go quite away, only desiring he should feel that
- such a transport as he had that day given way to, could not be indulged
- with perfect impunity, I was not sorry to see him, soon after,
- gardening in the berceau. He approached the glass door; I drew near
- also. We spoke of some flowers growing round it. By-and-by Monsieur
- laid down his spade; by-and-by he recommenced conversation, passed to
- other subjects, and at last touched a point of interest.
- Conscious that his proceeding of that day was specially open to a
- charge of extravagance, M. Paul half apologized; he half regretted,
- too, the fitfulness of his moods at all times, yet he hinted that some
- allowance ought to be made for him. "But," said he, "I can hardly
- expect it at your hands, Miss Lucy; you know neither me, nor my
- position, nor my history."
- His history. I took up the word at once; I pursued the idea.
- "No, Monsieur," I rejoined. "Of course, as you say, I know neither your
- history, nor your position, nor your sacrifices, nor any of your
- sorrows, or trials, or affections, or fidelities. Oh, no! I know
- nothing about you; you are for me altogether a stranger."
- "Hein?" he murmured, arching his brows in surprise.
- "You know, Monsieur, I only see you in classe--stern, dogmatic, hasty,
- imperious. I only hear of you in town as active and wilful, quick to
- originate, hasty to lead, but slow to persuade, and hard to bend. A man
- like you, without ties, can have no attachments; without dependants, no
- duties. All we, with whom you come in contact, are machines, which you
- thrust here and there, inconsiderate of their feelings. You seek your
- recreations in public, by the light of the evening chandelier: this
- school and yonder college are your workshops, where you fabricate the
- ware called pupils. I don't so much as know where you live; it is
- natural to take it for granted that you have no home, and need none."
- "I am judged," said he. "Your opinion of me is just what I thought it
- was. For you I am neither a man nor a Christian. You see me void of
- affection and religion, unattached by friend or family, unpiloted by
- principle or faith. It is well, Mademoiselle; such is our reward in
- this life."
- "You are a philosopher, Monsieur; a cynic philosopher" (and I looked at
- his paletôt, of which he straightway brushed the dim sleeve with his
- hand), "despising the foibles of humanity--above its
- luxuries--independent of its comforts."
- "Et vous, Mademoiselle? vous êtes proprette et douillette, et
- affreusement insensible, par-dessus le marché."
- "But, in short, Monsieur, now I think of it, you _must_ live somewhere?
- Do tell me where; and what establishment of servants do you keep?"
- With a fearful projection of the under-lip, implying an impetus of
- scorn the most decided, he broke out--
- "Je vis dans un trou! I inhabit a den, Miss--a cavern, where you would
- not put your dainty nose. Once, with base shame of speaking the whole
- truth, I talked about my 'study' in that college: know now that this
- 'study' is my whole abode; my chamber is there and my drawing-room. As
- for my 'establishment of servants'" (mimicking my voice) "they number
- ten; les voilà."
- And he grimly spread, close under my eyes, his ten fingers.
- "I black my boots," pursued he savagely. "I brush my paletôt."
- "No, Monsieur, it is too plain; you never do that," was my parenthesis.
- "Je fais mon lit et mon ménage; I seek my dinner in a restaurant; my
- supper takes care, of itself; I pass days laborious and loveless;
- nights long and lonely; I am ferocious, and bearded and monkish; and
- nothing now living in this world loves me, except some old hearts worn
- like my own, and some few beings, impoverished, suffering, poor in
- purse and in spirit, whom the kingdoms of this world own not, but to
- whom a will and testament not to be disputed has bequeathed the kingdom
- of heaven."
- "Ah, Monsieur; but I know!"
- "What do you know? many things, I verily believe; yet not me, Lucy!"
- "I know that you have a pleasant old house in a pleasant old square of
- the Basse-Ville--why don't you go and live there?"
- "Hein?" muttered he again.
- "I liked it much, Monsieur; with the steps ascending to the door, the
- grey flags in front, the nodding trees behind--real trees, not
- shrubs--trees dark, high, and of old growth. And the
- boudoir-oratoire--you should make that room your study; it is so quiet
- and solemn."
- He eyed me closely; he half-smiled, half-coloured. "Where did you pick
- up all that? Who told you?" he asked.
- "Nobody told me. Did I dream it, Monsieur, do you think?"
- "Can I enter into your visions? Can I guess a woman's waking thoughts,
- much less her sleeping fantasies?"
- "If I dreamt it, I saw in my dream human beings as well as a house. I
- saw a priest, old, bent, and grey, and a domestic--old, too, and
- picturesque; and a lady, splendid but strange; her head would scarce
- reach to my elbow--her magnificence might ransom a duke. She wore a
- gown bright as lapis-lazuli--a shawl worth a thousand francs: she was
- decked with ornaments so brilliant, I never saw any with such a
- beautiful sparkle; but her figure looked as if it had been broken in
- two and bent double; she seemed also to have outlived the common years
- of humanity, and to have attained those which are only labour and
- sorrow. She was become morose--almost malevolent; yet _somebody_, it
- appears, cared for her in her infirmities--somebody forgave her
- trespasses, hoping to have his trespasses forgiven. They lived
- together, these three people--the mistress, the chaplain, the
- servant--all old, all feeble, all sheltered under one kind wing."
- He covered with his hand the upper part of his face, but did not
- conceal his mouth, where I saw hovering an expression I liked.
- "I see you have entered into my secrets," said he, "but how was it
- done?"
- So I told him how--the commission on which I had been sent, the storm
- which had detained me, the abruptness of the lady, the kindness of the
- priest.
- "As I sat waiting for the rain to cease, Père Silas whiled away the
- time with a story," I said.
- "A story! What story? Père Silas is no romancist."
- "Shall I tell Monsieur the tale?"
- "Yes: begin at the beginning. Let me hear some of Miss Lucy's
- French--her best or her worst--I don't much care which: let us have a
- good poignée of barbarisms, and a bounteous dose of the insular accent."
- "Monsieur is not going to be gratified by a tale of ambitious
- proportions, and the spectacle of the narrator sticking fast in the
- midst. But I will tell him the title--the 'Priest's Pupil.'"
- "Bah!" said he, the swarthy flush again dyeing his dark cheek. "The
- good old father could not have chosen a worse subject; it is his weak
- point. But what of the 'Priest's Pupil?'"
- "Oh! many things."
- "You may as well define _what_ things. I mean to know."
- "There was the pupil's youth, the pupil's manhood;--his avarice, his
- ingratitude, his implacability, his inconstancy. Such a bad pupil,
- Monsieur!--so thankless, cold-hearted, unchivalrous, unforgiving!
- "Et puis?" said he, taking a cigar.
- "Et puis," I pursued, "he underwent calamities which one did not
- pity--bore them in a spirit one did not admire--endured wrongs for
- which one felt no sympathy; finally took the unchristian revenge of
- heaping coals of fire on his adversary's head."
- "You have not told me all," said he.
- "Nearly all, I think: I have indicated the heads of Père Silas's
- chapters."
- "You have forgotten one--that which touched on the pupil's lack of
- affection--on his hard, cold, monkish heart."
- "True; I remember now. Père Silas _did_ say that his vocation was
- almost that of a priest--that his life was considered consecrated."
- "By what bonds or duties?"
- "By the ties of the past and the charities of the present."
- "You have, then, the whole situation?"
- "I have now told Monsieur all that was told me."
- Some meditative minutes passed.
- "Now, Mademoiselle Lucy, look at me, and with that truth which I
- believe you never knowingly violate, answer me one question. Raise your
- eyes; rest them on mine; have no hesitation; fear not to trust me--I am
- a man to be trusted."
- I raised my eyes.
- "Knowing me thoroughly now--all my antecedents, all my
- responsibilities--having long known my faults, can you and I still be
- friends?"
- "If Monsieur wants a friend in me, I shall be glad to have a friend in
- him."
- "But a close friend I mean--intimate and real--kindred in all but
- blood. Will Miss Lucy be the sister of a very poor, fettered, burdened,
- encumbered man?"
- I could not answer him in words, yet I suppose I _did_ answer him; he
- took my hand, which found comfort, in the shelter of his. _His_
- friendship was not a doubtful, wavering benefit--a cold, distant
- hope--a sentiment so brittle as not to bear the weight of a finger: I
- at once felt (or _thought_ I felt) its support like that of some rock.
- "When I talk of friendship, I mean _true_ friendship," he repeated
- emphatically; and I could hardly believe that words so earnest had
- blessed my ear; I hardly could credit the reality of that kind, anxious
- look he gave. If he _really_ wished for my confidence and regard, and
- _really_ would give me his--why, it seemed to me that life could offer
- nothing more or better. In that case, I was become strong and rich: in
- a moment I was made substantially happy. To ascertain the fact, to fix
- and seal it, I asked--
- "Is Monsieur quite serious? Does he really think he needs me, and can
- take an interest in me as a sister?"
- "Surely, surely," said he; "a lonely man like me, who has no sister,
- must be but too glad to find in some woman's heart a sister's pure
- affection."
- "And dare I rely on Monsieur's regard? Dare I speak to him when I am so
- inclined?"
- "My little sister must make her own experiments," said he; "I will give
- no promises. She must tease and try her wayward brother till she has
- drilled him into what she wishes. After all, he is no inductile
- material in some hands."
- While he spoke, the tone of his voice, the light of his now
- affectionate eye, gave me such a pleasure as, certainly, I had never
- felt. I envied no girl her lover, no bride her bridegroom, no wife her
- husband; I was content with this my voluntary, self-offering friend. If
- he would but prove reliable, and he _looked_ reliable, what, beyond his
- friendship, could I ever covet? But, if all melted like a dream, as
- once before had happened--?
- "Qu'est-ce donc? What is it?" said he, as this thought threw its weight
- on my heart, its shadow on my countenance. I told him; and after a
- moment's pause, and a thoughtful smile, he showed me how an equal
- fear--lest I should weary of him, a man of moods so difficult and
- fitful--had haunted his mind for more than one day, or one month.
- On hearing this, a quiet courage cheered me. I ventured a word of
- re-assurance. That word was not only tolerated; its repetition was
- courted. I grew quite happy--strangely happy--in making him secure,
- content, tranquil. Yesterday, I could not have believed that earth
- held, or life afforded, moments like the few I was now passing.
- Countless times it had been my lot to watch apprehended sorrow close
- darkly in; but to see unhoped-for happiness take form, find place, and
- grow more real as the seconds sped, was indeed a new experience.
- "Lucy," said M. Paul, speaking low, and still holding my hand, "did you
- see a picture in the boudoir of the old house?"
- "I did; a picture painted on a panel."
- "The portrait of a nun?"
- "Yes."
- "You heard her history?"
- "Yes."
- "You remember what we saw that night in the berceau?"
- "I shall never forget it."
- "You did not connect the two ideas; that would be folly?"
- "I thought of the apparition when I saw the portrait," said I; which
- was true enough.
- "You did not, nor will you fancy," pursued he, "that a saint in heaven
- perturbs herself with rivalries of earth? Protestants are rarely
- superstitious; these morbid fancies will not beset _you?_"
- "I know not what to think of this matter; but I believe a perfectly
- natural solution of this seeming mystery will one day be arrived at."
- "Doubtless, doubtless. Besides, no good-living woman--much less a pure,
- happy spirit--would trouble amity like ours n'est-il pas vrai?"
- Ere I could answer, Fifine Beck burst in, rosy and abrupt, calling out
- that I was wanted. Her mother was going into town to call on some
- English family, who had applied for a prospectus: my services were
- needed as interpreter. The interruption was not unseasonable:
- sufficient for the day is always the evil; for this hour, its good
- sufficed. Yet I should have liked to ask M. Paul whether the "morbid
- fancies," against which he warned me, wrought in his own brain.
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
- THE APPLE OF DISCORD.
- Besides Fifine Beck's mother, another power had a word to say to M.
- Paul and me, before that covenant of friendship could be ratified. We
- were under the surveillance of a sleepless eye: Rome watched jealously
- her son through that mystic lattice at which I had knelt once, and to
- which M. Emanuel drew nigh month by month--the sliding panel of the
- confessional.
- "Why were you so glad to be friends with M. Paul?" asks the reader.
- "Had he not long been a friend to you? Had he not given proof on proof
- of a certain partiality in his feelings?"
- Yes, he had; but still I liked to hear him say so earnestly--that he
- was my close, true friend; I liked his modest doubts, his tender
- deference--that trust which longed to rest, and was grateful when
- taught how. He had called me "sister." It was well. Yes; he might call
- me what he pleased, so long as he confided in me. I was willing to be
- his sister, on condition that he did not invite me to fill that
- relation to some future wife of his; and tacitly vowed as he was to
- celibacy, of this dilemma there seemed little danger.
- Through most of the succeeding night I pondered that evening's
- interview. I wanted much the morning to break, and then listened for
- the bell to ring; and, after rising and dressing, I deemed prayers and
- breakfast slow, and all the hours lingering, till that arrived at last
- which brought me the lesson of literature. My wish was to get a more
- thorough comprehension of this fraternal alliance: to note with how
- much of the brother he would demean himself when we met again; to prove
- how much of the sister was in my own feelings; to discover whether I
- could summon a sister's courage, and he a brother's frankness.
- He came. Life is so constructed, that the event does not, cannot, will
- not, match the expectation. That whole day he never accosted me. His
- lesson was given rather more quietly than usual, more mildly, and also
- more gravely. He was fatherly to his pupils, but he was not brotherly
- to me. Ere he left the classe, I expected a smile, if not a word; I got
- neither: to my portion fell one nod--hurried, shy.
- This distance, I argued, is accidental--it is involuntary; patience,
- and it will vanish. It vanished not; it continued for days; it
- increased. I suppressed my surprise, and swallowed whatever other
- feelings began to surge.
- Well might I ask when he offered fraternity--"Dare I rely on you?" Well
- might he, doubtless knowing himself, withhold all pledge. True, he had
- bid me make my own experiments--tease and try him. Vain injunction!
- Privilege nominal and unavailable! Some women might use it! Nothing in
- my powers or instinct placed me amongst this brave band. Left alone, I
- was passive; repulsed, I withdrew; forgotten--my lips would not utter,
- nor my eyes dart a reminder. It seemed there had been an error
- somewhere in my calculations, and I wanted for time to disclose it.
- But the day came when, as usual, he was to give me a lesson. One
- evening in seven he had long generously bestowed on me, devoting it to
- the examination of what had been done in various studies during the
- past week, and to the preparation of work for the week in prospect. On
- these occasions my schoolroom was anywhere, wherever the pupils and the
- other teachers happened to be, or in their close vicinage, very often
- in the large second division, where it was easy to choose a quiet nook
- when the crowding day pupils were absent, and the few boarders gathered
- in a knot about the surveillante's estrade.
- On the customary evening, hearing the customary hour strike, I
- collected my books and papers, my pen and ink, and sought the large
- division.
- In classe there was no one, and it lay all in cool deep shadow; but
- through the open double doors was seen the carré, filled with pupils
- and with light; over hall and figures blushed the westering sun. It
- blushed so ruddily and vividly, that the hues of the walls and the
- variegated tints of the dresses seemed all fused in one warm glow. The
- girls were seated, working or studying; in the midst of their circle
- stood M. Emanuel, speaking good-humouredly to a teacher. His dark
- paletôt, his jetty hair, were tinged with many a reflex of crimson; his
- Spanish face, when he turned it momentarily, answered the sun's
- animated kiss with an animated smile. I took my place at a desk.
- The orange-trees, and several plants, full and bright with bloom,
- basked also in the sun's laughing bounty; they had partaken it the
- whole day, and now asked water. M. Emanuel had a taste for gardening;
- he liked to tend and foster plants. I used to think that working
- amongst shrubs with a spade or a watering-pot soothed his nerves; it
- was a recreation to which he often had recourse; and now he looked to
- the orange-trees, the geraniums, the gorgeous cactuses, and revived
- them all with the refreshment their drought needed. His lips meantime
- sustained his precious cigar, that (for him) first necessary and prime
- luxury of life; its blue wreaths curled prettily enough amongst the
- flowers, and in the evening light. He spoke no more to the pupils, nor
- to the mistresses, but gave many an endearing word to a small
- spanieless (if one may coin a word), that nominally belonged to the
- house, but virtually owned him as master, being fonder of him than any
- inmate. A delicate, silky, loving, and lovable little doggie she was,
- trotting at his side, looking with expressive, attached eyes into his
- face; and whenever he dropped his bonnet-grec or his handkerchief,
- which he occasionally did in play, crouching beside it with the air of
- a miniature lion guarding a kingdom's flag.
- There were many plants, and as the amateur gardener fetched all the
- water from the well in the court, with his own active hands, his work
- spun on to some length. The great school-clock ticked on. Another hour
- struck. The carré and the youthful group lost the illusion of sunset.
- Day was drooping. My lesson, I perceived, must to-night be very short;
- but the orange-trees, the cacti, the camelias were all served now. Was
- it my turn?
- Alas! in the garden were more plants to be looked after,--favourite
- rose-bushes, certain choice flowers; little Sylvie's glad bark and
- whine followed the receding paletôt down the alleys. I put up some of
- my books; I should not want them all; I sat and thought; and waited,
- involuntarily deprecating the creeping invasion of twilight.
- Sylvie, gaily frisking, emerged into view once more, heralding the
- returning paletôt; the watering-pot was deposited beside the well; it
- had fulfilled its office; how glad I was! Monsieur washed his hands in
- a little stone bowl. There was no longer time for a lesson now; ere
- long the prayer-bell must ring; but still we should meet; he would
- speak; a chance would be offered of reading in his eyes the riddle of
- his shyness. His ablutions over, he stood, slowly re-arranging his
- cuffs, looking at the horn of a young moon, set pale in the opal sky,
- and glimmering faint on the oriel of Jean Baptiste. Sylvie watched the
- mood contemplative; its stillness irked her; she whined and jumped to
- break it. He looked down.
- "Petite exigeante," said he; "you must not be forgotten one moment, it
- seems."
- He stopped, lifted her in his arms, sauntered across the court, within
- a yard of the line of windows near one of which I sat: he sauntered
- lingeringly, fondling the spaniel in his bosom, calling her tender
- names in a tender voice. On the front-door steps he turned; once again
- he looked at the moon, at the grey cathedral, over the remoter spires
- and house-roofs fading into a blue sea of night-mist; he tasted the
- sweet breath of dusk, and noted the folded bloom of the garden; he
- suddenly looked round; a keen beam out of his eye rased the white
- façade of the classes, swept the long line of croisées. I think he
- bowed; if he did, I had no time to return the courtesy. In a moment he
- was gone; the moonlit threshold lay pale and shadowless before the
- closed front door.
- Gathering in my arms all that was spread on the desk before me, I
- carried back the unused heap to its place in the third classe. The
- prayer-bell rang; I obeyed its summons.
- The morrow would not restore him to the Rue Fossette, that day being
- devoted entirely to his college. I got through my teaching; I got over
- the intermediate hours; I saw evening approaching, and armed myself for
- its heavy ennuis. Whether it was worse to stay with my co-inmates, or
- to sit alone, I had not considered; I naturally took up the latter
- alternative; if there was a hope of comfort for any moment, the heart
- or head of no human being in this house could yield it; only under the
- lid of my desk could it harbour, nestling between the leaves of some
- book, gilding a pencil-point, the nib of a pen, or tinging the black
- fluid in that ink-glass. With a heavy heart I opened my desk-lid; with
- a weary hand I turned up its contents.
- One by one, well-accustomed books, volumes sewn in familiar covers,
- were taken out and put back hopeless: they had no charm; they could not
- comfort. Is this something new, this pamphlet in lilac? I had not seen
- it before, and I re-arranged my desk this very day--this very
- afternoon; the tract must have been introduced within the last hour,
- while we were at dinner.
- I opened it. What was it? What would it say to me?
- It was neither tale nor poem, neither essay nor history; it neither
- sung, nor related, not discussed. It was a theological work; it
- preached and it persuaded.
- I lent to it my ear very willingly, for, small as it was, it possessed
- its own spell, and bound my attention at once. It preached Romanism; it
- persuaded to conversion. The voice of that sly little book was a
- honeyed voice; its accents were all unction and balm. Here roared no
- utterance of Rome's thunders, no blasting of the breath of her
- displeasure. The Protestant was to turn Papist, not so much in fear of
- the heretic's hell, as on account of the comfort, the indulgence, the
- tenderness Holy Church offered: far be it from her to threaten or to
- coerce; her wish was to guide and win. _She_ persecute? Oh dear no! not
- on any account!
- This meek volume was not addressed to the hardened and worldly; it was
- not even strong meat for the strong: it was milk for babes: the mild
- effluence of a mother's love towards her tenderest and her youngest;
- intended wholly and solely for those whose head is to be reached
- through the heart. Its appeal was not to intellect; it sought to win
- the affectionate through their affections, the sympathizing through
- their sympathies: St. Vincent de Paul, gathering his orphans about him,
- never spoke more sweetly.
- I remember one capital inducement to apostacy was held out in the fact
- that the Catholic who had lost dear friends by death could enjoy the
- unspeakable solace of praying them out of purgatory. The writer did not
- touch on the firmer peace of those whose belief dispenses with
- purgatory altogether: but I thought of this; and, on the whole,
- preferred the latter doctrine as the most consolatory. The little book
- amused, and did not painfully displease me. It was a canting,
- sentimental, shallow little book, yet something about it cheered my
- gloom and made me smile; I was amused with the gambols of this unlicked
- wolf-cub muffled in the fleece, and mimicking the bleat of a guileless
- lamb. Portions of it reminded me of certain Wesleyan Methodist tracts I
- had once read when a child; they were flavoured with about the same
- seasoning of excitation to fanaticism. He that had written it was no
- bad man, and while perpetually betraying the trained cunning--the
- cloven hoof of his system--I should pause before accusing himself of
- insincerity. His judgment, however, wanted surgical props; it was
- rickety.
- I smiled then over this dose of maternal tenderness, coming from the
- ruddy old lady of the Seven Hills; smiled, too, at my own
- disinclination, not to say disability, to meet these melting favours.
- Glancing at the title-page, I found the name of "Père Silas." A
- fly-leaf bore in small, but clear and well-known pencil characters:
- "From P. C. D. E. to L--y." And when I saw this I laughed: but not in
- my former spirit. I was revived.
- A mortal bewilderment cleared suddenly from my head and vision; the
- solution of the Sphinx-riddle was won; the conjunction of those two
- names, Père Silas and Paul Emanuel, gave the key to all. The penitent
- had been with his director; permitted to withhold nothing; suffered to
- keep no corner of his heart sacred to God and to himself; the whole
- narrative of our late interview had been drawn from him; he had avowed
- the covenant of fraternity, and spoken of his adopted sister. How could
- such a covenant, such adoption, be sanctioned by the Church? Fraternal
- communion with a heretic! I seemed to hear Père Silas annulling the
- unholy pact; warning his penitent of its perils; entreating, enjoining
- reserve, nay, by the authority of his office, and in the name, and by
- the memory of all M. Emanuel held most dear and sacred, commanding the
- enforcement of that new system whose frost had pierced to the marrow of
- my bones.
- These may not seem pleasant hypotheses; yet, by comparison, they were
- welcome. The vision of a ghostly troubler hovering in the background,
- was as nothing, matched with the fear of spontaneous change arising in
- M. Paul himself.
- At this distance of time, I cannot be sure how far the above
- conjectures were self-suggested: or in what measure they owed their
- origin and confirmation to another quarter. Help was not wanting.
- This evening there was no bright sunset: west and east were one cloud;
- no summer night-mist, blue, yet rose-tinged, softened the distance; a
- clammy fog from the marshes crept grey round Villette. To-night the
- watering-pot might rest in its niche by the well: a small rain had been
- drizzling all the afternoon, and still it fell fast and quietly. This
- was no weather for rambling in the wet alleys, under the dripping
- trees; and I started to hear Sylvie's sudden bark in the garden--her
- bark of welcome. Surely she was not accompanied and yet this glad,
- quick bark was never uttered, save in homage to one presence.
- Through the glass door and the arching berceau, I commanded the deep
- vista of the allée défendue: thither rushed Sylvie, glistening through
- its gloom like a white guelder-rose. She ran to and fro, whining,
- springing, harassing little birds amongst the bushes. I watched five
- minutes; no fulfilment followed the omen. I returned to my books;
- Sylvie's sharp bark suddenly ceased. Again I looked up. She was
- standing not many yards distant, wagging her white feathery tail as
- fast as the muscle would work, and intently watching the operations of
- a spade, plied fast by an indefatigable hand. There was M. Emanuel,
- bent over the soil, digging in the wet mould amongst the rain-laden and
- streaming shrubs, working as hard as if his day's pittance were yet to
- earn by the literal sweat of his brow.
- In this sign I read a ruffled mood. He would dig thus in frozen snow on
- the coldest winter day, when urged inwardly by painful emotion, whether
- of nervous excitation, or, sad thoughts of self-reproach. He would dig
- by the hour, with knit brow and set teeth, nor once lift his head, or
- open his lips.
- Sylvie watched till she was tired. Again scampering devious, bounding
- here, rushing there, snuffing and sniffing everywhere; she at last
- discovered me in classe. Instantly she flew barking at the panes, as if
- to urge me forth to share her pleasure or her master's toil; she had
- seen me occasionally walking in that alley with M. Paul; and I doubt
- not, considered it my duty to join him now, wet as it was.
- She made such a bustle that M. Paul at last looked up, and of course
- perceived why, and at whom she barked. He whistled to call her off; she
- only barked the louder. She seemed quite bent upon having the glass
- door opened. Tired, I suppose, with her importunity, he threw down his
- spade, approached, and pushed the door ajar. Sylvie burst in all
- impetuous, sprang to my lap, and with her paws at my neck, and her
- little nose and tongue somewhat overpoweringly busy about my face,
- mouth, and eyes, flourished her bushy tail over the desk, and scattered
- books and papers far and wide.
- M. Emanuel advanced to still the clamour and repair the disarrangement.
- Having gathered up the books, he captured Sylvie, and stowed her away
- under his paletôt, where she nestled as quiet as a mouse, her head just
- peeping forth. She was very tiny, and had the prettiest little innocent
- face, the silkiest long ears, the finest dark eyes in the world. I
- never saw her, but I thought of Paulina de Bassompierre: forgive the
- association, reader, it _would_ occur.
- M. Paul petted and patted her; the endearments she received were not to
- be wondered at; she invited affection by her beauty and her vivacious
- life.
- While caressing the spaniel, his eye roved over the papers and books
- just replaced; it settled on the religious tract. His lips moved; he
- half checked the impulse to speak. What! had he promised never to
- address me more? If so, his better nature pronounced the vow "more
- honoured in the breach than in the observance," for with a second
- effort, he spoke.--"You have not yet read the brochure, I presume? It
- is not sufficiently inviting?"
- I replied that I had read it.
- He waited, as if wishing me to give an opinion upon it unasked.
- Unasked, however, I was in no mood to do or say anything. If any
- concessions were to be made--if any advances were demanded--that was
- the affair of the very docile pupil of Père Silas, not mine. His eye
- settled upon me gently: there was mildness at the moment in its blue
- ray--there was solicitude--a shade of pathos; there were meanings
- composite and contrasted--reproach melting into remorse. At the moment
- probably, he would have been glad to see something emotional in me. I
- could not show it. In another minute, however, I should have betrayed
- confusion, had I not bethought myself to take some quill-pens from my
- desk, and begin soberly to mend them.
- I knew that action would give a turn to his mood. He never liked to see
- me mend pens; my knife was always dull-edged--my hand, too, was
- unskilful; I hacked and chipped. On this occasion I cut my own
- finger--half on purpose. I wanted to restore him to his natural state,
- to set him at his ease, to get him to chide.
- "Maladroit!" he cried at last, "she will make mincemeat of her hands."
- He put Sylvie down, making her lie quiet beside his bonnet-grec, and,
- depriving me of the pens and penknife, proceeded to slice, nib, and
- point with the accuracy and celerity of a machine.
- "Did I like the little book?" he now inquired.
- Suppressing a yawn, I said I hardly knew.
- "Had it moved me?"
- "I thought it had made me a little sleepy."
- (After a pause:) "Allons donc! It was of no use taking that tone with
- him. Bad as I was--and he should be sorry to have to name all my faults
- at a breath--God and nature had given me 'trop de sensibilité et de
- sympathie' not to be profoundly affected by an appeal so touching."
- "Indeed!" I responded, rousing myself quickly, "I was not affected at
- all--not a whit."
- And in proof, I drew from my pocket a perfectly dry handkerchief, still
- clean and in its folds.
- Hereupon I was made the object of a string of strictures rather piquant
- than polite. I listened with zest. After those two days of unnatural
- silence, it was better than music to hear M. Paul haranguing again just
- in his old fashion. I listened, and meantime solaced myself and Sylvie
- with the contents of a bonbonnière, which M. Emanuel's gifts kept well
- supplied with chocolate comfits: It pleased him to see even a small
- matter from his hand duly appreciated. He looked at me and the spaniel
- while we shared the spoil; he put up his penknife. Touching my hand
- with the bundle of new-cut quills, he said:--"Dites donc, petite
- soeur--speak frankly--what have you thought of me during the last two
- days?"
- But of this question I would take no manner of notice; its purport made
- my eyes fill. I caressed Sylvie assiduously. M. Paul, leaning--over the
- desk, bent towards me:--"I called myself your brother," he said: "I
- hardly know what I am--brother--friend--I cannot tell. I know I think
- of you--I feel I wish, you well--but I must check myself; you are to be
- feared. My best friends point out danger, and whisper caution."
- "You do right to listen to your friends. By all means be cautious."
- "It is your religion--your strange, self-reliant, invulnerable creed,
- whose influence seems to clothe you in, I know not what, unblessed
- panoply. You are good--Père Silas calls you good, and loves you--but
- your terrible, proud, earnest Protestantism, there is the danger. It
- expresses itself by your eye at times; and again, it gives you certain
- tones and certain gestures that make my flesh creep. You are not
- demonstrative, and yet, just now--when you handled that tract--my God!
- I thought Lucifer smiled."
- "Certainly I don't respect that tract--what then?"
- "Not respect that tract? But it is the pure essence of faith, love,
- charity! I thought it would touch you: in its gentleness, I trusted
- that it could not fail. I laid it in your desk with a prayer: I must
- indeed be a sinner: Heaven will not hear the petitions that come
- warmest from my heart. You scorn my little offering. Oh, cela me fait
- mal!"
- "Monsieur, I don't scorn it--at least, not as your gift. Monsieur, sit
- down; listen to me. I am not a heathen, I am not hard-hearted, I am not
- unchristian, I am not dangerous, as they tell you; I would not trouble
- your faith; you believe in God and Christ and the Bible, and so do I."
- "But _do_ you believe in the Bible? Do you receive Revelation? What
- limits are there to the wild, careless daring of your country and sect.
- Père Silas dropped dark hints."
- By dint of persuasion, I made him half-define these hints; they
- amounted to crafty Jesuit-slanders. That night M. Paul and I talked
- seriously and closely. He pleaded, he argued. _I_ could not argue--a
- fortunate incapacity; it needed but triumphant, logical opposition to
- effect all the director wished to be effected; but I could talk in my
- own way--the way M. Paul was used to--and of which he could follow the
- meanderings and fill the hiatus, and pardon the strange stammerings,
- strange to him no longer. At ease with him, I could defend my creed and
- faith in my own fashion; in some degree I could lull his prejudices. He
- was not satisfied when he went away, hardly was he appeased; but he was
- made thoroughly to feel that Protestants were not necessarily the
- irreverent Pagans his director had insinuated; he was made to
- comprehend something of their mode of honouring the Light, the Life,
- the Word; he was enabled partly to perceive that, while their
- veneration for things venerable was not quite like that cultivated in
- his Church, it had its own, perhaps, deeper power--its own more solemn
- awe.
- I found that Père Silas (himself, I must repeat, not a bad man, though
- the advocate of a bad cause) had darkly stigmatized Protestants in
- general, and myself by inference, with strange names, had ascribed to
- us strange "isms;" Monsieur Emanuel revealed all this in his frank
- fashion, which knew not secretiveness, looking at me as he spoke with a
- kind, earnest fear, almost trembling lest there should be truth in the
- charges. Père Silas, it seems, had closely watched me, had ascertained
- that I went by turns, and indiscriminately, to the three Protestant
- Chapels of Villette--the French, German, and English--_id est_, the
- Presbyterian, Lutheran, Episcopalian. Such liberality argued in the
- father's eyes profound indifference--who tolerates all, he reasoned,
- can be attached to none. Now, it happened that I had often secretly
- wondered at the minute and unimportant character of the differences
- between these three sects--at the unity and identity of their vital
- doctrines: I saw nothing to hinder them from being one day fused into
- one grand Holy Alliance, and I respected them all, though I thought
- that in each there were faults of form, incumbrances, and trivialities.
- Just what I thought, that did I tell M. Emanuel, and explained to him
- that my own last appeal, the guide to which I looked, and the teacher
- which I owned, must always be the Bible itself, rather than any sect,
- of whatever name or nation.
- He left me soothed, yet full of solicitude, breathing a wish, as strong
- as a prayer, that if I were wrong, Heaven would lead me right. I heard,
- poured forth on the threshold, some fervid murmurings to "Marie, Reine
- du Ciel," some deep aspiration that _his_ hope might yet be _mine_.
- Strange! I had no such feverish wish to turn him from the faith of his
- fathers. I thought Romanism wrong, a great mixed image of gold and
- clay; but it seemed to me that _this_ Romanist held the purer elements
- of his creed with an innocency of heart which God must love.
- The preceding conversation passed between eight and nine o'clock of the
- evening, in a schoolroom of the quiet Rue Fossette, opening on a
- sequestered garden. Probably about the same, or a somewhat later hour
- of the succeeding evening, its echoes, collected by holy obedience,
- were breathed verbatim in an attent ear, at the panel of a
- confessional, in the hoary church of the Magi. It ensued that Père
- Silas paid a visit to Madame Beck, and stirred by I know not what
- mixture of motives, persuaded her to let him undertake for a time the
- Englishwoman's spiritual direction.
- Hereupon I was put through a course of reading--that is, I just glanced
- at the books lent me; they were too little in my way to be thoroughly
- read, marked, learned, or inwardly digested. And besides, I had a book
- up-stairs, under my pillow, whereof certain chapters satisfied my needs
- in the article of spiritual lore, furnishing such precept and example
- as, to my heart's core, I was convinced could not be improved on.
- Then Père Silas showed me the fair side of Rome, her good works; and
- bade me judge the tree by its fruits.
- In answer, I felt and I avowed that these works were _not_ the fruits
- of Rome; they were but her abundant blossoming, but the fair promise
- she showed the world, that bloom when set, savoured not of charity;
- the apple full formed was ignorance, abasement, and bigotry. Out of
- men's afflictions and affections were forged the rivets of their
- servitude. Poverty was fed and clothed, and sheltered, to bind it by
- obligation to "the Church;" orphanage was reared and educated that it
- might grow up in the fold of "the Church;" sickness was tended that it
- might die after the formula and in the ordinance of "the Church;" and
- men were overwrought, and women most murderously sacrificed, and all
- laid down a world God made pleasant for his creatures' good, and took
- up a cross, monstrous in its galling weight, that they might serve
- Rome, prove her sanctity, confirm her power, and spread the reign of
- her tyrant "Church."
- For man's good was little done; for God's glory, less. A thousand ways
- were opened with pain, with blood-sweats, with lavishing of life;
- mountains were cloven through their breasts, and rocks were split to
- their base; and all for what? That a Priesthood might march straight on
- and straight upward to an all-dominating eminence, whence they might at
- last stretch the sceptre of their Moloch "Church."
- It will not be. God is not with Rome, and, were human sorrows still for
- the Son of God, would he not mourn over her cruelties and ambitions, as
- once he mourned over the crimes and woes of doomed Jerusalem!
- Oh, lovers of power! Oh, mitred aspirants for this world's kingdoms! an
- hour will come, even to you, when it will be well for your
- hearts--pausing faint at each broken beat--that there is a Mercy beyond
- human compassions, a Love, stronger than this strong death which even
- you must face, and before it, fall; a Charity more potent than any sin,
- even yours; a Pity which redeems worlds--nay, absolves Priests.
- * * * * *
- My third temptation was held out in the pomp of Rome--the glory of her
- kingdom. I was taken to the churches on solemn occasions--days of fête
- and state; I was shown the Papal ritual and ceremonial. I looked at it.
- Many people--men and women--no doubt far my superiors in a thousand
- ways, have felt this display impressive, have declared that though
- their Reason protested, their Imagination was subjugated. I cannot say
- the same. Neither full procession, nor high mass, nor swarming tapers,
- nor swinging censers, nor ecclesiastical millinery, nor celestial
- jewellery, touched my imagination a whit. What I saw struck me as
- tawdry, not grand; as grossly material, not poetically spiritual.
- This I did not tell Père Silas; he was old, he looked venerable:
- through every abortive experiment, under every repeated disappointment,
- he remained personally kind to me, and I felt tender of hurting his
- feelings. But on the evening of a certain day when, from the balcony of
- a great house, I had been made to witness a huge mingled procession of
- the church and the army--priests with relics, and soldiers with
- weapons, an obese and aged archbishop, habited in cambric and lace,
- looking strangely like a grey daw in bird-of-paradise plumage, and a
- band of young girls fantastically robed and garlanded--_then_ I spoke
- my mind to M. Paul.
- "I did not like it," I told him; "I did not respect such ceremonies; I
- wished to see no more."
- And having relieved my conscience by this declaration, I was able to go
- on, and, speaking more currently and clearly than my wont, to show him
- that I had a mind to keep to my reformed creed; the more I saw of
- Popery the closer I clung to Protestantism; doubtless there were errors
- in every church, but I now perceived by contrast how severely pure was
- my own, compared with her whose painted and meretricious face had been
- unveiled for my admiration. I told him how we kept fewer forms between
- us and God; retaining, indeed, no more than, perhaps, the nature of
- mankind in the mass rendered necessary for due observance. I told him I
- could not look on flowers and tinsel, on wax-lights and embroidery, at
- such times and under such circumstances as should be devoted to lifting
- the secret vision to Him whose home is Infinity, and His
- being--Eternity. That when I thought of sin and sorrow, of earthly
- corruption, mortal depravity, weighty temporal woe--I could not care
- for chanting priests or mumming officials; that when the pains of
- existence and the terrors of dissolution pressed before me--when the
- mighty hope and measureless doubt of the future arose in view--_then_,
- even the scientific strain, or the prayer in a language learned and
- dead, harassed: with hindrance a heart which only longed to cry--"God
- be merciful to me, a sinner!"
- When I had so spoken, so declared my faith, and so widely severed
- myself, from him I addressed--then, at last, came a tone accordant, an
- echo responsive, one sweet chord of harmony in two conflicting spirits.
- "Whatever say priests or controversialists," murmured M. Emanuel, "God
- is good, and loves all the sincere. Believe, then, what you can;
- believe it as you can; one prayer, at least, we have in common; I also
- cry--'O Dieu, sois appaisé envers moi qui suis pécheur!'"
- He leaned on the back of my chair. After some thought he again spoke:
- "How seem in the eyes of that God who made all firmaments, from whose
- nostrils issued whatever of life is here, or in the stars shining
- yonder--how seem the differences of man? But as Time is not for God,
- nor Space, so neither is Measure, nor Comparison. We abase ourselves in
- our littleness, and we do right; yet it may be that the constancy of
- one heart, the truth and faith of one mind according to the light He
- has appointed, import as much to Him as the just motion of satellites
- about their planets, of planets about their suns, of suns around that
- mighty unseen centre incomprehensible, irrealizable, with strange
- mental effort only divined.
- "God guide us all! God bless you, Lucy!"
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
- SUNSHINE.
- It was very well for Paulina to decline further correspondence with
- Graham till her father had sanctioned the intercourse. But Dr. Bretton
- could not live within a league of the Hôtel Crécy, and not contrive to
- visit there often. Both lovers meant at first, I believe, to be
- distant; they kept their intention so far as demonstrative courtship
- went, but in feeling they soon drew very near.
- All that was best in Graham sought Paulina; whatever in him was noble,
- awoke, and grew in her presence. With his past admiration of Miss
- Fanshawe, I suppose his intellect had little to do, but his whole
- intellect, and his highest tastes, came in question now. These, like
- all his faculties, were active, eager for nutriment, and alive to
- gratification when it came.
- I cannot say that Paulina designedly led him to talk of books, or
- formally proposed to herself for a moment the task of winning him to
- reflection, or planned the improvement of his mind, or so much as
- fancied his mind could in any one respect be improved. She thought him
- very perfect; it was Graham himself, who, at first by the merest
- chance, mentioned some book he had been reading, and when in her
- response sounded a welcome harmony of sympathies, something, pleasant
- to his soul, he talked on, more and better perhaps than he had ever
- talked before on such subjects. She listened with delight, and answered
- with animation. In each successive answer, Graham heard a music waxing
- finer and finer to his sense; in each he found a suggestive,
- persuasive, magic accent that opened a scarce-known treasure-house
- within, showed him unsuspected power in his own mind, and what was
- better, latent goodness in his heart. Each liked the way in which the
- other talked; the voice, the diction, the expression pleased; each
- keenly relished the flavour of the other's wit; they met each other's
- meaning with strange quickness, their thoughts often matched like
- carefully-chosen pearls. Graham had wealth of mirth by nature; Paulina
- possessed no such inherent flow of animal spirits--unstimulated, she
- inclined to be thoughtful and pensive--but now she seemed merry as a
- lark; in her lover's genial presence, she glanced like some soft glad
- light. How beautiful she grew in her happiness, I can hardly express,
- but I wondered to see her. As to that gentle ice of hers--that reserve
- on which she had depended; where was it now? Ah! Graham would not long
- bear it; he brought with him a generous influence that soon thawed the
- timid, self-imposed restriction.
- Now were the old Bretton days talked over; perhaps brokenly at first,
- with a sort of smiling diffidence, then with opening candour and still
- growing confidence. Graham had made for himself a better opportunity
- than that he had wished me to give; he had earned independence of the
- collateral help that disobliging Lucy had refused; all his
- reminiscences of "little Polly" found their proper expression in his
- own pleasant tones, by his own kind and handsome lips; how much better
- than if suggested by me.
- More than once when we were alone, Paulina would tell me how wonderful
- and curious it was to discover the richness and accuracy of his memory
- in this matter. How, while he was looking at her, recollections would
- seem to be suddenly quickened in his mind. He reminded her that she had
- once gathered his head in her arms, caressed his leonine graces, and
- cried out, "Graham, I _do_ like you!" He told her how she would set a
- footstool beside him, and climb by its aid to his knee. At this day he
- said he could recall the sensation of her little hands smoothing his
- cheek, or burying themselves in his thick mane. He remembered the touch
- of her small forefinger, placed half tremblingly, half curiously, in
- the cleft in his chin, the lisp, the look with which she would name it
- "a pretty dimple," then seek his eyes and question why they pierced so,
- telling him he had a "nice, strange face; far nicer, far stranger, than
- either his mamma or Lucy Snowe."
- "Child as I was," remarked Paulina, "I wonder how I dared be so
- venturous. To me he seems now all sacred, his locks are inaccessible,
- and, Lucy, I feel a sort of fear, when I look at his firm, marble chin,
- at his straight Greek features. Women are called beautiful, Lucy; he is
- not like a woman, therefore I suppose he is not beautiful, but what is
- he, then? Do other people see him with my eyes? Do _you_ admire him?"
- "I'll tell you what I do, Paulina," was once my answer to her many
- questions. "_I never see him_. I looked at him twice or thrice about a
- year ago, before he recognised me, and then I shut my eyes; and if he
- were to cross their balls twelve times between each day's sunset and
- sunrise, except from memory, I should hardly know what shape had gone
- by."
- "Lucy, what do you mean?" said she, under her breath.
- "I mean that I value vision, and dread being struck stone blind."
- It was best to answer her strongly at once, and to silence for ever the
- tender, passionate confidences which left her lips sweet honey, and
- sometimes dropped in my ear--molten lead. To me, she commented no more
- on her lover's beauty.
- Yet speak of him she would; sometimes shyly, in quiet, brief phrases;
- sometimes with a tenderness of cadence, and music of voice exquisite in
- itself; but which chafed me at times miserably; and then, I know, I
- gave her stern looks and words; but cloudless happiness had dazzled her
- native clear sight, and she only thought Lucy--fitful.
- "Spartan girl! Proud Lucy!" she would say, smiling at me. "Graham says
- you are the most peculiar, capricious little woman he knows; but yet
- you are excellent; we both think so."
- "You both think you know not what," said I. "Have the goodness to make
- me as little the subject of your mutual talk and thoughts as possible.
- I have my sort of life apart from yours."
- "But ours, Lucy, is a beautiful life, or it will be; and you shall
- share it."
- "I shall share no man's or woman's life in this world, as you
- understand sharing. I think I have one friend of my own, but am not
- sure; and till I _am_ sure, I live solitary."
- "But solitude is sadness."
- "Yes; it is sadness. Life, however; has worse than that. Deeper than
- melancholy, lies heart-break."
- "Lucy, I wonder if anybody will ever comprehend you altogether."
- There is, in lovers, a certain infatuation of egotism; they will have a
- witness of their happiness, cost that witness what it may. Paulina had
- forbidden letters, yet Dr. Bretton wrote; she had resolved against
- correspondence, yet she answered, were it only to chide. She showed me
- these letters; with something of the spoiled child's wilfulness, and of
- the heiress's imperiousness, she _made_ me read them. As I read
- Graham's, I scarce wondered at her exaction, and understood her pride:
- they were fine letters--manly and fond--modest and gallant. Hers must
- have appeared to him beautiful. They had not been written to show her
- talents; still less, I think, to express her love. On the contrary, it
- appeared that she had proposed to herself the task of hiding that
- feeling, and bridling her lover's ardour. But how could such letters
- serve such a purpose? Graham was become dear as her life; he drew her
- like a powerful magnet. For her there was influence unspeakable in all
- he uttered, wrote, thought, or looked. With this unconfessed
- confession, her letters glowed; it kindled them, from greeting to adieu.
- "I wish papa knew; I _do_ wish papa knew!" began now to be her anxious
- murmur. "I wish, and yet I fear. I can hardly keep Graham back from
- telling him. There is nothing I long for more than to have this affair
- settled--to speak out candidly; and yet I dread the crisis. I know, I
- am certain, papa will be angry at the first; I fear he will dislike me
- almost; it will seem to him an untoward business; it will be a
- surprise, a shock: I can hardly foresee its whole effect on him."
- The fact was--her father, long calm, was beginning to be a little
- stirred: long blind on one point, an importunate light was beginning to
- trespass on his eye.
- To _her_, he said nothing; but when she was not looking at, or perhaps
- thinking of him, I saw him gaze and meditate on her.
- One evening--Paulina was in her dressing-room, writing, I believe, to
- Graham; she had left me in the library, reading--M. de Bassompierre
- came in; he sat down: I was about to withdraw; he requested me to
- remain--gently, yet in a manner which showed he wished compliance. He
- had taken his seat near the window, at a distance from me; he opened a
- desk; he took from it what looked like a memorandum-book; of this book
- he studied a certain entry for several minutes.
- "Miss Snowe," said he, laying it down, "do you know my little girl's
- age?"
- "About eighteen, is it not, sir?"
- "It seems so. This old pocket-book tells me she was born on the 5th of
- May, in the year 18--, eighteen years ago. It is strange; I had lost
- the just reckoning of her age. I thought of her as twelve--fourteen--an
- indefinite date; but she seemed a child."
- "She is about eighteen," I repeated. "She is grown up; she will be no
- taller."
- "My little jewel!" said M. de Bassompierre, in a tone which penetrated
- like some of his daughter's accents.
- He sat very thoughtful.
- "Sir, don't grieve," I said; for I knew his feelings, utterly unspoken
- as they were.
- "She is the only pearl I have," he said; "and now others will find out
- that she is pure and of price: they will covet her."
- I made no answer. Graham Bretton had dined with us that day; he had
- shone both in converse and looks: I know not what pride of bloom
- embellished his aspect and mellowed his intercourse. Under the stimulus
- of a high hope, something had unfolded in his whole manner which
- compelled attention. I think he had purposed on that day to indicate
- the origin of his endeavours, and the aim of his ambition. M. de
- Bassompierre had found himself forced, in a manner, to descry the
- direction and catch the character of his homage. Slow in remarking, he
- was logical in reasoning: having once seized the thread, it had guided
- him through a long labyrinth.
- "Where is she?" he asked.
- "She is up-stairs."
- "What is she doing?"
- "She is writing."
- "She writes, does she? Does she receive letters?"
- "None but such as she can show me. And--sir--she--_they_ have long
- wanted to consult you."
- "Pshaw! They don't think of me--an old father! I am in the way."
- "Ah, M. de Bassompierre--not so--that can't be! But Paulina must speak
- for herself: and Dr. Bretton, too, must be his own advocate."
- "It is a little late. Matters are advanced, it seems."
- "Sir, till you approve, nothing is done--only they love each other."
- "Only!" he echoed.
- Invested by fate with the part of confidante and mediator, I was
- obliged to go on: "Hundreds of times has Dr. Bretton been on the point
- of appealing to you, sir; but, with all his high courage, he fears you
- mortally."
- "He may well--he may well fear me. He has touched the best thing I
- have. Had he but let her alone, she would have remained a child for
- years yet. So. Are they engaged?"
- "They could not become engaged without your permission."
- "It is well for you, Miss Snowe, to talk and think with that propriety
- which always characterizes you; but this matter is a grief to me; my
- little girl was all I had: I have no more daughters and no son; Bretton
- might as well have looked elsewhere; there are scores of rich and
- pretty women who would not, I daresay, dislike him: he has looks, and
- conduct, and connection. Would nothing serve him but my Polly?"
- "If he had never seen your 'Polly,' others might and would have pleased
- him--your niece, Miss Fanshawe, for instance."
- "Ah! I would have given him Ginevra with all my heart; but Polly!--I
- can't let him have her. No--I can't. He is not her equal," he affirmed,
- rather gruffly. "In what particular is he her match? They talk of
- fortune! I am not an avaricious or interested man, but the world thinks
- of these things--and Polly will be rich."
- "Yes, that is known," said I: "all Villette knows her as an heiress."
- "Do they talk of my little girl in that light?"
- "They do, sir."
- He fell into deep thought. I ventured to say, "Would you, sir, think
- any one Paulina's match? Would you prefer any other to Dr. Bretton? Do
- you think higher rank or more wealth would make much difference in your
- feelings towards a future son-in-law?"
- "You touch me there," said he.
- "Look at the aristocracy of Villette--you would not like them, sir?"
- "I should not--never a duc, baron, or vicomte of the lot."
- "I am told many of these persons think about her, sir," I went on,
- gaining courage on finding that I met attention rather than repulse.
- "Other suitors will come, therefore, if Dr. Bretton is refused.
- Wherever you go, I suppose, aspirants will not be wanting. Independent
- of heiress-ship, it appears to me that Paulina charms most of those who
- see her."
- "Does she? How? My little girl is not thought a beauty."
- "Sir, Miss de Bassompierre is very beautiful."
- "Nonsense!--begging your pardon, Miss Snowe, but I think you are too
- partial. I like Polly: I like all her ways and all her looks--but then
- I am her father; and even I never thought about beauty. She is amusing,
- fairy-like, interesting to me;--you must be mistaken in supposing her
- handsome?"
- "She attracts, sir: she would attract without the advantages of your
- wealth and position."
- "My wealth and position! Are these any bait to Graham? If I thought
- so----"
- "Dr. Bretton knows these points perfectly, as you may be sure, M. de
- Bassompierre, and values them as any gentleman would--as _you_ would
- yourself, under the same circumstances--but they are not his baits. He
- loves your daughter very much; he feels her finest qualities, and they
- influence him worthily."
- "What! has my little pet 'fine qualities?'"
- "Ah, sir! did you observe her that evening when so many men of eminence
- and learning dined here?"
- "I certainly was rather struck and surprised with her manner that day;
- its womanliness made me smile."
- "And did you see those accomplished Frenchmen gather round her in the
- drawing-room?"
- "I did; but I thought it was by way of relaxation--as one might amuse
- one's self with a pretty infant."
- "Sir, she demeaned herself with distinction; and I heard the French
- gentlemen say she was 'pétrie d'esprit et de graces.' Dr. Bretton
- thought the same."
- "She is a good, dear child, that is certain; and I _do_ believe she has
- some character. When I think of it, I was once ill; Polly nursed me;
- they thought I should die; she, I recollect, grew at once stronger and
- tenderer as I grew worse in health. And as I recovered, what a sunbeam
- she was in my sick-room! Yes; she played about my chair as noiselessly
- and as cheerful as light. And now she is sought in marriage! I don't
- want to part with her," said he, and he groaned.
- "You have known Dr. and Mrs. Bretton so long," I suggested, "it would
- be less like separation to give her to him than to another."
- He reflected rather gloomily.
- "True. I have long known Louisa Bretton," he murmured. "She and I are
- indeed old, old friends; a sweet, kind girl she was when she was young.
- You talk of beauty, Miss Snowe! _she_ was handsome, if you will--tall,
- straight, and blooming--not the mere child or elf my Polly seems to me:
- at eighteen, Louisa had a carriage and stature fit for a princess. She
- is a comely and a good woman now. The lad is like her; I have always
- thought so, and favoured and wished him well. Now he repays me by this
- robbery! My little treasure used to love her old father dearly and
- truly. It is all over now, doubtless--I am an incumbrance."
- The door opened--his "little treasure" came in. She was dressed, so to
- speak, in evening beauty; that animation which sometimes comes with the
- close of day, warmed her eye and cheek; a tinge of summer crimson
- heightened her complexion; her curls fell full and long on her lily
- neck; her white dress suited the heat of June. Thinking me alone, she
- had brought in her hand the letter just written--brought it folded but
- unsealed. I was to read it. When she saw her father, her tripping step
- faltered a little, paused a moment--the colour in her cheek flowed rosy
- over her whole face.
- "Polly," said M. de Bassompierre, in a low voice, with a grave smile,
- "do you blush at seeing papa? That is something new."
- "I don't blush--I never _do_ blush," affirmed she, while another eddy
- from the heart sent up its scarlet. "But I thought you were in the
- dining-room, and I wanted Lucy."
- "You thought I was with John Graham Bretton, I suppose? But he has just
- been called out: he will be back soon, Polly. He can post your letter
- for you; it will save Matthieu a 'course,' as he calls it."
- "I don't post letters," said she, rather pettishly.
- "What do you do with them, then?--come here and tell me."
- Both her mind and gesture seemed to hesitate a second--to say "Shall I
- come?"--but she approached.
- "How long is it since you became a letter-writer, Polly? It only seems
- yesterday when you were at your pot-hooks, labouring away absolutely
- with both hands at the pen."
- "Papa, they are not letters to send to the post in your letter-bag;
- they are only notes, which I give now and then into the person's hands,
- just to satisfy."
- "The person! That means Miss Snowe, I suppose?"
- "No, papa--not Lucy."
- "Who then? Perhaps Mrs. Bretton?"
- "No, papa--not Mrs. Bretton."
- "Who, then, my little daughter? Tell papa the truth."
- "Oh, papa!" she cried with earnestness, "I will--I _will_ tell you the
- truth--all the truth; I am glad to tell you--glad, though I tremble."
- She _did_ tremble: growing excitement, kindling feeling, and also
- gathering courage, shook her.
- "I hate to hide my actions from you, papa. I fear you and love you
- above everything but God. Read the letter; look at the address."
- She laid it on his knee. He took it up and read it through; his hand
- shaking, his eyes glistening meantime.
- He re-folded it, and viewed the writer with a strange, tender, mournful
- amaze.
- "Can _she_ write so--the little thing that stood at my knee but
- yesterday? Can she feel so?"
- "Papa, is it wrong? Does it pain you?"
- "There is nothing wrong in it, my innocent little Mary; but it pains
- me."
- "But, papa, listen! You shall not be pained by me. I would give up
- everything--almost" (correcting herself); "I would die rather than make
- you unhappy; that would be too wicked!"
- She shuddered.
- "Does the letter not please you? Must it not go? Must it be torn? It
- shall, for your sake, if you order it."
- "I order nothing."
- "Order something, papa; express your wish; only don't hurt, don't
- grieve Graham. I cannot, _cannot_ bear that. I love you, papa; but I
- love Graham too--because--because--it is impossible to help it."
- "This splendid Graham is a young scamp, Polly--that is my present
- notion of him: it will surprise you to hear that, for my part, I do not
- love him one whit. Ah! years ago I saw something in that lad's eye I
- never quite fathomed--something his mother has not--a depth which
- warned a man not to wade into that stream too far; now, suddenly, I
- find myself taken over the crown of the head."
- "Papa, you don't--you have not fallen in; you are safe on the bank; you
- can do as you please; your power is despotic; you can shut me up in a
- convent, and break Graham's heart to-morrow, if you choose to be so
- cruel. Now, autocrat, now czar, will you do this?"
- "Off with him to Siberia, red whiskers and all; I say, I don't like
- him, Polly, and I wonder that you should."
- "Papa," said she, "do you know you are very naughty? I never saw you
- look so disagreeable, so unjust, so almost vindictive before. There is
- an expression in your face which does not belong to you."
- "Off with him!" pursued Mr. Home, who certainly did look sorely crossed
- and annoyed--even a little bitter; "but, I suppose, if he went, Polly
- would pack a bundle and run after him; her heart is fairly won--won,
- and weaned from her old father."
- "Papa, I say it is naughty, it is decidedly wrong, to talk in that way.
- I am _not_ weaned from you, and no human being and no mortal influence
- _can_ wean me."
- "Be married, Polly! Espouse the red whiskers. Cease to be a daughter;
- go and be a wife!"
- "Red whiskers! I wonder what you mean, papa. You should take care of
- prejudice. You sometimes say to me that all the Scotch, your
- countrymen, are the victims of prejudice. It is proved now, I think,
- when no distinction is to be made between red and deep nut-brown."
- "Leave the prejudiced old Scotchman; go away."
- She stood looking at him a minute. She wanted to show firmness,
- superiority to taunts; knowing her father's character, guessing his few
- foibles, she had expected the sort of scene which was now transpiring;
- it did not take her by surprise, and she desired to let it pass with
- dignity, reliant upon reaction. Her dignity stood her in no stead.
- Suddenly her soul melted in her eyes; she fell on his neck:--"I won't
- leave you, papa; I'll never leave you. I won't pain you! I'll never
- pain you!" was her cry.
- "My lamb! my treasure!" murmured the loving though rugged sire. He said
- no more for the moment; indeed, those two words were hoarse.
- The room was now darkening. I heard a movement, a step without.
- Thinking it might be a servant coming with candles, I gently opened, to
- prevent intrusion. In the ante-room stood no servant: a tall gentleman
- was placing his hat on the table, drawing off his gloves
- slowly--lingering, waiting, it seemed to me. He called me neither by
- sign nor word; yet his eye said:--"Lucy, come here." And I went.
- Over his face a smile flowed, while he looked down on me: no temper,
- save his own, would have expressed by a smile the sort of agitation
- which now fevered him.
- "M. de Bassompierre is there--is he not?" he inquired, pointing to the
- library.
- "Yes."
- "He noticed me at dinner? He understood me?"
- "Yes, Graham."
- "I am brought up for judgment, then, and so is _she_?"
- "Mr. Home" (we now and always continued to term him Mr. Home at times)
- "is talking to his daughter."
- "Ha! These are sharp moments, Lucy!"
- He was quite stirred up; his young hand trembled; a vital (I was going
- to write _mortal_, but such words ill apply to one all living like
- him)--a vital suspense now held, now hurried, his breath: in all this
- trouble his smile never faded.
- "Is he _very_ angry, Lucy?"
- "_She_ is very faithful, Graham."
- "What will be done unto me?"
- "Graham, your star must be fortunate."
- "Must it? Kind prophet! So cheered, I should be a faint heart indeed to
- quail. I think I find all women faithful, Lucy. I ought to love them,
- and I do. My mother is good; _she_ is divine; and _you_ are true as
- steel. Are you not?"
- "Yes, Graham."
- "Then give me thy hand, my little god-sister: it is a friendly little
- hand to me, and always has been. And now for the great venture. God be
- with the right. Lucy, say Amen!"
- He turned, and waited till I said "Amen!"--which I did to please him:
- the old charm, in doing as he bid me, came back. I wished him success;
- and successful I knew he would be. He was born victor, as some are born
- vanquished.
- "Follow me!" he said; and I followed him into Mr. Home's presence.
- "Sir," he asked, "what is my sentence?"
- The father looked at him: the daughter kept her face hid.
- "Well, Bretton," said Mr. Home, "you have given me the usual reward of
- hospitality. I entertained you; you have taken my best. I was always
- glad to see you; you were glad to see the one precious thing I had. You
- spoke me fair; and, meantime, I will not say you _robbed_ me, but I am
- bereaved, and what I have lost, _you_, it seems, have won."
- "Sir, I cannot repent."
- "Repent! Not you! You triumph, no doubt: John Graham, you descended
- partly from a Highlander and a chief, and there is a trace of the Celt
- in all you look, speak, and think. You have his cunning and his charm.
- The red--(Well then, Polly, the _fair_) hair, the tongue of guile, and
- brain of wile, are all come down by inheritance."
- "Sir, I _feel_ honest enough," said Graham; and a genuine English blush
- covered his face with its warm witness of sincerity. "And yet," he
- added, "I won't deny that in some respects you accuse me justly. In
- your presence I have always had a thought which I dared not show you. I
- did truly regard you as the possessor of the most valuable thing the
- world owns for me. I wished for it: I tried for it. Sir, I ask for it
- now."
- "John, you ask much."
- "Very much, sir. It must come from your generosity, as a gift; from
- your justice, as a reward. I can never earn it."
- "Ay! Listen to the Highland tongue!" said Mr. Home. "Look up, Polly!
- Answer this 'braw wooer;' send him away!"
- She looked up. She shyly glanced at her eager, handsome suitor. She
- gazed tenderly on her furrowed sire.
- "Papa, I love you both," said she; "I can take care of you both. I need
- not send Graham away--he can live here; he will be no inconvenience,"
- she alleged with that simplicity of phraseology which at times was wont
- to make both her father and Graham smile. They smiled now.
- "He will be a prodigious inconvenience to me," still persisted Mr.
- Home. "I don't want him, Polly, he is too tall; he is in my way. Tell
- him to march."
- "You will get used to him, papa. He seemed exceedingly tall to me at
- first--like a tower when I looked up at him; but, on the whole, I would
- rather not have him otherwise."
- "I object to him altogether, Polly; I can do without a son-in-law. I
- should never have requested the best man in the land to stand to me in
- that relation. Dismiss this gentleman."
- "But he has known you so long, papa, and suits you so well."
- "Suits _me_, forsooth! Yes; he has pretended to make my opinions and
- tastes his own. He has humoured me for good reasons. I think, Polly,
- you and I will bid him good-by."
- "Till to-morrow only. Shake hands with Graham, papa."
- "No: I think not: I am not friends with him. Don't think to coax me
- between you."
- "Indeed, indeed, you _are_ friends. Graham, stretch out your right
- hand. Papa, put out yours. Now, let them touch. Papa, don't be stiff;
- close your fingers; be pliant--there! But that is not a clasp--it is a
- grasp? Papa, you grasp like a vice. You crush Graham's hand to the
- bone; you hurt him!"
- He must have hurt him; for he wore a massive ring, set round with
- brilliants, of which the sharp facets cut into Graham's flesh and drew
- blood: but pain only made Dr. John laugh, as anxiety had made him smile.
- "Come with me into my study," at last said Mr. Home to the doctor. They
- went. Their intercourse was not long, but I suppose it was conclusive.
- The suitor had to undergo an interrogatory and a scrutiny on many
- things. Whether Dr. Bretton was at times guileful in look and language
- or not, there was a sound foundation below. His answers, I understood
- afterwards, evinced both wisdom and integrity. He had managed his
- affairs well. He had struggled through entanglements; his fortunes were
- in the way of retrieval; he proved himself in a position to marry.
- Once more the father and lover appeared in the library. M. de
- Bassompierre shut the door; he pointed to his daughter.
- "Take her," he said. "Take her, John Bretton: and may God deal with you
- as you deal with her!"
- * * * * *
- Not long after, perhaps a fortnight, I saw three persons, Count de
- Bassompierre, his daughter, and Dr. Graham Bretton, sitting on one
- seat, under a low-spreading and umbrageous tree, in the grounds of the
- palace at Bois l'Etang. They had come thither to enjoy a summer
- evening: outside the magnificent gates their carriage waited to take
- them home; the green sweeps of turf spread round them quiet and dim;
- the palace rose at a distance, white as a crag on Pentelicus; the
- evening star shone above it; a forest of flowering shrubs embalmed the
- climate of this spot; the hour was still and sweet; the scene, but for
- this group, was solitary.
- Paulina sat between the two gentlemen: while they conversed, her little
- hands were busy at some work; I thought at first she was binding a
- nosegay. No; with the tiny pair of scissors, glittering in her lap, she
- had severed spoils from each manly head beside her, and was now
- occupied in plaiting together the grey lock and the golden wave. The
- plait woven--no silk-thread being at hand to bind it--a tress of her
- own hair was made to serve that purpose; she tied it like a knot,
- prisoned it in a locket, and laid it on her heart.
- "Now," said she, "there is an amulet made, which has virtue to keep you
- two always friends. You can never quarrel so long as I wear this."
- An amulet was indeed made, a spell framed which rendered enmity
- impossible. She was become a bond to both, an influence over each, a
- mutual concord. From them she drew her happiness, and what she
- borrowed, she, with interest, gave back.
- "Is there, indeed, such happiness on earth?" I asked, as I watched the
- father, the daughter, the future husband, now united--all blessed and
- blessing.
- Yes; it is so. Without any colouring of romance, or any exaggeration of
- fancy, it is so. Some real lives do--for some certain days or
- years--actually anticipate the happiness of Heaven; and, I believe, if
- such perfect happiness is once felt by good people (to the wicked it
- never comes), its sweet effect is never wholly lost. Whatever trials
- follow, whatever pains of sickness or shades of death, the glory
- precedent still shines through, cheering the keen anguish, and tinging
- the deep cloud.
- I will go farther. I _do_ believe there are some human beings so born,
- so reared, so guided from a soft cradle to a calm and late grave, that
- no excessive suffering penetrates their lot, and no tempestuous
- blackness overcasts their journey. And often, these are not pampered,
- selfish beings, but Nature's elect, harmonious and benign; men and
- women mild with charity, kind agents of God's kind attributes.
- Let me not delay the happy truth. Graham Bretton and Paulina de
- Bassompierre were married, and such an agent did Dr. Bretton prove. He
- did not with time degenerate; his faults decayed, his virtues ripened;
- he rose in intellectual refinement, he won in moral profit: all dregs
- filtered away, the clear wine settled bright and tranquil. Bright, too,
- was the destiny of his sweet wife. She kept her husband's love, she
- aided in his progress--of his happiness she was the corner stone.
- This pair was blessed indeed, for years brought them, with great
- prosperity, great goodness: they imparted with open hand, yet wisely.
- Doubtless they knew crosses, disappointments, difficulties; but these
- were well borne. More than once, too, they had to look on Him whose
- face flesh scarce can see and live: they had to pay their tribute to
- the King of Terrors. In the fulness of years, M. de Bassompierre was
- taken: in ripe old age departed Louisa Bretton. Once even there rose a
- cry in their halls, of Rachel weeping for her children; but others
- sprang healthy and blooming to replace the lost: Dr. Bretton saw
- himself live again in a son who inherited his looks and his
- disposition; he had stately daughters, too, like himself: these
- children he reared with a suave, yet a firm hand; they grew up
- according to inheritance and nurture.
- In short, I do but speak the truth when I say that these two lives of
- Graham and Paulina were blessed, like that of Jacob's favoured son,
- with "blessings of Heaven above, blessings of the deep that lies
- under." It was so, for God saw that it was good.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
- CLOUD.
- But it is not so for all. What then? His will be done, as done it
- surely will be, whether we humble ourselves to resignation or not. The
- impulse of creation forwards it; the strength of powers, seen and
- unseen, has its fulfilment in charge. Proof of a life to come must be
- given. In fire and in blood, if needful, must that proof be written. In
- fire and in blood do we trace the record throughout nature. In fire and
- in blood does it cross our own experience. Sufferer, faint not through
- terror of this burning evidence. Tired wayfarer, gird up thy loins;
- look upward, march onward. Pilgrims and brother mourners, join in
- friendly company. Dark through the wilderness of this world stretches
- the way for most of us: equal and steady be our tread; be our cross our
- banner. For staff we have His promise, whose "word is tried, whose way
- perfect:" for present hope His providence, "who gives the shield of
- salvation, whose gentleness makes great;" for final home His bosom, who
- "dwells in the height of Heaven;" for crowning prize a glory, exceeding
- and eternal. Let us so run that we may obtain: let us endure hardness
- as good soldiers; let us finish our course, and keep the faith, reliant
- in the issue to come off more than conquerors: "Art thou not from
- everlasting mine Holy One? WE SHALL NOT DIE!"
- On a Thursday morning we were all assembled in classe, waiting for the
- lesson of literature. The hour was come; we expected the master.
- The pupils of the first classe sat very still; the cleanly-written
- compositions prepared since the last lesson lay ready before them,
- neatly tied with ribbon, waiting to be gathered by the hand of the
- Professor as he made his rapid round of the desks. The month was July,
- the morning fine, the glass-door stood ajar, through it played a fresh
- breeze, and plants, growing at the lintel, waved, bent, looked in,
- seeming to whisper tidings.
- M. Emanuel was not always quite punctual; we scarcely wondered at his
- being a little late, but we wondered when the door at last opened and,
- instead of him with his swiftness and his fire, there came quietly upon
- us the cautious Madame Beck.
- She approached M. Paul's desk; she stood before it; she drew round her
- the light shawl covering her shoulders; beginning to speak in low, yet
- firm tones, and with a fixed gaze, she said, "This morning there will
- be no lesson of literature."
- The second paragraph of her address followed, after about two minutes'
- pause.
- "It is probable the lessons will be suspended for a week. I shall
- require at least that space of time to find an efficient substitute for
- M. Emanuel. Meanwhile, it shall be our study to fill the blanks
- usefully.
- "Your Professor, ladies," she went on, "intends, if possible, duly to
- take leave of you. At the present moment he has not leisure for that
- ceremony. He is preparing for a long voyage. A very sudden and urgent
- summons of duty calls him to a great distance. He has decided to leave
- Europe for an indefinite time. Perhaps he may tell you more himself.
- Ladies, instead of the usual lesson with M. Emanuel, you will, this
- morning, read English with Mademoiselle Lucy."
- She bent her head courteously, drew closer the folds of her shawl, and
- passed from the classe.
- A great silence fell: then a murmur went round the room: I believe some
- pupils wept.
- Some time elapsed. The noise, the whispering, the occasional sobbing
- increased. I became conscious of a relaxation of discipline, a sort of
- growing disorder, as if my girls felt that vigilance was withdrawn, and
- that surveillance had virtually left the classe. Habit and the sense of
- duty enabled me to rally quickly, to rise in my usual way, to speak in
- my usual tone, to enjoin, and finally to establish quiet. I made the
- English reading long and close. I kept them at it the whole morning. I
- remember feeling a sentiment of impatience towards the pupils who
- sobbed. Indeed, their emotion was not of much value: it was only an
- hysteric agitation. I told them so unsparingly. I half ridiculed them.
- I was severe. The truth was, I could not do with their tears, or that
- gasping sound; I could not bear it. A rather weak-minded, low-spirited
- pupil kept it up when the others had done; relentless necessity obliged
- and assisted me so to accost her, that she dared not carry on the
- demonstration, that she was forced to conquer the convulsion.
- That girl would have had a right to hate me, except that, when school
- was over and her companions departing, I ordered her to stay, and when
- they were gone, I did what I had never done to one among them
- before--pressed her to my heart and kissed her cheek. But, this impulse
- yielded to, I speedily put her out of the classe, for, upon that
- poignant strain, she wept more bitterly than ever.
- I filled with occupation every minute of that day, and should have
- liked to sit up all night if I might have kept a candle burning; the
- night, however, proved a bad time, and left bad effects, preparing me
- ill for the next day's ordeal of insufferable gossip. Of course this
- news fell under general discussion. Some little reserve had accompanied
- the first surprise: that soon wore off; every mouth opened; every
- tongue wagged; teachers, pupils, the very servants, mouthed the name of
- "Emanuel." He, whose connection with the school was contemporary with
- its commencement, thus suddenly to withdraw! All felt it strange.
- They talked so much, so long, so often, that, out of the very multitude
- of their words and rumours, grew at last some intelligence. About the
- third day I heard it said that he was to sail in a week; then--that he
- was bound for the West Indies. I looked at Madame Beck's face, and into
- her eyes, for disproof or confirmation of this report; I perused her
- all over for information, but no part of her disclosed more than what
- was unperturbed and commonplace.
- "This secession was an immense loss to her," she alleged. "She did not
- know how she should fill up the vacancy. She was so used to her
- kinsman, he had become her right hand; what should she do without him?
- She had opposed the step, but M. Paul had convinced her it was his
- duty."
- She said all this in public, in classe, at the dinner-table, speaking
- audibly to Zélie St. Pierre.
- "Why was it his duty?" I could have asked her that. I had impulses to
- take hold of her suddenly, as she calmly passed me in classe, to
- stretch out my hand and grasp her fast, and say, "Stop. Let us hear the
- conclusion of the whole matter. _Why_ is it his duty to go into
- banishment?" But Madame always addressed some other teacher, and never
- looked at me, never seemed conscious I could have a care in the
- question.
- The week wore on. Nothing more was said about M. Emanuel coming to bid
- us good-by; and none seemed anxious for his coming; none questioned
- whether or not he would come; none betrayed torment lest he should
- depart silent and unseen; incessantly did they talk, and never, in all
- their talk, touched on this vital point. As to Madame, she of course
- could see him, and say to him as much as she pleased. What should _she_
- care whether or not he appeared in the schoolroom?
- The week consumed. We were told that he was going on such a day, that
- his destination was "Basseterre in Guadaloupe:" the business which
- called him abroad related to a friend's interests, not his own: I
- thought as much.
- "Basseterre in Guadaloupe." I had little sleep about this time, but
- whenever I _did_ slumber, it followed infallibly that I was quickly
- roused with a start, while the words "Basseterre," "Guadaloupe," seemed
- pronounced over my pillow, or ran athwart the darkness round and before
- me, in zigzag characters of red or violet light.
- For what I felt there was no help, and how could I help feeling? M.
- Emanuel had been very kind to me of late days; he had been growing
- hourly better and kinder. It was now a month since we had settled the
- theological difference, and in all that time there had been no quarrel.
- Nor had our peace been the cold daughter of divorce; we had not lived
- aloof; he had come oftener, he had talked with me more than before; he
- had spent hours with me, with temper soothed, with eye content, with
- manner home-like and mild. Kind subjects of conversation had grown
- between us; he had inquired into my plans of life, and I had
- communicated them; the school project pleased him; he made me repeat it
- more than once, though he called it an Alnaschar dream. The jar was
- over; the mutual understanding was settling and fixing; feelings of
- union and hope made themselves profoundly felt in the heart; affection
- and deep esteem and dawning trust had each fastened its bond.
- What quiet lessons I had about this time! No more taunts on my
- "intellect," no more menaces of grating public shows! How sweetly, for
- the jealous gibe, and the more jealous, half-passionate eulogy, were
- substituted a mute, indulgent help, a fond guidance, and a tender
- forbearance which forgave but never praised. There were times when he
- would sit for many minutes and not speak at all; and when dusk or duty
- brought separation, he would leave with words like these, "Il est doux,
- le repos! Il est précieux le calme bonheur!"
- One evening, not ten short days since, he joined me whilst walking in
- my alley. He took my hand. I looked up in his face. I thought he meant
- to arrest my attention.
- "Bonne petite amie!" said he, softly; "douce consolatrice!" But through
- his touch, and with his words, a new feeling and a strange thought
- found a course. Could it be that he was becoming more than friend or
- brother? Did his look speak a kindness beyond fraternity or amity?
- His eloquent look had more to say, his hand drew me forward, his
- interpreting lips stirred. No. Not now. Here into the twilight alley
- broke an interruption: it came dual and ominous: we faced two bodeful
- forms--a woman's and a priest's--Madame Beck and Père Silas.
- The aspect of the latter I shall never forget. On the first impulse it
- expressed a Jean-Jacques sensibility, stirred by the signs of affection
- just surprised; then, immediately, darkened over it the jaundice of
- ecclesiastical jealousy. He spoke to _me_ with unction. He looked on
- his pupil with sternness. As to Madame Beck, she, of course, saw
- nothing--nothing; though her kinsman retained in her presence the hand
- of the heretic foreigner, not suffering withdrawal, but clasping it
- close and fast.
- Following these incidents, that sudden announcement of departure had
- struck me at first as incredible. Indeed, it was only frequent
- repetition, and the credence of the hundred and fifty minds round me,
- which forced on me its full acceptance. As to that week of suspense,
- with its blank, yet burning days, which brought from him no word of
- explanation--I remember, but I cannot describe its passage.
- The last day broke. Now would he visit us. Now he would come and speak
- his farewell, or he would vanish mute, and be seen by us nevermore.
- This alternative seemed to be present in the mind of not a living
- creature in that school. All rose at the usual hour; all breakfasted as
- usual; all, without reference to, or apparent thought of their late
- Professor, betook themselves with wonted phlegm to their ordinary
- duties.
- So oblivious was the house, so tame, so trained its proceedings, so
- inexpectant its aspect--I scarce knew how to breathe in an atmosphere
- thus stagnant, thus smothering. Would no one lend me a voice? Had no
- one a wish, no one a word, no one a prayer to which I could say--Amen?
- I had seen them unanimous in demand for the merest trifle--a treat, a
- holiday, a lesson's remission; they could not, they _would_ not now
- band to besiege Madame Beck, and insist on a last interview with a
- Master who had certainly been loved, at least by some--loved as _they_
- could love--but, oh! what _is_ the love of the multitude?
- I knew where he lived: I knew where he was to be heard of, or
- communicated with; the distance was scarce a stone's-throw: had it been
- in the next room--unsummoned, I could make no use of my knowledge. To
- follow, to seek out, to remind, to recall--for these things I had no
- faculty.
- M. Emanuel might have passed within reach of my arm: had he passed
- silent and unnoticing, silent and stirless should I have suffered him
- to go by.
- Morning wasted. Afternoon came, and I thought all was over. My heart
- trembled in its place. My blood was troubled in its current. I was
- quite sick, and hardly knew how to keep at my post--or do my work. Yet
- the little world round me plodded on indifferent; all seemed jocund,
- free of care, or fear, or thought: the very pupils who, seven days
- since, had wept hysterically at a startling piece of news, appeared
- quite to have forgotten the news, its import, and their emotion.
- A little before five o'clock, the hour of dismissal, Madame Beck sent
- for me to her chamber, to read over and translate some English letter
- she had received, and to write for her the answer. Before settling to
- this work, I observed that she softly closed the two doors of her
- chamber; she even shut and fastened the casement, though it was a hot
- day, and free circulation of air was usually regarded by her as
- indispensable. Why this precaution? A keen suspicion, an almost fierce
- distrust, suggested such question. Did she want to exclude sound? what
- sound?
- I listened as I had never listened before; I listened like the evening
- and winter-wolf, snuffing the snow, scenting prey, and hearing far off
- the traveller's tramp. Yet I could both listen and write. About the
- middle of the letter I heard--what checked my pen--a tread in the
- vestibule. No door-bell had rung; Rosine--acting doubtless by
- orders--had anticipated such réveillée. Madame saw me halt. She
- coughed, made a bustle, spoke louder. The tread had passed on to the
- classes.
- "Proceed," said Madame; but my hand was fettered, my ear enchained, my
- thoughts were carried off captive.
- The classes formed another building; the hall parted them from the
- dwelling-house: despite distance and partition, I heard the sudden stir
- of numbers, a whole division rising at once.
- "They are putting away work," said Madame.
- It was indeed the hour to put away work, but why that sudden hush--that
- instant quell of the tumult?
- "Wait, Madame--I will see what it is."
- And I put down my pen and left her. Left her? No: she would not be
- left: powerless to detain me, she rose and followed, close as my
- shadow. I turned on the last step of the stair.
- "Are you coming, too?" I asked.
- "Yes," said she; meeting my glance with a peculiar aspect--a look,
- clouded, yet resolute.
- We proceeded then, not together, but she walked in my steps.
- He was come. Entering the first classe, I saw him. There, once more
- appeared the form most familiar. I doubt not they had tried to keep him
- away, but he was come.
- The girls stood in a semicircle; he was passing round, giving his
- farewells, pressing each hand, touching with his lips each cheek. This
- last ceremony, foreign custom permitted at such a parting--so solemn,
- to last so long.
- I felt it hard that Madame Beck should dog me thus; following and
- watching me close; my neck and shoulder shrunk in fever under her
- breath; I became terribly goaded.
- He was approaching; the semicircle was almost travelled round; he came
- to the last pupil; he turned. But Madame was before me; she had stepped
- out suddenly; she seemed to magnify her proportions and amplify her
- drapery; she eclipsed me; I was hid. She knew my weakness and
- deficiency; she could calculate the degree of moral paralysis--the
- total default of self-assertion--with which, in a crisis, I could be
- struck. She hastened to her kinsman, she broke upon him volubly, she
- mastered his attention, she hurried him to the door--the glass-door
- opening on the garden. I think he looked round; could I but have caught
- his eye, courage, I think, would have rushed in to aid feeling, and
- there would have been a charge, and, perhaps, a rescue; but already the
- room was all confusion, the semicircle broken into groups, my figure
- was lost among thirty more conspicuous. Madame had her will; yes, she
- got him away, and he had not seen me; he thought me absent. Five
- o'clock struck, the loud dismissal-bell rang, the school separated, the
- room emptied.
- There seems, to my memory, an entire darkness and distraction in some
- certain minutes I then passed alone--a grief inexpressible over a loss
- unendurable. _What_ should I do; oh! _what_ should I do; when all my
- life's hope was thus torn by the roots out of my riven, outraged heart?
- What I _should_ have done, I know not, when a little child--the least
- child in the school--broke with its simplicity and its unconsciousness
- into the raging yet silent centre of that inward conflict.
- "Mademoiselle," lisped the treble voice, "I am to give you that. M.
- Paul said I was to seek you all over the house, from the grenier to the
- cellar, and when I found you, to give you that."
- And the child delivered a note; the little dove dropped on my knee, its
- olive leaf plucked off. I found neither address nor name, only these
- words:--
- "It was not my intention to take leave of you when I said good-by to
- the rest, but I hoped to see you in classe. I was disappointed. The
- interview is deferred. Be ready for me. Ere I sail, I must see you at
- leisure, and speak with you at length. Be ready; my moments are
- numbered, and, just now, monopolized; besides, I have a private
- business on hand which I will not share with any, nor communicate--even
- to you.--PAUL."
- "Be ready?" Then it must be this evening: was he not to go on the
- morrow? Yes; of that point I was certain. I had seen the date of his
- vessel's departure advertised. Oh! _I_ would be ready, but could that
- longed-for meeting really be achieved? the time was so short, the
- schemers seemed so watchful, so active, so hostile; the way of access
- appeared strait as a gully, deep as a chasm--Apollyon straddled across
- it, breathing flames. Could my Greatheart overcome? Could my guide
- reach me?
- Who might tell? Yet I began to take some courage, some comfort; it
- seemed to me that I felt a pulse of his heart beating yet true to the
- whole throb of mine.
- I waited my champion. Apollyon came trailing his Hell behind him. I
- think if Eternity held torment, its form would not be fiery rack, nor
- its nature despair. I think that on a certain day amongst those days
- which never dawned, and will not set, an angel entered Hades--stood,
- shone, smiled, delivered a prophecy of conditional pardon, kindled a
- doubtful hope of bliss to come, not now, but at a day and hour unlooked
- for, revealed in his own glory and grandeur the height and compass of
- his promise: spoke thus--then towering, became a star, and vanished
- into his own Heaven. His legacy was suspense--a worse boon than despair.
- All that evening I waited, trusting in the dove-sent olive-leaf, yet in
- the midst of my trust, terribly fearing. My fear pressed heavy. Cold
- and peculiar, I knew it for the partner of a rarely-belied
- presentiment. The first hours seemed long and slow; in spirit I clung
- to the flying skirts of the last. They passed like drift cloud--like
- the wrack scudding before a storm.
- They passed. All the long, hot summer day burned away like a Yule-log;
- the crimson of its close perished; I was left bent among the cool blue
- shades, over the pale and ashen gleams of its night.
- Prayers were over; it was bed-time; my co-inmates were all retired. I
- still remained in the gloomy first classe, forgetting, or at least
- disregarding, rules I had never forgotten or disregarded before.
- How long I paced that classe I cannot tell; I must have been afoot many
- hours; mechanically had I moved aside benches and desks, and had made
- for myself a path down its length. There I walked, and there, when
- certain that the whole household were abed, and quite out of
- hearing--there, I at last wept. Reliant on Night, confiding in
- Solitude, I kept my tears sealed, my sobs chained, no longer; they
- heaved my heart; they tore their way. In this house, what grief could
- be sacred?
- Soon after eleven o'clock--a very late hour in the Rue Fossette--the
- door unclosed, quietly but not stealthily; a lamp's flame invaded the
- moonlight; Madame Beck entered, with the same composed air, as if
- coming on an ordinary occasion, at an ordinary season. Instead of at
- once addressing me, she went to her desk, took her keys, and seemed to
- seek something: she loitered over this feigned search long, too long.
- She was calm, too calm; my mood scarce endured the pretence; driven
- beyond common range, two hours since I had left behind me wonted
- respects and fears. Led by a touch, and ruled by a word, under usual
- circumstances, no yoke could now be borne--no curb obeyed.
- "It is more than time for retirement," said Madame; "the rule of the
- house has already been transgressed too long."
- Madame met no answer: I did not check my walk; when she came in my way,
- I put her out of it.
- "Let me persuade you to calm, Meess; let me lead you to your chamber,"
- said she, trying to speak softly.
- "No!" I said; "neither you nor another shall persuade or lead me."
- "Your bed shall be warmed. Goton is sitting up still. She shall make
- you comfortable: she shall give you a sedative."
- "Madame," I broke out, "you are a sensualist. Under all your serenity,
- your peace, and your decorum, you are an undenied sensualist. Make your
- own bed warm and soft; take sedatives and meats, and drinks spiced and
- sweet, as much as you will. If you have any sorrow or
- disappointment--and, perhaps, you have--nay, I _know_ you have--seek
- your own palliatives, in your own chosen resources. Leave me, however.
- _Leave me_, I say!"
- "I must send another to watch you, Meess: I must send Goton."
- "I forbid it. Let me alone. Keep your hand off me, and my life, and my
- troubles. Oh, Madame! in _your_ hand there is both chill and poison.
- You envenom and you paralyze."
- "What have I done, Meess? You must not marry Paul. He cannot marry."
- "Dog in the manger!" I said: for I knew she secretly wanted him, and
- had always wanted him. She called him "insupportable:" she railed at
- him for a "dévot:" she did not love, but she wanted to marry, that she
- might bind him to her interest. Deep into some of Madame's secrets I
- had entered--I know not how: by an intuition or an inspiration which
- came to me--I know not whence. In the course of living with her too, I
- had slowly learned, that, unless with an inferior, she must ever be a
- rival. She was _my_ rival, heart and soul, though secretly, under the
- smoothest bearing, and utterly unknown to all save her and myself.
- Two minutes I stood over Madame, feeling that the whole woman was in my
- power, because in some moods, such as the present--in some stimulated
- states of perception, like that of this instant--her habitual disguise,
- her mask and her domino, were to me a mere network reticulated with
- holes; and I saw underneath a being heartless, self-indulgent, and
- ignoble. She quietly retreated from me: meek and self-possessed, though
- very uneasy, she said, "If I would not be persuaded to take rest, she
- must reluctantly leave me." Which she did incontinent, perhaps even
- more glad to get away, than I was to see her vanish.
- This was the sole flash-eliciting, truth-extorting, rencontre which
- ever occurred between me and Madame Beck: this short night-scene was
- never repeated. It did not one whit change her manner to me. I do not
- know that she revenged it. I do not know that she hated me the worse
- for my fell candour. I think she bucklered herself with the secret
- philosophy of her strong mind, and resolved to forget what it irked her
- to remember. I know that to the end of our mutual lives there occurred
- no repetition of, no allusion to, that fiery passage.
- That night passed: all nights--even the starless night before
- dissolution--must wear away. About six o'clock, the hour which called
- up the household, I went out to the court, and washed my face in its
- cold, fresh well-water. Entering by the carré, a piece of mirror-glass,
- set in an oaken cabinet, repeated my image. It said I was changed: my
- cheeks and lips were sodden white, my eyes were glassy, and my eyelids
- swollen and purple.
- On rejoining my companions, I knew they all looked at me--my heart
- seemed discovered to them: I believed myself self-betrayed. Hideously
- certain did it seem that the very youngest of the school must guess why
- and for whom I despaired.
- "Isabelle," the child whom I had once nursed in sickness, approached
- me. Would she, too, mock me!
- "Que vous êtes pâle! Vous êtes donc bien malade, Mademoiselle!" said
- she, putting her finger in her mouth, and staring with a wistful
- stupidity which at the moment seemed to me more beautiful than the
- keenest intelligence.
- Isabelle did not long stand alone in the recommendation of ignorance:
- before the day was over, I gathered cause of gratitude towards the
- whole blind household. The multitude have something else to do than to
- read hearts and interpret dark sayings. Who wills, may keep his own
- counsel--be his own secret's sovereign. In the course of that day,
- proof met me on proof, not only that the cause of my present sorrow was
- unguessed, but that my whole inner life for the last six months, was
- still mine only. It was not known--it had not been noted--that I held
- in peculiar value one life among all lives. Gossip had passed me by;
- curiosity had looked me over; both subtle influences, hovering always
- round, had never become centred upon me. A given organization may live
- in a full fever-hospital, and escape typhus. M. Emanuel had come and
- gone: I had been taught and sought; in season and out of season he had
- called me, and I had obeyed him: "M. Paul wants Miss Lucy"--"Miss Lucy
- is with M. Paul"--such had been the perpetual bulletin; and nobody
- commented, far less condemned. Nobody hinted, nobody jested. Madame
- Beck read the riddle: none else resolved it. What I now suffered was
- called illness--a headache: I accepted the baptism.
- But what bodily illness was ever like this pain? This certainty that he
- was gone without a farewell--this cruel conviction that fate and
- pursuing furies--a woman's envy and a priest's bigotry--would suffer me
- to see him no more? What wonder that the second evening found me like
- the first--untamed, tortured, again pacing a solitary room in an
- unalterable passion of silent desolation?
- Madame Beck did not herself summon me to bed that night--she did not
- come near me: she sent Ginevra Fanshawe--a more efficient agent for the
- purpose she could not have employed. Ginevra's first words--"Is your
- headache very bad to-night?" (for Ginevra, like the rest, thought I had
- a headache--an intolerable headache which made me frightfully white in
- the face, and insanely restless in the foot)--her first words, I say,
- inspired the impulse to flee anywhere, so that it were only out of
- reach. And soon, what followed--plaints about her own
- headaches--completed the business.
- I went up-stairs. Presently I was in my bed--my miserable bed--haunted
- with quick scorpions. I had not been laid down five minutes, when
- another emissary arrived: Goton came, bringing me something to drink. I
- was consumed with thirst--I drank eagerly; the beverage was sweet, but
- I tasted a drug.
- "Madame says it will make you sleep, chou-chou," said Goton, as she
- received back the emptied cup.
- Ah! the sedative had been administered. In fact, they had given me a
- strong opiate. I was to be held quiet for one night.
- The household came to bed, the night-light was lit, the dormitory
- hushed. Sleep soon reigned: over those pillows, sleep won an easy
- supremacy: contented sovereign over heads and hearts which did not
- ache--he passed by the unquiet.
- The drug wrought. I know not whether Madame had overcharged or
- under-charged the dose; its result was not that she intended. Instead
- of stupor, came excitement. I became alive to new thought--to reverie
- peculiar in colouring. A gathering call ran among the faculties, their
- bugles sang, their trumpets rang an untimely summons. Imagination was
- roused from her rest, and she came forth impetuous and venturous. With
- scorn she looked on Matter, her mate--"Rise!" she said. "Sluggard! this
- night I will have _my_ will; nor shalt thou prevail."
- "Look forth and view the night!" was her cry; and when I lifted the
- heavy blind from the casement close at hand--with her own royal
- gesture, she showed me a moon supreme, in an element deep and splendid.
- To my gasping senses she made the glimmering gloom, the narrow limits,
- the oppressive heat of the dormitory, intolerable. She lured me to
- leave this den and follow her forth into dew, coolness, and glory.
- She brought upon me a strange vision of Villette at midnight.
- Especially she showed the park, the summer-park, with its long alleys
- all silent, lone and safe; among these lay a huge stone basin--that
- basin I knew, and beside which I had often stood--deep-set in the
- tree-shadows, brimming with cool water, clear, with a green, leafy,
- rushy bed. What of all this? The park-gates were shut up, locked,
- sentinelled: the place could not be entered.
- Could it not? A point worth considering; and while revolving it, I
- mechanically dressed. Utterly incapable of sleeping or lying
- still--excited from head to foot--what could I do better than dress?
- The gates were locked, soldiers set before them: was there, then, no
- admission to the park?
- The other day, in walking past, I had seen, without then attending to
- the circumstance, a gap in the paling--one stake broken down: I now saw
- this gap again in recollection--saw it very plainly--the narrow,
- irregular aperture visible between the stems of the lindens, planted
- orderly as a colonnade. A man could not have made his way through that
- aperture, nor could a stout woman, perhaps not Madame Beck; but I
- thought I might: I fancied I should like to try, and once within, at
- this hour the whole park would be mine--the moonlight, midnight park!
- How soundly the dormitory slept! What deep slumbers! What quiet
- breathing! How very still the whole large house! What was the time? I
- felt restless to know. There stood a clock in the classe below: what
- hindered me from venturing down to consult it? By such a moon, its
- large white face and jet black figures must be vividly distinct.
- As for hindrance to this step, there offered not so much as a creaking
- hinge or a clicking latch. On these hot July nights, close air could
- not be tolerated, and the chamber-door stood wide open. Will the
- dormitory-planks sustain my tread untraitorous? Yes. I know wherever a
- board is loose, and will avoid it. The oak staircase creaks somewhat as
- I descend, but not much:--I am in the carré.
- The great classe-doors are close shut: they are bolted. On the other
- hand, the entrance to the corridor stands open. The classes seem to my
- thought, great dreary jails, buried far back beyond thoroughfares, and
- for me, filled with spectral and intolerable Memories, laid miserable
- amongst their straw and their manacles. The corridor offers a cheerful
- vista, leading to the high vestibule which opens direct upon the street.
- Hush!--the clock strikes. Ghostly deep as is the stillness of this
- convent, it is only eleven. While my ear follows to silence the hum of
- the last stroke, I catch faintly from the built-out capital, a sound
- like bells or like a band--a sound where sweetness, where victory,
- where mourning blend. Oh, to approach this music nearer, to listen to
- it alone by the rushy basin! Let me go--oh, let me go! What hinders,
- what does not aid freedom?
- There, in the corridor, hangs my garden-costume, my large hat, my
- shawl. There is no lock on the huge, heavy, porte-cochère; there is no
- key to seek: it fastens with a sort of spring-bolt, not to be opened
- from the outside, but which, from within, may be noiselessly withdrawn.
- Can I manage it? It yields to my hand, yields with propitious facility.
- I wonder as that portal seems almost spontaneously to unclose--I wonder
- as I cross the threshold and step on the paved street, wonder at the
- strange ease with which this prison has been forced. It seems as if I
- had been pioneered invisibly, as if some dissolving force had gone
- before me: for myself, I have scarce made an effort.
- Quiet Rue Fossette! I find on this pavement that wanderer-wooing summer
- night of which I mused; I see its moon over me; I feel its dew in the
- air. But here I cannot stay; I am still too near old haunts: so close
- under the dungeon, I can hear the prisoners moan. This solemn peace is
- not what I seek, it is not what I can bear: to me the face of that sky
- bears the aspect of a world's death. The park also will be calm--I
- know, a mortal serenity prevails everywhere--yet let me seek the park.
- I took a route well known, and went up towards the palatial and royal
- Haute-Ville; thence the music I had heard certainly floated; it was
- hushed now, but it might re-waken. I went on: neither band nor bell
- music came to meet me; another sound replaced it, a sound like a strong
- tide, a great flow, deepening as I proceeded. Light broke, movement
- gathered, chimes pealed--to what was I coming? Entering on the level of
- a Grande Place, I found myself, with the suddenness of magic, plunged
- amidst a gay, living, joyous crowd.
- Villette is one blaze, one broad illumination; the whole world seems
- abroad; moonlight and heaven are banished: the town, by her own
- flambeaux, beholds her own splendour--gay dresses, grand equipages,
- fine horses and gallant riders throng the bright streets. I see even
- scores of masks. It is a strange scene, stranger than dreams. But where
- is the park?--I ought to be near it. In the midst of this glare the
- park must be shadowy and calm--_there_, at least, are neither torches,
- lamps, nor crowd?
- I was asking this question when an open carriage passed me filled with
- known faces. Through the deep throng it could pass but slowly; the
- spirited horses fretted in their curbed ardour. I saw the occupants of
- that carriage well: me they could not see, or, at least, not know,
- folded close in my large shawl, screened with my straw hat (in that
- motley crowd no dress was noticeably strange). I saw the Count de
- Bassompierre; I saw my godmother, handsomely apparelled, comely and
- cheerful; I saw, too, Paulina Mary, compassed with the triple halo of
- her beauty, her youth, and her happiness. In looking on her countenance
- of joy, and eyes of festal light, one scarce remembered to note the
- gala elegance of what she wore; I know only that the drapery floating
- about her was all white and light and bridal; seated opposite to her I
- saw Graham Bretton; it was in looking up at him her aspect had caught
- its lustre--the light repeated in _her_ eyes beamed first out of his.
- It gave me strange pleasure to follow these friends viewlessly, and I
- _did_ follow them, as I thought, to the park. I watched them alight
- (carriages were inadmissible) amidst new and unanticipated splendours.
- Lo! the iron gateway, between the stone columns, was spanned by a
- flaming arch built of massed stars; and, following them cautiously
- beneath that arch, where were they, and where was I?
- In a land of enchantment, a garden most gorgeous, a plain sprinkled
- with coloured meteors, a forest with sparks of purple and ruby and
- golden fire gemming the foliage; a region, not of trees and shadow, but
- of strangest architectural wealth--of altar and of temple, of pyramid,
- obelisk, and sphinx: incredible to say, the wonders and the symbols of
- Egypt teemed throughout the park of Villette.
- No matter that in five minutes the secret was mine--the key of the
- mystery picked up, and its illusion unveiled--no matter that I quickly
- recognised the material of these solemn fragments--the timber, the
- paint, and the pasteboard--these inevitable discoveries failed to quite
- destroy the charm, or undermine the marvel of that night. No matter
- that I now seized the explanation of the whole great fête--a fête of
- which the conventual Rue Fossette had not tasted, though it had opened
- at dawn that morning, and was still in full vigour near midnight.
- In past days there had been, said history, an awful crisis in the fate
- of Labassecour, involving I know not what peril to the rights and
- liberties of her gallant citizens. Rumours of wars there had been, if
- not wars themselves; a kind of struggling in the streets--a bustle--a
- running to and fro, some rearing of barricades, some burgher-rioting,
- some calling out of troops, much interchange of brickbats, and even a
- little of shot. Tradition held that patriots had fallen: in the old
- Basse-Ville was shown an enclosure, solemnly built in and set apart,
- holding, it was said, the sacred bones of martyrs. Be this as it may, a
- certain day in the year was still kept as a festival in honour of the
- said patriots and martyrs of somewhat apocryphal memory--the morning
- being given to a solemn Te Deum in St. Jean Baptiste, the evening
- devoted to spectacles, decorations, and illuminations, such as these I
- now saw.
- While looking up at the image of a white ibis, fixed on a column--while
- fathoming the deep, torch-lit perspective of an avenue, at the close of
- which was couched a sphinx--I lost sight of the party which, from the
- middle of the great square, I had followed--or, rather, they vanished
- like a group of apparitions. On this whole scene was impressed a
- dream-like character: every shape was wavering, every movement
- floating, every voice echo-like--half-mocking, half-uncertain. Paulina
- and her friends being gone, I scarce could avouch that I had really
- seen them; nor did I miss them as guides through the chaos, far less
- regret them as protectors amidst the night.
- That festal night would have been safe for a very child. Half the
- peasantry had come in from the outlying environs of Villette, and the
- decent burghers were all abroad and around, dressed in their best. My
- straw-hat passed amidst cap and jacket, short petticoat, and long
- calico mantle, without, perhaps, attracting a glance; I only took the
- precaution to bind down the broad leaf gipsy-wise, with a supplementary
- ribbon--and then I felt safe as if masked.
- Safe I passed down the avenues--safe I mixed with the crowd where it
- was deepest. To be still was not in my power, nor quietly to observe. I
- took a revel of the scene; I drank the elastic night-air--the swell of
- sound, the dubious light, now flashing, now fading. As to Happiness or
- Hope, they and I had shaken hands, but just now--I scorned Despair.
- My vague aim, as I went, was to find the stone-basin, with its clear
- depth and green lining: of that coolness and verdure I thought, with
- the passionate thirst of unconscious fever. Amidst the glare, and
- hurry, and throng, and noise, I still secretly and chiefly longed to
- come on that circular mirror of crystal, and surprise the moon glassing
- therein her pearly front.
- I knew my route, yet it seemed as if I was hindered from pursuing it
- direct: now a sight, and now a sound, called me aside, luring me down
- this alley and down that. Already I saw the thick-planted trees which
- framed this tremulous and rippled glass, when, choiring out of a glade
- to the right, broke such a sound as I thought might be heard if Heaven
- were to open--such a sound, perhaps, as _was_ heard above the plain of
- Bethlehem, on the night of glad tidings.
- The song, the sweet music, rose afar, but rushing swiftly on
- fast-strengthening pinions--there swept through these shades so full a
- storm of harmonies that, had no tree been near against which to lean, I
- think I must have dropped. Voices were there, it seemed to me,
- unnumbered; instruments varied and countless--bugle, horn, and trumpet
- I knew. The effect was as a sea breaking into song with all its waves.
- The swaying tide swept this way, and then it fell back, and I followed
- its retreat. It led me towards a Byzantine building--a sort of kiosk
- near the park's centre. Round about stood crowded thousands, gathered
- to a grand concert in the open air. What I had heard was, I think, a
- wild Jäger chorus; the night, the space, the scene, and my own mood,
- had but enhanced the sounds and their impression.
- Here were assembled ladies, looking by this light most beautiful: some
- of their dresses were gauzy, and some had the sheen of satin, the
- flowers and the blond trembled, and the veils waved about their
- decorated bonnets, as that host-like chorus, with its greatly-gathering
- sound, sundered the air above them. Most of these ladies occupied the
- little light park-chairs, and behind and beside them stood guardian
- gentlemen. The outer ranks of the crowd were made up of citizens,
- plebeians and police.
- In this outer rank I took my place. I rather liked to find myself the
- silent, unknown, consequently unaccosted neighbour of the short
- petticoat and the sabot; and only the distant gazer at the silk robe,
- the velvet mantle, and the plumed chapeau. Amidst so much life and joy,
- too, it suited me to be alone--quite alone. Having neither wish nor
- power to force my way through a mass so close-packed, my station was on
- the farthest confines, where, indeed, I might hear, but could see
- little.
- "Mademoiselle is not well placed," said a voice at my elbow. Who dared
- accost _me_, a being in a mood so little social? I turned, rather to
- repel than to reply. I saw a man--a burgher--an entire stranger, as I
- deemed him for one moment, but the next, recognised in him a certain
- tradesman--a bookseller, whose shop furnished the Rue Fossette with its
- books and stationery; a man notorious in our pensionnat for the
- excessive brittleness of his temper, and frequent snappishness of his
- manner, even to us, his principal customers: but whom, for my solitary
- self, I had ever been disposed to like, and had always found civil,
- sometimes kind; once, in aiding me about some troublesome little
- exchange of foreign money, he had done me a service. He was an
- intelligent man; under his asperity, he was a good-hearted man; the
- thought had sometimes crossed me, that a part of his nature bore
- affinity to a part of M. Emanuel's (whom he knew well, and whom I had
- often seen sitting on Miret's counter, turning over the current month's
- publications); and it was in this affinity I read the explanation of
- that conciliatory feeling with which I instinctively regarded him.
- Strange to say, this man knew me under my straw-hat and closely-folded
- shawl; and, though I deprecated the effort, he insisted on making a way
- for me through the crowd, and finding me a better situation. He carried
- his disinterested civility further; and, from some quarter, procured me
- a chair. Once and again, I have found that the most cross-grained are
- by no means the worst of mankind; nor the humblest in station, the
- least polished in feeling. This man, in his courtesy, seemed to find
- nothing strange in my being here alone; only a reason for extending to
- me, as far as he could, a retiring, yet efficient attention. Having
- secured me a place and a seat, he withdrew without asking a question,
- without obtruding a remark, without adding a superfluous word. No
- wonder that Professor Emanuel liked to take his cigar and his lounge,
- and to read his feuilleton in M. Miret's shop--the two must have suited.
- I had not been seated five minutes, ere I became aware that chance and
- my worthy burgher friend had brought me once more within view of a
- familiar and domestic group. Right before me sat the Brettons and de
- Bassompierres. Within reach of my hand--had I chosen to extend it--sat
- a figure like a fairy-queen, whose array, lilies and their leaves
- seemed to have suggested; whatever was not spotless white, being
- forest-green. My godmother, too, sat so near, that, had I leaned
- forward, my breath might have stirred the ribbon of her bonnet. They
- were too near; having been just recognised by a comparative stranger, I
- felt uneasy at this close vicinage of intimate acquaintance.
- It made me quite start when Mrs. Bretton, turning to Mr. Home, and
- speaking out of a kind impulse of memory, said,--"I wonder what my
- steady little Lucy would say to all this if she were here? I wish we
- had brought her, she would have enjoyed it much."
- "So she would, so she would, in her grave sensible fashion; it is a
- pity but we had asked her," rejoined the kind gentleman; and added, "I
- like to see her so quietly pleased; so little moved, yet so content."
- Dear were they both to me, dear are they to this day in their
- remembered benevolence. Little knew they the rack of pain which had
- driven Lucy almost into fever, and brought her out, guideless and
- reckless, urged and drugged to the brink of frenzy. I had half a mind
- to bend over the elders' shoulders, and answer their goodness with the
- thanks of my eyes. M. de Bassompierre did not well know _me_, but I
- knew _him_, and honoured and admired his nature, with all its plain
- sincerity, its warm affection, and unconscious enthusiasm. Possibly I
- might have spoken, but just then Graham turned; he turned with one of
- his stately firm movements, so different from those, of a
- sharp-tempered under-sized man: there was behind him a throng, a
- hundred ranks deep; there were thousands to meet his eye and divide its
- scrutiny--why then did he concentrate all on me--oppressing me with the
- whole force of that full, blue, steadfast orb? Why, if he _would_ look,
- did not one glance satisfy him? why did he turn on his chair, rest his
- elbow on its back, and study me leisurely? He could not see my face, I
- held it down; surely, he _could_ not recognise me: I stooped, I turned,
- I _would_ not be known. He rose, by some means he contrived to
- approach, in two minutes he would have had my secret: my identity would
- have been grasped between his, never tyrannous, but always powerful
- hands. There was but one way to evade or to check him. I implied, by a
- sort of supplicatory gesture, that it was my prayer to be let alone;
- after that, had he persisted, he would perhaps have seen the spectacle
- of Lucy incensed: not all that was grand, or good, or kind in him (and
- Lucy felt the full amount) should have kept her quite tame, or
- absolutely inoffensive and shadowlike. He looked, but he desisted. He
- shook his handsome head, but he was mute. He resumed his seat, nor did
- he again turn or disturb me by a glance, except indeed for one single
- instant, when a look, rather solicitous than curious, stole my
- way--speaking what somehow stilled my heart like "the south-wind
- quieting the earth." Graham's thoughts of me were not entirely those of
- a frozen indifference, after all. I believe in that goodly mansion, his
- heart, he kept one little place under the sky-lights where Lucy might
- have entertainment, if she chose to call. It was not so handsome as the
- chambers where he lodged his male friends; it was not like the hall
- where he accommodated his philanthropy, or the library where he
- treasured his science, still less did it resemble the pavilion where
- his marriage feast was splendidly spread; yet, gradually, by long and
- equal kindness, he proved to me that he kept one little closet, over
- the door of which was written "Lucy's Room." I kept a place for him,
- too--a place of which I never took the measure, either by rule or
- compass: I think it was like the tent of Peri-Banou. All my life long I
- carried it folded in the hollow of my hand yet, released from that hold
- and constriction, I know not but its innate capacity for expanse might
- have magnified it into a tabernacle for a host.
- Forbearing as he was to-night, I could not stay in this proximity; this
- dangerous place and seat must be given up: I watched my opportunity,
- rose, and stole away. He might think, he might even believe that Lucy
- was contained within that shawl, and sheltered under that hat; he never
- could be certain, for he did not see my face.
- Surely the spirit of restlessness was by this time appeased? Had I not
- had enough of adventure? Did I not begin to flag, quail, and wish for
- safety under a roof? Not so. I still loathed my bed in the school
- dormitory more than words can express: I clung to whatever could
- distract thought. Somehow I felt, too, that the night's drama was but
- begun, that the prologue was scarce spoken: throughout this woody and
- turfy theatre reigned a shadow of mystery; actors and incidents
- unlooked-for, waited behind the scenes: I thought so foreboding told me
- as much.
- Straying at random, obeying the push of every chance elbow, I was
- brought to a quarter where trees planted in clusters, or towering
- singly, broke up somewhat the dense packing of the crowd, and gave it a
- more scattered character. These confines were far from the music, and
- somewhat aloof even from the lamps, but there was sound enough to
- soothe, and with that full, high moon, lamps were scarce needed. Here
- had chiefly settled family-groups, burgher-parents; some of them, late
- as was the hour, actually surrounded by their children, with whom it
- had not been thought advisable to venture into the closer throng.
- Three fine tall trees growing close, almost twined stem within stem,
- lifted a thick canopy of shade above a green knoll, crowned with a
- seat--a seat which might have held several, yet it seemed abandoned to
- one, the remaining members of the fortunate party in possession of this
- site standing dutifully round; yet, amongst this reverend circle was a
- lady, holding by the hand a little girl.
- When I caught sight of this little girl, she was twisting herself round
- on her heel, swinging from her conductress's hand, flinging herself
- from side to side with wanton and fantastic gyrations. These perverse
- movements arrested my attention, they struck me as of a character
- fearfully familiar. On close inspection, no less so appeared the
- child's equipment; the lilac silk pelisse, the small swansdown boa, the
- white bonnet--the whole holiday toilette, in short, was the gala garb
- of a cherub but too well known, of that tadpole, Désirée Beck--and
- Désirée Beck it was--she, or an imp in her likeness.
- I might have taken this discovery as a thunder-clap, but such hyperbole
- would have been premature; discovery was destined to rise more than one
- degree, ere it reached its climax.
- On whose hand could the amiable Désirée swing thus selfishly, whose
- glove could she tear thus recklessly, whose arm thus strain with
- impunity, or on the borders of whose dress thus turn and trample
- insolently, if not the hand, glove, arm, and robe of her lady-mother?
- And there, in an Indian shawl and a pale-green crape bonnet--there,
- fresh, portly, blithe, and pleasant--there stood Madame Beck.
- Curious! I had certainly deemed Madame in her bed, and Désirée in her
- crib, at this blessed minute, sleeping, both of them, the sleep of the
- just, within the sacred walls, amidst the profound seclusion of the Rue
- Fossette. Most certainly also they did not picture "Meess Lucie"
- otherwise engaged; and here we all three were taking our "ébats" in the
- fête-blazing park at midnight!
- The fact was, Madame was only acting according to her quite justifiable
- wont. I remembered now I had heard it said among the teachers--though
- without at the time particularly noticing the gossip--that often, when
- we thought Madame in her chamber, sleeping, she was gone, full-dressed,
- to take her pleasure at operas, or plays, or balls. Madame had no sort
- of taste for a monastic life, and took care--largely, though
- discreetly--to season her existence with a relish of the world.
- Half a dozen gentlemen of her friends stood about her. Amongst these, I
- was not slow to recognise two or three. There was her brother, M.
- Victor Kint; there was another person, moustached and with long hair--a
- calm, taciturn man, but whose traits bore a stamp and a semblance I
- could not mark unmoved. Amidst reserve and phlegm, amidst contrasts of
- character and of countenance, something there still was which recalled
- a face--mobile, fervent, feeling--a face changeable, now clouded, and
- now alight--a face from my world taken away, for my eyes lost, but
- where my best spring-hours of life had alternated in shadow and in
- glow; that face, where I had often seen movements so near the signs of
- genius--that why there did not shine fully out the undoubted fire, the
- thing, the spirit, and the secret itself--I could never tell. Yes--this
- Josef Emanuel--this man of peace--reminded me of his ardent brother.
- Besides Messieurs Victor and Josef, I knew another of this party. This
- third person stood behind and in the shade, his attitude too was
- stooping, yet his dress and bald white head made him the most
- conspicuous figure of the group. He was an ecclesiastic: he was Père
- Silas. Do not fancy, reader, that there was any inconsistency in the
- priest's presence at this fête. This was not considered a show of
- Vanity Fair, but a commemoration of patriotic sacrifice. The Church
- patronised it, even with ostentation. There were troops of priests in
- the park that night.
- Père Silas stooped over the seat with its single occupant, the rustic
- bench and that which sat upon it: a strange mass it was--bearing no
- shape, yet magnificent. You saw, indeed, the outline of a face, and
- features, but these were so cadaverous and so strangely placed, you
- could almost have fancied a head severed from its trunk, and flung at
- random on a pile of rich merchandise. The distant lamp-rays glanced on
- clear pendants, on broad rings; neither the chasteness of moonlight,
- nor the distance of the torches, could quite subdue the gorgeous dyes
- of the drapery. Hail, Madame Walravens! I think you looked more
- witch-like than ever. And presently the good lady proved that she was
- indeed no corpse or ghost, but a harsh and hardy old woman; for, upon
- some aggravation in the clamorous petition of Désirée Beck to her
- mother, to go to the kiosk and take sweetmeats, the hunchback suddenly
- fetched her a resounding rap with her gold-knobbed cane.
- There, then, were Madame Walravens, Madame Beck, Père Silas--the whole
- conjuration, the secret junta. The sight of them thus assembled did me
- good. I cannot say that I felt weak before them, or abashed, or
- dismayed. They outnumbered me, and I was worsted and under their feet;
- but, as yet, I was not dead.
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
- OLD AND NEW ACQUAINTANCE.
- Fascinated as by a basilisk with three heads, I could not leave this
- clique; the ground near them seemed to hold my feet. The canopy of
- entwined trees held out shadow, the night whispered a pledge of
- protection, and an officious lamp flashed just one beam to show me an
- obscure, safe seat, and then vanished. Let me now briefly tell the
- reader all that, during the past dark fortnight, I have been silently
- gathering from Rumour, respecting the origin and the object of M.
- Emanuel's departure. The tale is short, and not new: its alpha is
- Mammon, and its omega Interest.
- If Madame Walravens was hideous as a Hindoo idol, she seemed also to
- possess, in the estimation of these her votaries, an idol's
- consequence. The fact was, she had been rich--very rich; and though,
- for the present, without the command of money, she was likely one day
- to be rich again. At Basseterre, in Guadaloupe, she possessed a large
- estate, received in dowry on her marriage sixty years ago, sequestered
- since her husband's failure; but now, it was supposed, cleared of
- claim, and, if duly looked after by a competent agent of integrity,
- considered capable of being made, in a few years, largely productive.
- Père Silas took an interest in this prospective improvement for the
- sake of religion and the church, whereof Magliore Walravens was a
- devout daughter. Madame Beck, distantly related to the hunchback and
- knowing her to be without family of her own, had long brooded over
- contingencies with a mother's calculating forethought, and, harshly
- treated as she was by Madame Walravens, never ceased to court her for
- interest's sake. Madame Beck and the priest were thus, for money
- reasons, equally and sincerely interested in the nursing of the West
- Indian estate.
- But the distance was great, and the climate hazardous. The competent
- and upright agent wanted, must be a devoted man. Just such a man had
- Madame Walravens retained for twenty years in her service, blighting
- his life, and then living on him, like an old fungus; such a man had
- Père Silas trained, taught, and bound to him by the ties of gratitude,
- habit, and belief. Such a man Madame Beck knew, and could in some
- measure influence. "My pupil," said Père Silas, "if he remains in
- Europe, runs risk of apostacy, for he has become entangled with a
- heretic." Madame Beck made also her private comment, and preferred in
- her own breast her secret reason for desiring expatriation. The thing
- she could not obtain, she desired not another to win: rather would she
- destroy it. As to Madame Walravens, she wanted her money and her land,
- and knew Paul, if he liked, could make the best and faithfullest
- steward: so the three self-seekers banded and beset the one unselfish.
- They reasoned, they appealed, they implored; on his mercy they cast
- themselves, into his hands they confidingly thrust their interests.
- They asked but two or three years of devotion--after that, he should
- live for himself: one of the number, perhaps, wished that in the
- meantime he might die.
- No living being ever humbly laid his advantage at M. Emanuel's feet, or
- confidingly put it into his hands, that he spurned the trust or
- repulsed the repository. What might be his private pain or inward
- reluctance to leave Europe--what his calculations for his own
- future--none asked, or knew, or reported. All this was a blank to me.
- His conferences with his confessor I might guess; the part duty and
- religion were made to play in the persuasions used, I might conjecture.
- He was gone, and had made no sign. There my knowledge closed.
- * * * * *
- With my head bent, and my forehead resting on my hands, I sat amidst
- grouped tree-stems and branching brushwood. Whatever talk passed
- amongst my neighbours, I might hear, if I would; I was near enough; but
- for some time, there was scarce motive to attend. They gossiped about
- the dresses, the music, the illuminations, the fine night. I listened
- to hear them say, "It is calm weather for _his_ voyage; the _Antigua_"
- (his ship) "will sail prosperously." No such remark fell; neither the
- _Antigua_, nor her course, nor her passenger were named.
- Perhaps the light chat scarcely interested old Madame Walravens more
- than it did me; she appeared restless, turning her head now to this
- side, now that, looking through the trees, and among the crowd, as if
- expectant of an arrival and impatient of delay. "Où sont-ils? Pourquoi
- ne viennent-ils?" I heard her mutter more than once; and at last, as if
- determined to have an answer to her question--which hitherto none
- seemed to mind, she spoke aloud this phrase--a phrase brief enough,
- simple enough, but it sent a shock through me--"Messieurs et mesdames,"
- said she, "où donc est Justine Marie?"
- "Justine Marie!" What was this? Justine Marie--the dead nun--where was
- she? Why, in her grave, Madame Walravens--what can you want with her?
- You shall go to her, but she shall not come to you.
- Thus _I_ should have answered, had the response lain with me, but
- nobody seemed to be of my mind; nobody seemed surprised, startled, or
- at a loss. The quietest commonplace answer met the strange, the
- dead-disturbing, the Witch-of-Endor query of the hunchback.
- "Justine Marie," said one, "is coming; she is in the kiosk; she will be
- here presently."
- Out of this question and reply sprang a change in the chat--chat it
- still remained, easy, desultory, familiar gossip. Hint, allusion,
- comment, went round the circle, but all so broken, so dependent on
- references to persons not named, or circumstances not defined, that
- listen as intently as I would--and I _did_ listen _now_ with a fated
- interest--I could make out no more than that some scheme was on foot,
- in which this ghostly Justine Marie--dead or alive--was concerned. This
- family-junta seemed grasping at her somehow, for some reason; there
- seemed question of a marriage, of a fortune--for whom I could not quite
- make out--perhaps for Victor Kint, perhaps for Josef Emanuel--both were
- bachelors. Once I thought the hints and jests rained upon a young
- fair-haired foreigner of the party, whom they called Heinrich Mühler.
- Amidst all the badinage, Madame Walravens still obtruded from time to
- time, hoarse, cross-grained speeches; her impatience being diverted
- only by an implacable surveillance of Désirée, who could not stir but
- the old woman menaced her with her staff.
- "La voilà!" suddenly cried one of the gentlemen, "voilà Justine Marie
- qui arrive!"
- This moment was for me peculiar. I called up to memory the pictured nun
- on the panel; present to my mind was the sad love-story; I saw in
- thought the vision of the garret, the apparition of the alley, the
- strange birth of the berceau; I underwent a presentiment of discovery,
- a strong conviction of coming disclosure. Ah! when imagination once
- runs riot where do we stop? What winter tree so bare and
- branchless--what way-side, hedge-munching animal so humble, that Fancy,
- a passing cloud, and a struggling moonbeam, will not clothe it in
- spirituality, and make of it a phantom?
- With solemn force pressed on my heart, the expectation of mystery
- breaking up: hitherto I had seen this spectre only through a glass
- darkly; now was I to behold it face to face. I leaned forward; I looked.
- "She comes!" cried Josef Emanuel.
- The circle opened as if opening to admit a new and welcome member. At
- this instant a torch chanced to be carried past; its blaze aided the
- pale moon in doing justice to the crisis, in lighting to perfection the
- dénouement pressing on. Surely those near me must have felt some little
- of the anxiety I felt, in degree so unmeted. Of that group the coolest
- must have "held his breath for a time!" As for me, my life stood still.
- It is over. The moment and the nun are come. The crisis and the
- revelation are passed by.
- The flambeau glares still within a yard, held up in a park-keeper's
- hand; its long eager tongue of flame almost licks the figure of the
- Expected--there--where she stands full in my sight. What is she like?
- What does she wear? How does she look? Who is she?
- There are many masks in the park to-night, and as the hour wears late,
- so strange a feeling of revelry and mystery begins to spread abroad,
- that scarce would you discredit me, reader, were I to say that she is
- like the nun of the attic, that she wears black skirts and white
- head-clothes, that she looks the resurrection of the flesh, and that
- she is a risen ghost.
- All falsities--all figments! We will not deal in this gear. Let us be
- honest, and cut, as heretofore, from the homely web of truth.
- _Homely_, though, is an ill-chosen word. What I see is not precisely
- homely. A girl of Villette stands there--a girl fresh from her
- pensionnat. She is very comely, with the beauty indigenous to this
- country. She looks well-nourished, fair, and fat of flesh. Her cheeks
- are round, her eyes good; her hair is abundant. She is handsomely
- dressed. She is not alone; her escort consists of three persons--two
- being elderly; these she addresses as "Mon Oncle" and "Ma Tante." She
- laughs, she chats; good-humoured, buxom, and blooming, she looks, at
- all points, the bourgeoise belle.
- "So much for Justine Marie;" so much for ghosts and mystery: not that
- this last was solved--this girl certainly is not my nun: what I saw in
- the garret and garden must have been taller by a span.
- We have looked at the city belle; we have cursorily glanced at the
- respectable old uncle and aunt. Have we a stray glance to give to the
- third member of this company? Can we spare him a moment's notice? We
- ought to distinguish him so far, reader; he has claims on us; we do not
- now meet him for the first time. I clasped my hands very hard, and I
- drew my breath very deep: I held in the cry, I devoured the
- ejaculation, I forbade the start, I spoke and I stirred no more than a
- stone; but I knew what I looked on; through the dimness left in my eyes
- by many nights' weeping, I knew him. They said he was to sail by the
- _Antigua_. Madame Beck said so. She lied, or she had uttered what was
- once truth, and failed to contradict it when it became false. The
- _Antigua_ was gone, and there stood Paul Emanuel.
- Was I glad? A huge load left me. Was it a fact to warrant joy? I know
- not. Ask first what were the circumstances attendant on this respite?
- How far did this delay concern _me?_ Were there not those whom it might
- touch more nearly?
- After all, who may this young girl, this Justine Marie, be? Not a
- stranger, reader; she is known to me by sight; she visits at the Rue
- Fossette: she is often of Madame Beck's Sunday parties. She is a
- relation of both the Becks and Walravens; she derives her baptismal
- name from the sainted nun who would have been her aunt had she lived;
- her patronymic is Sauveur; she is an heiress and an orphan, and M.
- Emanuel is her guardian; some say her godfather.
- The family junta wish this heiress to be married to one of their
- band--which is it? Vital question--which is it?
- I felt very glad now, that the drug administered in the sweet draught
- had filled me with a possession which made bed and chamber intolerable.
- I always, through my whole life, liked to penetrate to the real truth;
- I like seeking the goddess in her temple, and handling the veil, and
- daring the dread glance. O Titaness among deities! the covered outline
- of thine aspect sickens often through its uncertainty, but define to us
- one trait, show us one lineament, clear in awful sincerity; we may gasp
- in untold terror, but with that gasp we drink in a breath of thy
- divinity; our heart shakes, and its currents sway like rivers lifted by
- earthquake, but we have swallowed strength. To see and know the worst
- is to take from Fear her main advantage.
- The Walravens' party, augmented in numbers, now became very gay. The
- gentlemen fetched refreshments from the kiosk, all sat down on the turf
- under the trees; they drank healths and sentiments; they laughed, they
- jested. M. Emanuel underwent some raillery, half good-humoured, half, I
- thought, malicious, especially on Madame Beck's part. I soon gathered
- that his voyage had been temporarily deferred of his own will, without
- the concurrence, even against the advice, of his friends; he had let
- the _Antigua_ go, and had taken his berth in the _Paul et Virginie_,
- appointed to sail a fortnight later. It was his reason for this resolve
- which they teased him to assign, and which he would only vaguely
- indicate as "the settlement of a little piece of business which he had
- set his heart upon." What _was_ this business? Nobody knew. Yes, there
- was one who seemed partly, at least, in his confidence; a meaning look
- passed between him and Justine Marie. "La petite va m'aider--n'est-ce
- pas?" said he. The answer was prompt enough, God knows?
- "Mais oui, je vous aiderai de tout mon coeur. Vous ferez de moi tout ce
- que vous voudrez, mon parrain."
- And this dear "parrain" took her hand and lifted it to his grateful
- lips. Upon which demonstration, I saw the light-complexioned young
- Teuton, Heinrich Mühler, grow restless, as if he did not like it. He
- even grumbled a few words, whereat M. Emanuel actually laughed in his
- face, and with the ruthless triumph of the assured conqueror, he drew
- his ward nearer to him.
- M. Emanuel was indeed very joyous that night. He seemed not one whit
- subdued by the change of scene and action impending. He was the true
- life of the party; a little despotic, perhaps, determined to be chief
- in mirth, as well as in labour, yet from moment to moment proving
- indisputably his right of leadership. His was the wittiest word, the
- pleasantest anecdote, the frankest laugh. Restlessly active, after his
- manner, he multiplied himself to wait on all; but oh! I saw which was
- his favourite. I saw at whose feet he lay on the turf, I saw whom he
- folded carefully from the night air, whom he tended, watched, and
- cherished as the apple of his eye.
- Still, hint and raillery flew thick, and still I gathered that while M.
- Paul should be absent, working for others, these others, not quite
- ungrateful, would guard for him the treasure he left in Europe. Let him
- bring them an Indian fortune: they would give him in return a young
- bride and a rich inheritance. As for the saintly consecration, the vow
- of constancy, that was forgotten: the blooming and charming Present
- prevailed over the Past; and, at length, his nun was indeed buried.
- Thus it must be. The revelation was indeed come. Presentiment had not
- been mistaken in her impulse: there is a kind of presentiment which
- never _is_ mistaken; it was I who had for a moment miscalculated; not
- seeing the true bearing of the oracle, I had thought she muttered of
- vision when, in truth, her prediction touched reality.
- I might have paused longer upon what I saw; I might have deliberated
- ere I drew inferences. Some, perhaps, would have held the premises
- doubtful, the proofs insufficient; some slow sceptics would have
- incredulously examined ere they conclusively accepted the project of a
- marriage between a poor and unselfish man of forty, and his wealthy
- ward of eighteen; but far from me such shifts and palliatives, far from
- me such temporary evasion of the actual, such coward fleeing from the
- dread, the swift-footed, the all-overtaking Fact, such feeble suspense
- of submission to her the sole sovereign, such paltering and faltering
- resistance to the Power whose errand is to march conquering and to
- conquer, such traitor defection from the TRUTH.
- No. I hastened to accept the whole plan. I extended my grasp and took
- it all in. I gathered it to me with a sort of rage of haste, and folded
- it round me, as the soldier struck on the field folds his colours about
- his breast. I invoked Conviction to nail upon me the certainty,
- abhorred while embraced, to fix it with the strongest spikes her
- strongest strokes could drive; and when the iron had entered well my
- soul, I stood up, as I thought, renovated.
- In my infatuation, I said, "Truth, you are a good mistress to your
- faithful servants! While a Lie pressed me, how I suffered! Even when
- the Falsehood was still sweet, still flattering to the fancy, and warm
- to the feelings, it wasted me with hourly torment. The persuasion that
- affection was won could not be divorced from the dread that, by another
- turn of the wheel, it might be lost. Truth stripped away Falsehood, and
- Flattery, and Expectancy, and here I stand--free!"
- Nothing remained now but to take my freedom to my chamber, to carry it
- with me to my bed and see what I could make of it. The play was not
- yet, indeed, quite played out. I might have waited and watched longer
- that love-scene under the trees, that sylvan courtship. Had there been
- nothing of love in the demonstration, my Fancy in this hour was so
- generous, so creative, she could have modelled for it the most salient
- lineaments, and given it the deepest life and highest colour of
- passion. But I _would_ not look; I had fixed my resolve, but I would
- not violate my nature. And then--something tore me so cruelly under my
- shawl, something so dug into my side, a vulture so strong in beak and
- talon, I must be alone to grapple with it. I think I never felt
- jealousy till now. This was not like enduring the endearments of Dr.
- John and Paulina, against which while I sealed my eyes and my ears,
- while I withdrew thence my thoughts, my sense of harmony still
- acknowledged in it a charm. This was an outrage. The love born of
- beauty was not mine; I had nothing in common with it: I could not dare
- to meddle with it, but another love, venturing diffidently into life
- after long acquaintance, furnace-tried by pain, stamped by constancy,
- consolidated by affection's pure and durable alloy, submitted by
- intellect to intellect's own tests, and finally wrought up, by his own
- process, to his own unflawed completeness, this Love that laughed at
- Passion, his fast frenzies and his hot and hurried extinction, in
- _this_ Love I had a vested interest; and whatever tended either to its
- culture or its destruction, I could not view impassibly.
- I turned from the group of trees and the "merrie companie" in its
- shade. Midnight was long past; the concert was over, the crowds were
- thinning. I followed the ebb. Leaving the radiant park and well-lit
- Haute-Ville (still well lit, this it seems was to be a "nuit blanche"
- in Villette), I sought the dim lower quarter.
- Dim I should not say, for the beauty of moonlight--forgotten in the
- park--here once more flowed in upon perception. High she rode, and calm
- and stainlessly she shone. The music and the mirth of the fête, the
- fire and bright hues of those lamps had out-done and out-shone her for
- an hour, but now, again, her glory and her silence triumphed. The rival
- lamps were dying: she held her course like a white fate. Drum, trumpet,
- bugle, had uttered their clangour, and were forgotten; with pencil-ray
- she wrote on heaven and on earth records for archives everlasting. She
- and those stars seemed to me at once the types and witnesses of truth
- all regnant. The night-sky lit her reign: like its slow-wheeling
- progress, advanced her victory--that onward movement which has been,
- and is, and will be from eternity to eternity.
- These oil-twinkling streets are very still: I like them for their
- lowliness and peace. Homeward-bound burghers pass me now and then, but
- these companies are pedestrians, make little noise, and are soon gone.
- So well do I love Villette under her present aspect, not willingly
- would I re-enter under a roof, but that I am bent on pursuing my
- strange adventure to a successful close, and quietly regaining my bed
- in the great dormitory, before Madame Beck comes home.
- Only one street lies between me and the Rue Fossette; as I enter it,
- for the first time, the sound of a carriage tears up the deep peace of
- this quarter. It comes this way--comes very fast. How loud sounds its
- rattle on the paved path! The street is narrow, and I keep carefully to
- the causeway. The carriage thunders past, but what do I see, or fancy I
- see, as it rushes by? Surely something white fluttered from that
- window--surely a hand waved a handkerchief. Was that signal meant for
- me? Am I known? Who could recognise me? That is not M. de
- Bassompierre's carriage, nor Mrs. Bretton's; and besides, neither the
- Hôtel Crécy nor the château of La Terrasse lies in that direction.
- Well, I have no time for conjecture; I must hurry home.
- Gaining the Rue Fossette, reaching the pensionnat, all there was still;
- no fiacre had yet arrived with Madame and Désirée. I had left the great
- door ajar; should I find it thus? Perhaps the wind or some other
- accident may have thrown it to with sufficient force to start the
- spring-bolt? In that case, hopeless became admission; my adventure must
- issue in catastrophe. I lightly pushed the heavy leaf; would it yield?
- Yes. As soundless, as unresisting, as if some propitious genius had
- waited on a sesame-charm, in the vestibule within. Entering with bated
- breath, quietly making all fast, shoelessly mounting the staircase, I
- sought the dormitory, and reached my couch.
- * * * * *
- Ay! I reached it, and once more drew a free inspiration. The next
- moment, I almost shrieked--almost, but not quite, thank Heaven!
- Throughout the dormitory, throughout the house, there reigned at this
- hour the stillness of death. All slept, and in such hush, it seemed
- that none dreamed. Stretched on the nineteen beds lay nineteen forms,
- at full-length and motionless. On mine--the twentieth couch--nothing
- _ought_ to have lain: I had left it void, and void should have found
- it. What, then; do I see between the half-drawn curtains? What dark,
- usurping shape, supine, long, and strange? Is it a robber who has made
- his way through the open street-door, and lies there in wait? It looks
- very black, I think it looks--not human. Can it be a wandering dog that
- has come in from the street and crept and nestled hither? Will it
- spring, will it leap out if I approach? Approach I must. Courage! One
- step!--
- My head reeled, for by the faint night-lamp, I saw stretched on my bed
- the old phantom--the NUN.
- A cry at this moment might have ruined me. Be the spectacle what it
- might, I could afford neither consternation, scream, nor swoon.
- Besides, I was not overcome. Tempered by late incidents, my nerves
- disdained hysteria. Warm from illuminations, and music, and thronging
- thousands, thoroughly lashed up by a new scourge, I defied spectra. In
- a moment, without exclamation, I had rushed on the haunted couch;
- nothing leaped out, or sprung, or stirred; all the movement was mine,
- so was all the life, the reality, the substance, the force; as my
- instinct felt. I tore her up--the incubus! I held her on high--the
- goblin! I shook her loose--the mystery! And down she fell--down all
- around me--down in shreds and fragments--and I trode upon her.
- Here again--behold the branchless tree, the unstabled Rosinante; the
- film of cloud, the flicker of moonshine. The long nun proved a long
- bolster dressed in a long black stole, and artfully invested with a
- white veil. The garments in very truth, strange as it may seem, were
- genuine nun's garments, and by some hand they had been disposed with a
- view to illusion. Whence came these vestments? Who contrived this
- artifice? These questions still remained. To the head-bandage was
- pinned a slip of paper: it bore in pencil these mocking words--
- "The nun of the attic bequeaths to Lucy Snowe her wardrobe. She will be
- seen in the Rue Fossette no more."
- And what and who was she that had haunted me? She, I had actually seen
- three times. Not a woman of my acquaintance had the stature of that
- ghost. She was not of a female height. Not to any man I knew could the
- machination, for a moment, be attributed.
- Still mystified beyond expression, but as thoroughly, as suddenly,
- relieved from all sense of the spectral and unearthly; scorning also to
- wear out my brain with the fret of a trivial though insoluble riddle, I
- just bundled together stole, veil, and bandages, thrust them beneath my
- pillow, lay down, listened till I heard the wheels of Madame's
- home-returning fiacre, then turned, and worn out by many nights'
- vigils, conquered, too, perhaps, by the now reacting narcotic, I deeply
- slept.
- CHAPTER XL.
- THE HAPPY PAIR.
- The day succeeding this remarkable Midsummer night, proved no common
- day. I do not mean that it brought signs in heaven above, or portents
- on the earth beneath; nor do I allude to meteorological phenomena, to
- storm, flood, or whirlwind. On the contrary: the sun rose jocund, with
- a July face. Morning decked her beauty with rubies, and so filled her
- lap with roses, that they fell from her in showers, making her path
- blush: the Hours woke fresh as nymphs, and emptying on the early hills
- their dew-vials, they stepped out dismantled of vapour: shadowless,
- azure, and glorious, they led the sun's steeds on a burning and
- unclouded course.
- In short, it was as fine a day as the finest summer could boast; but I
- doubt whether I was not the sole inhabitant of the Rue Fossette, who
- cared or remembered to note this pleasant fact. Another thought busied
- all other heads; a thought, indeed, which had its share in my
- meditations; but this master consideration, not possessing for me so
- entire a novelty, so overwhelming a suddenness, especially so dense a
- mystery, as it offered to the majority of my co-speculators thereon,
- left me somewhat more open than the rest to any collateral observation
- or impression.
- Still, while walking in the garden, feeling the sunshine, and marking
- the blooming and growing plants, I pondered the same subject the whole
- house discussed.
- What subject?
- Merely this. When matins came to be said, there was a place vacant in
- the first rank of boarders. When breakfast was served, there remained a
- coffee-cup unclaimed. When the housemaid made the beds, she found in
- one, a bolster laid lengthwise, clad in a cap and night-gown; and when
- Ginevra Fanshawe's music-mistress came early, as usual, to give the
- morning lesson, that accomplished and promising young person, her
- pupil, failed utterly to be forthcoming.
- High and low was Miss Fanshawe sought; through length and breadth was
- the house ransacked; vainly; not a trace, not an indication, not so
- much as a scrap of a billet rewarded the search; the nymph was
- vanished, engulfed in the past night, like a shooting star swallowed up
- by darkness.
- Deep was the dismay of surveillante teachers, deeper the horror of the
- defaulting directress. Never had I seen Madame Beck so pale or so
- appalled. Here was a blow struck at her tender part, her weak side;
- here was damage done to her interest. How, too, had the untoward event
- happened? By what outlet had the fugitive taken wing? Not a casement
- was found unfastened, not a pane of glass broken; all the doors were
- bolted secure. Never to this day has Madame Beck obtained satisfaction
- on this point, nor indeed has anybody else concerned, save and
- excepting one, Lucy Snowe, who could not forget how, to facilitate a
- certain enterprise, a certain great door had been drawn softly to its
- lintel, closed, indeed, but neither bolted nor secure. The thundering
- carriage-and-pair encountered were now likewise recalled, as well as
- that puzzling signal, the waved handkerchief.
- From these premises, and one or two others, inaccessible to any but
- myself, I could draw but one inference. It was a case of elopement.
- Morally certain on this head, and seeing Madame Beck's profound
- embarrassment, I at last communicated my conviction. Having alluded to
- M. de Hamal's suit, I found, as I expected, that Madame Beck was
- perfectly au fait to that affair. She had long since discussed it with
- Mrs. Cholmondeley, and laid her own responsibility in the business on
- that lady's shoulders. To Mrs. Cholmondeley and M. de Bassompierre she
- now had recourse.
- We found that the Hôtel Crécy was already alive to what had happened.
- Ginevra had written to her cousin Paulina, vaguely signifying hymeneal
- intentions; communications had been received from the family of de
- Hamal; M. de Bassompierre was on the track of the fugitives. He
- overtook them too late.
- In the course of the week, the post brought me a note. I may as well
- transcribe it; it contains explanation on more than one point:--
- 'DEAR OLD TIM "(short for Timon),--" I am off you see--gone like a
- shot. Alfred and I intended to be married in this way almost from the
- first; we never meant to be spliced in the humdrum way of other people;
- Alfred has too much spirit for that, and so have I--Dieu merci! Do you
- know, Alfred, who used to call you 'the dragon,' has seen so much of
- you during the last few months, that he begins to feel quite friendly
- towards you. He hopes you won't miss him now that he has gone; he begs
- to apologize for any little trouble he may have given you. He is afraid
- he rather inconvenienced you once when he came upon you in the grenier,
- just as you were reading a letter seemingly of the most special
- interest; but he could not resist the temptation to give you a start,
- you appeared so wonderfully taken up with your correspondent. En
- revanche, he says you once frightened him by rushing in for a dress or
- a shawl, or some other chiffon, at the moment when he had struck a
- light, and was going to take a quiet whiff of his cigar, while waiting
- for me.
- "Do you begin to comprehend by this time that M. le Comte de Hamal was
- the nun of the attic, and that he came to see your humble servant? I
- will tell you how he managed it. You know he has the entrée of the
- Athénée, where two or three of his nephews, the sons of his eldest
- sister, Madame de Melcy, are students. You know the court of the
- Athénée is on the other side of the high wall bounding your walk, the
- allée défendue. Alfred can climb as well as he can dance or fence: his
- amusement was to make the escalade of our pensionnat by mounting, first
- the wall; then--by the aid of that high tree overspreading the grand
- berceau, and resting some of its boughs on the roof of the lower
- buildings of our premises--he managed to scale the first classe and the
- grand salle. One night, by the way, he fell out of this tree, tore down
- some of the branches, nearly broke his own neck, and after all, in
- running away, got a terrible fright, and was nearly caught by two
- people, Madame Beck and M. Emanuel, he thinks, walking in the alley.
- From the grande salle the ascent is not difficult to the highest block
- of building, finishing in the great garret. The skylight, you know, is,
- day and night, left half open for air; by the skylight he entered.
- Nearly a year ago I chanced to tell him our legend of the nun; that
- suggested his romantic idea of the spectral disguise, which I think you
- must allow he has very cleverly carried out.
- "But for the nun's black gown and white veil, he would have been caught
- again and again both by you and that tiger-Jesuit, M. Paul. He thinks
- you both capital ghost-seers, and very brave. What I wonder at is,
- rather your secretiveness than your courage. How could you endure the
- visitations of that long spectre, time after time, without crying out,
- telling everybody, and rousing the whole house and neighbourhood?
- "Oh, and how did you like the nun as a bed-fellow? _I_ dressed her up:
- didn't I do it well? Did you shriek when you saw her: I should have
- gone mad; but then you have such nerves!--real iron and bend-leather! I
- believe you feel nothing. You haven't the same sensitiveness that a
- person of my constitution has. You seem to me insensible both to pain
- and fear and grief. You are a real old Diogenes.
- "Well, dear grandmother! and are you not mightily angry at my moonlight
- flitting and run away match? I assure you it is excellent fun, and I
- did it partly to spite that minx, Paulina, and that bear, Dr. John: to
- show them that, with all their airs, I could get married as well as
- they. M. de Bassompierre was at first in a strange fume with Alfred; he
- threatened a prosecution for 'détournement de mineur,' and I know not
- what; he was so abominably in earnest, that I found myself forced to do
- a little bit of the melodramatic--go down on my knees, sob, cry, drench
- three pocket-handkerchiefs. Of course, 'mon oncle' soon gave in;
- indeed, where was the use of making a fuss? I am married, and that's
- all about it. He still says our marriage is not legal, because I am not
- of age, forsooth! As if that made any difference! I am just as much
- married as if I were a hundred. However, we are to be married again,
- and I am to have a trousseau, and Mrs. Cholmondeley is going to
- superintend it; and there are some hopes that M. de Bassompierre will
- give me a decent portion, which will be very convenient, as dear Alfred
- has nothing but his nobility, native and hereditary, and his pay. I
- only wish uncle would do things unconditionally, in a generous,
- gentleman-like fashion; he is so disagreeable as to make the dowry
- depend on Alfred's giving his written promise that he will never touch
- cards or dice from the day it is paid down. They accuse my angel of a
- tendency to play: I don't know anything about that, but I _do_ know he
- is a dear, adorable creature.
- "I cannot sufficiently extol the genius with which de Hamal managed our
- flight. How clever in him to select the night of the fête, when Madame
- (for he knows her habits), as he said, would infallibly be absent at
- the concert in the park. I suppose _you_ must have gone with her. I
- watched you rise and leave the dormitory about eleven o'clock. How you
- returned alone, and on foot, I cannot conjecture. That surely was _you_
- we met in the narrow old Rue St. Jean? Did you see me wave my
- handkerchief from the carriage window?
- "Adieu! Rejoice in my good luck: congratulate me on my supreme
- happiness, and believe me, dear cynic and misanthrope, yours, in the
- best of health and spirits,
- GINEVRA LAURA DE HAMAL, née FANSHAWE.
- "P.S.--Remember, I am a countess now. Papa, mamma, and the girls at
- home, will be delighted to hear that. 'My daughter the Countess!' 'My
- sister the Countess!' Bravo! Sounds rather better than Mrs. John
- Bretton, hein?"
- * * * * *
- In winding up Mistress Fanshawe's memoirs, the reader will no doubt
- expect to hear that she came finally to bitter expiation of her
- youthful levities. Of course, a large share of suffering lies in
- reserve for her future.
- A few words will embody my farther knowledge respecting her.
- I saw her towards the close of her honeymoon. She called on Madame
- Beck, and sent for me into the salon. She rushed into my arms laughing.
- She looked very blooming and beautiful: her curls were longer, her
- cheeks rosier than ever: her white bonnet and her Flanders veil, her
- orange-flowers and her bride's dress, became her mightily.
- "I have got my portion!" she cried at once; (Ginevra ever stuck to the
- substantial; I always thought there was a good trading element in her
- composition, much as she scorned the "bourgeoise;") "and uncle de
- Bassompierre is quite reconciled. I don't mind his calling Alfred a
- 'nincompoop'--that's only his coarse Scotch breeding; and I believe
- Paulina envies me, and Dr. John is wild with jealousy--fit to blow his
- brains out--and I'm so happy! I really think I've hardly anything left
- to wish for--unless it be a carriage and an hotel, and, oh! I--must
- introduce you to 'mon mari.' Alfred, come here!"
- And Alfred appeared from the inner salon, where he was talking to
- Madame Beck, receiving the blended felicitations and reprimands of that
- lady. I was presented under my various names: the Dragon, Diogenes, and
- Timon. The young Colonel was very polite. He made me a prettily-turned,
- neatly-worded apology, about the ghost-visits, &c., concluding with
- saying that "the best excuse for all his iniquities stood there!"
- pointing to his bride.
- And then the bride sent him back to Madame Beck, and she took me to
- herself, and proceeded literally to suffocate me with her unrestrained
- spirits, her girlish, giddy, wild nonsense. She showed her ring
- exultingly; she called herself Madame la Comtesse de Hamal, and asked
- how it sounded, a score of times. I said very little. I gave her only
- the crust and rind of my nature. No matter she expected of me nothing
- better--she knew me too well to look for compliments--my dry gibes
- pleased her well enough and the more impassible and prosaic my mien,
- the more merrily she laughed.
- Soon after his marriage, M. de Hamal was persuaded to leave the army as
- the surest way of weaning him from certain unprofitable associates and
- habits; a post of attaché was procured for him, and he and his young
- wife went abroad. I thought she would forget me now, but she did not.
- For many years, she kept up a capricious, fitful sort of
- correspondence. During the first year or two, it was only of herself
- and Alfred she wrote; then, Alfred faded in the background; herself and
- a certain, new comer prevailed; one Alfred Fanshawe de Bassompierre de
- Hamal began to reign in his father's stead. There were great boastings
- about this personage, extravagant amplifications upon miracles of
- precocity, mixed with vehement objurgations against the phlegmatic
- incredulity with which I received them. I didn't know "what it was to
- be a mother;" "unfeeling thing that I was, the sensibilities of the
- maternal heart were Greek and Hebrew to me," and so on. In due course
- of nature this young gentleman took his degrees in teething, measles,
- hooping-cough: that was a terrible time for me--the mamma's letters
- became a perfect shout of affliction; never woman was so put upon by
- calamity: never human being stood in such need of sympathy. I was
- frightened at first, and wrote back pathetically; but I soon found out
- there was more cry than wool in the business, and relapsed into my
- natural cruel insensibility. As to the youthful sufferer, he weathered
- each storm like a hero. Five times was that youth "in articulo mortis,"
- and five times did he miraculously revive.
- In the course of years there arose ominous murmurings against Alfred
- the First; M. de Bassompierre had to be appealed to, debts had to be
- paid, some of them of that dismal and dingy order called "debts of
- honour;" ignoble plaints and difficulties became frequent. Under every
- cloud, no matter what its nature, Ginevra, as of old, called out
- lustily for sympathy and aid. She had no notion of meeting any distress
- single-handed. In some shape, from some quarter or other, she was
- pretty sure to obtain her will, and so she got on--fighting the battle
- of life by proxy, and, on the whole, suffering as little as any human
- being I have ever known.
- CHAPTER XLI.
- FAUBOURG CLOTILDE.
- Must I, ere I close, render some account of that Freedom and Renovation
- which I won on the fête-night? Must I tell how I and the two stalwart
- companions I brought home from the illuminated park bore the test of
- intimate acquaintance?
- I tried them the very next day. They had boasted their strength loudly
- when they reclaimed me from love and its bondage, but upon my demanding
- deeds, not words, some evidence of better comfort, some experience of a
- relieved life--Freedom excused himself, as for the present impoverished
- and disabled to assist; and Renovation never spoke; he had died in the
- night suddenly.
- I had nothing left for it then but to trust secretly that conjecture
- might have hurried me too fast and too far, to sustain the oppressive
- hour by reminders of the distorting and discolouring magic of jealousy.
- After a short and vain struggle, I found myself brought back captive to
- the old rack of suspense, tied down and strained anew.
- Shall I yet see him before he goes? Will he bear me in mind? Does he
- purpose to come? Will this day--will the next hour bring him? or must I
- again assay that corroding pain of long attent--that rude agony of
- rupture at the close, that mute, mortal wrench, which, in at once
- uprooting hope and doubt, shakes life; while the hand that does the
- violence cannot be caressed to pity, because absence interposes her
- barrier!
- It was the Feast of the Assumption; no school was held. The boarders
- and teachers, after attending mass in the morning, were gone a long
- walk into the country to take their goûter, or afternoon meal, at some
- farm-house. I did not go with them, for now but two days remained ere
- the _Paul et Virginie_ must sail, and I was clinging to my last chance,
- as the living waif of a wreck clings to his last raft or cable.
- There was some joiners' work to do in the first classe, some bench or
- desk to repair; holidays were often turned to account for the
- performance of these operations, which could not be executed when the
- rooms were filled with pupils. As I sat solitary, purposing to adjourn
- to the garden and leave the coast clear, but too listless to fulfil my
- own intent, I heard the workmen coming.
- Foreign artisans and servants do everything by couples: I believe it
- would take two Labassecourien carpenters to drive a nail. While tying
- on my bonnet, which had hitherto hung by its ribbons from my idle hand,
- I vaguely and momentarily wondered to hear the step of but one
- "ouvrier." I noted, too--as captives in dungeons find sometimes dreary
- leisure to note the merest trifles--that this man wore shoes, and not
- sabots: I concluded that it must be the master-carpenter, coming to
- inspect before he sent his journeymen. I threw round me my scarf. He
- advanced; he opened the door; my back was towards it; I felt a little
- thrill--a curious sensation, too quick and transient to be analyzed. I
- turned, I stood in the supposed master-artisan's presence: looking
- towards the door-way, I saw it filled with a figure, and my eyes
- printed upon my brain the picture of M. Paul.
- Hundreds of the prayers with which we weary Heaven bring to the
- suppliant no fulfilment. Once haply in life, one golden gift falls
- prone in the lap--one boon full and bright, perfect from Fruition's
- mint.
- M. Emanuel wore the dress in which he probably purposed to travel--a
- surtout, guarded with velvet; I thought him prepared for instant
- departure, and yet I had understood that two days were yet to run
- before the ship sailed. He looked well and cheerful. He looked kind and
- benign: he came in with eagerness; he was close to me in one second; he
- was all amity. It might be his bridegroom mood which thus brightened
- him. Whatever the cause, I could not meet his sunshine with cloud. If
- this were my last moment with him, I would not waste it in forced,
- unnatural distance. I loved him well--too well not to smite out of my
- path even Jealousy herself, when she would have obstructed a kind
- farewell. A cordial word from his lips, or a gentle look from his eyes,
- would do me good, for all the span of life that remained to me; it
- would be comfort in the last strait of loneliness; I would take it--I
- would taste the elixir, and pride should not spill the cup.
- The interview would be short, of course: he would say to me just what
- he had said to each of the assembled pupils; he would take and hold my
- hand two minutes; he would touch my cheek with his lips for the first,
- last, only time--and then--no more. Then, indeed, the final parting,
- then the wide separation, the great gulf I could not pass to go to
- him--across which, haply, he would not glance, to remember me.
- He took my hand in one of his, with the other he put back my bonnet; he
- looked into my face, his luminous smile went out, his lips expressed
- something almost like the wordless language of a mother who finds a
- child greatly and unexpectedly changed, broken with illness, or worn
- out by want. A check supervened.
- "Paul, Paul!" said a woman's hurried voice behind, "Paul, come into the
- salon; I have yet a great many things to say to you--conversation for
- the whole day--and so has Victor; and Josef is here. Come Paul, come to
- your friends."
- Madame Beck, brought to the spot by vigilance or an inscrutable
- instinct, pressed so near, she almost thrust herself between me and M.
- Emanuel.
- "Come, Paul!" she reiterated, her eye grazing me with its hard ray like
- a steel stylet. She pushed against her kinsman. I thought he receded; I
- thought he would go. Pierced deeper than I could endure, made now to
- feel what defied suppression, I cried--
- "My heart will break!"
- What I felt seemed literal heart-break; but the seal of another
- fountain yielded under the strain: one breath from M. Paul, the
- whisper, "Trust me!" lifted a load, opened an outlet. With many a deep
- sob, with thrilling, with icy shiver, with strong trembling, and yet
- with relief--I wept.
- "Leave her to me; it is a crisis: I will give her a cordial, and it
- will pass," said the calm Madame Beck.
- To be left to her and her cordial seemed to me something like being
- left to the poisoner and her bowl. When M. Paul answered deeply,
- harshly, and briefly--"Laissez-moi!" in the grim sound I felt a music
- strange, strong, but life-giving.
- "Laissez-moi!" he repeated, his nostrils opening, and his facial
- muscles all quivering as he spoke.
- "But this will never do," said Madame, with sternness. More sternly
- rejoined her kinsman--
- "Sortez d'ici!"
- "I will send for Père Silas: on the spot I will send for him," she
- threatened pertinaciously.
- "Femme!" cried the Professor, not now in his deep tones, but in his
- highest and most excited key, "Femme! sortez à l'instant!"
- He was roused, and I loved him in his wrath with a passion beyond what
- I had yet felt.
- "What you do is wrong," pursued Madame; "it is an act characteristic of
- men of your unreliable, imaginative temperament; a step impulsive,
- injudicious, inconsistent--a proceeding vexatious, and not estimable in
- the view of persons of steadier and more resolute character."
- "You know not what I have of steady and resolute in me," said he, "but
- you shall see; the event shall teach you. Modeste," he continued less
- fiercely, "be gentle, be pitying, be a woman; look at this poor face,
- and relent. You know I am your friend, and the friend of your friends;
- in spite of your taunts, you well and deeply know I may be trusted. Of
- sacrificing myself I made no difficulty but my heart is pained by what
- I see; it _must_ have and give solace. _Leave me!_"
- This time, in the "_leave me_" there was an intonation so bitter and so
- imperative, I wondered that even Madame Beck herself could for one
- moment delay obedience; but she stood firm; she gazed upon him
- dauntless; she met his eye, forbidding and fixed as stone. She was
- opening her lips to retort; I saw over all M. Paul's face a quick
- rising light and fire; I can hardly tell how he managed the movement;
- it did not seem violent; it kept the form of courtesy; he gave his
- hand; it scarce touched her I thought; she ran, she whirled from the
- room; she was gone, and the door shut, in one second.
- The flash of passion was all over very soon. He smiled as he told me to
- wipe my eyes; he waited quietly till I was calm, dropping from time to
- time a stilling, solacing word. Ere long I sat beside him once more
- myself--re-assured, not desperate, nor yet desolate; not friendless,
- not hopeless, not sick of life, and seeking death.
- "It made you very sad then to lose your friend?" said he.
- "It kills me to be forgotten, Monsieur," I said. "All these weary days
- I have not heard from you one word, and I was crushed with the
- possibility, growing to certainty, that you would depart without saying
- farewell!"
- "Must I tell you what I told Modeste Beck--that you do not know me?
- Must I show and teach you my character? You _will_ have proof that I
- can be a firm friend? Without clear proof this hand will not lie still
- in mine, it will not trust my shoulder as a safe stay? Good. The proof
- is ready. I come to justify myself."
- "Say anything, teach anything, prove anything, Monsieur; I can listen
- now."
- "Then, in the first place, you must go out with me a good distance into
- the town. I came on purpose to fetch you."
- Without questioning his meaning, or sounding his plan, or offering the
- semblance of an objection, I re-tied my bonnet: I was ready.
- The route he took was by the boulevards: he several times made me sit
- down on the seats stationed under the lime-trees; he did not ask if I
- was tired, but looked, and drew his own conclusions.
- "All these weary days," said he, repeating my words, with a gentle,
- kindly mimicry of my voice and foreign accent, not new from his lips,
- and of which the playful banter never wounded, not even when coupled,
- as it often was, with the assertion, that however I might _write_ his
- language, I _spoke_ and always should speak it imperfectly and
- hesitatingly. "'All these weary days' I have not for one hour forgotten
- you. Faithful women err in this, that they think themselves the sole
- faithful of God's creatures. On a very fervent and living truth to
- myself, I, too, till lately scarce dared count, from any quarter;
- but----look at me."
- I lifted my happy eyes: they _were_ happy now, or they would have been
- no interpreters of my heart.
- "Well," said he, after some seconds' scrutiny, "there is no denying
- that signature: Constancy wrote it: her pen is of iron. Was the record
- painful?"
- "Severely painful," I said, with truth. "Withdraw her hand, Monsieur; I
- can bear its inscribing force no more."
- "Elle est toute pâle," said he, speaking to himself; "cette figure-là
- me fait mal."
- "Ah! I am not pleasant to look at----?"
- I could not help saying this; the words came unbidden: I never remember
- the time when I had not a haunting dread of what might be the degree of
- my outward deficiency; this dread pressed me at the moment with special
- force.
- A great softness passed upon his countenance; his violet eyes grew
- suffused and glistening under their deep Spanish lashes: he started up;
- "Let us walk on."
- "Do I displease your eyes _much_?" I took courage to urge: the point
- had its vital import for me.
- He stopped, and gave me a short, strong answer; an answer which
- silenced, subdued, yet profoundly satisfied. Ever after that I knew
- what I was for _him_; and what I might be for the rest of the world, I
- ceased painfully to care. Was it weak to lay so much stress on an
- opinion about appearance? I fear it might be; I fear it was; but in
- that case I must avow no light share of weakness. I must own great fear
- of displeasing--a strong wish moderately to please M. Paul.
- Whither we rambled, I scarce knew. Our walk was long, yet seemed short;
- the path was pleasant, the day lovely. M. Emanuel talked of his
- voyage--he thought of staying away three years. On his return from
- Guadaloupe, he looked forward to release from liabilities and a clear
- course; and what did I purpose doing in the interval of his absence? he
- asked. I had talked once, he reminded me, of trying to be independent
- and keeping a little school of my own: had I dropped the idea?
- "Indeed, I had not: I was doing my best to save what would enable me to
- put it in practice."
- "He did not like leaving me in the Rue Fossette; he feared I should
- miss him there too much--I should feel desolate--I should grow sad--?"
- This was certain; but I promised to do my best to endure.
- "Still," said he, speaking low, "there is another objection to your
- present residence. I should wish to write to you sometimes: it would
- not be well to have any uncertainty about the safe transmission of
- letters; and in the Rue Fossette--in short, our Catholic discipline in
- certain matters--though justifiable and expedient--might possibly,
- under peculiar circumstances, become liable to misapplication--perhaps
- abuse."
- "But if you write," said I, "I _must_ have your letters; and I _will_
- have them: ten directors, twenty directresses, shall not keep them from
- me. I am a Protestant: I will not bear that kind of discipline:
- Monsieur, I _will not_."
- "Doucement--doucement," rejoined he; "we will contrive a plan; we have
- our resources: soyez tranquille."
- So speaking, he paused.
- We were now returning from the long walk. We had reached the middle of
- a clean Faubourg, where the houses were small, but looked pleasant. It
- was before the white door-step of a very neat abode that M. Paul had
- halted.
- "I call here," said he.
- He did not knock, but taking from his pocket a key, he opened and
- entered at once. Ushering me in, he shut the door behind us. No servant
- appeared. The vestibule was small, like the house, but freshly and
- tastefully painted; its vista closed in a French window with vines
- trained about the panes, tendrils, and green leaves kissing the glass.
- Silence reigned in this dwelling.
- Opening an inner door, M. Paul disclosed a parlour, or salon--very
- tiny, but I thought, very pretty. Its delicate walls were tinged like a
- blush; its floor was waxed; a square of brilliant carpet covered its
- centre; its small round table shone like the mirror over its hearth;
- there was a little couch, a little chiffonnière, the half-open,
- crimson-silk door of which, showed porcelain on the shelves; there was
- a French clock, a lamp; there were ornaments in biscuit china; the
- recess of the single ample window was filled with a green stand,
- bearing three green flower-pots, each filled with a fine plant glowing
- in bloom; in one corner appeared a guéridon with a marble top, and upon
- it a work-box, and a glass filled with violets in water. The lattice of
- this room was open; the outer air breathing through, gave freshness,
- the sweet violets lent fragrance.
- "Pretty, pretty place!" said I. M. Paul smiled to see me so pleased.
- "Must we sit down here and wait?" I asked in a whisper, half awed by
- the deep pervading hush.
- "We will first peep into one or two other nooks of this nutshell," he
- replied.
- "Dare you take the freedom of going all over the house?" I inquired.
- "Yes, I dare," said he, quietly.
- He led the way. I was shown a little kitchen with a little stove and
- oven, with few but bright brasses, two chairs and a table. A small
- cupboard held a diminutive but commodious set of earthenware.
- "There is a coffee service of china in the salon," said M. Paul, as I
- looked at the six green and white dinner-plates; the four dishes, the
- cups and jugs to match.
- Conducted up the narrow but clean staircase, I was permitted a glimpse
- of two pretty cabinets of sleeping-rooms; finally, I was once more led
- below, and we halted with a certain ceremony before a larger door than
- had yet been opened.
- Producing a second key, M. Emanuel adjusted it to the lock of this
- door. He opened, put me in before him.
- "Voici!" he cried.
- I found myself in a good-sized apartment, scrupulously clean, though
- bare, compared with those I had hitherto seen. The well-scoured boards
- were carpetless; it contained two rows of green benches and desks, with
- an alley down the centre, terminating in an estrade, a teacher's chair
- and table; behind them a tableau. On the walls hung two maps; in the
- windows flowered a few hardy plants; in short, here was a miniature
- classe--complete, neat, pleasant.
- "It is a school then?" said I. "Who keeps it? I never heard of an
- establishment in this faubourg."
- "Will you have the goodness to accept of a few prospectuses for
- distribution in behalf of a friend of mine?" asked he, taking from his
- surtout-pocket some quires of these documents, and putting them into my
- hand. I looked, I read--printed in fair characters:--
- "Externat de demoiselles. Numéro 7, Faubourg Clotilde, Directrice,
- Mademoiselle Lucy Snowe."
- * * * * *
- And what did I say to M. Paul Emanuel?
- Certain junctures of our lives must always be difficult of recall to
- memory. Certain points, crises, certain feelings, joys, griefs, and
- amazements, when reviewed, must strike us as things wildered and
- whirling, dim as a wheel fast spun.
- I can no more remember the thoughts or the words of the ten minutes
- succeeding this disclosure, than I can retrace the experience of my
- earliest year of life: and yet the first thing distinct to me is the
- consciousness that I was speaking very fast, repeating over and over
- again:--
- "Did you do this, M. Paul? Is this your house? Did you furnish it? Did
- you get these papers printed? Do you mean me? Am I the directress? Is
- there another Lucy Snowe? Tell me: say something."
- But he would not speak. His pleased silence, his laughing down-look,
- his attitude, are visible to me now.
- "How is it? I must know all--_all_," I cried.
- The packet of papers fell on the floor. He had extended his hand, and I
- had fastened thereon, oblivious of all else.
- "Ah! you said I had forgotten you all these weary days," said he. "Poor
- old Emanuel! These are the thanks he gets for trudging about three
- mortal weeks from house-painter to upholsterer, from cabinet-maker to
- charwoman. Lucy and Lucy's cot, the sole thoughts in his head!"
- I hardly knew what to do. I first caressed the soft velvet on his cuff,
- and then. I stroked the hand it surrounded. It was his foresight, his
- goodness, his silent, strong, effective goodness, that overpowered me
- by their proved reality. It was the assurance of his sleepless interest
- which broke on me like a light from heaven; it was his--I will dare to
- say it--his fond, tender look, which now shook me indescribably. In the
- midst of all I forced myself to look at the practical.
- "The trouble!" I cried, "and the cost! Had you money, M. Paul?"
- "Plenty of money!" said he heartily. "The disposal of my large teaching
- connection put me in possession of a handsome sum with part of it I
- determined to give myself the richest treat that I _have_ known or
- _shall_ know. I like this. I have reckoned on this hour day and night
- lately. I would not come near you, because I would not forestall it.
- Reserve is neither my virtue nor my vice. If I had put myself into your
- power, and you had begun with your questions of look and lip--Where
- have you been, M. Paul? What have you been doing? What is your
- mystery?--my solitary first and last secret would presently have
- unravelled itself in your lap. Now," he pursued, "you shall live here
- and have a school; you shall employ yourself while I am away; you shall
- think of me sometimes; you shall mind your health and happiness for my
- sake, and when I come back--"
- There he left a blank.
- I promised to do all he told me. I promised to work hard and willingly.
- "I will be your faithful steward," I said; "I trust at your coming the
- account will be ready. Monsieur, monsieur, you are _too_ good!"
- In such inadequate language my feelings struggled for expression: they
- could not get it; speech, brittle and unmalleable, and cold as ice,
- dissolved or shivered in the effort. He watched me, still; he gently
- raised his hand to stroke my hair; it touched my lips in passing; I
- pressed it close, I paid it tribute. He was my king; royal for me had
- been that hand's bounty; to offer homage was both a joy and a duty.
- * * * * *
- The afternoon hours were over, and the stiller time of evening shaded
- the quiet faubourg. M. Paul claimed my hospitality; occupied and afoot
- since morning, he needed refreshment; he said I should offer him
- chocolate in my pretty gold and white china service. He went out and
- ordered what was needful from the restaurant; he placed the small
- guéridon and two chairs in the balcony outside the French window under
- the screening vines. With what shy joy I accepted my part as hostess,
- arranged the salver, served the benefactor-guest.
- This balcony was in the rear of the house, the gardens of the faubourg
- were round us, fields extended beyond. The air was still, mild, and
- fresh. Above the poplars, the laurels, the cypresses, and the roses,
- looked up a moon so lovely and so halcyon, the heart trembled under her
- smile; a star shone subject beside her, with the unemulous ray of pure
- love. In a large garden near us, a jet rose from a well, and a pale
- statue leaned over the play of waters.
- M. Paul talked to me. His voice was so modulated that it mixed
- harmonious with the silver whisper, the gush, the musical sigh, in
- which light breeze, fountain and foliage intoned their lulling vesper:
- Happy hour--stay one moment! droop those plumes, rest those wings;
- incline to mine that brow of Heaven! White Angel! let thy light linger;
- leave its reflection on succeeding clouds; bequeath its cheer to that
- time which needs a ray in retrospect!
- Our meal was simple: the chocolate, the rolls, the plate of fresh
- summer fruit, cherries and strawberries bedded in green leaves formed
- the whole: but it was what we both liked better than a feast, and I
- took a delight inexpressible in tending M. Paul. I asked him whether
- his friends, Père Silas and Madame Beck, knew what he had done--whether
- they had seen my house?
- "Mon amie," said he, "none knows what I have done save you and myself:
- the pleasure is consecrated to us two, unshared and unprofaned. To
- speak truth, there has been to me in this matter a refinement of
- enjoyment I would not make vulgar by communication. Besides" (smiling)
- "I wanted to prove to Miss Lucy that I _could_ keep a secret. How often
- has she taunted me with lack of dignified reserve and needful caution!
- How many times has she saucily insinuated that all my affairs are the
- secret of Polichinelle!"
- This was true enough: I had not spared him on this point, nor perhaps
- on any other that was assailable. Magnificent-minded, grand-hearted,
- dear, faulty little man! You deserved candour, and from me always had
- it.
- Continuing my queries, I asked to whom the house belonged, who was my
- landlord, the amount of my rent. He instantly gave me these particulars
- in writing; he had foreseen and prepared all things.
- The house was not M. Paul's--that I guessed: he was hardly the man to
- become a proprietor; I more than suspected in him a lamentable absence
- of the saving faculty; he could get, but not keep; he needed a
- treasurer. The tenement, then, belonged to a citizen in the
- Basse-Ville--a man of substance, M. Paul said; he startled me by
- adding: "a friend of yours, Miss Lucy, a person who has a most
- respectful regard for you." And, to my pleasant surprise, I found the
- landlord was none other than M. Miret, the short-tempered and
- kind-hearted bookseller, who had so kindly found me a seat that
- eventful night in the park. It seems M. Miret was, in his station,
- rich, as well as much respected, and possessed several houses in this
- faubourg; the rent was moderate, scarce half of what it would have been
- for a house of equal size nearer the centre of Villette.
- "And then," observed M. Paul, "should fortune not favour you, though I
- think she will, I have the satisfaction to think you are in good hands;
- M. Miret will not be extortionate: the first year's rent you have
- already in your savings; afterwards Miss Lucy must trust God, and
- herself. But now, what will you do for pupils?"
- "I must distribute my prospectuses."
- "Right! By way of losing no time, I gave one to M. Miret yesterday.
- Should you object to beginning with three petite bourgeoises, the
- Demoiselles Miret? They are at your service."
- "Monsieur, you forget nothing; you are wonderful. Object? It would
- become me indeed to object! I suppose I hardly expect at the outset to
- number aristocrats in my little day-school; I care not if they never
- come. I shall be proud to receive M. Miret's daughters."
- "Besides these," pursued he, "another pupil offers, who will come daily
- to take lessons in English; and as she is rich, she will pay
- handsomely. I mean my god-daughter and ward, Justine Marie Sauveur."
- What is in a name?--what in three words? Till this moment I had
- listened with living joy--I had answered with gleeful quickness; a name
- froze me; three words struck me mute. The effect could not be hidden,
- and indeed I scarce tried to hide it.
- "What now?" said M. Paul.
- "Nothing."
- "Nothing! Your countenance changes: your colour and your very eyes
- fade. Nothing! You must be ill; you have some suffering; tell me what."
- I had nothing to tell.
- He drew his chair nearer. He did not grow vexed, though I continued
- silent and icy. He tried to win a word; he entreated with perseverance,
- he waited with patience.
- "Justine Marie is a good girl," said he, "docile and amiable; not
- quick--but you will like her."
- "I think not. I think she must not come here."
- Such was my speech.
- "Do you wish to puzzle me? Do you know her? But, in truth, there _is_
- something. Again you are pale as that statue. Rely on Paul Carlos; tell
- him the grief."
- His chair touched mine; his hand, quietly advanced, turned me towards
- him.
- "Do you know Marie Justine?" said he again.
- The name re-pronounced by his lips overcame me unaccountably. It did
- not prostrate--no, it stirred me up, running with haste and heat
- through my veins--recalling an hour of quick pain, many days and nights
- of heart-sickness. Near me as he now sat, strongly and closely as he
- had long twined his life in mine--far as had progressed, and near as
- was achieved our minds' and affections' assimilation--the very
- suggestion of interference, of heart-separation, could be heard only
- with a fermenting excitement, an impetuous throe, a disdainful resolve,
- an ire, a resistance of which no human eye or cheek could hide the
- flame, nor any truth-accustomed human tongue curb the cry.
- "I want to tell you something," I said: "I want to tell you all."
- "Speak, Lucy; come near; speak. Who prizes you, if I do not? Who is
- your friend, if not Emanuel? Speak!"
- I spoke. All escaped from my lips. I lacked not words now; fast I
- narrated; fluent I told my tale; it streamed on my tongue. I went back
- to the night in the park; I mentioned the medicated draught--why it was
- given--its goading effect--how it had torn rest from under my head,
- shaken me from my couch, carried me abroad with the lure of a vivid yet
- solemn fancy--a summer-night solitude on turf, under trees, near a
- deep, cool lakelet. I told the scene realized; the crowd, the masques,
- the music, the lamps, the splendours, the guns booming afar, the bells
- sounding on high. All I had encountered I detailed, all I had
- recognised, heard, and seen; how I had beheld and watched himself: how
- I listened, how much heard, what conjectured; the whole history, in
- brief, summoned to his confidence, rushed thither, truthful, literal,
- ardent, bitter.
- Still as I narrated, instead of checking, he incited me to proceed he
- spurred me by the gesture, the smile, the half-word. Before I had half
- done, he held both my hands, he consulted my eyes with a most piercing
- glance: there was something in his face which tended neither to calm
- nor to put me down; he forgot his own doctrine, he forsook his own
- system of repression when I most challenged its exercise. I think I
- deserved strong reproof; but when have we our deserts? I merited
- severity; he looked indulgence. To my very self I seemed imperious and
- unreasonable, for I forbade Justine Marie my door and roof; he smiled,
- betraying delight. Warm, jealous, and haughty, I knew not till now that
- my nature had such a mood: he gathered me near his heart. I was full of
- faults; he took them and me all home. For the moment of utmost mutiny,
- he reserved the one deep spell of peace. These words caressed my ear:--
- "Lucy, take my love. One day share my life. Be my dearest, first on
- earth."
- We walked back to the Rue Fossette by moonlight--such moonlight as fell
- on Eden--shining through the shades of the Great Garden, and haply
- gilding a path glorious for a step divine--a Presence nameless. Once in
- their lives some men and women go back to these first fresh days of our
- great Sire and Mother--taste that grand morning's dew--bathe in its
- sunrise.
- In the course of the walk I was told how Justine Marie Sauveur had
- always been regarded with the affection proper to a daughter--how, with
- M. Paul's consent, she had been affianced for months to one Heinrich
- Mühler, a wealthy young German merchant, and was to be married in the
- course of a year. Some of M. Emanuel's relations and connections would,
- indeed, it seems, have liked him to marry her, with a view to securing
- her fortune in the family; but to himself the scheme was repugnant, and
- the idea totally inadmissible.
- We reached Madame Beck's door. Jean Baptiste's clock tolled nine. At
- this hour, in this house, eighteen months since, had this man at my
- side bent before me, looked into my face and eyes, and arbitered my
- destiny. This very evening he had again stooped, gazed, and decreed.
- How different the look--how far otherwise the fate!
- He deemed me born under his star: he seemed to have spread over me its
- beam like a banner. Once--unknown, and unloved, I held him harsh and
- strange; the low stature, the wiry make, the angles, the darkness, the
- manner, displeased me. Now, penetrated with his influence, and living
- by his affection, having his worth by intellect, and his goodness by
- heart--I preferred him before all humanity.
- We parted: he gave me his pledge, and then his farewell. We parted: the
- next day--he sailed.
- CHAPTER XLII.
- FINIS.
- Man cannot prophesy. Love is no oracle. Fear sometimes imagines a vain
- thing. Those years of absence! How had I sickened over their
- anticipation! The woe they must bring seemed certain as death. I knew
- the nature of their course: I never had doubt how it would harrow as it
- went. The juggernaut on his car towered there a grim load. Seeing him
- draw nigh, burying his broad wheels in the oppressed soil--I, the
- prostrate votary--felt beforehand the annihilating craunch.
- Strange to say--strange, yet true, and owning many parallels in life's
- experience--that anticipatory craunch proved all--yes--nearly _all_ the
- torture. The great Juggernaut, in his great chariot, drew on lofty,
- loud, and sullen. He passed quietly, like a shadow sweeping the sky, at
- noon. Nothing but a chilling dimness was seen or felt. I looked up.
- Chariot and demon charioteer were gone by; the votary still lived.
- M. Emanuel was away three years. Reader, they were the three happiest
- years of my life. Do you scout the paradox? Listen. I commenced my
- school; I worked--I worked hard. I deemed myself the steward of his
- property, and determined, God willing, to render a good account. Pupils
- came--burghers at first--a higher class ere long. About the middle of
- the second year an unexpected chance threw into my hands an additional
- hundred pounds: one day I received from England a letter containing
- that sum. It came from Mr. Marchmont, the cousin and heir of my dear
- and dead mistress. He was just recovering from a dangerous illness; the
- money was a peace-offering to his conscience, reproaching him in the
- matter of, I know not what, papers or memoranda found after his
- kinswoman's death--naming or recommending Lucy Snowe. Mrs. Barrett had
- given him my address. How far his conscience had been sinned against, I
- never inquired. I asked no questions, but took the cash and made it
- useful.
- With this hundred pounds I ventured to take the house adjoining mine. I
- would not leave that which M. Paul had chosen, in which he had left,
- and where he expected again to find me. My externat became a
- pensionnat; that also prospered.
- The secret of my success did not lie so much in myself, in any
- endowment, any power of mine, as in a new state of circumstances, a
- wonderfully changed life, a relieved heart. The spring which moved my
- energies lay far away beyond seas, in an Indian isle. At parting, I had
- been left a legacy; such a thought for the present, such a hope for the
- future, such a motive for a persevering, a laborious, an enterprising,
- a patient and a brave course--I _could_ not flag. Few things shook me
- now; few things had importance to vex, intimidate, or depress me: most
- things pleased--mere trifles had a charm.
- Do not think that this genial flame sustained itself, or lived wholly
- on a bequeathed hope or a parting promise. A generous provider supplied
- bounteous fuel. I was spared all chill, all stint; I was not suffered
- to fear penury; I was not tried with suspense. By every vessel he
- wrote; he wrote as he gave and as he loved, in full-handed,
- full-hearted plenitude. He wrote because he liked to write; he did not
- abridge, because he cared not to abridge. He sat down, he took pen and
- paper, because he loved Lucy and had much to say to her; because he was
- faithful and thoughtful, because he was tender and true. There was no
- sham and no cheat, and no hollow unreal in him. Apology never dropped
- her slippery oil on his lips--never proffered, by his pen, her coward
- feints and paltry nullities: he would give neither a stone, nor an
- excuse--neither a scorpion; nor a disappointment; his letters were real
- food that nourished, living water that refreshed.
- And was I grateful? God knows! I believe that scarce a living being so
- remembered, so sustained, dealt with in kind so constant, honourable
- and noble, could be otherwise than grateful to the death.
- Adherent to his own religion (in him was not the stuff of which is made
- the facile apostate), he freely left me my pure faith. He did not tease
- nor tempt. He said:--
- "Remain a Protestant. My little English Puritan, I love Protestantism
- in you. I own its severe charm. There is something in its ritual I
- cannot receive myself, but it is the sole creed for 'Lucy.'"
- All Rome could not put into him bigotry, nor the Propaganda itself make
- him a real Jesuit. He was born honest, and not false--artless, and not
- cunning--a freeman, and not a slave. His tenderness had rendered him
- ductile in a priest's hands, his affection, his devotedness, his
- sincere pious enthusiasm blinded his kind eyes sometimes, made him
- abandon justice to himself to do the work of craft, and serve the ends
- of selfishness; but these are faults so rare to find, so costly to
- their owner to indulge, we scarce know whether they will not one day be
- reckoned amongst the jewels.
- * * * * *
- And now the three years are past: M. Emanuel's return is fixed. It is
- Autumn; he is to be with me ere the mists of November come. My school
- flourishes, my house is ready: I have made him a little library, filled
- its shelves with the books he left in my care: I have cultivated out of
- love for him (I was naturally no florist) the plants he preferred, and
- some of them are yet in bloom. I thought I loved him when he went away;
- I love him now in another degree: he is more my own.
- The sun passes the equinox; the days shorten, the leaves grow sere;
- but--he is coming.
- Frosts appear at night; November has sent his fogs in advance; the wind
- takes its autumn moan; but--he is coming.
- The skies hang full and dark--a wrack sails from the west; the clouds
- cast themselves into strange forms--arches and broad radiations; there
- rise resplendent mornings--glorious, royal, purple as monarch in his
- state; the heavens are one flame; so wild are they, they rival battle
- at its thickest--so bloody, they shame Victory in her pride. I know
- some signs of the sky; I have noted them ever since childhood. God
- watch that sail! Oh! guard it!
- The wind shifts to the west. Peace, peace, Banshee--"keening" at every
- window! It will rise--it will swell--it shrieks out long: wander as I
- may through the house this night, I cannot lull the blast. The
- advancing hours make it strong: by midnight, all sleepless watchers
- hear and fear a wild south-west storm. That storm roared frenzied, for
- seven days. It did not cease till the Atlantic was strewn with wrecks:
- it did not lull till the deeps had gorged their full of sustenance. Not
- till the destroying angel of tempest had achieved his perfect work,
- would he fold the wings whose waft was thunder--the tremor of whose
- plumes was storm.
- Peace, be still! Oh! a thousand weepers, praying in agony on waiting
- shores, listened for that voice, but it was not uttered--not uttered
- till; when the hush came, some could not feel it: till, when the sun
- returned, his light was night to some!
- Here pause: pause at once. There is enough said. Trouble no quiet, kind
- heart; leave sunny imaginations hope. Let it be theirs to conceive the
- delight of joy born again fresh out of great terror, the rapture of
- rescue from peril, the wondrous reprieve from dread, the fruition of
- return. Let them picture union and a happy succeeding life.
- Madame Beck prospered all the days of her life; so did Père Silas;
- Madame Walravens fulfilled her ninetieth year before she died. Farewell.
- THE END.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Villette, by Charlotte Brontë
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