- The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, by Anne Bronte
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- Title: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
- Author: Anne Bronte
- Introduction by: Mrs. Humphry Ward
- Release Date: February 2, 2010 [eBook #969]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL***
- Transcribed from the 1920 John Murray edition by David Price, email
- ccx074@pglaf.org
- [Picture: Anne Brontë from a drawing by Charlotte Brontë in the
- possession of the Rev. A. B. Nicholls]
- THE TENANT
- OF
- WILDFELL HALL
- BY ANNE BRONTË
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION
- BY MRS HUMPHREY WARD
- * * * * *
- LONDON
- JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
- 1920
- * * * * *
- THIS EDITION FIRST ISSUED _March_, 1900
- (Smith, Elder & Co.)
- Reprinted _June_, 1906
- Reprinted (John Murray) _September_, 1920
- * * * * *
- [All rights reserved]
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PORTRAIT OF ANNE BRONTË _Frontispiece_
- FACSIMILE OF THE TITLE-PAGE OF THE FIRST EDITION _p._ xxv
- OF ‘WILDFELL HALL’
- _The following Illustrations are reproduced from photographs taken by
- Mr. W. R. Bland_, _of Duffield_, _Derby_, _in conjunction with Mr. C.
- Barrow Keene_, _of Derby_:
- MOORLAND SCENE, HAWORTH _To face p._ 14
- (_with water_) 46
- (_with cottage_) 100
- BLAKE HALL (GRASSDALE MANOR):
- THE APPROACH 206
- FRONT 222
- SIDE 286
- INTRODUCTION
- Anne Brontë serves a twofold purpose in the study of what the Brontës
- wrote and were. In the first place, her gentle and delicate presence,
- her sad, short story, her hard life and early death, enter deeply into
- the poetry and tragedy that have always been entwined with the memory of
- the Brontës, as women and as writers; in the second, the books and poems
- that she wrote serve as matter of comparison by which to test the
- greatness of her two sisters. She is the measure of their genius—like
- them, yet not with them.
- Many years after Anne’s death her brother-in-law protested against a
- supposed portrait of her, as giving a totally wrong impression of the
- ‘dear, gentle Anne Brontë.’ ‘Dear’ and ‘gentle’ indeed she seems to have
- been through life, the youngest and prettiest of the sisters, with a
- delicate complexion, a slender neck, and small, pleasant features.
- Notwithstanding, she possessed in full the Brontë seriousness, the Brontë
- strength of will. When her father asked her at four years old what a
- little child like her wanted most, the tiny creature replied—if it were
- not a Brontë it would be incredible!—‘Age and experience.’ When the
- three children started their ‘Island Plays’ together in 1827, Anne, who
- was then eight, chose Guernsey for her imaginary island, and peopled it
- with ‘Michael Sadler, Lord Bentinck, and Sir Henry Halford.’ She and
- Emily were constant companions, and there is evidence that they shared a
- common world of fancy from very early days to mature womanhood. ‘The
- Gondal Chronicles’ seem to have amused them for many years, and to have
- branched out into innumerable books, written in the ‘tiny writing’ of
- which Mr. Clement Shorter has given us facsimiles. ‘I am now engaged in
- writing the fourth volume of Solala Vernon’s Life,’ says Anne at
- twenty-one. And four years later Emily says, ‘The Gondals still flourish
- bright as ever. I am at present writing a work on the First War. Anne
- has been writing some articles on this and a book by Henry Sophona. We
- intend sticking firm by the rascals as long as they delight us, which I
- am glad to say they do at present.’
- That the author of ‘Wildfell Hall’ should ever have delighted in the
- Gondals, should ever have written the story of Solala Vernon or Henry
- Sophona, is pleasant to know. Then, for her too, as for her sisters,
- there was a moment when the power of ‘making out’ could turn loneliness
- and disappointment into riches and content. For a time at least, and
- before a hard and degrading experience had broken the spring of her
- youth, and replaced the disinterested and spontaneous pleasure that is to
- be got from the life and play of imagination, by a sad sense of duty, and
- an inexorable consciousness of moral and religious mission, Anne Brontë
- wrote stories for her own amusement, and loved the ‘rascals’ she created.
- But already in 1841, when we first hear of the Gondals and Solala Vernon,
- the material for quite other books was in poor Anne’s mind. She was then
- teaching in the family at Thorpe Green, where Branwell joined her as
- tutor in 1843, and where, owing to events that are still a mystery, she
- seems to have passed through an ordeal that left her shattered in health
- and nerve, with nothing gained but those melancholy and repulsive
- memories that she was afterwards to embody in ‘Wildfell Hall.’ She
- seems, indeed, to have been partly the victim of Branwell’s morbid
- imagination, the imagination of an opium-eater and a drunkard. That he
- was neither the conqueror nor the villain that he made his sisters
- believe, all the evidence that has been gathered since Mrs. Gaskell wrote
- goes to show. But poor Anne believed his account of himself, and no
- doubt saw enough evidence of vicious character in Branwell’s daily life
- to make the worst enormities credible. She seems to have passed the last
- months of her stay at Thorpe Green under a cloud of dread and miserable
- suspicion, and was thankful to escape from her situation in the summer of
- 1845. At the same moment Branwell was summarily dismissed from his
- tutorship, his employer, Mr. Robinson, writing a stern letter of
- complaint to Bramwell’s father, concerned no doubt with the young man’s
- disorderly and intemperate habits. Mrs. Gaskell says: ‘The premature
- deaths of two at least of the sisters—all the great possibilities of
- their earthly lives snapped short—may be dated from Midsummer 1845.’ The
- facts as we now know them hardly bear out so strong a judgment. There is
- nothing to show that Branwell’s conduct was responsible in any way for
- Emily’s illness and death, and Anne, in the contemporary fragment
- recovered by Mr. Shorter, gives a less tragic account of the matter.
- ‘During my stay (at Thorpe Green),’ she writes on July 31, 1845, ‘I have
- had some very unpleasant and undreamt-of experience of human nature. . . .
- Branwell has . . . been a tutor at Thorpe Green, and had much
- tribulation and ill-health. . . . We hope he will be better and do
- better in future.’ And at the end of the paper she says, sadly,
- forecasting the coming years, ‘I for my part cannot well be flatter or
- older in mind than I am now.’ This is the language of disappointment and
- anxiety; but it hardly fits the tragic story that Mrs. Gaskell believed.
- That story was, no doubt, the elaboration of Branwell’s diseased fancy
- during the three years which elapsed between his dismissal from Thorpe
- Green and his death. He imagined a guilty romance with himself and his
- employer’s wife for characters, and he imposed the horrid story upon his
- sisters. Opium and drink are the sufficient explanations; and no time
- need now be wasted upon unravelling the sordid mystery. But the vices of
- the brother, real or imaginary, have a certain importance in literature,
- because of the effect they produced upon his sisters. There can be no
- question that Branwell’s opium madness, his bouts of drunkenness at the
- Black Bull, his violence at home, his free and coarse talk, and his
- perpetual boast of guilty secrets, influenced the imagination of his
- wholly pure and inexperienced sisters. Much of ‘Wuthering Heights,’ and
- all of ‘Wildfell Hall,’ show Branwell’s mark, and there are many passages
- in Charlotte’s books also where those who know the history of the
- parsonage can hear the voice of those sharp moral repulsions, those
- dismal moral questionings, to which Branwell’s misconduct and ruin gave
- rise. Their brother’s fate was an element in the genius of Emily and
- Charlotte which they were strong enough to assimilate, which may have
- done them some harm, and weakened in them certain delicate or sane
- perceptions, but was ultimately, by the strange alchemy of talent, far
- more profitable than hurtful, inasmuch as it troubled the waters of the
- soul, and brought them near to the more desperate realities of our
- ‘frail, fall’n humankind.’
- But Anne was not strong enough, her gift was not vigorous enough, to
- enable her thus to transmute experience and grief. The probability is
- that when she left Thorpe Green in 1845 she was already suffering from
- that religious melancholy of which Charlotte discovered such piteous
- evidence among her papers after death. It did not much affect the
- writing of ‘Agnes Grey,’ which was completed in 1846, and reflected the
- minor pains and discomforts of her teaching experience, but it combined
- with the spectacle of Branwell’s increasing moral and physical decay to
- produce that bitter mandate of conscience under which she wrote ‘The
- Tenant of Wildfell Hall.’
- ‘Hers was naturally a sensitive, reserved, and dejected nature. She
- hated her work, but would pursue it. It was written as a warning,’—so
- said Charlotte when, in the pathetic Preface of 1850, she was
- endeavouring to explain to the public how a creature so gentle and so
- good as Acton Bell should have written such a book as ‘Wildfell Hall.’
- And in the second edition of ‘Wildfell Hall,’ which appeared in 1848,
- Anne Brontë herself justified her novel in a Preface which is reprinted
- in this volume for the first time. The little Preface is a curious
- document. It has the same determined didactic tone which pervades the
- book itself, the same narrowness of view, and inflation of expression, an
- inflation which is really due not to any personal egotism in the writer,
- but rather to that very gentleness and inexperience which must yet nerve
- itself under the stimulus of religion to its disagreeable and repulsive
- task. ‘I knew that such characters’—as Huntingdon and his companions—‘do
- exist, and if I have warned one rash youth from following in their steps
- the book has not been written in vain.’ If the story has given more pain
- than pleasure to ‘any honest reader,’ the writer ‘craves his pardon, for
- such was far from my intention.’ But at the same time she cannot promise
- to limit her ambition to the giving of innocent pleasure, or to the
- production of ‘a perfect work of art.’ ‘Time and talent so spent I
- should consider wasted and misapplied.’ God has given her unpalatable
- truths to speak, and she must speak them.
- The measure of misconstruction and abuse, therefore, which her book
- brought upon her she bore, says her sister, ‘as it was her custom to bear
- whatever was unpleasant, with mild, steady patience. She was a very
- sincere and practical Christian, but the tinge of religious melancholy
- communicated a sad shade to her brief, blameless life.’
- In spite of misconstruction and abuse, however, ‘Wildfell Hall’ seems to
- have attained more immediate success than anything else written by the
- sisters before 1848, except ‘Jane Eyre.’ It went into a second edition
- within a very short time of its publication, and Messrs. Newby informed
- the American publishers with whom they were negotiating that it was the
- work of the same hand which had produced ‘Jane Eyre,’ and superior to
- either ‘Jane Eyre’ or ‘Wuthering Heights’! It was, indeed, the sharp
- practice connected with this astonishing judgment which led to the
- sisters’ hurried journey to London in 1848—the famous journey when the
- two little ladies in black revealed themselves to Mr. Smith, and proved
- to him that they were not one Currer Bell, but two Miss Brontës. It was
- Anne’s sole journey to London—her only contact with a world that was not
- Haworth, except that supplied by her school-life at Roehead and her two
- teaching engagements.
- And there was and is a considerable narrative ability, a sheer moral
- energy in ‘Wildfell Hall,’ which would not be enough, indeed, to keep it
- alive if it were not the work of a Brontë, but still betray its kinship
- and source. The scenes of Huntingdon’s wickedness are less interesting
- but less improbable than the country-house scenes of ‘Jane Eyre’; the
- story of his death has many true and touching passages; the last
- love-scene is well, even in parts admirably, written. But the book’s
- truth, so far as it is true, is scarcely the truth of imagination; it is
- rather the truth of a tract or a report. There can be little doubt that
- many of the pages are close transcripts from Branwell’s conduct and
- language,—so far as Anne’s slighter personality enabled her to render her
- brother’s temperament, which was more akin to Emily’s than to her own.
- The same material might have been used by Emily or Charlotte; Emily, as
- we know, did make use of it in ‘Wuthering Heights’; but only after it had
- passed through that ineffable transformation, that mysterious,
- incommunicable heightening which makes and gives rank in literature.
- Some subtle, innate correspondence between eye and brain, between brain
- and hand, was present in Emily and Charlotte, and absent in Anne. There
- is no other account to be given of this or any other case of difference
- between serviceable talent and the high gifts of ‘Delos’ and Patara’s own
- Apollo.’
- The same world of difference appears between her poems and those of her
- playfellow and comrade, Emily. If ever our descendants should establish
- the schools for writers which are even now threatened or attempted, they
- will hardly know perhaps any better than we what genius is, nor how it
- can be produced. But if they try to teach by example, then Anne and
- Emily Brontë are ready to their hand. Take the verses written by Emily
- at Roehead which contain the lovely lines which I have already quoted in
- an earlier ‘Introduction.’ {0} Just before those lines there are two or
- three verses which it is worth while to compare with a poem of Anne’s
- called ‘Home.’ Emily was sixteen at the time of writing; Anne about
- twenty-one or twenty-two. Both sisters take for their motive the exile’s
- longing thought of home. Emily’s lines are full of faults, but they have
- the indefinable quality—here, no doubt, only in the bud, only as a matter
- of promise—which Anne’s are entirely without. From the twilight
- schoolroom at Roehead, Emily turns in thought to the distant upland of
- Haworth and the little stone-built house upon its crest:—
- There is a spot, ’mid barren hills,
- Where winter howls, and driving rain;
- But, if the dreary tempest chills,
- There is a light that warms again.
- The house is old, the trees are bare,
- Moonless above bends twilight’s dome,
- But what on earth is half so dear—
- So longed for—as the hearth of home?
- The mute bird sitting on the stone,
- The dank moss dripping from the wall,
- The thorn-trees gaunt, the walks o’ergrown,
- I love them—how I love them all!
- Anne’s verses, written from one of the houses where she was a governess,
- express precisely the same feeling, and movement of mind. But notice the
- instinctive rightness and swiftness of Emily’s, the blurred weakness of
- Anne’s!—
- For yonder garden, fair and wide,
- With groves of evergreen,
- Long winding walks, and borders trim,
- And velvet lawns between—
- Restore to me that little spot,
- With gray walls compassed round,
- Where knotted grass neglected lies,
- And weeds usurp the ground.
- Though all around this mansion high
- Invites the foot to roam,
- And though its halls are fair within—
- Oh, give me back my Home!
- A similar parallel lies between Anne’s lines ‘Domestic Peace,’—a sad and
- true reflection of the terrible times with Branwell in 1846—and Emily’s
- ‘Wanderer from the Fold’; while in Emily’s ‘Last Lines,’ the daring
- spirit of the sister to whom the magic gift was granted separates itself
- for ever from the gentle and accustomed piety of the sister to whom it
- was denied. Yet Anne’s ‘Last Lines’—‘I hoped that with the brave and
- strong’—have sweetness and sincerity; they have gained and kept a place
- in English religious verse, and they must always appeal to those who love
- the Brontës because, in the language of Christian faith and submission,
- they record the death of Emily and the passionate affection which her
- sisters bore her.
- And so we are brought back to the point from which we started. It is not
- as the writer of ‘Wildfell Hall,’ but as the sister of Charlotte and
- Emily Brontë, that Anne Brontë escapes oblivion—as the frail ‘little
- one,’ upon whom the other two lavished a tender and protecting care, who
- was a witness of Emily’s death, and herself, within a few minutes of her
- own farewell to life, bade Charlotte ‘take courage.’
- ‘When my thoughts turn to Anne,’ said Charlotte many years earlier, ‘they
- always see her as a patient, persecuted stranger,—more lonely, less
- gifted with the power of making friends even than I am.’ Later on,
- however, this power of making friends seems to have belonged to Anne in
- greater measure than to the others. Her gentleness conquered; she was
- not set apart, as they were, by the lonely and self-sufficing activities
- of great powers; her Christianity, though sad and timid, was of a kind
- which those around her could understand; she made no grim fight with
- suffering and death as did Emily. Emily was ‘torn’ from life ‘conscious,
- panting, reluctant,’ to use Charlotte’s own words; Anne’s ‘sufferings
- were mild,’ her mind ‘generally serene,’ and at the last ‘she thanked God
- that death was come, and come so gently.’ When Charlotte returned to the
- desolate house at Haworth, Emily’s large house-dog and Anne’s little
- spaniel welcomed her in ‘a strange, heart-touching way,’ she writes to
- Mr. Williams. She alone was left, heir to all the memories and tragedies
- of the house. She took up again the task of life and labour. She cared
- for her father; she returned to the writing of ‘Shirley’; and when she
- herself passed away, four years later, she had so turned those years to
- account that not only all she did but all she loved had passed silently
- into the keeping of fame. Mrs. Gaskell’s touching and delightful task
- was ready for her, and Anne, no less than Charlotte and Emily, was sure
- of England’s remembrance.
- MARY A. WARD.
- AUTHOR’S PREFACE {1}
- TO THE SECOND EDITION
- While I acknowledge the success of the present work to have been greater
- than I anticipated, and the praises it has elicited from a few kind
- critics to have been greater than it deserved, I must also admit that
- from some other quarters it has been censured with an asperity which I
- was as little prepared to expect, and which my judgment, as well as my
- feelings, assures me is more bitter than just. It is scarcely the
- province of an author to refute the arguments of his censors and
- vindicate his own productions; but I may be allowed to make here a few
- observations with which I would have prefaced the first edition, had I
- foreseen the necessity of such precautions against the misapprehensions
- of those who would read it with a prejudiced mind or be content to judge
- it by a hasty glance.
- My object in writing the following pages was not simply to amuse the
- Reader; neither was it to gratify my own taste, nor yet to ingratiate
- myself with the Press and the Public: I wished to tell the truth, for
- truth always conveys its own moral to those who are able to receive it.
- But as the priceless treasure too frequently hides at the bottom of a
- well, it needs some courage to dive for it, especially as he that does so
- will be likely to incur more scorn and obloquy for the mud and water into
- which he has ventured to plunge, than thanks for the jewel he procures;
- as, in like manner, she who undertakes the cleansing of a careless
- bachelor’s apartment will be liable to more abuse for the dust she raises
- than commendation for the clearance she effects. Let it not be imagined,
- however, that I consider myself competent to reform the errors and abuses
- of society, but only that I would fain contribute my humble quota towards
- so good an aim; and if I can gain the public ear at all, I would rather
- whisper a few wholesome truths therein than much soft nonsense.
- As the story of ‘Agnes Grey’ was accused of extravagant over-colouring in
- those very parts that were carefully copied from the life, with a most
- scrupulous avoidance of all exaggeration, so, in the present work, I find
- myself censured for depicting _con amore_, with ‘a morbid love of the
- coarse, if not of the brutal,’ those scenes which, I will venture to say,
- have not been more painful for the most fastidious of my critics to read
- than they were for me to describe. I may have gone too far; in which
- case I shall be careful not to trouble myself or my readers in the same
- way again; but when we have to do with vice and vicious characters, I
- maintain it is better to depict them as they really are than as they
- would wish to appear. To represent a bad thing in its least offensive
- light is, doubtless, the most agreeable course for a writer of fiction to
- pursue; but is it the most honest, or the safest? Is it better to reveal
- the snares and pitfalls of life to the young and thoughtless traveller,
- or to cover them with branches and flowers? Oh, reader! if there were
- less of this delicate concealment of facts—this whispering, ‘Peace,
- peace,’ when there is no peace, there would be less of sin and misery to
- the young of both sexes who are left to wring their bitter knowledge from
- experience.
- I would not be understood to suppose that the proceedings of the unhappy
- scapegrace, with his few profligate companions I have here introduced,
- are a specimen of the common practices of society—the case is an extreme
- one, as I trusted none would fail to perceive; but I know that such
- characters do exist, and if I have warned one rash youth from following
- in their steps, or prevented one thoughtless girl from falling into the
- very natural error of my heroine, the book has not been written in vain.
- But, at the same time, if any honest reader shall have derived more pain
- than pleasure from its perusal, and have closed the last volume with a
- disagreeable impression on his mind, I humbly crave his pardon, for such
- was far from my intention; and I will endeavour to do better another
- time, for I love to give innocent pleasure. Yet, be it understood, I
- shall not limit my ambition to this—or even to producing ‘a perfect work
- of art’: time and talents so spent, I should consider wasted and
- misapplied. Such humble talents as God has given me I will endeavour to
- put to their greatest use; if I am able to amuse, I will try to benefit
- too; and when I feel it my duty to speak an unpalatable truth, with the
- help of God, I _will_ speak it, though it be to the prejudice of my name
- and to the detriment of my reader’s immediate pleasure as well as my own.
- One word more, and I have done. Respecting the author’s identity, I
- would have it to be distinctly understood that Acton Bell is neither
- Currer nor Ellis Bell, and therefore let not his faults be attributed to
- them. As to whether the name be real or fictitious, it cannot greatly
- signify to those who know him only by his works. As little, I should
- think, can it matter whether the writer so designated is a man, or a
- woman, as one or two of my critics profess to have discovered. I take
- the imputation in good part, as a compliment to the just delineation of
- my female characters; and though I am bound to attribute much of the
- severity of my censors to this suspicion, I make no effort to refute it,
- because, in my own mind, I am satisfied that if a book is a good one, it
- is so whatever the sex of the author may be. All novels are, or should
- be, written for both men and women to read, and I am at a loss to
- conceive how a man should permit himself to write anything that would be
- really disgraceful to a woman, or why a woman should be censured for
- writing anything that would be proper and becoming for a man.
- _July_ 22_nd_, 1848.
- [Picture: Facsimile of the Title-page of the First Edition]
- CHAPTER I
- You must go back with me to the autumn of 1827.
- My father, as you know, was a sort of gentleman farmer in —shire; and I,
- by his express desire, succeeded him in the same quiet occupation, not
- very willingly, for ambition urged me to higher aims, and self-conceit
- assured me that, in disregarding its voice, I was burying my talent in
- the earth, and hiding my light under a bushel. My mother had done her
- utmost to persuade me that I was capable of great achievements; but my
- father, who thought ambition was the surest road to ruin, and change but
- another word for destruction, would listen to no scheme for bettering
- either my own condition, or that of my fellow mortals. He assured me it
- was all rubbish, and exhorted me, with his dying breath, to continue in
- the good old way, to follow his steps, and those of his father before
- him, and let my highest ambition be to walk honestly through the world,
- looking neither to the right hand nor to the left, and to transmit the
- paternal acres to my children in, at least, as flourishing a condition as
- he left them to me.
- ‘Well!—an honest and industrious farmer is one of the most useful members
- of society; and if I devote my talents to the cultivation of my farm, and
- the improvement of agriculture in general, I shall thereby benefit, not
- only my own immediate connections and dependants, but, in some degree,
- mankind at large:—hence I shall not have lived in vain.’ With such
- reflections as these I was endeavouring to console myself, as I plodded
- home from the fields, one cold, damp, cloudy evening towards the close of
- October. But the gleam of a bright red fire through the parlour window
- had more effect in cheering my spirits, and rebuking my thankless
- repinings, than all the sage reflections and good resolutions I had
- forced my mind to frame;—for I was young then, remember—only
- four-and-twenty—and had not acquired half the rule over my own spirit
- that I now possess—trifling as that may be.
- However, that haven of bliss must not be entered till I had exchanged my
- miry boots for a clean pair of shoes, and my rough surtout for a
- respectable coat, and made myself generally presentable before decent
- society; for my mother, with all her kindness, was vastly particular on
- certain points.
- In ascending to my room I was met upon the stairs by a smart, pretty girl
- of nineteen, with a tidy, dumpy figure, a round face, bright, blooming
- cheeks, glossy, clustering curls, and little merry brown eyes. I need
- not tell you this was my sister Rose. She is, I know, a comely matron
- still, and, doubtless, no less lovely—in your eyes—than on the happy day
- you first beheld her. Nothing told me then that she, a few years hence,
- would be the wife of one entirely unknown to me as yet, but destined
- hereafter to become a closer friend than even herself, more intimate than
- that unmannerly lad of seventeen, by whom I was collared in the passage,
- on coming down, and well-nigh jerked off my equilibrium, and who, in
- correction for his impudence, received a resounding whack over the
- sconce, which, however, sustained no serious injury from the infliction;
- as, besides being more than commonly thick, it was protected by a
- redundant shock of short, reddish curls, that my mother called auburn.
- On entering the parlour we found that honoured lady seated in her
- arm-chair at the fireside, working away at her knitting, according to her
- usual custom, when she had nothing else to do. She had swept the hearth,
- and made a bright blazing fire for our reception; the servant had just
- brought in the tea-tray; and Rose was producing the sugar-basin and
- tea-caddy from the cupboard in the black oak side-board, that shone like
- polished ebony, in the cheerful parlour twilight.
- ‘Well! here they both are,’ cried my mother, looking round upon us
- without retarding the motion of her nimble fingers and glittering
- needles. ‘Now shut the door, and come to the fire, while Rose gets the
- tea ready; I’m sure you must be starved;—and tell me what you’ve been
- about all day;—I like to know what my children have been about.’
- ‘I’ve been breaking in the grey colt—no easy business that—directing the
- ploughing of the last wheat stubble—for the ploughboy has not the sense
- to direct himself—and carrying out a plan for the extensive and efficient
- draining of the low meadowlands.’
- ‘That’s my brave boy!—and Fergus, what have you been doing?’
- ‘Badger-baiting.’
- And here he proceeded to give a particular account of his sport, and the
- respective traits of prowess evinced by the badger and the dogs; my
- mother pretending to listen with deep attention, and watching his
- animated countenance with a degree of maternal admiration I thought
- highly disproportioned to its object.
- ‘It’s time you should be doing something else, Fergus,’ said I, as soon
- as a momentary pause in his narration allowed me to get in a word.
- ‘What can I do?’ replied he; ‘my mother won’t let me go to sea or enter
- the army; and I’m determined to do nothing else—except make myself such a
- nuisance to you all, that you will be thankful to get rid of me on any
- terms.’
- Our parent soothingly stroked his stiff, short curls. He growled, and
- tried to look sulky, and then we all took our seats at the table, in
- obedience to the thrice-repeated summons of Rose.
- ‘Now take your tea,’ said she; ‘and I’ll tell you what I’ve been doing.
- I’ve been to call on the Wilsons; and it’s a thousand pities you didn’t
- go with me, Gilbert, for Eliza Millward was there!’
- ‘Well! what of her?’
- ‘Oh, nothing!—I’m not going to tell you about her;—only that she’s a
- nice, amusing little thing, when she is in a merry humour, and I
- shouldn’t mind calling her—’
- ‘Hush, hush, my dear! your brother has no such idea!’ whispered my mother
- earnestly, holding up her finger.
- ‘Well,’ resumed Rose; ‘I was going to tell you an important piece of news
- I heard there—I have been bursting with it ever since. You know it was
- reported a month ago, that somebody was going to take Wildfell
- Hall—and—what do you think? It has actually been inhabited above a
- week!—and we never knew!’
- ‘Impossible!’ cried my mother.
- ‘Preposterous!!!’ shrieked Fergus.
- ‘It has indeed!—and by a single lady!’
- ‘Good gracious, my dear! The place is in ruins!’
- ‘She has had two or three rooms made habitable; and there she lives, all
- alone—except an old woman for a servant!’
- ‘Oh, dear! that spoils it—I’d hoped she was a witch,’ observed Fergus,
- while carving his inch-thick slice of bread and butter. ‘Nonsense,
- Fergus! But isn’t it strange, mamma?’
- ‘Strange! I can hardly believe it.’
- ‘But you may believe it; for Jane Wilson has seen her. She went with her
- mother, who, of course, when she heard of a stranger being in the
- neighbourhood, would be on pins and needles till she had seen her and got
- all she could out of her. She is called Mrs. Graham, and she is in
- mourning—not widow’s weeds, but slightish mourning—and she is quite
- young, they say,—not above five or six and twenty,—but so reserved! They
- tried all they could to find out who she was and where she came from,
- and, all about her, but neither Mrs. Wilson, with her pertinacious and
- impertinent home-thrusts, nor Miss Wilson, with her skilful manoeuvring,
- could manage to elicit a single satisfactory answer, or even a casual
- remark, or chance expression calculated to allay their curiosity, or
- throw the faintest ray of light upon her history, circumstances, or
- connections. Moreover, she was barely civil to them, and evidently
- better pleased to say ‘good-by,’ than ‘how do you do.’ But Eliza Millward
- says her father intends to call upon her soon, to offer some pastoral
- advice, which he fears she needs, as, though she is known to have entered
- the neighbourhood early last week, she did not make her appearance at
- church on Sunday; and she—Eliza, that is—will beg to accompany him, and
- is sure she can succeed in wheedling something out of her—you know,
- Gilbert, she can do anything. And we should call some time, mamma; it’s
- only proper, you know.’
- ‘Of course, my dear. Poor thing! How lonely she must feel!’
- ‘And pray, be quick about it; and mind you bring me word how much sugar
- she puts in her tea, and what sort of caps and aprons she wears, and all
- about it; for I don’t know how I can live till I know,’ said Fergus, very
- gravely.
- But if he intended the speech to be hailed as a master-stroke of wit, he
- signally failed, for nobody laughed. However, he was not much
- disconcerted at that; for when he had taken a mouthful of bread and
- butter and was about to swallow a gulp of tea, the humour of the thing
- burst upon him with such irresistible force, that he was obliged to jump
- up from the table, and rush snorting and choking from the room; and a
- minute after, was heard screaming in fearful agony in the garden.
- As for me, I was hungry, and contented myself with silently demolishing
- the tea, ham, and toast, while my mother and sister went on talking, and
- continued to discuss the apparent or non-apparent circumstances, and
- probable or improbable history of the mysterious lady; but I must confess
- that, after my brother’s misadventure, I once or twice raised the cup to
- my lips, and put it down again without daring to taste the contents, lest
- I should injure my dignity by a similar explosion.
- The next day my mother and Rose hastened to pay their compliments to the
- fair recluse; and came back but little wiser than they went; though my
- mother declared she did not regret the journey, for if she had not gained
- much good, she flattered herself she had imparted some, and that was
- better: she had given some useful advice, which, she hoped, would not be
- thrown away; for Mrs. Graham, though she said little to any purpose, and
- appeared somewhat self-opinionated, seemed not incapable of
- reflection,—though she did not know where she had been all her life, poor
- thing, for she betrayed a lamentable ignorance on certain points, and had
- not even the sense to be ashamed of it.
- ‘On what points, mother?’ asked I.
- ‘On household matters, and all the little niceties of cookery, and such
- things, that every lady ought to be familiar with, whether she be
- required to make a practical use of her knowledge or not. I gave her
- some useful pieces of information, however, and several excellent
- receipts, the value of which she evidently could not appreciate, for she
- begged I would not trouble myself, as she lived in such a plain, quiet
- way, that she was sure she should never make use of them. “No matter, my
- dear,” said I; “it is what every respectable female ought to know;—and
- besides, though you are alone now, you will not be always so; you have
- been married, and probably—I might say almost certainly—will be again.”
- “You are mistaken there, ma’am,” said she, almost haughtily; “I am
- certain I never shall.”—But I told her I knew better.’
- ‘Some romantic young widow, I suppose,’ said I, ‘come there to end her
- days in solitude, and mourn in secret for the dear departed—but it won’t
- last long.’
- ‘No, I think not,’ observed Rose; ‘for she didn’t seem very disconsolate
- after all; and she’s excessively pretty—handsome rather—you must see her,
- Gilbert; you will call her a perfect beauty, though you could hardly
- pretend to discover a resemblance between her and Eliza Millward.’
- ‘Well, I can imagine many faces more beautiful than Eliza’s, though not
- more charming. I allow she has small claims to perfection; but then, I
- maintain that, if she were more perfect, she would be less interesting.’
- ‘And so you prefer her faults to other people’s perfections?’
- ‘Just so—saving my mother’s presence.’
- ‘Oh, my dear Gilbert, what nonsense you talk!—I know you don’t mean it;
- it’s quite out of the question,’ said my mother, getting up, and bustling
- out of the room, under pretence of household business, in order to escape
- the contradiction that was trembling on my tongue.
- After that Rose favoured me with further particulars respecting Mrs.
- Graham. Her appearance, manners, and dress, and the very furniture of
- the room she inhabited, were all set before me, with rather more
- clearness and precision than I cared to see them; but, as I was not a
- very attentive listener, I could not repeat the description if I would.
- The next day was Saturday; and, on Sunday, everybody wondered whether or
- not the fair unknown would profit by the vicar’s remonstrance, and come
- to church. I confess I looked with some interest myself towards the old
- family pew, appertaining to Wildfell Hall, where the faded crimson
- cushions and lining had been unpressed and unrenewed so many years, and
- the grim escutcheons, with their lugubrious borders of rusty black cloth,
- frowned so sternly from the wall above.
- And there I beheld a tall, lady-like figure, clad in black. Her face was
- towards me, and there was something in it which, once seen, invited me to
- look again. Her hair was raven black, and disposed in long glossy
- ringlets, a style of coiffure rather unusual in those days, but always
- graceful and becoming; her complexion was clear and pale; her eyes I
- could not see, for, being bent upon her prayer-book, they were concealed
- by their drooping lids and long black lashes, but the brows above were
- expressive and well defined; the forehead was lofty and intellectual, the
- nose, a perfect aquiline and the features, in general,
- unexceptionable—only there was a slight hollowness about the cheeks and
- eyes, and the lips, though finely formed, were a little too thin, a
- little too firmly compressed, and had something about them that
- betokened, I thought, no very soft or amiable temper; and I said in my
- heart—‘I would rather admire you from this distance, fair lady, than be
- the partner of your home.’
- Just then she happened to raise her eyes, and they met mine; I did not
- choose to withdraw my gaze, and she turned again to her book, but with a
- momentary, indefinable expression of quiet scorn, that was inexpressibly
- provoking to me.
- ‘She thinks me an impudent puppy,’ thought I. ‘Humph!—she shall change
- her mind before long, if I think it worth while.’
- But then it flashed upon me that these were very improper thoughts for a
- place of worship, and that my behaviour, on the present occasion, was
- anything but what it ought to be. Previous, however, to directing my
- mind to the service, I glanced round the church to see if any one had
- been observing me;—but no,—all, who were not attending to their
- prayer-books, were attending to the strange lady,—my good mother and
- sister among the rest, and Mrs. Wilson and her daughter; and even Eliza
- Millward was slily glancing from the corners of her eyes towards the
- object of general attraction. Then she glanced at me, simpered a little,
- and blushed, modestly looked at her prayer-book, and endeavoured to
- compose her features.
- Here I was transgressing again; and this time I was made sensible of it
- by a sudden dig in the ribs, from the elbow of my pert brother. For the
- present, I could only resent the insult by pressing my foot upon his
- toes, deferring further vengeance till we got out of church.
- Now, Halford, before I close this letter, I’ll tell you who Eliza
- Millward was: she was the vicar’s younger daughter, and a very engaging
- little creature, for whom I felt no small degree of partiality;—and she
- knew it, though I had never come to any direct explanation, and had no
- definite intention of so doing, for my mother, who maintained there was
- no one good enough for me within twenty miles round, could not bear the
- thoughts of my marrying that insignificant little thing, who, in addition
- to her numerous other disqualifications, had not twenty pounds to call
- her own. Eliza’s figure was at once slight and plump, her face small,
- and nearly as round as my sister’s,—complexion, something similar to
- hers, but more delicate and less decidedly blooming,—nose,
- retroussé,—features, generally irregular; and, altogether, she was rather
- charming than pretty. But her eyes—I must not forget those remarkable
- features, for therein her chief attraction lay—in outward aspect at
- least;—they were long and narrow in shape, the irids black, or very dark
- brown, the expression various, and ever changing, but always either
- preternaturally—I had almost said diabolically—wicked, or irresistibly
- bewitching—often both. Her voice was gentle and childish, her tread
- light and soft as that of a cat:—but her manners more frequently
- resembled those of a pretty playful kitten, that is now pert and roguish,
- now timid and demure, according to its own sweet will.
- Her sister, Mary, was several years older, several inches taller, and of
- a larger, coarser build—a plain, quiet, sensible girl, who had patiently
- nursed their mother, through her last long, tedious illness, and been the
- housekeeper, and family drudge, from thence to the present time. She was
- trusted and valued by her father, loved and courted by all dogs, cats,
- children, and poor people, and slighted and neglected by everybody else.
- The Reverend Michael Millward himself was a tall, ponderous elderly
- gentleman, who placed a shovel hat above his large, square,
- massive-featured face, carried a stout walking-stick in his hand, and
- incased his still powerful limbs in knee-breeches and gaiters,—or black
- silk stockings on state occasions. He was a man of fixed principles,
- strong prejudices, and regular habits, intolerant of dissent in any
- shape, acting under a firm conviction that his opinions were always
- right, and whoever differed from them must be either most deplorably
- ignorant, or wilfully blind.
- In childhood, I had always been accustomed to regard him with a feeling
- of reverential awe—but lately, even now, surmounted, for, though he had a
- fatherly kindness for the well-behaved, he was a strict disciplinarian,
- and had often sternly reproved our juvenile failings and peccadilloes;
- and moreover, in those days, whenever he called upon our parents, we had
- to stand up before him, and say our catechism, or repeat, ‘How doth the
- little busy bee,’ or some other hymn, or—worse than all—be questioned
- about his last text, and the heads of the discourse, which we never could
- remember. Sometimes, the worthy gentleman would reprove my mother for
- being over-indulgent to her sons, with a reference to old Eli, or David
- and Absalom, which was particularly galling to her feelings; and, very
- highly as she respected him, and all his sayings, I once heard her
- exclaim, ‘I wish to goodness he had a son himself! He wouldn’t be so
- ready with his advice to other people then;—he’d see what it is to have a
- couple of boys to keep in order.’
- He had a laudable care for his own bodily health—kept very early hours,
- regularly took a walk before breakfast, was vastly particular about warm
- and dry clothing, had never been known to preach a sermon without
- previously swallowing a raw egg—albeit he was gifted with good lungs and
- a powerful voice,—and was, generally, extremely particular about what he
- ate and drank, though by no means abstemious, and having a mode of
- dietary peculiar to himself,—being a great despiser of tea and such
- slops, and a patron of malt liquors, bacon and eggs, ham, hung beef, and
- other strong meats, which agreed well enough with his digestive organs,
- and therefore were maintained by him to be good and wholesome for
- everybody, and confidently recommended to the most delicate convalescents
- or dyspeptics, who, if they failed to derive the promised benefit from
- his prescriptions, were told it was because they had not persevered, and
- if they complained of inconvenient results therefrom, were assured it was
- all fancy.
- I will just touch upon two other persons whom I have mentioned, and then
- bring this long letter to a close. These are Mrs. Wilson and her
- daughter. The former was the widow of a substantial farmer, a
- narrow-minded, tattling old gossip, whose character is not worth
- describing. She had two sons, Robert, a rough countrified farmer, and
- Richard, a retiring, studious young man, who was studying the classics
- with the vicar’s assistance, preparing for college, with a view to enter
- the church.
- Their sister Jane was a young lady of some talents, and more ambition.
- She had, at her own desire, received a regular boarding-school education,
- superior to what any member of the family had obtained before. She had
- taken the polish well, acquired considerable elegance of manners, quite
- lost her provincial accent, and could boast of more accomplishments than
- the vicar’s daughters. She was considered a beauty besides; but never
- for a moment could she number me amongst her admirers. She was about six
- and twenty, rather tall and very slender, her hair was neither chestnut
- nor auburn, but a most decided bright, light red; her complexion was
- remarkably fair and brilliant, her head small, neck long, chin well
- turned, but very short, lips thin and red, eyes clear hazel, quick, and
- penetrating, but entirely destitute of poetry or feeling. She had, or
- might have had, many suitors in her own rank of life, but scornfully
- repulsed or rejected them all; for none but a gentleman could please her
- refined taste, and none but a rich one could satisfy her soaring
- ambition. One gentleman there was, from whom she had lately received
- some rather pointed attentions, and upon whose heart, name, and fortune,
- it was whispered, she had serious designs. This was Mr. Lawrence, the
- young squire, whose family had formerly occupied Wildfell Hall, but had
- deserted it, some fifteen years ago, for a more modern and commodious
- mansion in the neighbouring parish.
- Now, Halford, I bid you adieu for the present. This is the first
- instalment of my debt. If the coin suits you, tell me so, and I’ll send
- you the rest at my leisure: if you would rather remain my creditor than
- stuff your purse with such ungainly, heavy pieces,—tell me still, and
- I’ll pardon your bad taste, and willingly keep the treasure to myself.
- Yours immutably,
- GILBERT MARKHAM.
- CHAPTER II
- I perceive, with joy, my most valued friend, that the cloud of your
- displeasure has passed away; the light of your countenance blesses me
- once more, and you desire the continuation of my story: therefore,
- without more ado, you shall have it.
- I think the day I last mentioned was a certain Sunday, the latest in the
- October of 1827. On the following Tuesday I was out with my dog and gun,
- in pursuit of such game as I could find within the territory of
- Linden-Car; but finding none at all, I turned my arms against the hawks
- and carrion crows, whose depredations, as I suspected, had deprived me of
- better prey. To this end I left the more frequented regions, the wooded
- valleys, the corn-fields, and the meadow-lands, and proceeded to mount
- the steep acclivity of Wildfell, the wildest and the loftiest eminence in
- our neighbourhood, where, as you ascend, the hedges, as well as the
- trees, become scanty and stunted, the former, at length, giving place to
- rough stone fences, partly greened over with ivy and moss, the latter to
- larches and Scotch fir-trees, or isolated blackthorns. The fields, being
- rough and stony, and wholly unfit for the plough, were mostly devoted to
- the pasturing of sheep and cattle; the soil was thin and poor: bits of
- grey rock here and there peeped out from the grassy hillocks;
- bilberry-plants and heather—relics of more savage wildness—grew under the
- walls; and in many of the enclosures, ragweeds and rushes usurped
- supremacy over the scanty herbage; but these were not my property.
- Near the top of this hill, about two miles from Linden-Car, stood
- Wildfell Hall, a superannuated mansion of the Elizabethan era, built of
- dark grey stone, venerable and picturesque to look at, but doubtless,
- cold and gloomy enough to inhabit, with its thick stone mullions and
- little latticed panes, its time-eaten air-holes, and its too lonely, too
- unsheltered situation,—only shielded from the war of wind and weather by
- a group of Scotch firs, themselves half blighted with storms, and looking
- as stern and gloomy as the Hall itself. Behind it lay a few desolate
- fields, and then the brown heath-clad summit of the hill; before it
- (enclosed by stone walls, and entered by an iron gate, with large balls
- of grey granite—similar to those which decorated the roof and
- gables—surmounting the gate-posts) was a garden,—once stocked with such
- hard plants and flowers as could best brook the soil and climate, and
- such trees and shrubs as could best endure the gardener’s torturing
- shears, and most readily assume the shapes he chose to give them,—now,
- having been left so many years untilled and untrimmed, abandoned to the
- weeds and the grass, to the frost and the wind, the rain and the drought,
- it presented a very singular appearance indeed. The close green walls of
- privet, that had bordered the principal walk, were two-thirds withered
- away, and the rest grown beyond all reasonable bounds; the old boxwood
- swan, that sat beside the scraper, had lost its neck and half its body:
- the castellated towers of laurel in the middle of the garden, the
- gigantic warrior that stood on one side of the gateway, and the lion that
- guarded the other, were sprouted into such fantastic shapes as resembled
- nothing either in heaven or earth, or in the waters under the earth; but,
- to my young imagination, they presented all of them a goblinish
- appearance, that harmonised well with the ghostly legions and dark
- traditions our old nurse had told us respecting the haunted hall and its
- departed occupants.
- [Picture: Moorland Scene, Haworth]
- I had succeeded in killing a hawk and two crows when I came within sight
- of the mansion; and then, relinquishing further depredations, I sauntered
- on, to have a look at the old place, and see what changes had been
- wrought in it by its new inhabitant. I did not like to go quite to the
- front and stare in at the gate; but I paused beside the garden wall, and
- looked, and saw no change—except in one wing, where the broken windows
- and dilapidated roof had evidently been repaired, and where a thin wreath
- of smoke was curling up from the stack of chimneys.
- While I thus stood, leaning on my gun, and looking up at the dark gables,
- sunk in an idle reverie, weaving a tissue of wayward fancies, in which
- old associations and the fair young hermit, now within those walls, bore
- a nearly equal part, I heard a slight rustling and scrambling just within
- the garden; and, glancing in the direction whence the sound proceeded, I
- beheld a tiny hand elevated above the wall: it clung to the topmost
- stone, and then another little hand was raised to take a firmer hold, and
- then appeared a small white forehead, surmounted with wreaths of light
- brown hair, with a pair of deep blue eyes beneath, and the upper portion
- of a diminutive ivory nose.
- The eyes did not notice me, but sparkled with glee on beholding Sancho,
- my beautiful black and white setter, that was coursing about the field
- with its muzzle to the ground. The little creature raised its face and
- called aloud to the dog. The good-natured animal paused, looked up, and
- wagged his tail, but made no further advances. The child (a little boy,
- apparently about five years old) scrambled up to the top of the wall, and
- called again and again; but finding this of no avail, apparently made up
- his mind, like Mahomet, to go to the mountain, since the mountain would
- not come to him, and attempted to get over; but a crabbed old
- cherry-tree, that grew hard by, caught him by the frock in one of its
- crooked scraggy arms that stretched over the wall. In attempting to
- disengage himself his foot slipped, and down he tumbled—but not to the
- earth;—the tree still kept him suspended. There was a silent struggle,
- and then a piercing shriek;—but, in an instant, I had dropped my gun on
- the grass, and caught the little fellow in my arms.
- I wiped his eyes with his frock, told him he was all right and called
- Sancho to pacify him. He was just putting little hand on the dog’s neck
- and beginning to smile through his tears, when I heard behind me a click
- of the iron gate, and a rustle of female garments, and lo! Mrs. Graham
- darted upon me—her neck uncovered, her black locks streaming in the wind.
- ‘Give me the child!’ she said, in a voice scarce louder than a whisper,
- but with a tone of startling vehemence, and, seizing the boy, she
- snatched him from me, as if some dire contamination were in my touch, and
- then stood with one hand firmly clasping his, the other on his shoulder,
- fixing upon me her large, luminous dark eyes—pale, breathless, quivering
- with agitation.
- ‘I was not harming the child, madam,’ said I, scarce knowing whether to
- be most astonished or displeased; ‘he was tumbling off the wall there;
- and I was so fortunate as to catch him, while he hung suspended headlong
- from that tree, and prevent I know not what catastrophe.’
- ‘I beg your pardon, sir,’ stammered she;—suddenly calming down,—the light
- of reason seeming to break upon her beclouded spirit, and a faint blush
- mantling on her cheek—‘I did not know you;—and I thought—’
- She stooped to kiss the child, and fondly clasped her arm round his neck.
- ‘You thought I was going to kidnap your son, I suppose?’
- She stroked his head with a half-embarrassed laugh, and replied,—‘I did
- not know he had attempted to climb the wall.—I have the pleasure of
- addressing Mr. Markham, I believe?’ she added, somewhat abruptly.
- I bowed, but ventured to ask how she knew me.
- ‘Your sister called here, a few days ago, with Mrs. Markham.’
- ‘Is the resemblance so strong then?’ I asked, in some surprise, and not
- so greatly flattered at the idea as I ought to have been.
- ‘There is a likeness about the eyes and complexion I think,’ replied she,
- somewhat dubiously surveying my face;—‘and I think I saw you at church on
- Sunday.’
- I smiled.—There was something either in that smile or the recollections
- it awakened that was particularly displeasing to her, for she suddenly
- assumed again that proud, chilly look that had so unspeakably roused my
- aversion at church—a look of repellent scorn, so easily assumed, and so
- entirely without the least distortion of a single feature, that, while
- there, it seemed like the natural expression of the face, and was the
- more provoking to me, because I could not think it affected.
- ‘Good-morning, Mr. Markham,’ said she; and without another word or
- glance, she withdrew, with her child, into the garden; and I returned
- home, angry and dissatisfied—I could scarcely tell you why, and therefore
- will not attempt it.
- I only stayed to put away my gun and powder-horn, and give some requisite
- directions to one of the farming-men, and then repaired to the vicarage,
- to solace my spirit and soothe my ruffled temper with the company and
- conversation of Eliza Millward.
- I found her, as usual, busy with some piece of soft embroidery (the mania
- for Berlin wools had not yet commenced), while her sister was seated at
- the chimney-corner, with the cat on her knee, mending a heap of
- stockings.
- ‘Mary—Mary! put them away!’ Eliza was hastily saying, just as I entered
- the room.
- ‘Not I, indeed!’ was the phlegmatic reply; and my appearance prevented
- further discussion.
- ‘You’re so unfortunate, Mr. Markham!’ observed the younger sister, with
- one of her arch, sidelong glances. ‘Papa’s just gone out into the
- parish, and not likely to be back for an hour!’
- ‘Never mind; I can manage to spend a few minutes with his daughters, if
- they’ll allow me,’ said I, bringing a chair to the fire, and seating
- myself therein, without waiting to be asked.
- ‘Well, if you’ll be very good and amusing, we shall not object.’
- ‘Let your permission be unconditional, pray; for I came not to give
- pleasure, but to seek it,’ I answered.
- However, I thought it but reasonable to make some slight exertion to
- render my company agreeable; and what little effort I made, was
- apparently pretty successful, for Miss Eliza was never in a better
- humour. We seemed, indeed, to be mutually pleased with each other, and
- managed to maintain between us a cheerful and animated though not very
- profound conversation. It was little better than a _tête-à-tête_, for
- Miss Millward never opened her lips, except occasionally to correct some
- random assertion or exaggerated expression of her sister’s, and once to
- ask her to pick up the ball of cotton that had rolled under the table. I
- did this myself, however, as in duty bound.
- ‘Thank you, Mr. Markham,’ said she, as I presented it to her. ‘I would
- have picked it up myself; only I did not want to disturb the cat.’
- ‘Mary, dear, that won’t excuse you in Mr. Markham’s eyes,’ said Eliza;
- ‘he hates cats, I daresay, as cordially as he does old maids—like all
- other gentlemen. Don’t you, Mr. Markham?’
- ‘I believe it is natural for our unamiable sex to dislike the creatures,’
- replied I; ‘for you ladies lavish so many caresses upon them.’
- ‘Bless them—little darlings!’ cried she, in a sudden burst of enthusiasm,
- turning round and overwhelming her sister’s pet with a shower of kisses.
- ‘Don’t, Eliza!’ said Miss Millward, somewhat gruffly, as she impatiently
- pushed her away.
- But it was time for me to be going: make what haste I would, I should
- still be too late for tea; and my mother was the soul of order and
- punctuality.
- My fair friend was evidently unwilling to bid me adieu. I tenderly
- squeezed her little hand at parting; and she repaid me with one of her
- softest smiles and most bewitching glances. I went home very happy, with
- a heart brimful of complacency for myself, and overflowing with love for
- Eliza.
- CHAPTER III
- Two days after, Mrs. Graham called at Linden-Car, contrary to the
- expectation of Rose, who entertained an idea that the mysterious occupant
- of Wildfell Hall would wholly disregard the common observances of
- civilized life,—in which opinion she was supported by the Wilsons, who
- testified that neither their call nor the Millwards’ had been returned as
- yet. Now, however, the cause of that omission was explained, though not
- entirely to the satisfaction of Rose. Mrs. Graham had brought her child
- with her, and on my mother’s expressing surprise that he could walk so
- far, she replied,—‘It is a long walk for him; but I must have either
- taken him with me, or relinquished the visit altogether; for I never
- leave him alone; and I think, Mrs. Markham, I must beg you to make my
- excuses to the Millwards and Mrs. Wilson, when you see them, as I fear I
- cannot do myself the pleasure of calling upon them till my little Arthur
- is able to accompany me.’
- ‘But you have a servant,’ said Rose; ‘could you not leave him with her?’
- ‘She has her own occupations to attend to; and besides, she is too old to
- run after a child, and he is too mercurial to be tied to an elderly
- woman.’
- ‘But you left him to come to church.’
- ‘Yes, once; but I would not have left him for any other purpose; and I
- think, in future, I must contrive to bring him with me, or stay at home.’
- ‘Is he so mischievous?’ asked my mother, considerably shocked.
- ‘No,’ replied the lady, sadly smiling, as she stroked the wavy locks of
- her son, who was seated on a low stool at her feet; ‘but he is my only
- treasure, and I am his only friend: so we don’t like to be separated.’
- ‘But, my dear, I call that doting,’ said my plain-spoken parent. ‘You
- should try to suppress such foolish fondness, as well to save your son
- from ruin as yourself from ridicule.’
- ‘Ruin! Mrs. Markham!’
- ‘Yes; it is spoiling the child. Even at his age, he ought not to be
- always tied to his mother’s apron-string; he should learn to be ashamed
- of it.’
- ‘Mrs. Markham, I beg you will not say such things, in his presence, at
- least. I trust my son will never be ashamed to love his mother!’ said
- Mrs. Graham, with a serious energy that startled the company.
- My mother attempted to appease her by an explanation; but she seemed to
- think enough had been said on the subject, and abruptly turned the
- conversation.
- ‘Just as I thought,’ said I to myself: ‘the lady’s temper is none of the
- mildest, notwithstanding her sweet, pale face and lofty brow, where
- thought and suffering seem equally to have stamped their impress.’
- All this time I was seated at a table on the other side of the room,
- apparently immersed in the perusal of a volume of the _Farmer’s
- Magazine_, which I happened to have been reading at the moment of our
- visitor’s arrival; and, not choosing to be over civil, I had merely bowed
- as she entered, and continued my occupation as before.
- In a little while, however, I was sensible that some one was approaching
- me, with a light, but slow and hesitating tread. It was little Arthur,
- irresistibly attracted by my dog Sancho, that was lying at my feet. On
- looking up I beheld him standing about two yards off, with his clear blue
- eyes wistfully gazing on the dog, transfixed to the spot, not by fear of
- the animal, but by a timid disinclination to approach its master. A
- little encouragement, however, induced him to come forward. The child,
- though shy, was not sullen. In a minute he was kneeling on the carpet,
- with his arms round Sancho’s neck, and, in a minute or two more, the
- little fellow was seated on my knee, surveying with eager interest the
- various specimens of horses, cattle, pigs, and model farms portrayed in
- the volume before me. I glanced at his mother now and then to see how
- she relished the new-sprung intimacy; and I saw, by the unquiet aspect of
- her eye, that for some reason or other she was uneasy at the child’s
- position.
- ‘Arthur,’ said she, at length, ‘come here. You are troublesome to Mr.
- Markham: he wishes to read.’
- ‘By no means, Mrs. Graham; pray let him stay. I am as much amused as he
- is,’ pleaded I. But still, with hand and eye, she silently called him to
- her side.
- ‘No, mamma,’ said the child; ‘let me look at these pictures first; and
- then I’ll come, and tell you all about them.’
- ‘We are going to have a small party on Monday, the fifth of November,’
- said my mother; ‘and I hope you will not refuse to make one, Mrs. Graham.
- You can bring your little boy with you, you know—I daresay we shall be
- able to amuse him;—and then you can make your own apologies to the
- Millwards and Wilsons—they will all be here, I expect.’
- ‘Thank you, I never go to parties.’
- ‘Oh! but this will be quite a family concern—early hours, and nobody here
- but ourselves, and just the Millwards and Wilsons, most of whom you
- already know, and Mr. Lawrence, your landlord, with whom you ought to
- make acquaintance.’
- ‘I do know something of him—but you must excuse me this time; for the
- evenings, now, are dark and damp, and Arthur, I fear, is too delicate to
- risk exposure to their influence with impunity. We must defer the
- enjoyment of your hospitality till the return of longer days and warmer
- nights.’
- Rose, now, at a hint from my mother, produced a decanter of wine, with
- accompaniments of glasses and cake, from the cupboard and the oak
- sideboard, and the refreshment was duly presented to the guests. They
- both partook of the cake, but obstinately refused the wine, in spite of
- their hostess’s hospitable attempts to force it upon them. Arthur,
- especially shrank from the ruby nectar as if in terror and disgust, and
- was ready to cry when urged to take it.
- ‘Never mind, Arthur,’ said his mamma; ‘Mrs. Markham thinks it will do you
- good, as you were tired with your walk; but she will not oblige you to
- take it!—I daresay you will do very well without. He detests the very
- sight of wine,’ she added, ‘and the smell of it almost makes him sick. I
- have been accustomed to make him swallow a little wine or weak
- spirits-and-water, by way of medicine, when he was sick, and, in fact, I
- have done what I could to make him hate them.’
- Everybody laughed, except the young widow and her son.
- ‘Well, Mrs. Graham,’ said my mother, wiping the tears of merriment from
- her bright blue eyes—‘well, you surprise me! I really gave you credit
- for having more sense.—The poor child will be the veriest milksop that
- ever was sopped! Only think what a man you will make of him, if you
- persist in—’
- ‘I think it a very excellent plan,’ interrupted Mrs. Graham, with
- imperturbable gravity. ‘By that means I hope to save him from one
- degrading vice at least. I wish I could render the incentives to every
- other equally innoxious in his case.’
- ‘But by such means,’ said I, ‘you will never render him virtuous.—What is
- it that constitutes virtue, Mrs. Graham? Is it the circumstance of being
- able and willing to resist temptation; or that of having no temptations
- to resist?—Is he a strong man that overcomes great obstacles and performs
- surprising achievements, though by dint of great muscular exertion, and
- at the risk of some subsequent fatigue, or he that sits in his chair all
- day, with nothing to do more laborious than stirring the fire, and
- carrying his food to his mouth? If you would have your son to walk
- honourably through the world, you must not attempt to clear the stones
- from his path, but teach him to walk firmly over them—not insist upon
- leading him by the hand, but let him learn to go alone.’
- ‘I will lead him by the hand, Mr. Markham, till he has strength to go
- alone; and I will clear as many stones from his path as I can, and teach
- him to avoid the rest—or walk firmly over them, as you say;—for when I
- have done my utmost, in the way of clearance, there will still be plenty
- left to exercise all the agility, steadiness, and circumspection he will
- ever have.—It is all very well to talk about noble resistance, and trials
- of virtue; but for fifty—or five hundred men that have yielded to
- temptation, show me one that has had virtue to resist. And why should I
- take it for granted that my son will be one in a thousand?—and not rather
- prepare for the worst, and suppose he will be like his—like the rest of
- mankind, unless I take care to prevent it?’
- ‘You are very complimentary to us all,’ I observed.
- ‘I know nothing about you—I speak of those I do know—and when I see the
- whole race of mankind (with a few rare exceptions) stumbling and
- blundering along the path of life, sinking into every pitfall, and
- breaking their shins over every impediment that lies in their way, shall
- I not use all the means in my power to insure for him a smoother and a
- safer passage?’
- ‘Yes, but the surest means will be to endeavour to fortify him against
- temptation, not to remove it out of his way.’
- ‘I will do both, Mr. Markham. God knows he will have temptations enough
- to assail him, both from within and without, when I have done all I can
- to render vice as uninviting to him, as it is abominable in its own
- nature—I myself have had, indeed, but few incentives to what the world
- calls vice, but yet I have experienced temptations and trials of another
- kind, that have required, on many occasions, more watchfulness and
- firmness to resist than I have hitherto been able to muster against them.
- And this, I believe, is what most others would acknowledge who are
- accustomed to reflection, and wishful to strive against their natural
- corruptions.’
- ‘Yes,’ said my mother, but half apprehending her drift; ‘but you would
- not judge of a boy by yourself—and, my dear Mrs. Graham, let me warn you
- in good time against the error—the fatal error, I may call it—of taking
- that boy’s education upon yourself. Because you are clever in some
- things and well informed, you may fancy yourself equal to the task; but
- indeed you are not; and if you persist in the attempt, believe me you
- will bitterly repent it when the mischief is done.’
- ‘I am to send him to school, I suppose, to learn to despise his mother’s
- authority and affection!’ said the lady, with rather a bitter smile.
- ‘Oh, no!—But if you would have a boy to despise his mother, let her keep
- him at home, and spend her life in petting him up, and slaving to indulge
- his follies and caprices.’
- ‘I perfectly agree with you, Mrs. Markham; but nothing can be further
- from my principles and practice than such criminal weakness as that.’
- ‘Well, but you will treat him like a girl—you’ll spoil his spirit, and
- make a mere Miss Nancy of him—you will, indeed, Mrs. Graham, whatever you
- may think. But I’ll get Mr. Millward to talk to you about it:—he’ll tell
- you the consequences;—he’ll set it before you as plain as the day;—and
- tell you what you ought to do, and all about it;—and, I don’t doubt,
- he’ll be able to convince you in a minute.’
- ‘No occasion to trouble the vicar,’ said Mrs. Graham, glancing at me—I
- suppose I was smiling at my mother’s unbounded confidence in that worthy
- gentleman—‘Mr. Markham here thinks his powers of conviction at least
- equal to Mr. Millward’s. If I hear not him, neither should I be
- convinced though one rose from the dead, he would tell you. Well, Mr.
- Markham, you that maintain that a boy should not be shielded from evil,
- but sent out to battle against it, alone and unassisted—not taught to
- avoid the snares of life, but boldly to rush into them, or over them, as
- he may—to seek danger, rather than shun it, and feed his virtue by
- temptation,—would you—?’
- ‘I beg your pardon, Mrs. Graham—but you get on too fast. I have not yet
- said that a boy should be taught to rush into the snares of life,—or even
- wilfully to seek temptation for the sake of exercising his virtue by
- overcoming it;—I only say that it is better to arm and strengthen your
- hero, than to disarm and enfeeble the foe;—and if you were to rear an oak
- sapling in a hothouse, tending it carefully night and day, and shielding
- it from every breath of wind, you could not expect it to become a hardy
- tree, like that which has grown up on the mountain-side, exposed to all
- the action of the elements, and not even sheltered from the shock of the
- tempest.’
- ‘Granted;—but would you use the same argument with regard to a girl?’
- ‘Certainly not.’
- ‘No; you would have her to be tenderly and delicately nurtured, like a
- hot-house plant—taught to cling to others for direction and support, and
- guarded, as much as possible, from the very knowledge of evil. But will
- you be so good as to inform me why you make this distinction? Is it that
- you think she has no virtue?’
- ‘Assuredly not.’
- ‘Well, but you affirm that virtue is only elicited by temptation;—and you
- think that a woman cannot be too little exposed to temptation, or too
- little acquainted with vice, or anything connected therewith. It must be
- either that you think she is essentially so vicious, or so feeble-minded,
- that she cannot withstand temptation,—and though she may be pure and
- innocent as long as she is kept in ignorance and restraint, yet, being
- destitute of real virtue, to teach her how to sin is at once to make her
- a sinner, and the greater her knowledge, the wider her liberty, the
- deeper will be her depravity,—whereas, in the nobler sex, there is a
- natural tendency to goodness, guarded by a superior fortitude, which, the
- more it is exercised by trials and dangers, is only the further
- developed—’
- ‘Heaven forbid that I should think so!’ I interrupted her at last.
- ‘Well, then, it must be that you think they are both weak and prone to
- err, and the slightest error, the merest shadow of pollution, will ruin
- the one, while the character of the other will be strengthened and
- embellished—his education properly finished by a little practical
- acquaintance with forbidden things. Such experience, to him (to use a
- trite simile), will be like the storm to the oak, which, though it may
- scatter the leaves, and snap the smaller branches, serves but to rivet
- the roots, and to harden and condense the fibres of the tree. You would
- have us encourage our sons to prove all things by their own experience,
- while our daughters must not even profit by the experience of others.
- Now I would have both so to benefit by the experience of others, and the
- precepts of a higher authority, that they should know beforehand to
- refuse the evil and choose the good, and require no experimental proofs
- to teach them the evil of transgression. I would not send a poor girl
- into the world, unarmed against her foes, and ignorant of the snares that
- beset her path; nor would I watch and guard her, till, deprived of
- self-respect and self-reliance, she lost the power or the will to watch
- and guard herself;—and as for my son—if I thought he would grow up to be
- what you call a man of the world—one that has “seen life,” and glories in
- his experience, even though he should so far profit by it as to sober
- down, at length, into a useful and respected member of society—I would
- rather that he died to-morrow!—rather a thousand times!’ she earnestly
- repeated, pressing her darling to her side and kissing his forehead with
- intense affection. He had already left his new companion, and been
- standing for some time beside his mother’s knee, looking up into her
- face, and listening in silent wonder to her incomprehensible discourse.
- ‘Well! you ladies must always have the last word, I suppose,’ said I,
- observing her rise, and begin to take leave of my mother.
- ‘You may have as many words as you please,—only I can’t stay to hear
- them.’
- ‘No; that is the way: you hear just as much of an argument as you please;
- and the rest may be spoken to the wind.’
- ‘If you are anxious to say anything more on the subject,’ replied she, as
- she shook hands with Rose, ‘you must bring your sister to see me some
- fine day, and I’ll listen, as patiently as you could wish, to whatever
- you please to say. I would rather be lectured by you than the vicar,
- because I should have less remorse in telling you, at the end of the
- discourse, that I preserve my own opinion precisely the same as at the
- beginning—as would be the case, I am persuaded, with regard to either
- logician.’
- ‘Yes, of course,’ replied I, determined to be as provoking as herself;
- ‘for when a lady does consent to listen to an argument against her own
- opinions, she is always predetermined to withstand it—to listen only with
- her bodily ears, keeping the mental organs resolutely closed against the
- strongest reasoning.’
- ‘Good-morning, Mr. Markham,’ said my fair antagonist, with a pitying
- smile; and deigning no further rejoinder, she slightly bowed, and was
- about to withdraw; but her son, with childish impertinence, arrested her
- by exclaiming,—‘Mamma, you have not shaken hands with Mr. Markham!’
- She laughingly turned round and held out her hand. I gave it a spiteful
- squeeze, for I was annoyed at the continual injustice she had done me
- from the very dawn of our acquaintance. Without knowing anything about
- my real disposition and principles, she was evidently prejudiced against
- me, and seemed bent upon showing me that her opinions respecting me, on
- every particular, fell far below those I entertained of myself. I was
- naturally touchy, or it would not have vexed me so much. Perhaps, too, I
- was a little bit spoiled by my mother and sister, and some other ladies
- of my acquaintance;—and yet I was by no means a fop—of that I am fully
- convinced, whether you are or not.
- CHAPTER IV
- Our party, on the 5th of November, passed off very well, in spite of Mrs.
- Graham’s refusal to grace it with her presence. Indeed, it is probable
- that, had she been there, there would have been less cordiality, freedom,
- and frolic amongst us than there was without her.
- My mother, as usual, was cheerful and chatty, full of activity and
- good-nature, and only faulty in being too anxious to make her guests
- happy, thereby forcing several of them to do what their soul abhorred in
- the way of eating or drinking, sitting opposite the blazing fire, or
- talking when they would be silent. Nevertheless, they bore it very well,
- being all in their holiday humours.
- Mr. Millward was mighty in important dogmas and sententious jokes,
- pompous anecdotes and oracular discourses, dealt out for the edification
- of the whole assembly in general, and of the admiring Mrs. Markham, the
- polite Mr. Lawrence, the sedate Mary Millward, the quiet Richard Wilson,
- and the matter-of-fact Robert in particular,—as being the most attentive
- listeners.
- Mrs. Wilson was more brilliant than ever, with her budgets of fresh news
- and old scandal, strung together with trivial questions and remarks, and
- oft-repeated observations, uttered apparently for the sole purpose of
- denying a moment’s rest to her inexhaustible organs of speech. She had
- brought her knitting with her, and it seemed as if her tongue had laid a
- wager with her fingers, to outdo them in swift and ceaseless motion.
- Her daughter Jane was, of course, as graceful and elegant, as witty and
- seductive, as she could possibly manage to be; for here were all the
- ladies to outshine, and all the gentlemen to charm,—and Mr. Lawrence,
- especially, to capture and subdue. Her little arts to effect his
- subjugation were too subtle and impalpable to attract my observation; but
- I thought there was a certain refined affectation of superiority, and an
- ungenial self-consciousness about her, that negatived all her advantages;
- and after she was gone, Rose interpreted to me her various looks, words,
- and actions with a mingled acuteness and asperity that made me wonder,
- equally, at the lady’s artifice and my sister’s penetration, and ask
- myself if she too had an eye to the squire—but never mind, Halford; she
- had not.
- Richard Wilson, Jane’s younger brother, sat in a corner, apparently
- good-tempered, but silent and shy, desirous to escape observation, but
- willing enough to listen and observe: and, although somewhat out of his
- element, he would have been happy enough in his own quiet way, if my
- mother could only have let him alone; but in her mistaken kindness, she
- would keep persecuting him with her attentions—pressing upon him all
- manner of viands, under the notion that he was too bashful to help
- himself, and obliging him to shout across the room his monosyllabic
- replies to the numerous questions and observations by which she vainly
- attempted to draw him into conversation.
- Rose informed me that he never would have favoured us with his company
- but for the importunities of his sister Jane, who was most anxious to
- show Mr. Lawrence that she had at least one brother more gentlemanly and
- refined than Robert. That worthy individual she had been equally
- solicitous to keep away; but he affirmed that he saw no reason why he
- should not enjoy a crack with Markham and the old lady (my mother was not
- old, really), and bonny Miss Rose and the parson, as well as the
- best;—and he was in the right of it too. So he talked common-place with
- my mother and Rose, and discussed parish affairs with the vicar, farming
- matters with me, and politics with us both.
- Mary Millward was another mute,—not so much tormented with cruel kindness
- as Dick Wilson, because she had a certain short, decided way of answering
- and refusing, and was supposed to be rather sullen than diffident.
- However that might be, she certainly did not give much pleasure to the
- company;—nor did she appear to derive much from it. Eliza told me she
- had only come because her father insisted upon it, having taken it into
- his head that she devoted herself too exclusively to her household
- duties, to the neglect of such relaxations and innocent enjoyments as
- were proper to her age and sex. She seemed to me to be good-humoured
- enough on the whole. Once or twice she was provoked to laughter by the
- wit or the merriment of some favoured individual amongst us; and then I
- observed she sought the eye of Richard Wilson, who sat over against her.
- As he studied with her father, she had some acquaintance with him, in
- spite of the retiring habits of both, and I suppose there was a kind of
- fellow-feeling established between them.
- My Eliza was charming beyond description, coquettish without affectation,
- and evidently more desirous to engage my attention than that of all the
- room besides. Her delight in having me near her, seated or standing by
- her side, whispering in her ear, or pressing her hand in the dance, was
- plainly legible in her glowing face and heaving bosom, however belied by
- saucy words and gestures. But I had better hold my tongue: if I boast of
- these things now, I shall have to blush hereafter.
- To proceed, then, with the various individuals of our party; Rose was
- simple and natural as usual, and full of mirth and vivacity.
- Fergus was impertinent and absurd; but his impertinence and folly served
- to make others laugh, if they did not raise himself in their estimation.
- And finally (for I omit myself), Mr. Lawrence was gentlemanly and
- inoffensive to all, and polite to the vicar and the ladies, especially
- his hostess and her daughter, and Miss Wilson—misguided man; he had not
- the taste to prefer Eliza Millward. Mr. Lawrence and I were on tolerably
- intimate terms. Essentially of reserved habits, and but seldom quitting
- the secluded place of his birth, where he had lived in solitary state
- since the death of his father, he had neither the opportunity nor the
- inclination for forming many acquaintances; and, of all he had ever
- known, I (judging by the results) was the companion most agreeable to his
- taste. I liked the man well enough, but he was too cold, and shy, and
- self-contained, to obtain my cordial sympathies. A spirit of candour and
- frankness, when wholly unaccompanied with coarseness, he admired in
- others, but he could not acquire it himself. His excessive reserve upon
- all his own concerns was, indeed, provoking and chilly enough; but I
- forgave it, from a conviction that it originated less in pride and want
- of confidence in his friends, than in a certain morbid feeling of
- delicacy, and a peculiar diffidence, that he was sensible of, but wanted
- energy to overcome. His heart was like a sensitive plant, that opens for
- a moment in the sunshine, but curls up and shrinks into itself at the
- slightest touch of the finger, or the lightest breath of wind. And, upon
- the whole, our intimacy was rather a mutual predilection than a deep and
- solid friendship, such as has since arisen between myself and you,
- Halford, whom, in spite of your occasional crustiness, I can liken to
- nothing so well as an old coat, unimpeachable in texture, but easy and
- loose—that has conformed itself to the shape of the wearer, and which he
- may use as he pleases, without being bothered with the fear of spoiling
- it;—whereas Mr. Lawrence was like a new garment, all very neat and trim
- to look at, but so tight in the elbows, that you would fear to split the
- seams by the unrestricted motion of your arms, and so smooth and fine in
- surface that you scruple to expose it to a single drop of rain.
- Soon after the arrival of the guests, my mother mentioned Mrs. Graham,
- regretted she was not there to meet them, and explained to the Millwards
- and Wilsons the reasons she had given for neglecting to return their
- calls, hoping they would excuse her, as she was sure she did not mean to
- be uncivil, and would be glad to see them at any time.—‘But she is a very
- singular lady, Mr. Lawrence,’ added she; ‘we don’t know what to make of
- her—but I daresay you can tell us something about her, for she is your
- tenant, you know,—and she said she knew you a little.’
- All eyes were turned to Mr. Lawrence. I thought he looked unnecessarily
- confused at being so appealed to.
- ‘I, Mrs. Markham!’ said he; ‘you are mistaken—I don’t—that is—I have seen
- her, certainly; but I am the last person you should apply to for
- information respecting Mrs. Graham.’
- He then immediately turned to Rose, and asked her to favour the company
- with a song, or a tune on the piano.
- ‘No,’ said she, ‘you must ask Miss Wilson: she outshines us all in
- singing, and music too.’
- Miss Wilson demurred.
- ‘She’ll sing readily enough,’ said Fergus, ‘if you’ll undertake to stand
- by her, Mr. Lawrence, and turn over the leaves for her.’
- ‘I shall be most happy to do so, Miss Wilson; will you allow me?’
- She bridled her long neck and smiled, and suffered him to lead her to the
- instrument, where she played and sang, in her very best style, one piece
- after another; while he stood patiently by, leaning one hand on the back
- of her chair, and turning over the leaves of her book with the other.
- Perhaps he was as much charmed with her performance as she was. It was
- all very fine in its way; but I cannot say that it moved me very deeply.
- There was plenty of skill and execution, but precious little feeling.
- But we had not done with Mrs. Graham yet.
- ‘I don’t take wine, Mrs. Markham,’ said Mr. Millward, upon the
- introduction of that beverage; ‘I’ll take a little of your home-brewed
- ale. I always prefer your home-brewed to anything else.’
- Flattered at this compliment, my mother rang the bell, and a china jug of
- our best ale was presently brought and set before the worthy gentleman
- who so well knew how to appreciate its excellences.
- ‘Now THIS is the thing!’ cried he, pouring out a glass of the same in a
- long stream, skilfully directed from the jug to the tumbler, so as to
- produce much foam without spilling a drop; and, having surveyed it for a
- moment opposite the candle, he took a deep draught, and then smacked his
- lips, drew a long breath, and refilled his glass, my mother looking on
- with the greatest satisfaction.
- ‘There’s nothing like this, Mrs. Markham!’ said he. ‘I always maintain
- that there’s nothing to compare with your home-brewed ale.’
- ‘I’m sure I’m glad you like it, sir. I always look after the brewing
- myself, as well as the cheese and the butter—I like to have things well
- done, while we’re about it.’
- ‘Quite right, Mrs. Markham!’
- ‘But then, Mr. Millward, you don’t think it wrong to take a little wine
- now and then—or a little spirits either!’ said my mother, as she handed a
- smoking tumbler of gin-and-water to Mrs. Wilson, who affirmed that wine
- sat heavy on her stomach, and whose son Robert was at that moment helping
- himself to a pretty stiff glass of the same.
- ‘By no means!’ replied the oracle, with a Jove-like nod; ‘these things
- are all blessings and mercies, if we only knew how to make use of them.’
- ‘But Mrs. Graham doesn’t think so. You shall just hear now what she told
- us the other day—I told her I’d tell you.’
- And my mother favoured the company with a particular account of that
- lady’s mistaken ideas and conduct regarding the matter in hand,
- concluding with, ‘Now, don’t you think it is wrong?’
- ‘Wrong!’ repeated the vicar, with more than common solemnity—‘criminal, I
- should say—criminal! Not only is it making a fool of the boy, but it is
- despising the gifts of Providence, and teaching him to trample them under
- his feet.’
- He then entered more fully into the question, and explained at large the
- folly and impiety of such a proceeding. My mother heard him with
- profoundest reverence; and even Mrs. Wilson vouchsafed to rest her tongue
- for a moment, and listen in silence, while she complacently sipped her
- gin-and-water. Mr. Lawrence sat with his elbow on the table, carelessly
- playing with his half-empty wine-glass, and covertly smiling to himself.
- ‘But don’t you think, Mr. Millward,’ suggested he, when at length that
- gentleman paused in his discourse, ‘that when a child may be naturally
- prone to intemperance—by the fault of its parents or ancestors, for
- instance—some precautions are advisable?’ (Now it was generally believed
- that Mr. Lawrence’s father had shortened his days by intemperance.)
- ‘Some precautions, it may be; but temperance, sir, is one thing, and
- abstinence another.’
- ‘But I have heard that, with some persons, temperance—that is,
- moderation—is almost impossible; and if abstinence be an evil (which some
- have doubted), no one will deny that excess is a greater. Some parents
- have entirely prohibited their children from tasting intoxicating
- liquors; but a parent’s authority cannot last for ever; children are
- naturally prone to hanker after forbidden things; and a child, in such a
- case, would be likely to have a strong curiosity to taste, and try the
- effect of what has been so lauded and enjoyed by others, so strictly
- forbidden to himself—which curiosity would generally be gratified on the
- first convenient opportunity; and the restraint once broken, serious
- consequences might ensue. I don’t pretend to be a judge of such matters,
- but it seems to me, that this plan of Mrs. Graham’s, as you describe it,
- Mrs. Markham, extraordinary as it may be, is not without its advantages;
- for here you see the child is delivered at once from temptation; he has
- no secret curiosity, no hankering desire; he is as well acquainted with
- the tempting liquors as he ever wishes to be; and is thoroughly disgusted
- with them, without having suffered from their effects.’
- ‘And is that right, sir? Have I not proven to you how wrong it is—how
- contrary to Scripture and to reason, to teach a child to look with
- contempt and disgust upon the blessings of Providence, instead of to use
- them aright?’
- ‘You may consider laudanum a blessing of Providence, sir,’ replied Mr.
- Lawrence, smiling; ‘and yet, you will allow that most of us had better
- abstain from it, even in moderation; but,’ added he, ‘I would not desire
- you to follow out my simile too closely—in witness whereof I finish my
- glass.’
- ‘And take another, I hope, Mr. Lawrence,’ said my mother, pushing the
- bottle towards him.
- He politely declined, and pushing his chair a little away from the table,
- leant back towards me—I was seated a trifle behind, on the sofa beside
- Eliza Millward—and carelessly asked me if I knew Mrs. Graham.
- ‘I have met her once or twice,’ I replied.
- ‘What do you think of her?’
- ‘I cannot say that I like her much. She is handsome—or rather I should
- say distinguished and interesting—in her appearance, but by no means
- amiable—a woman liable to take strong prejudices, I should fancy, and
- stick to them through thick and thin, twisting everything into conformity
- with her own preconceived opinions—too hard, too sharp, too bitter for my
- taste.’
- He made no reply, but looked down and bit his lip, and shortly after rose
- and sauntered up to Miss Wilson, as much repelled by me, I fancy, as
- attracted by her. I scarcely noticed it at the time, but afterwards I
- was led to recall this and other trifling facts, of a similar nature, to
- my remembrance, when—but I must not anticipate.
- We wound up the evening with dancing—our worthy pastor thinking it no
- scandal to be present on the occasion, though one of the village
- musicians was engaged to direct our evolutions with his violin. But Mary
- Millward obstinately refused to join us; and so did Richard Wilson,
- though my mother earnestly entreated him to do so, and even offered to be
- his partner.
- We managed very well without them, however. With a single set of
- quadrilles, and several country dances, we carried it on to a pretty late
- hour; and at length, having called upon our musician to strike up a
- waltz, I was just about to whirl Eliza round in that delightful dance,
- accompanied by Lawrence and Jane Wilson, and Fergus and Rose, when Mr.
- Millward interposed with:—‘No, no; I don’t allow that! Come, it’s time
- to be going now.’
- ‘Oh, no, papa!’ pleaded Eliza.
- ‘High time, my girl—high time! Moderation in all things, remember!
- That’s the plan—“Let your moderation be known unto all men!”’
- But in revenge I followed Eliza into the dimly-lighted passage, where,
- under pretence of helping her on with her shawl, I fear I must plead
- guilty to snatching a kiss behind her father’s back, while he was
- enveloping his throat and chin in the folds of a mighty comforter. But
- alas! in turning round, there was my mother close beside me. The
- consequence was, that no sooner were the guests departed, than I was
- doomed to a very serious remonstrance, which unpleasantly checked the
- galloping course of my spirits, and made a disagreeable close to the
- evening.
- ‘My dear Gilbert,’ said she, ‘I wish you wouldn’t do so! You know how
- deeply I have your advantage at heart, how I love you and prize you above
- everything else in the world, and how much I long to see you well settled
- in life—and how bitterly it would grieve me to see you married to that
- girl—or any other in the neighbourhood. What you see in her I don’t
- know. It isn’t only the want of money that I think about—nothing of the
- kind—but there’s neither beauty, nor cleverness, nor goodness, nor
- anything else that’s desirable. If you knew your own value, as I do, you
- wouldn’t dream of it. Do wait awhile and see! If you bind yourself to
- her, you’ll repent it all your lifetime when you look round and see how
- many better there are. Take my word for it, you will.’
- ‘Well, mother, do be quiet!—I hate to be lectured!—I’m not going to marry
- yet, I tell you; but—dear me! mayn’t I enjoy myself at all?’
- ‘Yes, my dear boy, but not in that way. Indeed, you shouldn’t do such
- things. You would be wronging the girl, if she were what she ought to
- be; but I assure you she is as artful a little hussy as anybody need wish
- to see; and you’ll get entangled in her snares before you know where you
- are. And if you marry her, Gilbert, you’ll break my heart—so there’s an
- end of it.’
- ‘Well, don’t cry about it, mother,’ said I, for the tears were gushing
- from her eyes; ‘there, let that kiss efface the one I gave Eliza; don’t
- abuse her any more, and set your mind at rest; for I’ll promise
- never—that is, I’ll promise to think twice before I take any important
- step you seriously disapprove of.’
- So saying, I lighted my candle, and went to bed, considerably quenched in
- spirit.
- CHAPTER V
- It was about the close of the month, that, yielding at length to the
- urgent importunities of Rose, I accompanied her in a visit to Wildfell
- Hall. To our surprise, we were ushered into a room where the first
- object that met the eye was a painter’s easel, with a table beside it
- covered with rolls of canvas, bottles of oil and varnish, palette,
- brushes, paints, &c. Leaning against the wall were several sketches in
- various stages of progression, and a few finished paintings—mostly of
- landscapes and figures.
- ‘I must make you welcome to my studio,’ said Mrs. Graham; ‘there is no
- fire in the sitting-room to-day, and it is rather too cold to show you
- into a place with an empty grate.’
- And disengaging a couple of chairs from the artistical lumber that
- usurped them, she bid us be seated, and resumed her place beside the
- easel—not facing it exactly, but now and then glancing at the picture
- upon it while she conversed, and giving it an occasional touch with her
- brush, as if she found it impossible to wean her attention entirely from
- her occupation to fix it upon her guests. It was a view of Wildfell
- Hall, as seen at early morning from the field below, rising in dark
- relief against a sky of clear silvery blue, with a few red streaks on the
- horizon, faithfully drawn and coloured, and very elegantly and
- artistically handled.
- ‘I see your heart is in your work, Mrs. Graham,’ observed I: ‘I must beg
- you to go on with it; for if you suffer our presence to interrupt you, we
- shall be constrained to regard ourselves as unwelcome intruders.’
- ‘Oh, no!’ replied she, throwing her brush on to the table, as if startled
- into politeness. ‘I am not so beset with visitors but that I can readily
- spare a few minutes to the few that do favour me with their company.’
- ‘You have almost completed your painting,’ said I, approaching to observe
- it more closely, and surveying it with a greater degree of admiration and
- delight than I cared to express. ‘A few more touches in the foreground
- will finish it, I should think. But why have you called it Fernley
- Manor, Cumberland, instead of Wildfell Hall, —shire?’ I asked, alluding
- to the name she had traced in small characters at the bottom of the
- canvas.
- But immediately I was sensible of having committed an act of impertinence
- in so doing; for she coloured and hesitated; but after a moment’s pause,
- with a kind of desperate frankness, she replied:—
- ‘Because I have friends—acquaintances at least—in the world, from whom I
- desire my present abode to be concealed; and as they might see the
- picture, and might possibly recognise the style in spite of the false
- initials I have put in the corner, I take the precaution to give a false
- name to the place also, in order to put them on a wrong scent, if they
- should attempt to trace me out by it.’
- ‘Then you don’t intend to keep the picture?’ said I, anxious to say
- anything to change the subject.
- ‘No; I cannot afford to paint for my own amusement.’
- ‘Mamma sends all her pictures to London,’ said Arthur; ‘and somebody
- sells them for her there, and sends us the money.’
- In looking round upon the other pieces, I remarked a pretty sketch of
- Linden-hope from the top of the hill; another view of the old hall
- basking in the sunny haze of a quiet summer afternoon; and a simple but
- striking little picture of a child brooding, with looks of silent but
- deep and sorrowful regret, over a handful of withered flowers, with
- glimpses of dark low hills and autumnal fields behind it, and a dull
- beclouded sky above.
- ‘You see there is a sad dearth of subjects,’ observed the fair artist.
- ‘I took the old hall once on a moonlight night, and I suppose I must take
- it again on a snowy winter’s day, and then again on a dark cloudy
- evening; for I really have nothing else to paint. I have been told that
- you have a fine view of the sea somewhere in the neighbourhood. Is it
- true?—and is it within walking distance?’
- ‘Yes, if you don’t object to walking four miles—or nearly so—little short
- of eight miles, there and back—and over a somewhat rough, fatiguing
- road.’
- ‘In what direction does it lie?’
- I described the situation as well as I could, and was entering upon an
- explanation of the various roads, lanes, and fields to be traversed in
- order to reach it, the goings straight on, and turnings to the right and
- the left, when she checked me with,—
- ‘Oh, stop! don’t tell me now: I shall forget every word of your
- directions before I require them. I shall not think about going till
- next spring; and then, perhaps, I may trouble you. At present we have
- the winter before us, and—’
- She suddenly paused, with a suppressed exclamation, started up from her
- seat, and saying, ‘Excuse me one moment,’ hurried from the room, and shut
- the door behind her.
- Curious to see what had startled her so, I looked towards the window—for
- her eyes had been carelessly fixed upon it the moment before—and just
- beheld the skirts of a man’s coat vanishing behind a large holly-bush
- that stood between the window and the porch.
- ‘It’s mamma’s friend,’ said Arthur.
- Rose and I looked at each other.
- ‘I don’t know what to make of her at all,’ whispered Rose.
- The child looked at her in grave surprise. She straightway began to talk
- to him on indifferent matters, while I amused myself with looking at the
- pictures. There was one in an obscure corner that I had not before
- observed. It was a little child, seated on the grass with its lap full
- of flowers. The tiny features and large blue eyes, smiling through a
- shock of light brown curls, shaken over the forehead as it bent above its
- treasure, bore sufficient resemblance to those of the young gentleman
- before me to proclaim it a portrait of Arthur Graham in his early
- infancy.
- In taking this up to bring it to the light, I discovered another behind
- it, with its face to the wall. I ventured to take that up too. It was
- the portrait of a gentleman in the full prime of youthful
- manhood—handsome enough, and not badly executed; but if done by the same
- hand as the others, it was evidently some years before; for there was far
- more careful minuteness of detail, and less of that freshness of
- colouring and freedom of handling that delighted and surprised me in
- them. Nevertheless, I surveyed it with considerable interest. There was
- a certain individuality in the features and expression that stamped it,
- at once, a successful likeness. The bright blue eyes regarded the
- spectator with a kind of lurking drollery—you almost expected to see them
- wink; the lips—a little too voluptuously full—seemed ready to break into
- a smile; the warmly-tinted cheeks were embellished with a luxuriant
- growth of reddish whiskers; while the bright chestnut hair, clustering in
- abundant, wavy curls, trespassed too much upon the forehead, and seemed
- to intimate that the owner thereof was prouder of his beauty than his
- intellect—as, perhaps, he had reason to be; and yet he looked no fool.
- I had not had the portrait in my hands two minutes before the fair artist
- returned.
- ‘Only some one come about the pictures,’ said she, in apology for her
- abrupt departure: ‘I told him to wait.’
- ‘I fear it will be considered an act of impertinence,’ I said ‘to presume
- to look at a picture that the artist has turned to the wall; but may I
- ask—’
- ‘It is an act of very great impertinence, sir; and therefore I beg you
- will ask nothing about it, for your curiosity will not be gratified,’
- replied she, attempting to cover the tartness of her rebuke with a smile;
- but I could see, by her flushed cheek and kindling eye, that she was
- seriously annoyed.
- ‘I was only going to ask if you had painted it yourself,’ said I, sulkily
- resigning the picture into her hands; for without a grain of ceremony she
- took it from me; and quickly restoring it to the dark corner, with its
- face to the wall, placed the other against it as before, and then turned
- to me and laughed.
- But I was in no humour for jesting. I carelessly turned to the window,
- and stood looking out upon the desolate garden, leaving her to talk to
- Rose for a minute or two; and then, telling my sister it was time to go,
- shook hands with the little gentleman, coolly bowed to the lady, and
- moved towards the door. But, having bid adieu to Rose, Mrs. Graham
- presented her hand to me, saying, with a soft voice, and by no means a
- disagreeable smile,—‘Let not the sun go down upon your wrath, Mr.
- Markham. I’m sorry I offended you by my abruptness.’
- When a lady condescends to apologise, there is no keeping one’s anger, of
- course; so we parted good friends for once; and this time I squeezed her
- hand with a cordial, not a spiteful pressure.
- CHAPTER VI
- During the next four months I did not enter Mrs. Graham’s house, nor she
- mine; but still the ladies continued to talk about her, and still our
- acquaintance continued, though slowly, to advance. As for their talk, I
- paid but little attention to that (when it related to the fair hermit, I
- mean), and the only information I derived from it was, that one fine
- frosty day she had ventured to take her little boy as far as the
- vicarage, and that, unfortunately, nobody was at home but Miss Millward;
- nevertheless, she had sat a long time, and, by all accounts, they had
- found a good deal to say to each other, and parted with a mutual desire
- to meet again. But Mary liked children, and fond mammas like those who
- can duly appreciate their treasures.
- But sometimes I saw her myself, not only when she came to church, but
- when she was out on the hills with her son, whether taking a long,
- purpose-like walk, or—on special fine days—leisurely rambling over the
- moor or the bleak pasture-lands, surrounding the old hall, herself with a
- book in her hand, her son gambolling about her; and, on any of these
- occasions, when I caught sight of her in my solitary walks or rides, or
- while following my agricultural pursuits, I generally contrived to meet
- or overtake her, for I rather liked to see Mrs. Graham, and to talk to
- her, and I decidedly liked to talk to her little companion, whom, when
- once the ice of his shyness was fairly broken, I found to be a very
- amiable, intelligent, and entertaining little fellow; and we soon became
- excellent friends—how much to the gratification of his mamma I cannot
- undertake to say. I suspected at first that she was desirous of throwing
- cold water on this growing intimacy—to quench, as it were, the kindling
- flame of our friendship—but discovering, at length, in spite of her
- prejudice against me, that I was perfectly harmless, and even
- well-intentioned, and that, between myself and my dog, her son derived a
- great deal of pleasure from the acquaintance that he would not otherwise
- have known, she ceased to object, and even welcomed my coming with a
- smile.
- As for Arthur, he would shout his welcome from afar, and run to meet me
- fifty yards from his mother’s side. If I happened to be on horseback he
- was sure to get a canter or a gallop; or, if there was one of the draught
- horses within an available distance, he was treated to a steady ride upon
- that, which served his turn almost as well; but his mother would always
- follow and trudge beside him—not so much, I believe, to ensure his safe
- conduct, as to see that I instilled no objectionable notions into his
- infant mind, for she was ever on the watch, and never would allow him to
- be taken out of her sight. What pleased her best of all was to see him
- romping and racing with Sancho, while I walked by her side—not, I fear,
- for love of my company (though I sometimes deluded myself with that
- idea), so much as for the delight she took in seeing her son thus happily
- engaged in the enjoyment of those active sports so invigorating to his
- tender frame, yet so seldom exercised for want of playmates suited to his
- years: and, perhaps, her pleasure was sweetened not a little by the fact
- of my being with her instead of with him, and therefore incapable of
- doing him any injury directly or indirectly, designedly or otherwise,
- small thanks to her for that same.
- But sometimes, I believe, she really had some little gratification in
- conversing with me; and one bright February morning, during twenty
- minutes’ stroll along the moor, she laid aside her usual asperity and
- reserve, and fairly entered into conversation with me, discoursing with
- so much eloquence and depth of thought and feeling on a subject happily
- coinciding with my own ideas, and looking so beautiful withal, that I
- went home enchanted; and on the way (morally) started to find myself
- thinking that, after all, it would, perhaps, be better to spend one’s
- days with such a woman than with Eliza Millward; and then I
- (figuratively) blushed for my inconstancy.
- On entering the parlour I found Eliza there with Rose, and no one else.
- The surprise was not altogether so agreeable as it ought to have been.
- We chatted together a long time, but I found her rather frivolous, and
- even a little insipid, compared with the more mature and earnest Mrs.
- Graham. Alas, for human constancy!
- ‘However,’ thought I, ‘I ought not to marry Eliza, since my mother so
- strongly objects to it, and I ought not to delude the girl with the idea
- that I intended to do so. Now, if this mood continue, I shall have less
- difficulty in emancipating my affections from her soft yet unrelenting
- sway; and, though Mrs. Graham might be equally objectionable, I may be
- permitted, like the doctors, to cure a greater evil by a less, for I
- shall not fall seriously in love with the young widow, I think, nor she
- with me—that’s certain—but if I find a little pleasure in her society I
- may surely be allowed to seek it; and if the star of her divinity be
- bright enough to dim the lustre of Eliza’s, so much the better, but I
- scarcely can think it.’
- And thereafter I seldom suffered a fine day to pass without paying a
- visit to Wildfell about the time my new acquaintance usually left her
- hermitage; but so frequently was I baulked in my expectations of another
- interview, so changeable was she in her times of coming forth and in her
- places of resort, so transient were the occasional glimpses I was able to
- obtain, that I felt half inclined to think she took as much pains to
- avoid my company as I to seek hers; but this was too disagreeable a
- supposition to be entertained a moment after it could conveniently be
- dismissed.
- One calm, clear afternoon, however, in March, as I was superintending the
- rolling of the meadow-land, and the repairing of a hedge in the valley, I
- saw Mrs. Graham down by the brook, with a sketch-book in her hand,
- absorbed in the exercise of her favourite art, while Arthur was putting
- on the time with constructing dams and breakwaters in the shallow, stony
- stream. I was rather in want of amusement, and so rare an opportunity
- was not to be neglected; so, leaving both meadow and hedge, I quickly
- repaired to the spot, but not before Sancho, who, immediately upon
- perceiving his young friend, scoured at full gallop the intervening
- space, and pounced upon him with an impetuous mirth that precipitated the
- child almost into the middle of the beck; but, happily, the stones
- preserved him from any serious wetting, while their smoothness prevented
- his being too much hurt to laugh at the untoward event.
- Mrs. Graham was studying the distinctive characters of the different
- varieties of trees in their winter nakedness, and copying, with a
- spirited, though delicate touch, their various ramifications. She did
- not talk much, but I stood and watched the progress of her pencil: it was
- a pleasure to behold it so dexterously guided by those fair and graceful
- fingers. But ere long their dexterity became impaired, they began to
- hesitate, to tremble slightly, and make false strokes, and then suddenly
- came to a pause, while their owner laughingly raised her face to mine,
- and told me that her sketch did not profit by my superintendence.
- ‘Then,’ said I, ‘I’ll talk to Arthur till you’ve done.’
- ‘I should like to have a ride, Mr. Markham, if mamma will let me,’ said
- the child.
- ‘What on, my boy?’
- ‘I think there’s a horse in that field,’ replied he, pointing to where
- the strong black mare was pulling the roller.
- ‘No, no, Arthur; it’s too far,’ objected his mother.
- But I promised to bring him safe back after a turn or two up and down the
- meadow; and when she looked at his eager face she smiled and let him go.
- It was the first time she had even allowed me to take him so much as half
- a field’s length from her side.
- [Picture: Moorland scene (with water): Haworth]
- Enthroned upon his monstrous steed, and solemnly proceeding up and down
- the wide, steep field, he looked the very incarnation of quiet, gleeful
- satisfaction and delight. The rolling, however, was soon completed; but
- when I dismounted the gallant horseman, and restored him to his mother,
- she seemed rather displeased at my keeping him so long. She had shut up
- her sketch-book, and been, probably, for some minutes impatiently waiting
- his return.
- It was now high time to go home, she said, and would have bid me
- good-evening, but I was not going to leave her yet: I accompanied her
- half-way up the hill. She became more sociable, and I was beginning to
- be very happy; but, on coming within sight of the grim old hall, she
- stood still, and turned towards me while she spoke, as if expecting I
- should go no further, that the conversation would end here, and I should
- now take leave and depart—as, indeed, it was time to do, for ‘the clear,
- cold eve’ was fast ‘declining,’ the sun had set, and the gibbous moon was
- visibly brightening in the pale grey sky; but a feeling almost of
- compassion riveted me to the spot. It seemed hard to leave her to such a
- lonely, comfortless home. I looked up at it. Silent and grim it
- frowned before us. A faint, red light was gleaming from the lower
- windows of one wing, but all the other windows were in darkness, and many
- exhibited their black, cavernous gulfs, entirely destitute of glazing or
- framework.
- ‘Do you not find it a desolate place to live in?’ said I, after a moment
- of silent contemplation.
- ‘I do, sometimes,’ replied she. ‘On winter evenings, when Arthur is in
- bed, and I am sitting there alone, hearing the bleak wind moaning round
- me and howling through the ruinous old chambers, no books or occupations
- can repress the dismal thoughts and apprehensions that come crowding
- in—but it is folly to give way to such weakness, I know. If Rachel is
- satisfied with such a life, why should not I?—Indeed, I cannot be too
- thankful for such an asylum, while it is left me.’
- The closing sentence was uttered in an under-tone, as if spoken rather to
- herself than to me. She then bid me good-evening and withdrew.
- I had not proceeded many steps on my way homewards when I perceived Mr.
- Lawrence, on his pretty grey pony, coming up the rugged lane that crossed
- over the hill-top. I went a little out of my way to speak to him; for we
- had not met for some time.
- ‘Was that Mrs. Graham you were speaking to just now?’ said he, after the
- first few words of greeting had passed between us.
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘Humph! I thought so.’ He looked contemplatively at his horse’s mane,
- as if he had some serious cause of dissatisfaction with it, or something
- else.
- ‘Well! what then?’
- ‘Oh, nothing!’ replied he. ‘Only I thought you disliked her,’ he quietly
- added, curling his classic lip with a slightly sarcastic smile.
- ‘Suppose I did; mayn’t a man change his mind on further acquaintance?’
- ‘Yes, of course,’ returned he, nicely reducing an entanglement in the
- pony’s redundant hoary mane. Then suddenly turning to me, and fixing his
- shy, hazel eyes upon me with a steady penetrating gaze, he added, ‘Then
- you have changed your mind?’
- ‘I can’t say that I have exactly. No; I think I hold the same opinion
- respecting her as before—but slightly ameliorated.’
- ‘Oh!’ He looked round for something else to talk about; and glancing up
- at the moon, made some remark upon the beauty of the evening, which I did
- not answer, as being irrelevant to the subject.
- ‘Lawrence,’ said I, calmly looking him in the face, ‘are you in love with
- Mrs. Graham?’
- Instead of his being deeply offended at this, as I more than half
- expected he would, the first start of surprise, at the audacious
- question, was followed by a tittering laugh, as if he was highly amused
- at the idea.
- ‘I in love with her!’ repeated he. ‘What makes you dream of such a
- thing?’
- ‘From the interest you take in the progress of my acquaintance with the
- lady, and the changes of my opinion concerning her, I thought you might
- be jealous.’
- He laughed again. ‘Jealous! no. But I thought you were going to marry
- Eliza Millward.’
- ‘You thought wrong, then; I am not going to marry either one or the
- other—that I know of—’
- ‘Then I think you’d better let them alone.’
- ‘Are you going to marry Jane Wilson?’
- He coloured, and played with the mane again, but answered—‘No, I think
- not.’
- ‘Then you had better let her alone.’
- ‘She won’t let me alone,’ he might have said; but he only looked silly
- and said nothing for the space of half a minute, and then made another
- attempt to turn the conversation; and this time I let it pass; for he had
- borne enough: another word on the subject would have been like the last
- atom that breaks the camel’s back.
- I was too late for tea; but my mother had kindly kept the teapot and
- muffin warm upon the hobs, and, though she scolded me a little, readily
- admitted my excuses; and when I complained of the flavour of the
- overdrawn tea, she poured the remainder into the slop-basin, and bade
- Rose put some fresh into the pot, and reboil the kettle, which offices
- were performed with great commotion, and certain remarkable comments.
- ‘Well!—if it had been me now, I should have had no tea at all—if it had
- been Fergus, even, he would have to put up with such as there was, and
- been told to be thankful, for it was far too good for him; but you—we
- can’t do too much for you. It’s always so—if there’s anything
- particularly nice at table, mamma winks and nods at me to abstain from
- it, and if I don’t attend to that, she whispers, “Don’t eat so much of
- that, Rose; Gilbert will like it for his supper.”—I’m nothing at all. In
- the parlour, it’s “Come, Rose, put away your things, and let’s have the
- room nice and tidy against they come in; and keep up a good fire; Gilbert
- likes a cheerful fire.” In the kitchen—“Make that pie a large one, Rose;
- I daresay the boys’ll be hungry; and don’t put so much pepper in, they’ll
- not like it, I’m sure”—or, “Rose, don’t put so many spices in the
- pudding, Gilbert likes it plain,”—or, “Mind you put plenty of currants in
- the cake, Fergus liked plenty.” If I say, “Well, mamma, I don’t,” I’m
- told I ought not to think of myself. “You know, Rose, in all household
- matters, we have only two things to consider, first, what’s proper to be
- done; and, secondly, what’s most agreeable to the gentlemen of the
- house—anything will do for the ladies.”’
- ‘And very good doctrine too,’ said my mother. ‘Gilbert thinks so, I’m
- sure.’
- ‘Very convenient doctrine, for us, at all events,’ said I; ‘but if you
- would really study my pleasure, mother, you must consider your own
- comfort and convenience a little more than you do—as for Rose, I have no
- doubt she’ll take care of herself; and whenever she does make a sacrifice
- or perform a remarkable act of devotedness, she’ll take good care to let
- me know the extent of it. But for you I might sink into the grossest
- condition of self-indulgence and carelessness about the wants of others,
- from the mere habit of being constantly cared for myself, and having all
- my wants anticipated or immediately supplied, while left in total
- ignorance of what is done for me,—if Rose did not enlighten me now and
- then; and I should receive all your kindness as a matter of course, and
- never know how much I owe you.’
- ‘Ah! and you never will know, Gilbert, till you’re married. Then, when
- you’ve got some trifling, self-conceited girl like Eliza Millward,
- careless of everything but her own immediate pleasure and advantage, or
- some misguided, obstinate woman, like Mrs. Graham, ignorant of her
- principal duties, and clever only in what concerns her least to know—then
- you’ll find the difference.’
- ‘It will do me good, mother; I was not sent into the world merely to
- exercise the good capacities and good feelings of others—was I?—but to
- exert my own towards them; and when I marry, I shall expect to find more
- pleasure in making my wife happy and comfortable, than in being made so
- by her: I would rather give than receive.’
- ‘Oh! that’s all nonsense, my dear. It’s mere boy’s talk that! You’ll
- soon tire of petting and humouring your wife, be she ever so charming,
- and then comes the trial.’
- ‘Well, then, we must bear one another’s burdens.’
- ‘Then you must fall each into your proper place. You’ll do your
- business, and she, if she’s worthy of you, will do hers; but it’s your
- business to please yourself, and hers to please you. I’m sure your poor,
- dear father was as good a husband as ever lived, and after the first six
- months or so were over, I should as soon have expected him to fly, as to
- put himself out of his way to pleasure me. He always said I was a good
- wife, and did my duty; and he always did his—bless him!—he was steady and
- punctual, seldom found fault without a reason, always did justice to my
- good dinners, and hardly ever spoiled my cookery by delay—and that’s as
- much as any woman can expect of any man.’
- Is it so, Halford? Is that the extent of your domestic virtues; and does
- your happy wife exact no more?
- CHAPTER VII
- Not many days after this, on a mild sunny morning—rather soft under foot;
- for the last fall of snow was only just wasted away, leaving yet a thin
- ridge, here and there, lingering on the fresh green grass beneath the
- hedges; but beside them already, the young primroses were peeping from
- among their moist, dark foliage, and the lark above was singing of
- summer, and hope, and love, and every heavenly thing—I was out on the
- hill-side, enjoying these delights, and looking after the well-being of
- my young lambs and their mothers, when, on glancing round me, I beheld
- three persons ascending from the vale below. They were Eliza Millward,
- Fergus, and Rose; so I crossed the field to meet them; and, being told
- they were going to Wildfell Hall, I declared myself willing to go with
- them, and offering my arm to Eliza, who readily accepted it in lieu of my
- brother’s, told the latter he might go back, for I would accompany the
- ladies.
- ‘I beg your pardon!’ exclaimed he. ‘It’s the ladies that are
- accompanying me, not I them. You had all had a peep at this wonderful
- stranger but me, and I could endure my wretched ignorance no longer—come
- what would, I must be satisfied; so I begged Rose to go with me to the
- Hall, and introduce me to her at once. She swore she would not, unless
- Miss Eliza would go too; so I ran to the vicarage and fetched her; and
- we’ve come hooked all the way, as fond as a pair of lovers—and now you’ve
- taken her from me; and you want to deprive me of my walk and my visit
- besides. Go back to your fields and your cattle, you lubberly fellow;
- you’re not fit to associate with ladies and gentlemen like us, that have
- nothing to do but to run snooking about to our neighbours’ houses,
- peeping into their private corners, and scenting out their secrets, and
- picking holes in their coats, when we don’t find them ready made to our
- hands—you don’t understand such refined sources of enjoyment.’
- ‘Can’t you both go?’ suggested Eliza, disregarding the latter half of the
- speech.
- ‘Yes, both, to be sure!’ cried Rose; ‘the more the merrier—and I’m sure
- we shall want all the cheerfulness we can carry with us to that great,
- dark, gloomy room, with its narrow latticed windows, and its dismal old
- furniture—unless she shows us into her studio again.’
- So we went all in a body; and the meagre old maid-servant, that opened
- the door, ushered us into an apartment such as Rose had described to me
- as the scene of her first introduction to Mrs. Graham, a tolerably
- spacious and lofty room, but obscurely lighted by the old-fashioned
- windows, the ceiling, panels, and chimney-piece of grim black oak—the
- latter elaborately but not very tastefully carved,—with tables and chairs
- to match, an old bookcase on one side of the fire-place, stocked with a
- motley assemblage of books, and an elderly cabinet piano on the other.
- The lady was seated in a stiff, high-backed arm-chair, with a small round
- table, containing a desk and a work-basket on one side of her, and her
- little boy on the other, who stood leaning his elbow on her knee, and
- reading to her, with wonderful fluency, from a small volume that lay in
- her lap; while she rested her hand on his shoulder, and abstractedly
- played with the long, wavy curls that fell on his ivory neck. They
- struck me as forming a pleasing contrast to all the surrounding objects;
- but of course their position was immediately changed on our entrance. I
- could only observe the picture during the few brief seconds that Rachel
- held the door for our admittance.
- I do not think Mrs. Graham was particularly delighted to see us: there
- was something indescribably chilly in her quiet, calm civility; but I did
- not talk much to her. Seating myself near the window, a little back from
- the circle, I called Arthur to me, and he and I and Sancho amused
- ourselves very pleasantly together, while the two young ladies baited his
- mother with small talk, and Fergus sat opposite with his legs crossed and
- his hands in his breeches-pockets, leaning back in his chair, and staring
- now up at the ceiling, now straight forward at his hostess (in a manner
- that made me strongly inclined to kick him out of the room), now
- whistling sotto voce to himself a snatch of a favourite air, now
- interrupting the conversation, or filling up a pause (as the case might
- be) with some most impertinent question or remark. At one time it
- was,—‘It, amazes me, Mrs. Graham, how you could choose such a
- dilapidated, rickety old place as this to live in. If you couldn’t
- afford to occupy the whole house, and have it mended up, why couldn’t you
- take a neat little cottage?’
- ‘Perhaps I was too proud, Mr. Fergus,’ replied she, smiling; ‘perhaps I
- took a particular fancy for this romantic, old-fashioned place—but,
- indeed, it has many advantages over a cottage—in the first place, you
- see, the rooms are larger and more airy; in the second place, the
- unoccupied apartments, which I don’t pay for, may serve as lumber-rooms,
- if I have anything to put in them; and they are very useful for my little
- boy to run about in on rainy days when he can’t go out; and then there is
- the garden for him to play in, and for me to work in. You see I have
- effected some little improvement already,’ continued she, turning to the
- window. ‘There is a bed of young vegetables in that corner, and here are
- some snowdrops and primroses already in bloom—and there, too, is a yellow
- crocus just opening in the sunshine.’
- ‘But then how can you bear such a situation—your nearest neighbours two
- miles distant, and nobody looking in or passing by? Rose would go stark
- mad in such a place. She can’t put on life unless she sees half a dozen
- fresh gowns and bonnets a day—not to speak of the faces within; but you
- might sit watching at these windows all day long, and never see so much
- as an old woman carrying her eggs to market.’
- ‘I am not sure the loneliness of the place was not one of its chief
- recommendations. I take no pleasure in watching people pass the windows;
- and I like to be quiet.’
- ‘Oh! as good as to say you wish we would all of us mind our own business,
- and let you alone.’
- ‘No, I dislike an extensive acquaintance; but if I have a few friends, of
- course I am glad to see them occasionally. No one can be happy in
- eternal solitude. Therefore, Mr. Fergus, if you choose to enter my house
- as a friend, I will make you welcome; if not, I must confess, I would
- rather you kept away.’ She then turned and addressed some observation to
- Rose or Eliza.
- ‘And, Mrs. Graham,’ said he again, five minutes after, ‘we were
- disputing, as we came along, a question that you can readily decide for
- us, as it mainly regarded yourself—and, indeed, we often hold discussions
- about you; for some of us have nothing better to do than to talk about
- our neighbours’ concerns, and we, the indigenous plants of the soil, have
- known each other so long, and talked each other over so often, that we
- are quite sick of that game; so that a stranger coming amongst us makes
- an invaluable addition to our exhausted sources of amusement. Well, the
- question, or questions, you are requested to solve—’
- ‘Hold your tongue, Fergus!’ cried Rose, in a fever of apprehension and
- wrath.
- ‘I won’t, I tell you. The questions you are requested to solve are
- these:—First, concerning your birth, extraction, and previous residence.
- Some will have it that you are a foreigner, and some an Englishwoman;
- some a native of the north country, and some of the south; some say—’
- ‘Well, Mr. Fergus, I’ll tell you. I’m an Englishwoman—and I don’t see
- why any one should doubt it—and I was born in the country, neither in the
- extreme north nor south of our happy isle; and in the country I have
- chiefly passed my life, and now I hope you are satisfied; for I am not
- disposed to answer any more questions at present.’
- ‘Except this—’
- ‘No, not one more!’ laughed she, and, instantly quitting her seat, she
- sought refuge at the window by which I was seated, and, in very
- desperation, to escape my brother’s persecutions, endeavoured to draw me
- into conversation.
- ‘Mr. Markham,’ said she, her rapid utterance and heightened colour too
- plainly evincing her disquietude, ‘have you forgotten the fine sea-view
- we were speaking of some time ago? I think I must trouble you, now, to
- tell me the nearest way to it; for if this beautiful weather continue, I
- shall, perhaps, be able to walk there, and take my sketch; I have
- exhausted every other subject for painting; and I long to see it.’
- I was about to comply with her request, but Rose would not suffer me to
- proceed.
- ‘Oh, don’t tell her, Gilbert!’ cried she; ‘she shall go with us. It’s —
- Bay you are thinking about, I suppose, Mrs. Graham? It is a very long
- walk, too far for you, and out of the question for Arthur. But we were
- thinking about making a picnic to see it some fine day; and, if you will
- wait till the settled fine weather comes, I’m sure we shall all be
- delighted to have you amongst us.’
- Poor Mrs. Graham looked dismayed, and attempted to make excuses, but
- Rose, either compassionating her lonely life, or anxious to cultivate her
- acquaintance, was determined to have her; and every objection was
- overruled. She was told it would only be a small party, and all friends,
- and that the best view of all was from — Cliffs, full five miles distant.
- ‘Just a nice walk for the gentlemen,’ continued Rose; ‘but the ladies
- will drive and walk by turns; for we shall have our pony-carriage, which
- will be plenty large enough to contain little Arthur and three ladies,
- together with your sketching apparatus, and our provisions.’
- So the proposal was finally acceded to; and, after some further
- discussion respecting the time and manner of the projected excursion, we
- rose, and took our leave.
- But this was only March: a cold, wet April, and two weeks of May passed
- over before we could venture forth on our expedition with the reasonable
- hope of obtaining that pleasure we sought in pleasant prospects, cheerful
- society, fresh air, good cheer and exercise, without the alloy of bad
- roads, cold winds, or threatening clouds. Then, on a glorious morning,
- we gathered our forces and set forth. The company consisted of Mrs. and
- Master Graham, Mary and Eliza Millward, Jane and Richard Wilson, and
- Rose, Fergus, and Gilbert Markham.
- Mr. Lawrence had been invited to join us, but, for some reason best known
- to himself, had refused to give us his company. I had solicited the
- favour myself. When I did so, he hesitated, and asked who were going.
- Upon my naming Miss Wilson among the rest, he seemed half inclined to go,
- but when I mentioned Mrs. Graham, thinking it might be a further
- inducement, it appeared to have a contrary effect, and he declined it
- altogether, and, to confess the truth, the decision was not displeasing
- to me, though I could scarcely tell you why.
- It was about midday when we reached the place of our destination. Mrs.
- Graham walked all the way to the cliffs; and little Arthur walked the
- greater part of it too; for he was now much more hardy and active than
- when he first entered the neighbourhood, and he did not like being in the
- carriage with strangers, while all his four friends, mamma, and Sancho,
- and Mr. Markham, and Miss Millward, were on foot, journeying far behind,
- or passing through distant fields and lanes.
- I have a very pleasant recollection of that walk, along the hard, white,
- sunny road, shaded here and there with bright green trees, and adorned
- with flowery banks and blossoming hedges of delicious fragrance; or
- through pleasant fields and lanes, all glorious in the sweet flowers and
- brilliant verdure of delightful May. It was true, Eliza was not beside
- me; but she was with her friends in the pony-carriage, as happy, I
- trusted, as I was; and even when we pedestrians, having forsaken the
- highway for a short cut across the fields, beheld the little carriage far
- away, disappearing amid the green, embowering trees, I did not hate those
- trees for snatching the dear little bonnet and shawl from my sight, nor
- did I feel that all those intervening objects lay between my happiness
- and me; for, to confess the truth, I was too happy in the company of Mrs.
- Graham to regret the absence of Eliza Millward.
- The former, it is true, was most provokingly unsociable at
- first—seemingly bent upon talking to no one but Mary Millward and Arthur.
- She and Mary journeyed along together, generally with the child between
- them;—but where the road permitted, I always walked on the other side of
- her, Richard Wilson taking the other side of Miss Millward, and Fergus
- roving here and there according to his fancy; and, after a while, she
- became more friendly, and at length I succeeded in securing her attention
- almost entirely to myself—and then I was happy indeed; for whenever she
- did condescend to converse, I liked to listen. Where her opinions and
- sentiments tallied with mine, it was her extreme good sense, her
- exquisite taste and feeling, that delighted me; where they differed, it
- was still her uncompromising boldness in the avowal or defence of that
- difference, her earnestness and keenness, that piqued my fancy: and even
- when she angered me by her unkind words or looks, and her uncharitable
- conclusions respecting me, it only made me the more dissatisfied with
- myself for having so unfavourably impressed her, and the more desirous to
- vindicate my character and disposition in her eyes, and, if possible, to
- win her esteem.
- At length our walk was ended. The increasing height and boldness of the
- hills had for some time intercepted the prospect; but, on gaining the
- summit of a steep acclivity, and looking downward, an opening lay before
- us—and the blue sea burst upon our sight!—deep violet blue—not deadly
- calm, but covered with glinting breakers—diminutive white specks
- twinkling on its bosom, and scarcely to be distinguished, by the keenest
- vision, from the little seamews that sported above, their white wings
- glittering in the sunshine: only one or two vessels were visible, and
- those were far away.
- I looked at my companion to see what she thought of this glorious scene.
- She said nothing: but she stood still, and fixed her eyes upon it with a
- gaze that assured me she was not disappointed. She had very fine eyes,
- by-the-by—I don’t know whether I have told you before, but they were full
- of soul, large, clear, and nearly black—not brown, but very dark grey. A
- cool, reviving breeze blew from the sea—soft, pure, salubrious: it waved
- her drooping ringlets, and imparted a livelier colour to her usually too
- pallid lip and cheek. She felt its exhilarating influence, and so did
- I—I felt it tingling through my frame, but dared not give way to it while
- she remained so quiet. There was an aspect of subdued exhilaration in
- her face, that kindled into almost a smile of exalted, glad intelligence
- as her eye met mine. Never had she looked so lovely: never had my heart
- so warmly cleaved to her as now. Had we been left two minutes longer
- standing there alone, I cannot answer for the consequences. Happily for
- my discretion, perhaps for my enjoyment during the remainder of the day,
- we were speedily summoned to the repast—a very respectable collation,
- which Rose, assisted by Miss Wilson and Eliza, who, having shared her
- seat in the carriage, had arrived with her a little before the rest, had
- set out upon an elevated platform overlooking the sea, and sheltered from
- the hot sun by a shelving rock and overhanging trees.
- Mrs. Graham seated herself at a distance from me. Eliza was my nearest
- neighbour. She exerted herself to be agreeable, in her gentle,
- unobtrusive way, and was, no doubt, as fascinating and charming as ever,
- if I could only have felt it. But soon my heart began to warm towards
- her once again; and we were all very merry and happy together—as far as I
- could see—throughout the protracted social meal.
- When that was over, Rose summoned Fergus to help her to gather up the
- fragments, and the knives, dishes, &c., and restore them to the baskets;
- and Mrs. Graham took her camp-stool and drawing materials; and having
- begged Miss Millward to take charge of her precious son, and strictly
- enjoined him not to wander from his new guardian’s side, she left us and
- proceeded along the steep, stony hill, to a loftier, more precipitous
- eminence at some distance, whence a still finer prospect was to be had,
- where she preferred taking her sketch, though some of the ladies told her
- it was a frightful place, and advised her not to attempt it.
- When she was gone, I felt as if there was to be no more fun—though it is
- difficult to say what she had contributed to the hilarity of the party.
- No jests, and little laughter, had escaped her lips; but her smile had
- animated my mirth; a keen observation or a cheerful word from her had
- insensibly sharpened my wits, and thrown an interest over all that was
- done and said by the rest. Even my conversation with Eliza had been
- enlivened by her presence, though I knew it not; and now that she was
- gone, Eliza’s playful nonsense ceased to amuse me—nay, grew wearisome to
- my soul, and I grew weary of amusing her: I felt myself drawn by an
- irresistible attraction to that distant point where the fair artist sat
- and plied her solitary task—and not long did I attempt to resist it:
- while my little neighbour was exchanging a few words with Miss Wilson, I
- rose and cannily slipped away. A few rapid strides, and a little active
- clambering, soon brought me to the place where she was seated—a narrow
- ledge of rock at the very verge of the cliff, which descended with a
- steep, precipitous slant, quite down to the rocky shore.
- She did not hear me coming: the falling of my shadow across her paper
- gave her an electric start; and she looked hastily round—any other lady
- of my acquaintance would have screamed under such a sudden alarm.
- ‘Oh! I didn’t know it was you.—Why did you startle me so?’ said she,
- somewhat testily. ‘I hate anybody to come upon me so unexpectedly.’
- ‘Why, what did you take me for?’ said I: ‘if I had known you were so
- nervous, I would have been more cautious; but—’
- ‘Well, never mind. What did you come for? are they all coming?’
- ‘No; this little ledge could scarcely contain them all.’
- ‘I’m glad, for I’m tired of talking.’
- ‘Well, then, I won’t talk. I’ll only sit and watch your drawing.’
- ‘Oh, but you know I don’t like that.’
- ‘Then I’ll content myself with admiring this magnificent prospect.’
- She made no objection to this; and, for some time, sketched away in
- silence. But I could not help stealing a glance, now and then, from the
- splendid view at our feet to the elegant white hand that held the pencil,
- and the graceful neck and glossy raven curls that drooped over the paper.
- ‘Now,’ thought I, ‘if I had but a pencil and a morsel of paper, I could
- make a lovelier sketch than hers, admitting I had the power to delineate
- faithfully what is before me.’
- But, though this satisfaction was denied me, I was very well content to
- sit beside her there, and say nothing.
- ‘Are you there still, Mr. Markham?’ said she at length, looking round
- upon me—for I was seated a little behind on a mossy projection of the
- cliff.—‘Why don’t you go and amuse yourself with your friends?’
- ‘Because I am tired of them, like you; and I shall have enough of them
- to-morrow—or at any time hence; but you I may not have the pleasure of
- seeing again for I know not how long.’
- ‘What was Arthur doing when you came away?’
- ‘He was with Miss Millward, where you left him—all right, but hoping
- mamma would not be long away. You didn’t intrust him to me, by-the-by,’
- I grumbled, ‘though I had the honour of a much longer acquaintance; but
- Miss Millward has the art of conciliating and amusing children,’ I
- carelessly added, ‘if she is good for nothing else.’
- ‘Miss Millward has many estimable qualities, which such as you cannot be
- expected to perceive or appreciate. Will you tell Arthur that I shall
- come in a few minutes?’
- ‘If that be the case, I will wait, with your permission, till those few
- minutes are past; and then I can assist you to descend this difficult
- path.’
- ‘Thank you—I always manage best, on such occasions, without assistance.’
- ‘But, at least, I can carry your stool and sketch-book.’
- She did not deny me this favour; but I was rather offended at her evident
- desire to be rid of me, and was beginning to repent of my pertinacity,
- when she somewhat appeased me by consulting my taste and judgment about
- some doubtful matter in her drawing. My opinion, happily, met her
- approbation, and the improvement I suggested was adopted without
- hesitation.
- ‘I have often wished in vain,’ said she, ‘for another’s judgment to
- appeal to when I could scarcely trust the direction of my own eye and
- head, they having been so long occupied with the contemplation of a
- single object as to become almost incapable of forming a proper idea
- respecting it.’
- ‘That,’ replied I, ‘is only one of many evils to which a solitary life
- exposes us.’
- ‘True,’ said she; and again we relapsed into silence.
- About two minutes after, however, she declared her sketch completed, and
- closed the book.
- On returning to the scene of our repast we found all the company had
- deserted it, with the exception of three—Mary Millward, Richard Wilson,
- and Arthur Graham. The younger gentleman lay fast asleep with his head
- pillowed on the lady’s lap; the other was seated beside her with a pocket
- edition of some classic author in his hand. He never went anywhere
- without such a companion wherewith to improve his leisure moments: all
- time seemed lost that was not devoted to study, or exacted, by his
- physical nature, for the bare support of life. Even now he could not
- abandon himself to the enjoyment of that pure air and balmy sunshine—that
- splendid prospect, and those soothing sounds, the music of the waves and
- of the soft wind in the sheltering trees above him—not even with a lady
- by his side (though not a very charming one, I will allow)—he must pull
- out his book, and make the most of his time while digesting his temperate
- meal, and reposing his weary limbs, unused to so much exercise.
- Perhaps, however, he spared a moment to exchange a word or a glance with
- his companion now and then—at any rate, she did not appear at all
- resentful of his conduct; for her homely features wore an expression of
- unusual cheerfulness and serenity, and she was studying his pale,
- thoughtful face with great complacency when we arrived.
- The journey homeward was by no means so agreeable to me as the former
- part of the day: for now Mrs. Graham was in the carriage, and Eliza
- Millward was the companion of my walk. She had observed my preference
- for the young widow, and evidently felt herself neglected. She did not
- manifest her chagrin by keen reproaches, bitter sarcasms, or pouting
- sullen silence—any or all of these I could easily have endured, or
- lightly laughed away; but she showed it by a kind of gentle melancholy, a
- mild, reproachful sadness that cut me to the heart. I tried to cheer her
- up, and apparently succeeded in some degree, before the walk was over;
- but in the very act my conscience reproved me, knowing, as I did, that,
- sooner or later, the tie must be broken, and this was only nourishing
- false hopes and putting off the evil day.
- When the pony-carriage had approached as near Wildfell Hall as the road
- would permit—unless, indeed, it proceeded up the long rough lane, which
- Mrs. Graham would not allow—the young widow and her son alighted,
- relinquishing the driver’s seat to Rose; and I persuaded Eliza to take
- the latter’s place. Having put her comfortably in, bid her take care of
- the evening air, and wished her a kind good-night, I felt considerably
- relieved, and hastened to offer my services to Mrs. Graham to carry her
- apparatus up the fields, but she had already hung her camp-stool on her
- arm and taken her sketch-book in her hand, and insisted upon bidding me
- adieu then and there, with the rest of the company. But this time she
- declined my proffered aid in so kind and friendly a manner that I almost
- forgave her.
- CHAPTER VIII
- Six weeks had passed away. It was a splendid morning about the close of
- June. Most of the hay was cut, but the last week had been very
- unfavourable; and now that fine weather was come at last, being
- determined to make the most of it, I had gathered all hands together into
- the hay-field, and was working away myself, in the midst of them, in my
- shirt-sleeves, with a light, shady straw hat on my head, catching up
- armfuls of moist, reeking grass, and shaking it out to the four winds of
- heaven, at the head of a goodly file of servants and hirelings—intending
- so to labour, from morning till night, with as much zeal and assiduity as
- I could look for from any of them, as well to prosper the work by my own
- exertion as to animate the workers by my example—when lo! my resolutions
- were overthrown in a moment, by the simple fact of my brother’s running
- up to me and putting into my hand a small parcel, just arrived from
- London, which I had been for some time expecting. I tore off the cover,
- and disclosed an elegant and portable edition of ‘Marmion.’
- ‘I guess I know who that’s for,’ said Fergus, who stood looking on while
- I complacently examined the volume. ‘That’s for Miss Eliza, now.’
- He pronounced this with a tone and look so prodigiously knowing, that I
- was glad to contradict him.
- ‘You’re wrong, my lad,’ said I; and, taking up my coat, I deposited the
- book in one of its pockets, and then put it on (_i.e._ the coat). ‘Now
- come here, you idle dog, and make yourself useful for once,’ I continued.
- ‘Pull off your coat, and take my place in the field till I come back.’
- ‘Till you come back?—and where are you going, pray? ‘No matter where—the
- when is all that concerns you;—and I shall be back by dinner, at least.’
- ‘Oh—oh! and I’m to labour away till then, am I?—and to keep all these
- fellows hard at it besides? Well, well! I’ll submit—for once in a
- way.—Come, my lads, you must look sharp: I’m come to help you now:—and
- woe be to that man, or woman either, that pauses for a moment amongst
- you—whether to stare about him, to scratch his head, or blow his nose—no
- pretext will serve—nothing but work, work, work in the sweat of your
- face,’ &c., &c.
- Leaving him thus haranguing the people, more to their amusement than
- edification, I returned to the house, and, having made some alteration in
- my toilet, hastened away to Wildfell Hall, with the book in my pocket;
- for it was destined for the shelves of Mrs. Graham.
- ‘What! then had she and you got on so well together as to come to the
- giving and receiving of presents?’—Not precisely, old buck; this was my
- first experiment in that line; and I was very anxious to see the result
- of it.
- We had met several times since the — Bay excursion, and I had found she
- was not averse to my company, provided I confined my conversation to the
- discussion of abstract matters, or topics of common interest;—the moment
- I touched upon the sentimental or the complimentary, or made the
- slightest approach to tenderness in word or look, I was not only punished
- by an immediate change in her manner at the time, but doomed to find her
- more cold and distant, if not entirely inaccessible, when next I sought
- her company. This circumstance did not greatly disconcert me, however,
- because I attributed it, not so much to any dislike of my person, as to
- some absolute resolution against a second marriage formed prior to the
- time of our acquaintance, whether from excess of affection for her late
- husband, or because she had had enough of him and the matrimonial state
- together. At first, indeed, she had seemed to take a pleasure in
- mortifying my vanity and crushing my presumption—relentlessly nipping off
- bud by bud as they ventured to appear; and then, I confess, I was deeply
- wounded, though, at the same time, stimulated to seek revenge;—but
- latterly finding, beyond a doubt, that I was not that empty-headed
- coxcomb she had first supposed me, she had repulsed my modest advances in
- quite a different spirit. It was a kind of serious, almost sorrowful
- displeasure, which I soon learnt carefully to avoid awakening.
- ‘Let me first establish my position as a friend,’ thought I—‘the patron
- and playfellow of her son, the sober, solid, plain-dealing friend of
- herself, and then, when I have made myself fairly necessary to her
- comfort and enjoyment in life (as I believe I can), we’ll see what next
- may be effected.’
- So we talked about painting, poetry, and music, theology, geology, and
- philosophy: once or twice I lent her a book, and once she lent me one in
- return: I met her in her walks as often as I could; I came to her house
- as often as I dared. My first pretext for invading the sanctum was to
- bring Arthur a little waddling puppy of which Sancho was the father, and
- which delighted the child beyond expression, and, consequently, could not
- fail to please his mamma. My second was to bring him a book, which,
- knowing his mother’s particularity, I had carefully selected, and which I
- submitted for her approbation before presenting it to him. Then, I
- brought her some plants for her garden, in my sister’s name—having
- previously persuaded Rose to send them. Each of these times I inquired
- after the picture she was painting from the sketch taken on the cliff,
- and was admitted into the studio, and asked my opinion or advice
- respecting its progress.
- My last visit had been to return the book she had lent me; and then it
- was that, in casually discussing the poetry of Sir Walter Scott, she had
- expressed a wish to see ‘Marmion,’ and I had conceived the presumptuous
- idea of making her a present of it, and, on my return home, instantly
- sent for the smart little volume I had this morning received. But an
- apology for invading the hermitage was still necessary; so I had
- furnished myself with a blue morocco collar for Arthur’s little dog; and
- that being given and received, with much more joy and gratitude, on the
- part of the receiver, than the worth of the gift or the selfish motive of
- the giver deserved, I ventured to ask Mrs. Graham for one more look at
- the picture, if it was still there.
- ‘Oh, yes! come in,’ said she (for I had met them in the garden). ‘It is
- finished and framed, all ready for sending away; but give me your last
- opinion, and if you can suggest any further improvement, it shall be—duly
- considered, at least.’
- The picture was strikingly beautiful; it was the very scene itself,
- transferred as if by magic to the canvas; but I expressed my approbation
- in guarded terms, and few words, for fear of displeasing her. She,
- however, attentively watched my looks, and her artist’s pride was
- gratified, no doubt, to read my heartfelt admiration in my eyes. But,
- while I gazed, I thought upon the book, and wondered how it was to be
- presented. My heart failed me; but I determined not to be such a fool as
- to come away without having made the attempt. It was useless waiting for
- an opportunity, and useless trying to concoct a speech for the occasion.
- The more plainly and naturally the thing was done, the better, I thought;
- so I just looked out of the window to screw up my courage, and then
- pulled out the book, turned round, and put it into her hand, with this
- short explanation:
- ‘You were wishing to see ‘Marmion,’ Mrs. Graham; and here it is, if you
- will be so kind as to take it.’
- A momentary blush suffused her face—perhaps, a blush of sympathetic shame
- for such an awkward style of presentation: she gravely examined the
- volume on both sides; then silently turned over the leaves, knitting her
- brows the while, in serious cogitation; then closed the book, and turning
- from it to me, quietly asked the price of it—I felt the hot blood rush to
- my face.
- ‘I’m sorry to offend you, Mr. Markham,’ said she, ‘but unless I pay for
- the book, I cannot take it.’ And she laid it on the table.
- ‘Why cannot you?’
- ‘Because,’—she paused, and looked at the carpet.
- ‘Why cannot you?’ I repeated, with a degree of irascibility that roused
- her to lift her eyes and look me steadily in the face.
- ‘Because I don’t like to put myself under obligations that I can never
- repay—I am obliged to you already for your kindness to my son; but his
- grateful affection and your own good feelings must reward you for that.’
- ‘Nonsense!’ ejaculated I.
- She turned her eyes on me again, with a look of quiet, grave surprise,
- that had the effect of a rebuke, whether intended for such or not.
- ‘Then you won’t take the book?’ I asked, more mildly than I had yet
- spoken.
- ‘I will gladly take it, if you will let me pay for it.’ I told her the
- exact price, and the cost of the carriage besides, in as calm a tone as I
- could command—for, in fact, I was ready to weep with disappointment and
- vexation.
- She produced her purse, and coolly counted out the money, but hesitated
- to put it into my hand. Attentively regarding me, in a tone of soothing
- softness, she observed,—‘You think yourself insulted, Mr Markham—I wish I
- could make you understand that—that I—’
- ‘I do understand you, perfectly,’ I said. ‘You think that if you were to
- accept that trifle from me now, I should presume upon it hereafter; but
- you are mistaken:—if you will only oblige me by taking it, believe me, I
- shall build no hopes upon it, and consider this no precedent for future
- favours:—and it is nonsense to talk about putting yourself under
- obligations to me when you must know that in such a case the obligation
- is entirely on my side,—the favour on yours.’
- ‘Well, then, I’ll take you at your word,’ she answered, with a most
- angelic smile, returning the odious money to her purse—‘but remember!’
- ‘I will remember—what I have said;—but do not you punish my presumption
- by withdrawing your friendship entirely from me,—or expect me to atone
- for it by being more distant than before,’ said I, extending my hand to
- take leave, for I was too much excited to remain.
- ‘Well, then! let us be as we were,’ replied she, frankly placing her hand
- in mine; and while I held it there, I had much difficulty to refrain from
- pressing it to my lips;—but that would be suicidal madness: I had been
- bold enough already, and this premature offering had well-nigh given the
- death-blow to my hopes.
- It was with an agitated, burning heart and brain that I hurried
- homewards, regardless of that scorching noonday sun—forgetful of
- everything but her I had just left—regretting nothing but her
- impenetrability, and my own precipitancy and want of tact—fearing nothing
- but her hateful resolution, and my inability to overcome it—hoping
- nothing—but halt,—I will not bore you with my conflicting hopes and
- fears—my serious cogitations and resolves.
- CHAPTER IX
- Though my affections might now be said to be fairly weaned from Eliza
- Millward, I did not yet entirely relinquish my visits to the vicarage,
- because I wanted, as it were, to let her down easy; without raising much
- sorrow, or incurring much resentment,—or making myself the talk of the
- parish; and besides, if I had wholly kept away, the vicar, who looked
- upon my visits as paid chiefly, if not entirely, to himself, would have
- felt himself decidedly affronted by the neglect. But when I called there
- the day after my interview with Mrs. Graham, he happened to be from
- home—a circumstance by no means so agreeable to me now as it had been on
- former occasions. Miss Millward was there, it is true, but she, of
- course, would be little better than a nonentity. However, I resolved to
- make my visit a short one, and to talk to Eliza in a brotherly, friendly
- sort of way, such as our long acquaintance might warrant me in assuming,
- and which, I thought, could neither give offence nor serve to encourage
- false hopes.
- It was never my custom to talk about Mrs. Graham either to her or any one
- else; but I had not been seated three minutes before she brought that
- lady on to the carpet herself in a rather remarkable manner.
- ‘Oh, Mr. Markham!’ said she, with a shocked expression and voice subdued
- almost to a whisper, ‘what do you think of these shocking reports about
- Mrs. Graham?—can you encourage us to disbelieve them?’
- ‘What reports?’
- ‘Ah, now! you know!’ she slily smiled and shook her head.
- ‘I know nothing about them. What in the world do you mean, Eliza?’
- ‘Oh, don’t ask me! _I_ can’t explain it.’ She took up the cambric
- handkerchief which she had been beautifying with a deep lace border, and
- began to be very busy.
- ‘What is it, Miss Millward? what does she mean?’ said I, appealing to her
- sister, who seemed to be absorbed in the hemming of a large, coarse
- sheet.
- ‘I don’t know,’ replied she. ‘Some idle slander somebody has been
- inventing, I suppose. I never heard it till Eliza told me the other
- day,—but if all the parish dinned it in my ears, I shouldn’t believe a
- word of it—I know Mrs. Graham too well!’
- ‘Quite right, Miss Millward!—and so do I—whatever it may be.’
- ‘Well,’ observed Eliza, with a gentle sigh, ‘it’s well to have such a
- comfortable assurance regarding the worth of those we love. I only wish
- you may not find your confidence misplaced.’
- And she raised her face, and gave me such a look of sorrowful tenderness
- as might have melted my heart, but within those eyes there lurked a
- something that I did not like; and I wondered how I ever could have
- admired them—her sister’s honest face and small grey optics appeared far
- more agreeable. But I was out of temper with Eliza at that moment for
- her insinuations against Mrs. Graham, which were false, I was certain,
- whether she knew it or not.
- I said nothing more on the subject, however, at the time, and but little
- on any other; for, finding I could not well recover my equanimity, I
- presently rose and took leave, excusing myself under the plea of business
- at the farm; and to the farm I went, not troubling my mind one whit about
- the possible truth of these mysterious reports, but only wondering what
- they were, by whom originated, and on what foundations raised, and how
- they could the most effectually be silenced or disproved.
- A few days after this we had another of our quiet little parties, to
- which the usual company of friends and neighbours had been invited, and
- Mrs. Graham among the number. She could not now absent herself under the
- plea of dark evenings or inclement weather, and, greatly to my relief,
- she came. Without her I should have found the whole affair an
- intolerable bore; but the moment of her arrival brought new life to the
- house, and though I might not neglect the other guests for her, or expect
- to engross much of her attention and conversation to myself alone, I
- anticipated an evening of no common enjoyment.
- Mr. Lawrence came too. He did not arrive till some time after the rest
- were assembled. I was curious to see how he would comport himself to
- Mrs. Graham. A slight bow was all that passed between them on his
- entrance; and having politely greeted the other members of the company,
- he seated himself quite aloof from the young widow, between my mother and
- Rose.
- ‘Did you ever see such art?’ whispered Eliza, who was my nearest
- neighbour. ‘Would you not say they were perfect strangers?’
- ‘Almost; but what then?’
- ‘What then; why, you can’t pretend to be ignorant?’
- ‘Ignorant of what?’ demanded I, so sharply that she started and replied,—
- ‘Oh, hush! don’t speak so loud.’
- ‘Well, tell me then,’ I answered in a lower tone, ‘what is it you mean?
- I hate enigmas.’
- ‘Well, you know, I don’t vouch for the truth of it—indeed, far from
- it—but haven’t you heard—?’
- ‘I’ve heard nothing, except from you.’
- ‘You must be wilfully deaf then, for anyone will tell you that; but I
- shall only anger you by repeating it, I see, so I had better hold my
- tongue.’
- She closed her lips and folded her hands before her, with an air of
- injured meekness.
- ‘If you had wished not to anger me, you should have held your tongue from
- the beginning, or else spoken out plainly and honestly all you had to
- say.’
- She turned aside her face, pulled out her handkerchief, rose, and went to
- the window, where she stood for some time, evidently dissolved in tears.
- I was astounded, provoked, ashamed—not so much of my harshness as for her
- childish weakness. However, no one seemed to notice her, and shortly
- after we were summoned to the tea-table: in those parts it was customary
- to sit to the table at tea-time on all occasions, and make a meal of it,
- for we dined early. On taking my seat, I had Rose on one side of me and
- an empty chair on the other.
- ‘May I sit by you?’ said a soft voice at my elbow.
- ‘If you like,’ was the reply; and Eliza slipped into the vacant chair;
- then, looking up in my face with a half-sad, half-playful smile, she
- whispered,—‘You’re so stern, Gilbert.’
- I handed down her tea with a slightly contemptuous smile, and said
- nothing, for I had nothing to say.
- ‘What have I done to offend you?’ said she, more plaintively. ‘I wish I
- knew.’
- ‘Come, take your tea, Eliza, and don’t be foolish,’ responded I, handing
- her the sugar and cream.
- Just then there arose a slight commotion on the other side of me,
- occasioned by Miss Wilson’s coming to negotiate an exchange of seats with
- Rose.
- ‘Will you be so good as to exchange places with me, Miss Markham?’ said
- she; ‘for I don’t like to sit by Mrs. Graham. If your mamma thinks
- proper to invite such persons to her house, she cannot object to her
- daughter’s keeping company with them.’
- This latter clause was added in a sort of soliloquy when Rose was gone;
- but I was not polite enough to let it pass.
- ‘Will you be so good as to tell me what you mean, Miss Wilson?’ said I.
- The question startled her a little, but not much.
- ‘Why, Mr. Markham,’ replied she, coolly, having quickly recovered her
- self-possession, ‘it surprises me rather that Mrs. Markham should invite
- such a person as Mrs. Graham to her house; but, perhaps, she is not aware
- that the lady’s character is considered scarcely respectable.’
- ‘She is not, nor am I; and therefore you would oblige me by explaining
- your meaning a little further.’
- ‘This is scarcely the time or the place for such explanations; but I
- think you can hardly be so ignorant as you pretend—you must know her as
- well as I do.’
- ‘I think I do, perhaps a little better; and therefore, if you will inform
- me what you have heard or imagined against her, I shall, perhaps, be able
- to set you right.’
- ‘Can you tell me, then, who was her husband, or if she ever had any?’
- Indignation kept me silent. At such a time and place I could not trust
- myself to answer.
- ‘Have you never observed,’ said Eliza, ‘what a striking likeness there is
- between that child of hers and—’
- ‘And whom?’ demanded Miss Wilson, with an air of cold, but keen severity.
- Eliza was startled; the timidly spoken suggestion had been intended for
- my ear alone.
- ‘Oh, I beg your pardon!’ pleaded she; ‘I may be mistaken—perhaps I was
- mistaken.’ But she accompanied the words with a sly glance of derision
- directed to me from the corner of her disingenuous eye.
- ‘There’s no need to ask my pardon,’ replied her friend, ‘but I see no one
- here that at all resembles that child, except his mother, and when you
- hear ill-natured reports, Miss Eliza, I will thank you, that is, I think
- you will do well, to refrain from repeating them. I presume the person
- you allude to is Mr. Lawrence; but I think I can assure you that your
- suspicions, in that respect, are utterly misplaced; and if he has any
- particular connection with the lady at all (which no one has a right to
- assert), at least he has (what cannot be said of some others) sufficient
- sense of propriety to withhold him from acknowledging anything more than
- a bowing acquaintance in the presence of respectable persons; he was
- evidently both surprised and annoyed to find her here.’
- ‘Go it!’ cried Fergus, who sat on the other side of Eliza, and was the
- only individual who shared that side of the table with us. ‘Go it like
- bricks! mind you don’t leave her one stone upon another.’
- Miss Wilson drew herself up with a look of freezing scorn, but said
- nothing. Eliza would have replied, but I interrupted her by saying as
- calmly as I could, though in a tone which betrayed, no doubt, some little
- of what I felt within,—‘We have had enough of this subject; if we can
- only speak to slander our betters, let us hold our tongues.’
- ‘I think you’d better,’ observed Fergus, ‘and so does our good parson; he
- has been addressing the company in his richest vein all the while, and
- eyeing you, from time to time, with looks of stern distaste, while you
- sat there, irreverently whispering and muttering together; and once he
- paused in the middle of a story or a sermon, I don’t know which, and
- fixed his eyes upon you, Gilbert, as much as to say, “When Mr. Markham
- has done flirting with those two ladies I will proceed.”’
- What more was said at the tea-table I cannot tell, nor how I found
- patience to sit till the meal was over. I remember, however, that I
- swallowed with difficulty the remainder of the tea that was in my cup,
- and ate nothing; and that the first thing I did was to stare at Arthur
- Graham, who sat beside his mother on the opposite side of the table, and
- the second to stare at Mr. Lawrence, who sat below; and, first, it struck
- me that there was a likeness; but, on further contemplation, I concluded
- it was only in imagination.
- Both, it is true, had more delicate features and smaller bones than
- commonly fall to the lot of individuals of the rougher sex, and
- Lawrence’s complexion was pale and clear, and Arthur’s delicately fair;
- but Arthur’s tiny, somewhat snubby nose could never become so long and
- straight as Mr. Lawrence’s; and the outline of his face, though not full
- enough to be round, and too finely converging to the small, dimpled chin
- to be square, could never be drawn out to the long oval of the other’s,
- while the child’s hair was evidently of a lighter, warmer tint than the
- elder gentleman’s had ever been, and his large, clear blue eyes, though
- prematurely serious at times, were utterly dissimilar to the shy hazel
- eyes of Mr. Lawrence, whence the sensitive soul looked so distrustfully
- forth, as ever ready to retire within, from the offences of a too rude,
- too uncongenial world. Wretch that I was to harbour that detestable idea
- for a moment! Did I not know Mrs. Graham? Had I not seen her, conversed
- with her time after time? Was I not certain that she, in intellect, in
- purity and elevation of soul, was immeasurably superior to any of her
- detractors; that she was, in fact, the noblest, the most adorable, of her
- sex I had ever beheld, or even imagined to exist? Yes, and I would say
- with Mary Millward (sensible girl as she was), that if all the parish,
- ay, or all the world, should din these horrible lies in my ears, I would
- not believe them, for I knew her better than they.
- Meantime, my brain was on fire with indignation, and my heart seemed
- ready to burst from its prison with conflicting passions. I regarded my
- two fair neighbours with a feeling of abhorrence and loathing I scarcely
- endeavoured to conceal. I was rallied from several quarters for my
- abstraction and ungallant neglect of the ladies; but I cared little for
- that: all I cared about, besides that one grand subject of my thoughts,
- was to see the cups travel up to the tea-tray, and not come down again.
- I thought Mr. Millward never would cease telling us that he was no
- tea-drinker, and that it was highly injurious to keep loading the stomach
- with slops to the exclusion of more wholesome sustenance, and so give
- himself time to finish his fourth cup.
- At length it was over; and I rose and left the table and the guests
- without a word of apology—I could endure their company no longer. I
- rushed out to cool my brain in the balmy evening air, and to compose my
- mind or indulge my passionate thoughts in the solitude of the garden.
- To avoid being seen from the windows I went down a quiet little avenue
- that skirted one side of the inclosure, at the bottom of which was a seat
- embowered in roses and honeysuckles. Here I sat down to think over the
- virtues and wrongs of the lady of Wildfell Hall; but I had not been so
- occupied two minutes, before voices and laughter, and glimpses of moving
- objects through the trees, informed me that the whole company had turned
- out to take an airing in the garden too. However, I nestled up in a
- corner of the bower, and hoped to retain possession of it, secure alike
- from observation and intrusion. But no—confound it—there was some one
- coming down the avenue! Why couldn’t they enjoy the flowers and sunshine
- of the open garden, and leave that sunless nook to me, and the gnats and
- midges?
- But, peeping through my fragrant screen of the interwoven branches to
- discover who the intruders were (for a murmur of voices told me it was
- more than one), my vexation instantly subsided, and far other feelings
- agitated my still unquiet soul; for there was Mrs. Graham, slowly moving
- down the walk with Arthur by her side, and no one else. Why were they
- alone? Had the poison of detracting tongues already spread through all;
- and had they all turned their backs upon her? I now recollected having
- seen Mrs. Wilson, in the early part of the evening, edging her chair
- close up to my mother, and bending forward, evidently in the delivery of
- some important confidential intelligence; and from the incessant wagging
- of her head, the frequent distortions of her wrinkled physiognomy, and
- the winking and malicious twinkle of her little ugly eyes, I judged it
- was some spicy piece of scandal that engaged her powers; and from the
- cautious privacy of the communication I supposed some person then present
- was the luckless object of her calumnies: and from all these tokens,
- together with my mother’s looks and gestures of mingled horror and
- incredulity, I now concluded that object to have been Mrs. Graham. I did
- not emerge from my place of concealment till she had nearly reached the
- bottom of the walk, lest my appearance should drive her away; and when I
- did step forward she stood still and seemed inclined to turn back as it
- was.
- ‘Oh, don’t let us disturb you, Mr. Markham!’ said she. ‘We came here to
- seek retirement ourselves, not to intrude on your seclusion.’
- ‘I am no hermit, Mrs. Graham—though I own it looks rather like it to
- absent myself in this uncourteous fashion from my guests.’
- ‘I feared you were unwell,’ said she, with a look of real concern.
- ‘I was rather, but it’s over now. Do sit here a little and rest, and
- tell me how you like this arbour,’ said I, and, lifting Arthur by the
- shoulders, I planted him in the middle of the seat by way of securing his
- mamma, who, acknowledging it to be a tempting place of refuge, threw
- herself back in one corner, while I took possession of the other.
- But that word refuge disturbed me. Had their unkindness then really
- driven her to seek for peace in solitude?
- ‘Why have they left you alone?’ I asked.
- ‘It is I who have left them,’ was the smiling rejoinder. ‘I was wearied
- to death with small talk—nothing wears me out like that. I cannot
- imagine how they can go on as they do.’
- I could not help smiling at the serious depth of her wonderment.
- ‘Is it that they think it a duty to be continually talking,’ pursued she:
- ‘and so never pause to think, but fill up with aimless trifles and vain
- repetitions when subjects of real interest fail to present themselves, or
- do they really take a pleasure in such discourse?’
- ‘Very likely they do,’ said I; ‘their shallow minds can hold no great
- ideas, and their light heads are carried away by trivialities that would
- not move a better-furnished skull; and their only alternative to such
- discourse is to plunge over head and ears into the slough of
- scandal—which is their chief delight.’
- ‘Not all of them, surely?’ cried the lady, astonished at the bitterness
- of my remark.
- ‘No, certainly; I exonerate my sister from such degraded tastes, and my
- mother too, if you included her in your animadversions.’
- ‘I meant no animadversions against any one, and certainly intended no
- disrespectful allusions to your mother. I have known some sensible
- persons great adepts in that style of conversation when circumstances
- impelled them to it; but it is a gift I cannot boast the possession of.
- I kept up my attention on this occasion as long as I could, but when my
- powers were exhausted I stole away to seek a few minutes’ repose in this
- quiet walk. I hate talking where there is no exchange of ideas or
- sentiments, and no good given or received.’
- ‘Well,’ said I, ‘if ever I trouble you with my loquacity, tell me so at
- once, and I promise not to be offended; for I possess the faculty of
- enjoying the company of those I—of my friends as well in silence as in
- conversation.’
- ‘I don’t quite believe you; but if it were so you would exactly suit me
- for a companion.’
- ‘I am all you wish, then, in other respects?’
- ‘No, I don’t mean that. How beautiful those little clusters of foliage
- look, where the sun comes through behind them!’ said she, on purpose to
- change the subject.
- And they did look beautiful, where at intervals the level rays of the sun
- penetrating the thickness of trees and shrubs on the opposite side of the
- path before us, relieved their dusky verdure by displaying patches of
- semi-transparent leaves of resplendent golden green.
- ‘I almost wish I were not a painter,’ observed my companion.
- ‘Why so? one would think at such a time you would most exult in your
- privilege of being able to imitate the various brilliant and delightful
- touches of nature.’
- ‘No; for instead of delivering myself up to the full enjoyment of them as
- others do, I am always troubling my head about how I could produce the
- same effect upon canvas; and as that can never be done, it is mere vanity
- and vexation of spirit.’
- ‘Perhaps you cannot do it to satisfy yourself, but you may and do succeed
- in delighting others with the result of your endeavours.’
- ‘Well, after all, I should not complain: perhaps few people gain their
- livelihood with so much pleasure in their toil as I do. Here is some one
- coming.’
- She seemed vexed at the interruption.
- ‘It is only Mr. Lawrence and Miss Wilson,’ said I, ‘coming to enjoy a
- quiet stroll. They will not disturb us.’
- I could not quite decipher the expression of her face; but I was
- satisfied there was no jealousy therein. What business had I to look for
- it?
- ‘What sort of a person is Miss Wilson?’ she asked.
- ‘She is elegant and accomplished above the generality of her birth and
- station; and some say she is ladylike and agreeable.’
- ‘I thought her somewhat frigid and rather supercilious in her manner
- to-day.’
- ‘Very likely she might be so to you. She has possibly taken a prejudice
- against you, for I think she regards you in the light of a rival.’
- ‘Me! Impossible, Mr. Markham!’ said she, evidently astonished and
- annoyed.
- ‘Well, I know nothing about it,’ returned I, rather doggedly; for I
- thought her annoyance was chiefly against myself.
- The pair had now approached within a few paces of us. Our arbour was set
- snugly back in a corner, before which the avenue at its termination
- turned off into the more airy walk along the bottom of the garden. As
- they approached this, I saw, by the aspect of Jane Wilson, that she was
- directing her companion’s attention to us; and, as well by her cold,
- sarcastic smile as by the few isolated words of her discourse that
- reached me, I knew full well that she was impressing him with the idea,
- that we were strongly attached to each other. I noticed that he coloured
- up to the temples, gave us one furtive glance in passing, and walked on,
- looking grave, but seemingly offering no reply to her remarks.
- It was true, then, that he had some designs upon Mrs. Graham; and, were
- they honourable, he would not be so anxious to conceal them. She was
- blameless, of course, but he was detestable beyond all count.
- While these thoughts flashed through my mind, my companion abruptly rose,
- and calling her son, said they would now go in quest of the company, and
- departed up the avenue. Doubtless she had heard or guessed something of
- Miss Wilson’s remarks, and therefore it was natural enough she should
- choose to continue the _tête-à-tête_ no longer, especially as at that
- moment my cheeks were burning with indignation against my former friend,
- the token of which she might mistake for a blush of stupid embarrassment.
- For this I owed Miss Wilson yet another grudge; and still the more I
- thought upon her conduct the more I hated her.
- It was late in the evening before I joined the company. I found Mrs.
- Graham already equipped for departure, and taking leave of the rest, who
- were now returned to the house. I offered, nay, begged to accompany her
- home. Mr. Lawrence was standing by at the time conversing with some one
- else. He did not look at us, but, on hearing my earnest request, he
- paused in the middle of a sentence to listen for her reply, and went on,
- with a look of quiet satisfaction, the moment he found it was to be a
- denial.
- A denial it was, decided, though not unkind. She could not be persuaded
- to think there was danger for herself or her child in traversing those
- lonely lanes and fields without attendance. It was daylight still, and
- she should meet no one; or if she did, the people were quiet and harmless
- she was well assured. In fact, she would not hear of any one’s putting
- himself out of the way to accompany her, though Fergus vouchsafed to
- offer his services in case they should be more acceptable than mine, and
- my mother begged she might send one of the farming-men to escort her.
- When she was gone the rest was all a blank or worse. Lawrence attempted
- to draw me into conversation, but I snubbed him and went to another part
- of the room. Shortly after the party broke up and he himself took leave.
- When he came to me I was blind to his extended hand, and deaf to his
- good-night till he repeated it a second time; and then, to get rid of
- him, I muttered an inarticulate reply, accompanied by a sulky nod.
- ‘What is the matter, Markham?’ whispered he.
- I replied by a wrathful and contemptuous stare.
- ‘Are you angry because Mrs. Graham would not let you go home with her?’
- he asked, with a faint smile that nearly exasperated me beyond control.
- But, swallowing down all fiercer answers, I merely demanded,—‘What
- business is it of yours?’
- ‘Why, none,’ replied he with provoking quietness; ‘only,’—and he raised
- his eyes to my face, and spoke with unusual solemnity,—‘only let me tell
- you, Markham, that if you have any designs in that quarter, they will
- certainly fail; and it grieves me to see you cherishing false hopes, and
- wasting your strength in useless efforts, for—’
- ‘Hypocrite!’ I exclaimed; and he held his breath, and looked very blank,
- turned white about the gills, and went away without another word.
- I had wounded him to the quick; and I was glad of it.
- CHAPTER X
- When all were gone, I learnt that the vile slander had indeed been
- circulated throughout the company, in the very presence of the victim.
- Rose, however, vowed she did not and would not believe it, and my mother
- made the same declaration, though not, I fear, with the same amount of
- real, unwavering incredulity. It seemed to dwell continually on her
- mind, and she kept irritating me from time to time by such expressions
- as—‘Dear, dear, who would have thought it!—Well! I always thought there
- was something odd about her.—You see what it is for women to affect to be
- different to other people.’ And once it was,—‘I misdoubted that
- appearance of mystery from the very first—I thought there would no good
- come of it; but this is a sad, sad business, to be sure!’
- ‘Why, mother, you said you didn’t believe these tales,’ said Fergus.
- ‘No more I do, my dear; but then, you know, there must be some
- foundation.’
- ‘The foundation is in the wickedness and falsehood of the world,’ said I,
- ‘and in the fact that Mr. Lawrence has been seen to go that way once or
- twice of an evening—and the village gossips say he goes to pay his
- addresses to the strange lady, and the scandal-mongers have greedily
- seized the rumour, to make it the basis of their own infernal structure.’
- ‘Well, but, Gilbert, there must be something in her manner to countenance
- such reports.’
- ‘Did you see anything in her manner?’
- ‘No, certainly; but then, you know, I always said there was something
- strange about her.’
- I believe it was on that very evening that I ventured on another invasion
- of Wildfell Hall. From the time of our party, which was upwards of a
- week ago, I had been making daily efforts to meet its mistress in her
- walks; and always disappointed (she must have managed it so on purpose),
- had nightly kept revolving in my mind some pretext for another call. At
- length I concluded that the separation could be endured no longer (by
- this time, you will see, I was pretty far gone); and, taking from the
- book-case an old volume that I thought she might be interested in,
- though, from its unsightly and somewhat dilapidated condition, I had not
- yet ventured to offer it for perusal, I hastened away,—but not without
- sundry misgivings as to how she would receive me, or how I could summon
- courage to present myself with so slight an excuse. But, perhaps, I
- might see her in the field or the garden, and then there would be no
- great difficulty: it was the formal knocking at the door, with the
- prospect of being gravely ushered in by Rachel, to the presence of a
- surprised, uncordial mistress, that so greatly disturbed me.
- My wish, however, was not gratified. Mrs. Graham herself was not to be
- seen; but there was Arthur playing with his frolicsome little dog in the
- garden. I looked over the gate and called him to me. He wanted me to
- come in; but I told him I could not without his mother’s leave.
- ‘I’ll go and ask her,’ said the child.
- ‘No, no, Arthur, you mustn’t do that; but if she’s not engaged, just ask
- her to come here a minute. Tell her I want to speak to her.’
- He ran to perform my bidding, and quickly returned with his mother. How
- lovely she looked with her dark ringlets streaming in the light summer
- breeze, her fair cheek slightly flushed, and her countenance radiant with
- smiles. Dear Arthur! what did I not owe to you for this and every other
- happy meeting? Through him I was at once delivered from all formality,
- and terror, and constraint. In love affairs, there is no mediator like a
- merry, simple-hearted child—ever ready to cement divided hearts, to span
- the unfriendly gulf of custom, to melt the ice of cold reserve, and
- overthrow the separating walls of dread formality and pride.
- ‘Well, Mr. Markham, what is it?’ said the young mother, accosting me with
- a pleasant smile.
- ‘I want you to look at this book, and, if you please, to take it, and
- peruse it at your leisure. I make no apology for calling you out on such
- a lovely evening, though it be for a matter of no greater importance.’
- ‘Tell him to come in, mamma,’ said Arthur.
- ‘Would you like to come in?’ asked the lady.
- ‘Yes; I should like to see your improvements in the garden.’
- ‘And how your sister’s roots have prospered in my charge,’ added she, as
- she opened the gate.
- And we sauntered through the garden, and talked of the flowers, the
- trees, and the book, and then of other things. The evening was kind and
- genial, and so was my companion. By degrees I waxed more warm and tender
- than, perhaps, I had ever been before; but still I said nothing tangible,
- and she attempted no repulse, until, in passing a moss rose-tree that I
- had brought her some weeks since, in my sister’s name, she plucked a
- beautiful half-open bud and bade me give it to Rose.
- ‘May I not keep it myself?’ I asked.
- ‘No; but here is another for you.’
- Instead of taking it quietly, I likewise took the hand that offered it,
- and looked into her face. She let me hold it for a moment, and I saw a
- flash of ecstatic brilliance in her eye, a glow of glad excitement on her
- face—I thought my hour of victory was come—but instantly a painful
- recollection seemed to flash upon her; a cloud of anguish darkened her
- brow, a marble paleness blanched her cheek and lip; there seemed a moment
- of inward conflict, and, with a sudden effort, she withdrew her hand, and
- retreated a step or two back.
- ‘Now, Mr. Markham,’ said she, with a kind of desperate calmness, ‘I must
- tell you plainly that I cannot do with this. I like your company,
- because I am alone here, and your conversation pleases me more than that
- of any other person; but if you cannot be content to regard me as a
- friend—a plain, cold, motherly, or sisterly friend—I must beg you to
- leave me now, and let me alone hereafter: in fact, we must be strangers
- for the future.’
- ‘I will, then—be your friend, or brother, or anything you wish, if you
- will only let me continue to see you; but tell me why I cannot be
- anything more?’
- There was a perplexed and thoughtful pause.
- ‘Is it in consequence of some rash vow?’
- ‘It is something of the kind,’ she answered. ‘Some day I may tell you,
- but at present you had better leave me; and never, Gilbert, put me to the
- painful necessity of repeating what I have just now said to you,’ she
- earnestly added, giving me her hand in serious kindness. How sweet, how
- musical my own name sounded in her mouth!
- ‘I will not,’ I replied. ‘But you pardon this offence?’
- ‘On condition that you never repeat it.’
- ‘And may I come to see you now and then?’
- ‘Perhaps—occasionally; provided you never abuse the privilege.’
- ‘I make no empty promises, but you shall see.’
- ‘The moment you do our intimacy is at an end, that’s all.’
- ‘And will you always call me Gilbert? It sounds more sisterly, and it
- will serve to remind me of our contract.’
- She smiled, and once more bid me go; and at length I judged it prudent to
- obey, and she re-entered the house and I went down the hill. But as I
- went the tramp of horses’ hoofs fell on my ear, and broke the stillness
- of the dewy evening; and, looking towards the lane, I saw a solitary
- equestrian coming up. Inclining to dusk as it was, I knew him at a
- glance: it was Mr. Lawrence on his grey pony. I flew across the field,
- leaped the stone fence, and then walked down the lane to meet him. On
- seeing me, he suddenly drew in his little steed, and seemed inclined to
- turn back, but on second thought apparently judged it better to continue
- his course as before. He accosted me with a slight bow, and, edging
- close to the wall, endeavoured to pass on; but I was not so minded.
- Seizing his horse by the bridle, I exclaimed,—‘Now, Lawrence, I will have
- this mystery explained! Tell me where you are going, and what you mean
- to do—at once, and distinctly!’
- ‘Will you take your hand off the bridle?’ said he, quietly—‘you’re
- hurting my pony’s mouth.’
- ‘You and your pony be—’
- ‘What makes you so coarse and brutal, Markham? I’m quite ashamed of
- you.’
- ‘You answer my questions—before you leave this spot I will know what you
- mean by this perfidious duplicity!’
- ‘I shall answer no questions till you let go the bridle,—if you stand
- till morning.’
- ‘Now then,’ said I, unclosing my hand, but still standing before him.
- ‘Ask me some other time, when you can speak like a gentleman,’ returned
- he, and he made an effort to pass me again; but I quickly re-captured the
- pony, scarce less astonished than its master at such uncivil usage.
- ‘Really, Mr. Markham, this is too much!’ said the latter. ‘Can I not go
- to see my tenant on matters of business, without being assaulted in this
- manner by—?’
- ‘This is no time for business, sir!—I’ll tell you, now, what I think of
- your conduct.’
- ‘You’d better defer your opinion to a more convenient season,’
- interrupted he in a low tone—‘here’s the vicar.’ And, in truth, the
- vicar was just behind me, plodding homeward from some remote corner of
- his parish. I immediately released the squire; and he went on his way,
- saluting Mr. Millward as he passed.
- ‘What! quarrelling, Markham?’ cried the latter, addressing himself to
- me,—‘and about that young widow, I doubt?’ he added, reproachfully
- shaking his head. ‘But let me tell you, young man’ (here he put his face
- into mine with an important, confidential air), ‘she’s not worth it!’ and
- he confirmed the assertion by a solemn nod.
- ‘MR. MILLWARD,’ I exclaimed, in a tone of wrathful menace that made the
- reverend gentleman look round—aghast—astounded at such unwonted
- insolence, and stare me in the face, with a look that plainly said,
- ‘What, this to me!’ But I was too indignant to apologise, or to speak
- another word to him: I turned away, and hastened homewards, descending
- with rapid strides the steep, rough lane, and leaving him to follow as he
- pleased.
- CHAPTER XI
- You must suppose about three weeks passed over. Mrs. Graham and I were
- now established friends—or brother and sister, as we rather chose to
- consider ourselves. She called me Gilbert, by my express desire, and I
- called her Helen, for I had seen that name written in her books. I
- seldom attempted to see her above twice a week; and still I made our
- meetings appear the result of accident as often as I could—for I found it
- necessary to be extremely careful—and, altogether, I behaved with such
- exceeding propriety that she never had occasion to reprove me once. Yet
- I could not but perceive that she was at times unhappy and dissatisfied
- with herself or her position, and truly I myself was not quite contented
- with the latter: this assumption of brotherly nonchalance was very hard
- to sustain, and I often felt myself a most confounded hypocrite with it
- all; I saw too, or rather I felt, that, in spite of herself, ‘I was not
- indifferent to her,’ as the novel heroes modestly express it, and while I
- thankfully enjoyed my present good fortune, I could not fail to wish and
- hope for something better in future; but, of course, I kept such dreams
- entirely to myself.
- ‘Where are you going, Gilbert?’ said Rose, one evening, shortly after
- tea, when I had been busy with the farm all day.
- ‘To take a walk,’ was the reply.
- ‘Do you always brush your hat so carefully, and do your hair so nicely,
- and put on such smart new gloves when you take a walk?’
- ‘Not always.’
- ‘You’re going to Wildfell Hall, aren’t you?’
- ‘What makes you think so?’
- ‘Because you look as if you were—but I wish you wouldn’t go so often.’
- ‘Nonsense, child! I don’t go once in six weeks—what do you mean?’
- ‘Well, but if I were you, I wouldn’t have so much to do with Mrs.
- Graham.’
- ‘Why, Rose, are you, too, giving in to the prevailing opinion?’
- ‘No,’ returned she, hesitatingly—‘but I’ve heard so much about her
- lately, both at the Wilsons’ and the vicarage;—and besides, mamma says,
- if she were a proper person she would not be living there by herself—and
- don’t you remember last winter, Gilbert, all that about the false name to
- the picture; and how she explained it—saying she had friends or
- acquaintances from whom she wished her present residence to be concealed,
- and that she was afraid of their tracing her out;—and then, how suddenly
- she started up and left the room when that person came—whom she took good
- care not to let us catch a glimpse of, and who Arthur, with such an air
- of mystery, told us was his mamma’s friend?’
- ‘Yes, Rose, I remember it all; and I can forgive your uncharitable
- conclusions; for, perhaps, if I did not know her myself, I should put all
- these things together, and believe the same as you do; but thank God, I
- do know her; and I should be unworthy the name of a man, if I could
- believe anything that was said against her, unless I heard it from her
- own lips.—I should as soon believe such things of you, Rose.’
- ‘Oh, Gilbert!’
- ‘Well, do you think I could believe anything of the kind,—whatever the
- Wilsons and Millwards dared to whisper?’
- ‘I should hope not indeed!’
- ‘And why not?—Because I know you—Well, and I know her just as well.’
- ‘Oh, no! you know nothing of her former life; and last year, at this
- time, you did not know that such a person existed.’
- ‘No matter. There is such a thing as looking through a person’s eyes
- into the heart, and learning more of the height, and breadth, and depth
- of another’s soul in one hour than it might take you a lifetime to
- discover, if he or she were not disposed to reveal it, or if you had not
- the sense to understand it.’
- ‘Then you are going to see her this evening?’
- ‘To be sure I am!’
- ‘But what would mamma say, Gilbert!’
- ‘Mamma needn’t know.’
- ‘But she must know some time, if you go on.’
- ‘Go on!—there’s no going on in the matter. Mrs. Graham and I are two
- friends—and will be; and no man breathing shall hinder it,—or has a right
- to interfere between us.’
- ‘But if you knew how they talk you would be more careful, for her sake as
- well as for your own. Jane Wilson thinks your visits to the old hall but
- another proof of her depravity—’
- ‘Confound Jane Wilson!’
- ‘And Eliza Millward is quite grieved about you.’
- ‘I hope she is.’
- ‘But I wouldn’t, if I were you.’
- ‘Wouldn’t what?—How do they know that I go there?’
- ‘There’s nothing hid from them: they spy out everything.’
- ‘Oh, I never thought of this!—And so they dare to turn my friendship into
- food for further scandal against her!—That proves the falsehood of their
- other lies, at all events, if any proof were wanting.—Mind you contradict
- them, Rose, whenever you can.’
- ‘But they don’t speak openly to me about such things: it is only by hints
- and innuendoes, and by what I hear others say, that I knew what they
- think.’
- ‘Well, then, I won’t go to-day, as it’s getting latish. But oh, deuce
- take their cursed, envenomed tongues!’ I muttered, in the bitterness of
- my soul.
- And just at that moment the vicar entered the room: we had been too much
- absorbed in our conversation to observe his knock. After his customary
- cheerful and fatherly greeting of Rose, who was rather a favourite with
- the old gentleman, he turned somewhat sternly to me:—
- ‘Well, sir!’ said he, ‘you’re quite a stranger. It is—let—me—see,’ he
- continued, slowly, as he deposited his ponderous bulk in the arm-chair
- that Rose officiously brought towards him; ‘it is just—six-weeks—by my
- reckoning, since you darkened—my—door!’ He spoke it with emphasis, and
- struck his stick on the floor.
- ‘Is it, sir?’ said I.
- ‘Ay! It is so!’ He added an affirmatory nod, and continued to gaze upon
- me with a kind of irate solemnity, holding his substantial stick between
- his knees, with his hands clasped upon its head.
- ‘I have been busy,’ I said, for an apology was evidently demanded.
- ‘Busy!’ repeated he, derisively.
- ‘Yes, you know I’ve been getting in my hay; and now the harvest is
- beginning.’
- ‘Humph!’
- Just then my mother came in, and created a diversion in my favour by her
- loquacious and animated welcome of the reverend guest. She regretted
- deeply that he had not come a little earlier, in time for tea, but
- offered to have some immediately prepared, if he would do her the favour
- to partake of it.
- ‘Not any for me, I thank you,’ replied he; ‘I shall be at home in a few
- minutes.’
- ‘Oh, but do stay and take a little! it will be ready in five minutes.’
- But he rejected the offer with a majestic wave of the hand.
- ‘I’ll tell you what I’ll take, Mrs. Markham,’ said he: ‘I’ll take a glass
- of your excellent ale.’
- ‘With pleasure!’ cried my mother, proceeding with alacrity to pull the
- bell and order the favoured beverage.
- ‘I thought,’ continued he, ‘I’d just look in upon you as I passed, and
- taste your home-brewed ale. I’ve been to call on Mrs. Graham.’
- ‘Have you, indeed?’
- He nodded gravely, and added with awful emphasis—‘I thought it incumbent
- upon me to do so.’
- ‘Really!’ ejaculated my mother.
- ‘Why so, Mr. Millward?’ asked I.
- He looked at me with some severity, and turning again to my mother,
- repeated,—‘I thought it incumbent upon me!’ and struck his stick on the
- floor again. My mother sat opposite, an awe-struck but admiring auditor.
- ‘“Mrs. Graham,” said I,’ he continued, shaking his head as he spoke,
- ‘“these are terrible reports!” “What, sir?” says she, affecting to be
- ignorant of my meaning. “It is my—duty—as—your pastor,” said I, “to tell
- you both everything that I myself see reprehensible in your conduct, and
- all I have reason to suspect, and what others tell me concerning you.”—So
- I told her!’
- ‘You did, sir?’ cried I, starting from my seat and striking my fist on
- the table. He merely glanced towards me, and continued—addressing his
- hostess:—
- ‘It was a painful duty, Mrs. Markham—but I told her!’
- ‘And how did she take it?’ asked my mother.
- ‘Hardened, I fear—hardened!’ he replied, with a despondent shake of the
- head; ‘and, at the same time, there was a strong display of unchastened,
- misdirected passions. She turned white in the face, and drew her breath
- through her teeth in a savage sort of way;—but she offered no extenuation
- or defence; and with a kind of shameless calmness—shocking indeed to
- witness in one so young—as good as told me that my remonstrance was
- unavailing, and my pastoral advice quite thrown away upon her—nay, that
- my very presence was displeasing while I spoke such things. And I
- withdrew at length, too plainly seeing that nothing could be done—and
- sadly grieved to find her case so hopeless. But I am fully determined,
- Mrs. Markham, that my daughters—shall—not—consort with her. Do you adopt
- the same resolution with regard to yours!—As for your sons—as for you,
- young man,’ he continued, sternly turning to me—
- ‘As for ME, sir,’ I began, but checked by some impediment in my
- utterance, and finding that my whole frame trembled with fury, I said no
- more, but took the wiser part of snatching up my hat and bolting from the
- room, slamming the door behind me, with a bang that shook the house to
- its foundations, and made my mother scream, and gave a momentary relief
- to my excited feelings.
- The next minute saw me hurrying with rapid strides in the direction of
- Wildfell Hall—to what intent or purpose I could scarcely tell, but I must
- be moving somewhere, and no other goal would do—I must see her too, and
- speak to her—that was certain; but what to say, or how to act, I had no
- definite idea. Such stormy thoughts—so many different resolutions
- crowded in upon me, that my mind was little better than a chaos of
- conflicting passions.
- CHAPTER XII
- In little more than twenty minutes the journey was accomplished. I
- paused at the gate to wipe my streaming forehead, and recover my breath
- and some degree of composure. Already the rapid walking had somewhat
- mitigated my excitement; and with a firm and steady tread I paced the
- garden-walk. In passing the inhabited wing of the building, I caught a
- sight of Mrs. Graham, through the open window, slowly pacing up and down
- her lonely room.
- She seemed agitated and even dismayed at my arrival, as if she thought I
- too was coming to accuse her. I had entered her presence intending to
- condole with her upon the wickedness of the world, and help her to abuse
- the vicar and his vile informants, but now I felt positively ashamed to
- mention the subject, and determined not to refer to it, unless she led
- the way.
- ‘I am come at an unseasonable hour,’ said I, assuming a cheerfulness I
- did not feel, in order to reassure her; ‘but I won’t stay many minutes.’
- She smiled upon me, faintly it is true, but most kindly—I had almost said
- thankfully, as her apprehensions were removed.
- ‘How dismal you are, Helen! Why have you no fire?’ I said, looking round
- on the gloomy apartment.
- ‘It is summer yet,’ she replied.
- ‘But we always have a fire in the evenings, if we can bear it; and you
- especially require one in this cold house and dreary room.’
- ‘You should have come a little sooner, and I would have had one lighted
- for you: but it is not worth while now—you won’t stay many minutes, you
- say, and Arthur is gone to bed.’
- ‘But I have a fancy for a fire, nevertheless. Will you order one, if I
- ring?’
- ‘Why, Gilbert, you don’t look cold!’ said she, smilingly regarding my
- face, which no doubt seemed warm enough.
- ‘No,’ replied I, ‘but I want to see you comfortable before I go.’
- ‘Me comfortable!’ repeated she, with a bitter laugh, as if there were
- something amusingly absurd in the idea. ‘It suits me better as it is,’
- she added, in a tone of mournful resignation.
- But determined to have my own way, I pulled the bell.
- ‘There now, Helen!’ I said, as the approaching steps of Rachel were heard
- in answer to the summons. There was nothing for it but to turn round and
- desire the maid to light the fire.
- I owe Rachel a grudge to this day for the look she cast upon me ere she
- departed on her mission, the sour, suspicious, inquisitorial look that
- plainly demanded, ‘What are you here for, I wonder?’ Her mistress did
- not fail to notice it, and a shade of uneasiness darkened her brow.
- ‘You must not stay long, Gilbert,’ said she, when the door was closed
- upon us.
- ‘I’m not going to,’ said I, somewhat testily, though without a grain of
- anger in my heart against any one but the meddling old woman. ‘But,
- Helen, I’ve something to say to you before I go.’
- ‘What is it?’
- ‘No, not now—I don’t know yet precisely what it is, or how to say it,’
- replied I, with more truth than wisdom; and then, fearing lest she should
- turn me out of the house, I began talking about indifferent matters in
- order to gain time. Meanwhile Rachel came in to kindle the fire, which
- was soon effected by thrusting a red-hot poker between the bars of the
- grate, where the fuel was already disposed for ignition. She honoured me
- with another of her hard, inhospitable looks in departing, but, little
- moved thereby, I went on talking; and setting a chair for Mrs. Graham on
- one side of the hearth, and one for myself on the other, I ventured to
- sit down, though half suspecting she would rather see me go.
- In a little while we both relapsed into silence, and continued for
- several minutes gazing abstractedly into the fire—she intent upon her own
- sad thoughts, and I reflecting how delightful it would be to be seated
- thus beside her with no other presence to restrain our intercourse—not
- even that of Arthur, our mutual friend, without whom we had never met
- before—if only I could venture to speak my mind, and disburden my full
- heart of the feelings that had so long oppressed it, and which it now
- struggled to retain, with an effort that it seemed impossible to continue
- much longer,—and revolving the pros and cons for opening my heart to her
- there and then, and imploring a return of affection, the permission to
- regard her thenceforth as my own, and the right and the power to defend
- her from the calumnies of malicious tongues. On the one hand, I felt a
- new-born confidence in my powers of persuasion—a strong conviction that
- my own fervour of spirit would grant me eloquence—that my very
- determination—the absolute necessity for succeeding, that I felt must win
- me what I sought; while, on the other, I feared to lose the ground I had
- already gained with so much toil and skill, and destroy all future hope
- by one rash effort, when time and patience might have won success. It
- was like setting my life upon the cast of a die; and yet I was ready to
- resolve upon the attempt. At any rate, I would entreat the explanation
- she had half promised to give me before; I would demand the reason of
- this hateful barrier, this mysterious impediment to my happiness, and, as
- I trusted, to her own.
- But while I considered in what manner I could best frame my request, my
- companion, wakened from her reverie with a scarcely audible sigh, and
- looking towards the window, where the blood-red harvest moon, just rising
- over one of the grim, fantastic evergreens, was shining in upon us,
- said,—‘Gilbert, it is getting late.’
- ‘I see,’ said I. ‘You want me to go, I suppose?’
- ‘I think you ought. If my kind neighbours get to know of this visit—as
- no doubt they will—they will not turn it much to my advantage.’ It was
- with what the vicar would doubtless have called a savage sort of smile
- that she said this.
- ‘Let them turn it as they will,’ said I. ‘What are their thoughts to you
- or me, so long as we are satisfied with ourselves—and each other. Let
- them go to the deuce with their vile constructions and their lying
- inventions!’
- This outburst brought a flush of colour to her face.
- ‘You have heard, then, what they say of me?’
- ‘I heard some detestable falsehoods; but none but fools would credit them
- for a moment, Helen, so don’t let them trouble you.’
- ‘I did not think Mr. Millward a fool, and he believes it all; but however
- little you may value the opinions of those about you—however little you
- may esteem them as individuals, it is not pleasant to be looked upon as a
- liar and a hypocrite, to be thought to practise what you abhor, and to
- encourage the vices you would discountenance, to find your good
- intentions frustrated, and your hands crippled by your supposed
- unworthiness, and to bring disgrace on the principles you profess.’
- ‘True; and if I, by my thoughtlessness and selfish disregard to
- appearances, have at all assisted to expose you to these evils, let me
- entreat you not only to pardon me, but to enable me to make reparation;
- authorise me to clear your name from every imputation: give me the right
- to identify your honour with my own, and to defend your reputation as
- more precious than my life!’
- ‘Are you hero enough to unite yourself to one whom you know to be
- suspected and despised by all around you, and identify your interests and
- your honour with hers? Think! it is a serious thing.’
- ‘I should be proud to do it, Helen!—most happy—delighted beyond
- expression!—and if that be all the obstacle to our union, it is
- demolished, and you must—you shall be mine!’
- And starting from my seat in a frenzy of ardour, I seized her hand and
- would have pressed it to my lips, but she as suddenly caught it away,
- exclaiming in the bitterness of intense affliction,—‘No, no, it is not
- all!’
- ‘What is it, then? You promised I should know some time, and—’
- ‘You shall know some time—but not now—my head aches terribly,’ she said,
- pressing her hand to her forehead, ‘and I must have some repose—and
- surely I have had misery enough to-day!’ she added, almost wildly.
- ‘But it could not harm you to tell it,’ I persisted: ‘it would ease your
- mind; and I should then know how to comfort you.’
- She shook her head despondingly. ‘If you knew all, you, too, would blame
- me—perhaps even more than I deserve—though I have cruelly wronged you,’
- she added in a low murmur, as if she mused aloud.
- ‘You, Helen? Impossible?’
- ‘Yes, not willingly; for I did not know the strength and depth of your
- attachment. I thought—at least I endeavoured to think your regard for me
- was as cold and fraternal as you professed it to be.’
- ‘Or as yours?’
- ‘Or as mine—ought to have been—of such a light and selfish, superficial
- nature, that—’
- ‘There, indeed, you wronged me.’
- [Picture: Moorland scene (with cottage), Haworth]
- ‘I know I did; and, sometimes, I suspected it then; but I thought, upon
- the whole, there could be no great harm in leaving your fancies and your
- hopes to dream themselves to nothing—or flutter away to some more fitting
- object, while your friendly sympathies remained with me; but if I had
- known the depth of your regard, the generous, disinterested affection you
- seem to feel—’
- ‘Seem, Helen?’
- ‘That you do feel, then, I would have acted differently.’
- ‘How? You could not have given me less encouragement, or treated me with
- greater severity than you did! And if you think you have wronged me by
- giving me your friendship, and occasionally admitting me to the enjoyment
- of your company and conversation, when all hopes of closer intimacy were
- vain—as indeed you always gave me to understand—if you think you have
- wronged me by this, you are mistaken; for such favours, in themselves
- alone, are not only delightful to my heart, but purifying, exalting,
- ennobling to my soul; and I would rather have your friendship than the
- love of any other woman in the world!’
- Little comforted by this, she clasped her hands upon her knee, and
- glancing upward, seemed, in silent anguish, to implore divine assistance;
- then, turning to me, she calmly said,—‘To-morrow, if you meet me on the
- moor about mid-day, I will tell you all you seek to know; and perhaps you
- will then see the necessity of discontinuing our intimacy—if, indeed, you
- do not willingly resign me as one no longer worthy of regard.’
- ‘I can safely answer no to that: you cannot have such grave confessions
- to make—you must be trying my faith, Helen.’
- ‘No, no, no,’ she earnestly repeated—‘I wish it were so! Thank heaven!’
- she added, ‘I have no great crime to confess; but I have more than you
- will like to hear, or, perhaps, can readily excuse,—and more than I can
- tell you now; so let me entreat you to leave me!’
- ‘I will; but answer me this one question first;—do you love me?’
- ‘I will not answer it!’
- ‘Then I will conclude you do; and so good-night.’
- She turned from me to hide the emotion she could not quite control; but I
- took her hand and fervently kissed it.
- ‘Gilbert, do leave me!’ she cried, in a tone of such thrilling anguish
- that I felt it would be cruel to disobey.
- But I gave one look back before I closed the door, and saw her leaning
- forward on the table, with her hands pressed against her eyes, sobbing
- convulsively; yet I withdrew in silence. I felt that to obtrude my
- consolations on her then would only serve to aggravate her sufferings.
- To tell you all the questionings and conjectures—the fears, and hopes,
- and wild emotions that jostled and chased each other through my mind as I
- descended the hill, would almost fill a volume in itself. But before I
- was half-way down, a sentiment of strong sympathy for her I had left
- behind me had displaced all other feelings, and seemed imperatively to
- draw me back: I began to think, ‘Why am I hurrying so fast in this
- direction? Can I find comfort or consolation—peace, certainty,
- contentment, all—or anything that I want at home? and can I leave all
- perturbation, sorrow, and anxiety behind me there?’
- And I turned round to look at the old Hall. There was little besides the
- chimneys visible above my contracted horizon. I walked back to get a
- better view of it. When it rose in sight, I stood still a moment to
- look, and then continued moving towards the gloomy object of attraction.
- Something called me nearer—nearer still—and why not, pray? Might I not
- find more benefit in the contemplation of that venerable pile with the
- full moon in the cloudless heaven shining so calmly above it—with that
- warm yellow lustre peculiar to an August night—and the mistress of my
- soul within, than in returning to my home, where all comparatively was
- light, and life, and cheerfulness, and therefore inimical to me in my
- present frame of mind,—and the more so that its inmates all were more or
- less imbued with that detestable belief, the very thought of which made
- my blood boil in my veins—and how could I endure to hear it openly
- declared, or cautiously insinuated—which was worse?—I had had trouble
- enough already, with some babbling fiend that would keep whispering in my
- ear, ‘It may be true,’ till I had shouted aloud, ‘It is false! I defy
- you to make me suppose it!’
- I could see the red firelight dimly gleaming from her parlour window. I
- went up to the garden wall, and stood leaning over it, with my eyes fixed
- upon the lattice, wondering what she was doing, thinking, or suffering
- now, and wishing I could speak to her but one word, or even catch one
- glimpse of her, before I went.
- I had not thus looked, and wished, and wondered long, before I vaulted
- over the barrier, unable to resist the temptation of taking one glance
- through the window, just to see if she were more composed than when we
- parted;—and if I found her still in deep distress, perhaps I might
- venture attempt a word of comfort—to utter one of the many things I
- should have said before, instead of aggravating her sufferings by my
- stupid impetuosity. I looked. Her chair was vacant: so was the room.
- But at that moment some one opened the outer door, and a voice—her
- voice—said,—‘Come out—I want to see the moon, and breathe the evening
- air: they will do me good—if anything will.’
- Here, then, were she and Rachel coming to take a walk in the garden. I
- wished myself safe back over the wall. I stood, however, in the shadow
- of the tall holly-bush, which, standing between the window and the porch,
- at present screened me from observation, but did not prevent me from
- seeing two figures come forth into the moonlight: Mrs. Graham followed by
- another—not Rachel, but a young man, slender and rather tall. O heavens,
- how my temples throbbed! Intense anxiety darkened my sight; but I
- thought—yes, and the voice confirmed it—it was Mr. Lawrence!
- ‘You should not let it worry you so much, Helen,’ said he; ‘I will be
- more cautious in future; and in time—’
- I did not hear the rest of the sentence; for he walked close beside her
- and spoke so gently that I could not catch the words. My heart was
- splitting with hatred; but I listened intently for her reply. I heard it
- plainly enough.
- ‘But I must leave this place, Frederick,’ she said—‘I never can be happy
- here,—nor anywhere else, indeed,’ she added, with a mirthless laugh,—‘but
- I cannot rest here.’
- ‘But where could you find a better place?’ replied he, ‘so secluded—so
- near me, if you think anything of that.’
- ‘Yes,’ interrupted she, ‘it is all I could wish, if they could only have
- left me alone.’
- ‘But wherever you go, Helen, there will be the same sources of annoyance.
- I cannot consent to lose you: I must go with you, or come to you; and
- there are meddling fools elsewhere, as well as here.’
- While thus conversing they had sauntered slowly past me, down the walk,
- and I heard no more of their discourse; but I saw him put his arm round
- her waist, while she lovingly rested her hand on his shoulder;—and then,
- a tremulous darkness obscured my sight, my heart sickened and my head
- burned like fire: I half rushed, half staggered from the spot, where
- horror had kept me rooted, and leaped or tumbled over the wall—I hardly
- know which—but I know that, afterwards, like a passionate child, I dashed
- myself on the ground and lay there in a paroxysm of anger and despair—how
- long, I cannot undertake to say; but it must have been a considerable
- time; for when, having partially relieved myself by a torment of tears,
- and looked up at the moon, shining so calmly and carelessly on, as little
- influenced by my misery as I was by its peaceful radiance, and earnestly
- prayed for death or forgetfulness, I had risen and journeyed
- homewards—little regarding the way, but carried instinctively by my feet
- to the door, I found it bolted against me, and every one in bed except my
- mother, who hastened to answer my impatient knocking, and received me
- with a shower of questions and rebukes.
- ‘Oh, Gilbert! how could you do so? Where have you been? Do come in and
- take your supper. I’ve got it all ready, though you don’t deserve it,
- for keeping me in such a fright, after the strange manner you left the
- house this evening. Mr. Millward was quite— Bless the boy! how ill he
- looks. Oh, gracious! what is the matter?’
- ‘Nothing, nothing—give me a candle.’
- ‘But won’t you take some supper?’
- ‘No; I want to go to bed,’ said I, taking a candle and lighting it at the
- one she held in her hand.
- ‘Oh, Gilbert, how you tremble!’ exclaimed my anxious parent. ‘How white
- you look! Do tell me what it is? Has anything happened?’
- ‘It’s nothing,’ cried I, ready to stamp with vexation because the candle
- would not light. Then, suppressing my irritation, I added, ‘I’ve been
- walking too fast, that’s all. Good-night,’ and marched off to bed,
- regardless of the ‘Walking too fast! where have you been?’ that was
- called after me from below.
- My mother followed me to the very door of my room with her questionings
- and advice concerning my health and my conduct; but I implored her to let
- me alone till morning; and she withdrew, and at length I had the
- satisfaction to hear her close her own door. There was no sleep for me,
- however, that night as I thought; and instead of attempting to solicit
- it, I employed myself in rapidly pacing the chamber, having first removed
- my boots, lest my mother should hear me. But the boards creaked, and she
- was watchful. I had not walked above a quarter of an hour before she was
- at the door again.
- ‘Gilbert, why are you not in bed—you said you wanted to go?’
- ‘Confound it! I’m going,’ said I.
- ‘But why are you so long about it? You must have something on your
- mind—’
- ‘For heaven’s sake, let me alone, and get to bed yourself.’
- ‘Can it be that Mrs. Graham that distresses you so?’
- ‘No, no, I tell you—it’s nothing.’
- ‘I wish to goodness it mayn’t,’ murmured she, with a sigh, as she
- returned to her own apartment, while I threw myself on the bed, feeling
- most undutifully disaffected towards her for having deprived me of what
- seemed the only shadow of a consolation that remained, and chained me to
- that wretched couch of thorns.
- Never did I endure so long, so miserable a night as that. And yet it was
- not wholly sleepless. Towards morning my distracting thoughts began to
- lose all pretensions to coherency, and shape themselves into confused and
- feverish dreams, and, at length, there followed an interval of
- unconscious slumber. But then the dawn of bitter recollection that
- succeeded—the waking to find life a blank, and worse than a blank,
- teeming with torment and misery—not a mere barren wilderness, but full of
- thorns and briers—to find myself deceived, duped, hopeless, my affections
- trampled upon, my angel not an angel, and my friend a fiend incarnate—it
- was worse than if I had not slept at all.
- It was a dull, gloomy morning; the weather had changed like my prospects,
- and the rain was pattering against the window. I rose, nevertheless, and
- went out; not to look after the farm, though that would serve as my
- excuse, but to cool my brain, and regain, if possible, a sufficient
- degree of composure to meet the family at the morning meal without
- exciting inconvenient remarks. If I got a wetting, that, in conjunction
- with a pretended over-exertion before breakfast, might excuse my sudden
- loss of appetite; and if a cold ensued, the severer the better—it would
- help to account for the sullen moods and moping melancholy likely to
- cloud my brow for long enough.
- CHAPTER XIII
- ‘My dear Gilbert, I wish you would try to be a little more amiable,’ said
- my mother one morning after some display of unjustifiable ill-humour on
- my part. ‘You say there is nothing the matter with you, and nothing has
- happened to grieve you, and yet I never saw anyone so altered as you
- within these last few days. You haven’t a good word for anybody—friends
- and strangers, equals and inferiors—it’s all the same. I do wish you’d
- try to check it.’
- ‘Check what?’
- ‘Why, your strange temper. You don’t know how it spoils you. I’m sure a
- finer disposition than yours by nature could not be, if you’d let it have
- fair play: so you’ve no excuse that way.’
- While she thus remonstrated, I took up a book, and laying it open on the
- table before me, pretended to be deeply absorbed in its perusal, for I
- was equally unable to justify myself and unwilling to acknowledge my
- errors; and I wished to have nothing to say on the matter. But my
- excellent parent went on lecturing, and then came to coaxing, and began
- to stroke my hair; and I was getting to feel quite a good boy, but my
- mischievous brother, who was idling about the room, revived my corruption
- by suddenly calling out,—‘Don’t touch him, mother! he’ll bite! He’s a
- very tiger in human form. I’ve given him up for my part—fairly disowned
- him—cast him off, root and branch. It’s as much as my life is worth to
- come within six yards of him. The other day he nearly fractured my skull
- for singing a pretty, inoffensive love-song, on purpose to amuse him.’
- ‘Oh, Gilbert! how could you?’ exclaimed my mother.
- ‘I told you to hold your noise first, you know, Fergus,’ said I.
- ‘Yes, but when I assured you it was no trouble and went on with the next
- verse, thinking you might like it better, you clutched me by the shoulder
- and dashed me away, right against the wall there, with such force that I
- thought I had bitten my tongue in two, and expected to see the place
- plastered with my brains; and when I put my hand to my head, and found my
- skull not broken, I thought it was a miracle, and no mistake. But, poor
- fellow!’ added he, with a sentimental sigh—‘his heart’s broken—that’s the
- truth of it—and his head’s—’
- ‘Will you be silent NOW?’ cried I, starting up, and eyeing the fellow so
- fiercely that my mother, thinking I meant to inflict some grievous bodily
- injury, laid her hand on my arm, and besought me to let him alone, and he
- walked leisurely out, with his hands in his pockets, singing
- provokingly—‘Shall I, because a woman’s fair,’ &c.
- ‘I’m not going to defile my fingers with him,’ said I, in answer to the
- maternal intercession. ‘I wouldn’t touch him with the tongs.’
- I now recollected that I had business with Robert Wilson, concerning the
- purchase of a certain field adjoining my farm—a business I had been
- putting off from day to day; for I had no interest in anything now; and
- besides, I was misanthropically inclined, and, moreover, had a particular
- objection to meeting Jane Wilson or her mother; for though I had too good
- reason, now, to credit their reports concerning Mrs. Graham, I did not
- like them a bit the better for it—or Eliza Millward either—and the
- thought of meeting them was the more repugnant to me that I could not,
- now, defy their seeming calumnies and triumph in my own convictions as
- before. But to-day I determined to make an effort to return to my duty.
- Though I found no pleasure in it, it would be less irksome than
- idleness—at all events it would be more profitable. If life promised no
- enjoyment within my vocation, at least it offered no allurements out of
- it; and henceforth I would put my shoulder to the wheel and toil away,
- like any poor drudge of a cart-horse that was fairly broken in to its
- labour, and plod through life, not wholly useless if not agreeable, and
- uncomplaining if not contented with my lot.
- Thus resolving, with a kind of sullen resignation, if such a term may be
- allowed, I wended my way to Ryecote Farm, scarcely expecting to find its
- owner within at this time of day, but hoping to learn in what part of the
- premises he was most likely to be found.
- Absent he was, but expected home in a few minutes; and I was desired to
- step into the parlour and wait. Mrs. Wilson was busy in the kitchen, but
- the room was not empty; and I scarcely checked an involuntary recoil as I
- entered it; for there sat Miss Wilson chattering with Eliza Millward.
- However, I determined to be cool and civil. Eliza seemed to have made
- the same resolution on her part. We had not met since the evening of the
- tea-party; but there was no visible emotion either of pleasure or pain,
- no attempt at pathos, no display of injured pride: she was cool in
- temper, civil in demeanour. There was even an ease and cheerfulness
- about her air and manner that I made no pretension to; but there was a
- depth of malice in her too expressive eye that plainly told me I was not
- forgiven; for, though she no longer hoped to win me to herself, she still
- hated her rival, and evidently delighted to wreak her spite on me. On
- the other hand, Miss Wilson was as affable and courteous as heart could
- wish, and though I was in no very conversable humour myself, the two
- ladies between them managed to keep up a pretty continuous fire of small
- talk. But Eliza took advantage of the first convenient pause to ask if I
- had lately seen Mrs. Graham, in a tone of merely casual inquiry, but with
- a sidelong glance—intended to be playfully mischievous—really, brimful
- and running over with malice.
- ‘Not lately,’ I replied, in a careless tone, but sternly repelling her
- odious glances with my eyes; for I was vexed to feel the colour mounting
- to my forehead, despite my strenuous efforts to appear unmoved.
- ‘What! are you beginning to tire already? I thought so noble a creature
- would have power to attach you for a year at least!’
- ‘I would rather not speak of her now.’
- ‘Ah! then you are convinced, at last, of your mistake—you have at length
- discovered that your divinity is not quite the immaculate—’
- ‘I desired you not to speak of her, Miss Eliza.’
- ‘Oh, I beg your pardon! I perceive Cupid’s arrows have been too sharp
- for you: the wounds, being more than skin-deep, are not yet healed, and
- bleed afresh at every mention of the loved one’s name.’
- ‘Say, rather,’ interposed Miss Wilson, ‘that Mr. Markham feels that name
- is unworthy to be mentioned in the presence of right-minded females. I
- wonder, Eliza, you should think of referring to that unfortunate
- person—you might know the mention of her would be anything but agreeable
- to any one here present.’
- How could this be borne? I rose and was about to clap my hat upon my
- head and burst away, in wrathful indignation from the house; but
- recollecting—just in time to save my dignity—the folly of such a
- proceeding, and how it would only give my fair tormentors a merry laugh
- at my expense, for the sake of one I acknowledged in my own heart to be
- unworthy of the slightest sacrifice—though the ghost of my former
- reverence and love so hung about me still, that I could not bear to hear
- her name aspersed by others—I merely walked to the window, and having
- spent a few seconds in vengibly biting my lips and sternly repressing the
- passionate heavings of my chest, I observed to Miss Wilson, that I could
- see nothing of her brother, and added that, as my time was precious, it
- would perhaps be better to call again to-morrow, at some time when I
- should be sure to find him at home.
- ‘Oh, no!’ said she; ‘if you wait a minute, he will be sure to come; for
- he has business at L—’ (that was our market-town), ‘and will require a
- little refreshment before he goes.’
- I submitted accordingly, with the best grace I could; and, happily, I had
- not long to wait. Mr. Wilson soon arrived, and, indisposed for business
- as I was at that moment, and little as I cared for the field or its
- owner, I forced my attention to the matter in hand, with very creditable
- determination, and quickly concluded the bargain—perhaps more to the
- thrifty farmer’s satisfaction than he cared to acknowledge. Then,
- leaving him to the discussion of his substantial ‘refreshment,’ I gladly
- quitted the house, and went to look after my reapers.
- Leaving them busy at work on the side of the valley, I ascended the hill,
- intending to visit a corn-field in the more elevated regions, and see
- when it would be ripe for the sickle. But I did not visit it that day;
- for, as I approached, I beheld, at no great distance, Mrs. Graham and her
- son coming down in the opposite direction. They saw me; and Arthur
- already was running to meet me; but I immediately turned back and walked
- steadily homeward; for I had fully determined never to encounter his
- mother again; and regardless of the shrill voice in my ear, calling upon
- me to ‘wait a moment,’ I pursued the even tenor of my way; and he soon
- relinquished the pursuit as hopeless, or was called away by his mother.
- At all events, when I looked back, five minutes after, not a trace of
- either was to be seen.
- This incident agitated and disturbed me most unaccountably—unless you
- would account for it by saying that Cupid’s arrows not only had been too
- sharp for me, but they were barbed and deeply rooted, and I had not yet
- been able to wrench them from my heart. However that be, I was rendered
- doubly miserable for the remainder of the day.
- CHAPTER XIV
- Next morning, I bethought me, I, too, had business at L—; so I mounted my
- horse, and set forth on the expedition soon after breakfast. It was a
- dull, drizzly day; but that was no matter: it was all the more suitable
- to my frame of mind. It was likely to be a lonely journey; for it was no
- market-day, and the road I traversed was little frequented at any other
- time; but that suited me all the better too.
- As I trotted along, however, chewing the cud of—bitter fancies, I heard
- another horse at no great distance behind me; but I never conjectured who
- the rider might be, or troubled my head about him, till, on slackening my
- pace to ascend a gentle acclivity, or rather, suffering my horse to
- slacken his pace into a lazy walk—for, rapt in my own reflections, I was
- letting it jog on as leisurely as it thought proper—I lost ground, and my
- fellow-traveller overtook me. He accosted me by name, for it was no
- stranger—it was Mr. Lawrence! Instinctively the fingers of my whip-hand
- tingled, and grasped their charge with convulsive energy; but I
- restrained the impulse, and answering his salutation with a nod,
- attempted to push on; but he pushed on beside me, and began to talk about
- the weather and the crops. I gave the briefest possible answers to his
- queries and observations, and fell back. He fell back too, and asked if
- my horse was lame. I replied with a look, at which he placidly smiled.
- I was as much astonished as exasperated at this singular pertinacity and
- imperturbable assurance on his part. I had thought the circumstances of
- our last meeting would have left such an impression on his mind as to
- render him cold and distant ever after: instead of that, he appeared not
- only to have forgotten all former offences, but to be impenetrable to all
- present incivilities. Formerly, the slightest hint, or mere fancied
- coldness in tone or glance, had sufficed to repulse him: now, positive
- rudeness could not drive him away. Had he heard of my disappointment;
- and was he come to witness the result, and triumph in my despair? I
- grasped my whip with more determined energy than before—but still forbore
- to raise it, and rode on in silence, waiting for some more tangible cause
- of offence, before I opened the floodgates of my soul and poured out the
- dammed-up fury that was foaming and swelling within.
- ‘Markham,’ said he, in his usual quiet tone, ‘why do you quarrel with
- your friends, because you have been disappointed in one quarter? You
- have found your hopes defeated; but how am I to blame for it? I warned
- you beforehand, you know, but you would not—’
- He said no more; for, impelled by some fiend at my elbow, I had seized my
- whip by the small end, and—swift and sudden as a flash of
- lightning—brought the other down upon his head. It was not without a
- feeling of savage satisfaction that I beheld the instant, deadly pallor
- that overspread his face, and the few red drops that trickled down his
- forehead, while he reeled a moment in his saddle, and then fell backward
- to the ground. The pony, surprised to be so strangely relieved of its
- burden, started and capered, and kicked a little, and then made use of
- its freedom to go and crop the grass of the hedge-bank: while its master
- lay as still and silent as a corpse. Had I killed him?—an icy hand
- seemed to grasp my heart and check its pulsation, as I bent over him,
- gazing with breathless intensity upon the ghastly, upturned face. But
- no; he moved his eyelids and uttered a slight groan. I breathed again—he
- was only stunned by the fall. It served him right—it would teach him
- better manners in future. Should I help him to his horse? No. For any
- other combination of offences I would; but his were too unpardonable. He
- might mount it himself, if he liked—in a while: already he was beginning
- to stir and look about him—and there it was for him, quietly browsing on
- the road-side.
- So with a muttered execration I left the fellow to his fate, and clapping
- spurs to my own horse, galloped away, excited by a combination of
- feelings it would not be easy to analyse; and perhaps, if I did so, the
- result would not be very creditable to my disposition; for I am not sure
- that a species of exultation in what I had done was not one principal
- concomitant.
- Shortly, however, the effervescence began to abate, and not many minutes
- elapsed before I had turned and gone back to look after the fate of my
- victim. It was no generous impulse—no kind relentings that led me to
- this—nor even the fear of what might be the consequences to myself, if I
- finished my assault upon the squire by leaving him thus neglected, and
- exposed to further injury; it was, simply, the voice of conscience; and I
- took great credit to myself for attending so promptly to its dictates—and
- judging the merit of the deed by the sacrifice it cost, I was not far
- wrong.
- Mr. Lawrence and his pony had both altered their positions in some
- degree. The pony had wandered eight or ten yards further away; and he
- had managed, somehow, to remove himself from the middle of the road: I
- found him seated in a recumbent position on the bank,—looking very white
- and sickly still, and holding his cambric handkerchief (now more red than
- white) to his head. It must have been a powerful blow; but half the
- credit—or the blame of it (which you please) must be attributed to the
- whip, which was garnished with a massive horse’s head of plated metal.
- The grass, being sodden with rain, afforded the young gentleman a rather
- inhospitable couch; his clothes were considerably bemired; and his hat
- was rolling in the mud on the other side of the road. But his thoughts
- seemed chiefly bent upon his pony, on which he was wistfully gazing—half
- in helpless anxiety, and half in hopeless abandonment to his fate.
- I dismounted, however, and having fastened my own animal to the nearest
- tree, first picked up his hat, intending to clap it on his head; but
- either he considered his head unfit for a hat, or the hat, in its present
- condition, unfit for his head; for shrinking away the one, he took the
- other from my hand, and scornfully cast it aside.
- ‘It’s good enough for you,’ I muttered.
- My next good office was to catch his pony and bring it to him, which was
- soon accomplished; for the beast was quiet enough in the main, and only
- winced and flirted a trifle till I got hold of the bridle—but then, I
- must see him in the saddle.
- ‘Here, you fellow—scoundrel—dog—give me your hand, and I’ll help you to
- mount.’
- No; he turned from me in disgust. I attempted to take him by the arm.
- He shrank away as if there had been contamination in my touch.
- ‘What, you won’t! Well! you may sit there till doomsday, for what I
- care. But I suppose you don’t want to lose all the blood in your
- body—I’ll just condescend to bind that up for you.’
- ‘Let me alone, if you please.’
- ‘Humph; with all my heart. You may go to the d—l, if you choose—and say
- I sent you.’
- But before I abandoned him to his fate I flung his pony’s bridle over a
- stake in the hedge, and threw him my handkerchief, as his own was now
- saturated with blood. He took it and cast it back to me in abhorrence
- and contempt, with all the strength he could muster. It wanted but this
- to fill the measure of his offences. With execrations not loud but deep
- I left him to live or die as he could, well satisfied that I had done my
- duty in attempting to save him—but forgetting how I had erred in bringing
- him into such a condition, and how insultingly my after-services had been
- offered—and sullenly prepared to meet the consequences if he should
- choose to say I had attempted to murder him—which I thought not unlikely,
- as it seemed probable he was actuated by such spiteful motives in so
- perseveringly refusing my assistance.
- Having remounted my horse, I just looked back to see how he was getting
- on, before I rode away. He had risen from the ground, and grasping his
- pony’s mane, was attempting to resume his seat in the saddle; but
- scarcely had he put his foot in the stirrup, when a sickness or dizziness
- seemed to overpower him: he leant forward a moment, with his head drooped
- on the animal’s back, and then made one more effort, which proving
- ineffectual, he sank back on the bank, where I left him, reposing his
- head on the oozy turf, and to all appearance, as calmly reclining as if
- he had been taking his rest on his sofa at home.
- I ought to have helped him in spite of himself—to have bound up the wound
- he was unable to staunch, and insisted upon getting him on his horse and
- seeing him safe home; but, besides my bitter indignation against himself,
- there was the question what to say to his servants—and what to my own
- family. Either I should have to acknowledge the deed, which would set me
- down as a madman, unless I acknowledged the motive too—and that seemed
- impossible—or I must get up a lie, which seemed equally out of the
- question—especially as Mr. Lawrence would probably reveal the whole
- truth, and thereby bring me to tenfold disgrace—unless I were villain
- enough, presuming on the absence of witnesses, to persist in my own
- version of the case, and make him out a still greater scoundrel than he
- was. No; he had only received a cut above the temple, and perhaps a few
- bruises from the fall, or the hoofs of his own pony: that could not kill
- him if he lay there half the day; and, if he could not help himself,
- surely some one would be coming by: it would be impossible that a whole
- day should pass and no one traverse the road but ourselves. As for what
- he might choose to say hereafter, I would take my chance about it: if he
- told lies, I would contradict him; if he told the truth, I would bear it
- as best I could. I was not obliged to enter into explanations further
- than I thought proper. Perhaps he might choose to be silent on the
- subject, for fear of raising inquiries as to the cause of the quarrel,
- and drawing the public attention to his connection with Mrs. Graham,
- which, whether for her sake or his own, he seemed so very desirous to
- conceal.
- Thus reasoning, I trotted away to the town, where I duly transacted my
- business, and performed various little commissions for my mother and
- Rose, with very laudable exactitude, considering the different
- circumstances of the case. In returning home, I was troubled with sundry
- misgivings about the unfortunate Lawrence. The question, What if I
- should find him lying still on the damp earth, fairly dying of cold and
- exhaustion—or already stark and chill? thrust itself most unpleasantly
- upon my mind, and the appalling possibility pictured itself with painful
- vividness to my imagination as I approached the spot where I had left
- him. But no, thank heaven, both man and horse were gone, and nothing was
- left to witness against me but two objects—unpleasant enough in
- themselves to be sure, and presenting a very ugly, not to say murderous
- appearance—in one place, the hat saturated with rain and coated with mud,
- indented and broken above the brim by that villainous whip-handle; in
- another, the crimson handkerchief, soaking in a deeply tinctured pool of
- water—for much rain had fallen in the interim.
- Bad news flies fast: it was hardly four o’clock when I got home, but my
- mother gravely accosted me with—‘Oh, Gilbert!—Such an accident! Rose has
- been shopping in the village, and she’s heard that Mr. Lawrence has been
- thrown from his horse and brought home dying!’
- This shocked me a trifle, as you may suppose; but I was comforted to hear
- that he had frightfully fractured his skull and broken a leg; for,
- assured of the falsehood of this, I trusted the rest of the story was
- equally exaggerated; and when I heard my mother and sister so feelingly
- deploring his condition, I had considerable difficulty in preventing
- myself from telling them the real extent of the injuries, as far as I
- knew them.
- ‘You must go and see him to-morrow,’ said my mother.
- ‘Or to-day,’ suggested Rose: ‘there’s plenty of time; and you can have
- the pony, as your horse is tired. Won’t you, Gilbert—as soon as you’ve
- had something to eat?’
- ‘No, no—how can we tell that it isn’t all a false report? It’s highly
- im-’
- ‘Oh, I’m sure it isn’t; for the village is all alive about it; and I saw
- two people that had seen others that had seen the man that found him.
- That sounds far-fetched; but it isn’t so when you think of it.’
- ‘Well, but Lawrence is a good rider; it is not likely he would fall from
- his horse at all; and if he did, it is highly improbable he would break
- his bones in that way. It must be a gross exaggeration at least.’
- ‘No; but the horse kicked him—or something.’
- ‘What, his quiet little pony?’
- ‘How do you know it was that?’
- ‘He seldom rides any other.’
- ‘At any rate,’ said my mother, ‘you will call to-morrow. Whether it be
- true or false, exaggerated or otherwise, we shall like to know how he
- is.’
- ‘Fergus may go.’
- ‘Why not you?’
- ‘He has more time. I am busy just now.’
- ‘Oh! but, Gilbert, how can you be so composed about it? You won’t mind
- business for an hour or two in a case of this sort, when your friend is
- at the point of death.’
- ‘He is not, I tell you.’
- ‘For anything you know, he may be: you can’t tell till you have seen him.
- At all events, he must have met with some terrible accident, and you
- ought to see him: he’ll take it very unkind if you don’t.’
- ‘Confound it! I can’t. He and I have not been on good terms of late.’
- ‘Oh, my dear boy! Surely, surely you are not so unforgiving as to carry
- your little differences to such a length as—’
- ‘Little differences, indeed!’ I muttered.
- ‘Well, but only remember the occasion. Think how—’
- ‘Well, well, don’t bother me now—I’ll see about it,’ I replied.
- And my seeing about it was to send Fergus next morning, with my mother’s
- compliments, to make the requisite inquiries; for, of course, my going
- was out of the question—or sending a message either. He brought back
- intelligence that the young squire was laid up with the complicated evils
- of a broken head and certain contusions (occasioned by a fall—of which he
- did not trouble himself to relate the particulars—and the subsequent
- misconduct of his horse), and a severe cold, the consequence of lying on
- the wet ground in the rain; but there were no broken bones, and no
- immediate prospects of dissolution.
- It was evident, then, that for Mrs. Graham’s sake it was not his
- intention to criminate me.
- CHAPTER XV
- That day was rainy like its predecessor; but towards evening it began to
- clear up a little, and the next morning was fair and promising. I was
- out on the hill with the reapers. A light wind swept over the corn, and
- all nature laughed in the sunshine. The lark was rejoicing among the
- silvery floating clouds. The late rain had so sweetly freshened and
- cleared the air, and washed the sky, and left such glittering gems on
- branch and blade, that not even the farmers could have the heart to blame
- it. But no ray of sunshine could reach my heart, no breeze could freshen
- it; nothing could fill the void my faith, and hope, and joy in Helen
- Graham had left, or drive away the keen regrets and bitter dregs of
- lingering love that still oppressed it.
- While I stood with folded arms abstractedly gazing on the undulating
- swell of the corn, not yet disturbed by the reapers, something gently
- pulled my skirts, and a small voice, no longer welcome to my ears,
- aroused me with the startling words,—‘Mr. Markham, mamma wants you.’
- ‘Wants me, Arthur?’
- ‘Yes. Why do you look so queer?’ said he, half laughing, half frightened
- at the unexpected aspect of my face in suddenly turning towards him,—‘and
- why have you kept so long away? Come! Won’t you come?’
- ‘I’m busy just now,’ I replied, scarce knowing what to answer.
- He looked up in childish bewilderment; but before I could speak again the
- lady herself was at my side.
- ‘Gilbert, I must speak with you!’ said she, in a tone of suppressed
- vehemence.
- I looked at her pale cheek and glittering eye, but answered nothing.
- ‘Only for a moment,’ pleaded she. ‘Just step aside into this other
- field.’ She glanced at the reapers, some of whom were directing looks of
- impertinent curiosity towards her. ‘I won’t keep you a minute.’
- I accompanied her through the gap.
- ‘Arthur, darling, run and gather those bluebells,’ said she, pointing to
- some that were gleaming at some distance under the hedge along which we
- walked. The child hesitated, as if unwilling to quit my side. ‘Go,
- love!’ repeated she more urgently, and in a tone which, though not
- unkind, demanded prompt obedience, and obtained it.
- ‘Well, Mrs. Graham?’ said I, calmly and coldly; for, though I saw she was
- miserable, and pitied her, I felt glad to have it in my power to torment
- her.
- She fixed her eyes upon me with a look that pierced me to the heart; and
- yet it made me smile.
- ‘I don’t ask the reason of this change, Gilbert,’ said she, with bitter
- calmness: ‘I know it too well; but though I could see myself suspected
- and condemned by every one else, and bear it with calmness, I cannot
- endure it from you.—Why did you not come to hear my explanation on the
- day I appointed to give it?’
- ‘Because I happened, in the interim, to learn all you would have told
- me—and a trifle more, I imagine.’
- ‘Impossible, for I would have told you all!’ cried she, passionately—‘but
- I won’t now, for I see you are not worthy of it!’
- And her pale lips quivered with agitation.
- ‘Why not, may I ask?’
- She repelled my mocking smile with a glance of scornful indignation.
- ‘Because you never understood me, or you would not soon have listened to
- my traducers—my confidence would be misplaced in you—you are not the man
- I thought you. Go! I won’t care what you think of me.’
- She turned away, and I went; for I thought that would torment her as much
- as anything; and I believe I was right; for, looking back a minute after,
- I saw her turn half round, as if hoping or expecting to find me still
- beside her; and then she stood still, and cast one look behind. It was a
- look less expressive of anger than of bitter anguish and despair; but I
- immediately assumed an aspect of indifference, and affected to be gazing
- carelessly around me, and I suppose she went on; for after lingering
- awhile to see if she would come back or call, I ventured one more glance,
- and saw her a good way off, moving rapidly up the field, with little
- Arthur running by her side and apparently talking as he went; but she
- kept her face averted from him, as if to hide some uncontrollable
- emotion. And I returned to my business.
- But I soon began to regret my precipitancy in leaving her so soon. It
- was evident she loved me—probably she was tired of Mr. Lawrence, and
- wished to exchange him for me; and if I had loved and reverenced her less
- to begin with, the preference might have gratified and amused me; but now
- the contrast between her outward seeming and her inward mind, as I
- supposed,—between my former and my present opinion of her, was so
- harrowing—so distressing to my feelings, that it swallowed up every
- lighter consideration.
- But still I was curious to know what sort of an explanation she would
- have given me—or would give now, if I pressed her for it—how much she
- would confess, and how she would endeavour to excuse herself. I longed
- to know what to despise, and what to admire in her; how much to pity, and
- how much to hate;—and, what was more, I would know. I would see her once
- more, and fairly satisfy myself in what light to regard her, before we
- parted. Lost to me she was, for ever, of course; but still I could not
- bear to think that we had parted, for the last time, with so much
- unkindness and misery on both sides. That last look of hers had sunk
- into my heart; I could not forget it. But what a fool I was! Had she
- not deceived me, injured me—blighted my happiness for life? ‘Well, I’ll
- see her, however,’ was my concluding resolve, ‘but not to-day: to-day and
- to-night she may think upon her sins, and be as miserable as she will:
- to-morrow I will see her once again, and know something more about her.
- The interview may be serviceable to her, or it may not. At any rate, it
- will give a breath of excitement to the life she has doomed to
- stagnation, and may calm with certainty some agitating thoughts.’
- I did go on the morrow, but not till towards evening, after the business
- of the day was concluded, that is, between six and seven; and the
- westering sun was gleaming redly on the old Hall, and flaming in the
- latticed windows, as I reached it, imparting to the place a cheerfulness
- not its own. I need not dilate upon the feelings with which I approached
- the shrine of my former divinity—that spot teeming with a thousand
- delightful recollections and glorious dreams—all darkened now by one
- disastrous truth.
- Rachel admitted me into the parlour, and went to call her mistress, for
- she was not there: but there was her desk left open on the little round
- table beside the high-backed chair, with a book laid upon it. Her
- limited but choice collection of books was almost as familiar to me as my
- own; but this volume I had not seen before. I took it up. It was Sir
- Humphry Davy’s ‘Last Days of a Philosopher,’ and on the first leaf was
- written, ‘Frederick Lawrence.’ I closed the book, but kept it in my
- hand, and stood facing the door, with my back to the fire-place, calmly
- waiting her arrival; for I did not doubt she would come. And soon I
- heard her step in the hall. My heart was beginning to throb, but I
- checked it with an internal rebuke, and maintained my composure—outwardly
- at least. She entered, calm, pale, collected.
- ‘To what am I indebted for this favour, Mr. Markham?’ said she, with such
- severe but quiet dignity as almost disconcerted me; but I answered with a
- smile, and impudently enough,—
- ‘Well, I am come to hear your explanation.’
- ‘I told you I would not give it,’ said she. ‘I said you were unworthy of
- my confidence.’
- ‘Oh, very well,’ replied I, moving to the door.
- ‘Stay a moment,’ said she. ‘This is the last time I shall see you: don’t
- go just yet.’
- I remained, awaiting her further commands.
- ‘Tell me,’ resumed she, ‘on what grounds you believe these things against
- me; who told you; and what did they say?’
- I paused a moment. She met my eye as unflinchingly as if her bosom had
- been steeled with conscious innocence. She was resolved to know the
- worst, and determined to dare it too. ‘I can crush that bold spirit,’
- thought I. But while I secretly exulted in my power, I felt disposed to
- dally with my victim like a cat. Showing her the book that I still held,
- in my hand, and pointing to the name on the fly-leaf, but fixing my eye
- upon her face, I asked,—‘Do you know that gentleman?’
- ‘Of course I do,’ replied she; and a sudden flush suffused her
- features—whether of shame or anger I could not tell: it rather resembled
- the latter. ‘What next, sir?’
- ‘How long is it since you saw him?’
- ‘Who gave you the right to catechize me on this or any other subject?’
- ‘Oh, no one!—it’s quite at your option whether to answer or not. And
- now, let me ask—have you heard what has lately befallen this friend of
- yours?—because, if you have not—’
- ‘I will not be insulted, Mr. Markham!’ cried she, almost infuriated at my
- manner. ‘So you had better leave the house at once, if you came only for
- that.’
- ‘I did not come to insult you: I came to hear your explanation.’
- ‘And I tell you I won’t give it!’ retorted she, pacing the room in a
- state of strong excitement, with her hands clasped tightly together,
- breathing short, and flashing fires of indignation from her eyes. ‘I
- will not condescend to explain myself to one that can make a jest of such
- horrible suspicions, and be so easily led to entertain them.’
- ‘I do not make a jest of them, Mrs. Graham,’ returned I, dropping at once
- my tone of taunting sarcasm. ‘I heartily wish I could find them a
- jesting matter. And as to being easily led to suspect, God only knows
- what a blind, incredulous fool I have hitherto been, perseveringly
- shutting my eyes and stopping my ears against everything that threatened
- to shake my confidence in you, till proof itself confounded my
- infatuation!’
- ‘What proof, sir?’
- ‘Well, I’ll tell you. You remember that evening when I was here last?’
- ‘I do.’
- ‘Even then you dropped some hints that might have opened the eyes of a
- wiser man; but they had no such effect upon me: I went on trusting and
- believing, hoping against hope, and adoring where I could not comprehend.
- It so happened, however, that after I left you I turned back—drawn by
- pure depth of sympathy and ardour of affection—not daring to intrude my
- presence openly upon you, but unable to resist the temptation of catching
- one glimpse through the window, just to see how you were: for I had left
- you apparently in great affliction, and I partly blamed my own want of
- forbearance and discretion as the cause of it. If I did wrong, love
- alone was my incentive, and the punishment was severe enough; for it was
- just as I had reached that tree, that you came out into the garden with
- your friend. Not choosing to show myself, under the circumstances, I
- stood still, in the shadow, till you had both passed by.’
- ‘And how much of our conversation did you hear?’
- ‘I heard quite enough, Helen. And it was well for me that I did hear it;
- for nothing less could have cured my infatuation. I always said and
- thought, that I would never believe a word against you, unless I heard it
- from your own lips. All the hints and affirmations of others I treated
- as malignant, baseless slanders; your own self-accusations I believed to
- be overstrained; and all that seemed unaccountable in your position I
- trusted that you could account for if you chose.’
- Mrs. Graham had discontinued her walk. She leant against one end of the
- chimney-piece, opposite that near which I was standing, with her chin
- resting on her closed hand, her eyes—no longer burning with anger, but
- gleaming with restless excitement—sometimes glancing at me while I spoke,
- then coursing the opposite wall, or fixed upon the carpet.
- ‘You should have come to me after all,’ said she, ‘and heard what I had
- to say in my own justification. It was ungenerous and wrong to withdraw
- yourself so secretly and suddenly, immediately after such ardent
- protestations of attachment, without ever assigning a reason for the
- change. You should have told me all--no matter how bitterly. It would
- have been better than this silence.’
- ‘To what end should I have done so? You could not have enlightened me
- further, on the subject which alone concerned me; nor could you have made
- me discredit the evidence of my senses. I desired our intimacy to be
- discontinued at once, as you yourself had acknowledged would probably be
- the case if I knew all; but I did not wish to upbraid you,—though (as you
- also acknowledged) you had deeply wronged me. Yes, you have done me an
- injury you can never repair—or any other either—you have blighted the
- freshness and promise of youth, and made my life a wilderness! I might
- live a hundred years, but I could never recover from the effects of this
- withering blow—and never forget it! Hereafter—You smile, Mrs. Graham,’
- said I, suddenly stopping short, checked in my passionate declamation by
- unutterable feelings to behold her actually smiling at the picture of the
- ruin she had wrought.
- ‘Did I?’ replied she, looking seriously up; ‘I was not aware of it. If I
- did, it was not for pleasure at the thoughts of the harm I had done you.
- Heaven knows I have had torment enough at the bare possibility of that;
- it was for joy to find that you had some depth of soul and feeling after
- all, and to hope that I had not been utterly mistaken in your worth. But
- smiles and tears are so alike with me, they are neither of them confined
- to any particular feelings: I often cry when I am happy, and smile when I
- am sad.’
- She looked at me again, and seemed to expect a reply; but I continued
- silent.
- ‘Would you be very glad,’ resumed she, ‘to find that you were mistaken in
- your conclusions?’
- ‘How can you ask it, Helen?’
- ‘I don’t say I can clear myself altogether,’ said she, speaking low and
- fast, while her heart beat visibly and her bosom heaved with
- excitement,—‘but would you be glad to discover I was better than you
- think me?’
- ‘Anything that could in the least degree tend to restore my former
- opinion of you, to excuse the regard I still feel for you, and alleviate
- the pangs of unutterable regret that accompany it, would be only too
- gladly, too eagerly received!’ Her cheeks burned, and her whole frame
- trembled, now, with excess of agitation. She did not speak, but flew to
- her desk, and snatching thence what seemed a thick album or manuscript
- volume, hastily tore away a few leaves from the end, and thrust the rest
- into my hand, saying, ‘You needn’t read it all; but take it home with
- you,’ and hurried from the room. But when I had left the house, and was
- proceeding down the walk, she opened the window and called me back. It
- was only to say,—‘Bring it back when you have read it; and don’t breathe
- a word of what it tells you to any living being. I trust to your
- honour.’
- Before I could answer she had closed the casement and turned away. I saw
- her cast herself back in the old oak chair, and cover her face with her
- hands. Her feelings had been wrought to a pitch that rendered it
- necessary to seek relief in tears.
- Panting with eagerness, and struggling to suppress my hopes, I hurried
- home, and rushed up-stairs to my room, having first provided myself with
- a candle, though it was scarcely twilight yet—then, shut and bolted the
- door, determined to tolerate no interruption; and sitting down before the
- table, opened out my prize and delivered myself up to its perusal—first
- hastily turning over the leaves and snatching a sentence here and there,
- and then setting myself steadily to read it through.
- I have it now before me; and though you could not, of course, peruse it
- with half the interest that I did, I know you would not be satisfied with
- an abbreviation of its contents, and you shall have the whole, save,
- perhaps, a few passages here and there of merely temporary interest to
- the writer, or such as would serve to encumber the story rather than
- elucidate it. It begins somewhat abruptly, thus—but we will reserve its
- commencement for another chapter.
- CHAPTER XVI
- June 1st, 1821.—We have just returned to Staningley—that is, we returned
- some days ago, and I am not yet settled, and feel as if I never should
- be. We left town sooner than was intended, in consequence of my uncle’s
- indisposition;—I wonder what would have been the result if we had stayed
- the full time. I am quite ashamed of my new-sprung distaste for country
- life. All my former occupations seem so tedious and dull, my former
- amusements so insipid and unprofitable. I cannot enjoy my music, because
- there is no one to hear it. I cannot enjoy my walks, because there is no
- one to meet. I cannot enjoy my books, because they have not power to
- arrest my attention: my head is so haunted with the recollections of the
- last few weeks, that I cannot attend to them. My drawing suits me best,
- for I can draw and think at the same time; and if my productions cannot
- now be seen by any one but myself, and those who do not care about them,
- they, possibly, may be, hereafter. But, then, there is one face I am
- always trying to paint or to sketch, and always without success; and that
- vexes me. As for the owner of that face, I cannot get him out of my
- mind—and, indeed, I never try. I wonder whether he ever thinks of me;
- and I wonder whether I shall ever see him again. And then might follow a
- train of other wonderments—questions for time and fate to
- answer—concluding with—Supposing all the rest be answered in the
- affirmative, I wonder whether I shall ever repent it? as my aunt would
- tell me I should, if she knew what I was thinking about.
- How distinctly I remember our conversation that evening before our
- departure for town, when we were sitting together over the fire, my uncle
- having gone to bed with a slight attack of the gout.
- ‘Helen,’ said she, after a thoughtful silence, ‘do you ever think about
- marriage?’
- ‘Yes, aunt, often.’
- ‘And do you ever contemplate the possibility of being married yourself,
- or engaged, before the season is over?’
- ‘Sometimes; but I don’t think it at all likely that I ever shall.’
- ‘Why so?’
- ‘Because, I imagine, there must be only a very, very few men in the world
- that I should like to marry; and of those few, it is ten to one I may
- never be acquainted with one; or if I should, it is twenty to one he may
- not happen to be single, or to take a fancy to me.’
- ‘That is no argument at all. It may be very true—and I hope is true,
- that there are very few men whom you would choose to marry, of yourself.
- It is not, indeed, to be supposed that you would wish to marry any one
- till you were asked: a girl’s affections should never be won unsought.
- But when they are sought—when the citadel of the heart is fairly
- besieged—it is apt to surrender sooner than the owner is aware of, and
- often against her better judgment, and in opposition to all her
- preconceived ideas of what she could have loved, unless she be extremely
- careful and discreet. Now, I want to warn you, Helen, of these things,
- and to exhort you to be watchful and circumspect from the very
- commencement of your career, and not to suffer your heart to be stolen
- from you by the first foolish or unprincipled person that covets the
- possession of it.—You know, my dear, you are only just eighteen; there is
- plenty of time before you, and neither your uncle nor I are in any hurry
- to get you off our hands, and I may venture to say, there will be no lack
- of suitors; for you can boast a good family, a pretty considerable
- fortune and expectations, and, I may as well tell you likewise—for, if I
- don’t, others will—that you have a fair share of beauty besides—and I
- hope you may never have cause to regret it!’
- ‘I hope not, aunt; but why should you fear it?’
- ‘Because, my dear, beauty is that quality which, next to money, is
- generally the most attractive to the worst kinds of men; and, therefore,
- it is likely to entail a great deal of trouble on the possessor.’
- ‘Have you been troubled in that way, aunt?’
- ‘No, Helen,’ said she, with reproachful gravity, ‘but I know many that
- have; and some, through carelessness, have been the wretched victims of
- deceit; and some, through weakness, have fallen into snares and
- temptations terrible to relate.’
- ‘Well, I shall be neither careless nor weak.’
- ‘Remember Peter, Helen! Don’t boast, but watch. Keep a guard over your
- eyes and ears as the inlets of your heart, and over your lips as the
- outlet, lest they betray you in a moment of unwariness. Receive, coldly
- and dispassionately, every attention, till you have ascertained and duly
- considered the worth of the aspirant; and let your affections be
- consequent upon approbation alone. First study; then approve; then love.
- Let your eyes be blind to all external attractions, your ears deaf to all
- the fascinations of flattery and light discourse.—These are nothing—and
- worse than nothing—snares and wiles of the tempter, to lure the
- thoughtless to their own destruction. Principle is the first thing,
- after all; and next to that, good sense, respectability, and moderate
- wealth. If you should marry the handsomest, and most accomplished and
- superficially agreeable man in the world, you little know the misery that
- would overwhelm you if, after all, you should find him to be a worthless
- reprobate, or even an impracticable fool.’
- ‘But what are all the poor fools and reprobates to do, aunt? If
- everybody followed your advice, the world would soon come to an end.’
- ‘Never fear, my dear! the male fools and reprobates will never want for
- partners, while there are so many of the other sex to match them; but do
- you follow my advice. And this is no subject for jesting, Helen—I am
- sorry to see you treat the matter in that light way. Believe me,
- matrimony is a serious thing.’ And she spoke it so seriously, that one
- might have fancied she had known it to her cost; but I asked no more
- impertinent questions, and merely answered,—‘I know it is; and I know
- there is truth and sense in what you say; but you need not fear me, for I
- not only should think it wrong to marry a man that was deficient in sense
- or in principle, but I should never be tempted to do it; for I could not
- like him, if he were ever so handsome, and ever so charming, in other
- respects; I should hate him—despise him—pity him—anything but love him.
- My affections not only ought to be founded on approbation, but they will
- and must be so: for, without approving, I cannot love. It is needless to
- say, I ought to be able to respect and honour the man I marry, as well as
- love him, for I cannot love him without. So set your mind at rest.’
- ‘I hope it may be so,’ answered she.
- ‘I know it is so,’ persisted I.
- ‘You have not been tried yet, Helen—we can but hope,’ said she in her
- cold, cautious way.
- ‘I was vexed at her incredulity; but I am not sure her doubts were
- entirely without sagacity; I fear I have found it much easier to remember
- her advice than to profit by it;—indeed, I have sometimes been led to
- question the soundness of her doctrines on those subjects. Her counsels
- may be good, as far as they go—in the main points at least;—but there are
- some things she has overlooked in her calculations. I wonder if she was
- ever in love.
- I commenced my career—or my first campaign, as my uncle calls it—kindling
- with bright hopes and fancies—chiefly raised by this conversation—and
- full of confidence in my own discretion. At first, I was delighted with
- the novelty and excitement of our London life; but soon I began to weary
- of its mingled turbulence and constraint, and sigh for the freshness and
- freedom of home. My new acquaintances, both male and female,
- disappointed my expectations, and vexed and depressed me by turns; for I
- soon grew tired of studying their peculiarities, and laughing at their
- foibles—particularly as I was obliged to keep my criticisms to myself,
- for my aunt would not hear them—and they—the ladies especially—appeared
- so provokingly mindless, and heartless, and artificial. The gentlemen
- seemed better, but, perhaps, it was because I knew them less—perhaps,
- because they flattered me; but I did not fall in love with any of them;
- and, if their attentions pleased me one moment, they provoked me the
- next, because they put me out of humour with myself, by revealing my
- vanity and making me fear I was becoming like some of the ladies I so
- heartily despised.
- There was one elderly gentleman that annoyed me very much; a rich old
- friend of my uncle’s, who, I believe, thought I could not do better than
- marry him; but, besides being old, he was ugly and disagreeable,—and
- wicked, I am sure, though my aunt scolded me for saying so; but she
- allowed he was no saint. And there was another, less hateful, but still
- more tiresome, because she favoured him, and was always thrusting him
- upon me, and sounding his praises in my ears—Mr. Boarham by name,
- Bore’em, as I prefer spelling it, for a terrible bore he was: I shudder
- still at the remembrance of his voice—drone, drone, drone, in my
- ear—while he sat beside me, prosing away by the half-hour together, and
- beguiling himself with the notion that he was improving my mind by useful
- information, or impressing his dogmas upon me and reforming my errors of
- judgment, or perhaps that he was talking down to my level, and amusing me
- with entertaining discourse. Yet he was a decent man enough in the main,
- I daresay; and if he had kept his distance, I never would have hated him.
- As it was, it was almost impossible to help it, for he not only bothered
- me with the infliction of his own presence, but he kept me from the
- enjoyment of more agreeable society.
- One night, however, at a ball, he had been more than usually tormenting,
- and my patience was quite exhausted. It appeared as if the whole evening
- was fated to be insupportable: I had just had one dance with an
- empty-headed coxcomb, and then Mr. Boarham had come upon me and seemed
- determined to cling to me for the rest of the night. He never danced
- himself, and there he sat, poking his head in my face, and impressing all
- beholders with the idea that he was a confirmed, acknowledged lover; my
- aunt looking complacently on all the time, and wishing him God-speed. In
- vain I attempted to drive him away by giving a loose to my exasperated
- feelings, even to positive rudeness: nothing could convince him that his
- presence was disagreeable. Sullen silence was taken for rapt attention,
- and gave him greater room to talk; sharp answers were received as smart
- sallies of girlish vivacity, that only required an indulgent rebuke; and
- flat contradictions were but as oil to the flames, calling forth new
- strains of argument to support his dogmas, and bringing down upon me
- endless floods of reasoning to overwhelm me with conviction.
- But there was one present who seemed to have a better appreciation of my
- frame of mind. A gentleman stood by, who had been watching our
- conference for some time, evidently much amused at my companion’s
- remorseless pertinacity and my manifest annoyance, and laughing to
- himself at the asperity and uncompromising spirit of my replies. At
- length, however, he withdrew, and went to the lady of the house,
- apparently for the purpose of asking an introduction to me, for, shortly
- after, they both came up, and she introduced him as Mr. Huntingdon, the
- son of a late friend of my uncle’s. He asked me to dance. I gladly
- consented, of course; and he was my companion during the remainder of my
- stay, which was not long, for my aunt, as usual, insisted upon an early
- departure.
- I was sorry to go, for I had found my new acquaintance a very lively and
- entertaining companion. There was a certain graceful ease and freedom
- about all he said and did, that gave a sense of repose and expansion to
- the mind, after so much constraint and formality as I had been doomed to
- suffer. There might be, it is true, a little too much careless boldness
- in his manner and address, but I was in so good a humour, and so grateful
- for my late deliverance from Mr. Boarham, that it did not anger me.
- ‘Well, Helen, how do you like Mr. Boarham now?’ said my aunt, as we took
- our seats in the carriage and drove away.
- ‘Worse than ever,’ I replied.
- She looked displeased, but said no more on that subject.
- ‘Who was the gentleman you danced with last,’ resumed she, after a
- pause—‘that was so officious in helping you on with your shawl?’
- ‘He was not officious at all, aunt: he never attempted to help me till he
- saw Mr. Boarham coming to do so; and then he stepped laughingly forward
- and said, “Come, I’ll preserve you from that infliction.”’
- ‘Who was it, I ask?’ said she, with frigid gravity.
- ‘It was Mr. Huntingdon, the son of uncle’s old friend.’
- ‘I have heard your uncle speak of young Mr. Huntingdon. I’ve heard him
- say, “He’s a fine lad, that young Huntingdon, but a bit wildish, I
- fancy.” So I’d have you beware.’
- ‘What does “a bit wildish” mean?’ I inquired.
- ‘It means destitute of principle, and prone to every vice that is common
- to youth.’
- ‘But I’ve heard uncle say he was a sad wild fellow himself, when he was
- young.’
- She sternly shook her head.
- ‘He was jesting then, I suppose,’ said I, ‘and here he was speaking at
- random—at least, I cannot believe there is any harm in those laughing
- blue eyes.’
- ‘False reasoning, Helen!’ said she, with a sigh.
- ‘Well, we ought to be charitable, you know, aunt—besides, I don’t think
- it is false: I am an excellent physiognomist, and I always judge of
- people’s characters by their looks—not by whether they are handsome or
- ugly, but by the general cast of the countenance. For instance, I should
- know by your countenance that you were not of a cheerful, sanguine
- disposition; and I should know by Mr. Wilmot’s, that he was a worthless
- old reprobate; and by Mr. Boarham’s, that he was not an agreeable
- companion; and by Mr. Huntingdon’s, that he was neither a fool nor a
- knave, though, possibly, neither a sage nor a saint—but that is no matter
- to me, as I am not likely to meet him again—unless as an occasional
- partner in the ball-room.’
- It was not so, however, for I met him again next morning. He came to
- call upon my uncle, apologising for not having done so before, by saying
- he was only lately returned from the Continent, and had not heard, till
- the previous night, of my uncle’s arrival in town; and after that I often
- met him; sometimes in public, sometimes at home; for he was very
- assiduous in paying his respects to his old friend, who did not, however,
- consider himself greatly obliged by the attention.
- ‘I wonder what the deuce the lad means by coming so often,’ he would
- say,—‘can you tell, Helen?—Hey? He wants none o’ my company, nor I
- his—that’s certain.’
- ‘I wish you’d tell him so, then,’ said my aunt.
- ‘Why, what for? If I don’t want him, somebody does, mayhap’ (winking at
- me). ‘Besides, he’s a pretty tidy fortune, Peggy, you know—not such a
- catch as Wilmot; but then Helen won’t hear of that match: for, somehow,
- these old chaps don’t go down with the girls—with all their money, and
- their experience to boot. I’ll bet anything she’d rather have this young
- fellow without a penny, than Wilmot with his house full of gold.
- Wouldn’t you, Nell?’
- ‘Yes, uncle; but that’s not saying much for Mr. Huntingdon; for I’d
- rather be an old maid and a pauper than Mrs. Wilmot.’
- ‘And Mrs. Huntingdon? What would you rather be than Mrs. Huntingdon—eh?’
- ‘I’ll tell you when I’ve considered the matter.’
- ‘Ah! it needs consideration, then? But come, now—would you rather be an
- old maid—let alone the pauper?’
- ‘I can’t tell till I’m asked.’
- And I left the room immediately, to escape further examination. But five
- minutes after, in looking from my window, I beheld Mr. Boarham coming up
- to the door. I waited nearly half-an-hour in uncomfortable suspense,
- expecting every minute to be called, and vainly longing to hear him go.
- Then footsteps were heard on the stairs, and my aunt entered the room
- with a solemn countenance, and closed the door behind her.
- ‘Here is Mr. Boarham, Helen,’ said she. ‘He wishes to see you.’
- ‘Oh, aunt!—Can’t you tell him I’m indisposed?—I’m sure I am—to see him.’
- ‘Nonsense, my dear! this is no trifling matter. He is come on a very
- important errand—to ask your hand in marriage of your uncle and me.’
- ‘I hope my uncle and you told him it was not in your power to give it.
- What right had he to ask any one before me?’
- ‘Helen!’
- ‘What did my uncle say?’
- ‘He said he would not interfere in the matter; if you liked to accept Mr.
- Boarham’s obliging offer, you—’
- ‘Did he say obliging offer?’
- ‘No; he said if you liked to take him you might; and if not, you might
- please yourself.’
- ‘He said right; and what did you say?’
- ‘It is no matter what I said. What will you say?—that is the question.
- He is now waiting to ask you himself; but consider well before you go;
- and if you intend to refuse him, give me your reasons.’
- ‘I shall refuse him, of course; but you must tell me how, for I want to
- be civil and yet decided—and when I’ve got rid of him, I’ll give you my
- reasons afterwards.’
- ‘But stay, Helen; sit down a little and compose yourself. Mr. Boarham is
- in no particular hurry, for he has little doubt of your acceptance; and I
- want to speak with you. Tell me, my dear, what are your objections to
- him? Do you deny that he is an upright, honourable man?’
- ‘No.’
- ‘Do you deny that he is sensible, sober, respectable?’
- ‘No; he may be all this, but—’
- ‘But, Helen! How many such men do you expect to meet with in the world?
- Upright, honourable, sensible, sober, respectable! Is this such an
- every-day character that you should reject the possessor of such noble
- qualities without a moment’s hesitation? Yes, noble I may call them; for
- think of the full meaning of each, and how many inestimable virtues they
- include (and I might add many more to the list), and consider that all
- this is laid at your feet. It is in your power to secure this
- inestimable blessing for life—a worthy and excellent husband, who loves
- you tenderly, but not too fondly so as to blind him to your faults, and
- will be your guide throughout life’s pilgrimage, and your partner in
- eternal bliss. Think how—’
- ‘But I hate him, aunt,’ said I, interrupting this unusual flow of
- eloquence.
- ‘Hate him, Helen! Is this a Christian spirit?—you hate him? and he so
- good a man!’
- ‘I don’t hate him as a man, but as a husband. As a man, I love him so
- much that I wish him a better wife than I—one as good as himself, or
- better—if you think that possible—provided she could like him; but I
- never could, and therefore—’
- ‘But why not? What objection do you find?’
- ‘Firstly, he is at least forty years old—considerably more, I should
- think—and I am but eighteen; secondly, he is narrow-minded and bigoted in
- the extreme; thirdly, his tastes and feelings are wholly dissimilar to
- mine; fourthly, his looks, voice, and manner are particularly displeasing
- to me; and, finally, I have an aversion to his whole person that I never
- can surmount.’
- ‘Then you ought to surmount it. And please to compare him for a moment
- with Mr. Huntingdon, and, good looks apart (which contribute nothing to
- the merit of the man, or to the happiness of married life, and which you
- have so often professed to hold in light esteem), tell me which is the
- better man.’
- ‘I have no doubt Mr. Huntingdon is a much better man than you think him;
- but we are not talking about him now, but about Mr. Boarham; and as I
- would rather grow, live, and die in single blessedness—than be his wife,
- it is but right that I should tell him so at once, and put him out of
- suspense—so let me go.’
- ‘But don’t give him a flat denial; he has no idea of such a thing, and it
- would offend him greatly: say you have no thoughts of matrimony at
- present—’
- ‘But I have thoughts of it.’
- ‘Or that you desire a further acquaintance.’
- ‘But I don’t desire a further acquaintance—quite the contrary.’
- And without waiting for further admonitions I left the room and went to
- seek Mr. Boarham. He was walking up and down the drawing-room, humming
- snatches of tunes and nibbling the end of his cane.
- ‘My dear young lady,’ said he, bowing and smirking with great
- complacency, ‘I have your kind guardian’s permission—’
- ‘I know, sir,’ said I, wishing to shorten the scene as much as possible,
- ‘and I am greatly obliged for your preference, but must beg to decline
- the honour you wish to confer, for I think we were not made for each
- other, as you yourself would shortly discover if the experiment were
- tried.’
- My aunt was right. It was quite evident he had had little doubt of my
- acceptance, and no idea of a positive denial. He was amazed, astounded
- at such an answer, but too incredulous to be much offended; and after a
- little humming and hawing, he returned to the attack.
- ‘I know, my dear, that there exists a considerable disparity between us
- in years, in temperament, and perhaps some other things; but let me
- assure you, I shall not be severe to mark the faults and foibles of a
- young and ardent nature such as yours, and while I acknowledge them to
- myself, and even rebuke them with all a father’s care, believe me, no
- youthful lover could be more tenderly indulgent towards the object of his
- affections than I to you; and, on the other hand, let me hope that my
- more experienced years and graver habits of reflection will be no
- disparagement in your eyes, as I shall endeavour to make them all
- conducive to your happiness. Come, now! What do you say? Let us have
- no young lady’s affectations and caprices, but speak out at once.’
- ‘I will, but only to repeat what I said before, that I am certain we were
- not made for each other.’
- ‘You really think so?’
- ‘I do.’
- ‘But you don’t know me—you wish for a further acquaintance—a longer time
- to—’
- ‘No, I don’t. I know you as well as I ever shall, and better than you
- know me, or you would never dream of uniting yourself to one so
- incongruous—so utterly unsuitable to you in every way.’
- ‘But, my dear young lady, I don’t look for perfection; I can excuse—’
- ‘Thank you, Mr. Boarham, but I won’t trespass upon your goodness. You
- may save your indulgence and consideration for some more worthy object,
- that won’t tax them so heavily.’
- ‘But let me beg you to consult your aunt; that excellent lady, I am sure,
- will—’
- ‘I have consulted her; and I know her wishes coincide with yours; but in
- such important matters, I take the liberty of judging for myself; and no
- persuasion can alter my inclinations, or induce me to believe that such a
- step would be conducive to my happiness or yours—and I wonder that a man
- of your experience and discretion should think of choosing such a wife.’
- ‘Ah, well!’ said he, ‘I have sometimes wondered at that myself. I have
- sometimes said to myself, “Now Boarham, what is this you’re after? Take
- care, man—look before you leap! This is a sweet, bewitching creature,
- but remember, the brightest attractions to the lover too often prove the
- husband’s greatest torments!” I assure you my choice has not been made
- without much reasoning and reflection. The seeming imprudence of the
- match has cost me many an anxious thought by day, and many a sleepless
- hour by night; but at length I satisfied myself that it was not, in very
- deed, imprudent. I saw my sweet girl was not without her faults, but of
- these her youth, I trusted, was not one, but rather an earnest of virtues
- yet unblown—a strong ground of presumption that her little defects of
- temper and errors of judgment, opinion, or manner were not irremediable,
- but might easily be removed or mitigated by the patient efforts of a
- watchful and judicious adviser, and where I failed to enlighten and
- control, I thought I might safely undertake to pardon, for the sake of
- her many excellences. Therefore, my dearest girl, since I am satisfied,
- why should you object—on my account, at least?’
- ‘But to tell you the truth, Mr. Boarham, it is on my own account I
- principally object; so let us—drop the subject,’ I would have said, ‘for
- it is worse than useless to pursue it any further,’ but he pertinaciously
- interrupted me with,—‘But why so? I would love you, cherish you, protect
- you,’ &c., &c.
- I shall not trouble myself to put down all that passed between us.
- Suffice it to say, that I found him very troublesome, and very hard to
- convince that I really meant what I said, and really was so obstinate and
- blind to my own interests, that there was no shadow of a chance that
- either he or my aunt would ever be able to overcome my objections.
- Indeed, I am not sure that I succeeded after all; though wearied with his
- so pertinaciously returning to the same point and repeating the same
- arguments over and over again, forcing me to reiterate the same replies,
- I at length turned short and sharp upon him, and my last words were,—‘I
- tell you plainly, that it cannot be. No consideration can induce me to
- marry against my inclinations. I respect you—at least, I would respect
- you, if you would behave like a sensible man—but I cannot love you, and
- never could—and the more you talk the further you repel me; so pray don’t
- say any more about it.’
- Whereupon he wished me a good-morning, and withdrew, disconcerted and
- offended, no doubt; but surely it was not my fault.
- CHAPTER XVII
- The next day I accompanied my uncle and aunt to a dinner-party at Mr.
- Wilmot’s. He had two ladies staying with him: his niece Annabella, a
- fine dashing girl, or rather young woman,—of some five-and-twenty, too
- great a flirt to be married, according to her own assertion, but greatly
- admired by the gentlemen, who universally pronounced her a splendid
- woman; and her gentle cousin, Milicent Hargrave, who had taken a violent
- fancy to me, mistaking me for something vastly better than I was. And I,
- in return, was very fond of her. I should entirely exclude poor Milicent
- in my general animadversions against the ladies of my acquaintance. But
- it was not on her account, or her cousin’s, that I have mentioned the
- party: it was for the sake of another of Mr. Wilmot’s guests, to wit Mr.
- Huntingdon. I have good reason to remember his presence there, for this
- was the last time I saw him.
- He did not sit near me at dinner; for it was his fate to hand in a
- capacious old dowager, and mine to be handed in by Mr. Grimsby, a friend
- of his, but a man I very greatly disliked: there was a sinister cast in
- his countenance, and a mixture of lurking ferocity and fulsome
- insincerity in his demeanour, that I could not away with. What a
- tiresome custom that is, by-the-by—one among the many sources of
- factitious annoyance of this ultra-civilised life. If the gentlemen must
- lead the ladies into the dining-room, why cannot they take those they
- like best?
- I am not sure, however, that Mr. Huntingdon would have taken me, if he
- had been at liberty to make his own selection. It is quite possible he
- might have chosen Miss Wilmot; for she seemed bent upon engrossing his
- attention to herself, and he seemed nothing loth to pay the homage she
- demanded. I thought so, at least, when I saw how they talked and
- laughed, and glanced across the table, to the neglect and evident umbrage
- of their respective neighbours—and afterwards, as the gentlemen joined us
- in the drawing-room, when she, immediately upon his entrance, loudly
- called upon him to be the arbiter of a dispute between herself and
- another lady, and he answered the summons with alacrity, and decided the
- question without a moment’s hesitation in her favour—though, to my
- thinking, she was obviously in the wrong—and then stood chatting
- familiarly with her and a group of other ladies; while I sat with
- Milicent Hargrave at the opposite end of the room, looking over the
- latter’s drawings, and aiding her with my critical observations and
- advice, at her particular desire. But in spite of my efforts to remain
- composed, my attention wandered from the drawings to the merry group, and
- against my better judgment my wrath rose, and doubtless my countenance
- lowered; for Milicent, observing that I must be tired of her daubs and
- scratches, begged I would join the company now, and defer the examination
- of the remainder to another opportunity. But while I was assuring her
- that I had no wish to join them, and was not tired, Mr. Huntingdon
- himself came up to the little round table at which we sat.
- ‘Are these yours?’ said he, carelessly taking up one of the drawings.
- ‘No, they are Miss Hargrave’s.’
- ‘Oh! well, let’s have a look at them.’
- And, regardless of Miss Hargrave’s protestations that they were not worth
- looking at, he drew a chair to my side, and receiving the drawings, one
- by one from my hand, successively scanned them over, and threw them on
- the table, but said not a word about them, though he was talking all the
- time. I don’t know what Milicent Hargrave thought of such conduct, but I
- found his conversation extremely interesting; though, as I afterwards
- discovered, when I came to analyse it, it was chiefly confined to
- quizzing the different members of the company present; and albeit he made
- some clever remarks, and some excessively droll ones, I do not think the
- whole would appear anything very particular, if written here, without the
- adventitious aids of look, and tone, and gesture, and that ineffable but
- indefinite charm, which cast a halo over all he did and said, and which
- would have made it a delight to look in his face, and hear the music of
- his voice, if he had been talking positive nonsense—and which, moreover,
- made me feel so bitter against my aunt when she put a stop to this
- enjoyment, by coming composedly forward, under pretence of wishing to see
- the drawings, that she cared and knew nothing about, and while making
- believe to examine them, addressing herself to Mr. Huntingdon, with one
- of her coldest and most repellent aspects, and beginning a series of the
- most common-place and formidably formal questions and observations, on
- purpose to wrest his attention from me—on purpose to vex me, as I
- thought: and having now looked through the portfolio, I left them to
- their _tête-à-tête_, and seated myself on a sofa, quite apart from the
- company—never thinking how strange such conduct would appear, but merely
- to indulge, at first, the vexation of the moment, and subsequently to
- enjoy my private thoughts.
- But I was not left long alone, for Mr. Wilmot, of all men the least
- welcome, took advantage of my isolated position to come and plant himself
- beside me. I had flattered myself that I had so effectually repulsed his
- advances on all former occasions, that I had nothing more to apprehend
- from his unfortunate predilection; but it seems I was mistaken: so great
- was his confidence, either in his wealth or his remaining powers of
- attraction, and so firm his conviction of feminine weakness, that he
- thought himself warranted to return to the siege, which he did with
- renovated ardour, enkindled by the quantity of wine he had drunk—a
- circumstance that rendered him infinitely the more disgusting; but
- greatly as I abhorred him at that moment, I did not like to treat him
- with rudeness, as I was now his guest, and had just been enjoying his
- hospitality; and I was no hand at a polite but determined rejection, nor
- would it have greatly availed me if I had, for he was too coarse-minded
- to take any repulse that was not as plain and positive as his own
- effrontery. The consequence was, that he waxed more fulsomely tender,
- and more repulsively warm, and I was driven to the very verge of
- desperation, and about to say I know not what, when I felt my hand, that
- hung over the arm of the sofa, suddenly taken by another and gently but
- fervently pressed. Instinctively, I guessed who it was, and, on looking
- up, was less surprised than delighted to see Mr. Huntingdon smiling upon
- me. It was like turning from some purgatorial fiend to an angel of
- light, come to announce that the season of torment was past.
- ‘Helen,’ said he (he frequently called me Helen, and I never resented the
- freedom), ‘I want you to look at this picture. Mr. Wilmot will excuse
- you a moment, I’m sure.’
- I rose with alacrity. He drew my arm within his, and led me across the
- room to a splendid painting of Vandyke’s that I had noticed before, but
- not sufficiently examined. After a moment of silent contemplation, I was
- beginning to comment on its beauties and peculiarities, when, playfully
- pressing the hand he still retained within his arm, he interrupted me
- with,—‘Never mind the picture: it was not for that I brought you here; it
- was to get you away from that scoundrelly old profligate yonder, who is
- looking as if he would like to challenge me for the affront.’
- ‘I am very much obliged to you,’ said I. ‘This is twice you have
- delivered me from such unpleasant companionship.’
- ‘Don’t be too thankful,’ he answered: ‘it is not all kindness to you; it
- is partly from a feeling of spite to your tormentors that makes me
- delighted to do the old fellows a bad turn, though I don’t think I have
- any great reason to dread them as rivals. Have I, Helen?’
- ‘You know I detest them both.’
- ‘And me?’
- ‘I have no reason to detest you.’
- ‘But what are your sentiments towards me? Helen—Speak! How do you
- regard me?’
- And again he pressed my hand; but I feared there was more of conscious
- power than tenderness in his demeanour, and I felt he had no right to
- extort a confession of attachment from me when he had made no
- correspondent avowal himself, and knew not what to answer. At last I
- said,—‘How do you regard me?’
- ‘Sweet angel, I adore you! I—’
- ‘Helen, I want you a moment,’ said the distinct, low voice of my aunt,
- close beside us. And I left him, muttering maledictions against his evil
- angel.
- ‘Well, aunt, what is it? What do you want?’ said I, following her to the
- embrasure of the window.
- ‘I want you to join the company, when you are fit to be seen,’ returned
- she, severely regarding me; ‘but please to stay here a little, till that
- shocking colour is somewhat abated, and your eyes have recovered
- something of their natural expression. I should be ashamed for anyone to
- see you in your present state.’
- Of course, such a remark had no effect in reducing the ‘shocking colour’;
- on the contrary, I felt my face glow with redoubled fires kindled by a
- complication of emotions, of which indignant, swelling anger was the
- chief. I offered no reply, however, but pushed aside the curtain and
- looked into the night—or rather into the lamp-lit square.
- ‘Was Mr. Huntingdon proposing to you, Helen?’ inquired my too watchful
- relative.
- ‘No.’
- ‘What was he saying then? I heard something very like it.’
- ‘I don’t know what he would have said, if you hadn’t interrupted him.’
- ‘And would you have accepted him, Helen, if he had proposed?’
- ‘Of course not—without consulting uncle and you.’
- ‘Oh! I’m glad, my dear, you have so much prudence left. Well, now,’ she
- added, after a moment’s pause, ‘you have made yourself conspicuous enough
- for one evening. The ladies are directing inquiring glances towards us
- at this moment, I see: I shall join them. Do you come too, when you are
- sufficiently composed to appear as usual.’
- ‘I am so now.’
- ‘Speak gently then, and don’t look so malicious,’ said my calm, but
- provoking aunt. ‘We shall return home shortly, and then,’ she added with
- solemn significance, ‘I have much to say to you.’
- So I went home prepared for a formidable lecture. Little was said by
- either party in the carriage during our short transit homewards; but when
- I had entered my room and thrown myself into an easy-chair, to reflect on
- the events of the day, my aunt followed me thither, and having dismissed
- Rachel, who was carefully stowing away my ornaments, closed the door; and
- placing a chair beside me, or rather at right angles with mine, sat down.
- With due deference I offered her my more commodious seat. She declined
- it, and thus opened the conference: ‘Do you remember, Helen, our
- conversation the night but one before we left Staningley?’
- ‘Yes, aunt.’
- ‘And do you remember how I warned you against letting your heart be
- stolen from you by those unworthy of its possession, and fixing your
- affections where approbation did not go before, and where reason and
- judgment withheld their sanction?’
- ‘Yes; but my reason—’
- ‘Pardon me—and do you remember assuring me that there was no occasion for
- uneasiness on your account; for you should never be tempted to marry a
- man who was deficient in sense or principle, however handsome or charming
- in other respects he might be, for you could not love him; you should
- hate—despise—pity—anything but love him—were not those your words?’
- ‘Yes; but—’
- ‘And did you not say that your affection must be founded on approbation;
- and that, unless you could approve and honour and respect, you could not
- love?’
- ‘Yes; but I do approve, and honour, and respect—’
- ‘How so, my dear? Is Mr. Huntingdon a good man?’
- ‘He is a much better man than you think him.’
- ‘That is nothing to the purpose. Is he a good man?’
- ‘Yes—in some respects. He has a good disposition.’
- ‘Is he a man of principle?’
- ‘Perhaps not, exactly; but it is only for want of thought. If he had
- some one to advise him, and remind him of what is right—’
- ‘He would soon learn, you think—and you yourself would willingly
- undertake to be his teacher? But, my dear, he is, I believe, full ten
- years older than you—how is it that you are so beforehand in moral
- acquirements?’
- ‘Thanks to you, aunt, I have been well brought up, and had good examples
- always before me, which he, most likely, has not; and, besides, he is of
- a sanguine temperament, and a gay, thoughtless temper, and I am naturally
- inclined to reflection.’
- ‘Well, now you have made him out to be deficient in both sense and
- principle, by your own confession—’
- ‘Then, my sense and my principle are at his service.’
- ‘That sounds presumptuous, Helen. Do you think you have enough for both;
- and do you imagine your merry, thoughtless profligate would allow himself
- to be guided by a young girl like you?’
- ‘No; I should not wish to guide him; but I think I might have influence
- sufficient to save him from some errors, and I should think my life well
- spent in the effort to preserve so noble a nature from destruction. He
- always listens attentively now when I speak seriously to him (and I often
- venture to reprove his random way of talking), and sometimes he says that
- if he had me always by his side he should never do or say a wicked thing,
- and that a little daily talk with me would make him quite a saint. It
- may he partly jest and partly flattery, but still—’
- ‘But still you think it may be truth?’
- ‘If I do think there is any mixture of truth in it, it is not from
- confidence in my own powers, but in his natural goodness. And you have
- no right to call him a profligate, aunt; he is nothing of the kind.’
- ‘Who told you so, my dear? What was that story about his intrigue with a
- married lady—Lady who was it?—Miss Wilmot herself was telling you the
- other day?’
- ‘It was false—false!’ I cried. ‘I don’t believe a word of it.’
- ‘You think, then, that he is a virtuous, well-conducted young man?’
- ‘I know nothing positive respecting his character. I only know that I
- have heard nothing definite against it—nothing that could be proved, at
- least; and till people can prove their slanderous accusations, I will not
- believe them. And I know this, that if he has committed errors, they are
- only such as are common to youth, and such as nobody thinks anything
- about; for I see that everybody likes him, and all the mammas smile upon
- him, and their daughters—and Miss Wilmot herself—are only too glad to
- attract his attention.’
- ‘Helen, the world may look upon such offences as venial; a few
- unprincipled mothers may be anxious to catch a young man of fortune
- without reference to his character; and thoughtless girls may be glad to
- win the smiles of so handsome a gentleman, without seeking to penetrate
- beyond the surface; but you, I trusted, were better informed than to see
- with their eyes, and judge with their perverted judgment. I did not
- think you would call these venial errors!’
- ‘Nor do I, aunt; but if I hate the sins, I love the sinner, and would do
- much for his salvation, even supposing your suspicions to be mainly true,
- which I do not and will not believe.’
- ‘Well, my dear, ask your uncle what sort of company he keeps, and if he
- is not banded with a set of loose, profligate young men, whom he calls
- his friends, his jolly companions, and whose chief delight is to wallow
- in vice, and vie with each other who can run fastest and furthest down
- the headlong road to the place prepared for the devil and his angels.’
- ‘Then I will save him from them.’
- ‘Oh, Helen, Helen! you little know the misery of uniting your fortunes to
- such a man!’
- ‘I have such confidence in him, aunt, notwithstanding all you say, that I
- would willingly risk my happiness for the chance of securing his. I will
- leave better men to those who only consider their own advantage. If he
- has done amiss, I shall consider my life well spent in saving him from
- the consequences of his early errors, and striving to recall him to the
- path of virtue. God grant me success!’
- Here the conversation ended, for at this juncture my uncle’s voice was
- heard from his chamber, loudly calling upon my aunt to come to bed. He
- was in a bad humour that night; for his gout was worse. It had been
- gradually increasing upon him ever since we came to town; and my aunt
- took advantage of the circumstance next morning to persuade him to return
- to the country immediately, without waiting for the close of the season.
- His physician supported and enforced her arguments; and contrary to her
- usual habits, she so hurried the preparations for removal (as much for my
- sake as my uncle’s, I think), that in a very few days we departed; and I
- saw no more of Mr. Huntingdon. My aunt flatters herself I shall soon
- forget him—perhaps she thinks I have forgotten him already, for I never
- mention his name; and she may continue to think so, till we meet again—if
- ever that should be. I wonder if it will?
- CHAPTER XVIII
- August 25th.—I am now quite settled down to my usual routine of steady
- occupations and quiet amusements—tolerably contented and cheerful, but
- still looking forward to spring with the hope of returning to town, not
- for its gaieties and dissipations, but for the chance of meeting Mr.
- Huntingdon once again; for still he is always in my thoughts and in my
- dreams. In all my employments, whatever I do, or see, or hear, has an
- ultimate reference to him; whatever skill or knowledge I acquire is some
- day to be turned to his advantage or amusement; whatever new beauties in
- nature or art I discover are to be depicted to meet his eye, or stored in
- my memory to be told him at some future period. This, at least, is the
- hope that I cherish, the fancy that lights me on my lonely way. It may
- be only an ignis fatuus, after all, but it can do no harm to follow it
- with my eyes and rejoice in its lustre, as long as it does not lure me
- from the path I ought to keep; and I think it will not, for I have
- thought deeply on my aunt’s advice, and I see clearly, now, the folly of
- throwing myself away on one that is unworthy of all the love I have to
- give, and incapable of responding to the best and deepest feelings of my
- inmost heart—so clearly, that even if I should see him again, and if he
- should remember me and love me still (which, alas! is too little
- probable, considering how he is situated, and by whom surrounded), and if
- he should ask me to marry him—I am determined not to consent until I know
- for certain whether my aunt’s opinion of him or mine is nearest the
- truth; for if mine is altogether wrong, it is not he that I love; it is a
- creature of my own imagination. But I think it is not wrong—no, no—there
- is a secret something—an inward instinct that assures me I am right.
- There is essential goodness in him;—and what delight to unfold it! If he
- has wandered, what bliss to recall him! If he is now exposed to the
- baneful influence of corrupting and wicked companions, what glory to
- deliver him from them! Oh! if I could but believe that Heaven has
- designed me for this!
- * * * * *
- To-day is the first of September; but my uncle has ordered the gamekeeper
- to spare the partridges till the gentlemen come. ‘What gentlemen?’ I
- asked when I heard it. A small party he had invited to shoot. His
- friend Mr. Wilmot was one, and my aunt’s friend, Mr. Boarham, another.
- This struck me as terrible news at the moment; but all regret and
- apprehension vanished like a dream when I heard that Mr. Huntingdon was
- actually to be a third! My aunt is greatly against his coming, of
- course: she earnestly endeavoured to dissuade my uncle from asking him;
- but he, laughing at her objections, told her it was no use talking, for
- the mischief was already done: he had invited Huntingdon and his friend
- Lord Lowborough before we left London, and nothing now remained but to
- fix the day for their coming. So he is safe, and I am sure of seeing
- him. I cannot express my joy. I find it very difficult to conceal it
- from my aunt; but I don’t wish to trouble her with my feelings till I
- know whether I ought to indulge them or not. If I find it my absolute
- duty to suppress them, they shall trouble no one but myself; and if I can
- really feel myself justified in indulging this attachment, I can dare
- anything, even the anger and grief of my best friend, for its
- object—surely, I shall soon know. But they are not coming till about the
- middle of the month.
- We are to have two lady visitors also: Mr. Wilmot is to bring his niece
- and her cousin Milicent. I suppose my aunt thinks the latter will
- benefit me by her society, and the salutary example of her gentle
- deportment and lowly and tractable spirit; and the former I suspect she
- intends as a species of counter-attraction to win Mr. Huntingdon’s
- attention from me. I don’t thank her for this; but I shall be glad of
- Milicent’s company: she is a sweet, good girl, and I wish I were like
- her—more like her, at least, than I am.
- * * * * *
- 19th.—They are come. They came the day before yesterday. The gentlemen
- are all gone out to shoot, and the ladies are with my aunt, at work in
- the drawing-room. I have retired to the library, for I am very unhappy,
- and I want to be alone. Books cannot divert me; so having opened my
- desk, I will try what may be done by detailing the cause of my
- uneasiness. This paper will serve instead of a confidential friend into
- whose ear I might pour forth the overflowings of my heart. It will not
- sympathise with my distresses, but then it will not laugh at them, and,
- if I keep it close, it cannot tell again; so it is, perhaps, the best
- friend I could have for the purpose.
- First, let me speak of his arrival—how I sat at my window, and watched
- for nearly two hours, before his carriage entered the park-gates—for they
- all came before him,—and how deeply I was disappointed at every arrival,
- because it was not his. First came Mr. Wilmot and the ladies. When
- Milicent had got into her room, I quitted my post a few minutes to look
- in upon her and have a little private conversation, for she was now my
- intimate friend, several long epistles having passed between us since our
- parting. On returning to my window, I beheld another carriage at the
- door. Was it his? No; it was Mr. Boarham’s plain dark chariot; and
- there stood he upon the steps, carefully superintending the dislodging of
- his various boxes and packages. What a collection! One would have
- thought he projected a visit of six months at least. A considerable time
- after, came Lord Lowborough in his barouche. Is he one of the profligate
- friends, I wonder? I should think not; for no one could call him a jolly
- companion, I’m sure,—and, besides, he appears too sober and gentlemanly
- in his demeanour to merit such suspicions. He is a tall, thin,
- gloomy-looking man, apparently between thirty and forty, and of a
- somewhat sickly, careworn aspect.
- At last, Mr. Huntingdon’s light phaeton came bowling merrily up the lawn.
- I had but a transient glimpse of him: for the moment it stopped, he
- sprang out over the side on to the portico steps, and disappeared into
- the house.
- I now submitted to be dressed for dinner—a duty which Rachel had been
- urging upon me for the last twenty minutes; and when that important
- business was completed, I repaired to the drawing-room, where I found Mr.
- and Miss Wilmot and Milicent Hargrave already assembled. Shortly after,
- Lord Lowborough entered, and then Mr. Boarham, who seemed quite willing
- to forget and forgive my former conduct, and to hope that a little
- conciliation and steady perseverance on his part might yet succeed in
- bringing me to reason. While I stood at the window, conversing with
- Milicent, he came up to me, and was beginning to talk in nearly his usual
- strain, when Mr. Huntingdon entered the room.
- ‘How will he greet me, I wonder?’ said my bounding heart; and, instead of
- advancing to meet him, I turned to the window to hide or subdue my
- emotion. But having saluted his host and hostess, and the rest of the
- company, he came to me, ardently squeezed my hand, and murmured he was
- glad to see me once again. At that moment dinner was announced: my aunt
- desired him to take Miss Hargrave into the dining-room, and odious Mr.
- Wilmot, with unspeakable grimaces, offered his arm to me; and I was
- condemned to sit between himself and Mr. Boarham. But afterwards, when
- we were all again assembled in the drawing-room, I was indemnified for so
- much suffering by a few delightful minutes of conversation with Mr.
- Huntingdon.
- In the course of the evening, Miss Wilmot was called upon to sing and
- play for the amusement of the company, and I to exhibit my drawings, and,
- though he likes music, and she is an accomplished musician, I think I am
- right in affirming, that he paid more attention to my drawings than to
- her music.
- So far so good;—but hearing him pronounce, sotto voce, but with peculiar
- emphasis, concerning one of the pieces, ‘This is better than all!’—I
- looked up, curious to see which it was, and, to my horror, beheld him
- complacently gazing at the back of the picture:—it was his own face that
- I had sketched there and forgotten to rub out! To make matters worse, in
- the agony of the moment, I attempted to snatch it from his hand; but he
- prevented me, and exclaiming, ‘No—by George, I’ll keep it!’ placed it
- against his waistcoat and buttoned his coat upon it with a delighted
- chuckle.
- Then, drawing a candle close to his elbow, he gathered all the drawings
- to himself, as well what he had seen as the others, and muttering, ‘I
- must look at both sides now,’ he eagerly commenced an examination, which
- I watched, at first, with tolerable composure, in the confidence that his
- vanity would not be gratified by any further discoveries; for, though I
- must plead guilty to having disfigured the backs of several with abortive
- attempts to delineate that too fascinating physiognomy, I was sure that,
- with that one unfortunate exception, I had carefully obliterated all such
- witnesses of my infatuation. But the pencil frequently leaves an
- impression upon cardboard that no amount of rubbing can efface. Such, it
- seems, was the case with most of these; and, I confess, I trembled when I
- saw him holding them so close to the candle, and poring so intently over
- the seeming blanks; but still, I trusted, he would not be able to make
- out these dim traces to his own satisfaction. I was mistaken, however.
- Having ended his scrutiny, he quietly remarked,—‘I perceive the backs of
- young ladies’ drawings, like the postscripts of their letters, are the
- most important and interesting part of the concern.’
- Then, leaning back in his chair, he reflected a few minutes in silence,
- complacently smiling to himself, and while I was concocting some cutting
- speech wherewith to check his gratification, he rose, and passing over to
- where Annabella Wilmot sat vehemently coquetting with Lord Lowborough,
- seated himself on the sofa beside her, and attached himself to her for
- the rest of the evening.
- ‘So then,’ thought I, ‘he despises me, because he knows I love him.’
- And the reflection made me so miserable I knew not what to do. Milicent
- came and began to admire my drawings, and make remarks upon them; but I
- could not talk to her—I could talk to no one, and, upon the introduction
- of tea, I took advantage of the open door and the slight diversion caused
- by its entrance to slip out—for I was sure I could not take any—and take
- refuge in the library. My aunt sent Thomas in quest of me, to ask if I
- were not coming to tea; but I bade him say I should not take any
- to-night, and, happily, she was too much occupied with her guests to make
- any further inquiries at the time.
- As most of the company had travelled far that day, they retired early to
- rest; and having heard them all, as I thought, go up-stairs, I ventured
- out, to get my candlestick from the drawing-room sideboard. But Mr.
- Huntingdon had lingered behind the rest. He was just at the foot of the
- stairs when I opened the door, and hearing my step in the hall—though I
- could hardly hear it myself—he instantly turned back.
- ‘Helen, is that you?’ said he. ‘Why did you run away from us?’
- ‘Good-night, Mr. Huntingdon,’ said I, coldly, not choosing to answer the
- question. And I turned away to enter the drawing-room.
- ‘But you’ll shake hands, won’t you?’ said he, placing himself in the
- doorway before me. And he seized my hand and held it, much against my
- will.
- ‘Let me go, Mr. Huntingdon,’ said I. ‘I want to get a candle.’
- ‘The candle will keep,’ returned he.
- I made a desperate effort to free my hand from his grasp.
- ‘Why are you in such a hurry to leave me, Helen?’ he said, with a smile
- of the most provoking self-sufficiency. ‘You don’t hate me, you know.’
- ‘Yes, I do—at this moment.’
- ‘Not you. It is Annabella Wilmot you hate, not me.’
- ‘I have nothing to do with Annabella Wilmot,’ said I, burning with
- indignation.
- ‘But I have, you know,’ returned he, with peculiar emphasis.
- ‘That is nothing to me, sir,’ I retorted.
- ‘Is it nothing to you, Helen? Will you swear it? Will you?’
- ‘No I won’t, Mr. Huntingdon! and I will go,’ cried I, not knowing whether
- to laugh, or to cry, or to break out into a tempest of fury.
- ‘Go, then, you vixen!’ he said; but the instant he released my hand he
- had the audacity to put his arm round my neck, and kiss me.
- Trembling with anger and agitation, and I don’t know what besides, I
- broke away, and got my candle, and rushed up-stairs to my room. He would
- not have done so but for that hateful picture. And there he had it still
- in his possession, an eternal monument to his pride and my humiliation.
- It was but little sleep I got that night, and in the morning I rose
- perplexed and troubled with the thoughts of meeting him at breakfast. I
- knew not how it was to be done. An assumption of dignified, cold
- indifference would hardly do, after what he knew of my devotion—to his
- face, at least. Yet something must be done to check his presumption—I
- would not submit to be tyrannised over by those bright, laughing eyes.
- And, accordingly, I received his cheerful morning salutation as calmly
- and coldly as my aunt could have wished, and defeated with brief answers
- his one or two attempts to draw me into conversation, while I comported
- myself with unusual cheerfulness and complaisance towards every other
- member of the party, especially Annabella Wilmot, and even her uncle and
- Mr. Boarham were treated with an extra amount of civility on the
- occasion, not from any motives of coquetry, but just to show him that my
- particular coolness and reserve arose from no general ill-humour or
- depression of spirits.
- He was not, however, to be repelled by such acting as this. He did not
- talk much to me, but when he did speak it was with a degree of freedom
- and openness, and kindliness too, that plainly seemed to intimate he knew
- his words were music to my ears; and when his looks met mine it was with
- a smile—presumptuous, it might be—but oh! so sweet, so bright, so genial,
- that I could not possibly retain my anger; every vestige of displeasure
- soon melted away beneath it like morning clouds before the summer sun.
- Soon after breakfast all the gentlemen save one, with boyish eagerness,
- set out on their expedition against the hapless partridges; my uncle and
- Mr. Wilmot on their shooting ponies, Mr. Huntingdon and Lord Lowborough
- on their legs: the one exception being Mr. Boarham, who, in consideration
- of the rain that had fallen during the night, thought it prudent to
- remain behind a little and join them in a while when the sun had dried
- the grass. And he favoured us all with a long and minute disquisition
- upon the evils and dangers attendant upon damp feet, delivered with the
- most imperturbable gravity, amid the jeers and laughter of Mr. Huntingdon
- and my uncle, who, leaving the prudent sportsman to entertain the ladies
- with his medical discussions, sallied forth with their guns, bending
- their steps to the stables first, to have a look at the horses and let
- out the dogs.
- Not desirous of sharing Mr. Boarham’s company for the whole of the
- morning, I betook myself to the library, and there brought forth my easel
- and began to paint. The easel and the painting apparatus would serve as
- an excuse for abandoning the drawing-room if my aunt should come to
- complain of the desertion, and besides I wanted to finish the picture.
- It was one I had taken great pains with, and I intended it to be my
- masterpiece, though it was somewhat presumptuous in the design. By the
- bright azure of the sky, and by the warm and brilliant lights and deep
- long shadows, I had endeavoured to convey the idea of a sunny morning. I
- had ventured to give more of the bright verdure of spring or early summer
- to the grass and foliage than is commonly attempted in painting. The
- scene represented was an open glade in a wood. A group of dark Scotch
- firs was introduced in the middle distance to relieve the prevailing
- freshness of the rest; but in the foreground was part of the gnarled
- trunk and of the spreading boughs of a large forest-tree, whose foliage
- was of a brilliant golden green—not golden from autumnal mellowness, but
- from the sunshine and the very immaturity of the scarce expanded leaves.
- Upon this bough, that stood out in bold relief against the sombre firs,
- were seated an amorous pair of turtle doves, whose soft sad-coloured
- plumage afforded a contrast of another nature; and beneath it a young
- girl was kneeling on the daisy-spangled turf, with head thrown back and
- masses of fair hair falling on her shoulders, her hands clasped, lips
- parted, and eyes intently gazing upward in pleased yet earnest
- contemplation of those feathered lovers—too deeply absorbed in each other
- to notice her.
- I had scarcely settled to my work, which, however, wanted but a few
- touches to the finishing, when the sportsmen passed the window on their
- return from the stables. It was partly open, and Mr. Huntingdon must
- have seen me as he went by, for in half a minute he came back, and
- setting his gun against the wall, threw up the sash and sprang in, and
- set himself before my picture.
- ‘Very pretty, i’faith,’ said he, after attentively regarding it for a few
- seconds; ‘and a very fitting study for a young lady. Spring just opening
- into summer—morning just approaching noon—girlhood just ripening into
- womanhood, and hope just verging on fruition. She’s a sweet creature!
- but why didn’t you make her black hair?’
- ‘I thought light hair would suit her better. You see I have made her
- blue-eyed and plump, and fair and rosy.’
- ‘Upon my word—a very Hebe! I should fall in love with her if I hadn’t
- the artist before me. Sweet innocent! she’s thinking there will come a
- time when she will be wooed and won like that pretty hen-dove by as fond
- and fervent a lover; and she’s thinking how pleasant it will be, and how
- tender and faithful he will find her.’
- ‘And perhaps,’ suggested I, ‘how tender and faithful she shall find him.’
- ‘Perhaps, for there is no limit to the wild extravagance of Hope’s
- imaginings at such an age.’
- ‘Do you call that, then, one of her wild, extravagant delusions?’
- ‘No; my heart tells me it is not. I might have thought so once, but now,
- I say, give me the girl I love, and I will swear eternal constancy to her
- and her alone, through summer and winter, through youth and age, and life
- and death! if age and death must come.’
- He spoke this in such serious earnest that my heart bounded with delight;
- but the minute after he changed his tone, and asked, with a significant
- smile, if I had ‘any more portraits.’
- ‘No,’ replied I, reddening with confusion and wrath.
- But my portfolio was on the table: he took it up, and coolly sat down to
- examine its contents.
- ‘Mr. Huntingdon, those are my unfinished sketches,’ cried I, ‘and I never
- let any one see them.’
- And I placed my hand on the portfolio to wrest it from him, but he
- maintained his hold, assuring me that he ‘liked unfinished sketches of
- all things.’
- ‘But I hate them to be seen,’ returned I. ‘I can’t let you have it,
- indeed!’
- ‘Let me have its bowels then,’ said he; and just as I wrenched the
- portfolio from his hand, he deftly abstracted the greater part of its
- contents, and after turning them over a moment he cried out,—‘Bless my
- stars, here’s another;’ and slipped a small oval of ivory paper into his
- waistcoat pocket—a complete miniature portrait that I had sketched with
- such tolerable success as to be induced to colour it with great pains and
- care. But I was determined he should not keep it.
- ‘Mr. Huntingdon,’ cried I, ‘I insist upon having that back! It is mine,
- and you have no right to take it. Give it me directly—I’ll never forgive
- you if you don’t!’
- But the more vehemently I insisted, the more he aggravated my distress by
- his insulting, gleeful laugh. At length, however, he restored it to me,
- saying,—‘Well, well, since you value it so much, I’ll not deprive you of
- it.’
- To show him how I valued it, I tore it in two and threw it into the fire.
- He was not prepared for this. His merriment suddenly ceasing, he stared
- in mute amazement at the consuming treasure; and then, with a careless
- ‘Humph! I’ll go and shoot now,’ he turned on his heel and vacated the
- apartment by the window as he came, and setting on his hat with an air,
- took up his gun and walked away, whistling as he went—and leaving me not
- too much agitated to finish my picture, for I was glad, at the moment,
- that I had vexed him.
- When I returned to the drawing-room, I found Mr. Boarham had ventured to
- follow his comrades to the field; and shortly after lunch, to which they
- did not think of returning, I volunteered to accompany the ladies in a
- walk, and show Annabella and Milicent the beauties of the country. We
- took a long ramble, and re-entered the park just as the sportsmen were
- returning from their expedition. Toil-spent and travel-stained, the main
- body of them crossed over the grass to avoid us, but Mr. Huntingdon, all
- spattered and splashed as he was, and stained with the blood of his
- prey—to the no small offence of my aunt’s strict sense of propriety—came
- out of his way to meet us, with cheerful smiles and words for all but me,
- and placing himself between Annabella Wilmot and myself, walked up the
- road and began to relate the various exploits and disasters of the day,
- in a manner that would have convulsed me with laughter if I had been on
- good terms with him; but he addressed himself entirely to Annabella, and
- I, of course, left all the laughter and all the badinage to her, and
- affecting the utmost indifference to whatever passed between them, walked
- along a few paces apart, and looking every way but theirs, while my aunt
- and Milicent went before, linked arm in arm and gravely discoursing
- together. At length Mr. Huntingdon turned to me, and addressing me in a
- confidential whisper, said,—‘Helen, why did you burn my picture?’
- ‘Because I wished to destroy it,’ I answered, with an asperity it is
- useless now to lament.
- ‘Oh, very good!’ was the reply; ‘if you don’t value me, I must turn to
- somebody that will.’
- I thought it was partly in jest—a half-playful mixture of mock
- resignation and pretended indifference: but immediately he resumed his
- place beside Miss Wilmot, and from that hour to this—during all that
- evening, and all the next day, and the next, and the next, and all this
- morning (the 22nd), he has never given me one kind word or one pleasant
- look—never spoken to me, but from pure necessity—never glanced towards me
- but with a cold, unfriendly look I thought him quite incapable of
- assuming.
- My aunt observes the change, and though she has not inquired the cause or
- made any remark to me on the subject, I see it gives her pleasure. Miss
- Wilmot observes it, too, and triumphantly ascribes it to her own superior
- charms and blandishments; but I am truly miserable—more so than I like to
- acknowledge to myself. Pride refuses to aid me. It has brought me into
- the scrape, and will not help me out of it.
- He meant no harm—it was only his joyous, playful spirit; and I, by my
- acrimonious resentment—so serious, so disproportioned to the offence—have
- so wounded his feelings, so deeply offended him, that I fear he will
- never forgive me—and all for a mere jest! He thinks I dislike him, and
- he must continue to think so. I must lose him for ever, and Annabella
- may win him, and triumph as she will.
- But it is not my loss nor her triumph that I deplore so greatly as the
- wreck of my fond hopes for his advantage, and her unworthiness of his
- affection, and the injury he will do himself by trusting his happiness to
- her. She does not love him: she thinks only of herself. She cannot
- appreciate the good that is in him: she will neither see it, nor value
- it, nor cherish it. She will neither deplore his faults nor attempt
- their amendment, but rather aggravate them by her own. And I doubt
- whether she will not deceive him after all. I see she is playing double
- between him and Lord Lowborough, and while she amuses herself with the
- lively Huntingdon, she tries her utmost to enslave his moody friend; and
- should she succeed in bringing both to her feet, the fascinating commoner
- will have but little chance against the lordly peer. If he observes her
- artful by-play, it gives him no uneasiness, but rather adds new zest to
- his diversion by opposing a stimulating check to his otherwise too easy
- conquest.
- Messrs. Wilmot and Boarham have severally taken occasion by his neglect
- of me to renew their advances; and if I were like Annabella and some
- others I should take advantage of their perseverance to endeavour to
- pique him into a revival of affection; but, justice and honesty apart, I
- could not bear to do it. I am annoyed enough by their present
- persecutions without encouraging them further; and even if I did it would
- have precious little effect upon him. He sees me suffering under the
- condescending attentions and prosaic discourses of the one, and the
- repulsive obtrusions of the other, without so much as a shadow of
- commiseration for me, or resentment against my tormentors. He never
- could have loved me, or he would not have resigned me so willingly, and
- he would not go on talking to everybody else so cheerfully as he
- does—laughing and jesting with Lord Lowborough and my uncle, teasing
- Milicent Hargrave, and flirting with Annabella Wilmot—as if nothing were
- on his mind. Oh! why can’t I hate him? I must be infatuated, or I
- should scorn to regret him as I do. But I must rally all the powers I
- have remaining, and try to tear him from my heart. There goes the
- dinner-bell, and here comes my aunt to scold me for sitting here at my
- desk all day, instead of staying with the company: wish the company
- were—gone.
- CHAPTER XIX
- Twenty Second: Night.—What have I done? and what will be the end of it?
- I cannot calmly reflect upon it; I cannot sleep. I must have recourse to
- my diary again; I will commit it to paper to-night, and see what I shall
- think of it to-morrow.
- I went down to dinner resolving to be cheerful and well-conducted, and
- kept my resolution very creditably, considering how my head ached and how
- internally wretched I felt. I don’t know what is come over me of late;
- my very energies, both mental and physical, must be strangely impaired,
- or I should not have acted so weakly in many respects as I have done; but
- I have not been well this last day or two. I suppose it is with sleeping
- and eating so little, and thinking so much, and being so continually out
- of humour. But to return. I was exerting myself to sing and play for
- the amusement, and at the request, of my aunt and Milicent, before the
- gentlemen came into the drawing-room (Miss Wilmot never likes to waste
- her musical efforts on ladies’ ears alone). Milicent had asked for a
- little Scotch song, and I was just in the middle of it when they entered.
- The first thing Mr. Huntingdon did was to walk up to Annabella.
- ‘Now, Miss Wilmot, won’t you give us some music to-night?’ said he. ‘Do
- now! I know you will, when I tell you that I have been hungering and
- thirsting all day for the sound of your voice. Come! the piano’s
- vacant.’
- It was, for I had quitted it immediately upon hearing his petition. Had
- I been endowed with a proper degree of self-possession, I should have
- turned to the lady myself, and cheerfully joined my entreaties to his,
- whereby I should have disappointed his expectations, if the affront had
- been purposely given, or made him sensible of the wrong, if it had only
- arisen from thoughtlessness; but I felt it too deeply to do anything but
- rise from the music-stool, and throw myself back on the sofa, suppressing
- with difficulty the audible expression of the bitterness I felt within.
- I knew Annabella’s musical talents were superior to mine, but that was no
- reason why I should be treated as a perfect nonentity. The time and the
- manner of his asking her appeared like a gratuitous insult to me; and I
- could have wept with pure vexation.
- Meantime, she exultingly seated herself at the piano, and favoured him
- with two of his favourite songs, in such superior style that even I soon
- lost my anger in admiration, and listened with a sort of gloomy pleasure
- to the skilful modulations of her full-toned and powerful voice, so
- judiciously aided by her rounded and spirited touch; and while my ears
- drank in the sound, my eyes rested on the face of her principal auditor,
- and derived an equal or superior delight from the contemplation of his
- speaking countenance, as he stood beside her—that eye and brow lighted up
- with keen enthusiasm, and that sweet smile passing and appearing like
- gleams of sunshine on an April day. No wonder he should hunger and
- thirst to hear her sing. I now forgave him from my heart his reckless
- slight of me, and I felt ashamed at my pettish resentment of such a
- trifle—ashamed too of those bitter envious pangs that gnawed my inmost
- heart, in spite of all this admiration and delight.
- ‘There now,’ said she, playfully running her fingers over the keys when
- she had concluded the second song. ‘What shall I give you next?’
- But in saying this she looked back at Lord Lowborough, who was standing a
- little behind, leaning against the back of a chair, an attentive
- listener, too, experiencing, to judge by his countenance, much the same
- feelings of mingled pleasure and sadness as I did. But the look she gave
- him plainly said, ‘Do you choose for me now: I have done enough for him,
- and will gladly exert myself to gratify you;’ and thus encouraged, his
- lordship came forward, and turning over the music, presently set before
- her a little song that I had noticed before, and read more than once,
- with an interest arising from the circumstance of my connecting it in my
- mind with the reigning tyrant of my thoughts. And now, with my nerves
- already excited and half unstrung, I could not hear those words so
- sweetly warbled forth without some symptoms of emotion I was not able to
- suppress. Tears rose unbidden to my eyes, and I buried my face in the
- sofa-pillow that they might flow unseen while I listened. The air was
- simple, sweet, and sad. It is still running in my head, and so are the
- words:—
- Farewell to thee! but not farewell
- To all my fondest thoughts of thee:
- Within my heart they still shall dwell;
- And they shall cheer and comfort me.
- O beautiful, and full of grace!
- If thou hadst never met mine eye,
- I had not dreamed a living face
- Could fancied charms so far outvie.
- If I may ne’er behold again
- That form and face so dear to me,
- Nor hear thy voice, still would I fain
- Preserve, for aye, their memory.
- That voice, the magic of whose tone
- Can wake an echo in my breast,
- Creating feelings that, alone,
- Can make my tranced spirit blest.
- That laughing eye, whose sunny beam
- My memory would not cherish less;—
- And oh, that smile! I whose joyous gleam
- No mortal languish can express.
- Adieu! but let me cherish, still,
- The hope with which I cannot part.
- Contempt may wound, and coldness chill,
- But still it lingers in my heart.
- And who can tell but Heaven, at last,
- May answer all my thousand prayers,
- And bid the future pay the past
- With joy for anguish, smiles for tears.
- When it ceased, I longed for nothing so much as to be out of the room.
- The sofa was not far from the door, but I did not dare to raise my head,
- for I knew Mr. Huntingdon was standing near me, and I knew by the sound
- of his voice, as he spoke in answer to some remark of Lord Lowborough’s,
- that his face was turned towards me. Perhaps a half-suppressed sob had
- caught his ear, and caused him to look round—heaven forbid! But with a
- violent effort, I checked all further signs of weakness, dried my tears,
- and, when I thought he had turned away again, rose, and instantly left
- the apartment, taking refuge in my favourite resort, the library.
- There was no light there but the faint red glow of the neglected
- fire;—but I did not want a light; I only wanted to indulge my thoughts,
- unnoticed and undisturbed; and sitting down on a low stool before the
- easy-chair, I sunk my head upon its cushioned seat, and thought, and
- thought, until the tears gushed out again, and I wept like any child.
- Presently, however, the door was gently opened and someone entered the
- room. I trusted it was only a servant, and did not stir. The door was
- closed again—but I was not alone; a hand gently touched my shoulder, and
- a voice said, softly,—‘Helen, what is the matter?’
- I could not answer at the moment.
- ‘You must, and shall tell me,’ was added, more vehemently, and the
- speaker threw himself on his knees beside me on the rug, and forcibly
- possessed himself of my hand; but I hastily caught it away, and
- replied,—‘It is nothing to you, Mr. Huntingdon.’
- ‘Are you sure it is nothing to me?’ he returned; ‘can you swear that you
- were not thinking of me while you wept?’ This was unendurable. I made
- an effort to rise, but he was kneeling on my dress.
- ‘Tell me,’ continued he—‘I want to know,—because if you were, I have
- something to say to you,—and if not, I’ll go.’
- ‘Go then!’ I cried; but, fearing he would obey too well, and never come
- again, I hastily added—‘Or say what you have to say, and have done with
- it!’
- ‘But which?’ said he—‘for I shall only say it if you really were thinking
- of me. So tell me, Helen.’
- ‘You’re excessively impertinent, Mr. Huntingdon!’
- ‘Not at all—too pertinent, you mean. So you won’t tell me?—Well, I’ll
- spare your woman’s pride, and, construing your silence into “Yes,” I’ll
- take it for granted that I was the subject of your thoughts, and the
- cause of your affliction—’
- ‘Indeed, sir—’
- ‘If you deny it, I won’t tell you my secret,’ threatened he; and I did
- not interrupt him again, or even attempt to repulse him: though he had
- taken my hand once more, and half embraced me with his other arm, I was
- scarcely conscious of it at the time.
- ‘It is this,’ resumed he: ‘that Annabella Wilmot, in comparison with you,
- is like a flaunting peony compared with a sweet, wild rosebud gemmed with
- dew—and I love you to distraction!—Now, tell me if that intelligence
- gives you any pleasure. Silence again? That means yes. Then let me
- add, that I cannot live without you, and if you answer No to this last
- question, you will drive me mad.—Will you bestow yourself upon me?—you
- will!’ he cried, nearly squeezing me to death in his arms.
- ‘No, no!’ I exclaimed, struggling to free myself from him—‘you must ask
- my uncle and aunt.’
- ‘They won’t refuse me, if you don’t.’
- ‘I’m not so sure of that—my aunt dislikes you.’
- ‘But you don’t, Helen—say you love me, and I’ll go.’
- ‘I wish you would go!’ I replied.
- ‘I will, this instant,—if you’ll only say you love me.’
- ‘You know I do,’ I answered. And again he caught me in his arms, and
- smothered me with kisses.
- At that moment my aunt opened wide the door, and stood before us, candle
- in hand, in shocked and horrified amazement, gazing alternately at Mr.
- Huntingdon and me—for we had both started up, and now stood wide enough
- asunder. But his confusion was only for a moment. Rallying in an
- instant, with the most enviable assurance, he began,—‘I beg ten thousand
- pardons, Mrs. Maxwell! Don’t be too severe upon me. I’ve been asking
- your sweet niece to take me for better, for worse; and she, like a good
- girl, informs me she cannot think of it without her uncle’s and aunt’s
- consent. So let me implore you not to condemn me to eternal
- wretchedness: if you favour my cause, I am safe; for Mr. Maxwell, I am
- certain, can refuse you nothing.’
- ‘We will talk of this to-morrow, sir,’ said my aunt, coldly. ‘It is a
- subject that demands mature and serious deliberation. At present, you
- had better return to the drawing-room.’
- ‘But meantime,’ pleaded he, ‘let me commend my cause to your most
- indulgent—’
- ‘No indulgence for you, Mr. Huntingdon, must come between me and the
- consideration of my niece’s happiness.’
- ‘Ah, true! I know she is an angel, and I am a presumptuous dog to dream
- of possessing such a treasure; but, nevertheless, I would sooner die than
- relinquish her in favour of the best man that ever went to heaven—and as
- for her happiness, I would sacrifice my body and soul—’
- ‘Body and soul, Mr. Huntingdon—sacrifice your soul?’
- ‘Well, I would lay down life—’
- ‘You would not be required to lay it down.’
- ‘I would spend it, then—devote my life—and all its powers to the
- promotion and preservation—’
- ‘Another time, sir, we will talk of this—and I should have felt disposed
- to judge more favourably of your pretensions, if you too had chosen
- another time and place, and let me add—another manner for your
- declaration.’
- ‘Why, you see, Mrs. Maxwell,’ he began—
- ‘Pardon me, sir,’ said she, with dignity—‘The company are inquiring for
- you in the other room.’ And she turned to me.
- ‘Then you must plead for me, Helen,’ said he, and at length withdrew.
- ‘You had better retire to your room, Helen,’ said my aunt, gravely. ‘I
- will discuss this matter with you, too, to-morrow.’
- ‘Don’t be angry, aunt,’ said I.
- ‘My dear, I am not angry,’ she replied: ‘I am surprised. If it is true
- that you told him you could not accept his offer without our consent—’
- ‘It is true,’ interrupted I.
- ‘Then how could you permit—?’
- ‘I couldn’t help it, aunt,’ I cried, bursting into tears. They were not
- altogether the tears of sorrow, or of fear for her displeasure, but
- rather the outbreak of the general tumultuous excitement of my feelings.
- But my good aunt was touched at my agitation. In a softer tone, she
- repeated her recommendation to retire, and, gently kissing my forehead,
- bade me good-night, and put her candle in my hand; and I went; but my
- brain worked so, I could not think of sleeping. I feel calmer now that I
- have written all this; and I will go to bed, and try to win tired
- nature’s sweet restorer.
- CHAPTER XX
- September 24th.—In the morning I rose, light and cheerful—nay, intensely
- happy. The hovering cloud cast over me by my aunt’s views, and by the
- fear of not obtaining her consent, was lost in the bright effulgence of
- my own hopes, and the too delightful consciousness of requited love. It
- was a splendid morning; and I went out to enjoy it, in a quiet ramble, in
- company with my own blissful thoughts. The dew was on the grass, and ten
- thousand gossamers were waving in the breeze; the happy red-breast was
- pouring out its little soul in song, and my heart overflowed with silent
- hymns of gratitude and praise to heaven.
- But I had not wandered far before my solitude was interrupted by the only
- person that could have disturbed my musings, at that moment, without
- being looked upon as an unwelcome intruder: Mr. Huntingdon came suddenly
- upon me. So unexpected was the apparition, that I might have thought it
- the creation of an over-excited imagination, had the sense of sight alone
- borne witness to his presence; but immediately I felt his strong arm
- round my waist and his warm kiss on my cheek, while his keen and gleeful
- salutation, ‘My own Helen!’ was ringing in my ear.
- ‘Not yours yet!’ said I, hastily swerving aside from this too
- presumptuous greeting. ‘Remember my guardians. You will not easily
- obtain my aunt’s consent. Don’t you see she is prejudiced against you?’
- ‘I do, dearest; and you must tell me why, that I may best know how to
- combat her objections. I suppose she thinks I am a prodigal,’ pursued
- he, observing that I was unwilling to reply, ‘and concludes that I shall
- have but little worldly goods wherewith to endow my better half? If so,
- you must tell her that my property is mostly entailed, and I cannot get
- rid of it. There may be a few mortgages on the rest—a few trifling debts
- and incumbrances here and there, but nothing to speak of; and though I
- acknowledge I am not so rich as I might be—or have been—still, I think,
- we could manage pretty comfortably on what’s left. My father, you know,
- was something of a miser, and in his latter days especially saw no
- pleasure in life but to amass riches; and so it is no wonder that his son
- should make it his chief delight to spend them, which was accordingly the
- case, until my acquaintance with you, dear Helen, taught me other views
- and nobler aims. And the very idea of having you to care for under my
- roof would force me to moderate my expenses and live like a Christian—not
- to speak of all the prudence and virtue you would instil into my mind by
- your wise counsels and sweet, attractive goodness.’
- ‘But it is not that,’ said I; ‘it is not money my aunt thinks about. She
- knows better than to value worldly wealth above its price.’
- ‘What is it, then?’
- ‘She wishes me to—to marry none but a really good man.’
- ‘What, a man of “decided piety”?—ahem!—Well, come, I’ll manage that too!
- It’s Sunday to-day, isn’t it? I’ll go to church morning, afternoon, and
- evening, and comport myself in such a godly sort that she shall regard me
- with admiration and sisterly love, as a brand plucked from the burning.
- I’ll come home sighing like a furnace, and full of the savour and unction
- of dear Mr. Blatant’s discourse—’
- ‘Mr. Leighton,’ said I, dryly.
- ‘Is Mr. Leighton a “sweet preacher,” Helen—a “dear, delightful,
- heavenly-minded man”?’
- ‘He is a good man, Mr. Huntingdon. I wish I could say half as much for
- you.’
- ‘Oh, I forgot, you are a saint, too. I crave your pardon, dearest—but
- don’t call me Mr. Huntingdon; my name is Arthur.’
- ‘I’ll call you nothing—for I’ll have nothing at all to do with you if you
- talk in that way any more. If you really mean to deceive my aunt as you
- say, you are very wicked; and if not, you are very wrong to jest on such
- a subject.’
- ‘I stand corrected,’ said he, concluding his laugh with a sorrowful sigh.
- ‘Now,’ resumed he, after a momentary pause, ‘let us talk about something
- else. And come nearer to me, Helen, and take my arm; and then I’ll let
- you alone. I can’t be quiet while I see you walking there.’
- I complied; but said we must soon return to the house.
- ‘No one will be down to breakfast yet, for long enough,’ he answered.
- ‘You spoke of your guardians just now, Helen, but is not your father
- still living?’
- ‘Yes, but I always look upon my uncle and aunt as my guardians, for they
- are so in deed, though not in name. My father has entirely given me up
- to their care. I have never seen him since dear mamma died, when I was a
- very little girl, and my aunt, at her request, offered to take charge of
- me, and took me away to Staningley, where I have remained ever since; and
- I don’t think he would object to anything for me that she thought proper
- to sanction.’
- ‘But would he sanction anything to which she thought proper to object?’
- ‘No, I don’t think he cares enough about me.’
- ‘He is very much to blame—but he doesn’t know what an angel he has for
- his daughter—which is all the better for me, as, if he did, he would not
- be willing to part with such a treasure.’
- ‘And Mr. Huntingdon,’ said I, ‘I suppose you know I am not an heiress?’
- He protested he had never given it a thought, and begged I would not
- disturb his present enjoyment by the mention of such uninteresting
- subjects. I was glad of this proof of disinterested affection; for
- Annabella Wilmot is the probable heiress to all her uncle’s wealth, in
- addition to her late father’s property, which she has already in
- possession.
- I now insisted upon retracing our steps to the house; but we walked
- slowly, and went on talking as we proceeded. I need not repeat all we
- said: let me rather refer to what passed between my aunt and me, after
- breakfast, when Mr. Huntingdon called my uncle aside, no doubt to make
- his proposals, and she beckoned me into another room, where she once more
- commenced a solemn remonstrance, which, however, entirely failed to
- convince me that her view of the case was preferable to my own.
- ‘You judge him uncharitably, aunt, I know,’ said I. ‘His very friends
- are not half so bad as you represent them. There is Walter Hargrave,
- Milicent’s brother, for one: he is but a little lower than the angels, if
- half she says of him is true. She is continually talking to me about
- him, and lauding his many virtues to the skies.’
- ‘You will form a very inadequate estimate of a man’s character,’ replied
- she, ‘if you judge by what a fond sister says of him. The worst of them
- generally know how to hide their misdeeds from their sisters’ eyes, and
- their mother’s, too.’
- ‘And there is Lord Lowborough,’ continued I, ‘quite a decent man.’
- ‘Who told you so? Lord Lowborough is a desperate man. He has dissipated
- his fortune in gambling and other things, and is now seeking an heiress
- to retrieve it. I told Miss Wilmot so; but you’re all alike: she
- haughtily answered she was very much obliged to me, but she believed she
- knew when a man was seeking her for her fortune, and when for herself;
- she flattered herself she had had experience enough in those matters to
- be justified in trusting to her own judgment—and as for his lordship’s
- lack of fortune, she cared nothing about that, as she hoped her own would
- suffice for both; and as for his wildness, she supposed he was no worse
- than others—besides, he was reformed now. Yes, they can all play the
- hypocrite when they want to take in a fond, misguided woman!’
- ‘Well, I think he’s about as good as she is,’ said I. ‘But when Mr.
- Huntingdon is married, he won’t have many opportunities of consorting
- with his bachelor friends;—and the worse they are, the more I long to
- deliver him from them.’
- ‘To be sure, my dear; and the worse he is, I suppose, the more you long
- to deliver him from himself.’
- ‘Yes, provided he is not incorrigible—that is, the more I long to deliver
- him from his faults—to give him an opportunity of shaking off the
- adventitious evil got from contact with others worse than himself, and
- shining out in the unclouded light of his own genuine goodness—to do my
- utmost to help his better self against his worse, and make him what he
- would have been if he had not, from the beginning, had a bad, selfish,
- miserly father, who, to gratify his own sordid passions, restricted him
- in the most innocent enjoyments of childhood and youth, and so disgusted
- him with every kind of restraint;—and a foolish mother who indulged him
- to the top of his bent, deceiving her husband for him, and doing her
- utmost to encourage those germs of folly and vice it was her duty to
- suppress,—and then, such a set of companions as you represent his friends
- to be—’
- ‘Poor man!’ said she, sarcastically, ‘his kind have greatly wronged him!’
- ‘They have!’ cried I—‘and they shall wrong him no more—his wife shall
- undo what his mother did!’
- ‘Well,’ said she, after a short pause, ‘I must say, Helen, I thought
- better of your judgment than this—and your taste too. How you can love
- such a man I cannot tell, or what pleasure you can find in his company;
- for “what fellowship hath light with darkness; or he that believeth with
- an infidel?”’
- ‘He is not an infidel;—and I am not light, and he is not darkness; his
- worst and only vice is thoughtlessness.’
- ‘And thoughtlessness,’ pursued my aunt, ‘may lead to every crime, and
- will but poorly excuse our errors in the sight of God. Mr. Huntingdon, I
- suppose, is not without the common faculties of men: he is not so
- light-headed as to be irresponsible: his Maker has endowed him with
- reason and conscience as well as the rest of us; the Scriptures are open
- to him as well as to others;—and “if he hear not them, neither will he
- hear though one rose from the dead.” And remember, Helen,’ continued she,
- solemnly, ‘“the wicked shall be turned into hell, and they that forget
- God!”’ And suppose, even, that he should continue to love you, and you
- him, and that you should pass through life together with tolerable
- comfort—how will it be in the end, when you see yourselves parted for
- ever; you, perhaps, taken into eternal bliss, and he cast into the lake
- that burneth with unquenchable fire—there for ever to—’
- ‘Not for ever,’ I exclaimed, ‘“only till he has paid the uttermost
- farthing;” for “if any man’s work abide not the fire, he shall suffer
- loss, yet himself shall be saved, but so as by fire;” and He that “is
- able to subdue all things to Himself will have all men to be saved,” and
- “will, in the fulness of time, gather together in one all things in
- Christ Jesus, who tasted death for every man, and in whom God will
- reconcile all things to Himself, whether they be things in earth or
- things in heaven.”’
- ‘Oh, Helen! where did you learn all this?’
- ‘In the Bible, aunt. I have searched it through, and found nearly thirty
- passages, all tending to support the same theory.’
- ‘And is that the use you make of your Bible? And did you find no
- passages tending to prove the danger and the falsity of such a belief?’
- ‘No: I found, indeed, some passages that, taken by themselves, might seem
- to contradict that opinion; but they will all bear a different
- construction to that which is commonly given, and in most the only
- difficulty is in the word which we translate “everlasting” or “eternal.”
- I don’t know the Greek, but I believe it strictly means for ages, and
- might signify either endless or long-enduring. And as for the danger of
- the belief, I would not publish it abroad if I thought any poor wretch
- would be likely to presume upon it to his own destruction, but it is a
- glorious thought to cherish in one’s own heart, and I would not part with
- it for all the world can give!’
- Here our conference ended, for it was now high time to prepare for
- church. Every one attended the morning service, except my uncle, who
- hardly ever goes, and Mr. Wilmot, who stayed at home with him to enjoy a
- quiet game of cribbage. In the afternoon Miss Wilmot and Lord Lowborough
- likewise excused themselves from attending; but Mr. Huntingdon vouchsafed
- to accompany us again. Whether it was to ingratiate himself with my aunt
- I cannot tell, but, if so, he certainly should have behaved better. I
- must confess, I did not like his conduct during service at all. Holding
- his prayer-book upside down, or open at any place but the right, he did
- nothing but stare about him, unless he happened to catch my aunt’s eye or
- mine, and then he would drop his own on his book, with a puritanical air
- of mock solemnity that would have been ludicrous, if it had not been too
- provoking. Once, during the sermon, after attentively regarding Mr.
- Leighton for a few minutes, he suddenly produced his gold pencil-case and
- snatched up a Bible. Perceiving that I observed the movement, he
- whispered that he was going to make a note of the sermon; but instead of
- that, as I sat next him, I could not help seeing that he was making a
- caricature of the preacher, giving to the respectable, pious, elderly
- gentleman, the air and aspect of a most absurd old hypocrite. And yet,
- upon his return, he talked to my aunt about the sermon with a degree of
- modest, serious discrimination that tempted me to believe he had really
- attended to and profited by the discourse.
- Just before dinner my uncle called me into the library for the discussion
- of a very important matter, which was dismissed in few words.
- ‘Now, Nell,’ said he, ‘this young Huntingdon has been asking for you:
- what must I say about it? Your aunt would answer “no”—but what say you?’
- ‘I say yes, uncle,’ replied I, without a moment’s hesitation; for I had
- thoroughly made up my mind on the subject.
- ‘Very good!’ cried he. ‘Now that’s a good honest answer—wonderful for a
- girl!—Well, I’ll write to your father to-morrow. He’s sure to give his
- consent; so you may look on the matter as settled. You’d have done a
- deal better if you’d taken Wilmot, I can tell you; but that you won’t
- believe. At your time of life, it’s love that rules the roast: at mine,
- it’s solid, serviceable gold. I suppose now, you’d never dream of
- looking into the state of your husband’s finances, or troubling your head
- about settlements, or anything of that sort?’
- ‘I don’t think I should.’
- ‘Well, be thankful, then, that you’ve wiser heads to think for you. I
- haven’t had time, yet, to examine thoroughly into this young rascal’s
- affairs, but I see that a great part of his father’s fine property has
- been squandered away;—but still, I think, there’s a pretty fair share of
- it left, and a little careful nursing may make a handsome thing of it
- yet; and then we must persuade your father to give you a decent fortune,
- as he has only one besides yourself to care for;—and, if you behave well,
- who knows but what I may be induced to remember you in my will!’
- continued he, putting his fingers to his nose, with a knowing wink.
- ‘Thanks, uncle, for that and all your kindness,’ replied I.
- ‘Well, and I questioned this young spark on the matter of settlements,’
- continued he; ‘and he seemed disposed to be generous enough on that
- point—’
- ‘I knew he would!’ said I. ‘But pray don’t trouble your head—or his, or
- mine about that; for all I have will be his, and all he has will be mine;
- and what more could either of us require?’ And I was about to make my
- exit, but he called me back.
- ‘Stop, stop!’ cried he; ‘we haven’t mentioned the time yet. When must it
- be? Your aunt would put it off till the Lord knows when, but he is
- anxious to be bound as soon as may be: he won’t hear of waiting beyond
- next month; and you, I guess, will be of the same mind, so—’
- ‘Not at all, uncle; on the contrary, I should like to wait till after
- Christmas, at least.’
- ‘Oh! pooh, pooh! never tell me that tale—I know better,’ cried he; and he
- persisted in his incredulity. Nevertheless, it is quite true. I am in
- no hurry at all. How can I be, when I think of the momentous change that
- awaits me, and of all I have to leave? It is happiness enough to know
- that we are to be united; and that he really loves me, and I may love him
- as devotedly, and think of him as often as I please. However, I insisted
- upon consulting my aunt about the time of the wedding, for I determined
- her counsels should not be utterly disregarded; and no conclusions on
- that particular are come to yet.
- CHAPTER XXI
- October 1st.—All is settled now. My father has given his consent, and
- the time is fixed for Christmas, by a sort of compromise between the
- respective advocates for hurry and delay. Milicent Hargrave is to be one
- bridesmaid and Annabella Wilmot the other—not that I am particularly fond
- of the latter, but she is an intimate of the family, and I have not
- another friend.
- When I told Milicent of my engagement, she rather provoked me by her
- manner of taking it. After staring a moment in mute surprise, she
- said,—‘Well, Helen, I suppose I ought to congratulate you—and I am glad
- to see you so happy; but I did not think you would take him; and I can’t
- help feeling surprised that you should like him so much.’
- ‘Why so?’
- ‘Because you are so superior to him in every way, and there’s something
- so bold and reckless about him—so, I don’t know how—but I always feel a
- wish to get out of his way when I see him approach.’
- ‘You are timid, Milicent; but that’s no fault of his.’
- ‘And then his look,’ continued she. ‘People say he’s handsome, and of
- course he is; but I don’t like that kind of beauty, and I wonder that you
- should.’
- ‘Why so, pray?’
- ‘Well, you know, I think there’s nothing noble or lofty in his
- appearance.’
- ‘In fact, you wonder that I can like any one so unlike the stilted heroes
- of romance. Well, give me my flesh and blood lover, and I’ll leave all
- the Sir Herberts and Valentines to you—if you can find them.’
- ‘I don’t want them,’ said she. ‘I’ll be satisfied with flesh and blood
- too—only the spirit must shine through and predominate. But don’t you
- think Mr. Huntingdon’s face is too red?’
- ‘No!’ cried I, indignantly. ‘It is not red at all. There is just a
- pleasant glow, a healthy freshness in his complexion—the warm, pinky tint
- of the whole harmonising with the deeper colour of the cheeks, exactly as
- it ought to do. I hate a man to be red and white, like a painted doll,
- or all sickly white, or smoky black, or cadaverous yellow.’
- ‘Well, tastes differ—but I like pale or dark,’ replied she. ‘But, to
- tell you the truth, Helen, I had been deluding myself with the hope that
- you would one day be my sister. I expected Walter would be introduced to
- you next season; and I thought you would like him, and was certain he
- would like you; and I flattered myself I should thus have the felicity of
- seeing the two persons I like best in the world—except mamma—united in
- one. He mayn’t be exactly what you would call handsome, but he’s far
- more distinguished-looking, and nicer and better than Mr. Huntingdon;—and
- I’m sure you would say so, if you knew him.’
- ‘Impossible, Milicent! You think so, because you’re his sister; and, on
- that account, I’ll forgive you; but nobody else should so disparage
- Arthur Huntingdon to me with impunity.’
- Miss Wilmot expressed her feelings on the subject almost as openly.
- ‘And so, Helen,’ said she, coming up to me with a smile of no amiable
- import, ‘you are to be Mrs. Huntingdon, I suppose?’
- ‘Yes,’ replied I. ‘Don’t you envy me?’
- ‘Oh, dear, no!’ she exclaimed. ‘I shall probably be Lady Lowborough some
- day, and then you know, dear, I shall be in a capacity to inquire, “Don’t
- you envy me?”’
- ‘Henceforth I shall envy no one,’ returned I.
- ‘Indeed! Are you so happy then?’ said she, thoughtfully; and something
- very like a cloud of disappointment shadowed her face. ‘And does he love
- you—I mean, does he idolise you as much as you do him?’ she added, fixing
- her eyes upon me with ill-disguised anxiety for the reply.
- ‘I don’t want to be idolised,’ I answered; ‘but I am well assured that he
- loves me more than anybody else in the world—as I do him.’
- ‘Exactly,’ said she, with a nod. ‘I wish—‘ she paused.
- ‘What do you wish?’ asked I, annoyed at the vindictive expression of her
- countenance.
- ‘I wish,’ returned, she, with a short laugh, ‘that all the attractive
- points and desirable qualifications of the two gentlemen were united in
- one—that Lord Lowborough had Huntingdon’s handsome face and good temper,
- and all his wit, and mirth and charm, or else that Huntingdon had
- Lowborough’s pedigree, and title, and delightful old family seat, and I
- had him; and you might have the other and welcome.’
- ‘Thank you, dear Annabella: I am better satisfied with things as they
- are, for my own part; and for you, I wish you were as well content with
- your intended as I am with mine,’ said I; and it was true enough; for,
- though vexed at first at her unamiable spirit, her frankness touched me,
- and the contrast between our situations was such, that I could well
- afford to pity her and wish her well.
- Mr. Huntingdon’s acquaintances appear to be no better pleased with our
- approaching union than mine. This morning’s post brought him letters
- from several of his friends, during the perusal of which, at the
- breakfast-table, he excited the attention of the company by the singular
- variety of his grimaces. But he crushed them all into his pocket, with a
- private laugh, and said nothing till the meal was concluded. Then, while
- the company were hanging over the fire or loitering through the room,
- previous to settling to their various morning avocations, he came and
- leant over the back of my chair, with his face in contact with my curls,
- and commencing with a quiet little kiss, poured forth the following
- complaints into my ear:—
- ‘Helen, you witch, do you know that you’ve entailed upon me the curses of
- all my friends? I wrote to them the other day, to tell them of my happy
- prospects, and now, instead of a bundle of congratulations, I’ve got a
- pocketful of bitter execrations and reproaches. There’s not one kind
- wish for me, or one good word for you, among them all. They say there’ll
- be no more fun now, no more merry days and glorious nights—and all my
- fault—I am the first to break up the jovial band, and others, in pure
- despair, will follow my example. I was the very life and prop of the
- community, they do me the honour to say, and I have shamefully betrayed
- my trust—’
- ‘You may join them again, if you like,’ said I, somewhat piqued at the
- sorrowful tone of his discourse. ‘I should be sorry to stand between any
- man—or body of men, and so much happiness; and perhaps I can manage to do
- without you, as well as your poor deserted friends.’
- ‘Bless you, no,’ murmured he. ‘It’s “all for love or the world well
- lost,” with me. Let them go to—where they belong, to speak politely.
- But if you saw how they abuse me, Helen, you would love me all the more
- for having ventured so much for your sake.’
- He pulled out his crumpled letters. I thought he was going to show them
- to me, and told him I did not wish to see them.
- ‘I’m not going to show them to you, love,’ said he. ‘They’re hardly fit
- for a lady’s eyes—the most part of them. But look here. This is
- Grimsby’s scrawl—only three lines, the sulky dog! He doesn’t say much,
- to be sure, but his very silence implies more than all the others’ words,
- and the less he says, the more he thinks—and this is Hargrave’s missive.
- He is particularly grieved at me, because, forsooth he had fallen in love
- with you from his sister’s reports, and meant to have married you
- himself, as soon as he had sown his wild oats.’
- ‘I’m vastly obliged to him,’ observed I.
- ‘And so am I,’ said he. ‘And look at this. This is Hattersley’s—every
- page stuffed full of railing accusations, bitter curses, and lamentable
- complaints, ending up with swearing that he’ll get married himself in
- revenge: he’ll throw himself away on the first old maid that chooses to
- set her cap at him,—as if I cared what he did with himself.’
- ‘Well,’ said I, ‘if you do give up your intimacy with these men, I don’t
- think you will have much cause to regret the loss of their society; for
- it’s my belief they never did you much good.’
- ‘Maybe not; but we’d a merry time of it, too, though mingled with sorrow
- and pain, as Lowborough knows to his cost—Ha, ha!’ and while he was
- laughing at the recollection of Lowborough’s troubles, my uncle came and
- slapped him on the shoulder.
- ‘Come, my lad!’ said he. ‘Are you too busy making love to my niece to
- make war with the pheasants?—First of October, remember! Sun shines
- out—rain ceased—even Boarham’s not afraid to venture in his waterproof
- boots; and Wilmot and I are going to beat you all. I declare, we old
- ’uns are the keenest sportsmen of the lot!’
- ‘I’ll show you what I can do to-day, however,’ said my companion. ‘I’ll
- murder your birds by wholesale, just for keeping me away from better
- company than either you or them.’
- And so saying he departed; and I saw no more of him till dinner. It
- seemed a weary time; I wonder what I shall do without him.
- It is very true that the three elder gentlemen have proved themselves
- much keener sportsmen than the two younger ones; for both Lord Lowborough
- and Arthur Huntingdon have of late almost daily neglected the shooting
- excursions to accompany us in our various rides and rambles. But these
- merry times are fast drawing to a close. In less than a fortnight the
- party break up, much to my sorrow, for every day I enjoy it more and
- more—now that Messrs. Boarham and Wilmot have ceased to tease me, and my
- aunt has ceased to lecture me, and I have ceased to be jealous of
- Annabella—and even to dislike her—and now that Mr. Huntingdon is become
- my Arthur, and I may enjoy his society without restraint. What shall I
- do without him, I repeat?
- CHAPTER XXII
- October 5th.—My cup of sweets is not unmingled: it is dashed with a
- bitterness that I cannot hide from myself, disguise it as I will. I may
- try to persuade myself that the sweetness overpowers it; I may call it a
- pleasant aromatic flavour; but say what I will, it is still there, and I
- cannot but taste it. I cannot shut my eyes to Arthur’s faults; and the
- more I love him the more they trouble me. His very heart, that I trusted
- so, is, I fear, less warm and generous than I thought it. At least, he
- gave me a specimen of his character to-day that seemed to merit a harder
- name than thoughtlessness. He and Lord Lowborough were accompanying
- Annabella and me in a long, delightful ride; he was riding by my side, as
- usual, and Annabella and Lord Lowborough were a little before us, the
- latter bending towards his companion as if in tender and confidential
- discourse.
- ‘Those two will get the start of us, Helen, if we don’t look sharp,’
- observed Huntingdon. ‘They’ll make a match of it, as sure as can be.
- That Lowborough’s fairly besotted. But he’ll find himself in a fix when
- he’s got her, I doubt.’
- ‘And she’ll find herself in a fix when she’s got him,’ said I, ‘if what
- I’ve heard of him is true.’
- ‘Not a bit of it. She knows what she’s about; but he, poor fool, deludes
- himself with the notion that she’ll make him a good wife, and because she
- has amused him with some rodomontade about despising rank and wealth in
- matters of love and marriage, he flatters himself that she’s devotedly
- attached to him; that she will not refuse him for his poverty, and does
- not court him for his rank, but loves him for himself alone.’
- ‘But is not he courting her for her fortune?’
- ‘No, not he. That was the first attraction, certainly; but now he has
- quite lost sight of it: it never enters his calculations, except merely
- as an essential without which, for the lady’s own sake, he could not
- think of marrying her. No; he’s fairly in love. He thought he never
- could be again, but he’s in for it once more. He was to have been
- married before, some two or three years ago; but he lost his bride by
- losing his fortune. He got into a bad way among us in London: he had an
- unfortunate taste for gambling; and surely the fellow was born under an
- unlucky star, for he always lost thrice where he gained once. That’s a
- mode of self-torment I never was much addicted to. When I spend my money
- I like to enjoy the full value of it: I see no fun in wasting it on
- thieves and blacklegs; and as for gaining money, hitherto I have always
- had sufficient; it’s time enough to be clutching for more, I think, when
- you begin to see the end of what you have. But I have sometimes
- frequented the gaming-houses just to watch the on-goings of those mad
- votaries of chance—a very interesting study, I assure you, Helen, and
- sometimes very diverting: I’ve had many a laugh at the boobies and
- bedlamites. Lowborough was quite infatuated—not willingly, but of
- necessity,—he was always resolving to give it up, and always breaking his
- resolutions. Every venture was the ‘just once more:’ if he gained a
- little, he hoped to gain a little more next time, and if he lost, it
- would not do to leave off at that juncture; he must go on till he had
- retrieved that last misfortune, at least: bad luck could not last for
- ever; and every lucky hit was looked upon as the dawn of better times,
- till experience proved the contrary. At length he grew desperate, and we
- were daily on the look-out for a case of _felo-de-se_—no great matter,
- some of us whispered, as his existence had ceased to be an acquisition to
- our club. At last, however, he came to a check. He made a large stake,
- which he determined should be the last, whether he lost or won. He had
- often so determined before, to be sure, and as often broken his
- determination; and so it was this time. He lost; and while his
- antagonist smilingly swept away the stakes, he turned chalky white, drew
- back in silence, and wiped his forehead. I was present at the time; and
- while he stood with folded arms and eyes fixed on the ground, I knew well
- enough what was passing in his mind.
- ‘“Is it to be the last, Lowborough?” said I, stepping up to him.
- ‘“The last but one,” he answered, with a grim smile; and then, rushing
- back to the table, he struck his hand upon it, and, raising his voice
- high above all the confusion of jingling coins and muttered oaths and
- curses in the room, he swore a deep and solemn oath that, come what
- would, this trial should be the last, and imprecated unspeakable curses
- on his head if ever he should shuffle a card or rattle a dice-box again.
- He then doubled his former stake, and challenged any one present to play
- against him. Grimsby instantly presented himself. Lowborough glared
- fiercely at him, for Grimsby was almost as celebrated for his luck as he
- was for his ill-fortune. However, they fell to work. But Grimsby had
- much skill and little scruple, and whether he took advantage of the
- other’s trembling, blinded eagerness to deal unfairly by him, I cannot
- undertake to say; but Lowborough lost again, and fell dead sick.
- ‘“You’d better try once more,” said Grimsby, leaning across the table.
- And then he winked at me.
- ‘“I’ve nothing to try with,” said the poor devil, with a ghastly smile.
- ‘“Oh, Huntingdon will lend you what you want,” said the other.
- ‘“No; you heard my oath,” answered Lowborough, turning away in quiet
- despair. And I took him by the arm and led him out.
- ‘“Is it to be the last, Lowborough?” I asked, when I got him into the
- street.
- ‘“The last,” he answered, somewhat against my expectation. And I took
- him home—that is, to our club—for he was as submissive as a child—and
- plied him with brandy-and-water till he began to look rather
- brighter—rather more alive, at least.
- ‘“Huntingdon, I’m ruined!” said he, taking the third glass from my
- hand—he had drunk the others in dead silence.
- ‘“Not you,” said I. “You’ll find a man can live without his money as
- merrily as a tortoise without its head, or a wasp without its body.”
- ‘“But I’m in debt,” said he—“deep in debt. And I can never, never get
- out of it.”
- ‘“Well, what of that? Many a better man than you has lived and died in
- debt; and they can’t put you in prison, you know, because you’re a peer.”
- And I handed him his fourth tumbler.
- ‘“But I hate to be in debt!” he shouted. “I wasn’t born for it, and I
- cannot bear it.”
- ‘“What can’t be cured must be endured,” said I, beginning to mix the
- fifth.
- ‘“And then, I’ve lost my Caroline.” And he began to snivel then, for the
- brandy had softened his heart.
- ‘“No matter,” I answered, “there are more Carolines in the world than
- one.”
- ‘“There’s only one for me,” he replied, with a dolorous sigh. “And if
- there were fifty more, who’s to get them, I wonder, without money?”
- ‘“Oh, somebody will take you for your title; and then you’ve your family
- estate yet; that’s entailed, you know.”
- ‘“I wish to God I could sell it to pay my debts,” he muttered.
- ‘“And then,” said Grimsby, who had just come in, “you can try again, you
- know. I would have more than one chance, if I were you. I’d never stop
- here.”
- ‘“I won’t, I tell you!” shouted he. And he started up, and left the
- room—walking rather unsteadily, for the liquor had got into his head. He
- was not so much used to it then, but after that he took to it kindly to
- solace his cares.
- ‘He kept his oath about gambling (not a little to the surprise of us
- all), though Grimsby did his utmost to tempt him to break it, but now he
- had got hold of another habit that bothered him nearly as much, for he
- soon discovered that the demon of drink was as black as the demon of
- play, and nearly as hard to get rid of—especially as his kind friends did
- all they could to second the promptings of his own insatiable cravings.’
- ‘Then, they were demons themselves,’ cried I, unable to contain my
- indignation. ‘And you, Mr. Huntingdon, it seems, were the first to tempt
- him.’
- ‘Well, what could we do?’ replied he, deprecatingly.—‘We meant it in
- kindness—we couldn’t bear to see the poor fellow so miserable:—and
- besides, he was such a damper upon us, sitting there silent and glum,
- when he was under the threefold influence—of the loss of his sweetheart,
- the loss of his fortune, and the reaction of the lost night’s debauch;
- whereas, when he had something in him, if he was not merry himself, he
- was an unfailing source of merriment to us. Even Grimsby could chuckle
- over his odd sayings: they delighted him far more than my merry jests, or
- Hattersley’s riotous mirth. But one evening, when we were sitting over
- our wine, after one of our club dinners, and all had been hearty
- together,—Lowborough giving us mad toasts, and hearing our wild songs,
- and bearing a hand in the applause, if he did not help us to sing them
- himself,—he suddenly relapsed into silence, sinking his head on his hand,
- and never lifting his glass to his lips;—but this was nothing new; so we
- let him alone, and went on with our jollification, till, suddenly raising
- his head, he interrupted us in the middle of a roar of laughter by
- exclaiming,—‘Gentlemen, where is all this to end?—Will you just tell me
- that now?—Where is it all to end?’ He rose.
- ‘“A speech, a speech!” shouted we. “Hear, hear! Lowborough’s going to
- give us a speech!”
- ‘He waited calmly till the thunders of applause and jingling of glasses
- had ceased, and then proceeded,—“It’s only this, gentlemen,—that I think
- we’d better go no further. We’d better stop while we can.”
- ‘“Just so!” cried Hattersley—
- “Stop, poor sinner, stop and think
- Before you further go,
- No longer sport upon the brink
- Of everlasting woe.”
- ‘“Exactly!” replied his lordship, with the utmost gravity. “And if you
- choose to visit the bottomless pit, I won’t go with you—we must part
- company, for I swear I’ll not move another step towards it!—What’s this?”
- he said, taking up his glass of wine.
- ‘“Taste it,” suggested I.
- ‘“This is hell broth!” he exclaimed. “I renounce it for ever!” And he
- threw it out into the middle of the table.
- ‘“Fill again!” said I, handing him the bottle—“and let us drink to your
- renunciation.”
- ‘“It’s rank poison,” said he, grasping the bottle by the neck, “and I
- forswear it! I’ve given up gambling, and I’ll give up this too.” He was
- on the point of deliberately pouring the whole contents of the bottle on
- to the table, but Hargrave wrested it from him. “On you be the curse,
- then!” said he. And, backing from the room, he shouted, “Farewell, ye
- tempters!” and vanished amid shouts of laughter and applause.
- ‘We expected him back among us the next day; but, to our surprise, the
- place remained vacant: we saw nothing of him for a whole week; and we
- really began to think he was going to keep his word. At last, one
- evening, when we were most of us assembled together again, he entered,
- silent and grim as a ghost, and would have quietly slipped into his usual
- seat at my elbow, but we all rose to welcome him, and several voices were
- raised to ask what he would have, and several hands were busy with bottle
- and glass to serve him; but I knew a smoking tumbler of brandy-and-water
- would comfort him best, and had nearly prepared it, when he peevishly
- pushed it away, saying,—
- ‘“Do let me alone, Huntingdon! Do be quiet, all of you! I’m not come to
- join you: I’m only come to be with you awhile, because I can’t bear my
- own thoughts.” And he folded his arms, and leant back in his chair; so
- we let him be. But I left the glass by him; and, after awhile, Grimsby
- directed my attention towards it, by a significant wink; and, on turning
- my head, I saw it was drained to the bottom. He made me a sign to
- replenish, and quietly pushed up the bottle. I willingly complied; but
- Lowborough detected the pantomime, and, nettled at the intelligent grins
- that were passing between us, snatched the glass from my hand, dashed the
- contents of it in Grimsby’s face, threw the empty tumbler at me, and then
- bolted from the room.’
- ‘I hope he broke your head,’ said I.
- ‘No, love,’ replied he, laughing immoderately at the recollection of the
- whole affair; ‘he would have done so,—and perhaps, spoilt my face, too,
- but, providentially, this forest of curls’ (taking off his hat, and
- showing his luxuriant chestnut locks) ‘saved my skull, and prevented the
- glass from breaking, till it reached the table.’
- ‘After that,’ he continued, ‘Lowborough kept aloof from us a week or two
- longer. I used to meet him occasionally in the town; and then, as I was
- too good-natured to resent his unmannerly conduct, and he bore no malice
- against me,—he was never unwilling to talk to me; on the contrary, he
- would cling to me, and follow me anywhere but to the club, and the
- gaming-houses, and such-like dangerous places of resort—he was so weary
- of his own moping, melancholy mind. At last, I got him to come in with
- me to the club, on condition that I would not tempt him to drink; and,
- for some time, he continued to look in upon us pretty regularly of an
- evening,—still abstaining, with wonderful perseverance, from the “rank
- poison” he had so bravely forsworn. But some of our members protested
- against this conduct. They did not like to have him sitting there like a
- skeleton at a feast, instead of contributing his quota to the general
- amusement, casting a cloud over all, and watching, with greedy eyes,
- every drop they carried to their lips—they vowed it was not fair; and
- some of them maintained that he should either be compelled to do as
- others did, or expelled from the society; and swore that, next time he
- showed himself, they would tell him as much, and, if he did not take the
- warning, proceed to active measures. However, I befriended him on this
- occasion, and recommended them to let him be for a while, intimating
- that, with a little patience on our parts, he would soon come round
- again. But, to be sure, it was rather provoking; for, though he refused
- to drink like an honest Christian, it was well known to me that he kept a
- private bottle of laudanum about him, which he was continually soaking
- at—or rather, holding off and on with, abstaining one day and exceeding
- the next—just like the spirits.
- ‘One night, however, during one of our orgies—one of our high festivals,
- I mean—he glided in, like the ghost in “Macbeth,” and seated himself, as
- usual, a little back from the table, in the chair we always placed for
- “the spectre,” whether it chose to fill it or not. I saw by his face
- that he was suffering from the effects of an overdose of his insidious
- comforter; but nobody spoke to him, and he spoke to nobody. A few
- sidelong glances, and a whispered observation, that “the ghost was come,”
- was all the notice he drew by his appearance, and we went on with our
- merry carousals as before, till he startled us all by suddenly drawing in
- his chair, and leaning forward with his elbows on the table, and
- exclaiming with portentous solemnity,—“Well! it puzzles me what you can
- find to be so merry about. What you see in life I don’t know—I see only
- the blackness of darkness, and a fearful looking for of judgment and
- fiery indignation!”
- ‘All the company simultaneously pushed up their glasses to him, and I set
- them before him in a semicircle, and, tenderly patting him on the back,
- bid him drink, and he would soon see as bright a prospect as any of us;
- but he pushed them back, muttering,—
- ‘“Take them away! I won’t taste it, I tell you. I won’t—I won’t!” So I
- handed them down again to the owners; but I saw that he followed them
- with a glare of hungry regret as they departed. Then he clasped his
- hands before his eyes to shut out the sight, and two minutes after lifted
- his head again, and said, in a hoarse but vehement whisper,—
- ‘“And yet I must! Huntingdon, get me a glass!”
- ‘“Take the bottle, man!” said I, thrusting the brandy-bottle into his
- hand—but stop, I’m telling too much,’ muttered the narrator, startled at
- the look I turned upon him. ‘But no matter,’ he recklessly added, and
- thus continued his relation: ‘In his desperate eagerness, he seized the
- bottle and sucked away, till he suddenly dropped from his chair,
- disappearing under the table amid a tempest of applause. The consequence
- of this imprudence was something like an apoplectic fit, followed by a
- rather severe brain fever—’
- ‘And what did you think of yourself, sir?’ said I, quickly.
- ‘Of course, I was very penitent,’ he replied. ‘I went to see him once or
- twice—nay, twice or thrice—or by’r lady, some four times—and when he got
- better, I tenderly brought him back to the fold.’
- ‘What do you mean?’
- ‘I mean, I restored him to the bosom of the club, and compassionating the
- feebleness of his health and extreme lowness of his spirits, I
- recommended him to “take a little wine for his stomach’s sake,” and, when
- he was sufficiently re-established, to embrace the media-via,
- ni-jamais-ni-toujours plan—not to kill himself like a fool, and not to
- abstain like a ninny—in a word, to enjoy himself like a rational
- creature, and do as I did; for, don’t think, Helen, that I’m a tippler;
- I’m nothing at all of the kind, and never was, and never shall be. I
- value my comfort far too much. I see that a man cannot give himself up
- to drinking without being miserable one-half his days and mad the other;
- besides, I like to enjoy my life at all sides and ends, which cannot be
- done by one that suffers himself to be the slave of a single
- propensity—and, moreover, drinking spoils one’s good looks,’ he
- concluded, with a most conceited smile that ought to have provoked me
- more than it did.
- ‘And did Lord Lowborough profit by your advice?’ I asked.
- ‘Why, yes, in a manner. For a while he managed very well; indeed, he was
- a model of moderation and prudence—something too much so for the tastes
- of our wild community; but, somehow, Lowborough had not the gift of
- moderation: if he stumbled a little to one side, he must go down before
- he could right himself: if he overshot the mark one night, the effects of
- it rendered him so miserable the next day that he must repeat the offence
- to mend it; and so on from day to day, till his clamorous conscience
- brought him to a stand. And then, in his sober moments, he so bothered
- his friends with his remorse, and his terrors and woes, that they were
- obliged, in self-defence, to get him to drown his sorrows in wine, or any
- more potent beverage that came to hand; and when his first scruples of
- conscience were overcome, he would need no more persuading, he would
- often grow desperate, and be as great a blackguard as any of them could
- desire—but only to lament his own unutterable wickedness and degradation
- the more when the fit was over.
- ‘At last, one day when he and I were alone together, after pondering
- awhile in one of his gloomy, abstracted moods, with his arms folded and
- his head sunk on his breast, he suddenly woke up, and vehemently grasping
- my arm, said,—
- ‘“Huntingdon, this won’t do! I’m resolved to have done with it.”
- ‘“What, are you going to shoot yourself?” said I.
- ‘“No; I’m going to reform.”
- ‘“Oh, that’s nothing new! You’ve been going to reform these twelve
- months and more.”
- ‘“Yes, but you wouldn’t let me; and I was such a fool I couldn’t live
- without you. But now I see what it is that keeps me back, and what’s
- wanted to save me; and I’d compass sea and land to get it—only I’m afraid
- there’s no chance.” And he sighed as if his heart would break.
- ‘“What is it, Lowborough?” said I, thinking he was fairly cracked at
- last.
- ‘“A wife,” he answered; “for I can’t live alone, because my own mind
- distracts me, and I can’t live with you, because you take the devil’s
- part against me.”
- ‘“Who—I?”
- ‘“Yes—all of you do—and you more than any of them, you know. But if I
- could get a wife, with fortune enough to pay off my debts and set me
- straight in the world—”
- ‘“To be sure,” said I.
- ‘“And sweetness and goodness enough,” he continued, “to make home
- tolerable, and to reconcile me to myself, I think I should do yet. I
- shall never be in love again, that’s certain; but perhaps that would be
- no great matter, it would enable me to choose with my eyes open—and I
- should make a good husband in spite of it; but could any one be in love
- with me?—that’s the question. With your good looks and powers of
- fascination” (he was pleased to say), “I might hope; but as it is,
- Huntingdon, do you think anybody would take me—ruined and wretched as I
- am?”
- ‘“Yes, certainly.”
- ‘“Who?”
- ‘“Why, any neglected old maid, fast sinking in despair, would be
- delighted to—”
- ‘“No, no,” said he—“it must be somebody that I can love.”
- ‘“Why, you just said you never could be in love again!”
- ‘“Well, love is not the word—but somebody that I can like. I’ll search
- all England through, at all events!” he cried, with a sudden burst of
- hope, or desperation. “Succeed or fail, it will be better than rushing
- headlong to destruction at that d-d club: so farewell to it and you.
- Whenever I meet you on honest ground or under a Christian roof, I shall
- be glad to see you; but never more shall you entice me to that devil’s
- den!”
- ‘This was shameful language, but I shook hands with him, and we parted.
- He kept his word; and from that time forward he has been a pattern of
- propriety, as far as I can tell; but till lately I have not had very much
- to do with him. He occasionally sought my company, but as frequently
- shrunk from it, fearing lest I should wile him back to destruction, and I
- found his not very entertaining, especially as he sometimes attempted to
- awaken my conscience and draw me from the perdition he considered himself
- to have escaped; but when I did happen to meet him, I seldom failed to
- ask after the progress of his matrimonial efforts and researches, and, in
- general, he could give me but a poor account. The mothers were repelled
- by his empty coffers and his reputation for gambling, and the daughters
- by his cloudy brow and melancholy temper—besides, he didn’t understand
- them; he wanted the spirit and assurance to carry his point.
- ‘I left him at it when I went to the continent; and on my return, at the
- year’s end, I found him still a disconsolate bachelor—though, certainly,
- looking somewhat less like an unblest exile from the tomb than before.
- The young ladies had ceased to be afraid of him, and were beginning to
- think him quite interesting; but the mammas were still unrelenting. It
- was about this time, Helen, that my good angel brought me into
- conjunction with you; and then I had eyes and ears for nobody else. But,
- meantime, Lowborough became acquainted with our charming friend, Miss
- Wilmot—through the intervention of his good angel, no doubt he would tell
- you, though he did not dare to fix his hopes on one so courted and
- admired, till after they were brought into closer contact here at
- Staningley, and she, in the absence of her other admirers, indubitably
- courted his notice and held out every encouragement to his timid
- advances. Then, indeed, he began to hope for a dawn of brighter days;
- and if, for a while, I darkened his prospects by standing between him and
- his sun—and so nearly plunged him again into the abyss of despair—it only
- intensified his ardour and strengthened his hopes when I chose to abandon
- the field in the pursuit of a brighter treasure. In a word, as I told
- you, he is fairly besotted. At first, he could dimly perceive her
- faults, and they gave him considerable uneasiness; but now his passion
- and her art together have blinded him to everything but her perfections
- and his amazing good fortune. Last night he came to me brimful of his
- new-found felicity:
- ‘“Huntingdon, I am not a castaway!” said he, seizing my hand and
- squeezing it like a vice. “There is happiness in store for me yet—even
- in this life—she loves me!”
- ‘“Indeed!” said I. “Has she told you so?”
- ‘“No, but I can no longer doubt it. Do you not see how pointedly kind
- and affectionate she is? And she knows the utmost extent of my poverty,
- and cares nothing about it! She knows all the folly and all the
- wickedness of my former life, and is not afraid to trust me—and my rank
- and title are no allurements to her; for them she utterly disregards.
- She is the most generous, high-minded being that can be conceived of.
- She will save me, body and soul, from destruction. Already, she has
- ennobled me in my own estimation, and made me three times better, wiser,
- greater than I was. Oh! if I had but known her before, how much
- degradation and misery I should have been spared! But what have I done
- to deserve so magnificent a creature?”
- ‘And the cream of the jest,’ continued Mr. Huntingdon, laughing, ‘is,
- that the artful minx loves nothing about him but his title and pedigree,
- and “that delightful old family seat.”’
- ‘How do you know?’ said I.
- ‘She told me so herself; she said, “As for the man himself, I thoroughly
- despise him; but then, I suppose, it is time to be making my choice, and
- if I waited for some one capable of eliciting my esteem and affection, I
- should have to pass my life in single blessedness, for I detest you all!”
- Ha, ha! I suspect she was wrong there; but, however, it is evident she
- has no love for him, poor fellow.’
- ‘Then you ought to tell him so.’
- ‘What! and spoil all her plans and prospects, poor girl? No, no: that
- would be a breach of confidence, wouldn’t it, Helen? Ha, ha! Besides,
- it would break his heart.’ And he laughed again.
- ‘Well, Mr. Huntingdon, I don’t know what you see so amazingly diverting
- in the matter; I see nothing to laugh at.’
- ‘I’m laughing at you, just now, love,’ said he, redoubling his
- machinations.
- And leaving him to enjoy his merriment alone, I touched Ruby with the
- whip, and cantered on to rejoin our companions; for we had been walking
- our horses all this time, and were consequently a long way behind.
- Arthur was soon at my side again; but not disposed to talk to him, I
- broke into a gallop. He did the same; and we did not slacken our pace
- till we came up with Miss Wilmot and Lord Lowborough, which was within
- half a mile of the park-gates. I avoided all further conversation with
- him till we came to the end of our ride, when I meant to jump off my
- horse and vanish into the house, before he could offer his assistance;
- but while I was disengaging my habit from the crutch, he lifted me off,
- and held me by both hands, asserting that he would not let me go till I
- had forgiven him.
- ‘I have nothing to forgive,’ said I. ‘You have not injured me.’
- ‘No, darling—God forbid that I should! but you are angry because it was
- to me that Annabella confessed her lack of esteem for her lover.’
- ‘No, Arthur, it is not that that displeases me: it is the whole system of
- your conduct towards your friend, and if you wish me to forget it, go
- now, and tell him what sort of a woman it is that he adores so madly, and
- on whom he has hung his hopes of future happiness.’
- ‘I tell you, Helen, it would break his heart—it would be the death of
- him—besides being a scandalous trick to poor Annabella. There is no help
- for him now; he is past praying for. Besides, she may keep up the
- deception to the end of the chapter; and then he will be just as happy in
- the illusion as if it were reality; or perhaps he will only discover his
- mistake when he has ceased to love her; and if not, it is much better
- that the truth should dawn gradually upon him. So now, my angel, I hope
- I have made out a clear case, and fully convinced you that I cannot make
- the atonement you require. What other requisition have you to make?
- Speak, and I will gladly obey.’
- ‘I have none but this,’ said I, as gravely as before: ‘that, in future,
- you will never make a jest of the sufferings of others, and always use
- your influence with your friends for their own advantage against their
- evil propensities, instead of seconding their evil propensities against
- themselves.’
- ‘I will do my utmost,’ said he, ‘to remember and perform the injunctions
- of my angel monitress;’ and after kissing both my gloved hands, he let me
- go.
- When I entered my room, I was surprised to see Annabella Wilmot standing
- before my toilet-table, composedly surveying her features in the glass,
- with one hand flirting her gold-mounted whip, and the other holding up
- her long habit.
- ‘She certainly is a magnificent creature!’ thought I, as I beheld that
- tall, finely developed figure, and the reflection of the handsome face in
- the mirror before me, with the glossy dark hair, slightly and not
- ungracefully disordered by the breezy ride, the rich brown complexion
- glowing with exercise, and the black eyes sparkling with unwonted
- brilliance. On perceiving me, she turned round, exclaiming, with a laugh
- that savoured more of malice than of mirth,—‘Why, Helen! what have you
- been doing so long? I came to tell you my good fortune,’ she continued,
- regardless of Rachel’s presence. ‘Lord Lowborough has proposed, and I
- have been graciously pleased to accept him. Don’t you envy me, dear?’
- ‘No, love,’ said I—‘or him either,’ I mentally added. ‘And do you like
- him, Annabella?’
- ‘Like him! yes, to be sure—over head and ears in love!’
- ‘Well, I hope you’ll make him a good wife.’
- ‘Thank you, my dear! And what besides do you hope?’
- ‘I hope you will both love each other, and both be happy.’
- ‘Thanks; and I hope you will make a very good wife to Mr. Huntingdon!’
- said she, with a queenly bow, and retired.
- ‘Oh, Miss! how could you say so to her!’ cried Rachel.
- ‘Say what?’ replied I.
- ‘Why, that you hoped she would make him a good wife. I never heard such
- a thing!’
- ‘Because I do hope it, or rather, I wish it; she’s almost past hope.’
- ‘Well,’ said she, ‘I’m sure I hope he’ll make her a good husband. They
- tell queer things about him downstairs. They were saying—’
- ‘I know, Rachel. I’ve heard all about him; but he’s reformed now. And
- they have no business to tell tales about their masters.’
- ‘No, mum—or else, they have said some things about Mr. Huntingdon too.’
- ‘I won’t hear them, Rachel; they tell lies.’
- ‘Yes, mum,’ said she, quietly, as she went on arranging my hair.
- ‘Do you believe them, Rachel?’ I asked, after a short pause.
- ‘No, Miss, not all. You know when a lot of servants gets together they
- like to talk about their betters; and some, for a bit of swagger, likes
- to make it appear as though they knew more than they do, and to throw out
- hints and things just to astonish the others. But I think, if I was you,
- Miss Helen, I’d look very well before I leaped. I do believe a young
- lady can’t be too careful who she marries.’
- ‘Of course not,’ said I; ‘but be quick, will you, Rachel? I want to be
- dressed.’
- And, indeed, I was anxious to be rid of the good woman, for I was in such
- a melancholy frame I could hardly keep the tears out of my eyes while she
- dressed me. It was not for Lord Lowborough—it was not for Annabella—it
- was not for myself—it was for Arthur Huntingdon that they rose.
- * * * * *
- 13th.—They are gone, and he is gone. We are to be parted for more than
- two months, above ten weeks! a long, long time to live and not to see
- him. But he has promised to write often, and made me promise to write
- still oftener, because he will be busy settling his affairs, and I shall
- have nothing better to do. Well, I think I shall always have plenty to
- say. But oh! for the time when we shall be always together, and can
- exchange our thoughts without the intervention of these cold go-betweens,
- pen, ink, and paper!
- * * * * *
- 22nd.—I have had several letters from Arthur already. They are not long,
- but passing sweet, and just like himself, full of ardent affection, and
- playful lively humour; but there is always a ‘but’ in this imperfect
- world, and I do wish he would sometimes be serious. I cannot get him to
- write or speak in real, solid earnest. I don’t much mind it now, but if
- it be always so, what shall I do with the serious part of myself?
- CHAPTER XXIII
- Feb. 18, 1822.—Early this morning Arthur mounted his hunter and set off
- in high glee to meet the — hounds. He will be away all day, and so I
- will amuse myself with my neglected diary, if I can give that name to
- such an irregular composition. It is exactly four months since I opened
- it last.
- I am married now, and settled down as Mrs. Huntingdon of Grassdale Manor.
- I have had eight weeks’ experience of matrimony. And do I regret the
- step I have taken? No, though I must confess, in my secret heart, that
- Arthur is not what I thought him at first, and if I had known him in the
- beginning as thoroughly as I do now, I probably never should have loved
- him, and if I loved him first, and then made the discovery, I fear I
- should have thought it my duty not to have married him. To be sure I
- might have known him, for every one was willing enough to tell me about
- him, and he himself was no accomplished hypocrite, but I was wilfully
- blind; and now, instead of regretting that I did not discern his full
- character before I was indissolubly bound to him, I am glad, for it has
- saved me a great deal of battling with my conscience, and a great deal of
- consequent trouble and pain; and, whatever I ought to have done, my duty
- now is plainly to love him and to cleave to him, and this just tallies
- with my inclination.
- He is very fond of me, almost too fond. I could do with less caressing
- and more rationality. I should like to be less of a pet and more of a
- friend, if I might choose; but I won’t complain of that: I am only afraid
- his affection loses in depth where it gains in ardour. I sometimes liken
- it to a fire of dry twigs and branches compared with one of solid coal,
- very bright and hot; but if it should burn itself out and leave nothing
- but ashes behind, what shall I do? But it won’t, it sha’n’t, I am
- determined; and surely I have power to keep it alive. So let me dismiss
- that thought at once. But Arthur is selfish; I am constrained to
- acknowledge that; and, indeed, the admission gives me less pain than
- might be expected, for, since I love him so much, I can easily forgive
- him for loving himself: he likes to be pleased, and it is my delight to
- please him; and when I regret this tendency of his, it is for his own
- sake, not for mine.
- The first instance he gave was on the occasion of our bridal tour. He
- wanted to hurry it over, for all the continental scenes were already
- familiar to him: many had lost their interest in his eyes, and others had
- never had anything to lose. The consequence was, that after a flying
- transit through part of France and part of Italy, I came back nearly as
- ignorant as I went, having made no acquaintance with persons and manners,
- and very little with things, my head swarming with a motley confusion of
- objects and scenes; some, it is true, leaving a deeper and more pleasing
- impression than others, but these embittered by the recollection that my
- emotions had not been shared by my companion, but that, on the contrary,
- when I had expressed a particular interest in anything that I saw or
- desired to see, it had been displeasing to him, inasmuch as it proved
- that I could take delight in anything disconnected with himself.
- [Picture: Blake Hall—The Approach (Grassdale Manor)]
- As for Paris, we only just touched at that, and he would not give me time
- to see one-tenth of the beauties and interesting objects of Rome. He
- wanted to get me home, he said, to have me all to himself, and to see me
- safely installed as the mistress of Grassdale Manor, just as
- single-minded, as naïve, and piquante as I was; and as if I had been some
- frail butterfly, he expressed himself fearful of rubbing the silver off
- my wings by bringing me into contact with society, especially that of
- Paris and Rome; and, more-over, he did not scruple to tell me that there
- were ladies in both places that would tear his eyes out if they happened
- to meet him with me.
- Of course I was vexed at all this; but still it was less the
- disappointment to myself that annoyed me, than the disappointment in him,
- and the trouble I was at to frame excuses to my friends for having seen
- and observed so little, without imputing one particle of blame to my
- companion. But when we got home—to my new, delightful home—I was so
- happy and he was so kind that I freely forgave him all; and I was
- beginning to think my lot too happy, and my husband actually too good for
- me, if not too good for this world, when, on the second Sunday after our
- arrival, he shocked and horrified me by another instance of his
- unreasonable exaction. We were walking home from the morning service,
- for it was a fine frosty day, and as we are so near the church, I had
- requested the carriage should not be used.
- ‘Helen,’ said he, with unusual gravity, ‘I am not quite satisfied with
- you.’
- I desired to know what was wrong.
- ‘But will you promise to reform if I tell you?’
- ‘Yes, if I can, and without offending a higher authority.’
- ‘Ah! there it is, you see: you don’t love me with all your heart.’
- ‘I don’t understand you, Arthur (at least I hope I don’t): pray tell me
- what I have done or said amiss.’
- ‘It is nothing you have done or said; it is something that you are—you
- are too religious. Now I like a woman to be religious, and I think your
- piety one of your greatest charms; but then, like all other good things,
- it may be carried too far. To my thinking, a woman’s religion ought not
- to lessen her devotion to her earthly lord. She should have enough to
- purify and etherealise her soul, but not enough to refine away her heart,
- and raise her above all human sympathies.’
- ‘And am I above all human sympathies?’ said I.
- ‘No, darling; but you are making more progress towards that saintly
- condition than I like; for all these two hours I have been thinking of
- you and wanting to catch your eye, and you were so absorbed in your
- devotions that you had not even a glance to spare for me—I declare it is
- enough to make one jealous of one’s Maker—which is very wrong, you know;
- so don’t excite such wicked passions again, for my soul’s sake.’
- ‘I will give my whole heart and soul to my Maker if I can,’ I answered,
- ‘and not one atom more of it to you than He allows. What are you, sir,
- that you should set yourself up as a god, and presume to dispute
- possession of my heart with Him to whom I owe all I have and all I am,
- every blessing I ever did or ever can enjoy—and yourself among the
- rest—if you are a blessing, which I am half inclined to doubt.’
- ‘Don’t be so hard upon me, Helen; and don’t pinch my arm so: you are
- squeezing your fingers into the bone.’
- ‘Arthur,’ continued I, relaxing my hold of his arm, ‘you don’t love me
- half as much as I do you; and yet, if you loved me far less than you do,
- I would not complain, provided you loved your Maker more. I should
- rejoice to see you at any time so deeply absorbed in your devotions that
- you had not a single thought to spare for me. But, indeed, I should lose
- nothing by the change, for the more you loved your God the more deep and
- pure and true would be your love to me.’
- At this he only laughed and kissed my hand, calling me a sweet
- enthusiast. Then taking off his hat, he added: ‘But look here,
- Helen—what can a man do with such a head as this?’
- The head looked right enough, but when he placed my hand on the top of
- it, it sunk in a bed of curls, rather alarmingly low, especially in the
- middle.
- ‘You see I was not made to be a saint,’ said he, laughing, ‘If God meant
- me to be religious, why didn’t He give me a proper organ of veneration?’
- ‘You are like the servant,’ I replied, ‘who, instead of employing his one
- talent in his master’s service, restored it to him unimproved, alleging,
- as an excuse, that he knew him “to be a hard man, reaping where he had
- not sown, and gathering where he had not strawed.” Of him to whom less
- is given, less will be required, but our utmost exertions are required of
- us all. You are not without the capacity of veneration, and faith and
- hope, and conscience and reason, and every other requisite to a
- Christian’s character, if you choose to employ them; but all our talents
- increase in the using, and every faculty, both good and bad, strengthens
- by exercise: therefore, if you choose to use the bad, or those which tend
- to evil, till they become your masters, and neglect the good till they
- dwindle away, you have only yourself to blame. But you have talents,
- Arthur—natural endowments both of heart and mind and temper, such as many
- a better Christian would be glad to possess, if you would only employ
- them in God’s service. I should never expect to see you a devotee, but
- it is quite possible to be a good Christian without ceasing to be a
- happy, merry-hearted man.’
- ‘You speak like an oracle, Helen, and all you say is indisputably true;
- but listen here: I am hungry, and I see before me a good substantial
- dinner; I am told that if I abstain from this to-day I shall have a
- sumptuous feast to-morrow, consisting of all manner of dainties and
- delicacies. Now, in the first place, I should be loth to wait till
- to-morrow when I have the means of appeasing my hunger already before me:
- in the second place, the solid viands of to-day are more to my taste than
- the dainties that are promised me; in the third place, I don’t see
- to-morrow’s banquet, and how can I tell that it is not all a fable, got
- up by the greasy-faced fellow that is advising me to abstain in order
- that he may have all the good victuals to himself? in the fourth place,
- this table must be spread for somebody, and, as Solomon says, “Who can
- eat, or who else can hasten hereunto more than I?” and finally, with your
- leave, I’ll sit down and satisfy my cravings of to-day, and leave
- to-morrow to shift for itself—who knows but what I may secure both this
- and that?’
- ‘But you are not required to abstain from the substantial dinner of
- to-day: you are only advised to partake of these coarser viands in such
- moderation as not to incapacitate you from enjoying the choicer banquet
- of to-morrow. If, regardless of that counsel, you choose to make a beast
- of yourself now, and over-eat and over-drink yourself till you turn the
- good victuals into poison, who is to blame if, hereafter, while you are
- suffering the torments of yesterday’s gluttony and drunkenness, you see
- more temperate men sitting down to enjoy themselves at that splendid
- entertainment which you are unable to taste?’
- ‘Most true, my patron saint; but again, our friend Solomon says, “There
- is nothing better for a man than to eat and to drink, and to be merry.”’
- ‘And again,’ returned I, ‘he says, “Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth;
- and walk in the ways of thine heart, and in the sight of thine eyes: but
- know thou, that for all these things God will bring thee into judgment.”’
- ‘Well, but, Helen, I’m sure I’ve been very good these last few weeks.
- What have you seen amiss in me, and what would you have me to do?’
- ‘Nothing more than you do, Arthur: your actions are all right so far; but
- I would have your thoughts changed; I would have you to fortify yourself
- against temptation, and not to call evil good, and good evil; I should
- wish you to think more deeply, to look further, and aim higher than you
- do.’
- CHAPTER XXIV
- March 25th.—Arthur is getting tired—not of me, I trust, but of the idle,
- quiet life he leads—and no wonder, for he has so few sources of
- amusement: he never reads anything but newspapers and sporting magazines;
- and when he sees me occupied with a book, he won’t let me rest till I
- close it. In fine weather he generally manages to get through the time
- pretty well, but on rainy days, of which we have had a good many of late,
- it is quite painful to witness his ennui. I do all I can to amuse him,
- but it is impossible to get him to feel interested in what I most like to
- talk about, while, on the other hand, he likes to talk about things that
- cannot interest me—or even that annoy me—and these please him—the most of
- all: for his favourite amusement is to sit or loll beside me on the sofa,
- and tell me stories of his former amours, always turning upon the ruin of
- some confiding girl or the cozening of some unsuspecting husband; and
- when I express my horror and indignation, he lays it all to the charge of
- jealousy, and laughs till the tears run down his cheeks. I used to fly
- into passions or melt into tears at first, but seeing that his delight
- increased in proportion to my anger and agitation, I have since
- endeavoured to suppress my feelings and receive his revelations in the
- silence of calm contempt; but still he reads the inward struggle in my
- face, and misconstrues my bitterness of soul for his unworthiness into
- the pangs of wounded jealousy; and when he has sufficiently diverted
- himself with that, or fears my displeasure will become too serious for
- his comfort, he tries to kiss and soothe me into smiles again—never were
- his caresses so little welcome as then! This is double selfishness
- displayed to me and to the victims of his former love. There are times
- when, with a momentary pang—a flash of wild dismay, I ask myself, ‘Helen,
- what have you done?’ But I rebuke the inward questioner, and repel the
- obtrusive thoughts that crowd upon me; for were he ten times as sensual
- and impenetrable to good and lofty thoughts, I well know I have no right
- to complain. And I don’t and won’t complain. I do and will love him
- still; and I do not and will not regret that I have linked my fate with
- his.
- April 4th.—We have had a downright quarrel. The particulars are as
- follows: Arthur had told me, at different intervals, the whole story of
- his intrigue with Lady F—, which I would not believe before. It was some
- consolation, however, to find that in this instance the lady had been
- more to blame than he, for he was very young at the time, and she had
- decidedly made the first advances, if what he said was true. I hated her
- for it, for it seemed as if she had chiefly contributed to his
- corruption; and when he was beginning to talk about her the other day, I
- begged he would not mention her, for I detested the very sound of her
- name.
- ‘Not because you loved her, Arthur, mind, but because she injured you and
- deceived her husband, and was altogether a very abominable woman, whom
- you ought to be ashamed to mention.’
- But he defended her by saying that she had a doting old husband, whom it
- was impossible to love.
- ‘Then why did she marry him?’ said I.
- ‘For his money,’ was the reply.
- ‘Then that was another crime, and her solemn promise to love and honour
- him was another, that only increased the enormity of the last.’
- ‘You are too severe upon the poor lady,’ laughed he. ‘But never mind,
- Helen, I don’t care for her now; and I never loved any of them half as
- much as I do you, so you needn’t fear to be forsaken like them.’
- ‘If you had told me these things before, Arthur, I never should have
- given you the chance.’
- ‘Wouldn’t you, my darling?’
- ‘Most certainly not!’
- He laughed incredulously.
- ‘I wish I could convince you of it now!’ cried I, starting up from beside
- him: and for the first time in my life, and I hope the last, I wished I
- had not married him.
- ‘Helen,’ said he, more gravely, ‘do you know that if I believed you now I
- should be very angry? but thank heaven I don’t. Though you stand there
- with your white face and flashing eyes, looking at me like a very
- tigress, I know the heart within you perhaps a trifle better than you
- know it yourself.’
- Without another word I left the room and locked myself up in my own
- chamber. In about half an hour he came to the door, and first he tried
- the handle, then he knocked.
- ‘Won’t you let me in, Helen?’ said he. ‘No; you have displeased me,’ I
- replied, ‘and I don’t want to see your face or hear your voice again till
- the morning.’
- He paused a moment as if dumfounded or uncertain how to answer such a
- speech, and then turned and walked away. This was only an hour after
- dinner: I knew he would find it very dull to sit alone all the evening;
- and this considerably softened my resentment, though it did not make me
- relent. I was determined to show him that my heart was not his slave,
- and I could live without him if I chose; and I sat down and wrote a long
- letter to my aunt, of course telling her nothing of all this. Soon after
- ten o’clock I heard him come up again, but he passed my door and went
- straight to his own dressing-room, where he shut himself in for the
- night.
- I was rather anxious to see how he would meet me in the morning, and not
- a little disappointed to behold him enter the breakfast-room with a
- careless smile.
- ‘Are you cross still, Helen?’ said he, approaching as if to salute me. I
- coldly turned to the table, and began to pour out the coffee, observing
- that he was rather late.
- He uttered a low whistle and sauntered away to the window, where he stood
- for some minutes looking out upon the pleasing prospect of sullen grey
- clouds, streaming rain, soaking lawn, and dripping leafless trees, and
- muttering execrations on the weather, and then sat down to breakfast.
- While taking his coffee he muttered it was ‘d—d cold.’
- ‘You should not have left it so long,’ said I.
- He made no answer, and the meal was concluded in silence. It was a
- relief to both when the letter-bag was brought in. It contained upon
- examination a newspaper and one or two letters for him, and a couple of
- letters for me, which he tossed across the table without a remark. One
- was from my brother, the other from Milicent Hargrave, who is now in
- London with her mother. His, I think, were business letters, and
- apparently not much to his mind, for he crushed them into his pocket with
- some muttered expletives that I should have reproved him for at any other
- time. The paper he set before him, and pretended to be deeply absorbed
- in its contents during the remainder of breakfast, and a considerable
- time after.
- The reading and answering of my letters, and the direction of household
- concerns, afforded me ample employment for the morning: after lunch I got
- my drawing, and from dinner till bed-time I read. Meanwhile, poor Arthur
- was sadly at a loss for something to amuse him or to occupy his time. He
- wanted to appear as busy and as unconcerned as I did. Had the weather at
- all permitted, he would doubtless have ordered his horse and set off to
- some distant region, no matter where, immediately after breakfast, and
- not returned till night: had there been a lady anywhere within reach, of
- any age between fifteen and forty-five, he would have sought revenge and
- found employment in getting up, or trying to get up, a desperate
- flirtation with her; but being, to my private satisfaction, entirely cut
- off from both these sources of diversion, his sufferings were truly
- deplorable. When he had done yawning over his paper and scribbling short
- answers to his shorter letters, he spent the remainder of the morning and
- the whole of the afternoon in fidgeting about from room to room, watching
- the clouds, cursing the rain, alternately petting and teasing and abusing
- his dogs, sometimes lounging on the sofa with a book that he could not
- force himself to read, and very often fixedly gazing at me when he
- thought I did not perceive it, with the vain hope of detecting some
- traces of tears, or some tokens of remorseful anguish in my face. But I
- managed to preserve an undisturbed though grave serenity throughout the
- day. I was not really angry: I felt for him all the time, and longed to
- be reconciled; but I determined he should make the first advances, or at
- least show some signs of an humble and contrite spirit first; for, if I
- began, it would only minister to his self-conceit, increase his
- arrogance, and quite destroy the lesson I wanted to give him.
- He made a long stay in the dining-room after dinner, and, I fear, took an
- unusual quantity of wine, but not enough to loosen his tongue: for when
- he came in and found me quietly occupied with my book, too busy to lift
- my head on his entrance, he merely murmured an expression of suppressed
- disapprobation, and, shutting the door with a bang, went and stretched
- himself at full length on the sofa, and composed himself to sleep. But
- his favourite cocker, Dash, that had been lying at my feet, took the
- liberty of jumping upon him and beginning to lick his face. He struck it
- off with a smart blow, and the poor dog squeaked and ran cowering back to
- me. When he woke up, about half an hour after, he called it to him
- again, but Dash only looked sheepish and wagged the tip of his tail. He
- called again more sharply, but Dash only clung the closer to me, and
- licked my hand, as if imploring protection. Enraged at this, his master
- snatched up a heavy book and hurled it at his head. The poor dog set up
- a piteous outcry, and ran to the door. I let him out, and then quietly
- took up the book.
- ‘Give that book to me,’ said Arthur, in no very courteous tone. I gave
- it to him.
- ‘Why did you let the dog out?’ he asked; ‘you knew I wanted him.’
- ‘By what token?’ I replied; ‘by your throwing the book at him? but
- perhaps it was intended for me?’
- ‘No; but I see you’ve got a taste of it,’ said he, looking at my hand,
- that had also been struck, and was rather severely grazed.
- I returned to my reading, and he endeavoured to occupy himself in the
- same manner; but in a little while, after several portentous yawns, he
- pronounced his book to be ‘cursed trash,’ and threw it on the table.
- Then followed eight or ten minutes of silence, during the greater part of
- which, I believe, he was staring at me. At last his patience was tired
- out.
- ‘What is that book, Helen?’ he exclaimed.
- I told him.
- ‘Is it interesting?’
- ‘Yes, very.’
- I went on reading, or pretending to read, at least—I cannot say there was
- much communication between my eyes and my brain; for, while the former
- ran over the pages, the latter was earnestly wondering when Arthur would
- speak next, and what he would say, and what I should answer. But he did
- not speak again till I rose to make the tea, and then it was only to say
- he should not take any. He continued lounging on the sofa, and
- alternately closing his eyes and looking at his watch and at me, till
- bed-time, when I rose, and took my candle and retired.
- ‘Helen!’ cried he, the moment I had left the room. I turned back, and
- stood awaiting his commands.
- ‘What do you want, Arthur?’ I said at length.
- ‘Nothing,’ replied he. ‘Go!’
- I went, but hearing him mutter something as I was closing the door, I
- turned again. It sounded very like ‘confounded slut,’ but I was quite
- willing it should be something else.
- ‘Were you speaking, Arthur?’ I asked.
- ‘No,’ was the answer, and I shut the door and departed. I saw nothing
- more of him till the following morning at breakfast, when he came down a
- full hour after the usual time.
- ‘You’re very late,’ was my morning’s salutation.
- ‘You needn’t have waited for me,’ was his; and he walked up to the window
- again. It was just such weather as yesterday.
- ‘Oh, this confounded rain!’ he muttered. But, after studiously regarding
- it for a minute or two, a bright idea, seemed to strike him, for he
- suddenly exclaimed, ‘But I know what I’ll do!’ and then returned and took
- his seat at the table. The letter-bag was already there, waiting to be
- opened. He unlocked it and examined the contents, but said nothing about
- them.
- ‘Is there anything for me?’ I asked.
- ‘No.’
- He opened the newspaper and began to read.
- ‘You’d better take your coffee,’ suggested I; ‘it will be cold again.’
- ‘You may go,’ said he, ‘if you’ve done; I don’t want you.’
- I rose and withdrew to the next room, wondering if we were to have
- another such miserable day as yesterday, and wishing intensely for an end
- of these mutually inflicted torments. Shortly after I heard him ring the
- bell and give some orders about his wardrobe that sounded as if he
- meditated a long journey. He then sent for the coachman, and I heard
- something about the carriage and the horses, and London, and seven
- o’clock to-morrow morning, that startled and disturbed me not a little.
- ‘I must not let him go to London, whatever comes of it,’ said I to
- myself; ‘he will run into all kinds of mischief, and I shall be the cause
- of it. But the question is, How am I to alter his purpose? Well, I will
- wait awhile, and see if he mentions it.’
- I waited most anxiously, from hour to hour; but not a word was spoken, on
- that or any other subject, to me. He whistled and talked to his dogs,
- and wandered from room to room, much the same as on the previous day. At
- last I began to think I must introduce the subject myself, and was
- pondering how to bring it about, when John unwittingly came to my relief
- with the following message from the coachman:
- ‘Please, sir, Richard says one of the horses has got a very bad cold, and
- he thinks, sir, if you could make it convenient to go the day after
- to-morrow, instead of to-morrow, he could physic it to-day, so as—’
- ‘Confound his impudence!’ interjected the master.
- ‘Please, sir, he says it would be a deal better if you could,’ persisted
- John, ‘for he hopes there’ll be a change in the weather shortly, and he
- says it’s not likely, when a horse is so bad with a cold, and physicked
- and all—’
- ‘Devil take the horse!’ cried the gentleman. ‘Well, tell him I’ll think
- about it,’ he added, after a moment’s reflection. He cast a searching
- glance at me, as the servant withdrew, expecting to see some token of
- deep astonishment and alarm; but, being previously prepared, I preserved
- an aspect of stoical indifference. His countenance fell as he met my
- steady gaze, and he turned away in very obvious disappointment, and
- walked up to the fire-place, where he stood in an attitude of undisguised
- dejection, leaning against the chimney-piece with his forehead sunk upon
- his arm.
- ‘Where do you want to go, Arthur?’ said I.
- ‘To London,’ replied he, gravely.
- ‘What for?’ I asked.
- ‘Because I cannot be happy here.’
- ‘Why not?’
- ‘Because my wife doesn’t love me.’
- ‘She would love you with all her heart, if you deserved it.’
- ‘What must I do to deserve it?’
- This seemed humble and earnest enough; and I was so much affected,
- between sorrow and joy, that I was obliged to pause a few seconds before
- I could steady my voice to reply.
- ‘If she gives you her heart,’ said I, ‘you must take it, thankfully, and
- use it well, and not pull it in pieces, and laugh in her face, because
- she cannot snatch it away.’
- He now turned round, and stood facing me, with his back to the fire.
- ‘Come, then, Helen, are you going to be a good girl?’ said he.
- This sounded rather too arrogant, and the smile that accompanied it did
- not please me. I therefore hesitated to reply. Perhaps my former answer
- had implied too much: he had heard my voice falter, and might have seen
- me brush away a tear.
- ‘Are you going to forgive me, Helen?’ he resumed, more humbly.
- ‘Are you penitent?’ I replied, stepping up to him and smiling in his
- face.
- ‘Heart-broken!’ he answered, with a rueful countenance, yet with a merry
- smile just lurking within his eyes and about the corners of his mouth;
- but this could not repulse me, and I flew into his arms. He fervently
- embraced me, and though I shed a torrent of tears, I think I never was
- happier in my life than at that moment.
- ‘Then you won’t go to London, Arthur?’ I said, when the first transport
- of tears and kisses had subsided.
- ‘No, love,—unless you will go with me.’
- ‘I will, gladly,’ I answered, ‘if you think the change will amuse you,
- and if you will put off the journey till next week.’
- He readily consented, but said there was no need of much preparation, as
- he should not be for staying long, for he did not wish me to be
- Londonized, and to lose my country freshness and originality by too much
- intercourse with the ladies of the world. I thought this folly; but I
- did not wish to contradict him now: I merely said that I was of very
- domestic habits, as he well knew, and had no particular wish to mingle
- with the world.
- So we are to go to London on Monday, the day after to-morrow. It is now
- four days since the termination of our quarrel, and I am sure it has done
- us both good: it has made me like Arthur a great deal better, and made
- him behave a great deal better to me. He has never once attempted to
- annoy me since, by the most distant allusion to Lady F—, or any of those
- disagreeable reminiscences of his former life. I wish I could blot them
- from my memory, or else get him to regard such matters in the same light
- as I do. Well! it is something, however, to have made him see that they
- are not fit subjects for a conjugal jest. He may see further some time.
- I will put no limits to my hopes; and, in spite of my aunt’s forebodings
- and my own unspoken fears, I trust we shall be happy yet.
- CHAPTER XXV
- On the eighth of April we went to London, on the eighth of May I
- returned, in obedience to Arthur’s wish; very much against my own,
- because I left him behind. If he had come with me, I should have been
- very glad to get home again, for he led me such a round of restless
- dissipation while there, that, in that short space of time, I was quite
- tired out. He seemed bent upon displaying me to his friends and
- acquaintances in particular, and the public in general, on every possible
- occasion, and to the greatest possible advantage. It was something to
- feel that he considered me a worthy object of pride; but I paid dear for
- the gratification: for, in the first place, to please him I had to
- violate my cherished predilections, my almost rooted principles in favour
- of a plain, dark, sober style of dress—I must sparkle in costly jewels
- and deck myself out like a painted butterfly, just as I had, long since,
- determined I would never do—and this was no trifling sacrifice; in the
- second place, I was continually straining to satisfy his sanguine
- expectations and do honour to his choice by my general conduct and
- deportment, and fearing to disappoint him by some awkward misdemeanour,
- or some trait of inexperienced ignorance about the customs of society,
- especially when I acted the part of hostess, which I was not unfrequently
- called upon to do; and, in the third place, as I intimated before, I was
- wearied of the throng and bustle, the restless hurry and ceaseless change
- of a life so alien to all my previous habits. At last, he suddenly
- discovered that the London air did not agree with me, and I was
- languishing for my country home, and must immediately return to
- Grassdale.
- I laughingly assured him that the case was not so urgent as he appeared
- to think it, but I was quite willing to go home if he was. He replied
- that he should be obliged to remain a week or two longer, as he had
- business that required his presence.
- [Picture: Blake Hall—Front (Grassdale Manor)]
- ‘Then I will stay with you,’ said I.
- ‘But I can’t do with you, Helen,’ was his answer: ‘as long as you stay I
- shall attend to you and neglect my business.’
- ‘But I won’t let you,’ I returned; ‘now that I know you have business to
- attend to, I shall insist upon your attending to it, and letting me
- alone; and, to tell the truth, I shall be glad of a little rest. I can
- take my rides and walks in the Park as usual; and your business cannot
- occupy all your time: I shall see you at meal-times, and in the evenings
- at least, and that will be better than being leagues away and never
- seeing you at all.’
- ‘But, my love, I cannot let you stay. How can I settle my affairs when I
- know that you are here, neglected—?’
- ‘I shall not feel myself neglected: while you are doing your duty,
- Arthur, I shall never complain of neglect. If you had told me before,
- that you had anything to do, it would have been half done before this;
- and now you must make up for lost time by redoubled exertions. Tell me
- what it is; and I will be your taskmaster, instead of being a hindrance.’
- ‘No, no,’ persisted the impracticable creature; ‘you must go home, Helen;
- I must have the satisfaction of knowing that you are safe and well,
- though far away. Your bright eyes are faded, and that tender, delicate
- bloom has quite deserted your cheek.’
- ‘That is only with too much gaiety and fatigue.’
- ‘It is not, I tell you; it is the London air: you are pining for the
- fresh breezes of your country home, and you shall feel them before you
- are two days older. And remember your situation, dearest Helen; on your
- health, you know, depends the health, if not the life, of our future
- hope.’
- ‘Then you really wish to get rid of me?’
- ‘Positively, I do; and I will take you down myself to Grassdale, and then
- return. I shall not be absent above a week or fortnight at most.’
- ‘But if I must go, I will go alone: if you must stay, it is needless to
- waste your time in the journey there and back.’
- But he did not like the idea of sending me alone.
- ‘Why, what helpless creature do you take me for,’ I replied, ‘that you
- cannot trust me to go a hundred miles in our own carriage, with our own
- footman and a maid to attend me? If you come with me I shall assuredly
- keep you. But tell me, Arthur, what is this tiresome business; and why
- did you never mention it before?’
- ‘It is only a little business with my lawyer,’ said he; and he told me
- something about a piece of property he wanted to sell, in order to pay
- off a part of the incumbrances on his estate; but either the account was
- a little confused, or I was rather dull of comprehension, for I could not
- clearly understand how that should keep him in town a fortnight after me.
- Still less can I now comprehend how it should keep him a month, for it is
- nearly that time since I left him, and no signs of his return as yet. In
- every letter he promises to be with me in a few days, and every time
- deceives me, or deceives himself. His excuses are vague and
- insufficient. I cannot doubt that he has got among his former companions
- again. Oh, why did I leave him! I wish—I do intensely wish he would
- return!
- June 29th.—No Arthur yet; and for many days I have been looking and
- longing in vain for a letter. His letters, when they come, are kind, if
- fair words and endearing epithets can give them a claim to the title—but
- very short, and full of trivial excuses and promises that I cannot trust;
- and yet how anxiously I look forward to them! how eagerly I open and
- devour one of those little, hastily-scribbled returns for the three or
- four long letters, hitherto unanswered, he has had from me!
- Oh, it is cruel to leave me so long alone! He knows I have no one but
- Rachel to speak to, for we have no neighbours here, except the Hargraves,
- whose residence I can dimly descry from these upper windows embosomed
- among those low, woody hills beyond the Dale. I was glad when I learnt
- that Milicent was so near us; and her company would be a soothing solace
- to me now; but she is still in town with her mother; there is no one at
- the Grove but little Esther and her French governess, for Walter is
- always away. I saw that paragon of manly perfections in London: he
- seemed scarcely to merit the eulogiums of his mother and sister, though
- he certainly appeared more conversable and agreeable than Lord
- Lowborough, more candid and high-minded than Mr. Grimsby, and more
- polished and gentlemanly than Mr. Hattersley, Arthur’s only other friend
- whom he judged fit to introduce to me.—Oh, Arthur, why won’t you come?
- why won’t you write to me at least? You talked about my health: how can
- you expect me to gather bloom and vigour here, pining in solitude and
- restless anxiety from day to day?—It would serve you right to come back
- and find my good looks entirely wasted away. I would beg my uncle and
- aunt, or my brother, to come and see me, but I do not like to complain of
- my loneliness to them, and indeed loneliness is the least of my
- sufferings. But what is he doing—what is it that keeps him away? It is
- this ever-recurring question, and the horrible suggestions it raises,
- that distract me.
- July 3rd.—My last bitter letter has wrung from him an answer at last, and
- a rather longer one than usual; but still I don’t know what to make of
- it. He playfully abuses me for the gall and vinegar of my latest
- effusion, tells me I can have no conception of the multitudinous
- engagements that keep him away, but avers that, in spite of them all, he
- will assuredly be with me before the close of next week; though it is
- impossible for a man so circumstanced as he is to fix the precise day of
- his return: meantime he exhorts me to the exercise of patience, ‘that
- first of woman’s virtues,’ and desires me to remember the saying,
- ‘Absence makes the heart grow fonder,’ and comfort myself with the
- assurance that the longer he stays away the better he shall love me when
- he returns; and till he does return, he begs I will continue to write to
- him constantly, for, though he is sometimes too idle and often too busy
- to answer my letters as they come, he likes to receive them daily; and if
- I fulfil my threat of punishing his seeming neglect by ceasing to write,
- he shall be so angry that he will do his utmost to forget me. He adds
- this piece of intelligence respecting poor Milicent Hargrave:
- ‘Your little friend Milicent is likely, before long, to follow your
- example, and take upon her the yoke of matrimony in conjunction with a
- friend of mine. Hattersley, you know, has not yet fulfilled his direful
- threat of throwing his precious person away on the first old maid that
- chose to evince a tenderness for him; but he still preserves a resolute
- determination to see himself a married man before the year is out.
- “Only,” said he to me, “I must have somebody that will let me have my own
- way in everything—not like your wife, Huntingdon: she is a charming
- creature, but she looks as if she had a will of her own, and could play
- the vixen upon occasion” (I thought “you’re right there, man,” but I
- didn’t say so). “I must have some good, quiet soul that will let me just
- do what I like and go where I like, keep at home or stay away, without a
- word of reproach or complaint; for I can’t do with being bothered.”
- “Well,” said I, “I know somebody that will suit you to a tee, if you
- don’t care for money, and that’s Hargrave’s sister, Milicent.” He
- desired to be introduced to her forthwith, for he said he had plenty of
- the needful himself, or should have when his old governor chose to quit
- the stage. So you see, Helen, I have managed pretty well, both for your
- friend and mine.’
- Poor Milicent! But I cannot imagine she will ever be led to accept such
- a suitor—one so repugnant to all her ideas of a man to be honoured and
- loved.
- 5th.—Alas! I was mistaken. I have got a long letter from her this
- morning, telling me she is already engaged, and expects to be married
- before the close of the month.
- ‘I hardly know what to say about it,’ she writes, ‘or what to think. To
- tell you the truth, Helen, I don’t like the thoughts of it at all. If I
- am to be Mr. Hattersley’s wife, I must try to love him; and I do try with
- all my might; but I have made very little progress yet; and the worst
- symptom of the case is, that the further he is from me the better I like
- him: he frightens me with his abrupt manners and strange hectoring ways,
- and I dread the thoughts of marrying him. “Then why have you accepted
- him?” you will ask; and I didn’t know I had accepted him; but mamma tells
- me I have, and he seems to think so too. I certainly didn’t mean to do
- so; but I did not like to give him a flat refusal, for fear mamma should
- be grieved and angry (for I knew she wished me to marry him), and I
- wanted to talk to her first about it: so I gave him what I thought was an
- evasive, half negative answer; but she says it was as good as an
- acceptance, and he would think me very capricious if I were to attempt to
- draw back—and indeed I was so confused and frightened at the moment, I
- can hardly tell what I said. And next time I saw him, he accosted me in
- all confidence as his affianced bride, and immediately began to settle
- matters with mamma. I had not courage to contradict them then, and how
- can I do it now? I cannot; they would think me mad. Besides, mamma is
- so delighted with the idea of the match; she thinks she has managed so
- well for me; and I cannot bear to disappoint her. I do object sometimes,
- and tell her what I feel, but you don’t know how she talks. Mr.
- Hattersley, you know, is the son of a rich banker, and as Esther and I
- have no fortunes, and Walter very little, our dear mamma is very anxious
- to see us all well married, that is, united to rich partners. It is not
- my idea of being well married, but she means it all for the best. She
- says when I am safe off her hands it will be such a relief to her mind;
- and she assures me it will be a good thing for the family as well as for
- me. Even Walter is pleased at the prospect, and when I confessed my
- reluctance to him, he said it was all childish nonsense. Do you think it
- nonsense, Helen? I should not care if I could see any prospect of being
- able to love and admire him, but I can’t. There is nothing about him to
- hang one’s esteem and affection upon; he is so diametrically opposite to
- what I imagined my husband should be. Do write to me, and say all you
- can to encourage me. Don’t attempt to dissuade me, for my fate is fixed:
- preparations for the important event are already going on around me; and
- don’t say a word against Mr. Hattersley, for I want to think well of him;
- and though I have spoken against him myself, it is for the last time:
- hereafter, I shall never permit myself to utter a word in his dispraise,
- however he may seem to deserve it; and whoever ventures to speak
- slightingly of the man I have promised to love, to honour, and obey, must
- expect my serious displeasure. After all, I think he is quite as good as
- Mr. Huntingdon, if not better; and yet you love him, and seem to be happy
- and contented; and perhaps I may manage as well. You must tell me, if
- you can, that Mr. Hattersley is better than he seems—that he is upright,
- honourable, and open-hearted—in fact, a perfect diamond in the rough. He
- may be all this, but I don’t know him. I know only the exterior, and
- what, I trust, is the worst part of him.’
- She concludes with ‘Good-by, dear Helen. I am waiting anxiously for your
- advice—but mind you let it be all on the right side.’
- Alas! poor Milicent, what encouragement can I give you? or what
- advice—except that it is better to make a bold stand now, though at the
- expense of disappointing and angering both mother and brother and lover,
- than to devote your whole life, hereafter, to misery and vain regret?
- Saturday, 13th.—The week is over, and he is not come. All the sweet
- summer is passing away without one breath of pleasure to me or benefit to
- him. And I had all along been looking forward to this season with the
- fond, delusive hope that we should enjoy it so sweetly together; and
- that, with God’s help and my exertions, it would be the means of
- elevating his mind, and refining his taste to a due appreciation of the
- salutary and pure delights of nature, and peace, and holy love. But
- now—at evening, when I see the round red sun sink quietly down behind
- those woody hills, leaving them sleeping in a warm, red, golden haze, I
- only think another lovely day is lost to him and me; and at morning, when
- roused by the flutter and chirp of the sparrows, and the gleeful twitter
- of the swallows—all intent upon feeding their young, and full of life and
- joy in their own little frames—I open the window to inhale the balmy,
- soul-reviving air, and look out upon the lovely landscape, laughing in
- dew and sunshine—I too often shame that glorious scene with tears of
- thankless misery, because he cannot feel its freshening influence; and
- when I wander in the ancient woods, and meet the little wild flowers
- smiling in my path, or sit in the shadow of our noble ash-trees by the
- water-side, with their branches gently swaying in the light summer breeze
- that murmurs through their feathery foliage—my ears full of that low
- music mingled with the dreamy hum of insects, my eyes abstractedly gazing
- on the glassy surface of the little lake before me, with the trees that
- crowd about its bank, some gracefully bending to kiss its waters, some
- rearing their stately heads high above, but stretching their wide arms
- over its margin, all faithfully mirrored far, far down in its glassy
- depth—though sometimes the images are partially broken by the sport of
- aquatic insects, and sometimes, for a moment, the whole is shivered into
- trembling fragments by a transient breeze that sweeps the surface too
- roughly—still I have no pleasure; for the greater the happiness that
- nature sets before me, the more I lament that he is not here to taste it:
- the greater the bliss we might enjoy together, the more I feel our
- present wretchedness apart (yes, ours; he must be wretched, though he may
- not know it); and the more my senses are pleased, the more my heart is
- oppressed; for he keeps it with him confined amid the dust and smoke of
- London—perhaps shut up within the walls of his own abominable club.
- But most of all, at night, when I enter my lonely chamber, and look out
- upon the summer moon, ‘sweet regent of the sky,’ floating above me in the
- ‘black blue vault of heaven,’ shedding a flood of silver radiance over
- park, and wood, and water, so pure, so peaceful, so divine—and think,
- Where is he now?—what is he doing at this moment? wholly unconscious of
- this heavenly scene—perhaps revelling with his boon companions,
- perhaps—God help me, it is too—too much!
- 23rd.—Thank heaven, he is come at last! But how altered! flushed and
- feverish, listless and languid, his beauty strangely diminished, his
- vigour and vivacity quite departed. I have not upbraided him by word or
- look; I have not even asked him what he has been doing. I have not the
- heart to do it, for I think he is ashamed of himself-he must be so
- indeed, and such inquiries could not fail to be painful to both. My
- forbearance pleases him—touches him even, I am inclined to think. He
- says he is glad to be home again, and God knows how glad I am to get him
- back, even as he is. He lies on the sofa, nearly all day long; and I
- play and sing to him for hours together. I write his letters for him,
- and get him everything he wants; and sometimes I read to him, and
- sometimes I talk, and sometimes only sit by him and soothe him with
- silent caresses. I know he does not deserve it; and I fear I am spoiling
- him; but this once, I will forgive him, freely and entirely. I will
- shame him into virtue if I can, and I will never let him leave me again.
- He is pleased with my attentions—it may be, grateful for them. He likes
- to have me near him: and though he is peevish and testy with his servants
- and his dogs, he is gentle and kind to me. What he would be, if I did
- not so watchfully anticipate his wants, and so carefully avoid, or
- immediately desist from doing anything that has a tendency to irritate or
- disturb him, with however little reason, I cannot tell. How intensely I
- wish he were worthy of all this care! Last night, as I sat beside him,
- with his head in my lap, passing my fingers through his beautiful curls,
- this thought made my eyes overflow with sorrowful tears—as it often does;
- but this time, a tear fell on his face and made him look up. He smiled,
- but not insultingly.
- ‘Dear Helen!’ he said—‘why do you cry? you know that I love you’ (and he
- pressed my hand to his feverish lips), ‘and what more could you desire?’
- ‘Only, Arthur, that you would love yourself as truly and as faithfully as
- you are loved by me.’
- ‘That would be hard, indeed!’ he replied, tenderly squeezing my hand.
- August 24th.—Arthur is himself again, as lusty and reckless, as light of
- heart and head as ever, and as restless and hard to amuse as a spoilt
- child, and almost as full of mischief too, especially when wet weather
- keeps him within doors. I wish he had something to do, some useful
- trade, or profession, or employment—anything to occupy his head or his
- hands for a few hours a day, and give him something besides his own
- pleasure to think about. If he would play the country gentleman and
- attend to the farm—but that he knows nothing about, and won’t give his
- mind to consider,—or if he would take up with some literary study, or
- learn to draw or to play—as he is so fond of music, I often try to
- persuade him to learn the piano, but he is far too idle for such an
- undertaking: he has no more idea of exerting himself to overcome
- obstacles than he has of restraining his natural appetites; and these two
- things are the ruin of him. I lay them both to the charge of his harsh
- yet careless father, and his madly indulgent mother.—If ever I am a
- mother I will zealously strive against this crime of over-indulgence. I
- can hardly give it a milder name when I think of the evils it brings.
- Happily, it will soon be the shooting season, and then, if the weather
- permit, he will find occupation enough in the pursuit and destruction of
- the partridges and pheasants: we have no grouse, or he might have been
- similarly occupied at this moment, instead of lying under the acacia-tree
- pulling poor Dash’s ears. But he says it is dull work shooting alone; he
- must have a friend or two to help him.
- ‘Let them be tolerably decent then, Arthur,’ said I. The word ‘friend’
- in his mouth makes me shudder: I know it was some of his ‘friends’ that
- induced him to stay behind me in London, and kept him away so long:
- indeed, from what he has unguardedly told me, or hinted from time to
- time, I cannot doubt that he frequently showed them my letters, to let
- them see how fondly his wife watched over his interests, and how keenly
- she regretted his absence; and that they induced him to remain week after
- week, and to plunge into all manner of excesses, to avoid being laughed
- at for a wife-ridden fool, and, perhaps, to show how far he could venture
- to go without danger of shaking the fond creature’s devoted attachment.
- It is a hateful idea, but I cannot believe it is a false one.
- ‘Well,’ replied he, ‘I thought of Lord Lowborough for one; but there is
- no possibility of getting him without his better half, our mutual friend,
- Annabella; so we must ask them both. You’re not afraid of her, are you,
- Helen?’ he asked, with a mischievous twinkle in his eyes.
- ‘Of course not,’ I answered: ‘why should I? And who besides?’
- ‘Hargrave for one. He will be glad to come, though his own place is so
- near, for he has little enough land of his own to shoot over, and we can
- extend our depredations into it, if we like; and he is thoroughly
- respectable, you know, Helen—quite a lady’s man: and I think, Grimsby for
- another: he’s a decent, quiet fellow enough. You’ll not object to
- Grimsby?’
- ‘I hate him: but, however, if you wish it, I’ll try to endure his
- presence for a while.’
- ‘All a prejudice, Helen, a mere woman’s antipathy.’
- ‘No; I have solid grounds for my dislike. And is that all?’
- ‘Why, yes, I think so. Hattersley will be too busy billing and cooing,
- with his bride to have much time to spare for guns and dogs at present,’
- he replied. And that reminds me, that I have had several letters from
- Milicent since her marriage, and that she either is, or pretends to be,
- quite reconciled to her lot. She professes to have discovered numberless
- virtues and perfections in her husband, some of which, I fear, less
- partial eyes would fail to distinguish, though they sought them carefully
- with tears; and now that she is accustomed to his loud voice, and abrupt,
- uncourteous manners, she affirms she finds no difficulty in loving him as
- a wife should do, and begs I will burn that letter wherein she spoke so
- unadvisedly against him. So that I trust she may yet be happy; but, if
- she is, it will be entirely the reward of her own goodness of heart; for
- had she chosen to consider herself the victim of fate, or of her mother’s
- worldly wisdom, she might have been thoroughly miserable; and if, for
- duty’s sake, she had not made every effort to love her husband, she
- would, doubtless, have hated him to the end of her days.
- CHAPTER XXVI
- Sept. 23rd.—Our guests arrived about three weeks ago. Lord and Lady
- Lowborough have now been married above eight months; and I will do the
- lady the credit to say that her husband is quite an altered man; his
- looks, his spirits, and his temper, are all perceptibly changed for the
- better since I last saw him. But there is room for improvement still.
- He is not always cheerful, nor always contented, and she often complains
- of his ill-humour, which, however, of all persons, she ought to be the
- last to accuse him of, as he never displays it against her, except for
- such conduct as would provoke a saint. He adores her still, and would go
- to the world’s end to please her. She knows her power, and she uses it
- too; but well knowing that to wheedle and coax is safer than to command,
- she judiciously tempers her despotism with flattery and blandishments
- enough to make him deem himself a favoured and a happy man.
- But she has a way of tormenting him, in which I am a fellow-sufferer, or
- might be, if I chose to regard myself as such. This is by openly, but
- not too glaringly, coquetting with Mr. Huntingdon, who is quite willing
- to be her partner in the game; but I don’t care for it, because, with
- him, I know there is nothing but personal vanity, and a mischievous
- desire to excite my jealousy, and, perhaps, to torment his friend; and
- she, no doubt, is actuated by much the same motives; only, there is more
- of malice and less of playfulness in her manoeuvres. It is obviously,
- therefore, my interest to disappoint them both, as far as I am concerned,
- by preserving a cheerful, undisturbed serenity throughout; and,
- accordingly, I endeavour to show the fullest confidence in my husband,
- and the greatest indifference to the arts of my attractive guest. I have
- never reproached the former but once, and that was for laughing at Lord
- Lowborough’s depressed and anxious countenance one evening, when they had
- both been particularly provoking; and then, indeed, I said a good deal on
- the subject, and rebuked him sternly enough; but he only laughed, and
- said,—‘You can feel for him, Helen, can’t you?’
- ‘I can feel for anyone that is unjustly treated,’ I replied, ‘and I can
- feel for those that injure them too.’
- ‘Why, Helen, you are as jealous as he is!’ cried he, laughing still more;
- and I found it impossible to convince him of his mistake. So, from that
- time, I have carefully refrained from any notice of the subject whatever,
- and left Lord Lowborough to take care of himself. He either has not the
- sense or the power to follow my example, though he does try to conceal
- his uneasiness as well as he can; but still, it will appear in his face,
- and his ill-humour will peep out at intervals, though not in the
- expression of open resentment—they never go far enough for that. But I
- confess I do feel jealous at times, most painfully, bitterly so; when she
- sings and plays to him, and he hangs over the instrument, and dwells upon
- her voice with no affected interest; for then I know he is really
- delighted, and I have no power to awaken similar fervour. I can amuse
- and please him with my simple songs, but not delight him thus.
- 28th.—Yesterday, we all went to the Grove, Mr. Hargrave’s much-neglected
- home. His mother frequently asks us over, that she may have the pleasure
- of her dear Walter’s company; and this time she had invited us to a
- dinner-party, and got together as many of the country gentry as were
- within reach to meet us. The entertainment was very well got up; but I
- could not help thinking about the cost of it all the time. I don’t like
- Mrs. Hargrave; she is a hard, pretentious, worldly-minded woman. She has
- money enough to live very comfortably, if she only knew how to use it
- judiciously, and had taught her son to do the same; but she is ever
- straining to keep up appearances, with that despicable pride that shuns
- the semblance of poverty as of a shameful crime. She grinds her
- dependents, pinches her servants, and deprives even her daughters and
- herself of the real comforts of life, because she will not consent to
- yield the palm in outward show to those who have three times her wealth;
- and, above all, because she is determined her cherished son shall be
- enabled to ‘hold up his head with the highest gentlemen in the land.’
- This same son, I imagine, is a man of expensive habits, no reckless
- spendthrift and no abandoned sensualist, but one who likes to have
- ‘everything handsome about him,’ and to go to a certain length in
- youthful indulgences, not so much to gratify his own tastes as to
- maintain his reputation as a man of fashion in the world, and a
- respectable fellow among his own lawless companions; while he is too
- selfish to consider how many comforts might be obtained for his fond
- mother and sisters with the money he thus wastes upon himself: as long as
- they can contrive to make a respectable appearance once a year, when they
- come to town, he gives himself little concern about their private
- stintings and struggles at home. This is a harsh judgment to form of
- ‘dear, noble-minded, generous-hearted Walter,’ but I fear it is too just.
- Mrs. Hargrave’s anxiety to make good matches for her daughters is partly
- the cause, and partly the result, of these errors: by making a figure in
- the world, and showing them off to advantage, she hopes to obtain better
- chances for them; and by thus living beyond her legitimate means, and
- lavishing so much on their brother, she renders them portionless, and
- makes them burdens on her hands. Poor Milicent, I fear, has already
- fallen a sacrifice to the manoeuvrings of this mistaken mother, who
- congratulates herself on having so satisfactorily discharged her maternal
- duty, and hopes to do as well for Esther. But Esther is a child as yet,
- a little merry romp of fourteen: as honest-hearted, and as guileless and
- simple as her sister, but with a fearless spirit of her own, that I fancy
- her mother will find some difficulty in bending to her purposes.
- CHAPTER XXVII
- October 9th.—It was on the night of the 4th, a little after tea, that
- Annabella had been singing and playing, with Arthur as usual at her side:
- she had ended her song, but still she sat at the instrument; and he stood
- leaning on the back of her chair, conversing in scarcely audible tones,
- with his face in very close proximity with hers. I looked at Lord
- Lowborough. He was at the other end of the room, talking with Messrs.
- Hargrave and Grimsby; but I saw him dart towards his lady and his host a
- quick, impatient glance, expressive of intense disquietude, at which
- Grimsby smiled. Determined to interrupt the _tête-à-tête_, I rose, and,
- selecting a piece of music from the music stand, stepped up to the piano,
- intending to ask the lady to play it; but I stood transfixed and
- speechless on seeing her seated there, listening, with what seemed an
- exultant smile on her flushed face to his soft murmurings, with her hand
- quietly surrendered to his clasp. The blood rushed first to my heart,
- and then to my head; for there was more than this: almost at the moment
- of my approach, he cast a hurried glance over his shoulder towards the
- other occupants of the room, and then ardently pressed the unresisting
- hand to his lips. On raising his eyes, he beheld me, and dropped them
- again, confounded and dismayed. She saw me too, and confronted me with a
- look of hard defiance. I laid the music on the piano, and retired. I
- felt ill; but I did not leave the room: happily, it was getting late, and
- could not be long before the company dispersed.
- I went to the fire, and leant my head against the chimney-piece. In a
- minute or two, some one asked me if I felt unwell. I did not answer;
- indeed, at the time, I knew not what was said; but I mechanically looked
- up, and saw Mr. Hargrave standing beside me on the rug.
- ‘Shall I get you a glass of wine?’ said he.
- ‘No, thank you,’ I replied; and, turning from him, I looked round. Lady
- Lowborough was beside her husband, bending over him as he sat, with her
- hand on his shoulder, softly talking and smiling in his face; and Arthur
- was at the table, turning over a book of engravings. I seated myself in
- the nearest chair; and Mr. Hargrave, finding his services were not
- desired, judiciously withdrew. Shortly after, the company broke up, and,
- as the guests were retiring to their rooms, Arthur approached me, smiling
- with the utmost assurance.
- ‘Are you very angry, Helen?’ murmured he.
- ‘This is no jest, Arthur,’ said I, seriously, but as calmly as I
- could—‘unless you think it a jest to lose my affection for ever.’
- ‘What! so bitter?’ he exclaimed, laughingly, clasping my hand between
- both his; but I snatched it away, in indignation—almost in disgust, for
- he was obviously affected with wine.
- ‘Then I must go down on my knees,’ said he; and kneeling before me, with
- clasped hands, uplifted in mock humiliation, he continued
- imploringly—‘Forgive me, Helen—dear Helen, forgive me, and I’ll never do
- it again!’ and, burying his face in his handkerchief, he affected to sob
- aloud.
- Leaving him thus employed, I took my candle, and, slipping quietly from
- the room, hastened up-stairs as fast as I could. But he soon discovered
- that I had left him, and, rushing up after me, caught me in his arms,
- just as I had entered the chamber, and was about to shut the door in his
- face.
- ‘No, no, by heaven, you sha’n’t escape me so!’ he cried. Then, alarmed
- at my agitation, he begged me not to put myself in such a passion,
- telling me I was white in the face, and should kill myself if I did so.
- ‘Let me go, then,’ I murmured; and immediately he released me—and it was
- well he did, for I was really in a passion. I sank into the easy-chair
- and endeavoured to compose myself, for I wanted to speak to him calmly.
- He stood beside me, but did not venture to touch me or to speak for a few
- seconds; then, approaching a little nearer, he dropped on one knee—not in
- mock humility, but to bring himself nearer my level, and leaning his hand
- on the arm of the chair, he began in a low voice: ‘It is all nonsense,
- Helen—a jest, a mere nothing—not worth a thought. Will you never learn,’
- he continued more boldly, ‘that you have nothing to fear from me? that I
- love you wholly and entirely?—or if,’ he added with a lurking smile, ‘I
- ever give a thought to another, you may well spare it, for those fancies
- are here and gone like a flash of lightning, while my love for you burns
- on steadily, and for ever, like the sun. You little exorbitant tyrant,
- will not that—?’
- ‘Be quiet a moment, will you, Arthur?’ said I, ‘and listen to me—and
- don’t think I’m in a jealous fury: I am perfectly calm. Feel my hand.’
- And I gravely extended it towards him—but closed it upon his with an
- energy that seemed to disprove the assertion, and made him smile. ‘You
- needn’t smile, sir,’ said I, still tightening my grasp, and looking
- steadfastly on him till he almost quailed before me. ‘You may think it
- all very fine, Mr. Huntingdon, to amuse yourself with rousing my
- jealousy; but take care you don’t rouse my hate instead. And when you
- have once extinguished my love, you will find it no easy matter to kindle
- it again.’
- ‘Well, Helen, I won’t repeat the offence. But I meant nothing by it, I
- assure you. I had taken too much wine, and I was scarcely myself at the
- time.’
- ‘You often take too much; and that is another practice I detest.’ He
- looked up astonished at my warmth. ‘Yes,’ I continued; ‘I never
- mentioned it before, because I was ashamed to do so; but now I’ll tell
- you that it distresses me, and may disgust me, if you go on and suffer
- the habit to grow upon you, as it will if you don’t check it in time.
- But the whole system of your conduct to Lady Lowborough is not referable
- to wine; and this night you knew perfectly well what you were doing.’
- ‘Well, I’m sorry for it,’ replied he, with more of sulkiness than
- contrition: ‘what more would you have?’
- ‘You are sorry that I saw you, no doubt,’ I answered coldly.
- ‘If you had not seen me,’ he muttered, fixing his eyes on the carpet, ‘it
- would have done no harm.’
- My heart felt ready to burst; but I resolutely swallowed back my emotion,
- and answered calmly,
- ‘You think not?’
- ‘No,’ replied he, boldly. ‘After all, what have I done? It’s
- nothing—except as you choose to make it a subject of accusation and
- distress.’
- ‘What would Lord Lowborough, your friend, think, if he knew all? or what
- would you yourself think, if he or any other had acted the same part to
- me, throughout, as you have to Annabella?’
- ‘I would blow his brains out.’
- ‘Well, then, Arthur, how can you call it nothing—an offence for which you
- would think yourself justified in blowing another man’s brains out? Is
- it nothing to trifle with your friend’s feelings and mine—to endeavour to
- steal a woman’s affections from her husband—what he values more than his
- gold, and therefore what it is more dishonest to take? Are the marriage
- vows a jest; and is it nothing to make it your sport to break them, and
- to tempt another to do the same? Can I love a man that does such things,
- and coolly maintains it is nothing?’
- ‘You are breaking your marriage vows yourself,’ said he, indignantly
- rising and pacing to and fro. ‘You promised to honour and obey me, and
- now you attempt to hector over me, and threaten and accuse me, and call
- me worse than a highwayman. If it were not for your situation, Helen, I
- would not submit to it so tamely. I won’t be dictated to by a woman,
- though she be my wife.’
- ‘What will you do then? Will you go on till I hate you, and then accuse
- me of breaking my vows?’
- He was silent a moment, and then replied: ‘You never will hate me.’
- Returning and resuming his former position at my feet, he repeated more
- vehemently—‘You cannot hate me as long as I love you.’
- ‘But how can I believe that you love me, if you continue to act in this
- way? Just imagine yourself in my place: would you think I loved you, if
- I did so? Would you believe my protestations, and honour and trust me
- under such circumstances?’
- ‘The cases are different,’ he replied. ‘It is a woman’s nature to be
- constant—to love one and one only, blindly, tenderly, and for ever—bless
- them, dear creatures! and you above them all; but you must have some
- commiseration for us, Helen; you must give us a little more licence, for,
- as Shakespeare has it—
- However we do praise ourselves,
- Our fancies are more giddy and unfirm,
- More longing, wavering, sooner lost and won
- Than women’s are.’
- ‘Do you mean by that, that your fancies are lost to me, and won by Lady
- Lowborough?’
- ‘No! heaven is my witness that I think her mere dust and ashes in
- comparison with you, and shall continue to think so, unless you drive me
- from you by too much severity. She is a daughter of earth; you are an
- angel of heaven; only be not too austere in your divinity, and remember
- that I am a poor, fallible mortal. Come now, Helen; won’t you forgive
- me?’ he said, gently taking my hand, and looking up with an innocent
- smile.
- ‘If I do, you will repeat the offence.’
- ‘I swear by—’
- ‘Don’t swear; I’ll believe your word as well as your oath. I wish I
- could have confidence in either.’
- ‘Try me, then, Helen: only trust and pardon me this once, and you shall
- see! Come, I am in hell’s torments till you speak the word.’
- I did not speak it, but I put my hand on his shoulder and kissed his
- forehead, and then burst into tears. He embraced me tenderly; and we
- have been good friends ever since. He has been decently temperate at
- table, and well-conducted towards Lady Lowborough. The first day he held
- himself aloof from her, as far as he could without any flagrant breach of
- hospitality: since that he has been friendly and civil, but nothing
- more—in my presence, at least, nor, I think, at any other time; for she
- seems haughty and displeased, and Lord Lowborough is manifestly more
- cheerful, and more cordial towards his host than before. But I shall be
- glad when they are gone, for I have so little love for Annabella that it
- is quite a task to be civil to her, and as she is the only woman here
- besides myself, we are necessarily thrown so much together. Next time
- Mrs. Hargrave calls I shall hail her advent as quite a relief. I have a
- good mind to ask Arthur’s leave to invite the old lady to stay with us
- till our guests depart. I think I will. She will take it as a kind
- attention, and, though I have little relish for her society, she will be
- truly welcome as a third to stand between Lady Lowborough and me.
- The first time the latter and I were alone together, after that unhappy
- evening, was an hour or two after breakfast on the following day, when
- the gentlemen were gone out, after the usual time spent in the writing of
- letters, the reading of newspapers, and desultory conversation. We sat
- silent for two or three minutes. She was busy with her work, and I was
- running over the columns of a paper from which I had extracted all the
- pith some twenty minutes before. It was a moment of painful
- embarrassment to me, and I thought it must be infinitely more so to her;
- but it seems I was mistaken. She was the first to speak; and, smiling
- with the coolest assurance, she began,—
- ‘Your husband was merry last night, Helen: is he often so?’
- My blood boiled in my face; but it was better she should seem to
- attribute his conduct to this than to anything else.
- ‘No,’ replied I, ‘and never will be so again, I trust.’
- ‘You gave him a curtain lecture, did you?’
- ‘No! but I told him I disliked such conduct, and he promised me not to
- repeat it.’
- ‘I thought he looked rather subdued this morning,’ she continued; ‘and
- you, Helen? you’ve been weeping, I see—that’s our grand resource, you
- know. But doesn’t it make your eyes smart? and do you always find it to
- answer?’
- ‘I never cry for effect; nor can I conceive how any one can.’
- ‘Well, I don’t know: I never had occasion to try it; but I think if
- Lowborough were to commit such improprieties, I’d make him cry. I don’t
- wonder at your being angry, for I’m sure I’d give my husband a lesson he
- would not soon forget for a lighter offence than that. But then he never
- will do anything of the kind; for I keep him in too good order for that.’
- ‘Are you sure you don’t arrogate too much of the credit to yourself.
- Lord Lowborough was quite as remarkable for his abstemiousness for some
- time before you married him, as he is now, I have heard.’
- ‘Oh, about the wine you mean—yes, he’s safe enough for that. And as to
- looking askance to another woman, he’s safe enough for that too, while I
- live, for he worships the very ground I tread on.’
- ‘Indeed! and are you sure you deserve it?’
- ‘Why, as to that, I can’t say: you know we’re all fallible creatures,
- Helen; we none of us deserve to be worshipped. But are you sure your
- darling Huntingdon deserves all the love you give to him?’
- I knew not what to answer to this. I was burning with anger; but I
- suppressed all outward manifestations of it, and only bit my lip and
- pretended to arrange my work.
- ‘At any rate,’ resumed she, pursuing her advantage, ‘you can console
- yourself with the assurance that you are worthy of all the love he gives
- to you.’
- ‘You flatter me,’ said I; ‘but, at least, I can try to be worthy of it.’
- And then I turned the conversation.
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- December 25th.—Last Christmas I was a bride, with a heart overflowing
- with present bliss, and full of ardent hopes for the future, though not
- unmingled with foreboding fears. Now I am a wife: my bliss is sobered,
- but not destroyed; my hopes diminished, but not departed; my fears
- increased, but not yet thoroughly confirmed; and, thank heaven, I am a
- mother too. God has sent me a soul to educate for heaven, and give me a
- new and calmer bliss, and stronger hopes to comfort me.
- Dec. 25th, 1823.—Another year is gone. My little Arthur lives and
- thrives. He is healthy, but not robust, full of gentle playfulness and
- vivacity, already affectionate, and susceptible of passions and emotions
- it will be long ere he can find words to express. He has won his
- father’s heart at last; and now my constant terror is, lest he should be
- ruined by that father’s thoughtless indulgence. But I must beware of my
- own weakness too, for I never knew till now how strong are a parent’s
- temptations to spoil an only child.
- I have need of consolation in my son, for (to this silent paper I may
- confess it) I have but little in my husband. I love him still; and he
- loves me, in his own way—but oh, how different from the love I could have
- given, and once had hoped to receive! How little real sympathy there
- exists between us; how many of my thoughts and feelings are gloomily
- cloistered within my own mind; how much of my higher and better self is
- indeed unmarried—doomed either to harden and sour in the sunless shade of
- solitude, or to quite degenerate and fall away for lack of nutriment in
- this unwholesome soil! But, I repeat, I have no right to complain; only
- let me state the truth—some of the truth, at least,—and see hereafter if
- any darker truths will blot these pages. We have now been full two years
- united; the ‘romance’ of our attachment must be worn away. Surely I have
- now got down to the lowest gradation in Arthur’s affection, and
- discovered all the evils of his nature: if there be any further change,
- it must be for the better, as we become still more accustomed to each
- other; surely we shall find no lower depth than this. And, if so, I can
- bear it well—as well, at least, as I have borne it hitherto.
- Arthur is not what is commonly called a bad man: he has many good
- qualities; but he is a man without self-restraint or lofty aspirations, a
- lover of pleasure, given up to animal enjoyments: he is not a bad
- husband, but his notions of matrimonial duties and comforts are not my
- notions. Judging from appearances, his idea of a wife is a thing to love
- one devotedly, and to stay at home to wait upon her husband, and amuse
- him and minister to his comfort in every possible way, while he chooses
- to stay with her; and, when he is absent, to attend to his interests,
- domestic or otherwise, and patiently wait his return, no matter how he
- may be occupied in the meantime.
- Early in spring he announced his intention of going to London: his
- affairs there demanded his attendance, he said, and he could refuse it no
- longer. He expressed his regret at having to leave me, but hoped I would
- amuse myself with the baby till he returned.
- ‘But why leave me?’ I said. ‘I can go with you: I can be ready at any
- time.’
- ‘You would not take that child to town?’
- ‘Yes; why not?’
- The thing was absurd: the air of the town would be certain to disagree
- with him, and with me as a nurse; the late hours and London habits would
- not suit me under such circumstances; and altogether he assured me that
- it would be excessively troublesome, injurious, and unsafe. I over-ruled
- his objections as well as I could, for I trembled at the thoughts of his
- going alone, and would sacrifice almost anything for myself, much even
- for my child, to prevent it; but at length he told me, plainly, and
- somewhat testily, that he could not do with me: he was worn out with the
- baby’s restless nights, and must have some repose. I proposed separate
- apartments; but it would not do.
- ‘The truth is, Arthur,’ I said at last, ‘you are weary of my company, and
- determined not to have me with you. You might as well have said so at
- once.’
- He denied it; but I immediately left the room, and flew to the nursery,
- to hide my feelings, if I could not soothe them, there.
- I was too much hurt to express any further dissatisfaction with his
- plans, or at all to refer to the subject again, except for the necessary
- arrangements concerning his departure and the conduct of affairs during
- his absence, till the day before he went, when I earnestly exhorted him
- to take care of himself and keep out of the way of temptation. He
- laughed at my anxiety, but assured me there was no cause for it, and
- promised to attend to my advice.
- ‘I suppose it is no use asking you to fix a day for your return?’ said I.
- ‘Why, no; I hardly can, under the circumstances; but be assured, love, I
- shall not be long away.’
- ‘I don’t wish to keep you a prisoner at home,’ I replied; ‘I should not
- grumble at your staying whole months away—if you can be happy so long
- without me—provided I knew you were safe; but I don’t like the idea of
- your being there among your friends, as you call them.’
- ‘Pooh, pooh, you silly girl! Do you think I can’t take care of myself?’
- ‘You didn’t last time. But THIS time, Arthur,’ I added, earnestly, ‘show
- me that you can, and teach me that I need not fear to trust you!’
- He promised fair, but in such a manner as we seek to soothe a child. And
- did he keep his promise? No; and henceforth I can never trust his word.
- Bitter, bitter confession! Tears blind me while I write. It was early
- in March that he went, and he did not return till July. This time he did
- not trouble himself to make excuses as before, and his letters were less
- frequent, and shorter and less affectionate, especially after the first
- few weeks: they came slower and slower, and more terse and careless every
- time. But still, when I omitted writing, he complained of my neglect.
- When I wrote sternly and coldly, as I confess I frequently did at the
- last, he blamed my harshness, and said it was enough to scare him from
- his home: when I tried mild persuasion, he was a little more gentle in
- his replies, and promised to return; but I had learnt, at last, to
- disregard his promises.
- CHAPTER XXIX
- Those were four miserable months, alternating between intense anxiety,
- despair, and indignation, pity for him and pity for myself. And yet,
- through all, I was not wholly comfortless: I had my darling, sinless,
- inoffensive little one to console me; but even this consolation was
- embittered by the constantly-recurring thought, ‘How shall I teach him
- hereafter to respect his father, and yet to avoid his example?’
- But I remembered that I had brought all these afflictions, in a manner
- wilfully, upon myself; and I determined to bear them without a murmur.
- At the same time I resolved not to give myself up to misery for the
- transgressions of another, and endeavoured to divert myself as much as I
- could; and besides the companionship of my child, and my dear, faithful
- Rachel, who evidently guessed my sorrows and felt for them, though she
- was too discreet to allude to them, I had my books and pencil, my
- domestic affairs, and the welfare and comfort of Arthur’s poor tenants
- and labourers to attend to: and I sometimes sought and obtained amusement
- in the company of my young friend Esther Hargrave: occasionally I rode
- over to see her, and once or twice I had her to spend the day with me at
- the Manor. Mrs. Hargrave did not visit London that season: having no
- daughter to marry, she thought it as well to stay at home and economise;
- and, for a wonder, Walter came down to join her in the beginning of June,
- and stayed till near the close of August.
- The first time I saw him was on a sweet, warm evening, when I was
- sauntering in the park with little Arthur and Rachel, who is head-nurse
- and lady’s-maid in one—for, with my secluded life and tolerably active
- habits, I require but little attendance, and as she had nursed me and
- coveted to nurse my child, and was moreover so very trustworthy, I
- preferred committing the important charge to her, with a young
- nursery-maid under her directions, to engaging any one else: besides, it
- saves money; and since I have made acquaintance with Arthur’s affairs, I
- have learnt to regard that as no trifling recommendation; for, by my own
- desire, nearly the whole of the income of my fortune is devoted, for
- years to come, to the paying off of his debts, and the money he contrives
- to squander away in London is incomprehensible. But to return to Mr.
- Hargrave. I was standing with Rachel beside the water, amusing the
- laughing baby in her arms with a twig of willow laden with golden
- catkins, when, greatly to my surprise, he entered the park, mounted on
- his costly black hunter, and crossed over the grass to meet me. He
- saluted me with a very fine compliment, delicately worded, and modestly
- delivered withal, which he had doubtless concocted as he rode along. He
- told me he had brought a message from his mother, who, as he was riding
- that way, had desired him to call at the Manor and beg the pleasure of my
- company to a friendly family dinner to-morrow.
- ‘There is no one to meet but ourselves,’ said he; ‘but Esther is very
- anxious to see you; and my mother fears you will feel solitary in this
- great house so much alone, and wishes she could persuade you to give her
- the pleasure of your company more frequently, and make yourself at home
- in our more humble dwelling, till Mr. Huntingdon’s return shall render
- this a little more conducive to your comfort.’
- ‘She is very kind,’ I answered, ‘but I am not alone, you see;—and those
- whose time is fully occupied seldom complain of solitude.’
- ‘Will you not come to-morrow, then? She will be sadly disappointed if
- you refuse.’
- I did not relish being thus compassionated for my loneliness; but,
- however, I promised to come.
- ‘What a sweet evening this is!’ observed he, looking round upon the sunny
- park, with its imposing swell and slope, its placid water, and majestic
- clumps of trees. ‘And what a paradise you live in!’
- ‘It is a lovely evening,’ answered I; and I sighed to think how little I
- had felt its loveliness, and how little of a paradise sweet Grassdale was
- to me—how still less to the voluntary exile from its scenes. Whether Mr.
- Hargrave divined my thoughts, I cannot tell, but, with a half-hesitating,
- sympathising seriousness of tone and manner, he asked if I had lately
- heard from Mr. Huntingdon.
- ‘Not lately,’ I replied.
- ‘I thought not,’ he muttered, as if to himself, looking thoughtfully on
- the ground.
- ‘Are you not lately returned from London?’ I asked.
- ‘Only yesterday.’
- ‘And did you see him there?’
- ‘Yes—I saw him.’
- ‘Was he well?’
- ‘Yes—that is,’ said he, with increasing hesitation and an appearance of
- suppressed indignation, ‘he was as well as—as he deserved to be, but
- under circumstances I should have deemed incredible for a man so favoured
- as he is.’ He here looked up and pointed the sentence with a serious bow
- to me. I suppose my face was crimson.
- ‘Pardon me, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ he continued, ‘but I cannot suppress my
- indignation when I behold such infatuated blindness and perversion of
- taste;—but, perhaps, you are not aware—‘ He paused.
- ‘I am aware of nothing, sir—except that he delays his coming longer than
- I expected; and if, at present, he prefers the society of his friends to
- that of his wife, and the dissipations of the town to the quiet of
- country life, I suppose I have those friends to thank for it. Their
- tastes and occupations are similar to his, and I don’t see why his
- conduct should awaken either their indignation or surprise.’
- ‘You wrong me cruelly,’ answered he. ‘I have shared but little of Mr.
- Huntingdon’s society for the last few weeks; and as for his tastes and
- occupations, they are quite beyond me—lonely wanderer as I am. Where I
- have but sipped and tasted, he drains the cup to the dregs; and if ever
- for a moment I have sought to drown the voice of reflection in madness
- and folly, or if I have wasted too much of my time and talents among
- reckless and dissipated companions, God knows I would gladly renounce
- them entirely and for ever, if I had but half the blessings that man so
- thanklessly casts behind his back—but half the inducements to virtue and
- domestic, orderly habits that he despises—but such a home, and such a
- partner to share it! It is infamous!’ he muttered, between his teeth.
- ‘And don’t think, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ he added aloud, ‘that I could be
- guilty of inciting him to persevere in his present pursuits: on the
- contrary, I have remonstrated with him again and again; I have frequently
- expressed my surprise at his conduct, and reminded him of his duties and
- his privileges—but to no purpose; he only—’
- ‘Enough, Mr. Hargrave; you ought to be aware that whatever my husband’s
- faults may be, it can only aggravate the evil for me to hear them from a
- stranger’s lips.’
- ‘Am I then a stranger?’ said he in a sorrowful tone. ‘I am your nearest
- neighbour, your son’s godfather, and your husband’s friend; may I not be
- yours also?’
- ‘Intimate acquaintance must precede real friendship; I know but little of
- you, Mr. Hargrave, except from report.’
- ‘Have you then forgotten the six or seven weeks I spent under your roof
- last autumn? I have not forgotten them. And I know enough of you, Mrs.
- Huntingdon, to think that your husband is the most enviable man in the
- world, and I should be the next if you would deem me worthy of your
- friendship.’
- ‘If you knew more of me, you would not think it, or if you did you would
- not say it, and expect me to be flattered by the compliment.’
- I stepped backward as I spoke. He saw that I wished the conversation to
- end; and immediately taking the hint, he gravely bowed, wished me
- good-evening, and turned his horse towards the road. He appeared grieved
- and hurt at my unkind reception of his sympathising overtures. I was not
- sure that I had done right in speaking so harshly to him; but, at the
- time, I had felt irritated—almost insulted by his conduct; it seemed as
- if he was presuming upon the absence and neglect of my husband, and
- insinuating even more than the truth against him.
- Rachel had moved on, during our conversation, to some yards’ distance.
- He rode up to her, and asked to see the child. He took it carefully into
- his arms, looked upon it with an almost paternal smile, and I heard him
- say, as I approached,—
- ‘And this, too, he has forsaken!’
- He then tenderly kissed it, and restored it to the gratified nurse.
- ‘Are you fond of children, Mr. Hargrave?’ said I, a little softened
- towards him.
- ‘Not in general,’ he replied, ‘but that is such a sweet child, and so
- like its mother,’ he added in a lower tone.
- ‘You are mistaken there; it is its father it resembles.’
- ‘Am I not right, nurse?’ said he, appealing to Rachel.
- ‘I think, sir, there’s a bit of both,’ she replied.
- He departed; and Rachel pronounced him a very nice gentleman. I had
- still my doubts on the subject.
- In the course of the following six weeks I met him several times, but
- always, save once, in company with his mother, or his sister, or both.
- When I called on them, he always happened to be at home, and, when they
- called on me, it was always he that drove them over in the phaeton. His
- mother, evidently, was quite delighted with his dutiful attentions and
- newly-acquired domestic habits.
- The time that I met him alone was on a bright, but not oppressively hot
- day, in the beginning of July: I had taken little Arthur into the wood
- that skirts the park, and there seated him on the moss-cushioned roots of
- an old oak; and, having gathered a handful of bluebells and wild-roses, I
- was kneeling before him, and presenting them, one by one, to the grasp of
- his tiny fingers; enjoying the heavenly beauty of the flowers, through
- the medium of his smiling eyes: forgetting, for the moment, all my cares,
- laughing at his gleeful laughter, and delighting myself with his
- delight,—when a shadow suddenly eclipsed the little space of sunshine on
- the grass before us; and looking up, I beheld Walter Hargrave standing
- and gazing upon us.
- ‘Excuse me, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he, ‘but I was spell-bound; I had
- neither the power to come forward and interrupt you, nor to withdraw from
- the contemplation of such a scene. How vigorous my little godson grows!
- and how merry he is this morning!’ He approached the child, and stooped
- to take his hand; but, on seeing that his caresses were likely to produce
- tears and lamentations, instead of a reciprocation of friendly
- demonstrations, he prudently drew back.
- ‘What a pleasure and comfort that little creature must be to you, Mrs.
- Huntingdon!’ he observed, with a touch of sadness in his intonation, as
- he admiringly contemplated the infant.
- ‘It is,’ replied I; and then I asked after his mother and sister.
- He politely answered my inquiries, and then returned again to the subject
- I wished to avoid; though with a degree of timidity that witnessed his
- fear to offend.
- ‘You have not heard from Huntingdon lately?’ he said.
- ‘Not this week,’ I replied. Not these three weeks, I might have said.
- ‘I had a letter from him this morning. I wish it were such a one as I
- could show to his lady.’ He half drew from his waistcoat-pocket a letter
- with Arthur’s still beloved hand on the address, scowled at it, and put
- it back again, adding—‘But he tells me he is about to return next week.’
- ‘He tells me so every time he writes.’
- ‘Indeed! well, it is like him. But to me he always avowed it his
- intention to stay till the present month.’
- It struck me like a blow, this proof of premeditated transgression and
- systematic disregard of truth.
- ‘It is only of a piece with the rest of his conduct,’ observed Mr.
- Hargrave, thoughtfully regarding me, and reading, I suppose, my feelings
- in my face.
- ‘Then he is really coming next week?’ said I, after a pause.
- ‘You may rely upon it, if the assurance can give you any pleasure. And
- is it possible, Mrs. Huntingdon, that you can rejoice at his return?’ he
- exclaimed, attentively perusing my features again.
- ‘Of course, Mr. Hargrave; is he not my husband?’
- ‘Oh, Huntingdon; you know not what you slight!’ he passionately murmured.
- I took up my baby, and, wishing him good-morning, departed, to indulge my
- thoughts unscrutinized, within the sanctum of my home.
- And was I glad? Yes, delighted; though I was angered by Arthur’s
- conduct, and though I felt that he had wronged me, and was determined he
- should feel it too.
- CHAPTER XXX
- On the following morning I received a few lines from him myself,
- confirming Hargrave’s intimations respecting his approaching return. And
- he did come next week, but in a condition of body and mind even worse
- than before. I did not, however, intend to pass over his derelictions
- this time without a remark; I found it would not do. But the first day
- he was weary with his journey, and I was glad to get him back: I would
- not upbraid him then; I would wait till to-morrow. Next morning he was
- weary still: I would wait a little longer. But at dinner, when, after
- breakfasting at twelve o’clock on a bottle of soda-water and a cup of
- strong coffee, and lunching at two on another bottle of soda-water
- mingled with brandy, he was finding fault with everything on the table,
- and declaring we must change our cook, I thought the time was come.
- ‘It is the same cook as we had before you went, Arthur,’ said I. ‘You
- were generally pretty well satisfied with her then.’
- ‘You must have been letting her get into slovenly habits, then, while I
- was away. It is enough to poison one, eating such a disgusting mess!’
- And he pettishly pushed away his plate, and leant back despairingly in
- his chair.
- ‘I think it is you that are changed, not she,’ said I, but with the
- utmost gentleness, for I did not wish to irritate him.
- ‘It may be so,’ he replied carelessly, as he seized a tumbler of wine and
- water, adding, when he had tossed it off, ‘for I have an infernal fire in
- my veins, that all the waters of the ocean cannot quench!’
- ‘What kindled it?’ I was about to ask, but at that moment the butler
- entered and began to take away the things.
- ‘Be quick, Benson; do have done with that infernal clatter!’ cried his
- master. ‘And don’t bring the cheese, unless you want to make me sick
- outright!’
- Benson, in some surprise, removed the cheese, and did his best to effect
- a quiet and speedy clearance of the rest; but, unfortunately, there was a
- rumple in the carpet, caused by the hasty pushing back of his master’s
- chair, at which he tripped and stumbled, causing a rather alarming
- concussion with the trayful of crockery in his hands, but no positive
- damage, save the fall and breaking of a sauce tureen; but, to my
- unspeakable shame and dismay, Arthur turned furiously around upon him,
- and swore at him with savage coarseness. The poor man turned pale, and
- visibly trembled as he stooped to pick up the fragments.
- ‘He couldn’t help it, Arthur,’ said I; ‘the carpet caught his foot, and
- there’s no great harm done. Never mind the pieces now, Benson; you can
- clear them away afterwards.’
- Glad to be released, Benson expeditiously set out the dessert and
- withdrew.
- ‘What could you mean, Helen, by taking the servant’s part against me,’
- said Arthur, as soon as the door was closed, ‘when you knew I was
- distracted?’
- ‘I did not know you were distracted, Arthur: and the poor man was quite
- frightened and hurt at your sudden explosion.’
- ‘Poor man, indeed! and do you think I could stop to consider the feelings
- of an insensate brute like that, when my own nerves were racked and torn
- to pieces by his confounded blunders?’
- ‘I never heard you complain of your nerves before.’
- ‘And why shouldn’t I have nerves as well as you?’
- ‘Oh, I don’t dispute your claim to their possession, but I never complain
- of mine.’
- ‘No, how should you, when you never do anything to try them?’
- ‘Then why do you try yours, Arthur?’
- ‘Do you think I have nothing to do but to stay at home and take care of
- myself like a woman?’
- ‘Is it impossible, then, to take care of yourself like a man when you go
- abroad? You told me that you could, and would too; and you promised—’
- ‘Come, come, Helen, don’t begin with that nonsense now; I can’t bear it.’
- ‘Can’t bear what?—to be reminded of the promises you have broken?’
- ‘Helen, you are cruel. If you knew how my heart throbbed, and how every
- nerve thrilled through me while you spoke, you would spare me. You can
- pity a dolt of a servant for breaking a dish; but you have no compassion
- for me when my head is split in two and all on fire with this consuming
- fever.’
- He leant his head on his hand, and sighed. I went to him and put my hand
- on his forehead. It was burning indeed.
- ‘Then come with me into the drawing-room, Arthur; and don’t take any more
- wine: you have taken several glasses since dinner, and eaten next to
- nothing all the day. How can that make you better?’
- With some coaxing and persuasion, I got him to leave the table. When the
- baby was brought I tried to amuse him with that; but poor little Arthur
- was cutting his teeth, and his father could not bear his complaints:
- sentence of immediate banishment was passed upon him on the first
- indication of fretfulness; and because, in the course of the evening, I
- went to share his exile for a little while, I was reproached, on my
- return, for preferring my child to my husband. I found the latter
- reclining on the sofa just as I had left him.
- ‘Well!’ exclaimed the injured man, in a tone of pseudo-resignation. ‘I
- thought I wouldn’t send for you; I thought I’d just see how long it would
- please you to leave me alone.’
- ‘I have not been very long, have I, Arthur? I have not been an hour, I’m
- sure.’
- ‘Oh, of course, an hour is nothing to you, so pleasantly employed; but to
- me—’
- ‘It has not been pleasantly employed,’ interrupted I. ‘I have been
- nursing our poor little baby, who is very far from well, and I could not
- leave him till I got him to sleep.’
- ‘Oh, to be sure, you’re overflowing with kindness and pity for everything
- but me.’
- ‘And why should I pity you? What is the matter with you?’
- ‘Well! that passes everything! After all the wear and tear that I’ve
- had, when I come home sick and weary, longing for comfort, and expecting
- to find attention and kindness, at least from my wife, she calmly asks
- what is the matter with me!’
- ‘There is nothing the matter with you,’ returned I, ‘except what you have
- wilfully brought upon yourself, against my earnest exhortation and
- entreaty.’
- ‘Now, Helen,’ said he emphatically, half rising from his recumbent
- posture, ‘if you bother me with another word, I’ll ring the bell and
- order six bottles of wine, and, by heaven, I’ll drink them dry before I
- stir from this place!’
- I said no more, but sat down before the table and drew a book towards me.
- ‘Do let me have quietness at least!’ continued he, ‘if you deny me every
- other comfort;’ and sinking back into his former position, with an
- impatient expiration between a sigh and a groan, he languidly closed his
- eyes, as if to sleep.
- What the book was that lay open on the table before me, I cannot tell,
- for I never looked at it. With an elbow on each side of it, and my hands
- clasped before my eyes, I delivered myself up to silent weeping. But
- Arthur was not asleep: at the first slight sob, he raised his head and
- looked round, impatiently exclaiming, ‘What are you crying for, Helen?
- What the deuce is the matter now?’
- ‘I’m crying for you, Arthur,’ I replied, speedily drying my tears; and
- starting up, I threw myself on my knees before him, and clasping his
- nerveless hand between my own, continued: ‘Don’t you know that you are a
- part of myself? And do you think you can injure and degrade yourself,
- and I not feel it?’
- ‘Degrade myself, Helen?’
- ‘Yes, degrade! What have you been doing all this time?’
- ‘You’d better not ask,’ said he, with a faint smile.
- ‘And you had better not tell; but you cannot deny that you have degraded
- yourself miserably. You have shamefully wronged yourself, body and soul,
- and me too; and I can’t endure it quietly, and I won’t!’
- ‘Well, don’t squeeze my hand so frantically, and don’t agitate me so, for
- heaven’s sake! Oh, Hattersley! you were right: this woman will be the
- death of me, with her keen feelings and her interesting force of
- character. There, there, do spare me a little.’
- ‘Arthur, you must repent!’ cried I, in a frenzy of desperation, throwing
- my arms around him and burying my face in his bosom. ‘You shall say you
- are sorry for what you have done!’
- ‘Well, well, I am.’
- ‘You are not! you’ll do it again.’
- ‘I shall never live to do it again if you treat me so savagely,’ replied
- he, pushing me from him. ‘You’ve nearly squeezed the breath out of my
- body.’ He pressed his hand to his heart, and looked really agitated and
- ill.
- ‘Now get me a glass of wine,’ said he, ‘to remedy what you’ve done, you
- she tiger! I’m almost ready to faint.’
- I flew to get the required remedy. It seemed to revive him considerably.
- ‘What a shame it is,’ said I, as I took the empty glass from his hand,
- ‘for a strong young man like you to reduce yourself to such a state!’
- ‘If you knew all, my girl, you’d say rather, “What a wonder it is you can
- bear it so well as you do!” I’ve lived more in these four months, Helen,
- than you have in the whole course of your existence, or will to the end
- of your days, if they numbered a hundred years; so I must expect to pay
- for it in some shape.’
- ‘You will have to pay a higher price than you anticipate, if you don’t
- take care: there will be the total loss of your own health, and of my
- affection too, if that is of any value to you.’
- ‘What! you’re at that game of threatening me with the loss of your
- affection again, are you? I think it couldn’t have been very genuine
- stuff to begin with, if it’s so easily demolished. If you don’t mind, my
- pretty tyrant, you’ll make me regret my choice in good earnest, and envy
- my friend Hattersley his meek little wife: she’s quite a pattern to her
- sex, Helen. He had her with him in London all the season, and she was no
- trouble at all. He might amuse himself just as he pleased, in regular
- bachelor style, and she never complained of neglect; he might come home
- at any hour of the night or morning, or not come home at all; be sullen,
- sober, or glorious drunk; and play the fool or the madman to his own
- heart’s desire, without any fear or botheration. She never gives him a
- word of reproach or complaint, do what he will. He says there’s not such
- a jewel in all England, and swears he wouldn’t take a kingdom for her.’
- ‘But he makes her life a curse to her.’
- ‘Not he! She has no will but his, and is always contented and happy as
- long as he is enjoying himself.’
- ‘In that case she is as great a fool as he is; but it is not so. I have
- several letters from her, expressing the greatest anxiety about his
- proceedings, and complaining that you incite him to commit those
- extravagances—one especially, in which she implores me to use my
- influence with you to get you away from London, and affirms that her
- husband never did such things before you came, and would certainly
- discontinue them as soon as you departed and left him to the guidance of
- his own good sense.’
- ‘The detestable little traitor! Give me the letter, and he shall see it
- as sure as I’m a living man.’
- ‘No, he shall not see it without her consent; but if he did, there is
- nothing there to anger him, nor in any of the others. She never speaks a
- word against him: it is only anxiety for him that she expresses. She
- only alludes to his conduct in the most delicate terms, and makes every
- excuse for him that she can possibly think of; and as for her own misery,
- I rather feel it than see it expressed in her letters.’
- ‘But she abuses me; and no doubt you helped her.’
- ‘No; I told her she over-rated my influence with you, that I would gladly
- draw you away from the temptations of the town if I could, but had little
- hope of success, and that I thought she was wrong in supposing that you
- enticed Mr. Hattersley or any one else into error. I had myself held the
- contrary opinion at one time, but I now believed that you mutually
- corrupted each other; and, perhaps, if she used a little gentle but
- serious remonstrance with her husband, it might be of some service; as,
- though he was more rough-hewn than mine, I believed he was of a less
- impenetrable material.’
- ‘And so that is the way you go on—heartening each other up to mutiny, and
- abusing each other’s partners, and throwing out implications against your
- own, to the mutual gratification of both!’
- ‘According to your own account,’ said I, ‘my evil counsel has had but
- little effect upon her. And as to abuse and aspersions, we are both of
- us far too deeply ashamed of the errors and vices of our other halves, to
- make them the common subject of our correspondence. Friends as we are,
- we would willingly keep your failings to ourselves—even from ourselves if
- we could, unless by knowing them we could deliver you from them.’
- ‘Well, well! don’t worry me about them: you’ll never effect any good by
- that. Have patience with me, and bear with my languor and crossness a
- little while, till I get this cursed low fever out of my veins, and then
- you’ll find me cheerful and kind as ever. Why can’t you be gentle and
- good, as you were last time?—I’m sure I was very grateful for it.’
- ‘And what good did your gratitude do? I deluded myself with the idea
- that you were ashamed of your transgressions, and hoped you would never
- repeat them again; but now you have left me nothing to hope!’
- ‘My case is quite desperate, is it? A very blessed consideration, if it
- will only secure me from the pain and worry of my dear anxious wife’s
- efforts to convert me, and her from the toil and trouble of such
- exertions, and her sweet face and silver accents from the ruinous effects
- of the same. A burst of passion is a fine rousing thing upon occasion,
- Helen, and a flood of tears is marvellously affecting, but, when indulged
- too often, they are both deuced plaguy things for spoiling one’s beauty
- and tiring out one’s friends.’
- Thenceforth I restrained my tears and passions as much as I could. I
- spared him my exhortations and fruitless efforts at conversion too, for I
- saw it was all in vain: God might awaken that heart, supine and stupefied
- with self-indulgence, and remove the film of sensual darkness from his
- eyes, but I could not. His injustice and ill-humour towards his
- inferiors, who could not defend themselves, I still resented and
- withstood; but when I alone was their object, as was frequently the case,
- I endured it with calm forbearance, except at times, when my temper, worn
- out by repeated annoyances, or stung to distraction by some new instance
- of irrationality, gave way in spite of myself, and exposed me to the
- imputations of fierceness, cruelty, and impatience. I attended carefully
- to his wants and amusements, but not, I own, with the same devoted
- fondness as before, because I could not feel it; besides, I had now
- another claimant on my time and care—my ailing infant, for whose sake I
- frequently braved and suffered the reproaches and complaints of his
- unreasonably exacting father.
- But Arthur is not naturally a peevish or irritable man; so far from it,
- that there was something almost ludicrous in the incongruity of this
- adventitious fretfulness and nervous irritability, rather calculated to
- excite laughter than anger, if it were not for the intensely painful
- considerations attendant upon those symptoms of a disordered frame, and
- his temper gradually improved as his bodily health was restored, which
- was much sooner than would have been the case but for my strenuous
- exertions; for there was still one thing about him that I did not give up
- in despair, and one effort for his preservation that I would not remit.
- His appetite for the stimulus of wine had increased upon him, as I had
- too well foreseen. It was now something more to him than an accessory to
- social enjoyment: it was an important source of enjoyment in itself. In
- this time of weakness and depression he would have made it his medicine
- and support, his comforter, his recreation, and his friend, and thereby
- sunk deeper and deeper, and bound himself down for ever in the bathos
- whereinto he had fallen. But I determined this should never be, as long
- as I had any influence left; and though I could not prevent him from
- taking more than was good for him, still, by incessant perseverance, by
- kindness, and firmness, and vigilance, by coaxing, and daring, and
- determination, I succeeded in preserving him from absolute bondage to
- that detestable propensity, so insidious in its advances, so inexorable
- in its tyranny, so disastrous in its effects.
- And here I must not forget that I am not a little indebted to his friend
- Mr. Hargrave. About that time he frequently called at Grassdale, and
- often dined with us, on which occasions I fear Arthur would willingly
- have cast prudence and decorum to the winds, and made ‘a night of it,’ as
- often as his friend would have consented to join him in that exalted
- pastime; and if the latter had chosen to comply, he might, in a night or
- two, have ruined the labour of weeks, and overthrown with a touch the
- frail bulwark it had cost me such trouble and toil to construct. I was
- so fearful of this at first, that I humbled myself to intimate to him, in
- private, my apprehensions of Arthur’s proneness to these excesses, and to
- express a hope that he would not encourage it. He was pleased with this
- mark of confidence, and certainly did not betray it. On that and every
- subsequent occasion his presence served rather as a check upon his host,
- than an incitement to further acts of intemperance; and he always
- succeeded in bringing him from the dining-room in good time, and in
- tolerably good condition; for if Arthur disregarded such intimations as
- ‘Well, I must not detain you from your lady,’ or ‘We must not forget that
- Mrs. Huntingdon is alone,’ he would insist upon leaving the table
- himself, to join me, and his host, however unwillingly, was obliged to
- follow.
- Hence I learned to welcome Mr. Hargrave as a real friend to the family, a
- harmless companion for Arthur, to cheer his spirits and preserve him from
- the tedium of absolute idleness and a total isolation from all society
- but mine, and a useful ally to me. I could not but feel grateful to him
- under such circumstances; and I did not scruple to acknowledge my
- obligation on the first convenient opportunity; yet, as I did so, my
- heart whispered all was not right, and brought a glow to my face, which
- he heightened by his steady, serious gaze, while, by his manner of
- receiving those acknowledgments, he more than doubled my misgivings. His
- high delight at being able to serve me was chastened by sympathy for me
- and commiseration for himself—about, I know not what, for I would not
- stay to inquire, or suffer him to unburden his sorrows to me. His sighs
- and intimations of suppressed affliction seemed to come from a full
- heart; but either he must contrive to retain them within it, or breathe
- them forth in other ears than mine: there was enough of confidence
- between us already. It seemed wrong that there should exist a secret
- understanding between my husband’s friend and me, unknown to him, of
- which he was the object. But my after-thought was, ‘If it is wrong,
- surely Arthur’s is the fault, not mine.’
- And indeed I know not whether, at the time, it was not for him rather
- than myself that I blushed; for, since he and I are one, I so identify
- myself with him, that I feel his degradation, his failings, and
- transgressions as my own: I blush for him, I fear for him; I repent for
- him, weep, pray, and feel for him as for myself; but I cannot act for
- him; and hence I must be, and I am, debased, contaminated by the union,
- both in my own eyes and in the actual truth. I am so determined to love
- him, so intensely anxious to excuse his errors, that I am continually
- dwelling upon them, and labouring to extenuate the loosest of his
- principles and the worst of his practices, till I am familiarised with
- vice, and almost a partaker in his sins. Things that formerly shocked
- and disgusted me, now seem only natural. I know them to be wrong,
- because reason and God’s word declare them to be so; but I am gradually
- losing that instinctive horror and repulsion which were given me by
- nature, or instilled into me by the precepts and example of my aunt.
- Perhaps then I was too severe in my judgments, for I abhorred the sinner
- as well as the sin; now I flatter myself I am more charitable and
- considerate; but am I not becoming more indifferent and insensate too?
- Fool that I was, to dream that I had strength and purity enough to save
- myself and him! Such vain presumption would be rightly served, if I
- should perish with him in the gulf from which I sought to save him! Yet,
- God preserve me from it, and him too! Yes, poor Arthur, I will still
- hope and pray for you; and though I write as if you were some abandoned
- wretch, past hope and past reprieve, it is only my anxious fears, my
- strong desires that make me do so; one who loved you less would be less
- bitter, less dissatisfied.
- His conduct has, of late, been what the world calls irreproachable; but
- then I know his heart is still unchanged; and I know that spring is
- approaching, and deeply dread the consequences.
- As he began to recover the tone and vigour of his exhausted frame, and
- with it something of his former impatience of retirement and repose, I
- suggested a short residence by the sea-side, for his recreation and
- further restoration, and for the benefit of our little one as well. But
- no: watering-places were so intolerably dull; besides, he had been
- invited by one of his friends to spend a month or two in Scotland for the
- better recreation of grouse-shooting and deer-stalking, and had promised
- to go.
- ‘Then you will leave me again, Arthur?’ said I.
- ‘Yes, dearest, but only to love you the better when I come back, and make
- up for all past offences and short-comings; and you needn’t fear me this
- time: there are no temptations on the mountains. And during my absence
- you may pay a visit to Staningley, if you like: your uncle and aunt have
- long been wanting us to go there, you know; but somehow there’s such a
- repulsion between the good lady and me, that I never could bring myself
- up to the scratch.’
- About the third week in August, Arthur set out for Scotland, and Mr.
- Hargrave accompanied him thither, to my private satisfaction. Shortly
- after, I, with little Arthur and Rachel, went to Staningley, my dear old
- home, which, as well as my dear old friends its inhabitants, I saw again
- with mingled feelings of pleasure and pain so intimately blended that I
- could scarcely distinguish the one from the other, or tell to which to
- attribute the various tears, and smiles, and sighs awakened by those old
- familiar scenes, and tones, and faces.
- Arthur did not come home till several weeks after my return to Grassdale;
- but I did not feel so anxious about him now; to think of him engaged in
- active sports among the wild hills of Scotland, was very different from
- knowing him to be immersed amid the corruptions and temptations of
- London. His letters now; though neither long nor loverlike, were more
- regular than ever they had been before; and when he did return, to my
- great joy, instead of being worse than when he went, he was more cheerful
- and vigorous, and better in every respect. Since that time I have had
- little cause to complain. He still has an unfortunate predilection for
- the pleasures of the table, against which I have to struggle and watch;
- but he has begun to notice his boy, and that is an increasing source of
- amusement to him within-doors, while his fox-hunting and coursing are a
- sufficient occupation for him without, when the ground is not hardened by
- frost; so that he is not wholly dependent on me for entertainment. But
- it is now January; spring is approaching; and, I repeat, I dread the
- consequences of its arrival. That sweet season, I once so joyously
- welcomed as the time of hope and gladness, awakens now far other
- anticipations by its return.
- CHAPTER XXXI
- March 20th, 1824. The dreaded time is come, and Arthur is gone, as I
- expected. This time he announced it his intention to make but a short
- stay in London, and pass over to the Continent, where he should probably
- stay a few weeks; but I shall not expect him till after the lapse of many
- weeks: I now know that, with him, days signify weeks, and weeks months.
- July 30th.—He returned about three weeks ago, rather better in health,
- certainly, than before, but still worse in temper. And yet, perhaps, I
- am wrong: it is I that am less patient and forbearing. I am tired out
- with his injustice, his selfishness and hopeless depravity. I wish a
- milder word would do; I am no angel, and my corruption rises against it.
- My poor father died last week: Arthur was vexed to hear of it, because he
- saw that I was shocked and grieved, and he feared the circumstance would
- mar his comfort. When I spoke of ordering my mourning, he
- exclaimed,—‘Oh, I hate black! But, however, I suppose you must wear it
- awhile, for form’s sake; but I hope, Helen, you won’t think it your
- bounden duty to compose your face and manners into conformity with your
- funereal garb. Why should you sigh and groan, and I be made
- uncomfortable, because an old gentleman in —shire, a perfect stranger to
- us both, has thought proper to drink himself to death? There, now, I
- declare you’re crying! Well, it must be affectation.’
- He would not hear of my attending the funeral, or going for a day or two,
- to cheer poor Frederick’s solitude. It was quite unnecessary, he said,
- and I was unreasonable to wish it. What was my father to me? I had
- never seen him but once since I was a baby, and I well knew he had never
- cared a stiver about me; and my brother, too, was little better than a
- stranger. ‘Besides, dear Helen,’ said he, embracing me with flattering
- fondness, ‘I cannot spare you for a single day.’
- ‘Then how have you managed without me these many days?’ said I.
- ‘Ah! then I was knocking about the world, now I am at home, and home
- without you, my household deity, would be intolerable.’
- ‘Yes, as long as I am necessary to your comfort; but you did not say so
- before, when you urged me to leave you, in order that you might get away
- from your home without me,’ retorted I; but before the words were well
- out of my mouth, I regretted having uttered them. It seemed so heavy a
- charge: if false, too gross an insult; if true, too humiliating a fact to
- be thus openly cast in his teeth. But I might have spared myself that
- momentary pang of self-reproach. The accusation awoke neither shame nor
- indignation in him: he attempted neither denial nor excuse, but only
- answered with a long, low, chuckling laugh, as if he viewed the whole
- transaction as a clever, merry jest from beginning to end. Surely that
- man will make me dislike him at last!
- Sine as ye brew, my maiden fair,
- Keep mind that ye maun drink the yill.
- Yes; and I will drink it to the very dregs: and none but myself shall
- know how bitter I find it!
- August 20th.—We are shaken down again to about our usual position.
- Arthur has returned to nearly his former condition and habits; and I have
- found it my wisest plan to shut my eyes against the past and future, as
- far as he, at least, is concerned, and live only for the present: to love
- him when I can; to smile (if possible) when he smiles, be cheerful when
- he is cheerful, and pleased when he is agreeable; and when he is not, to
- try to make him so; and if that won’t answer, to bear with him, to excuse
- him, and forgive him as well as I can, and restrain my own evil passions
- from aggravating his; and yet, while I thus yield and minister to his
- more harmless propensities to self-indulgence, to do all in my power to
- save him from the worse.
- But we shall not be long alone together. I shall shortly be called upon
- to entertain the same select body of friends as we had the autumn before
- last, with the addition of Mr. Hattersley and, at my special request, his
- wife and child. I long to see Milicent, and her little girl too. The
- latter is now above a year old; she will be a charming playmate for my
- little Arthur.
- September 30th.—Our guests have been here a week or two; but I have had
- no leisure to pass any comments upon them till now. I cannot get over my
- dislike to Lady Lowborough. It is not founded on mere personal pique; it
- is the woman herself that I dislike, because I so thoroughly disapprove
- of her. I always avoid her company as much as I can without violating
- the laws of hospitality; but when we do speak or converse together, it is
- with the utmost civility, even apparent cordiality on her part; but
- preserve me from such cordiality! It is like handling brier-roses and
- may-blossoms, bright enough to the eye, and outwardly soft to the touch,
- but you know there are thorns beneath, and every now and then you feel
- them too; and perhaps resent the injury by crushing them in till you have
- destroyed their power, though somewhat to the detriment of your own
- fingers.
- Of late, however, I have seen nothing in her conduct towards Arthur to
- anger or alarm me. During the first few days I thought she seemed very
- solicitous to win his admiration. Her efforts were not unnoticed by him:
- I frequently saw him smiling to himself at her artful manoeuvres: but, to
- his praise be it spoken, her shafts fell powerless by his side. Her most
- bewitching smiles, her haughtiest frowns were ever received with the same
- immutable, careless good-humour; till, finding he was indeed
- impenetrable, she suddenly remitted her efforts, and became, to all
- appearance, as perfectly indifferent as himself. Nor have I since
- witnessed any symptom of pique on his part, or renewed attempts at
- conquest upon hers.
- This is as it should be; but Arthur never will let me be satisfied with
- him. I have never, for a single hour since I married him, known what it
- is to realise that sweet idea, ‘In quietness and confidence shall be your
- rest.’ Those two detestable men, Grimsby and Hattersley, have destroyed
- all my labour against his love of wine. They encourage him daily to
- overstep the bounds of moderation, and not unfrequently to disgrace
- himself by positive excess. I shall not soon forget the second night
- after their arrival. Just as I had retired from the dining-room with the
- ladies, before the door was closed upon us, Arthur exclaimed,—‘Now then,
- my lads, what say you to a regular jollification?’
- Milicent glanced at me with a half-reproachful look, as if I could hinder
- it; but her countenance changed when she heard Hattersley’s voice,
- shouting through door and wall,—‘I’m your man! Send for more wine: here
- isn’t half enough!’
- We had scarcely entered the drawing-room before we were joined by Lord
- Lowborough.
- ‘What can induce you to come so soon?’ exclaimed his lady, with a most
- ungracious air of dissatisfaction.
- ‘You know I never drink, Annabella,’ replied he seriously.
- ‘Well, but you might stay with them a little: it looks so silly to be
- always dangling after the women; I wonder you can!’
- He reproached her with a look of mingled bitterness and surprise, and,
- sinking into a chair, suppressed a heavy sigh, bit his pale lips, and
- fixed his eyes upon the floor.
- ‘You did right to leave them, Lord Lowborough,’ said I. ‘I trust you
- will always continue to honour us so early with your company. And if
- Annabella knew the value of true wisdom, and the misery of folly and—and
- intemperance, she would not talk such nonsense—even in jest.’
- He raised his eyes while I spoke, and gravely turned them upon me, with a
- half-surprised, half-abstracted look, and then bent them on his wife.
- ‘At least,’ said she, ‘I know the value of a warm heart and a bold, manly
- spirit.’
- ‘Well, Annabella,’ said he, in a deep and hollow tone, ‘since my presence
- is disagreeable to you, I will relieve you of it.’
- ‘Are you going back to them, then?’ said she, carelessly.
- ‘No,’ exclaimed he, with harsh and startling emphasis. ‘I will not go
- back to them! And I will never stay with them one moment longer than I
- think right, for you or any other tempter! But you needn’t mind that; I
- shall never trouble you again by intruding my company upon you so
- unseasonably.’
- He left the room: I heard the hall-door open and shut, and immediately
- after, on putting aside the curtain, I saw him pacing down the park, in
- the comfortless gloom of the damp, cloudy twilight.
- ‘It would serve you right, Annabella,’ said I, at length, ‘if Lord
- Lowborough were to return to his old habits, which had so nearly effected
- his ruin, and which it cost him such an effort to break: you would then
- see cause to repent such conduct as this.’
- ‘Not at all, my dear! I should not mind if his lordship were to see fit
- to intoxicate himself every day: I should only the sooner be rid of him.’
- ‘Oh, Annabella!’ cried Milicent. ‘How can you say such wicked things!
- It would, indeed, be a just punishment, as far as you are concerned, if
- Providence should take you at your word, and make you feel what others
- feel, that—‘ She paused as a sudden burst of loud talking and laughter
- reached us from the dining-room, in which the voice of Hattersley was
- pre-eminently conspicuous, even to my unpractised ear.
- ‘What you feel at this moment, I suppose?’ said Lady Lowborough, with a
- malicious smile, fixing her eyes upon her cousin’s distressed
- countenance.
- The latter offered no reply, but averted her face and brushed away a
- tear. At that moment the door opened and admitted Mr. Hargrave, just a
- little flushed, his dark eyes sparkling with unwonted vivacity.
- ‘Oh, I’m so glad you’re come, Walter?’ cried his sister. ‘But I wish you
- could have got Ralph to come too.’
- ‘Utterly impossible, dear Milicent,’ replied he, gaily. ‘I had much ado
- to get away myself. Ralph attempted to keep me by violence; Huntingdon
- threatened me with the eternal loss of his friendship; and Grimsby, worse
- than all, endeavoured to make me ashamed of my virtue, by such galling
- sarcasms and innuendoes as he knew would wound me the most. So you see,
- ladies, you ought to make me welcome when I have braved and suffered so
- much for the favour of your sweet society.’ He smilingly turned to me
- and bowed as he finished the sentence.
- ‘Isn’t he handsome now, Helen!’ whispered Milicent, her sisterly pride
- overcoming, for the moment, all other considerations.
- ‘He would be,’ I returned, ‘if that brilliance of eye, and lip, and cheek
- were natural to him; but look again, a few hours hence.’
- Here the gentleman took a seat near me at the table, and petitioned for a
- cup of coffee.
- ‘I consider this an apt illustration of heaven taken by storm,’ said he,
- as I handed one to him. ‘I am in paradise, now; but I have fought my way
- through flood and fire to win it. Ralph Hattersley’s last resource was
- to set his back against the door, and swear I should find no passage but
- through his body (a pretty substantial one too). Happily, however, that
- was not the only door, and I effected my escape by the side entrance
- through the butler’s pantry, to the infinite amazement of Benson, who was
- cleaning the plate.’
- Mr. Hargrave laughed, and so did his cousin; but his sister and I
- remained silent and grave.
- ‘Pardon my levity, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ murmured he, more seriously, as he
- raised his eyes to my face. ‘You are not used to these things: you
- suffer them to affect your delicate mind too sensibly. But I thought of
- you in the midst of those lawless roysterers; and I endeavoured to
- persuade Mr. Huntingdon to think of you too; but to no purpose: I fear he
- is fully determined to enjoy himself this night; and it will be no use
- keeping the coffee waiting for him or his companions; it will be much if
- they join us at tea. Meantime, I earnestly wish I could banish the
- thoughts of them from your mind—and my own too, for I hate to think of
- them—yes—even of my dear friend Huntingdon, when I consider the power he
- possesses over the happiness of one so immeasurably superior to himself,
- and the use he makes of it—I positively detest the man!’
- ‘You had better not say so to me, then,’ said I; ‘for, bad as he is, he
- is part of myself, and you cannot abuse him without offending me.’
- ‘Pardon me, then, for I would sooner die than offend you. But let us say
- no more of him for the present, if you please.’
- At last they came; but not till after ten, when tea, which had been
- delayed for more than half an hour, was nearly over. Much as I had
- longed for their coming, my heart failed me at the riotous uproar of
- their approach; and Milicent turned pale, and almost started from her
- seat, as Mr. Hattersley burst into the room with a clamorous volley of
- oaths in his mouth, which Hargrave endeavoured to check by entreating him
- to remember the ladies.
- ‘Ah! you do well to remind me of the ladies, you dastardly deserter,’
- cried he, shaking his formidable fist at his brother-in-law. ‘If it were
- not for them, you well know, I’d demolish you in the twinkling of an eye,
- and give your body to the fowls of heaven and the lilies of the fields!’
- Then, planting a chair by Lady Lowborough’s side, he stationed himself in
- it, and began to talk to her with a mixture of absurdity and impudence
- that seemed rather to amuse than to offend her; though she affected to
- resent his insolence, and to keep him at bay with sallies of smart and
- spirited repartee.
- Meantime Mr. Grimsby seated himself by me, in the chair vacated by
- Hargrave as they entered, and gravely stated that he would thank me for a
- cup of tea: and Arthur placed himself beside poor Milicent,
- confidentially pushing his head into her face, and drawing in closer to
- her as she shrank away from him. He was not so noisy as Hattersley, but
- his face was exceedingly flushed: he laughed incessantly, and while I
- blushed for all I saw and heard of him, I was glad that he chose to talk
- to his companion in so low a tone that no one could hear what he said but
- herself.
- ‘What fools they are!’ drawled Mr. Grimsby, who had been talking away, at
- my elbow, with sententious gravity all the time; but I had been too much
- absorbed in contemplating the deplorable state of the other
- two—especially Arthur—to attend to him.
- ‘Did you ever hear such nonsense as they talk, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ he
- continued. ‘I’m quite ashamed of them for my part: they can’t take so
- much as a bottle between them without its getting into their heads—’
- ‘You are pouring the cream into your saucer, Mr. Grimsby.’
- ‘Ah! yes, I see, but we’re almost in darkness here. Hargrave, snuff
- those candles, will you?’
- ‘They’re wax; they don’t require snuffing,’ said I.
- ‘“The light of the body is the eye,”’ observed Hargrave, with a sarcastic
- smile. ‘“If thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of
- light.”’
- Grimsby repulsed him with a solemn wave of the hand, and then turning to
- me, continued, with the same drawling tones and strange uncertainty of
- utterance and heavy gravity of aspect as before: ‘But as I was saying,
- Mrs. Huntingdon, they have no head at all: they can’t take half a bottle
- without being affected some way; whereas I—well, I’ve taken three times
- as much as they have to-night, and you see I’m perfectly steady. Now
- that may strike you as very singular, but I think I can explain it: you
- see their brains—I mention no names, but you’ll understand to whom I
- allude—their brains are light to begin with, and the fumes of the
- fermented liquor render them lighter still, and produce an entire
- light-headedness, or giddiness, resulting in intoxication; whereas my
- brains, being composed of more solid materials, will absorb a
- considerable quantity of this alcoholic vapour without the production of
- any sensible result—’
- ‘I think you will find a sensible result produced on that tea,’
- interrupted Mr. Hargrave, ‘by the quantity of sugar you have put into it.
- Instead of your usual complement of one lump, you have put in six.’
- ‘Have I so?’ replied the philosopher, diving with his spoon into the cup,
- and bringing up several half-dissolved pieces in confirmation of the
- assertion. ‘Hum! I perceive. Thus, Madam, you see the evil of absence
- of mind—of thinking too much while engaged in the common concerns of
- life. Now, if I had had my wits about me, like ordinary men, instead of
- within me like a philosopher, I should not have spoiled this cup of tea,
- and been constrained to trouble you for another.’
- ‘That is the sugar-basin, Mr. Grimsby. Now you have spoiled the sugar
- too; and I’ll thank you to ring for some more, for here is Lord
- Lowborough at last; and I hope his lordship will condescend to sit down
- with us, such as we are, and allow me to give him some tea.’
- His lordship gravely bowed in answer to my appeal, but said nothing.
- Meantime, Hargrave volunteered to ring for the sugar, while Grimsby
- lamented his mistake, and attempted to prove that it was owing to the
- shadow of the urn and the badness of the lights.
- Lord Lowborough had entered a minute or two before, unobserved by anyone
- but me, and had been standing before the door, grimly surveying the
- company. He now stepped up to Annabella, who sat with her back towards
- him, with Hattersley still beside her, though not now attending to her,
- being occupied in vociferously abusing and bullying his host.
- ‘Well, Annabella,’ said her husband, as he leant over the back of her
- chair, ‘which of these three “bold, manly spirits” would you have me to
- resemble?’
- ‘By heaven and earth, you shall resemble us all!’ cried Hattersley,
- starting up and rudely seizing him by the arm. ‘Hallo, Huntingdon!’ he
- shouted—‘I’ve got him! Come, man, and help me! And d—n me, if I don’t
- make him drunk before I let him go! He shall make up for all past
- delinquencies as sure as I’m a living soul!’
- There followed a disgraceful contest: Lord Lowborough, in desperate
- earnest, and pale with anger, silently struggling to release himself from
- the powerful madman that was striving to drag him from the room. I
- attempted to urge Arthur to interfere in behalf of his outraged guest,
- but he could do nothing but laugh.
- ‘Huntingdon, you fool, come and help me, can’t you!’ cried Hattersley,
- himself somewhat weakened by his excesses.
- ‘I’m wishing you God-speed, Hattersley,’ cried Arthur, ‘and aiding you
- with my prayers: I can’t do anything else if my life depended on it! I’m
- quite used up. Oh—oh!’ and leaning back in his seat, he clapped his
- hands on his sides and groaned aloud.
- ‘Annabella, give me a candle!’ said Lowborough, whose antagonist had now
- got him round the waist and was endeavouring to root him from the
- door-post, to which he madly clung with all the energy of desperation.
- ‘I shall take no part in your rude sports!’ replied the lady coldly
- drawing back. ‘I wonder you can expect it.’ But I snatched up a candle
- and brought it to him. He took it and held the flame to Hattersley’s
- hands, till, roaring like a wild beast, the latter unclasped them and let
- him go. He vanished, I suppose to his own apartment, for nothing more
- was seen of him till the morning. Swearing and cursing like a maniac,
- Hattersley threw himself on to the ottoman beside the window. The door
- being now free, Milicent attempted to make her escape from the scene of
- her husband’s disgrace; but he called her back, and insisted upon her
- coming to him.
- ‘What do you want, Ralph?’ murmured she, reluctantly approaching him.
- ‘I want to know what’s the matter with you,’ said he, pulling her on to
- his knee like a child. ‘What are you crying for, Milicent?—Tell me!’
- ‘I’m not crying.’
- ‘You are,’ persisted he, rudely pulling her hands from her face. ‘How
- dare you tell such a lie!’
- ‘I’m not crying now,’ pleaded she.
- ‘But you have been, and just this minute too; and I will know what for.
- Come, now, you shall tell me!’
- ‘Do let me alone, Ralph! Remember, we are not at home.’
- ‘No matter: you shall answer my question!’ exclaimed her tormentor; and
- he attempted to extort the confession by shaking her, and remorselessly
- crushing her slight arms in the gripe of his powerful fingers.
- ‘Don’t let him treat your sister in that way,’ said I to Mr. Hargrave.
- ‘Come now, Hattersley, I can’t allow that,’ said that gentleman, stepping
- up to the ill-assorted couple. ‘Let my sister alone, if you please.’
- And he made an effort to unclasp the ruffian’s fingers from her arm, but
- was suddenly driven backward, and nearly laid upon the floor by a violent
- blow on the chest, accompanied with the admonition, ‘Take that for your
- insolence! and learn to interfere between me and mine again.’
- ‘If you were not drunk, I’d have satisfaction for that!’ gasped Hargrave,
- white and breathless as much from passion as from the immediate effects
- of the blow.
- ‘Go to the devil!’ responded his brother-in-law. ‘Now, Milicent, tell me
- what you were crying for.’
- ‘I’ll tell you some other time,’ murmured she, ‘when we are alone.’
- ‘Tell me now!’ said he, with another shake and a squeeze that made her
- draw in her breath and bite her lip to suppress a cry of pain.
- ‘I’ll tell you, Mr. Hattersley,’ said I. ‘She was crying from pure shame
- and humiliation for you; because she could not bear to see you conduct
- yourself so disgracefully.’
- ‘Confound you, Madam!’ muttered he, with a stare of stupid amazement at
- my ‘impudence.’ ‘It was not that—was it, Milicent?’
- She was silent.
- ‘Come, speak up, child!’
- ‘I can’t tell now,’ sobbed she.
- ‘But you can say “yes” or “no” as well as “I can’t tell.”—Come!’
- ‘Yes,’ she whispered, hanging her head, and blushing at the awful
- acknowledgment.
- ‘Curse you for an impertinent hussy, then!’ cried he, throwing her from
- him with such violence that she fell on her side; but she was up again
- before either I or her brother could come to her assistance, and made the
- best of her way out of the room, and, I suppose, up-stairs, without loss
- of time.
- The next object of assault was Arthur, who sat opposite, and had, no
- doubt, richly enjoyed the whole scene.
- ‘Now, Huntingdon,’ exclaimed his irascible friend, ‘I will not have you
- sitting there and laughing like an idiot!’
- ‘Oh, Hattersley,’ cried he, wiping his swimming eyes—‘you’ll be the death
- of me.’
- ‘Yes, I will, but not as you suppose: I’ll have the heart out of your
- body, man, if you irritate me with any more of that imbecile
- laughter!—What! are you at it yet?—There! see if that’ll settle you!’
- cried Hattersley, snatching up a footstool and hurting it at the head of
- his host; but he as well as missed his aim, and the latter still sat
- collapsed and quaking with feeble laughter, with tears running down his
- face: a deplorable spectacle indeed.
- Hattersley tried cursing and swearing, but it would not do: he then took
- a number of books from the table beside him, and threw them, one by one,
- at the object of his wrath; but Arthur only laughed the more; and,
- finally, Hattersley rushed upon him in a frenzy and seizing him by the
- shoulders, gave him a violent shaking, under which he laughed and
- shrieked alarmingly. But I saw no more: I thought I had witnessed enough
- of my husband’s degradation; and leaving Annabella and the rest to follow
- when they pleased, I withdrew, but not to bed. Dismissing Rachel to her
- rest, I walked up and down my room, in an agony of misery for what had
- been done, and suspense, not knowing what might further happen, or how or
- when that unhappy creature would come up to bed.
- At last he came, slowly and stumblingly ascending the stairs, supported
- by Grimsby and Hattersley, who neither of them walked quite steadily
- themselves, but were both laughing and joking at him, and making noise
- enough for all the servants to hear. He himself was no longer laughing
- now, but sick and stupid. I will write no more about that.
- Such disgraceful scenes (or nearly such) have been repeated more than
- once. I don’t say much to Arthur about it, for, if I did, it would do
- more harm than good; but I let him know that I intensely dislike such
- exhibitions; and each time he has promised they should never again be
- repeated. But I fear he is losing the little self-command and
- self-respect he once possessed: formerly, he would have been ashamed to
- act thus—at least, before any other witnesses than his boon companions,
- or such as they. His friend Hargrave, with a prudence and
- self-government that I envy for him, never disgraces himself by taking
- more than sufficient to render him a little ‘elevated,’ and is always the
- first to leave the table after Lord Lowborough, who, wiser still,
- perseveres in vacating the dining-room immediately after us: but never
- once, since Annabella offended him so deeply, has he entered the
- drawing-room before the rest; always spending the interim in the library,
- which I take care to have lighted for his accommodation; or, on fine
- moonlight nights, in roaming about the grounds. But I think she regrets
- her misconduct, for she has never repeated it since, and of late she has
- comported herself with wonderful propriety towards him, treating him with
- more uniform kindness and consideration than ever I have observed her to
- do before. I date the time of this improvement from the period when she
- ceased to hope and strive for Arthur’s admiration.
- CHAPTER XXXII
- October 5th.—Esther Hargrave is getting a fine girl. She is not out of
- the school-room yet, but her mother frequently brings her over to call in
- the mornings when the gentlemen are out, and sometimes she spends an hour
- or two in company with her sister and me, and the children; and when we
- go to the Grove, I always contrive to see her, and talk more to her than
- to any one else, for I am very much attached to my little friend, and so
- is she to me. I wonder what she can see to like in me though, for I am
- no longer the happy, lively girl I used to be; but she has no other
- society, save that of her uncongenial mother, and her governess (as
- artificial and conventional a person as that prudent mother could procure
- to rectify the pupil’s natural qualities), and, now and then, her
- subdued, quiet sister. I often wonder what will be her lot in life, and
- so does she; but her speculations on the future are full of buoyant hope;
- so were mine once. I shudder to think of her being awakened, like me, to
- a sense of their delusive vanity. It seems as if I should feel her
- disappointment, even more deeply than my own. I feel almost as if I were
- born for such a fate, but she is so joyous and fresh, so light of heart
- and free of spirit, and so guileless and unsuspecting too. Oh, it would
- be cruel to make her feel as I feel now, and know what I have known!
- Her sister trembles for her too. Yesterday morning, one of October’s
- brightest, loveliest days, Milicent and I were in the garden enjoying a
- brief half-hour together with our children, while Annabella was lying on
- the drawing-room sofa, deep in the last new novel. We had been romping
- with the little creatures, almost as merry and wild as themselves, and
- now paused in the shade of the tall copper beech, to recover breath and
- rectify our hair, disordered by the rough play and the frolicsome breeze,
- while they toddled together along the broad, sunny walk; my Arthur
- supporting the feebler steps of her little Helen, and sagaciously
- pointing out to her the brightest beauties of the border as they passed,
- with semi-articulate prattle, that did as well for her as any other mode
- of discourse. From laughing at the pretty sight, we began to talk of the
- children’s future life; and that made us thoughtful. We both relapsed
- into silent musing as we slowly proceeded up the walk; and I suppose
- Milicent, by a train of associations, was led to think of her sister.
- ‘Helen,’ said she, ‘you often see Esther, don’t you?’
- ‘Not very often.’
- ‘But you have more frequent opportunities of meeting her than I have; and
- she loves you, I know, and reverences you too: there is nobody’s opinion
- she thinks so much of; and she says you have more sense than mamma.’
- ‘That is because she is self-willed, and my opinions more generally
- coincide with her own than your mamma’s. But what then, Milicent?’
- ‘Well, since you have so much influence with her, I wish you would
- seriously impress it upon her, never, on any account, or for anybody’s
- persuasion, to marry for the sake of money, or rank, or establishment, or
- any earthly thing, but true affection and well-grounded esteem.’
- ‘There is no necessity for that,’ said I, ‘for we have had some discourse
- on that subject already, and I assure you her ideas of love and matrimony
- are as romantic as any one could desire.’
- ‘But romantic notions will not do: I want her to have true notions.’
- ‘Very right: but in my judgment, what the world stigmatises as romantic,
- is often more nearly allied to the truth than is commonly supposed; for,
- if the generous ideas of youth are too often over-clouded by the sordid
- views of after-life, that scarcely proves them to be false.’
- ‘Well, but if you think her ideas are what they ought to be, strengthen
- them, will you? and confirm them, as far as you can; for I had romantic
- notions once, and—I don’t mean to say that I regret my lot, for I am
- quite sure I don’t, but—’
- ‘I understand you,’ said I; ‘you are contented for yourself, but you
- would not have your sister to suffer the same as you.’
- ‘No—or worse. She might have far worse to suffer than I, for I am really
- contented, Helen, though you mayn’t think it: I speak the solemn truth in
- saying that I would not exchange my husband for any man on earth, if I
- might do it by the plucking of this leaf.’
- ‘Well, I believe you: now that you have him, you would not exchange him
- for another; but then you would gladly exchange some of his qualities for
- those of better men.’
- ‘Yes: just as I would gladly exchange some of my own qualities for those
- of better women; for neither he nor I are perfect, and I desire his
- improvement as earnestly as my own. And he will improve, don’t you think
- so, Helen? he’s only six-and-twenty yet.’
- ‘He may,’ I answered,
- ‘He will, he WILL!’ repeated she.
- ‘Excuse the faintness of my acquiescence, Milicent, I would not
- discourage your hopes for the world, but mine have been so often
- disappointed, that I am become as cold and doubtful in my expectations as
- the flattest of octogenarians.’
- ‘And yet you do hope, still, even for Mr. Huntingdon?’
- ‘I do, I confess, “even” for him; for it seems as if life and hope must
- cease together. And is he so much worse, Milicent, than Mr. Hattersley?’
- ‘Well, to give you my candid opinion, I think there is no comparison
- between them. But you mustn’t be offended, Helen, for you know I always
- speak my mind, and you may speak yours too. I sha’n’t care.’
- ‘I am not offended, love; and my opinion is, that if there be a
- comparison made between the two, the difference, for the most part, is
- certainly in Hattersley’s favour.’
- Milicent’s own heart told her how much it cost me to make this
- acknowledgment; and, with a childlike impulse, she expressed her sympathy
- by suddenly kissing my cheek, without a word of reply, and then turning
- quickly away, caught up her baby, and hid her face in its frock. How odd
- it is that we so often weep for each other’s distresses, when we shed not
- a tear for our own! Her heart had been full enough of her own sorrows,
- but it overflowed at the idea of mine; and I, too, shed tears at the
- sight of her sympathetic emotion, though I had not wept for myself for
- many a week.
- [Picture: Blake Hall—Side (Grassdale Manor)]
- It was one rainy day last week; most of the company were killing time in
- the billiard-room, but Milicent and I were with little Arthur and Helen
- in the library, and between our books, our children, and each other, we
- expected to make out a very agreeable morning. We had not been thus
- secluded above two hours, however, when Mr. Hattersley came in,
- attracted, I suppose, by the voice of his child, as he was crossing the
- hall, for he is prodigiously fond of her, and she of him.
- He was redolent of the stables, where he had been regaling himself with
- the company of his fellow-creatures the horses ever since breakfast. But
- that was no matter to my little namesake; as soon as the colossal person
- of her father darkened the door, she uttered a shrill scream of delight,
- and, quitting her mother’s side, ran crowing towards him, balancing her
- course with outstretched arms, and embracing his knee, threw back her
- head and laughed in his face. He might well look smilingly down upon
- those small, fair features, radiant with innocent mirth, those clear blue
- shining eyes, and that soft flaxen hair cast back upon the little ivory
- neck and shoulders. Did he not think how unworthy he was of such a
- possession? I fear no such idea crossed his mind. He caught her up, and
- there followed some minutes of very rough play, during which it is
- difficult to say whether the father or the daughter laughed and shouted
- the loudest. At length, however, the boisterous pastime terminated,
- suddenly, as might be expected: the little one was hurt, and began to
- cry; and the ungentle play-fellow tossed it into its mother’s lap,
- bidding her ‘make all straight.’ As happy to return to that gentle
- comforter as it had been to leave her, the child nestled in her arms, and
- hushed its cries in a moment; and sinking its little weary head on her
- bosom, soon dropped asleep.
- Meantime Mr. Hattersley strode up to the fire, and interposing his height
- and breadth between us and it, stood with arms akimbo, expanding his
- chest, and gazing round him as if the house and all its appurtenances and
- contents were his own undisputed possessions.
- ‘Deuced bad weather this!’ he began. ‘There’ll be no shooting to-day, I
- guess.’ Then, suddenly lifting up his voice, he regaled us with a few
- bars of a rollicking song, which abruptly ceasing, he finished the tune
- with a whistle, and then continued:—‘I say, Mrs. Huntingdon, what a fine
- stud your husband has! not large, but good. I’ve been looking at them a
- bit this morning; and upon my word, Black Boss, and Grey Tom, and that
- young Nimrod are the finest animals I’ve seen for many a day!’ Then
- followed a particular discussion of their various merits, succeeded by a
- sketch of the great things he intended to do in the horse-jockey line,
- when his old governor thought proper to quit the stage. ‘Not that I wish
- him to close his accounts,’ added he: ‘the old Trojan is welcome to keep
- his books open as long as he pleases for me.’
- ‘I hope so, indeed, Mr. Hattersley.’
- ‘Oh, yes! It’s only my way of talking. The event must come some time,
- and so I look to the bright side of it: that’s the right plan—isn’t it,
- Mrs. H.? What are you two doing here? By-the-by, where’s Lady
- Lowborough?’
- ‘In the billiard-room.’
- ‘What a splendid creature she is!’ continued he, fixing his eyes on his
- wife, who changed colour, and looked more and more disconcerted as he
- proceeded. ‘What a noble figure she has; and what magnificent black
- eyes; and what a fine spirit of her own; and what a tongue of her own,
- too, when she likes to use it. I perfectly adore her! But never mind,
- Milicent: I wouldn’t have her for my wife, not if she’d a kingdom for her
- dowry! I’m better satisfied with the one I have. Now then! what do you
- look so sulky for? don’t you believe me?’
- ‘Yes, I believe you,’ murmured she, in a tone of half sad, half sullen
- resignation, as she turned away to stroke the hair of her sleeping
- infant, that she had laid on the sofa beside her.
- ‘Well, then, what makes you so cross? Come here, Milly, and tell me why
- you can’t be satisfied with my assurance.’
- She went, and putting her little hand within his arm, looked up in his
- face, and said softly,—
- ‘What does it amount to, Ralph? Only to this, that though you admire
- Annabella so much, and for qualities that I don’t possess, you would
- still rather have me than her for your wife, which merely proves that you
- don’t think it necessary to love your wife; you are satisfied if she can
- keep your house, and take care of your child. But I’m not cross; I’m
- only sorry; for,’ added she, in a low, tremulous accent, withdrawing her
- hand from his arm, and bending her looks on the rug, ‘if you don’t love
- me, you don’t, and it can’t be helped.’
- ‘Very true; but who told you I didn’t? Did I say I loved Annabella?’
- ‘You said you adored her.’
- ‘True, but adoration isn’t love. I adore Annabella, but I don’t love
- her; and I love thee, Milicent, but I don’t adore thee.’ In proof of his
- affection, he clutched a handful of her light brown ringlets, and
- appeared to twist them unmercifully.
- ‘Do you really, Ralph?’ murmured she, with a faint smile beaming through
- her tears, just putting up her hand to his, in token that he pulled
- rather too hard.
- ‘To be sure I do,’ responded he: ‘only you bother me rather, sometimes.’
- ‘I bother you!’ cried she, in very natural surprise.
- ‘Yes, you—but only by your exceeding goodness. When a boy has been
- eating raisins and sugar-plums all day, he longs for a squeeze of sour
- orange by way of a change. And did you never, Milly, observe the sands
- on the sea-shore; how nice and smooth they look, and how soft and easy
- they feel to the foot? But if you plod along, for half an hour, over
- this soft, easy carpet—giving way at every step, yielding the more the
- harder you press,—you’ll find it rather wearisome work, and be glad
- enough to come to a bit of good, firm rock, that won’t budge an inch
- whether you stand, walk, or stamp upon it; and, though it be hard as the
- nether millstone, you’ll find it the easier footing after all.’
- ‘I know what you mean, Ralph,’ said she, nervously playing with her
- watchguard and tracing the figure on the rug with the point of her tiny
- foot—‘I know what you mean: but I thought you always liked to be yielded
- to, and I can’t alter now.’
- ‘I do like it,’ replied he, bringing her to him by another tug at her
- hair. ‘You mustn’t mind my talk, Milly. A man must have something to
- grumble about; and if he can’t complain that his wife harries him to
- death with her perversity and ill-humour, he must complain that she wears
- him out with her kindness and gentleness.’
- ‘But why complain at all, unless because you are tired and dissatisfied?’
- ‘To excuse my own failings, to be sure. Do you think I’ll bear all the
- burden of my sins on my own shoulders, as long as there’s another ready
- to help me, with none of her own to carry?’
- ‘There is no such one on earth,’ said she seriously; and then, taking his
- hand from her head, she kissed it with an air of genuine devotion, and
- tripped away to the door.
- ‘What now?’ said he. ‘Where are you going?’
- ‘To tidy my hair,’ she answered, smiling through her disordered locks;
- ‘you’ve made it all come down.’
- ‘Off with you then!—An excellent little woman,’ he remarked when she was
- gone, ‘but a thought too soft—she almost melts in one’s hands. I
- positively think I ill-use her sometimes, when I’ve taken too much—but I
- can’t help it, for she never complains, either at the time or after. I
- suppose she doesn’t mind it.’
- ‘I can enlighten you on that subject, Mr. Hattersley,’ said I: ‘she does
- mind it; and some other things she minds still more, which yet you may
- never hear her complain of.’
- ‘How do you know?—does she complain to you?’ demanded he, with a sudden
- spark of fury ready to burst into a flame if I should answer “yes.”
- ‘No,’ I replied; ‘but I have known her longer and studied her more
- closely than you have done.—And I can tell you, Mr. Hattersley, that
- Milicent loves you more than you deserve, and that you have it in your
- power to make her very happy, instead of which you are her evil genius,
- and, I will venture to say, there is not a single day passes in which you
- do not inflict upon her some pang that you might spare her if you would.’
- ‘Well—it’s not my fault,’ said he, gazing carelessly up at the ceiling
- and plunging his hands into his pockets: ‘if my ongoings don’t suit her,
- she should tell me so.’
- ‘Is she not exactly the wife you wanted? Did you not tell Mr. Huntingdon
- you must have one that would submit to anything without a murmur, and
- never blame you, whatever you did?’
- ‘True, but we shouldn’t always have what we want: it spoils the best of
- us, doesn’t it? How can I help playing the deuce when I see it’s all one
- to her whether I behave like a Christian or like a scoundrel, such as
- nature made me? and how can I help teasing her when she’s so invitingly
- meek and mim, when she lies down like a spaniel at my feet and never so
- much as squeaks to tell me that’s enough?’
- ‘If you are a tyrant by nature, the temptation is strong, I allow; but no
- generous mind delights to oppress the weak, but rather to cherish and
- protect.’
- ‘I don’t oppress her; but it’s so confounded flat to be always cherishing
- and protecting; and then, how can I tell that I am oppressing her when
- she “melts away and makes no sign”? I sometimes think she has no feeling
- at all; and then I go on till she cries, and that satisfies me.’
- ‘Then you do delight to oppress her?’
- ‘I don’t, I tell you! only when I’m in a bad humour, or a particularly
- good one, and want to afflict for the pleasure of comforting; or when she
- looks flat and wants shaking up a bit. And sometimes she provokes me by
- crying for nothing, and won’t tell me what it’s for; and then, I allow,
- it enrages me past bearing, especially when I’m not my own man.’
- ‘As is no doubt generally the case on such occasions,’ said I. ‘But in
- future, Mr. Hattersley, when you see her looking flat, or crying for
- “nothing” (as you call it), ascribe it all to yourself: be assured it is
- something you have done amiss, or your general misconduct, that
- distresses her.’
- ‘I don’t believe it. If it were, she should tell me so: I don’t like
- that way of moping and fretting in silence, and saying nothing: it’s not
- honest. How can she expect me to mend my ways at that rate?’
- ‘Perhaps she gives you credit for having more sense than you possess, and
- deludes herself with the hope that you will one day see your own errors
- and repair them, if left to your own reflection.’
- ‘None of your sneers, Mrs. Huntingdon. I have the sense to see that I’m
- not always quite correct, but sometimes I think that’s no great matter,
- as long as I injure nobody but myself—’
- ‘It is a great matter,’ interrupted I, ‘both to yourself (as you will
- hereafter find to your cost) and to all connected with you, most
- especially your wife. But, indeed, it is nonsense to talk about injuring
- no one but yourself: it is impossible to injure yourself, especially by
- such acts as we allude to, without injuring hundreds, if not thousands,
- besides, in a greater or less, degree, either by the evil you do or the
- good you leave undone.’ ‘And as I was saying,’ continued he, ‘or would
- have said if you hadn’t taken me up so short, I sometimes think I should
- do better if I were joined to one that would always remind me when I was
- wrong, and give me a motive for doing good and eschewing evil, by
- decidedly showing her approval of the one and disapproval of the other.’
- ‘If you had no higher motive than the approval of your fellow-mortal, it
- would do you little good.’
- ‘Well, but if I had a mate that would not always be yielding, and always
- equally kind, but that would have the spirit to stand at bay now and
- then, and honestly tell me her mind at all times, such a one as yourself
- for instance. Now, if I went on with you as I do with her when I’m in
- London, you’d make the house too hot to hold me at times, I’ll be sworn.’
- ‘You mistake me: I’m no termagant.’
- ‘Well, all the better for that, for I can’t stand contradiction, in a
- general way, and I’m as fond of my own will as another; only I think too
- much of it doesn’t answer for any man.’
- ‘Well, I would never contradict you without a cause, but certainly I
- would always let you know what I thought of your conduct; and if you
- oppressed me, in body, mind, or estate, you should at least have no
- reason to suppose “I didn’t mind it.”’
- ‘I know that, my lady; and I think if my little wife were to follow the
- same plan, it would be better for us both.’
- ‘I’ll tell her.’
- ‘No, no, let her be; there’s much to be said on both sides, and, now I
- think upon it, Huntingdon often regrets that you are not more like her,
- scoundrelly dog that he is, and you see, after all, you can’t reform him:
- he’s ten times worse than I. He’s afraid of you, to be sure; that is,
- he’s always on his best behaviour in your presence—but—’
- ‘I wonder what his worst behaviour is like, then?’ I could not forbear
- observing.
- ‘Why, to tell you the truth, it’s very bad indeed—isn’t it, Hargrave?’
- said he, addressing that gentleman, who had entered the room unperceived
- by me, for I was now standing near the fire, with my back to the door.
- ‘Isn’t Huntingdon,’ he continued, ‘as great a reprobate as ever was d—d?’
- ‘His lady will not hear him censured with impunity,’ replied Mr.
- Hargrave, coming forward; ‘but I must say, I thank God I am not such
- another.’
- ‘Perhaps it would become you better,’ said I, ‘to look at what you are,
- and say, “God be merciful to me a sinner.”’
- ‘You are severe,’ returned he, bowing slightly and drawing himself up
- with a proud yet injured air. Hattersley laughed, and clapped him on the
- shoulder. Moving from under his hand with a gesture of insulted dignity,
- Mr. Hargrave took himself away to the other end of the rug.
- ‘Isn’t it a shame, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ cried his brother-in-law; ‘I struck
- Walter Hargrave when I was drunk, the second night after we came, and
- he’s turned a cold shoulder on me ever since; though I asked his pardon
- the very morning after it was done!’
- ‘Your manner of asking it,’ returned the other, ‘and the clearness with
- which you remembered the whole transaction, showed you were not too drunk
- to be fully conscious of what you were about, and quite responsible for
- the deed.’
- ‘You wanted to interfere between me and my wife,’ grumbled Hattersley,
- ‘and that is enough to provoke any man.’
- ‘You justify it, then?’ said his opponent, darting upon him a most
- vindictive glance.
- ‘No, I tell you I wouldn’t have done it if I hadn’t been under
- excitement; and if you choose to bear malice for it after all the
- handsome things I’ve said, do so and be d—d!’
- ‘I would refrain from such language in a lady’s presence, at least,’ said
- Mr. Hargrave, hiding his anger under a mask of disgust.
- ‘What have I said?’ returned Hattersley: ‘nothing but heaven’s truth. He
- will be damned, won’t he, Mrs. Huntingdon, if he doesn’t forgive his
- brother’s trespasses?’
- ‘You ought to forgive him, Mr. Hargrave, since he asks you,’ said I.
- ‘Do you say so? Then I will!’ And, smiling almost frankly, he stepped
- forward and offered his hand. It was immediately clasped in that of his
- relative, and the reconciliation was apparently cordial on both sides.
- ‘The affront,’ continued Hargrave, turning to me, ‘owed half its
- bitterness to the fact of its being offered in your presence; and since
- you bid me forgive it, I will, and forget it too.’
- ‘I guess the best return I can make will be to take myself off,’ muttered
- Hattersley, with a broad grin. His companion smiled, and he left the
- room. This put me on my guard. Mr. Hargrave turned seriously to me, and
- earnestly began,—
- ‘Dear Mrs. Huntingdon, how I have longed for, yet dreaded, this hour! Do
- not be alarmed,’ he added, for my face was crimson with anger: ‘I am not
- about to offend you with any useless entreaties or complaints. I am not
- going to presume to trouble you with the mention of my own feelings or
- your perfections, but I have something to reveal to you which you ought
- to know, and which, yet, it pains me inexpressibly—’
- ‘Then don’t trouble yourself to reveal it!’
- ‘But it is of importance—’
- ‘If so I shall hear it soon enough, especially if it is bad news, as you
- seem to consider it. At present I am going to take the children to the
- nursery.’
- ‘But can’t you ring and send them?’
- ‘No; I want the exercise of a run to the top of the house. Come,
- Arthur.’
- ‘But you will return?’
- ‘Not yet; don’t wait.’
- ‘Then when may I see you again?’
- ‘At lunch,’ said I, departing with little Helen in one arm and leading
- Arthur by the hand.
- He turned away, muttering some sentence of impatient censure or
- complaint, in which ‘heartless’ was the only distinguishable word.
- ‘What nonsense is this, Mr. Hargrave?’ said I, pausing in the doorway.
- ‘What do you mean?’
- ‘Oh, nothing; I did not intend you should hear my soliloquy. But the
- fact is, Mrs. Huntingdon, I have a disclosure to make, painful for me to
- offer as for you to hear; and I want you to give me a few minutes of your
- attention in private at any time and place you like to appoint. It is
- from no selfish motive that I ask it, and not for any cause that could
- alarm your superhuman purity: therefore you need not kill me with that
- look of cold and pitiless disdain. I know too well the feelings with
- which the bearers of bad tidings are commonly regarded not to—’
- ‘What is this wonderful piece of intelligence?’ said I, impatiently
- interrupting him. ‘If it is anything of real importance, speak it in
- three words before I go.’
- ‘In three words I cannot. Send those children away and stay with me.’
- ‘No; keep your bad tidings to yourself. I know it is something I don’t
- want to hear, and something you would displease me by telling.’
- ‘You have divined too truly, I fear; but still, since I know it, I feel
- it my duty to disclose it to you.’
- ‘Oh, spare us both the infliction, and I will exonerate you from the
- duty. You have offered to tell; I have refused to hear: my ignorance
- will not be charged on you.’
- ‘Be it so: you shall not hear it from me. But if the blow fall too
- suddenly upon you when it comes, remember I wished to soften it!’
- I left him. I was determined his words should not alarm me. What could
- he, of all men, have to reveal that was of importance for me to hear? It
- was no doubt some exaggerated tale about my unfortunate husband that he
- wished to make the most of to serve his own bad purposes.
- 6th.—He has not alluded to this momentous mystery since, and I have seen
- no reason to repent of my unwillingness to hear it. The threatened blow
- has not been struck yet, and I do not greatly fear it. At present I am
- pleased with Arthur: he has not positively disgraced himself for upwards
- of a fortnight, and all this last week has been so very moderate in his
- indulgence at table that I can perceive a marked difference in his
- general temper and appearance. Dare I hope this will continue?
- CHAPTER XXXIII
- Seventh.—Yes, I will hope! To-night I heard Grimsby and Hattersley
- grumbling together about the inhospitality of their host. They did not
- know I was near, for I happened to be standing behind the curtain in the
- bow of the window, watching the moon rising over the clump of tall dark
- elm-trees below the lawn, and wondering why Arthur was so sentimental as
- to stand without, leaning against the outer pillar of the portico,
- apparently watching it too.
- ‘So, I suppose we’ve seen the last of our merry carousals in this house,’
- said Mr. Hattersley; ‘I thought his good-fellowship wouldn’t last long.
- But,’ added he, laughing, ‘I didn’t expect it would meet its end this
- way. I rather thought our pretty hostess would be setting up her
- porcupine quills, and threatening to turn us out of the house if we
- didn’t mind our manners.’
- ‘You didn’t foresee this, then?’ answered Grimsby, with a guttural
- chuckle. ‘But he’ll change again when he’s sick of her. If we come here
- a year or two hence, we shall have all our own way, you’ll see.’
- ‘I don’t know,’ replied the other: ‘she’s not the style of woman you soon
- tire of. But be that as it may, it’s devilish provoking now that we
- can’t be jolly, because he chooses to be on his good behaviour.’
- ‘It’s all these cursed women!’ muttered Grimsby: ‘they’re the very bane
- of the world! They bring trouble and discomfort wherever they come, with
- their false, fair faces and their deceitful tongues.’
- At this juncture I issued from my retreat, and smiling on Mr. Grimsby as
- I passed, left the room and went out in search of Arthur. Having seen
- him bend his course towards the shrubbery, I followed him thither, and
- found him just entering the shadowy walk. I was so light of heart, so
- overflowing with affection, that I sprang upon him and clasped him in my
- arms. This startling conduct had a singular effect upon him: first, he
- murmured, ‘Bless you, darling!’ and returned my close embrace with a
- fervour like old times, and then he started, and, in a tone of absolute
- terror, exclaimed, ‘Helen! what the devil is this?’ and I saw, by the
- faint light gleaming through the overshadowing tree, that he was
- positively pale with the shock.
- How strange that the instinctive impulse of affection should come first,
- and then the shock of the surprise! It shows, at least, that the
- affection is genuine: he is not sick of me yet.
- ‘I startled you, Arthur,’ said I, laughing in my glee. ‘How nervous you
- are!’
- ‘What the deuce did you do it for?’ cried he, quite testily, extricating
- himself from my arms, and wiping his forehead with his handkerchief. ‘Go
- back, Helen—go back directly! You’ll get your death of cold!’
- ‘I won’t, till I’ve told you what I came for. They are blaming you,
- Arthur, for your temperance and sobriety, and I’m come to thank you for
- it. They say it is all “these cursed women,” and that we are the bane of
- the world; but don’t let them laugh or grumble you out of your good
- resolutions, or your affection for me.’
- He laughed. I squeezed him in my arms again, and cried in tearful
- earnest, ‘Do, do persevere! and I’ll love you better than ever I did
- before!’
- ‘Well, well, I will!’ said he, hastily kissing me. ‘There, now, go. You
- mad creature, how could you come out in your light evening dress this
- chill autumn night?’
- ‘It is a glorious night,’ said I.
- ‘It is a night that will give you your death, in another minute. Run
- away, do!’
- ‘Do you see my death among those trees, Arthur?’ said I, for he was
- gazing intently at the shrubs, as if he saw it coming, and I was
- reluctant to leave him, in my new-found happiness and revival of hope and
- love. But he grew angry at my delay, so I kissed him and ran back to the
- house.
- I was in such a good humour that night: Milicent told me I was the life
- of the party, and whispered she had never seen me so brilliant.
- Certainly, I talked enough for twenty, and smiled upon them all.
- Grimsby, Hattersley, Hargrave, Lady Lowborough, all shared my sisterly
- kindness. Grimsby stared and wondered; Hattersley laughed and jested (in
- spite of the little wine he had been suffered to imbibe), but still
- behaved as well as he knew how. Hargrave and Annabella, from different
- motives and in different ways, emulated me, and doubtless both surpassed
- me, the former in his discursive versatility and eloquence, the latter in
- boldness and animation at least. Milicent, delighted to see her husband,
- her brother, and her over-estimated friend acquitting themselves so well,
- was lively and gay too, in her quiet way. Even Lord Lowborough caught
- the general contagion: his dark greenish eyes were lighted up beneath
- their moody brows; his sombre countenance was beautified by smiles; all
- traces of gloom and proud or cold reserve had vanished for the time; and
- he astonished us all, not only by his general cheerfulness and animation,
- but by the positive flashes of true force and brilliance he emitted from
- time to time. Arthur did not talk much, but he laughed, and listened to
- the rest, and was in perfect good-humour, though not excited by wine. So
- that, altogether, we made a very merry, innocent, and entertaining party.
- 9th.—Yesterday, when Rachel came to dress me for dinner, I saw that she
- had been crying. I wanted to know the cause of it, but she seemed
- reluctant to tell. Was she unwell? No. Had she heard bad news from her
- friends? No. Had any of the servants vexed her?
- ‘Oh, no, ma’am!’ she answered; ‘it’s not for myself.’
- ‘What then, Rachel? Have you been reading novels?’
- ‘Bless you, no!’ said she, with a sorrowful shake of the head; and then
- she sighed and continued: ‘But to tell you the truth, ma’am, I don’t like
- master’s ways of going on.’
- ‘What do you mean, Rachel? He’s going on very properly at present.’
- ‘Well, ma’am, if you think so, it’s right.’
- And she went on dressing my hair, in a hurried way, quite unlike her
- usual calm, collected manner, murmuring, half to herself, she was sure it
- was beautiful hair: she ‘could like to see ’em match it.’ When it was
- done, she fondly stroked it, and gently patted my head.
- ‘Is that affectionate ebullition intended for my hair, or myself, nurse?’
- said I, laughingly turning round upon her; but a tear was even now in her
- eye.
- ‘What do you mean, Rachel?’ I exclaimed.
- ‘Well, ma’am, I don’t know; but if—’
- ‘If what?’
- ‘Well, if I was you, I wouldn’t have that Lady Lowborough in the house
- another minute—not another minute I wouldn’t!
- I was thunderstruck; but before I could recover from the shock
- sufficiently to demand an explanation, Milicent entered my room, as she
- frequently does when she is dressed before me; and she stayed with me
- till it was time to go down. She must have found me a very unsociable
- companion this time, for Rachel’s last words rang in my ears. But still
- I hoped, I trusted they had no foundation but in some idle rumour of the
- servants from what they had seen in Lady Lowborough’s manner last month;
- or perhaps from something that had passed between their master and her
- during her former visit. At dinner I narrowly observed both her and
- Arthur, and saw nothing extraordinary in the conduct of either, nothing
- calculated to excite suspicion, except in distrustful minds, which mine
- was not, and therefore I would not suspect.
- Almost immediately after dinner Annabella went out with her husband to
- share his moonlight ramble, for it was a splendid evening like the last.
- Mr. Hargrave entered the drawing-room a little before the others, and
- challenged me to a game of chess. He did it without any of that sad but
- proud humility he usually assumes in addressing me, unless he is excited
- with wine. I looked at his face to see if that was the case now. His
- eye met mine keenly, but steadily: there was something about him I did
- not understand, but he seemed sober enough. Not choosing to engage with
- him, I referred him to Milicent.
- ‘She plays badly,’ said he, ‘I want to match my skill with yours. Come
- now! you can’t pretend you are reluctant to lay down your work. I know
- you never take it up except to pass an idle hour, when there is nothing
- better you can do.’
- ‘But chess-players are so unsociable,’ I objected; ‘they are no company
- for any but themselves.’
- ‘There is no one here but Milicent, and she—’
- ‘Oh, I shall be delighted to watch you!’ cried our mutual friend. ‘Two
- such players—it will be quite a treat! I wonder which will conquer.’
- I consented.
- ‘Now, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said Hargrave, as he arranged the men on the
- board, speaking distinctly, and with a peculiar emphasis, as if he had a
- double meaning to all his words, ‘you are a good player, but I am a
- better: we shall have a long game, and you will give me some trouble; but
- I can be as patient as you, and in the end I shall certainly win.’ He
- fixed his eyes upon me with a glance I did not like, keen, crafty, bold,
- and almost impudent;—already half triumphant in his anticipated success.
- ‘I hope not, Mr. Hargrave!’ returned I, with vehemence that must have
- startled Milicent at least; but he only smiled and murmured, ‘Time will
- show.’
- We set to work: he sufficiently interested in the game, but calm and
- fearless in the consciousness of superior skill: I, intensely eager to
- disappoint his expectations, for I considered this the type of a more
- serious contest, as I imagined he did, and I felt an almost superstitious
- dread of being beaten: at all events, I could ill endure that present
- success should add one tittle to his conscious power (his insolent
- self-confidence I ought to say), or encourage for a moment his dream of
- future conquest. His play was cautious and deep, but I struggled hard
- against him. For some time the combat was doubtful: at length, to my
- joy, the victory seemed inclining to my side: I had taken several of his
- best pieces, and manifestly baffled his projects. He put his hand to his
- brow and paused, in evident perplexity. I rejoiced in my advantage, but
- dared not glory in it yet. At length, he lifted his head, and quietly
- making his move, looked at me and said, calmly, ‘Now you think you will
- win, don’t you?’
- ‘I hope so,’ replied I, taking his pawn that he had pushed into the way
- of my bishop with so careless an air that I thought it was an oversight,
- but was not generous enough, under the circumstances, to direct his
- attention to it, and too heedless, at the moment, to foresee the
- after-consequences of my move. ‘It is those bishops that trouble me,’
- said he; ‘but the bold knight can overleap the reverend gentlemen,’
- taking my last bishop with his knight; ‘and now, those sacred persons
- once removed, I shall carry all before me.’
- ‘Oh, Walter, how you talk!’ cried Milicent; ‘she has far more pieces than
- you still.’
- ‘I intend to give you some trouble yet,’ said I; ‘and perhaps, sir, you
- will find yourself checkmated before you are aware. Look to your queen.’
- The combat deepened. The game was a long one, and I did give him some
- trouble: but he was a better player than I.
- ‘What keen gamesters you are!’ said Mr. Hattersley, who had now entered,
- and been watching us for some time. ‘Why, Mrs. Huntingdon, your hand
- trembles as if you had staked your all upon it! and, Walter, you dog, you
- look as deep and cool as if you were certain of success, and as keen and
- cruel as if you would drain her heart’s blood! But if I were you, I
- wouldn’t beat her, for very fear: she’ll hate you if you do—she will, by
- heaven! I see it in her eye.’
- ‘Hold your tongue, will you?’ said I: his talk distracted me, for I was
- driven to extremities. A few more moves, and I was inextricably
- entangled in the snare of my antagonist.
- ‘Check,’ cried he: I sought in agony some means of escape. ‘Mate!’ he
- added, quietly, but with evident delight. He had suspended the utterance
- of that last fatal syllable the better to enjoy my dismay. I was
- foolishly disconcerted by the event. Hattersley laughed; Milicent was
- troubled to see me so disturbed. Hargrave placed his hand on mine that
- rested on the table, and squeezing it with a firm but gentle pressure,
- murmured, ‘Beaten, beaten!’ and gazed into my face with a look where
- exultation was blended with an expression of ardour and tenderness yet
- more insulting.
- ‘No, never, Mr. Hargrave!’ exclaimed I, quickly withdrawing my hand.
- ‘Do you deny?’ replied he, smilingly pointing to the board. ‘No, no,’ I
- answered, recollecting how strange my conduct must appear: ‘you have
- beaten me in that game.’
- ‘Will you try another, then?’
- ‘No.’
- ‘You acknowledge my superiority?’
- ‘Yes, as a chess-player.’
- I rose to resume my work.
- ‘Where is Annabella?’ said Hargrave, gravely, after glancing round the
- room.
- ‘Gone out with Lord Lowborough,’ answered I, for he looked at me for a
- reply.
- ‘And not yet returned!’ he said, seriously.
- ‘I suppose not.’
- ‘Where is Huntingdon?’ looking round again.
- ‘Gone out with Grimsby, as you know,’ said Hattersley, suppressing a
- laugh, which broke forth as he concluded the sentence. Why did he laugh?
- Why did Hargrave connect them thus together? Was it true, then? And was
- this the dreadful secret he had wished to reveal to me? I must know, and
- that quickly. I instantly rose and left the room to go in search of
- Rachel and demand an explanation of her words; but Mr. Hargrave followed
- me into the anteroom, and before I could open its outer door, gently laid
- his hand upon the lock. ‘May I tell you something, Mrs. Huntingdon?’
- said he, in a subdued tone, with serious, downcast eyes.
- ‘If it be anything worth hearing,’ replied I, struggling to be composed,
- for I trembled in every limb.
- He quietly pushed a chair towards me. I merely leant my hand upon it,
- and bid him go on.
- ‘Do not be alarmed,’ said he: ‘what I wish to say is nothing in itself;
- and I will leave you to draw your own inferences from it. You say that
- Annabella is not yet returned?’
- ‘Yes, yes—go on!’ said I, impatiently; for I feared my forced calmness
- would leave me before the end of his disclosure, whatever it might be.
- ‘And you hear,’ continued he, ‘that Huntingdon is gone out with Grimsby?’
- ‘Well?’
- ‘I heard the latter say to your husband—or the man who calls himself so—’
- ‘Go on, sir!’
- He bowed submissively, and continued: ‘I heard him say,—“I shall manage
- it, you’ll see! They’re gone down by the water; I shall meet them there,
- and tell him I want a bit of talk with him about some things that we
- needn’t trouble the lady with; and she’ll say she can be walking back to
- the house; and then I shall apologise, you know, and all that, and tip
- her a wink to take the way of the shrubbery. I’ll keep him talking
- there, about those matters I mentioned, and anything else I can think of,
- as long as I can, and then bring him round the other way, stopping to
- look at the trees, the fields, and anything else I can find to discourse
- of.”’ Mr. Hargrave paused, and looked at me.
- Without a word of comment or further questioning, I rose, and darted from
- the room and out of the house. The torment of suspense was not to be
- endured: I would not suspect my husband falsely, on this man’s
- accusation, and I would not trust him unworthily—I must know the truth at
- once. I flew to the shrubbery. Scarcely had I reached it, when a sound
- of voices arrested my breathless speed.
- ‘We have lingered too long; he will be back,’ said Lady Lowborough’s
- voice.
- ‘Surely not, dearest!’ was his reply; ‘but you can run across the lawn,
- and get in as quietly as you can; I’ll follow in a while.’
- My knees trembled under me; my brain swam round. I was ready to faint.
- She must not see me thus. I shrunk among the bushes, and leant against
- the trunk of a tree to let her pass.
- ‘Ah, Huntingdon!’ said she reproachfully, pausing where I had stood with
- him the night before—‘it was here you kissed that woman!’ she looked back
- into the leafy shade. Advancing thence, he answered, with a careless
- laugh,—
- ‘Well, dearest, I couldn’t help it. You know I must keep straight with
- her as long as I can. Haven’t I seen you kiss your dolt of a husband
- scores of times?—and do I ever complain?’
- ‘But tell me, don’t you love her still—a little?’ said she, placing her
- hand on his arm, looking earnestly in his face—for I could see them,
- plainly, the moon shining full upon them from between the branches of the
- tree that sheltered me.
- ‘Not one bit, by all that’s sacred!’ he replied, kissing her glowing
- cheek.
- ‘Good heavens, I must be gone!’ cried she, suddenly breaking from him,
- and away she flew.
- There he stood before me; but I had not strength to confront him now: my
- tongue cleaved to the roof of my mouth; I was well-nigh sinking to the
- earth, and I almost wondered he did not hear the beating of my heart
- above the low sighing of the wind and the fitful rustle of the falling
- leaves. My senses seemed to fail me, but still I saw his shadowy form
- pass before me, and through the rushing sound in my ears I distinctly
- heard him say, as he stood looking up the lawn,—‘There goes the fool!
- Run, Annabella, run! There—in with you! Ah,—he didn’t see! That’s
- right, Grimsby, keep him back!’ And even his low laugh reached me as he
- walked away.
- ‘God help me now!’ I murmured, sinking on my knees among the damp weeds
- and brushwood that surrounded me, and looking up at the moonlit sky,
- through the scant foliage above. It seemed all dim and quivering now to
- my darkened sight. My burning, bursting heart strove to pour forth its
- agony to God, but could not frame its anguish into prayer; until a gust
- of wind swept over me, which, while it scattered the dead leaves, like
- blighted hopes, around, cooled my forehead, and seemed a little to revive
- my sinking frame. Then, while I lifted up my soul in speechless, earnest
- supplication, some heavenly influence seemed to strengthen me within: I
- breathed more freely; my vision cleared; I saw distinctly the pure moon
- shining on, and the light clouds skimming the clear, dark sky; and then I
- saw the eternal stars twinkling down upon me; I knew their God was mine,
- and He was strong to save and swift to hear. ‘I will never leave thee,
- nor forsake thee,’ seemed whispered from above their myriad orbs. No,
- no; I felt He would not leave me comfortless: in spite of earth and hell
- I should have strength for all my trials, and win a glorious rest at
- last!
- Refreshed, invigorated, if not composed, I rose and returned to the
- house. Much of my new-born strength and courage forsook me, I confess,
- as I entered it, and shut out the fresh wind and the glorious sky:
- everything I saw and heard seemed to sicken my heart—the hall, the lamp,
- the staircase, the doors of the different apartments, the social sound of
- talk and laughter from the drawing-room. How could I bear my future
- life! In this house, among those people—oh, how could I endure to live!
- John just then entered the hall, and seeing me, told me he had been sent
- in search of me, adding that he had taken in the tea, and master wished
- to know if I were coming.
- ‘Ask Mrs. Hattersley to be so kind as to make the tea, John,’ said I.
- ‘Say I am not well to-night, and wish to be excused.’
- I retired into the large, empty dining-room, where all was silence and
- darkness, but for the soft sighing of the wind without, and the faint
- gleam of moonlight that pierced the blinds and curtains; and there I
- walked rapidly up and down, thinking of my bitter thoughts alone. How
- different was this from the evening of yesterday! That, it seems, was
- the last expiring flash of my life’s happiness. Poor, blinded fool that
- I was to be so happy! I could now see the reason of Arthur’s strange
- reception of me in the shrubbery; the burst of kindness was for his
- paramour, the start of horror for his wife. Now, too, I could better
- understand the conversation between Hattersley and Grimsby; it was
- doubtless of his love for her they spoke, not for me.
- I heard the drawing-room door open: a light quick step came out of the
- ante-room, crossed the hall, and ascended the stairs. It was Milicent,
- poor Milicent, gone to see how I was—no one else cared for me; but she
- still was kind. I shed no tears before, but now they came, fast and
- free. Thus she did me good, without approaching me. Disappointed in her
- search, I heard her come down, more slowly than she had ascended. Would
- she come in there, and find me out? No, she turned in the opposite
- direction and re-entered the drawing-room. I was glad, for I knew not
- how to meet her, or what to say. I wanted no confidante in my distress.
- I deserved none, and I wanted none. I had taken the burden upon myself;
- let me bear it alone.
- As the usual hour of retirement approached I dried my eyes, and tried to
- clear my voice and calm my mind. I must see Arthur to-night, and speak
- to him; but I would do it calmly: there should be no scene—nothing to
- complain or to boast of to his companions—nothing to laugh at with his
- lady-love. When the company were retiring to their chambers I gently
- opened the door, and just as he passed, beckoned him in.
- ‘What’s to do with you, Helen?’ said he. ‘Why couldn’t you come to make
- tea for us? and what the deuce are you here for, in the dark? What ails
- you, young woman: you look like a ghost!’ he continued, surveying me by
- the light of his candle.
- ‘No matter,’ I answered, ‘to you; you have no longer any regard for me it
- appears; and I have no longer any for you.’
- ‘Hal-lo! what the devil is this?’ he muttered. ‘I would leave you
- to-morrow,’ continued I, ‘and never again come under this roof, but for
- my child’—I paused a moment to steady, my voice.
- ‘What in the devil’s name is this, Helen?’ cried he. ‘What can you be
- driving at?’
- ‘You know perfectly well. Let us waste no time in useless explanation,
- but tell me, will you—?’
- He vehemently swore he knew nothing about it, and insisted upon hearing
- what poisonous old woman had been blackening his name, and what infamous
- lies I had been fool enough to believe.
- ‘Spare yourself the trouble of forswearing yourself and racking your
- brains to stifle truth with falsehood,’ I coldly replied. ‘I have
- trusted to the testimony of no third person. I was in the shrubbery this
- evening, and I saw and heard for myself.’
- This was enough. He uttered a suppressed exclamation of consternation
- and dismay, and muttering, ‘I shall catch it now!’ set down his candle on
- the nearest chair, and rearing his back against the wall, stood
- confronting me with folded arms.
- ‘Well, what then?’ said he, with the calm insolence of mingled
- shamelessness and desperation.
- ‘Only this,’ returned I; ‘will you let me take our child and what remains
- of my fortune, and go?’
- ‘Go where?’
- ‘Anywhere, where he will be safe from your contaminating influence, and I
- shall be delivered from your presence, and you from mine.’
- ‘No.’
- ‘Will you let me have the child then, without the money?’
- ‘No, nor yourself without the child. Do you think I’m going to be made
- the talk of the country for your fastidious caprices?’
- ‘Then I must stay here, to be hated and despised. But henceforth we are
- husband and wife only in the name.’
- ‘Very good.’
- ‘I am your child’s mother, and your housekeeper, nothing more. So you
- need not trouble yourself any longer to feign the love you cannot feel: I
- will exact no more heartless caresses from you, nor offer nor endure them
- either. I will not be mocked with the empty husk of conjugal
- endearments, when you have given the substance to another!’
- ‘Very good, if you please. We shall see who will tire first, my lady.’
- ‘If I tire, it will be of living in the world with you: not of living
- without your mockery of love. When you tire of your sinful ways, and
- show yourself truly repentant, I will forgive you, and, perhaps, try to
- love you again, though that will be hard indeed.’
- ‘Humph! and meantime you will go and talk me over to Mrs. Hargrave, and
- write long letters to aunt Maxwell to complain of the wicked wretch you
- have married?’
- ‘I shall complain to no one. Hitherto I have struggled hard to hide your
- vices from every eye, and invest you with virtues you never possessed;
- but now you must look to yourself.’
- I left him muttering bad language to himself, and went up-stairs.
- ‘You are poorly, ma’am,’ said Rachel, surveying me with deep anxiety.
- ‘It is too true, Rachel,’ said I, answering her sad looks rather than her
- words.
- ‘I knew it, or I wouldn’t have mentioned such a thing.’
- ‘But don’t you trouble yourself about it,’ said I, kissing her pale,
- time-wasted cheek. ‘I can bear it better than you imagine.’
- ‘Yes, you were always for “bearing.” But if I was you I wouldn’t bear
- it; I’d give way to it, and cry right hard! and I’d talk too, I just
- would—I’d let him know what it was to—’
- ‘I have talked,’ said I; ‘I’ve said enough.’
- ‘Then I’d cry,’ persisted she. ‘I wouldn’t look so white and so calm,
- and burst my heart with keeping it in.’
- ‘I have cried,’ said I, smiling, in spite of my misery; ‘and I am calm
- now, really: so don’t discompose me again, nurse: let us say no more
- about it, and don’t mention it to the servants. There, you may go now.
- Good-night; and don’t disturb your rest for me: I shall sleep well—if I
- can.’
- Notwithstanding this resolution, I found my bed so intolerable that,
- before two o’clock, I rose, and lighting my candle by the rushlight that
- was still burning, I got my desk and sat down in my dressing-gown to
- recount the events of the past evening. It was better to be so occupied
- than to be lying in bed torturing my brain with recollections of the far
- past and anticipations of the dreadful future. I have found relief in
- describing the very circumstances that have destroyed my peace, as well
- as the little trivial details attendant upon their discovery. No sleep I
- could have got this night would have done so much towards composing my
- mind, and preparing me to meet the trials of the day. I fancy so, at
- least; and yet, when I cease writing, I find my head aches terribly; and
- when I look into the glass, I am startled at my haggard, worn appearance.
- Rachel has been to dress me, and says I have had a sad night of it, she
- can see. Milicent has just looked in to ask me how I was. I told her I
- was better, but to excuse my appearance admitted I had had a restless
- night. I wish this day were over! I shudder at the thoughts of going
- down to breakfast. How shall I encounter them all? Yet let me remember
- it is not I that am guilty: I have no cause to fear; and if they scorn me
- as a victim of their guilt, I can pity their folly and despise their
- scorn.
- CHAPTER XXXIV
- Evening.—Breakfast passed well over: I was calm and cool throughout. I
- answered composedly all inquiries respecting my health; and whatever was
- unusual in my look or manner was generally attributed to the trifling
- indisposition that had occasioned my early retirement last night. But
- how am I to get over the ten or twelve days that must yet elapse before
- they go? Yet why so long for their departure? When they are gone, how
- shall I get through the months or years of my future life in company with
- that man—my greatest enemy? for none could injure me as he has done. Oh!
- when I think how fondly, how foolishly I have loved him, how madly I have
- trusted him, how constantly I have laboured, and studied, and prayed, and
- struggled for his advantage; and how cruelly he has trampled on my love,
- betrayed my trust, scorned my prayers and tears, and efforts for his
- preservation, crushed my hopes, destroyed my youth’s best feelings, and
- doomed me to a life of hopeless misery, as far as man can do it, it is
- not enough to say that I no longer love my husband—I HATE him! The word
- stares me in the face like a guilty confession, but it is true: I hate
- him—I hate him! But God have mercy on his miserable soul! and make him
- see and feel his guilt—I ask no other vengeance! If he could but fully
- know and truly feel my wrongs I should be well avenged, and I could
- freely pardon all; but he is so lost, so hardened in his heartless
- depravity, that in this life I believe he never will. But it is useless
- dwelling on this theme: let me seek once more to dissipate reflection in
- the minor details of passing events.
- Mr. Hargrave has annoyed me all day long with his serious, sympathising,
- and (as he thinks) unobtrusive politeness. If it were more obtrusive it
- would trouble me less, for then I could snub him; but, as it is, he
- contrives to appear so really kind and thoughtful that I cannot do so
- without rudeness and seeming ingratitude. I sometimes think I ought to
- give him credit for the good feeling he simulates so well; and then
- again, I think it is my duty to suspect him under the peculiar
- circumstances in which I am placed. His kindness may not all be feigned;
- but still, let not the purest impulse of gratitude to him induce me to
- forget myself: let me remember the game of chess, the expressions he used
- on the occasion, and those indescribable looks of his, that so justly
- roused my indignation, and I think I shall be safe enough. I have done
- well to record them so minutely.
- I think he wishes to find an opportunity of speaking to me alone: he has
- seemed to be on the watch all day; but I have taken care to disappoint
- him—not that I fear anything he could say, but I have trouble enough
- without the addition of his insulting consolations, condolences, or
- whatever else he might attempt; and, for Milicent’s sake, I do not wish
- to quarrel with him. He excused himself from going out to shoot with the
- other gentlemen in the morning, under the pretext of having letters to
- write; and instead of retiring for that purpose into the library, he sent
- for his desk into the morning-room, where I was seated with Milicent and
- Lady Lowborough. They had betaken themselves to their work; I, less to
- divert my mind than to deprecate conversation, had provided myself with a
- book. Milicent saw that I wished to be quiet, and accordingly let me
- alone. Annabella, doubtless, saw it too: but that was no reason why she
- should restrain her tongue, or curb her cheerful spirits: she accordingly
- chatted away, addressing herself almost exclusively to me, and with the
- utmost assurance and familiarity, growing the more animated and friendly
- the colder and briefer my answers became. Mr. Hargrave saw that I could
- ill endure it, and, looking up from his desk, he answered her questions
- and observations for me, as far as he could, and attempted to transfer
- her social attentions from me to himself; but it would not do. Perhaps
- she thought I had a headache, and could not bear to talk; at any rate,
- she saw that her loquacious vivacity annoyed me, as I could tell by the
- malicious pertinacity with which she persisted. But I checked it
- effectually by putting into her hand the book I had been trying to read,
- on the fly-leaf of which I had hastily scribbled,—
- ‘I am too well acquainted with your character and conduct to feel any
- real friendship for you, and as I am without your talent for
- dissimulation, I cannot assume the appearance of it. I must, therefore,
- beg that hereafter all familiar intercourse may cease between us; and if
- I still continue to treat you with civility, as if you were a woman
- worthy of consideration and respect, understand that it is out of regard
- for your cousin Milicent’s feelings, not for yours.’
- Upon perusing this she turned scarlet, and bit her lip. Covertly tearing
- away the leaf, she crumpled it up and put it in the fire, and then
- employed herself in turning over the pages of the book, and, really or
- apparently, perusing its contents. In a little while Milicent announced
- it her intention to repair to the nursery, and asked if I would accompany
- her.
- ‘Annabella will excuse us,’ said she; ‘she’s busy reading.’
- ‘No, I won’t,’ cried Annabella, suddenly looking up, and throwing her
- book on the table; ‘I want to speak to Helen a minute. You may go,
- Milicent, and she’ll follow in a while.’ (Milicent went.) ‘Will you
- oblige me, Helen?’ continued she.
- Her impudence astounded me; but I complied, and followed her into the
- library. She closed the door, and walked up to the fire.
- ‘Who told you this?’ said she.
- ‘No one: I am not incapable of seeing for myself.’
- ‘Ah, you are suspicious!’ cried she, smiling, with a gleam of hope.
- Hitherto there had been a kind of desperation in her hardihood; now she
- was evidently relieved.
- ‘If I were suspicious,’ I replied, ‘I should have discovered your infamy
- long before. No, Lady Lowborough, I do not found my charge upon
- suspicion.’
- ‘On what do you found it, then?’ said she, throwing herself into an
- arm-chair, and stretching out her feet to the fender, with an obvious
- effort to appear composed.
- ‘I enjoy a moonlight ramble as well as you,’ I answered, steadily fixing
- my eyes upon her; ‘and the shrubbery happens to be one of my favourite
- resorts.’
- She coloured again excessively, and remained silent, pressing her finger
- against her teeth, and gazing into the fire. I watched her a few moments
- with a feeling of malevolent gratification; then, moving towards the
- door, I calmly asked if she had anything more to say.
- ‘Yes, yes!’ cried she eagerly, starting up from her reclining posture.
- ‘I want to know if you will tell Lord Lowborough?’
- ‘Suppose I do?’
- ‘Well, if you are disposed to publish the matter, I cannot dissuade you,
- of course—but there will be terrible work if you do—and if you don’t, I
- shall think you the most generous of mortal beings—and if there is
- anything in the world I can do for you—anything short of—‘ she hesitated.
- ‘Short of renouncing your guilty connection with my husband, I suppose
- you mean?’ said I.
- She paused, in evident disconcertion and perplexity, mingled with anger
- she dared not show.
- ‘I cannot renounce what is dearer than life,’ she muttered, in a low,
- hurried tone. Then, suddenly raising her head and fixing her gleaming
- eyes upon me, she continued earnestly: ‘But, Helen—or Mrs. Huntingdon, or
- whatever you would have me call you—will you tell him? If you are
- generous, here is a fitting opportunity for the exercise of your
- magnanimity: if you are proud, here am I—your rival—ready to acknowledge
- myself your debtor for an act of the most noble forbearance.’
- ‘I shall not tell him.’
- ‘You will not!’ cried she, delightedly. ‘Accept my sincere thanks,
- then!’
- She sprang up, and offered me her hand. I drew back.
- ‘Give me no thanks; it is not for your sake that I refrain. Neither is
- it an act of any forbearance: I have no wish to publish your shame. I
- should be sorry to distress your husband with the knowledge of it.’
- ‘And Milicent? will you tell her?’
- ‘No: on the contrary, I shall do my utmost to conceal it from her. I
- would not for much that she should know the infamy and disgrace of her
- relation!’
- ‘You use hard words, Mrs. Huntingdon, but I can pardon you.’
- ‘And now, Lady Lowborough,’ continued I, ‘let me counsel you to leave
- this house as soon as possible. You must be aware that your continuance
- here is excessively disagreeable to me—not for Mr. Huntingdon’s sake,’
- said I, observing the dawn of a malicious smile of triumph on her
- face—‘you are welcome to him, if you like him, as far as I am
- concerned—but because it is painful to be always disguising my true
- sentiments respecting you, and straining to keep up an appearance of
- civility and respect towards one for whom I have not the most distant
- shadow of esteem; and because, if you stay, your conduct cannot possibly
- remain concealed much longer from the only two persons in the house who
- do not know it already. And, for your husband’s sake, Annabella, and
- even for your own, I wish—I earnestly advise and entreat you to break off
- this unlawful connection at once, and return to your duty while you may,
- before the dreadful consequences—’
- ‘Yes, yes, of course,’ said she, interrupting me with a gesture of
- impatience. ‘But I cannot go, Helen, before the time appointed for our
- departure. What possible pretext could I frame for such a thing?
- Whether I proposed going back alone—which Lowborough would not hear of—or
- taking him with me, the very circumstance itself would be certain to
- excite suspicion—and when our visit is so nearly at an end too—little
- more than a week—surely you can endure my presence so long! I will not
- annoy you with any more of my friendly impertinences.’
- ‘Well, I have nothing more to say to you.’
- ‘Have you mentioned this affair to Huntingdon?’ asked she, as I was
- leaving the room.
- ‘How dare you mention his name to me!’ was the only answer I gave.
- No words have passed between us since, but such as outward decency or
- pure necessity demanded.
- CHAPTER XXXV
- Nineteenth.—In proportion as Lady Lowborough finds she has nothing to
- fear from me, and as the time of departure draws nigh, the more audacious
- and insolent she becomes. She does not scruple to speak to my husband
- with affectionate familiarity in my presence, when no one else is by, and
- is particularly fond of displaying her interest in his health and
- welfare, or in anything that concerns him, as if for the purpose of
- contrasting her kind solicitude with my cold indifference. And he
- rewards her by such smiles and glances, such whispered words, or
- boldly-spoken insinuations, indicative of his sense of her goodness and
- my neglect, as make the blood rush into my face, in spite of myself—for I
- would be utterly regardless of it all—deaf and blind to everything that
- passes between them, since the more I show myself sensible of their
- wickedness the more she triumphs in her victory, and the more he flatters
- himself that I love him devotedly still, in spite of my pretended
- indifference. On such occasions I have sometimes been startled by a
- subtle, fiendish suggestion inciting me to show him the contrary by a
- seeming encouragement of Hargrave’s advances; but such ideas are banished
- in a moment with horror and self-abasement; and then I hate him tenfold
- more than ever for having brought me to this!—God pardon me for it and
- all my sinful thoughts! Instead of being humbled and purified by my
- afflictions, I feel that they are turning my nature into gall. This must
- be my fault as much as theirs that wrong me. No true Christian could
- cherish such bitter feelings as I do against him and her, especially the
- latter: him, I still feel that I could pardon—freely, gladly—on the
- slightest token of repentance; but she—words cannot utter my abhorrence.
- Reason forbids, but passion urges strongly; and I must pray and struggle
- long ere I subdue it.
- It is well that she is leaving to-morrow, for I could not well endure her
- presence for another day. This morning she rose earlier than usual. I
- found her in the room alone, when I went down to breakfast.
- ‘Oh, Helen! is it you?’ said she, turning as I entered.
- I gave an involuntary start back on seeing her, at which she uttered a
- short laugh, observing, ‘I think we are both disappointed.’
- I came forward and busied myself with the breakfast things.
- ‘This is the last day I shall burden your hospitality,’ said she, as she
- seated herself at the table. ‘Ah, here comes one that will not rejoice
- at it!’ she murmured, half to herself, as Arthur entered the room.
- He shook hands with her and wished her good-morning: then, looking
- lovingly in her face, and still retaining her hand in his, murmured
- pathetically, ‘The last—last day!’
- ‘Yes,’ said she with some asperity; ‘and I rose early to make the best of
- it—I have been here alone this half-hour, and you—you lazy creature—’
- ‘Well, I thought I was early too,’ said he; ‘but,’ dropping his voice
- almost to a whisper, ‘you see we are not alone.’
- ‘We never are,’ returned she. But they were almost as good as alone, for
- I was now standing at the window, watching the clouds, and struggling to
- suppress my wrath.
- Some more words passed between them, which, happily, I did not overhear;
- but Annabella had the audacity to come and place herself beside me, and
- even to put her hand upon my shoulder and say softly, ‘You need not
- grudge him to me, Helen, for I love him more than ever you could do.’
- This put me beside myself. I took her hand and violently dashed it from
- me, with an expression of abhorrence and indignation that could not be
- suppressed. Startled, almost appalled, by this sudden outbreak, she
- recoiled in silence. I would have given way to my fury and said more,
- but Arthur’s low laugh recalled me to myself. I checked the half-uttered
- invective, and scornfully turned away, regretting that I had given him so
- much amusement. He was still laughing when Mr. Hargrave made his
- appearance. How much of the scene he had witnessed I do not know, for
- the door was ajar when he entered. He greeted his host and his cousin
- both coldly, and me with a glance intended to express the deepest
- sympathy mingled with high admiration and esteem.
- ‘How much allegiance do you owe to that man?’ he asked below his breath,
- as he stood beside me at the window, affecting to be making observations
- on the weather.
- ‘None,’ I answered. And immediately returning to the table, I employed
- myself in making the tea. He followed, and would have entered into some
- kind of conversation with me, but the other guests were now beginning to
- assemble, and I took no more notice of him, except to give him his
- coffee.
- After breakfast, determined to pass as little of the day as possible in
- company with Lady Lowborough, I quietly stole away from the company and
- retired to the library. Mr. Hargrave followed me thither, under pretence
- of coming for a book; and first, turning to the shelves, he selected a
- volume, and then quietly, but by no means timidly, approaching me, he
- stood beside me, resting his hand on the back of my chair, and said
- softly, ‘And so you consider yourself free at last?’
- ‘Yes,’ said I, without moving, or raising my eyes from my book, ‘free to
- do anything but offend God and my conscience.’
- There was a momentary pause.
- ‘Very right,’ said he, ‘provided your conscience be not too morbidly
- tender, and your ideas of God not too erroneously severe; but can you
- suppose it would offend that benevolent Being to make the happiness of
- one who would die for yours?—to raise a devoted heart from purgatorial
- torments to a state of heavenly bliss, when you could do it without the
- slightest injury to yourself or any other?’
- This was spoken in a low, earnest, melting tone, as he bent over me. I
- now raised my head; and steadily confronting his gaze, I answered calmly,
- ‘Mr. Hargrave, do you mean to insult me?’
- He was not prepared for this. He paused a moment to recover the shock;
- then, drawing himself up and removing his hand from my chair, he
- answered, with proud sadness,—‘That was not my intention.’
- I just glanced towards the door, with a slight movement of the head, and
- then returned to my book. He immediately withdrew. This was better than
- if I had answered with more words, and in the passionate spirit to which
- my first impulse would have prompted. What a good thing it is to be able
- to command one’s temper! I must labour to cultivate this inestimable
- quality: God only knows how often I shall need it in this rough, dark
- road that lies before me.
- In the course of the morning I drove over to the Grove with the two
- ladies, to give Milicent an opportunity for bidding farewell to her
- mother and sister. They persuaded her to stay with them the rest of the
- day, Mrs. Hargrave promising to bring her back in the evening and remain
- till the party broke up on the morrow. Consequently, Lady Lowborough and
- I had the pleasure of returning _tête-à-tête_ in the carriage together.
- For the first mile or two we kept silence, I looking out of my window,
- and she leaning back in her corner. But I was not going to restrict
- myself to any particular position for her; when I was tired of leaning
- forward, with the cold, raw wind in my face, and surveying the russet
- hedges and the damp, tangled grass of their banks, I gave it up and leant
- back too. With her usual impudence, my companion then made some attempts
- to get up a conversation; but the monosyllables ‘yes,’ or ‘no’ or
- ‘humph,’ were the utmost her several remarks could elicit from me. At
- last, on her asking my opinion upon some immaterial point of discussion,
- I answered,—‘Why do you wish to talk to me, Lady Lowborough? You must
- know what I think of you.’
- ‘Well, if you will be so bitter against me,’ replied she, ‘I can’t help
- it; but I’m not going to sulk for anybody.’ Our short drive was now at
- an end. As soon as the carriage door was opened, she sprang out, and
- went down the park to meet the gentlemen, who were just returning from
- the woods. Of course I did not follow.
- But I had not done with her impudence yet: after dinner, I retired to the
- drawing-room, as usual, and she accompanied me, but I had the two
- children with me, and I gave them my whole attention, and determined to
- keep them till the gentlemen came, or till Milicent arrived with her
- mother. Little Helen, however, was soon tired of playing, and insisted
- upon going to sleep; and while I sat on the sofa with her on my knee, and
- Arthur seated beside me, gently playing with her soft, flaxen hair, Lady
- Lowborough composedly came and placed herself on the other side.
- ‘To-morrow, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said she, ‘you will be delivered from my
- presence, which, no doubt, you will be very glad of—it is natural you
- should; but do you know I have rendered you a great service? Shall I
- tell you what it is?’
- ‘I shall be glad to hear of any service you have rendered me,’ said I,
- determined to be calm, for I knew by the tone of her voice she wanted to
- provoke me.
- ‘Well,’ resumed she, ‘have you not observed the salutary change in Mr.
- Huntingdon? Don’t you see what a sober, temperate man he is become? You
- saw with regret the sad habits he was contracting, I know: and I know you
- did your utmost to deliver him from them, but without success, until I
- came to your assistance. I told him in few words that I could not bear
- to see him degrade himself so, and that I should cease to—no matter what
- I told him, but you see the reformation I have wrought; and you ought to
- thank me for it.’
- I rose and rang for the nurse.
- ‘But I desire no thanks,’ she continued; ‘all the return I ask is, that
- you will take care of him when I am gone, and not, by harshness and
- neglect, drive him back to his old courses.’
- I was almost sick with passion, but Rachel was now at the door. I
- pointed to the children, for I could not trust myself to speak: she took
- them away, and I followed.
- ‘Will you, Helen?’ continued the speaker.
- I gave her a look that blighted the malicious smile on her face, or
- checked it, at least for a moment, and departed. In the ante-room I met
- Mr. Hargrave. He saw I was in no humour to be spoken to, and suffered me
- to pass without a word; but when, after a few minutes’ seclusion in the
- library, I had regained my composure, and was returning to join Mrs.
- Hargrave and Milicent, whom I had just heard come downstairs and go into
- the drawing-room, I found him there still lingering in the dimly-lighted
- apartment, and evidently waiting for me.
- ‘Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he as I passed, ‘will you allow me one word?’
- ‘What is it then? be quick, if you please.’
- ‘I offended you this morning; and I cannot live under your displeasure.’
- ‘Then go, and sin no more,’ replied I, turning away.
- ‘No, no!’ said he, hastily, setting himself before me. ‘Pardon me, but I
- must have your forgiveness. I leave you to-morrow, and I may not have an
- opportunity of speaking to you again. I was wrong to forget myself and
- you, as I did; but let me implore you to forget and forgive my rash
- presumption, and think of me as if those words had never been spoken;
- for, believe me, I regret them deeply, and the loss of your esteem is too
- severe a penalty: I cannot bear it.’
- ‘Forgetfulness is not to be purchased with a wish; and I cannot bestow my
- esteem on all who desire it, unless they deserve it too.’
- ‘I shall think my life well spent in labouring to deserve it, if you will
- but pardon this offence—will you?’
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘Yes! but that is coldly spoken. Give me your hand and I’ll believe you.
- You won’t? Then, Mrs. Huntingdon, you do not forgive me!’
- ‘Yes; here it is, and my forgiveness with it: only, _sin no more_.’
- He pressed my cold hand with sentimental fervour, but said nothing, and
- stood aside to let me pass into the room, where all the company were now
- assembled. Mr. Grimsby was seated near the door: on seeing me enter,
- almost immediately followed by Hargrave, he leered at me with a glance of
- intolerable significance, as I passed. I looked him in the face, till he
- sullenly turned away, if not ashamed, at least confounded for the moment.
- Meantime Hattersley had seized Hargrave by the arm, and was whispering
- something in his ear—some coarse joke, no doubt, for the latter neither
- laughed nor spoke in answer, but, turning from him with a slight curl of
- the lip, disengaged himself and went to his mother, who was telling Lord
- Lowborough how many reasons she had to be proud of her son.
- Thank heaven, they are all going to-morrow.
- CHAPTER XXXVI
- December 20th, 1824.—This is the third anniversary of our felicitous
- union. It is now two months since our guests left us to the enjoyment of
- each other’s society; and I have had nine weeks’ experience of this new
- phase of conjugal life—two persons living together, as master and
- mistress of the house, and father and mother of a winsome, merry little
- child, with the mutual understanding that there is no love, friendship,
- or sympathy between them. As far as in me lies, I endeavour to live
- peaceably with him: I treat him with unimpeachable civility, give up my
- convenience to his, wherever it may reasonably be done, and consult him
- in a business-like way on household affairs, deferring to his pleasure
- and judgment, even when I know the latter to be inferior to my own.
- As for him, for the first week or two, he was peevish and low, fretting,
- I suppose, over his dear Annabella’s departure, and particularly
- ill-tempered to me: everything I did was wrong; I was cold-hearted, hard,
- insensate; my sour, pale face was perfectly repulsive; my voice made him
- shudder; he knew not how he could live through the winter with me; I
- should kill him by inches. Again I proposed a separation, but it would
- not do: he was not going to be the talk of all the old gossips in the
- neighbourhood: he would not have it said that he was such a brute his
- wife could not live with him. No; he must contrive to bear with me.
- ‘I must contrive to bear with you, you mean,’ said I; ‘for so long as I
- discharge my functions of steward and house-keeper, so conscientiously
- and well, without pay and without thanks, you cannot afford to part with
- me. I shall therefore remit these duties when my bondage becomes
- intolerable.’ This threat, I thought, would serve to keep him in check,
- if anything would.
- I believe he was much disappointed that I did not feel his offensive
- sayings more acutely, for when he had said anything particularly well
- calculated to hurt my feelings, he would stare me searchingly in the
- face, and then grumble against my ‘marble heart’ or my ‘brutal
- insensibility.’ If I had bitterly wept and deplored his lost affection,
- he would, perhaps, have condescended to pity me, and taken me into favour
- for a while, just to comfort his solitude and console him for the absence
- of his beloved Annabella, until he could meet her again, or some more
- fitting substitute. Thank heaven, I am not so weak as that! I was
- infatuated once with a foolish, besotted affection, that clung to him in
- spite of his unworthiness, but it is fairly gone now—wholly crushed and
- withered away; and he has none but himself and his vices to thank for it.
- At first (in compliance with his sweet lady’s injunctions, I suppose), he
- abstained wonderfully well from seeking to solace his cares in wine; but
- at length he began to relax his virtuous efforts, and now and then
- exceeded a little, and still continues to do so; nay, sometimes, not a
- little. When he is under the exciting influence of these excesses, he
- sometimes fires up and attempts to play the brute; and then I take little
- pains to suppress my scorn and disgust. When he is under the depressing
- influence of the after-consequences, he bemoans his sufferings and his
- errors, and charges them both upon me; he knows such indulgence injures
- his health, and does him more harm than good; but he says I drive him to
- it by my unnatural, unwomanly conduct; it will be the ruin of him in the
- end, but it is all my fault; and then I am roused to defend myself,
- sometimes with bitter recrimination. This is a kind of injustice I
- cannot patiently endure. Have I not laboured long and hard to save him
- from this very vice? Would I not labour still to deliver him from it if
- I could? but could I do so by fawning upon him and caressing him when I
- know that he scorns me? Is it my fault that I have lost my influence
- with him, or that he has forfeited every claim to my regard? And should
- I seek a reconciliation with him, when I feel that I abhor him, and that
- he despises me? and while he continues still to correspond with Lady
- Lowborough, as I know he does? No, never, never, never! he may drink
- himself dead, but it is NOT my fault!
- Yet I do my part to save him still: I give him to understand that
- drinking makes his eyes dull, and his face red and bloated; and that it
- tends to render him imbecile in body and mind; and if Annabella were to
- see him as often as I do, she would speedily be disenchanted; and that
- she certainly will withdraw her favour from him, if he continues such
- courses. Such a mode of admonition wins only coarse abuse for me—and,
- indeed, I almost feel as if I deserved it, for I hate to use such
- arguments; but they sink into his stupefied heart, and make him pause,
- and ponder, and abstain, more than anything else I could say.
- At present I am enjoying a temporary relief from his presence: he is gone
- with Hargrave to join a distant hunt, and will probably not be back
- before to-morrow evening. How differently I used to feel his absence!
- Mr. Hargrave is still at the Grove. He and Arthur frequently meet to
- pursue their rural sports together: he often calls upon us here, and
- Arthur not unfrequently rides over to him. I do not think either of
- these soi-disant friends is overflowing with love for the other; but such
- intercourse serves to get the time on, and I am very willing it should
- continue, as it saves me some hours of discomfort in Arthur’s society,
- and gives him some better employment than the sottish indulgence of his
- sensual appetites. The only objection I have to Mr. Hargrave’s being in
- the neighbourhood, is that the fear of meeting him at the Grove prevents
- me from seeing his sister so often as I otherwise should; for, of late,
- he has conducted himself towards me with such unerring propriety, that I
- have almost forgotten his former conduct. I suppose he is striving to
- ‘win my esteem.’ If he continue to act in this way, he may win it; but
- what then? The moment he attempts to demand anything more, he will lose
- it again.
- February 10th.—It is a hard, embittering thing to have one’s kind
- feelings and good intentions cast back in one’s teeth. I was beginning
- to relent towards my wretched partner; to pity his forlorn, comfortless
- condition, unalleviated as it is by the consolations of intellectual
- resources and the answer of a good conscience towards God; and to think I
- ought to sacrifice my pride, and renew my efforts once again to make his
- home agreeable and lead him back to the path of virtue; not by false
- professions of love, and not by pretended remorse, but by mitigating my
- habitual coldness of manner, and commuting my frigid civility into
- kindness wherever an opportunity occurred; and not only was I beginning
- to think so, but I had already begun to act upon the thought—and what was
- the result? No answering spark of kindness, no awakening penitence, but
- an unappeasable ill-humour, and a spirit of tyrannous exaction that
- increased with indulgence, and a lurking gleam of self-complacent triumph
- at every detection of relenting softness in my manner, that congealed me
- to marble again as often as it recurred; and this morning he finished the
- business:—I think the petrifaction is so completely effected at last that
- nothing can melt me again. Among his letters was one which he perused
- with symptoms of unusual gratification, and then threw it across the
- table to me, with the admonition,—
- ‘There! read that, and take a lesson by it!’
- It was in the free, dashing hand of Lady Lowborough. I glanced at the
- first page; it seemed full of extravagant protestations of affection;
- impetuous longings for a speedy reunion—and impious defiance of God’s
- mandates, and railings against His providence for having cast their lot
- asunder, and doomed them both to the hateful bondage of alliance with
- those they could not love. He gave a slight titter on seeing me change
- colour. I folded up the letter, rose, and returned it to him, with no
- remark, but—
- ‘Thank you, I will take a lesson by it!’
- My little Arthur was standing between his knees, delightedly playing with
- the bright, ruby ring on his finger. Urged by a sudden, imperative
- impulse to deliver my son from that contaminating influence, I caught him
- up in my arms and carried him with me out of the room. Not liking this
- abrupt removal, the child began to pout and cry. This was a new stab to
- my already tortured heart. I would not let him go; but, taking him with
- me into the library, I shut the door, and, kneeling on the floor beside
- him, I embraced him, kissed him, wept over with him with passionate
- fondness. Rather frightened than consoled by this, he turned struggling
- from me, and cried out aloud for his papa. I released him from my arms,
- and never were more bitter tears than those that now concealed him from
- my blinded, burning eyes. Hearing his cries, the father came to the
- room. I instantly turned away, lest he should see and misconstrue my
- emotion. He swore at me, and took the now pacified child away.
- It is hard that my little darling should love him more than me; and that,
- when the well-being and culture of my son is all I have to live for, I
- should see my influence destroyed by one whose selfish affection is more
- injurious than the coldest indifference or the harshest tyranny could be.
- If I, for his good, deny him some trifling indulgence, he goes to his
- father, and the latter, in spite of his selfish indolence, will even give
- himself some trouble to meet the child’s desires: if I attempt to curb
- his will, or look gravely on him for some act of childish disobedience,
- he knows his other parent will smile and take his part against me. Thus,
- not only have I the father’s spirit in the son to contend against, the
- germs of his evil tendencies to search out and eradicate, and his
- corrupting intercourse and example in after-life to counteract, but
- already he counteracts my arduous labour for the child’s advantage,
- destroys my influence over his tender mind, and robs me of his very love;
- I had no earthly hope but this, and he seems to take a diabolical delight
- in tearing it away.
- But it is wrong to despair; I will remember the counsel of the inspired
- writer to him ‘that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voice of his
- servant, that sitteth in darkness and hath no light; let him trust in the
- name of the Lord, and stay upon his God!’
- CHAPTER XXXVII
- December 20th, 1825.—Another year is past; and I am weary of this life.
- And yet I cannot wish to leave it: whatever afflictions assail me here, I
- cannot wish to go and leave my darling in this dark and wicked world
- alone, without a friend to guide him through its weary mazes, to warn him
- of its thousand snares, and guard him from the perils that beset him on
- every hand. I am not well fitted to be his only companion, I know; but
- there is no other to supply my place. I am too grave to minister to his
- amusements and enter into his infantile sports as a nurse or a mother
- ought to do, and often his bursts of gleeful merriment trouble and alarm
- me; I see in them his father’s spirit and temperament, and I tremble for
- the consequences; and too often damp the innocent mirth I ought to share.
- That father, on the contrary, has no weight of sadness on his mind; is
- troubled with no fears, no scruples concerning his son’s future welfare;
- and at evenings especially, the times when the child sees him the most
- and the oftenest, he is always particularly jocund and open-hearted:
- ready to laugh and to jest with anything or anybody but me, and I am
- particularly silent and sad: therefore, of course, the child dotes upon
- his seemingly joyous amusing, ever-indulgent papa, and will at any time
- gladly exchange my company for his. This disturbs me greatly; not so
- much for the sake of my son’s affection (though I do prize that highly,
- and though I feel it is my right, and know I have done much to earn it)
- as for that influence over him which, for his own advantage, I would
- strive to purchase and retain, and which for very spite his father
- delights to rob me of, and, from motives of mere idle egotism, is pleased
- to win to himself; making no use of it but to torment me and ruin the
- child. My only consolation is, that he spends comparatively little of
- his time at home, and, during the months he passes in London or
- elsewhere, I have a chance of recovering the ground I had lost, and
- overcoming with good the evil he has wrought by his wilful mismanagement.
- But then it is a bitter trial to behold him, on his return, doing his
- utmost to subvert my labours and transform my innocent, affectionate,
- tractable darling into a selfish, disobedient, and mischievous boy;
- thereby preparing the soil for those vices he has so successfully
- cultivated in his own perverted nature.
- Happily, there were none of Arthur’s ‘friends’ invited to Grassdale last
- autumn: he took himself off to visit some of them instead. I wish he
- would always do so, and I wish his friends were numerous and loving
- enough to keep him amongst them all the year round. Mr. Hargrave,
- considerably to my annoyance, did not go with him; but I think I have
- done with that gentleman at last.
- For seven or eight months he behaved so remarkably well, and managed so
- skilfully too, that I was almost completely off my guard, and was really
- beginning to look upon him as a friend, and even to treat him as such,
- with certain prudent restrictions (which I deemed scarcely necessary);
- when, presuming upon my unsuspecting kindness, he thought he might
- venture to overstep the bounds of decent moderation and propriety that
- had so long restrained him. It was on a pleasant evening at the close of
- May: I was wandering in the park, and he, on seeing me there as he rode
- past, made bold to enter and approach me, dismounting and leaving his
- horse at the gate. This was the first time he had ventured to come
- within its inclosure since I had been left alone, without the sanction of
- his mother’s or sister’s company, or at least the excuse of a message
- from them. But he managed to appear so calm and easy, so respectful and
- self-possessed in his friendliness, that, though a little surprised, I
- was neither alarmed nor offended at the unusual liberty, and he walked
- with me under the ash-trees and by the water-side, and talked, with
- considerable animation, good taste, and intelligence, on many subjects,
- before I began to think about getting rid of him. Then, after a pause,
- during which we both stood gazing on the calm, blue water—I revolving in
- my mind the best means of politely dismissing my companion, he, no doubt,
- pondering other matters equally alien to the sweet sights and sounds that
- alone were present to his senses,—he suddenly electrified me by
- beginning, in a peculiar tone, low, soft, but perfectly distinct, to pour
- forth the most unequivocal expressions of earnest and passionate love;
- pleading his cause with all the bold yet artful eloquence he could summon
- to his aid. But I cut short his appeal, and repulsed him so
- determinately, so decidedly, and with such a mixture of scornful
- indignation, tempered with cool, dispassionate sorrow and pity for his
- benighted mind, that he withdrew, astonished, mortified, and
- discomforted; and, a few days after, I heard that he had departed for
- London. He returned, however, in eight or nine weeks, and did not
- entirely keep aloof from me, but comported himself in so remarkable a
- manner that his quick-sighted sister could not fail to notice the change.
- ‘What have you done to Walter, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ said she one morning,
- when I had called at the Grove, and he had just left the room after
- exchanging a few words of the coldest civility. ‘He has been so
- extremely ceremonious and stately of late, I can’t imagine what it is all
- about, unless you have desperately offended him. Tell me what it is,
- that I may be your mediator, and make you friends again.’
- ‘I have done nothing willingly to offend him,’ said I. ‘If he is
- offended, he can best tell you himself what it is about.’
- ‘I’ll ask him,’ cried the giddy girl, springing up and putting her head
- out of the window: ‘he’s only in the garden—Walter!’
- ‘No, no, Esther! you will seriously displease me if you do; and I shall
- leave you immediately, and not come again for months—perhaps years.’
- ‘Did you call, Esther?’ said her brother, approaching the window from
- without.
- ‘Yes; I wanted to ask you—’
- ‘Good-morning, Esther,’ said I, taking her hand and giving it a severe
- squeeze.
- ‘To ask you,’ continued she, ‘to get me a rose for Mrs. Huntingdon.’ He
- departed. ‘Mrs. Huntingdon,’ she exclaimed, turning to me and still
- holding me fast by the hand, ‘I’m quite shocked at you—you’re just as
- angry, and distant, and cold as he is: and I’m determined you shall be as
- good friends as ever before you go.’
- ‘Esther, how can you be so rude!’ cried Mrs. Hargrave, who was seated
- gravely knitting in her easy-chair. ‘Surely, you never will learn to
- conduct yourself like a lady!’
- ‘Well, mamma, you said yourself—‘ But the young lady was silenced by the
- uplifted finger of her mamma, accompanied with a very stern shake of the
- head.
- ‘Isn’t she cross?’ whispered she to me; but, before I could add my share
- of reproof, Mr. Hargrave reappeared at the window with a beautiful
- moss-rose in his hand.
- ‘Here, Esther, I’ve brought you the rose,’ said he, extending it towards
- her.
- ‘Give it her yourself, you blockhead!’ cried she, recoiling with a spring
- from between us.
- ‘Mrs. Huntingdon would rather receive it from you,’ replied he, in a very
- serious tone, but lowering his voice that his mother might not hear. His
- sister took the rose and gave it to me.
- ‘My brother’s compliments, Mrs. Huntingdon, and he hopes you and he will
- come to a better understanding by-and-by. Will that do, Walter?’ added
- the saucy girl, turning to him and putting her arm round his neck, as he
- stood leaning upon the sill of the window—‘or should I have said that you
- are sorry you were so touchy? or that you hope she will pardon your
- offence?’
- ‘You silly girl! you don’t know what you are talking about,’ replied he
- gravely.
- ‘Indeed I don’t: for I’m quite in the dark!’
- ‘Now, Esther,’ interposed Mrs. Hargrave, who, if equally benighted on the
- subject of our estrangement, saw at least that her daughter was behaving
- very improperly, ‘I must insist upon your leaving the room!’
- ‘Pray don’t, Mrs. Hargrave, for I’m going to leave it myself,’ said I,
- and immediately made my adieux.
- About a week after Mr. Hargrave brought his sister to see me. He
- conducted himself, at first, with his usual cold, distant, half-stately,
- half-melancholy, altogether injured air; but Esther made no remark upon
- it this time: she had evidently been schooled into better manners. She
- talked to me, and laughed and romped with little Arthur, her loved and
- loving playmate. He, somewhat to my discomfort, enticed her from the
- room to have a run in the hall, and thence into the garden. I got up to
- stir the fire. Mr. Hargrave asked if I felt cold, and shut the door—a
- very unseasonable piece of officiousness, for I had meditated following
- the noisy playfellows if they did not speedily return. He then took the
- liberty of walking up to the fire himself, and asking me if I were aware
- that Mr. Huntingdon was now at the seat of Lord Lowborough, and likely to
- continue there some time.
- ‘No; but it’s no matter,’ I answered carelessly; and if my cheek glowed
- like fire, it was rather at the question than the information it
- conveyed.
- ‘You don’t object to it?’ he said.
- ‘Not at all, if Lord Lowborough likes his company.’
- ‘You have no love left for him, then?’
- ‘Not the least.’
- ‘I knew that—I knew you were too high-minded and pure in your own nature
- to continue to regard one so utterly false and polluted with any feelings
- but those of indignation and scornful abhorrence!’
- ‘Is he not your friend?’ said I, turning my eyes from the fire to his
- face, with perhaps a slight touch of those feelings he assigned to
- another.
- ‘He was,’ replied he, with the same calm gravity as before; ‘but do not
- wrong me by supposing that I could continue my friendship and esteem to a
- man who could so infamously, so impiously forsake and injure one so
- transcendently—well, I won’t speak of it. But tell me, do you never
- think of revenge?’
- ‘Revenge! No—what good would that do?—it would make him no better, and
- me no happier.’
- ‘I don’t know how to talk to you, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he, smiling;
- ‘you are only half a woman—your nature must be half human, half angelic.
- Such goodness overawes me; I don’t know what to make of it.’
- ‘Then, sir, I fear you must be very much worse than you should be, if I,
- a mere ordinary mortal, am, by your own confession, so vastly your
- superior; and since there exists so little sympathy between us, I think
- we had better each look out for some more congenial companion.’ And
- forthwith moving to the window, I began to look out for my little son and
- his gay young friend.
- ‘No, I am the ordinary mortal, I maintain,’ replied Mr. Hargrave. ‘I
- will not allow myself to be worse than my fellows; but you, Madam—I
- equally maintain there is nobody like you. But are you happy?’ he asked
- in a serious tone.
- ‘As happy as some others, I suppose.’
- ‘Are you as happy as you desire to be?’
- ‘No one is so blest as that comes to on this side of eternity.’
- ‘One thing I know,’ returned he, with a deep sad sigh; ‘you are
- immeasurably happier than I am.’
- ‘I am very sorry for you, then,’ I could not help replying.
- ‘Are you, indeed? No, for if you were you would be glad to relieve me.’
- ‘And so I should if I could do so without injuring myself or any other.’
- ‘And can you suppose that I should wish you to injure yourself? No: on
- the contrary, it is your own happiness I long for more than mine. You
- are miserable now, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ continued he, looking me boldly in
- the face. ‘You do not complain, but I see—and feel—and know that you are
- miserable—and must remain so as long as you keep those walls of
- impenetrable ice about your still warm and palpitating heart; and I am
- miserable, too. Deign to smile on me and I am happy: trust me, and you
- shall be happy also, for if you are a woman I can make you so—and I will
- do it in spite of yourself!’ he muttered between his teeth; ‘and as for
- others, the question is between ourselves alone: you cannot injure your
- husband, you know, and no one else has any concern in the matter.’
- ‘I have a son, Mr. Hargrave, and you have a mother,’ said I, retiring
- from the window, whither he had followed me.
- ‘They need not know,’ he began; but before anything more could be said on
- either side, Esther and Arthur re-entered the room. The former glanced
- at Walter’s flushed, excited countenance, and then at mine—a little
- flushed and excited too, I daresay, though from far different causes.
- She must have thought we had been quarrelling desperately, and was
- evidently perplexed and disturbed at the circumstance; but she was too
- polite or too much afraid of her brother’s anger to refer to it. She
- seated herself on the sofa, and putting back her bright, golden ringlets,
- that were scattered in wild profusion over her face, she immediately
- began to talk about the garden and her little playfellow, and continued
- to chatter away in her usual strain till her brother summoned her to
- depart.
- ‘If I have spoken too warmly, forgive me,’ he murmured on taking his
- leave, ‘or I shall never forgive myself.’ Esther smiled and glanced at
- me: I merely bowed, and her countenance fell. She thought it a poor
- return for Walter’s generous concession, and was disappointed in her
- friend. Poor child, she little knows the world she lives in!
- Mr. Hargrave had not an opportunity of meeting me again in private for
- several weeks after this; but when he did meet me there was less of pride
- and more of touching melancholy in his manner than before. Oh, how he
- annoyed me! I was obliged at last almost entirely to remit my visits to
- the Grove, at the expense of deeply offending Mrs. Hargrave and seriously
- afflicting poor Esther, who really values my society for want of better,
- and who ought not to suffer for the fault of her brother. But that
- indefatigable foe was not yet vanquished: he seemed to be always on the
- watch. I frequently saw him riding lingeringly past the premises,
- looking searchingly round him as he went—or, if I did not, Rachel did.
- That sharp-sighted woman soon guessed how matters stood between us, and
- descrying the enemy’s movements from her elevation at the nursery-window,
- she would give me a quiet intimation if she saw me preparing for a walk
- when she had reason to believe he was about, or to think it likely that
- he would meet or overtake me in the way I meant to traverse. I would
- then defer my ramble, or confine myself for that day to the park and
- gardens, or, if the proposed excursion was a matter of importance, such
- as a visit to the sick or afflicted, I would take Rachel with me, and
- then I was never molested.
- But one mild, sunshiny day, early in November, I had ventured forth alone
- to visit the village school and a few of the poor tenants, and on my
- return I was alarmed at the clatter of a horse’s feet behind me,
- approaching at a rapid, steady trot. There was no stile or gap at hand
- by which I could escape into the fields, so I walked quietly on, saying
- to myself, ‘It may not be he after all; and if it is, and if he do annoy
- me, it shall be for the last time, I am determined, if there be power in
- words and looks against cool impudence and mawkish sentimentality so
- inexhaustible as his.’
- The horse soon overtook me, and was reined up close beside me. It was
- Mr. Hargrave. He greeted me with a smile intended to be soft and
- melancholy, but his triumphant satisfaction at having caught me at last
- so shone through that it was quite a failure. After briefly answering
- his salutation and inquiring after the ladies at the Grove, I turned away
- and walked on; but he followed and kept his horse at my side: it was
- evident he intended to be my companion all the way.
- ‘Well! I don’t much care. If you want another rebuff, take it—and
- welcome,’ was my inward remark. ‘Now, sir, what next?’
- This question, though unspoken, was not long unanswered; after a few
- passing observations upon indifferent subjects, he began in solemn tones
- the following appeal to my humanity:—
- ‘It will be four years next April since I first saw you, Mrs.
- Huntingdon—you may have forgotten the circumstance, but I never can. I
- admired you then most deeply, but I dared not love you. In the following
- autumn I saw so much of your perfections that I could not fail to love
- you, though I dared not show it. For upwards of three years I have
- endured a perfect martyrdom. From the anguish of suppressed emotions,
- intense and fruitless longings, silent sorrow, crushed hopes, and
- trampled affections, I have suffered more than I can tell, or you
- imagine—and you were the cause of it, and not altogether the innocent
- cause. My youth is wasting away; my prospects are darkened; my life is a
- desolate blank; I have no rest day or night: I am become a burden to
- myself and others, and you might save me by a word—a glance, and will not
- do it—is this right?’
- ‘In the first place, I don’t believe you,’ answered I; ‘in the second, if
- you will be such a fool, I can’t hinder it.’
- ‘If you affect,’ replied he, earnestly, ‘to regard as folly the best, the
- strongest, the most godlike impulses of our nature, I don’t believe you.
- I know you are not the heartless, icy being you pretend to be—you had a
- heart once, and gave it to your husband. When you found him utterly
- unworthy of the treasure, you reclaimed it; and you will not pretend that
- you loved that sensual, earthly-minded profligate so deeply, so
- devotedly, that you can never love another? I know that there are
- feelings in your nature that have never yet been called forth; I know,
- too, that in your present neglected lonely state you are and must be
- miserable. You have it in your power to raise two human beings from a
- state of actual suffering to such unspeakable beatitude as only generous,
- noble, self-forgetting love can give (for you can love me if you will);
- you may tell me that you scorn and detest me, but, since you have set me
- the example of plain speaking, I will answer that I do not believe you.
- But you will not do it! you choose rather to leave us miserable; and you
- coolly tell me it is the will of God that we should remain so. You may
- call this religion, but I call it wild fanaticism!’
- ‘There is another life both for you and for me,’ said I. ‘If it be the
- will of God that we should sow in tears now, it is only that we may reap
- in joy hereafter. It is His will that we should not injure others by the
- gratification of our own earthly passions; and you have a mother, and
- sisters, and friends who would be seriously injured by your disgrace; and
- I, too, have friends, whose peace of mind shall never be sacrificed to my
- enjoyment, or yours either, with my consent; and if I were alone in the
- world, I have still my God and my religion, and I would sooner die than
- disgrace my calling and break my faith with heaven to obtain a few brief
- years of false and fleeting happiness—happiness sure to end in misery
- even here—for myself or any other!’
- ‘There need be no disgrace, no misery or sacrifice in any quarter,’
- persisted he. ‘I do not ask you to leave your home or defy the world’s
- opinion.’ But I need not repeat all his arguments. I refuted them to
- the best of my power; but that power was provokingly small, at the
- moment, for I was too much flurried with indignation—and even shame—that
- he should thus dare to address me, to retain sufficient command of
- thought and language to enable me adequately to contend against his
- powerful sophistries. Finding, however, that he could not be silenced by
- reason, and even covertly exulted in his seeming advantage, and ventured
- to deride those assertions I had not the coolness to prove, I changed my
- course and tried another plan.
- ‘Do you really love me?’ said I, seriously, pausing and looking him
- calmly in the face.
- ‘Do I love you!’ cried he.
- ‘Truly?’ I demanded.
- His countenance brightened; he thought his triumph was at hand. He
- commenced a passionate protestation of the truth and fervour of his
- attachment, which I cut short by another question:—
- ‘But is it not a selfish love? Have you enough disinterested affection
- to enable you to sacrifice your own pleasure to mine?’
- ‘I would give my life to serve you.’
- ‘I don’t want your life; but have you enough real sympathy for my
- afflictions to induce you to make an effort to relieve them, at the risk
- of a little discomfort to yourself?’
- ‘Try me, and see.’
- ‘If you have, never mention this subject again. You cannot recur to it
- in any way without doubling the weight of those sufferings you so
- feelingly deplore. I have nothing left me but the solace of a good
- conscience and a hopeful trust in heaven, and you labour continually to
- rob me of these. If you persist, I must regard you as my deadliest foe.’
- ‘But hear me a moment—’
- ‘No, sir! You said you would give your life to serve me; I only ask your
- silence on one particular point. I have spoken plainly; and what I say I
- mean. If you torment me in this way any more, I must conclude that your
- protestations are entirely false, and that you hate me in your heart as
- fervently as you profess to love me!’
- He bit his lip, and bent his eyes upon the ground in silence for a while.
- ‘Then I must leave you,’ said he at length, looking steadily upon me, as
- if with the last hope of detecting some token of irrepressible anguish or
- dismay awakened by those solemn words. ‘I must leave you. I cannot live
- here, and be for ever silent on the all-absorbing subject of my thoughts
- and wishes.’
- ‘Formerly, I believe, you spent but little of your time at home,’ I
- answered; ‘it will do you no harm to absent yourself again, for a
- while—if that be really necessary.’
- ‘If that be really possible,’ he muttered; ‘and can you bid me go so
- coolly? Do you really wish it?’
- ‘Most certainly I do. If you cannot see me without tormenting me as you
- have lately done, I would gladly say farewell and never see you more.’
- He made no answer, but, bending from his horse, held out his hand towards
- me. I looked up at his face, and saw therein such a look of genuine
- agony of soul, that, whether bitter disappointment, or wounded pride, or
- lingering love, or burning wrath were uppermost, I could not hesitate to
- put my hand in his as frankly as if I bade a friend farewell. He grasped
- it very hard, and immediately put spurs to his horse and galloped away.
- Very soon after, I learned that he was gone to Paris, where he still is;
- and the longer he stays there the better for me.
- I thank God for this deliverance!
- CHAPTER XXXVIII
- December 20th, 1826.—The fifth anniversary of my wedding-day, and, I
- trust, the last I shall spend under this roof. My resolution is formed,
- my plan concocted, and already partly put in execution. My conscience
- does not blame me, but while the purpose ripens let me beguile a few of
- these long winter evenings in stating the case for my own satisfaction: a
- dreary amusement enough, but having the air of a useful occupation, and
- being pursued as a task, it will suit me better than a lighter one.
- In September, quiet Grassdale was again alive with a party of ladies and
- gentlemen (so called), consisting of the same individuals as those
- invited the year before last, with the addition of two or three others,
- among whom were Mrs. Hargrave and her younger daughter. The gentlemen
- and Lady Lowborough were invited for the pleasure and convenience of the
- host; the other ladies, I suppose, for the sake of appearances, and to
- keep me in check, and make me discreet and civil in my demeanour. But
- the ladies stayed only three weeks; the gentlemen, with two exceptions,
- above two months: for their hospitable entertainer was loth to part with
- them and be left alone with his bright intellect, his stainless
- conscience, and his loved and loving wife.
- On the day of Lady Lowborough’s arrival, I followed her into her chamber,
- and plainly told her that, if I found reason to believe that she still
- continued her criminal connection with Mr. Huntingdon, I should think it
- my absolute duty to inform her husband of the circumstance—or awaken his
- suspicions at least—however painful it might be, or however dreadful the
- consequences. She was startled at first by the declaration, so
- unexpected, and so determinately yet calmly delivered; but rallying in a
- moment, she coolly replied that, if I saw anything at all reprehensible
- or suspicious in her conduct, she would freely give me leave to tell his
- lordship all about it. Willing to be satisfied with this, I left her;
- and certainly I saw nothing thenceforth particularly reprehensible or
- suspicious in her demeanour towards her host; but then I had the other
- guests to attend to, and I did not watch them narrowly—for, to confess
- the truth, I feared to see anything between them. I no longer regarded
- it as any concern of mine, and if it was my duty to enlighten Lord
- Lowborough, it was a painful duty, and I dreaded to be called to perform
- it.
- But my fears were brought to an end in a manner I had not anticipated.
- One evening, about a fortnight after the visitors’ arrival, I had retired
- into the library to snatch a few minutes’ respite from forced
- cheerfulness and wearisome discourse, for after so long a period of
- seclusion, dreary indeed as I had often found it, I could not always bear
- to be doing violence to my feelings, and goading my powers to talk, and
- smile and listen, and play the attentive hostess, or even the cheerful
- friend: I had just ensconced myself within the bow of the window, and was
- looking out upon the west, where the darkening hills rose sharply defined
- against the clear amber light of evening, that gradually blended and
- faded away into the pure, pale blue of the upper sky, where one bright
- star was shining through, as if to promise—‘When that dying light is
- gone, the world will not be left in darkness, and they who trust in God,
- whose minds are unbeclouded by the mists of unbelief and sin, are never
- wholly comfortless,’—when I heard a hurried step approaching, and Lord
- Lowborough entered. This room was still his favourite resort. He flung
- the door to with unusual violence, and cast his hat aside regardless
- where it fell. What could be the matter with him? His face was ghastly
- pale; his eyes were fixed upon the ground; his teeth clenched: his
- forehead glistened with the dews of agony. It was plain he knew his
- wrongs at last!
- Unconscious of my presence, he began to pace the room in a state of
- fearful agitation, violently wringing his hands and uttering low groans
- or incoherent ejaculations. I made a movement to let him know that he
- was not alone; but he was too preoccupied to notice it. Perhaps, while
- his back was towards me, I might cross the room and slip away unobserved.
- I rose to make the attempt, but then he perceived me. He started and
- stood still a moment; then wiped his streaming forehead, and, advancing
- towards me, with a kind of unnatural composure, said in a deep, almost
- sepulchral tone,—‘Mrs. Huntingdon, I must leave you to-morrow.’
- ‘To-morrow!’ I repeated. ‘I do not ask the cause.’
- ‘You know it then, and you can be so calm!’ said he, surveying me with
- profound astonishment, not unmingled with a kind of resentful bitterness,
- as it appeared to me.
- ‘I have so long been aware of—‘ I paused in time, and added, ‘of my
- husband’s character, that nothing shocks me.’
- ‘But this—how long have you been aware of this?’ demanded he, laying his
- clenched hand on the table beside him, and looking me keenly and fixedly
- in the face.
- I felt like a criminal.
- ‘Not long,’ I answered.
- ‘You knew it!’ cried he, with bitter vehemence—‘and you did not tell me!
- You helped to deceive me!’
- ‘My lord, I did not help to deceive you.’
- ‘Then why did you not tell me?’
- ‘Because I knew it would be painful to you. I hoped she would return to
- her duty, and then there would be no need to harrow your feelings with
- such—’
- ‘O God! how long has this been going on? How long has it been, Mrs.
- Huntingdon?—Tell me—I must know!’ exclaimed, with intense and fearful
- eagerness.
- ‘Two years, I believe.’
- ‘Great heaven! and she has duped me all this time!’ He turned away with
- a suppressed groan of agony, and paced the room again in a paroxysm of
- renewed agitation. My heart smote me; but I would try to console him,
- though I knew not how to attempt it.
- ‘She is a wicked woman,’ I said. ‘She has basely deceived and betrayed
- you. She is as little worthy of your regret as she was of your
- affection. Let her injure you no further; abstract yourself from her,
- and stand alone.’
- ‘And you, Madam,’ said he sternly, arresting himself, and turning round
- upon me, ‘you have injured me too by this ungenerous concealment!’
- There was a sudden revulsion in my feelings. Something rose within me,
- and urged me to resent this harsh return for my heartfelt sympathy, and
- defend myself with answering severity. Happily, I did not yield to the
- impulse. I saw his anguish as, suddenly smiting his forehead, he turned
- abruptly to the window, and, looking upward at the placid sky, murmured
- passionately, ‘O God, that I might die!’—and felt that to add one drop of
- bitterness to that already overflowing cup would be ungenerous indeed.
- And yet I fear there was more coldness than gentleness in the quiet tone
- of my reply:—‘I might offer many excuses that some would admit to be
- valid, but I will not attempt to enumerate them—’
- ‘I know them,’ said he hastily: ‘you would say that it was no business of
- yours: that I ought to have taken care of myself; that if my own
- blindness has led me into this pit of hell, I have no right to blame
- another for giving me credit for a larger amount of sagacity than I
- possessed—’
- ‘I confess I was wrong,’ continued I, without regarding this bitter
- interruption; ‘but whether want of courage or mistaken kindness was the
- cause of my error, I think you blame me too severely. I told Lady
- Lowborough two weeks ago, the very hour she came, that I should certainly
- think it my duty to inform you if she continued to deceive you: she gave
- me full liberty to do so if I should see anything reprehensible or
- suspicious in her conduct; I have seen nothing; and I trusted she had
- altered her course.’
- He continued gazing from the window while I spoke, and did not answer,
- but, stung by the recollections my words awakened, stamped his foot upon
- the floor, ground his teeth, and corrugated his brow, like one under the
- influence of acute physical pain.
- ‘It was wrong, it was wrong!’ he muttered at length. ‘Nothing can excuse
- it; nothing can atone for it,—for nothing can recall those years of
- cursed credulity; nothing obliterate them!—nothing, nothing!’ he repeated
- in a whisper, whose despairing bitterness precluded all resentment.
- ‘When I put the case to myself, I own it was wrong,’ I answered; ‘but I
- can only now regret that I did not see it in this light before, and that,
- as you say, nothing can recall the past.’
- Something in my voice or in the spirit of this answer seemed to alter his
- mood. Turning towards me, and attentively surveying my face by the dim
- light, he said, in a milder tone than he had yet employed,—‘You, too,
- have suffered, I suppose.’
- ‘I suffered much, at first.’
- ‘When was that?’
- ‘Two years ago; and two years hence you will be as calm as I am now, and
- far, far happier, I trust, for you are a man, and free to act as you
- please.’
- Something like a smile, but a very bitter one, crossed his face for a
- moment.
- ‘You have not been happy, lately?’ he said, with a kind of effort to
- regain composure, and a determination to waive the further discussion of
- his own calamity.
- ‘Happy?’ I repeated, almost provoked at such a question. ‘Could I be so,
- with such a husband?’
- ‘I have noticed a change in your appearance since the first years of your
- marriage,’ pursued he: ‘I observed it to—to that infernal demon,’ he
- muttered between his teeth; ‘and he said it was your own sour temper that
- was eating away your bloom: it was making you old and ugly before your
- time, and had already made his fireside as comfortless as a convent cell.
- You smile, Mrs. Huntingdon; nothing moves you. I wish my nature were as
- calm as yours.’
- ‘My nature was not originally calm,’ said I. ‘I have learned to appear
- so by dint of hard lessons and many repeated efforts.’
- At this juncture Mr. Hattersley burst into the room.
- ‘Hallo, Lowborough!’ he began—‘Oh! I beg your pardon,’ he exclaimed on
- seeing me. ‘I didn’t know it was a _tête-à-tête_. Cheer up, man,’ he
- continued, giving Lord Lowborough a thump on the back, which caused the
- latter to recoil from him with looks of ineffable disgust and irritation.
- ‘Come, I want to speak with you a bit.’
- ‘Speak, then.’
- ‘But I’m not sure it would be quite agreeable to the lady what I have to
- say.’
- ‘Then it would not be agreeable to me,’ said his lordship, turning to
- leave the room.
- ‘Yes, it would,’ cried the other, following him into the hall. ‘If
- you’ve the heart of a man, it would be the very ticket for you. It’s
- just this, my lad,’ he continued, rather lowering his voice, but not
- enough to prevent me from hearing every word he said, though the
- half-closed door stood between us. ‘I think you’re an ill-used man—nay,
- now, don’t flare up; I don’t want to offend you: it’s only my rough way
- of talking. I must speak right out, you know, or else not at all; and
- I’m come—stop now! let me explain—I’m come to offer you my services, for
- though Huntingdon is my friend, he’s a devilish scamp, as we all know,
- and I’ll be your friend for the nonce. I know what it is you want, to
- make matters straight: it’s just to exchange a shot with him, and then
- you’ll feel yourself all right again; and if an accident happens—why,
- that’ll be all right too, I daresay, to a desperate fellow like you.
- Come now, give me your hand, and don’t look so black upon it. Name time
- and place, and I’ll manage the rest.’
- ‘That,’ answered the more low, deliberate voice of Lord Lowborough, ‘is
- just the remedy my own heart, or the devil within it, suggested—to meet
- him, and not to part without blood. Whether I or he should fall, or
- both, it would be an inexpressible relief to me, if—’
- ‘Just so! Well then,—’
- ‘No!’ exclaimed his lordship, with deep, determined emphasis. ‘Though I
- hate him from my heart, and should rejoice at any calamity that could
- befall him, I’ll leave him to God; and though I abhor my own life, I’ll
- leave that, too, to Him that gave it.’
- ‘But you see, in this case,’ pleaded Hattersley—
- ‘I’ll not hear you!’ exclaimed his companion, hastily turning away. ‘Not
- another word! I’ve enough to do against the fiend within me.’
- ‘Then you’re a white-livered fool, and I wash my hands of you,’ grumbled
- the tempter, as he swung himself round and departed.
- ‘Right, right, Lord Lowborough,’ cried I, darting out and clasping his
- burning hand, as he was moving away to the stairs. ‘I begin to think the
- world is not worthy of you!’ Not understanding this sudden ebullition,
- he turned upon me with a stare of gloomy, bewildered amazement, that made
- me ashamed of the impulse to which I had yielded; but soon a more
- humanised expression dawned upon his countenance, and before I could
- withdraw my hand, he pressed it kindly, while a gleam of genuine feeling
- flashed from his eyes as he murmured, ‘God help us both!’
- ‘Amen!’ responded I; and we parted.
- I returned to the drawing-room, where, doubtless, my presence would be
- expected by most, desired by one or two. In the ante-room was Mr.
- Hattersley, railing against Lord Lowborough’s poltroonery before a select
- audience, viz. Mr. Huntingdon, who was lounging against the table,
- exulting in his own treacherous villainy, and laughing his victim to
- scorn, and Mr. Grimsby, standing by, quietly rubbing his hands and
- chuckling with fiendish satisfaction.
- In the drawing-room I found Lady Lowborough, evidently in no very
- enviable state of mind, and struggling hard to conceal her discomposure
- by an overstrained affectation of unusual cheerfulness and vivacity, very
- uncalled-for under the circumstances, for she had herself given the
- company to understand that her husband had received unpleasant
- intelligence from home, which necessitated his immediate departure, and
- that he had suffered it so to bother his mind that it had brought on a
- bilious headache, owing to which, and the preparations he judged
- necessary to hasten his departure, she believed they would not have the
- pleasure of seeing him to-night. However, she asserted, it was only a
- business concern, and so she did not intend it should trouble her. She
- was just saying this as I entered, and she darted upon me such a glance
- of hardihood and defiance as at once astonished and revolted me.
- ‘But I am troubled,’ continued she, ‘and vexed too, for I think it my
- duty to accompany his lordship, and of course I am very sorry to part
- with all my kind friends so unexpectedly and so soon.’
- ‘And yet, Annabella,’ said Esther, who was sitting beside her, ‘I never
- saw you in better spirits in my life.’
- ‘Precisely so, my love: because I wish to make the best of your society,
- since it appears this is to be the last night I am to enjoy it till
- heaven knows when; and I wish to leave a good impression on you all,’—she
- glanced round, and seeing her aunt’s eye fixed upon her, rather too
- scrutinizingly, as she probably thought, she started up and continued:
- ‘To which end I’ll give you a song—shall I, aunt? shall I, Mrs.
- Huntingdon? shall I ladies and gentlemen all? Very well. I’ll do my
- best to amuse you.’
- She and Lord Lowborough occupied the apartments next to mine. I know not
- how she passed the night, but I lay awake the greater part of it
- listening to his heavy step pacing monotonously up and down his
- dressing-room, which was nearest my chamber. Once I heard him pause and
- throw something out of the window with a passionate ejaculation; and in
- the morning, after they were gone, a keen-bladed clasp-knife was found on
- the grass-plot below; a razor, likewise, was snapped in two and thrust
- deep into the cinders of the grate, but partially corroded by the
- decaying embers. So strong had been the temptation to end his miserable
- life, so determined his resolution to resist it.
- My heart bled for him as I lay listening to that ceaseless tread.
- Hitherto I had thought too much of myself, too little of him: now I
- forgot my own afflictions, and thought only of his; of the ardent
- affection so miserably wasted, the fond faith so cruelly betrayed,
- the—no, I will not attempt to enumerate his wrongs—but I hated his wife
- and my husband more intensely than ever, and not for my sake, but for
- his.
- They departed early in the morning, before any one else was down, except
- myself, and just as I was leaving my room Lord Lowborough was descending
- to take his place in the carriage, where his lady was already ensconced;
- and Arthur (or Mr. Huntingdon, as I prefer calling him, for the other is
- my child’s name) had the gratuitous insolence to come out in his
- dressing-gown to bid his ‘friend’ good-by.
- ‘What, going already, Lowborough!’ said he. ‘Well, good-morning.’ He
- smilingly offered his hand.
- I think the other would have knocked him down, had he not instinctively
- started back before that bony fist quivering with rage and clenched till
- the knuckles gleamed white and glistening through the skin. Looking upon
- him with a countenance livid with furious hate, Lord Lowborough muttered
- between his closed teeth a deadly execration he would not have uttered
- had he been calm enough to choose his words, and departed.
- ‘I call that an unchristian spirit now,’ said the villain. ‘But I’d
- never give up an old friend for the sake of a wife. You may have mine if
- you like, and I call that handsome; I can do no more than offer
- restitution, can I?’
- But Lowborough had gained the bottom of the stairs, and was now crossing
- the hall; and Mr. Huntingdon, leaning over the banisters, called out,
- ‘Give my love to Annabella! and I wish you both a happy journey,’ and
- withdrew, laughing, to his chamber.
- He subsequently expressed himself rather glad she was gone. ‘She was so
- deuced imperious and exacting,’ said he. ‘Now I shall be my own man
- again, and feel rather more at my ease.’
- CHAPTER XXXIX
- My greatest source of uneasiness, in this time of trial, was my son, whom
- his father and his father’s friends delighted to encourage in all the
- embryo vices a little child can show, and to instruct in all the evil
- habits he could acquire—in a word, to ‘make a man of him’ was one of
- their staple amusements; and I need say no more to justify my alarm on
- his account, and my determination to deliver him at any hazard from the
- hands of such instructors. I first attempted to keep him always with me,
- or in the nursery, and gave Rachel particular injunctions never to let
- him come down to dessert as long as these ‘gentlemen’ stayed; but it was
- no use: these orders were immediately countermanded and overruled by his
- father; he was not going to have the little fellow moped to death between
- an old nurse and a cursed fool of a mother. So the little fellow came
- down every evening in spite of his cross mamma, and learned to tipple
- wine like papa, to swear like Mr. Hattersley, and to have his own way
- like a man, and sent mamma to the devil when she tried to prevent him.
- To see such things done with the roguish naïveté of that pretty little
- child, and hear such things spoken by that small infantile voice, was as
- peculiarly piquant and irresistibly droll to them as it was inexpressibly
- distressing and painful to me; and when he had set the table in a roar he
- would look round delightedly upon them all, and add his shrill laugh to
- theirs. But if that beaming blue eye rested on me, its light would
- vanish for a moment, and he would say, in some concern, ‘Mamma, why don’t
- you laugh? Make her laugh, papa—she never will.’
- Hence was I obliged to stay among these human brutes, watching an
- opportunity to get my child away from them instead of leaving them
- immediately after the removal of the cloth, as I should always otherwise
- have done. He was never willing to go, and I frequently had to carry him
- away by force, for which he thought me very cruel and unjust; and
- sometimes his father would insist upon my letting him remain; and then I
- would leave him to his kind friends, and retire to indulge my bitterness
- and despair alone, or to rack my brains for a remedy to this great evil.
- But here again I must do Mr. Hargrave the justice to acknowledge that I
- never saw him laugh at the child’s misdemeanours, nor heard him utter a
- word of encouragement to his aspirations after manly accomplishments.
- But when anything very extraordinary was said or done by the infant
- profligate, I noticed, at times, a peculiar expression in his face that I
- could neither interpret nor define: a slight twitching about the muscles
- of the mouth; a sudden flash in the eye, as he darted a sudden glance at
- the child and then at me: and then I could fancy there arose a gleam of
- hard, keen, sombre satisfaction in his countenance at the look of
- impotent wrath and anguish he was too certain to behold in mine. But on
- one occasion, when Arthur had been behaving particularly ill, and Mr.
- Huntingdon and his guests had been particularly provoking and insulting
- to me in their encouragement of him, and I particularly anxious to get
- him out of the room, and on the very point of demeaning myself by a burst
- of uncontrollable passion—Mr. Hargrave suddenly rose from his seat with
- an aspect of stern determination, lifted the child from his father’s
- knee, where he was sitting half-tipsy, cocking his head and laughing at
- me, and execrating me with words he little knew the meaning of, handed
- him out of the room, and, setting him down in the hall, held the door
- open for me, gravely bowed as I withdrew, and closed it after me. I
- heard high words exchanged between him and his already half-inebriated
- host as I departed, leading away my bewildered and disconcerted boy.
- But this should not continue: my child must not be abandoned to this
- corruption: better far that he should live in poverty and obscurity, with
- a fugitive mother, than in luxury and affluence with such a father.
- These guests might not be with us long, but they would return again: and
- he, the most injurious of the whole, his child’s worst enemy, would still
- remain. I could endure it for myself, but for my son it must be borne no
- longer: the world’s opinion and the feelings of my friends must be alike
- unheeded here, at least—alike unable to deter me from my duty. But where
- should I find an asylum, and how obtain subsistence for us both? Oh, I
- would take my precious charge at early dawn, take the coach to M—, flee
- to the port of —, cross the Atlantic, and seek a quiet, humble home in
- New England, where I would support myself and him by the labour of my
- hands. The palette and the easel, my darling playmates once, must be my
- sober toil-fellows now. But was I sufficiently skilful as an artist to
- obtain my livelihood in a strange land, without friends and without
- recommendation? No; I must wait a little; I must labour hard to improve
- my talent, and to produce something worth while as a specimen of my
- powers, something to speak favourably for me, whether as an actual
- painter or a teacher. Brilliant success, of course, I did not look for,
- but some degree of security from positive failure was indispensable: I
- must not take my son to starve. And then I must have money for the
- journey, the passage, and some little to support us in our retreat in
- case I should be unsuccessful at first: and not too little either: for
- who could tell how long I might have to struggle with the indifference or
- neglect of others, or my own inexperience or inability to suit their
- tastes?
- What should I do then? Apply to my brother and explain my circumstances
- and my resolves to him? No, no: even if I told him all my grievances,
- which I should be very reluctant to do, he would be certain to disapprove
- of the step: it would seem like madness to him, as it would to my uncle
- and aunt, or to Milicent. No; I must have patience and gather a hoard of
- my own. Rachel should be my only confidante—I thought I could persuade
- her into the scheme; and she should help me, first, to find out a
- picture-dealer in some distant town; then, through her means, I would
- privately sell what pictures I had on hand that would do for such a
- purpose, and some of those I should thereafter paint. Besides this, I
- would contrive to dispose of my jewels, not the family jewels, but the
- few I brought with me from home, and those my uncle gave me on my
- marriage. A few months’ arduous toil might well be borne by me with such
- an end in view; and in the interim my son could not be much more injured
- than he was already.
- Having formed this resolution, I immediately set to work to accomplish
- it, I might possibly have been induced to wax cool upon it afterwards, or
- perhaps to keep weighing the pros and cons in my mind till the latter
- overbalanced the former, and I was driven to relinquish the project
- altogether, or delay the execution of it to an indefinite period, had not
- something occurred to confirm me in that determination, to which I still
- adhere, which I still think I did well to form, and shall do better to
- execute.
- Since Lord Lowborough’s departure I had regarded the library as entirely
- my own, a secure retreat at all hours of the day. None of our gentlemen
- had the smallest pretensions to a literary taste, except Mr. Hargrave;
- and he, at present, was quite contented with the newspapers and
- periodicals of the day. And if, by any chance, he should look in here, I
- felt assured he would soon depart on seeing me, for, instead of becoming
- less cool and distant towards me, he had become decidedly more so since
- the departure of his mother and sisters, which was just what I wished.
- Here, then, I set up my easel, and here I worked at my canvas from
- daylight till dusk, with very little intermission, saving when pure
- necessity, or my duties to little Arthur, called me away: for I still
- thought proper to devote some portion of every day exclusively to his
- instruction and amusement. But, contrary to my expectation, on the third
- morning, while I was thus employed, Mr. Hargrave did look in, and did not
- immediately withdraw on seeing me. He apologized for his intrusion, and
- said he was only come for a book; but when he had got it, he condescended
- to cast a glance over my picture. Being a man of taste, he had something
- to say on this subject as well as another, and having modestly commented
- on it, without much encouragement from me, he proceeded to expatiate on
- the art in general. Receiving no encouragement in that either, he
- dropped it, but did not depart.
- ‘You don’t give us much of your company, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ observed he,
- after a brief pause, during which I went on coolly mixing and tempering
- my colours; ‘and I cannot wonder at it, for you must be heartily sick of
- us all. I myself am so thoroughly ashamed of my companions, and so weary
- of their irrational conversation and pursuits—now that there is no one to
- humanize them and keep them in check, since you have justly abandoned us
- to our own devices—that I think I shall presently withdraw from amongst
- them, probably within this week; and I cannot suppose you will regret my
- departure.’
- He paused. I did not answer.
- ‘Probably,’ he added, with a smile, ‘your only regret on the subject will
- be that I do not take all my companions along with me. I flatter myself,
- at times, that though among them I am not of them; but it is natural that
- you should be glad to get rid of me. I may regret this, but I cannot
- blame you for it.’
- ‘I shall not rejoice at your departure, for you can conduct yourself like
- a gentleman,’ said I, thinking it but right to make some acknowledgment
- for his good behaviour; ‘but I must confess I shall rejoice to bid adieu
- to the rest, inhospitable as it may appear.’
- ‘No one can blame you for such an avowal,’ replied he gravely: ‘not even
- the gentlemen themselves, I imagine. I’ll just tell you,’ he continued,
- as if actuated by a sudden resolution, ‘what was said last night in the
- dining-room, after you left us: perhaps you will not mind it, as you’re
- so very philosophical on certain points,’ he added with a slight sneer.
- ‘They were talking about Lord Lowborough and his delectable lady, the
- cause of whose sudden departure is no secret amongst them; and her
- character is so well known to them all, that, nearly related to me as she
- is, I could not attempt to defend it. Curse me!’ he muttered, par
- parenthese, ‘if I don’t have vengeance for this! If the villain must
- disgrace the family, must he blazon it abroad to every low-bred knave of
- his acquaintance? I beg your pardon, Mrs. Huntingdon. Well, they were
- talking of these things, and some of them remarked that, as she was
- separated from her husband, he might see her again when he pleased.’
- ‘“Thank you,” said he; “I’ve had enough of her for the present: I’ll not
- trouble to see her, unless she comes to me.”
- ‘“Then what do you mean to do, Huntingdon, when we’re gone?” said Ralph
- Hattersley. “Do you mean to turn from the error of your ways, and be a
- good husband, a good father, and so forth; as I do, when I get shut of
- you and all these rollicking devils you call your friends? I think it’s
- time; and your wife is fifty times too good for you, you know—”
- ‘And he added some praise of you, which you would not thank me for
- repeating, nor him for uttering; proclaiming it aloud, as he did, without
- delicacy or discrimination, in an audience where it seemed profanation to
- utter your name: himself utterly incapable of understanding or
- appreciating your real excellences. Huntingdon, meanwhile, sat quietly
- drinking his wine,—or looking smilingly into his glass and offering no
- interruption or reply, till Hattersley shouted out,—“Do you hear me,
- man?”
- ‘“Yes, go on,” said he.
- ‘“Nay, I’ve done,” replied the other: “I only want to know if you intend
- to take my advice.”
- ‘“What advice?”
- ‘“To turn over a new leaf, you double-dyed scoundrel,” shouted Ralph,
- “and beg your wife’s pardon, and be a good boy for the future.”
- ‘“My wife! what wife? I have no wife,” replied Huntingdon, looking
- innocently up from his glass, “or if I have, look you, gentlemen: I value
- her so highly that any one among you, that can fancy her, may have her
- and welcome: you may, by Jove, and my blessing into the bargain!”
- ‘I—hem—someone asked if he really meant what he said; upon which he
- solemnly swore he did, and no mistake. What do you think of that, Mrs.
- Huntingdon?’ asked Mr. Hargrave, after a short pause, during which I had
- felt he was keenly examining my half-averted face.
- ‘I say,’ replied I, calmly, ‘that what he prizes so lightly will not be
- long in his possession.’
- ‘You cannot mean that you will break your heart and die for the
- detestable conduct of an infamous villain like that!’
- ‘By no means: my heart is too thoroughly dried to be broken in a hurry,
- and I mean to live as long as I can.’
- ‘Will you leave him then?’
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘When: and how?’ asked he, eagerly.
- ‘When I am ready, and how I can manage it most effectually.’
- ‘But your child?’
- ‘My child goes with me.’
- ‘He will not allow it.’
- ‘I shall not ask him.’
- ‘Ah, then, it is a secret flight you meditate! but with whom, Mrs.
- Huntingdon?’
- ‘With my son: and possibly, his nurse.’
- ‘Alone—and unprotected! But where can you go? what can you do? He will
- follow you and bring you back.’
- ‘I have laid my plans too well for that. Let me once get clear of
- Grassdale, and I shall consider myself safe.’
- Mr. Hargrave advanced one step towards me, looked me in the face, and
- drew in his breath to speak; but that look, that heightened colour, that
- sudden sparkle of the eye, made my blood rise in wrath: I abruptly turned
- away, and, snatching up my brush, began to dash away at my canvas with
- rather too much energy for the good of the picture.
- ‘Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said he with bitter solemnity, ‘you are cruel—cruel to
- me—cruel to yourself.’
- ‘Mr. Hargrave, remember your promise.’
- ‘I must speak: my heart will burst if I don’t! I have been silent long
- enough, and you must hear me!’ cried he, boldly intercepting my retreat
- to the door. ‘You tell me you owe no allegiance to your husband; he
- openly declares himself weary of you, and calmly gives you up to anybody
- that will take you; you are about to leave him; no one will believe that
- you go alone; all the world will say, “She has left him at last, and who
- can wonder at it? Few can blame her, fewer still can pity him; but who
- is the companion of her flight?” Thus you will have no credit for your
- virtue (if you call it such): even your best friends will not believe in
- it; because it is monstrous, and not to be credited but by those who
- suffer, from the effects of it, such cruel torments that they know it to
- be indeed reality. But what can you do in the cold, rough world alone?
- you, a young and inexperienced woman, delicately nurtured, and utterly—’
- ‘In a word, you would advise me to stay where I am,’ interrupted I.
- ‘Well, I’ll see about it.’
- ‘By all means, leave him!’ cried he earnestly; ‘but NOT alone! Helen! let
- me protect you!’
- ‘Never! while heaven spares my reason,’ replied I, snatching away the
- hand he had presumed to seize and press between his own. But he was in
- for it now; he had fairly broken the barrier: he was completely roused,
- and determined to hazard all for victory.
- ‘I must not be denied!’ exclaimed he, vehemently; and seizing both my
- hands, he held them very tight, but dropped upon his knee, and looked up
- in my face with a half-imploring, half-imperious gaze. ‘You have no
- reason now: you are flying in the face of heaven’s decrees. God has
- designed me to be your comfort and protector—I feel it, I know it as
- certainly as if a voice from heaven declared, “Ye twain shall be one
- flesh”—and you spurn me from you—’
- ‘Let me go, Mr. Hargrave!’ said I, sternly. But he only tightened his
- grasp.
- ‘Let me go!’ I repeated, quivering with indignation.
- His face was almost opposite the window as he knelt. With a slight
- start, I saw him glance towards it; and then a gleam of malicious triumph
- lit up his countenance. Looking over my shoulder, I beheld a shadow just
- retiring round the corner.
- ‘That is Grimsby,’ said he deliberately. ‘He will report what he has
- seen to Huntingdon and all the rest, with such embellishments as he
- thinks proper. He has no love for you, Mrs. Huntingdon—no reverence for
- your sex, no belief in virtue, no admiration for its image. He will give
- such a version of this story as will leave no doubt at all about your
- character, in the minds of those who hear it. Your fair fame is gone;
- and nothing that I or you can say can ever retrieve it. But give me the
- power to protect you, and show me the villain that dares to insult!’
- ‘No one has ever dared to insult me as you are doing now!’ said I, at
- length releasing my hands, and recoiling from him.
- ‘I do not insult you,’ cried he: ‘I worship you. You are my angel, my
- divinity! I lay my powers at your feet, and you must and shall accept
- them!’ he exclaimed, impetuously starting to his feet. ‘I will be your
- consoler and defender! and if your conscience upbraid you for it, say I
- overcame you, and you could not choose but yield!’
- I never saw a man go terribly excited. He precipitated himself towards
- me. I snatched up my palette-knife and held it against him. This
- startled him: he stood and gazed at me in astonishment; I daresay I
- looked as fierce and resolute as he. I moved to the bell, and put my
- hand upon the cord. This tamed him still more. With a
- half-authoritative, half-deprecating wave of the hand, he sought to deter
- me from ringing.
- ‘Stand off, then!’ said I; he stepped back. ‘And listen to me. I don’t
- like you,’ I continued, as deliberately and emphatically as I could, to
- give the greater efficacy to my words; ‘and if I were divorced from my
- husband, or if he were dead, I would not marry you. There now! I hope
- you’re satisfied.’
- His face grew blanched with anger.
- ‘I am satisfied,’ he replied, with bitter emphasis, ‘that you are the
- most cold-hearted, unnatural, ungrateful woman I ever yet beheld!’
- ‘Ungrateful, sir?’
- ‘Ungrateful.’
- ‘No, Mr. Hargrave, I am not. For all the good you ever did me, or ever
- wished to do, I most sincerely thank you: for all the evil you have done
- me, and all you would have done, I pray God to pardon you, and make you
- of a better mind.’ Here the door was thrown open, and Messrs. Huntingdon
- and Hattersley appeared without. The latter remained in the hall, busy
- with his ramrod and his gun; the former walked in, and stood with his
- back to the fire, surveying Mr. Hargrave and me, particularly the former,
- with a smile of insupportable meaning, accompanied as it was by the
- impudence of his brazen brow, and the sly, malicious, twinkle of his eye.
- ‘Well, sir?’ said Hargrave, interrogatively, and with the air of one
- prepared to stand on the defensive.
- ‘Well, sir,’ returned his host.
- ‘We want to know if you are at liberty to join us in a go at the
- pheasants, Walter,’ interposed Hattersley from without. ‘Come! there
- shall be nothing shot besides, except a puss or two; I’ll vouch for
- that.’
- Walter did not answer, but walked to the window to collect his faculties.
- Arthur uttered a low whistle, and followed him with his eyes. A slight
- flush of anger rose to Hargrave’s cheek; but in a moment he turned calmly
- round, and said carelessly:
- ‘I came here to bid farewell to Mrs. Huntingdon, and tell her I must go
- to-morrow.’
- ‘Humph! You’re mighty sudden in your resolution. What takes you off so
- soon, may I ask?’
- ‘Business,’ returned he, repelling the other’s incredulous sneer with a
- glance of scornful defiance.
- ‘Very good,’ was the reply; and Hargrave walked away. Thereupon Mr.
- Huntingdon, gathering his coat-laps under his arms, and setting his
- shoulder against the mantel-piece, turned to me, and, addressing me in a
- low voice, scarcely above his breath, poured forth a volley of the vilest
- and grossest abuse it was possible for the imagination to conceive or the
- tongue to utter. I did not attempt to interrupt him; but my spirit
- kindled within me, and when he had done, I replied, ‘If your accusation
- were true, Mr. Huntingdon, how dare you blame me?’
- ‘She’s hit it, by Jove!’ cried Hattersley, rearing his gun against the
- wall; and, stepping into the room, he took his precious friend by the
- arm, and attempted to drag him away. ‘Come, my lad,’ he muttered; ‘true
- or false, you’ve no right to blame her, you know, nor him either; after
- what you said last night. So come along.’
- There was something implied here that I could not endure.
- ‘Dare you suspect me, Mr. Hattersley?’ said I, almost beside myself with
- fury.
- ‘Nay, nay, I suspect nobody. It’s all right, it’s all right. So come
- along, Huntingdon, you blackguard.’
- ‘She can’t deny it!’ cried the gentleman thus addressed, grinning in
- mingled rage and triumph. ‘She can’t deny it if her life depended on
- it!’ and muttering some more abusive language, he walked into the hall,
- and took up his hat and gun from the table.
- ‘I scorn to justify myself to you!’ said I. ‘But you,’ turning to
- Hattersley, ‘if you presume to have any doubts on the subject, ask Mr.
- Hargrave.’
- At this they simultaneously burst into a rude laugh that made my whole
- frame tingle to the fingers’ ends.
- ‘Where is he? I’ll ask him myself!’ said I, advancing towards them.
- Suppressing a new burst of merriment, Hattersley pointed to the outer
- door. It was half open. His brother-in-law was standing on the front
- without.
- ‘Mr. Hargrave, will you please to step this way?’ said I.
- He turned and looked at me in grave surprise.
- ‘Step this way, if you please!’ I repeated, in so determined a manner
- that he could not, or did not choose to resist its authority. Somewhat
- reluctantly he ascended the steps and advanced a pace or two into the
- hall.
- ‘And tell those gentlemen,’ I continued—‘these men, whether or not I
- yielded to your solicitations.’
- ‘I don’t understand you, Mrs. Huntingdon.’
- ‘You do understand me, sir; and I charge you, upon your honour as a
- gentleman (if you have any), to answer truly. Did I, or did I not?’
- ‘No,’ muttered he, turning away.
- ‘Speak up, sir; they can’t hear you. Did I grant your request?
- ‘You did not.’
- ‘No, I’ll be sworn she didn’t,’ said Hattersley, ‘or he’d never look so
- black.’
- ‘I’m willing to grant you the satisfaction of a gentleman, Huntingdon,’
- said Mr. Hargrave, calmly addressing his host, but with a bitter sneer
- upon his countenance.
- ‘Go to the deuce!’ replied the latter, with an impatient jerk of the
- head. Hargrave withdrew with a look of cold disdain, saying,—‘You know
- where to find me, should you feel disposed to send a friend.’
- Muttered oaths and curses were all the answer this intimation obtained.
- ‘Now, Huntingdon, you see!’ said Hattersley. ‘Clear as the day.’
- ‘I don’t care what he sees,’ said I, ‘or what he imagines; but you, Mr.
- Hattersley, when you hear my name belied and slandered, will you defend
- it?’
- ‘I will.’
- I instantly departed and shut myself into the library. What could
- possess me to make such a request of such a man I cannot tell; but
- drowning men catch at straws: they had driven me desperate between them;
- I hardly knew what I said. There was no other to preserve my name from
- being blackened and aspersed among this nest of boon companions, and
- through them, perhaps, into the world; and beside my abandoned wretch of
- a husband, the base, malignant Grimsby, and the false villain Hargrave,
- this boorish ruffian, coarse and brutal as he was, shone like a glow-worm
- in the dark, among its fellow worms.
- What a scene was this! Could I ever have imagined that I should be
- doomed to bear such insults under my own roof—to hear such things spoken
- in my presence; nay, spoken to me and of me; and by those who arrogated
- to themselves the name of gentlemen? And could I have imagined that I
- should have been able to endure it as calmly, and to repel their insults
- as firmly and as boldly as I had done? A hardness such as this is taught
- by rough experience and despair alone.
- Such thoughts as these chased one another through my mind, as I paced to
- and fro the room, and longed—oh, how I longed—to take my child and leave
- them now, without an hour’s delay! But it could not be; there was work
- before me: hard work, that must be done.
- ‘Then let me do it,’ said I, ‘and lose not a moment in vain repinings and
- idle chafings against my fate, and those who influence it.’
- And conquering my agitation with a powerful effort, I immediately resumed
- my task, and laboured hard all day.
- Mr. Hargrave did depart on the morrow; and I have never seen him since.
- The others stayed on for two or three weeks longer; but I kept aloof from
- them as much as possible, and still continued my labour, and have
- continued it, with almost unabated ardour, to the present day. I soon
- acquainted Rachel with my design, confiding all my motives and intentions
- to her ear, and, much to my agreeable surprise, found little difficulty
- in persuading her to enter into my views. She is a sober, cautious
- woman, but she so hates her master, and so loves her mistress and her
- nursling, that after several ejaculations, a few faint objections, and
- many tears and lamentations that I should be brought to such a pass, she
- applauded my resolution and consented to aid me with all her might: on
- one condition only: that she might share my exile: otherwise, she was
- utterly inexorable, regarding it as perfect madness for me and Arthur to
- go alone. With touching generosity, she modestly offered to aid me with
- her little hoard of savings, hoping I would ‘excuse her for the liberty,
- but really, if I would do her the favour to accept it as a loan, she
- would be very happy.’ Of course I could not think of such a thing; but
- now, thank heaven, I have gathered a little hoard of my own, and my
- preparations are so far advanced that I am looking forward to a speedy
- emancipation. Only let the stormy severity of this winter weather be
- somewhat abated, and then, some morning, Mr. Huntingdon will come down to
- a solitary breakfast-table, and perhaps be clamouring through the house
- for his invisible wife and child, when they are some fifty miles on their
- way to the Western world, or it may be more: for we shall leave him hours
- before the dawn, and it is not probable he will discover the loss of both
- until the day is far advanced.
- I am fully alive to the evils that may and must result upon the step I am
- about to take; but I never waver in my resolution, because I never forget
- my son. It was only this morning, while I pursued my usual employment,
- he was sitting at my feet, quietly playing with the shreds of canvas I
- had thrown upon the carpet; but his mind was otherwise occupied, for, in
- a while, he looked up wistfully in my face, and gravely asked,—‘Mamma,
- why are you wicked?’
- ‘Who told you I was wicked, love?’
- ‘Rachel.’
- ‘No, Arthur, Rachel never said so, I am certain.’
- ‘Well, then, it was papa,’ replied he, thoughtfully. Then, after a
- reflective pause, he added, ‘At least, I’ll tell you how it was I got to
- know: when I’m with papa, if I say mamma wants me, or mamma says I’m not
- to do something that he tells me to do, he always says, “Mamma be
- damned,” and Rachel says it’s only wicked people that are damned. So,
- mamma, that’s why I think you must be wicked: and I wish you wouldn’t.’
- ‘My dear child, I am not. Those are bad words, and wicked people often
- say them of others better than themselves. Those words cannot make
- people be damned, nor show that they deserve it. God will judge us by
- our own thoughts and deeds, not by what others say about us. And when
- you hear such words spoken, Arthur, remember never to repeat them: it is
- wicked to say such things of others, not to have them said against you.’
- ‘Then it’s papa that’s wicked,’ said he, ruefully.
- ‘Papa is wrong to say such things, and you will be very wrong to imitate
- him now that you know better.’
- ‘What is imitate?’
- ‘To do as he does.’
- ‘Does he know better?’
- ‘Perhaps he does; but that is nothing to you.’
- ‘If he doesn’t, you ought to tell him, mamma.’
- ‘I have told him.’
- The little moralist paused and pondered. I tried in vain to divert his
- mind from the subject.
- ‘I’m sorry papa’s wicked,’ said he mournfully, at length, ‘for I don’t
- want him to go to hell.’ And so saying he burst into tears.
- I consoled him with the hope that perhaps his papa would alter and become
- good before he died—; but is it not time to deliver him from such a
- parent?
- CHAPTER XL
- January 10th, 1827.—While writing the above, yesterday evening, I sat in
- the drawing-room. Mr. Huntingdon was present, but, as I thought, asleep
- on the sofa behind me. He had risen, however, unknown to me, and,
- actuated by some base spirit of curiosity, been looking over my shoulder
- for I know not how long; for when I had laid aside my pen, and was about
- to close the book, he suddenly placed his hand upon it, and saying,—‘With
- your leave, my dear, I’ll have a look at this,’ forcibly wrested it from
- me, and, drawing a chair to the table, composedly sat down to examine it:
- turning back leaf after leaf to find an explanation of what he had read.
- Unluckily for me, he was more sober that night than he usually is at such
- an hour.
- Of course I did not leave him to pursue this occupation in quiet: I made
- several attempts to snatch the book from his hands, but he held it too
- firmly for that; I upbraided him in bitterness and scorn for his mean and
- dishonourable conduct, but that had no effect upon him; and, finally, I
- extinguished both the candles, but he only wheeled round to the fire, and
- raising a blaze sufficient for his purposes, calmly continued the
- investigation. I had serious thoughts of getting a pitcher of water and
- extinguishing that light too; but it was evident his curiosity was too
- keenly excited to be quenched by that, and the more I manifested my
- anxiety to baffle his scrutiny, the greater would be his determination to
- persist in it, besides it was too late.
- ‘It seems very interesting, love,’ said he, lifting his head and turning
- to where I stood, wringing my hands in silent rage and anguish; ‘but it’s
- rather long; I’ll look at it some other time; and meanwhile I’ll trouble
- you for your keys, my dear.’
- ‘What keys?’
- ‘The keys of your cabinet, desk, drawers, and whatever else you possess,’
- said he, rising and holding out his hand.
- ‘I’ve not got them,’ I replied. The key of my desk, in fact, was at that
- moment in the lock, and the others were attached to it.
- ‘Then you must send for them,’ said he; ‘and if that old devil, Rachel,
- doesn’t immediately deliver them up, she tramps bag and baggage
- tomorrow.’
- ‘She doesn’t know where they are,’ I answered, quietly placing my hand
- upon them, and taking them from the desk, as I thought, unobserved. ‘I
- know, but I shall not give them up without a reason.’
- ‘And I know, too,’ said he, suddenly seizing my closed hand and rudely
- abstracting them from it. He then took up one of the candles and
- relighted it by thrusting it into the fire.
- ‘Now, then,’ sneered he, ‘we must have a confiscation of property. But,
- first, let us take a peep into the studio.’
- And putting the keys into his pocket, he walked into the library. I
- followed, whether with the dim idea of preventing mischief, or only to
- know the worst, I can hardly tell. My painting materials were laid
- together on the corner table, ready for to-morrow’s use, and only covered
- with a cloth. He soon spied them out, and putting down the candle,
- deliberately proceeded to cast them into the fire: palette, paints,
- bladders, pencils, brushes, varnish: I saw them all consumed: the
- palette-knives snapped in two, the oil and turpentine sent hissing and
- roaring up the chimney. He then rang the bell.
- ‘Benson, take those things away,’ said he, pointing to the easel, canvas,
- and stretcher; ‘and tell the housemaid she may kindle the fire with them:
- your mistress won’t want them any more.’
- Benson paused aghast and looked at me.
- ‘Take them away, Benson,’ said I; and his master muttered an oath.
- ‘And this and all, sir?’ said the astonished servant, referring to the
- half-finished picture.
- ‘That and all,’ replied the master; and the things were cleared away.
- Mr. Huntingdon then went up-stairs. I did not attempt to follow him, but
- remained seated in the arm-chair, speechless, tearless, and almost
- motionless, till he returned about half-an-hour after, and walking up to
- me, held the candle in my face and peered into my eyes with looks and
- laughter too insulting to be borne. With a sudden stroke of my hand I
- dashed the candle to the floor.
- ‘Hal-lo!’ muttered he, starting back; ‘she’s the very devil for spite.
- Did ever any mortal see such eyes?—they shine in the dark like a cat’s.
- Oh, you’re a sweet one!’ So saying, he gathered up the candle and the
- candlestick. The former being broken as well as extinguished, he rang
- for another.
- ‘Benson, your mistress has broken the candle; bring another.’
- ‘You expose yourself finely,’ observed I, as the man departed.
- ‘I didn’t say I’d broken it, did I?’ returned he. He then threw my keys
- into my lap, saying,—‘There! you’ll find nothing gone but your money, and
- the jewels, and a few little trifles I thought it advisable to take into
- my own possession, lest your mercantile spirit should be tempted to turn
- them into gold. I’ve left you a few sovereigns in your purse, which I
- expect to last you through the month; at all events, when you want more
- you will be so good as to give me an account of how that’s spent. I
- shall put you upon a small monthly allowance, in future, for your own
- private expenses; and you needn’t trouble yourself any more about my
- concerns; I shall look out for a steward, my dear—I won’t expose you to
- the temptation. And as for the household matters, Mrs. Greaves must be
- very particular in keeping her accounts; we must go upon an entirely new
- plan—’
- ‘What great discovery have you made now, Mr. Huntingdon? Have I
- attempted to defraud you?’
- ‘Not in money matters, exactly, it seems; but it’s best to keep out of
- the way of temptation.’
- Here Benson entered with the candles, and there followed a brief interval
- of silence; I sitting still in my chair, and he standing with his back to
- the fire, silently triumphing in my despair.
- ‘And so,’ said he at length, ‘you thought to disgrace me, did you, by
- running away and turning artist, and supporting yourself by the labour of
- your hands, forsooth? And you thought to rob me of my son, too, and
- bring him up to be a dirty Yankee tradesman, or a low, beggarly painter?’
- ‘Yes, to obviate his becoming such a gentleman as his father.’
- ‘It’s well you couldn’t keep your own secret—ha, ha! It’s well these
- women must be blabbing. If they haven’t a friend to talk to, they must
- whisper their secrets to the fishes, or write them on the sand, or
- something; and it’s well, too, I wasn’t over full to-night, now I think
- of it, or I might have snoozed away and never dreamt of looking what my
- sweet lady was about; or I might have lacked the sense or the power to
- carry my point like a man, as I have done.’
- Leaving him to his self-congratulations, I rose to secure my manuscript,
- for I now remembered it had been left upon the drawing-room table, and I
- determined, if possible, to save myself the humiliation of seeing it in
- his hands again. I could not bear the idea of his amusing himself over
- my secret thoughts and recollections; though, to be sure, he would find
- little good of himself therein indited, except in the former part; and
- oh, I would sooner burn it all than he should read what I had written
- when I was such a fool as to love him!
- ‘And by-the-by,’ cried he, as I was leaving the room, ‘you’d better tell
- that d—d old sneak of a nurse to keep out of my way for a day or two; I’d
- pay her her wages and send her packing to-morrow, but I know she’d do
- more mischief out of the house than in it.’
- And as I departed, he went on cursing and abusing my faithful friend and
- servant with epithets I will not defile this paper with repeating. I
- went to her as soon as I had put away my book, and told her how our
- project was defeated. She was as much distressed and horrified as I
- was—and more so than I was that night, for I was partly stunned by the
- blow, and partly excited and supported against it by the bitterness of my
- wrath. But in the morning, when I woke without that cheering hope that
- had been my secret comfort and support so long, and all this day, when I
- have wandered about restless and objectless, shunning my husband,
- shrinking even from my child, knowing that I am unfit to be his teacher
- or companion, hoping nothing for his future life, and fervently wishing
- he had never been born,—I felt the full extent of my calamity, and I feel
- it now. I know that day after day such feelings will return upon me. I
- am a slave—a prisoner—but that is nothing; if it were myself alone I
- would not complain, but I am forbidden to rescue my son from ruin, and
- what was once my only consolation is become the crowning source of my
- despair.
- Have I no faith in God? I try to look to Him and raise my heart to
- heaven, but it will cleave to the dust. I can only say, ‘He hath hedged
- me about, that I cannot get out: He hath made my chain heavy. He hath
- filled me with bitterness—He hath made me drunken with wormwood.’ I
- forget to add, ‘But though He cause grief, yet will He have compassion
- according to the multitude of His mercies. For He doth not afflict
- willingly nor grieve the children of men.’ I ought to think of this; and
- if there be nothing but sorrow for me in this world, what is the longest
- life of misery to a whole eternity of peace? And for my little
- Arthur—has he no friend but me? Who was it said, ‘It is not the will of
- your Father which is in heaven that one of these little ones should
- perish?’
- CHAPTER XLI
- March 20th.—Having now got rid of Mr. Huntingdon for a season, my spirits
- begin to revive. He left me early in February; and the moment he was
- gone, I breathed again, and felt my vital energy return; not with the
- hope of escape—he has taken care to leave me no visible chance of
- that—but with a determination to make the best of existing circumstances.
- Here was Arthur left to me at last; and rousing from my despondent
- apathy, I exerted all my powers to eradicate the weeds that had been
- fostered in his infant mind, and sow again the good seed they had
- rendered unproductive. Thank heaven, it is not a barren or a stony soil;
- if weeds spring fast there, so do better plants. His apprehensions are
- more quick, his heart more overflowing with affection than ever his
- father’s could have been, and it is no hopeless task to bend him to
- obedience and win him to love and know his own true friend, as long as
- there is no one to counteract my efforts.
- I had much trouble at first in breaking him of those evil habits his
- father had taught him to acquire, but already that difficulty is nearly
- vanquished now: bad language seldom defiles his mouth, and I have
- succeeded in giving him an absolute disgust for all intoxicating liquors,
- which I hope not even his father or his father’s friends will be able to
- overcome. He was inordinately fond of them for so young a creature, and,
- remembering my unfortunate father as well as his, I dreaded the
- consequences of such a taste. But if I had stinted him, in his usual
- quantity of wine, or forbidden him to taste it altogether, that would
- only have increased his partiality for it, and made him regard it as a
- greater treat than ever. I therefore gave him quite as much as his
- father was accustomed to allow him; as much, indeed, as he desired to
- have—but into every glass I surreptitiously introduced a small quantity
- of tartar-emetic, just enough to produce inevitable nausea and depression
- without positive sickness. Finding such disagreeable consequences
- invariably to result from this indulgence, he soon grew weary of it, but
- the more he shrank from the daily treat the more I pressed it upon him,
- till his reluctance was strengthened to perfect abhorrence. When he was
- thoroughly disgusted with every kind of wine, I allowed him, at his own
- request, to try brandy-and-water, and then gin-and-water, for the little
- toper was familiar with them all, and I was determined that all should be
- equally hateful to him. This I have now effected; and since he declares
- that the taste, the smell, the sight of any one of them is sufficient to
- make him sick, I have given up teasing him about them, except now and
- then as objects of terror in cases of misbehaviour. ‘Arthur, if you’re
- not a good boy I shall give you a glass of wine,’ or ‘Now, Arthur, if you
- say that again you shall have some brandy-and-water,’ is as good as any
- other threat; and once or twice, when he was sick, I have obliged the
- poor child to swallow a little wine-and-water without the tartar-emetic,
- by way of medicine; and this practice I intend to continue for some time
- to come; not that I think it of any real service in a physical sense, but
- because I am determined to enlist all the powers of association in my
- service; I wish this aversion to be so deeply grounded in his nature that
- nothing in after-life may be able to overcome it.
- Thus, I flatter myself, I shall secure him from this one vice; and for
- the rest, if on his father’s return I find reason to apprehend that my
- good lessons will be all destroyed—if Mr. Huntingdon commence again the
- game of teaching the child to hate and despise his mother, and emulate
- his father’s wickedness—I will yet deliver my son from his hands. I have
- devised another scheme that might be resorted to in such a case; and if I
- could but obtain my brother’s consent and assistance, I should not doubt
- of its success. The old hall where he and I were born, and where our
- mother died, is not now inhabited, nor yet quite sunk into decay, as I
- believe. Now, if I could persuade him to have one or two rooms made
- habitable, and to let them to me as a stranger, I might live there, with
- my child, under an assumed name, and still support myself by my favourite
- art. He should lend me the money to begin with, and I would pay him
- back, and live in lowly independence and strict seclusion, for the house
- stands in a lonely place, and the neighbourhood is thinly inhabited, and
- he himself should negotiate the sale of my pictures for me. I have
- arranged the whole plan in my head: and all I want is to persuade
- Frederick to be of the same mind as myself. He is coming to see me soon,
- and then I will make the proposal to him, having first enlightened him
- upon my circumstances sufficiently to excuse the project.
- Already, I believe, he knows much more of my situation than I have told
- him. I can tell this by the air of tender sadness pervading his letters;
- and by the fact of his so seldom mentioning my husband, and generally
- evincing a kind of covert bitterness when he does refer to him; as well
- as by the circumstance of his never coming to see me when Mr. Huntingdon
- is at home. But he has never openly expressed any disapprobation of him
- or sympathy for me; he has never asked any questions, or said anything to
- invite my confidence. Had he done so, I should probably have had but few
- concealments from him. Perhaps he feels hurt at my reserve. He is a
- strange being; I wish we knew each other better. He used to spend a
- month at Staningley every year, before I was married; but, since our
- father’s death, I have only seen him once, when he came for a few days
- while Mr. Huntingdon was away. He shall stay many days this time, and
- there shall be more candour and cordiality between us than ever there was
- before, since our early childhood. My heart clings to him more than
- ever; and my soul is sick of solitude.
- April 16th.—He is come and gone. He would not stay above a fortnight.
- The time passed quickly, but very, very happily, and it has done me good.
- I must have a bad disposition, for my misfortunes have soured and
- embittered me exceedingly: I was beginning insensibly to cherish very
- unamiable feelings against my fellow-mortals, the male part of them
- especially; but it is a comfort to see there is at least one among them
- worthy to be trusted and esteemed; and doubtless there are more, though I
- have never known them, unless I except poor Lord Lowborough, and he was
- bad enough in his day. But what would Frederick have been, if he had
- lived in the world, and mingled from his childhood with such men as these
- of my acquaintance? and what will Arthur be, with all his natural
- sweetness of disposition, if I do not save him from that world and those
- companions? I mentioned my fears to Frederick, and introduced the
- subject of my plan of rescue on the evening after his arrival, when I
- presented my little son to his uncle.
- ‘He is like you, Frederick,’ said I, ‘in some of his moods: I sometimes
- think he resembles you more than his father; and I am glad of it.’
- ‘You flatter me, Helen,’ replied he, stroking the child’s soft, wavy
- locks.
- ‘No, you will think it no compliment when I tell you I would rather have
- him to resemble Benson than his father.’ He slightly elevated his
- eyebrows, but said nothing.
- ‘Do you know what sort of man Mr. Huntingdon is?’ said I.
- ‘I think I have an idea.’
- ‘Have you so clear an idea that you can hear, without surprise or
- disapproval, that I meditate escaping with that child to some secret
- asylum, where we can live in peace, and never see him again?’
- ‘Is it really so?’
- ‘If you have not,’ continued I, ‘I’ll tell you something more about him’;
- and I gave a sketch of his general conduct, and a more particular account
- of his behaviour with regard to his child, and explained my apprehensions
- on the latter’s account, and my determination to deliver him from his
- father’s influence.
- Frederick was exceedingly indignant against Mr. Huntingdon, and very much
- grieved for me; but still he looked upon my project as wild and
- impracticable. He deemed my fears for Arthur disproportioned to the
- circumstances, and opposed so many objections to my plan, and devised so
- many milder methods for ameliorating my condition, that I was obliged to
- enter into further details to convince him that my husband was utterly
- incorrigible, and that nothing could persuade him to give up his son,
- whatever became of me, he being as fully determined the child should not
- leave him, as I was not to leave the child; and that, in fact, nothing
- would answer but this, unless I fled the country, as I had intended
- before. To obviate that, he at length consented to have one wing of the
- old hall put into a habitable condition, as a place of refuge against a
- time of need; but hoped I would not take advantage of it unless
- circumstances should render it really necessary, which I was ready enough
- to promise: for though, for my own sake, such a hermitage appears like
- paradise itself, compared with my present situation, yet for my friends’
- sakes, for Milicent and Esther, my sisters in heart and affection, for
- the poor tenants of Grassdale, and, above all, for my aunt, I will stay
- if I possibly can.
- July 29th.—Mrs. Hargrave and her daughter are come back from London.
- Esther is full of her first season in town; but she is still heart-whole
- and unengaged. Her mother sought out an excellent match for her, and
- even brought the gentleman to lay his heart and fortune at her feet; but
- Esther had the audacity to refuse the noble gifts. He was a man of good
- family and large possessions, but the naughty girl maintained he was old
- as Adam, ugly as sin, and hateful as—one who shall be nameless.
- ‘But, indeed, I had a hard time of it,’ said she: ‘mamma was very greatly
- disappointed at the failure of her darling project, and very, very angry
- at my obstinate resistance to her will, and is so still; but I can’t help
- it. And Walter, too, is so seriously displeased at my perversity and
- absurd caprice, as he calls it, that I fear he will never forgive me—I
- did not think he could be so unkind as he has lately shown himself. But
- Milicent begged me not to yield, and I’m sure, Mrs. Huntingdon, if you
- had seen the man they wanted to palm upon me, you would have advised me
- not to take him too.’
- ‘I should have done so whether I had seen him or not,’ said I; ‘it is
- enough that you dislike him.’
- ‘I knew you would say so; though mamma affirmed you would be quite
- shocked at my undutiful conduct. You can’t imagine how she lectures me:
- I am disobedient and ungrateful; I am thwarting her wishes, wronging my
- brother, and making myself a burden on her hands. I sometimes fear
- she’ll overcome me after all. I have a strong will, but so has she, and
- when she says such bitter things, it provokes me to such a pass that I
- feel inclined to do as she bids me, and then break my heart and say,
- “There, mamma, it’s all your fault!”’
- ‘Pray don’t!’ said I. ‘Obedience from such a motive would be positive
- wickedness, and certain to bring the punishment it deserves. Stand firm,
- and your mamma will soon relinquish her persecution; and the gentleman
- himself will cease to pester you with his addresses if he finds them
- steadily rejected.’
- ‘Oh, no! mamma will weary all about her before she tires herself with her
- exertions; and as for Mr. Oldfield, she has given him to understand that
- I have refused his offer, not from any dislike of his person, but merely
- because I am giddy and young, and cannot at present reconcile myself to
- the thoughts of marriage under any circumstances: but by next season, she
- has no doubt, I shall have more sense, and hopes my girlish fancies will
- be worn away. So she has brought me home, to school me into a proper
- sense of my duty, against the time comes round again. Indeed, I believe
- she will not put herself to the expense of taking me up to London again,
- unless I surrender: she cannot afford to take me to town for pleasure and
- nonsense, she says, and it is not every rich gentleman that will consent
- to take me without a fortune, whatever exalted ideas I may have of my own
- attractions.’
- ‘Well, Esther, I pity you; but still, I repeat, stand firm. You might as
- well sell yourself to slavery at once, as marry a man you dislike. If
- your mother and brother are unkind to you, you may leave them, but
- remember you are bound to your husband for life.’
- ‘But I cannot leave them unless I get married, and I cannot get married
- if nobody sees me. I saw one or two gentlemen in London that I might
- have liked, but they were younger sons, and mamma would not let me get to
- know them—one especially, who I believe rather liked me—but she threw
- every possible obstacle in the way of our better acquaintance. Wasn’t it
- provoking?’
- ‘I have no doubt you would feel it so, but it is possible that if you
- married him, you might have more reason to regret it hereafter than if
- you married Mr. Oldfield. When I tell you not to marry without love, I
- do not advise you to marry for love alone: there are many, many other
- things to be considered. Keep both heart and hand in your own
- possession, till you see good reason to part with them; and if such an
- occasion should never present itself, comfort your mind with this
- reflection, that though in single life your joys may not be very many,
- your sorrows, at least, will not be more than you can bear. Marriage may
- change your circumstances for the better, but, in my private opinion, it
- is far more likely to produce a contrary result.’
- ‘So thinks Milicent; but allow me to say I think otherwise. If I thought
- myself doomed to old-maidenhood, I should cease to value my life. The
- thoughts of living on, year after year, at the Grove—a hanger-on upon
- mamma and Walter, a mere cumberer of the ground (now that I know in what
- light they would regard it), is perfectly intolerable; I would rather run
- away with the butler.’
- ‘Your circumstances are peculiar, I allow; but have patience, love; do
- nothing rashly. Remember you are not yet nineteen, and many years are
- yet to pass before any one can set you down as an old maid: you cannot
- tell what Providence may have in store for you. And meantime, remember
- you have a right to the protection and support of your mother and
- brother, however they may seem to grudge it.’
- ‘You are so grave, Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said Esther, after a pause. ‘When
- Milicent uttered the same discouraging sentiments concerning marriage, I
- asked if she was happy: she said she was; but I only half believed her;
- and now I must put the same question to you.’
- ‘It is a very impertinent question,’ laughed I, ‘from a young girl to a
- married woman so many years her senior, and I shall not answer it.’
- ‘Pardon me, dear madam,’ said she, laughingly throwing herself into my
- arms, and kissing me with playful affection; but I felt a tear on my
- neck, as she dropped her head on my bosom and continued, with an odd
- mixture of sadness and levity, timidity and audacity,—‘I know you are not
- so happy as I mean to be, for you spend half your life alone at
- Grassdale, while Mr. Huntingdon goes about enjoying himself where and how
- he pleases. I shall expect my husband to have no pleasures but what he
- shares with me; and if his greatest pleasure of all is not the enjoyment
- of my company, why, it will be the worse for him, that’s all.’
- ‘If such are your expectations of matrimony, Esther, you must, indeed, be
- careful whom you marry—or rather, you must avoid it altogether.’
- CHAPTER XLII
- September 1st.—No Mr. Huntingdon yet. Perhaps he will stay among his
- friends till Christmas; and then, next spring, he will be off again. If
- he continue this plan, I shall be able to stay at Grassdale well
- enough—that is, I shall be able to stay, and that is enough; even an
- occasional bevy of friends at the shooting season may be borne, if Arthur
- get so firmly attached to me, so well established in good sense and
- principles before they come that I shall be able, by reason and
- affection, to keep him pure from their contaminations. Vain hope, I
- fear! but still, till such a time of trial comes I will forbear to think
- of my quiet asylum in the beloved old hall.
- Mr. and Mrs. Hattersley have been staying at the Grove a fortnight: and
- as Mr. Hargrave is still absent, and the weather was remarkably fine, I
- never passed a day without seeing my two friends, Milicent and Esther,
- either there or here. On one occasion, when Mr. Hattersley had driven
- them over to Grassdale in the phaeton, with little Helen and Ralph, and
- we were all enjoying ourselves in the garden—I had a few minutes’
- conversation with that gentleman, while the ladies were amusing
- themselves with the children.
- ‘Do you want to hear anything of your husband, Mrs. Huntingdon?’ said he.
- ‘No, unless you can tell me when to expect him home.’
- ‘I can’t.—You don’t want him, do you?’ said he, with a broad grin.
- ‘No.’
- ‘Well, I think you’re better without him, sure enough—for my part, I’m
- downright weary of him. I told him I’d leave him if he didn’t mend his
- manners, and he wouldn’t; so I left him. You see, I’m a better man than
- you think me; and, what’s more, I have serious thoughts of washing my
- hands of him entirely, and the whole set of ’em, and comporting myself
- from this day forward with all decency and sobriety, as a Christian and
- the father of a family should do. What do you think of that?’
- ‘It is a resolution you ought to have formed long ago.’
- ‘Well, I’m not thirty yet; it isn’t too late, is it?’
- ‘No; it is never too late to reform, as long as you have the sense to
- desire it, and the strength to execute your purpose.’
- ‘Well, to tell you the truth, I’ve thought of it often and often before;
- but he’s such devilish good company, is Huntingdon, after all. You can’t
- imagine what a jovial good fellow he is when he’s not fairly drunk, only
- just primed or half-seas-over. We all have a bit of a liking for him at
- the bottom of our hearts, though we can’t respect him.’
- ‘But should you wish yourself to be like him?’
- ‘No, I’d rather be like myself, bad as I am.’
- ‘You can’t continue as bad as you are without getting worse and more
- brutalised every day, and therefore more like him.’
- I could not help smiling at the comical, half-angry, half-confounded look
- he put on at this rather unusual mode of address.
- ‘Never mind my plain speaking,’ said I; ‘it is from the best of motives.
- But tell me, should you wish your sons to be like Mr. Huntingdon—or even
- like yourself?’
- ‘Hang it! no.’
- ‘Should you wish your daughter to despise you—or, at least, to feel no
- vestige of respect for you, and no affection but what is mingled with the
- bitterest regret?’
- ‘Oh, no! I couldn’t stand that.’
- ‘And, finally, should you wish your wife to be ready to sink into the
- earth when she hears you mentioned; and to loathe the very sound of your
- voice, and shudder at your approach?’
- ‘She never will; she likes me all the same, whatever I do.’
- ‘Impossible, Mr. Hattersley! you mistake her quiet submission for
- affection.’
- ‘Fire and fury—’
- ‘Now don’t burst into a tempest at that. I don’t mean to say she does
- not love you—she does, I know, a great deal better than you deserve; but
- I am quite sure, that if you behave better, she will love you more, and
- if you behave worse, she will love you less and less, till all is lost in
- fear, aversion, and bitterness of soul, if not in secret hatred and
- contempt. But, dropping the subject of affection, should you wish to be
- the tyrant of her life—to take away all the sunshine from her existence,
- and make her thoroughly miserable?’
- ‘Of course not; and I don’t, and I’m not going to.’
- ‘You have done more towards it than you suppose.’
- ‘Pooh, pooh! she’s not the susceptible, anxious, worriting creature you
- imagine: she’s a little meek, peaceable, affectionate body; apt to be
- rather sulky at times, but quiet and cool in the main, and ready to take
- things as they come.’
- ‘Think of what she was five years ago, when you married her, and what she
- is now.’
- ‘I know she was a little plump lassie then, with a pretty pink and white
- face: now she’s a poor little bit of a creature, fading and melting away
- like a snow-wreath. But hang it!—that’s not my fault.’
- ‘What is the cause of it then? Not years, for she’s only
- five-and-twenty.’
- ‘It’s her own delicate health, and confound it, madam! what would you
- make of me?—and the children, to be sure, that worry her to death between
- them.’
- ‘No, Mr. Hattersley, the children give her more pleasure than pain: they
- are fine, well-dispositioned children—’
- ‘I know they are—bless them!’
- ‘Then why lay the blame on them?—I’ll tell you what it is: it’s silent
- fretting and constant anxiety on your account, mingled, I suspect, with
- something of bodily fear on her own. When you behave well, she can only
- rejoice with trembling; she has no security, no confidence in your
- judgment or principles; but is continually dreading the close of such
- short-lived felicity; when you behave ill, her causes of terror and
- misery are more than any one can tell but herself. In patient endurance
- of evil, she forgets it is our duty to admonish our neighbours of their
- transgressions. Since you will mistake her silence for indifference,
- come with me, and I’ll show you one or two of her letters—no breach of
- confidence, I hope, since you are her other half.’
- He followed me into the library. I sought out and put into his hands two
- of Milicent’s letters: one dated from London, and written during one of
- his wildest seasons of reckless dissipation; the other in the country,
- during a lucid interval. The former was full of trouble and anguish; not
- accusing him, but deeply regretting his connection with his profligate
- companions, abusing Mr. Grimsby and others, insinuating bitter things
- against Mr. Huntingdon, and most ingeniously throwing the blame of her
- husband’s misconduct on to other men’s shoulders. The latter was full of
- hope and joy, yet with a trembling consciousness that this happiness
- would not last; praising his goodness to the skies, but with an evident,
- though but half-expressed wish, that it were based on a surer foundation
- than the natural impulses of the heart, and a half-prophetic dread of the
- fall of that house so founded on the sand,—which fall had shortly after
- taken place, as Hattersley must have been conscious while he read.
- Almost at the commencement of the first letter I had the unexpected
- pleasure of seeing him blush; but he immediately turned his back to me,
- and finished the perusal at the window. At the second, I saw him, once
- or twice, raise his hand, and hurriedly pass it across his face. Could
- it be to dash away a tear? When he had done, there was an interval spent
- in clearing his throat and staring out of the window, and then, after
- whistling a few bars of a favourite air, he turned round, gave me back
- the letters, and silently shook me by the hand.
- ‘I’ve been a cursed rascal, God knows,’ said he, as he gave it a hearty
- squeeze, ‘but you see if I don’t make amends for it—d—n me if I don’t!’
- ‘Don’t curse yourself, Mr. Hattersley; if God had heard half your
- invocations of that kind, you would have been in hell long before now—and
- you cannot make amends for the past by doing your duty for the future,
- inasmuch as your duty is only what you owe to your Maker, and you cannot
- do more than fulfil it: another must make amends for your past
- delinquencies. If you intend to reform, invoke God’s blessing, His
- mercy, and His aid; not His curse.’
- ‘God help me, then—for I’m sure I need it. Where’s Milicent?’
- ‘She’s there, just coming in with her sister.’
- He stepped out at the glass door, and went to meet them. I followed at a
- little distance. Somewhat to his wife’s astonishment, he lifted her off
- from the ground, and saluted her with a hearty kiss and a strong embrace;
- then placing his two hands on her shoulders, he gave her, I suppose, a
- sketch of the great things he meant to do, for she suddenly threw her
- arms round him, and burst into tears, exclaiming,—‘Do, do, Ralph—we shall
- be so happy! How very, very good you are!’
- ‘Nay, not I,’ said he, turning her round, and pushing her towards me.
- ‘Thank her; it’s her doing.’
- Milicent flew to thank me, overflowing with gratitude. I disclaimed all
- title to it, telling her her husband was predisposed to amendment before
- I added my mite of exhortation and encouragement, and that I had only
- done what she might, and ought to have done herself.
- ‘Oh, no!’ cried she; ‘I couldn’t have influenced him, I’m sure, by
- anything that I could have said. I should only have bothered him by my
- clumsy efforts at persuasion, if I had made the attempt.’
- ‘You never tried me, Milly,’ said he.
- Shortly after they took their leave. They are now gone on a visit to
- Hattersley’s father. After that they will repair to their country home.
- I hope his good resolutions will not fall through, and poor Milicent will
- not be again disappointed. Her last letter was full of present bliss,
- and pleasing anticipations for the future; but no particular temptation
- has yet occurred to put his virtue to the test. Henceforth, however, she
- will doubtless be somewhat less timid and reserved, and he more kind and
- thoughtful.—Surely, then, her hopes are not unfounded; and I have one
- bright spot, at least, whereon to rest my thoughts.
- CHAPTER XLIII
- October 10th.—Mr. Huntingdon returned about three weeks ago. His
- appearance, his demeanour and conversation, and my feelings with regard
- to him, I shall not trouble myself to describe. The day after his
- arrival, however, he surprised me by the announcement of an intention to
- procure a governess for little Arthur: I told him it was quite
- unnecessary, not to say ridiculous, at the present season: I thought I
- was fully competent to the task of teaching him myself—for some years to
- come, at least: the child’s education was the only pleasure and business
- of my life; and since he had deprived me of every other occupation, he
- might surely leave me that.
- He said I was not fit to teach children, or to be with them: I had
- already reduced the boy to little better than an automaton; I had broken
- his fine spirit with my rigid severity; and I should freeze all the
- sunshine out of his heart, and make him as gloomy an ascetic as myself,
- if I had the handling of him much longer. And poor Rachel, too, came in
- for her share of abuse, as usual; he cannot endure Rachel, because he
- knows she has a proper appreciation of him.
- I calmly defended our several qualifications as nurse and governess, and
- still resisted the proposed addition to our family; but he cut me short
- by saying it was no use bothering about the matter, for he had engaged a
- governess already, and she was coming next week; so that all I had to do
- was to get things ready for her reception. This was a rather startling
- piece of intelligence. I ventured to inquire her name and address, by
- whom she had been recommended, or how he had been led to make choice of
- her.
- ‘She is a very estimable, pious young person,’ said he; ‘you needn’t be
- afraid. Her name is Myers, I believe; and she was recommended to me by a
- respectable old dowager: a lady of high repute in the religious world. I
- have not seen her myself, and therefore cannot give you a particular
- account of her person and conversation, and so forth; but, if the old
- lady’s eulogies are correct, you will find her to possess all desirable
- qualifications for her position: an inordinate love of children among the
- rest.’
- All this was gravely and quietly spoken, but there was a laughing demon
- in his half-averted eye that boded no good, I imagined. However, I
- thought of my asylum in —shire, and made no further objections.
- When Miss Myers arrived, I was not prepared to give her a very cordial
- reception. Her appearance was not particularly calculated to produce a
- favourable impression at first sight, nor did her manners and subsequent
- conduct, in any degree, remove the prejudice I had already conceived
- against her. Her attainments were limited, her intellect noways above
- mediocrity. She had a fine voice, and could sing like a nightingale, and
- accompany herself sufficiently well on the piano; but these were her only
- accomplishments. There was a look of guile and subtlety in her face, a
- sound of it in her voice. She seemed afraid of me, and would start if I
- suddenly approached her. In her behaviour she was respectful and
- complaisant, even to servility: she attempted to flatter and fawn upon me
- at first, but I soon checked that. Her fondness for her little pupil was
- overstrained, and I was obliged to remonstrate with her on the subject of
- over-indulgence and injudicious praise; but she could not gain his heart.
- Her piety consisted in an occasional heaving of sighs, and uplifting of
- eyes to the ceiling, and the utterance of a few cant phrases. She told
- me she was a clergyman’s daughter, and had been left an orphan from her
- childhood, but had had the good fortune to obtain a situation in a very
- pious family; and then she spoke so gratefully of the kindness she had
- experienced from its different members, that I reproached myself for my
- uncharitable thoughts and unfriendly conduct, and relented for a time,
- but not for long: my causes of dislike were too rational, my suspicions
- too well founded for that; and I knew it was my duty to watch and
- scrutinize till those suspicions were either satisfactorily removed or
- confirmed.
- I asked the name and residence of the kind and pious family. She
- mentioned a common name, and an unknown and distant place of abode, but
- told me they were now on the Continent, and their present address was
- unknown to her. I never saw her speak much to Mr. Huntingdon; but he
- would frequently look into the school-room to see how little Arthur got
- on with his new companion, when I was not there. In the evening, she sat
- with us in the drawing-room, and would sing and play to amuse him or us,
- as she pretended, and was very attentive to his wants, and watchful to
- anticipate them, though she only talked to me; indeed, he was seldom in a
- condition to be talked to. Had she been other than she was, I should
- have felt her presence a great relief to come between us thus, except,
- indeed, that I should have been thoroughly ashamed for any decent person
- to see him as he often was.
- I did not mention my suspicions to Rachel; but she, having sojourned for
- half a century in this land of sin and sorrow, has learned to be
- suspicious herself. She told me from the first she was ‘down of that new
- governess,’ and I soon found she watched her quite as narrowly as I did;
- and I was glad of it, for I longed to know the truth: the atmosphere of
- Grassdale seemed to stifle me, and I could only live by thinking of
- Wildfell Hall.
- At last, one morning, she entered my chamber with such intelligence that
- my resolution was taken before she had ceased to speak. While she
- dressed me I explained to her my intentions and what assistance I should
- require from her, and told her which of my things she was to pack up, and
- what she was to leave behind for herself, as I had no other means of
- recompensing her for this sudden dismissal after her long and faithful
- service: a circumstance I most deeply regretted, but could not avoid.
- ‘And what will you do, Rachel?’ said I; ‘will you go home, or seek
- another place?’
- ‘I have no home, ma’am, but with you,’ she replied; ‘and if I leave you
- I’ll never go into place again as long as I live.’
- ‘But I can’t afford to live like a lady now,’ returned I: ‘I must be my
- own maid and my child’s nurse.’
- ‘What signifies!’ replied she, in some excitement. ‘You’ll want somebody
- to clean and wash, and cook, won’t you? I can do all that; and never
- mind the wages: I’ve my bits o’ savings yet, and if you wouldn’t take me
- I should have to find my own board and lodging out of ’em somewhere, or
- else work among strangers: and it’s what I’m not used to: so you can
- please yourself, ma’am.’ Her voice quavered as she spoke, and the tears
- stood in her eyes.
- ‘I should like it above all things, Rachel, and I’d give you such wages
- as I could afford: such as I should give to any servant-of-all-work I
- might employ: but don’t you see I should be dragging you down with me
- when you have done nothing to deserve it?’
- ‘Oh, fiddle!’ ejaculated she.
- ‘And, besides, my future way of living will be so widely different to the
- past: so different to all you have been accustomed to—’
- ‘Do you think, ma’am, I can’t bear what my missis can? surely I’m not so
- proud and so dainty as that comes to; and my little master, too, God
- bless him!’
- ‘But I’m young, Rachel; I sha’n’t mind it; and Arthur is young too: it
- will be nothing to him.’
- ‘Nor me either: I’m not so old but what I can stand hard fare and hard
- work, if it’s only to help and comfort them as I’ve loved like my own
- bairns: for all I’m too old to bide the thoughts o’ leaving ’em in
- trouble and danger, and going amongst strangers myself.’
- ‘Then you sha’n’t, Rachel!’ cried I, embracing my faithful friend.
- ‘We’ll all go together, and you shall see how the new life suits you.’
- ‘Bless you, honey!’ cried she, affectionately returning my embrace.
- ‘Only let us get shut of this wicked house, and we’ll do right enough,
- you’ll see.’
- ‘So think I,’ was my answer; and so that point was settled.
- By that morning’s post I despatched a few hasty lines to Frederick,
- beseeching him to prepare my asylum for my immediate reception: for I
- should probably come to claim it within a day after the receipt of that
- note: and telling him, in few words, the cause of my sudden resolution.
- I then wrote three letters of adieu: the first to Esther Hargrave, in
- which I told her that I found it impossible to stay any longer at
- Grassdale, or to leave my son under his father’s protection; and, as it
- was of the last importance that our future abode should be unknown to him
- and his acquaintance, I should disclose it to no one but my brother,
- through the medium of whom I hoped still to correspond with my friends.
- I then gave her his address, exhorted her to write frequently, reiterated
- some of my former admonitions regarding her own concerns, and bade her a
- fond farewell.
- The second was to Milicent; much to the same effect, but a little more
- confidential, as befitted our longer intimacy, and her greater experience
- and better acquaintance with my circumstances.
- The third was to my aunt: a much more difficult and painful undertaking,
- and therefore I had left it to the last; but I must give her some
- explanation of that extraordinary step I had taken: and that quickly, for
- she and my uncle would no doubt hear of it within a day or two after my
- disappearance, as it was probable that Mr. Huntingdon would speedily
- apply to them to know what was become of me. At last, however, I told
- her I was sensible of my error: I did not complain of its punishment, and
- I was sorry to trouble my friends with its consequences; but in duty to
- my son I must submit no longer; it was absolutely necessary that he
- should be delivered from his father’s corrupting influence. I should not
- disclose my place of refuge even to her, in order that she and my uncle
- might be able, with truth, to deny all knowledge concerning it; but any
- communications addressed to me under cover to my brother would be certain
- to reach me. I hoped she and my uncle would pardon the step I had taken,
- for if they knew all, I was sure they would not blame me; and I trusted
- they would not afflict themselves on my account, for if I could only
- reach my retreat in safety and keep it unmolested, I should be very
- happy, but for the thoughts of them; and should be quite contented to
- spend my life in obscurity, devoting myself to the training up of my
- child, and teaching him to avoid the errors of both his parents.
- These things were done yesterday: I have given two whole days to the
- preparation for our departure, that Frederick may have more time to
- prepare the rooms, and Rachel to pack up the things: for the latter task
- must be done with the utmost caution and secrecy, and there is no one but
- me to assist her. I can help to get the articles together, but I do not
- understand the art of stowing them into the boxes, so as to take up the
- smallest possible space; and there are her own things to do, as well as
- mine and Arthur’s. I can ill afford to leave anything behind, since I
- have no money, except a few guineas in my purse; and besides, as Rachel
- observed, whatever I left would most likely become the property of Miss
- Myers, and I should not relish that.
- But what trouble I have had throughout these two days, struggling to
- appear calm and collected, to meet him and her as usual, when I was
- obliged to meet them, and forcing myself to leave my little Arthur in her
- hands for hours together! But I trust these trials are over now: I have
- laid him in my bed for better security, and never more, I trust, shall
- his innocent lips be defiled by their contaminating kisses, or his young
- ears polluted by their words. But shall we escape in safety? Oh, that
- the morning were come, and we were on our way at least! This evening,
- when I had given Rachel all the assistance I could, and had nothing left
- me but to wait, and wish and tremble, I became so greatly agitated that I
- knew not what to do. I went down to dinner, but I could not force myself
- to eat. Mr. Huntingdon remarked the circumstance.
- ‘What’s to do with you now?’ said he, when the removal of the second
- course gave him time to look about him.
- ‘I am not well,’ I replied: ‘I think I must lie down a little; you won’t
- miss me much?’
- ‘Not the least: if you leave your chair, it’ll do just as well—better, a
- trifle,’ he muttered, as I left the room, ‘for I can fancy somebody else
- fills it.’
- ‘Somebody else may fill it to-morrow,’ I thought, but did not say.
- ‘There! I’ve seen the last of you, I hope,’ I muttered, as I closed the
- door upon him.
- Rachel urged me to seek repose at once, to recruit my strength for
- to-morrow’s journey, as we must be gone before the dawn; but in my
- present state of nervous excitement that was entirely out of the
- question. It was equally out of the question to sit, or wander about my
- room, counting the hours and the minutes between me and the appointed
- time of action, straining my ears and trembling at every sound, lest
- someone should discover and betray us after all. I took up a book and
- tried to read: my eyes wandered over the pages, but it was impossible to
- bind my thoughts to their contents. Why not have recourse to the old
- expedient, and add this last event to my chronicle? I opened its pages
- once more, and wrote the above account—with difficulty, at first, but
- gradually my mind became more calm and steady. Thus several hours have
- passed away: the time is drawing near; and now my eyes feel heavy and my
- frame exhausted. I will commend my cause to God, and then lie down and
- gain an hour or two of sleep; and then!—
- Little Arthur sleeps soundly. All the house is still: there can be no
- one watching. The boxes were all corded by Benson, and quietly conveyed
- down the back stairs after dusk, and sent away in a cart to the M—
- coach-office. The name upon the cards was Mrs. Graham, which appellation
- I mean henceforth to adopt. My mother’s maiden name was Graham, and
- therefore I fancy I have some claim to it, and prefer it to any other,
- except my own, which I dare not resume.
- CHAPTER XLIV
- October 24th.—Thank heaven, I am free and safe at last. Early we rose,
- swiftly and quietly dressed, slowly and stealthily descended to the hall,
- where Benson stood ready with a light, to open the door and fasten it
- after us. We were obliged to let one man into our secret on account of
- the boxes, &c. All the servants were but too well acquainted with their
- master’s conduct, and either Benson or John would have been willing to
- serve me; but as the former was more staid and elderly, and a crony of
- Rachel’s besides, I of course directed her to make choice of him as her
- assistant and confidant on the occasion, as far as necessity demanded, I
- only hope he may not be brought into trouble thereby, and only wish I
- could reward him for the perilous service he was so ready to undertake.
- I slipped two guineas into his hand, by way of remembrance, as he stood
- in the doorway, holding the candle to light our departure, with a tear in
- his honest grey eye, and a host of good wishes depicted on his solemn
- countenance. Alas! I could offer no more: I had barely sufficient
- remaining for the probable expenses of the journey.
- What trembling joy it was when the little wicket closed behind us, as we
- issued from the park! Then, for one moment, I paused, to inhale one
- draught of that cool, bracing air, and venture one look back upon the
- house. All was dark and still: no light glimmered in the windows, no
- wreath of smoke obscured the stars that sparkled above it in the frosty
- sky. As I bade farewell for ever to that place, the scene of so much
- guilt and misery, I felt glad that I had not left it before, for now
- there was no doubt about the propriety of such a step—no shadow of
- remorse for him I left behind. There was nothing to disturb my joy but
- the fear of detection; and every step removed us further from the chance
- of that.
- We had left Grassdale many miles behind us before the round red sun arose
- to welcome our deliverance; and if any inhabitant of its vicinity had
- chanced to see us then, as we bowled along on the top of the coach, I
- scarcely think they would have suspected our identity. As I intend to be
- taken for a widow, I thought it advisable to enter my new abode in
- mourning: I was, therefore, attired in a plain black silk dress and
- mantle, a black veil (which I kept carefully over my face for the first
- twenty or thirty miles of the journey), and a black silk bonnet, which I
- had been constrained to borrow of Rachel, for want of such an article
- myself. It was not in the newest fashion, of course; but none the worse
- for that, under present circumstances. Arthur was clad in his plainest
- clothes, and wrapped in a coarse woollen shawl; and Rachel was muffled in
- a grey cloak and hood that had seen better days, and gave her more the
- appearance of an ordinary though decent old woman, than of a lady’s-maid.
- Oh, what delight it was to be thus seated aloft, rumbling along the
- broad, sunshiny road, with the fresh morning breeze in my face,
- surrounded by an unknown country, all smiling—cheerfully, gloriously
- smiling in the yellow lustre of those early beams; with my darling child
- in my arms, almost as happy as myself, and my faithful friend beside me:
- a prison and despair behind me, receding further, further back at every
- clatter of the horses’ feet; and liberty and hope before! I could hardly
- refrain from praising God aloud for my deliverance, or astonishing my
- fellow-passengers by some surprising outburst of hilarity.
- But the journey was a very long one, and we were all weary enough before
- the close of it. It was far into the night when we reached the town of
- L—, and still we were seven miles from our journey’s end; and there was
- no more coaching, nor any conveyance to be had, except a common cart, and
- that with the greatest difficulty, for half the town was in bed. And a
- dreary ride we had of it, that last stage of the journey, cold and weary
- as we were; sitting on our boxes, with nothing to cling to, nothing to
- lean against, slowly dragged and cruelly shaken over the rough, hilly
- roads. But Arthur was asleep in Rachel’s lap, and between us we managed
- pretty well to shield him from the cold night air.
- At last we began to ascend a terribly steep and stony lane, which, in
- spite of the darkness, Rachel said she remembered well: she had often
- walked there with me in her arms, and little thought to come again so
- many years after, under such circumstances as the present. Arthur being
- now awakened by the jolting and the stoppages, we all got out and walked.
- We had not far to go; but what if Frederick should not have received my
- letter? or if he should not have had time to prepare the rooms for our
- reception, and we should find them all dark, damp, and comfortless,
- destitute of food, fire, and furniture, after all our toil?
- At length the grim, dark pile appeared before us. The lane conducted us
- round by the back way. We entered the desolate court, and in breathless
- anxiety surveyed the ruinous mass. Was it all blackness and desolation?
- No; one faint red glimmer cheered us from a window where the lattice was
- in good repair. The door was fastened, but after due knocking and
- waiting, and some parleying with a voice from an upper window, we were
- admitted by an old woman who had been commissioned to air and keep the
- house till our arrival, into a tolerably snug little apartment, formerly
- the scullery of the mansion, which Frederick had now fitted up as a
- kitchen. Here she procured us a light, roused the fire to a cheerful
- blaze, and soon prepared a simple repast for our refreshment; while we
- disencumbered ourselves of our travelling-gear, and took a hasty survey
- of our new abode. Besides the kitchen, there were two bedrooms, a
- good-sized parlour, and another smaller one, which I destined for my
- studio, all well aired and seemingly in good repair, but only partly
- furnished with a few old articles, chiefly of ponderous black oak, the
- veritable ones that had been there before, and which had been kept as
- antiquarian relics in my brother’s present residence, and now, in all
- haste, transported back again.
- The old woman brought my supper and Arthur’s into the parlour, and told
- me, with all due formality, that ‘the master desired his compliments to
- Mrs. Graham, and he had prepared the rooms as well as he could upon so
- short a notice; but he would do himself the pleasure of calling upon her
- to-morrow, to receive her further commands.’
- I was glad to ascend the stern-looking stone staircase, and lie down in
- the gloomy, old-fashioned bed, beside my little Arthur. He was asleep in
- a minute; but, weary as I was, my excited feelings and restless
- cogitations kept me awake till dawn began to struggle with the darkness;
- but sleep was sweet and refreshing when it came, and the waking was
- delightful beyond expression. It was little Arthur that roused me, with
- his gentle kisses. He was here, then, safely clasped in my arms, and
- many leagues away from his unworthy father! Broad daylight illumined the
- apartment, for the sun was high in heaven, though obscured by rolling
- masses of autumnal vapour.
- The scene, indeed, was not remarkably cheerful in itself, either within
- or without. The large bare room, with its grim old furniture, the
- narrow, latticed windows, revealing the dull, grey sky above and the
- desolate wilderness below, where the dark stone walls and iron gate, the
- rank growth of grass and weeds, and the hardy evergreens of preternatural
- forms, alone remained to tell that there had been once a garden,—and the
- bleak and barren fields beyond might have struck me as gloomy enough at
- another time; but now, each separate object seemed to echo back my own
- exhilarating sense of hope and freedom: indefinite dreams of the far past
- and bright anticipations of the future seemed to greet me at every turn.
- I should rejoice with more security, to be sure, had the broad sea rolled
- between my present and my former homes; but surely in this lonely spot I
- might remain unknown; and then I had my brother here to cheer my solitude
- with his occasional visits.
- He came that morning; and I have had several interviews with him since;
- but he is obliged to be very cautious when and how he comes; not even his
- servants or his best friends must know of his visits to Wildfell—except
- on such occasions as a landlord might be expected to call upon a stranger
- tenant—lest suspicion should be excited against me, whether of the truth
- or of some slanderous falsehood.
- I have now been here nearly a fortnight, and, but for one disturbing
- care, the haunting dread of discovery, I am comfortably settled in my new
- home: Frederick has supplied me with all requisite furniture and painting
- materials: Rachel has sold most of my clothes for me, in a distant town,
- and procured me a wardrobe more suitable to my present position: I have a
- second-hand piano, and a tolerably well-stocked bookcase in my parlour;
- and my other room has assumed quite a professional, business-like
- appearance already. I am working hard to repay my brother for all his
- expenses on my account; not that there is the slightest necessity for
- anything of the kind, but it pleases me to do so: I shall have so much
- more pleasure in my labour, my earnings, my frugal fare, and household
- economy, when I know that I am paying my way honestly, and that what
- little I possess is legitimately all my own; and that no one suffers for
- my folly—in a pecuniary way at least. I shall make him take the last
- penny I owe him, if I can possibly effect it without offending him too
- deeply. I have a few pictures already done, for I told Rachel to pack up
- all I had; and she executed her commission but too well—for among the
- rest, she put up a portrait of Mr. Huntingdon that I had painted in the
- first year of my marriage. It struck me with dismay, at the moment, when
- I took it from the box and beheld those eyes fixed upon me in their
- mocking mirth, as if exulting still in his power to control my fate, and
- deriding my efforts to escape.
- How widely different had been my feelings in painting that portrait to
- what they now were in looking upon it! How I had studied and toiled to
- produce something, as I thought, worthy of the original! what mingled
- pleasure and dissatisfaction I had had in the result of my
- labours!—pleasure for the likeness I had caught; dissatisfaction, because
- I had not made it handsome enough. Now, I see no beauty in it—nothing
- pleasing in any part of its expression; and yet it is far handsomer and
- far more agreeable—far less repulsive I should rather say—than he is now:
- for these six years have wrought almost as great a change upon himself as
- on my feelings regarding him. The frame, however, is handsome enough; it
- will serve for another painting. The picture itself I have not
- destroyed, as I had first intended; I have put it aside; not, I think,
- from any lurking tenderness for the memory of past affection, nor yet to
- remind me of my former folly, but chiefly that I may compare my son’s
- features and countenance with this, as he grows up, and thus be enabled
- to judge how much or how little he resembles his father—if I may be
- allowed to keep him with me still, and never to behold that father’s face
- again—a blessing I hardly dare reckon upon.
- It seems Mr. Huntingdon is making every exertion to discover the place of
- my retreat. He has been in person to Staningley, seeking redress for his
- grievances—expecting to hear of his victims, if not to find them
- there—and has told so many lies, and with such unblushing coolness, that
- my uncle more than half believes him, and strongly advocates my going
- back to him and being friends again. But my aunt knows better: she is
- too cool and cautious, and too well acquainted with both my husband’s
- character and my own to be imposed upon by any specious falsehoods the
- former could invent. But he does not want me back; he wants my child;
- and gives my friends to understand that if I prefer living apart from
- him, he will indulge the whim and let me do so unmolested, and even
- settle a reasonable allowance on me, provided I will immediately deliver
- up his son. But heaven help me! I am not going to sell my child for
- gold, though it were to save both him and me from starving: it would be
- better that he should die with me than that he should live with his
- father.
- Frederick showed me a letter he had received from that gentleman, full of
- cool impudence such as would astonish any one who did not know him, but
- such as, I am convinced, none would know better how to answer than my
- brother. He gave me no account of his reply, except to tell me that he
- had not acknowledged his acquaintance with my place of refuge, but rather
- left it to be inferred that it was quite unknown to him, by saying it was
- useless to apply to him, or any other of my relations, for information on
- the subject, as it appeared I had been driven to such extremity that I
- had concealed my retreat even from my best friends; but that if he had
- known it, or should at any time be made aware of it, most certainly Mr.
- Huntingdon would be the last person to whom he should communicate the
- intelligence; and that he need not trouble himself to bargain for the
- child, for he (Frederick) fancied he knew enough of his sister to enable
- him to declare, that wherever she might be, or however situated, no
- consideration would induce her to deliver him up.
- 30th.—Alas! my kind neighbours will not let me alone. By some means they
- have ferreted me out, and I have had to sustain visits from three
- different families, all more or less bent upon discovering who and what I
- am, whence I came, and why I have chosen such a home as this. Their
- society is unnecessary to me, to say the least, and their curiosity
- annoys and alarms me: if I gratify it, it may lead to the ruin of my son,
- and if I am too mysterious it will only excite their suspicions, invite
- conjecture, and rouse them to greater exertions—and perhaps be the means
- of spreading my fame from parish to parish, till it reach the ears of
- some one who will carry it to the Lord of Grassdale Manor.
- I shall be expected to return their calls, but if, upon inquiry, I find
- that any of them live too far away for Arthur to accompany me, they must
- expect in vain for a while, for I cannot bear to leave him, unless it be
- to go to church, and I have not attempted that yet: for—it may be foolish
- weakness, but I am under such constant dread of his being snatched away,
- that I am never easy when he is not by my side; and I fear these nervous
- terrors would so entirely disturb my devotions, that I should obtain no
- benefit from the attendance. I mean, however, to make the experiment
- next Sunday, and oblige myself to leave him in charge of Rachel for a few
- hours. It will be a hard task, but surely no imprudence; and the vicar
- has been to scold me for my neglect of the ordinances of religion. I had
- no sufficient excuse to offer, and I promised, if all were well, he
- should see me in my pew next Sunday; for I do not wish to be set down as
- an infidel; and, besides, I know I should derive great comfort and
- benefit from an occasional attendance at public worship, if I could only
- have faith and fortitude to compose my thoughts in conformity with the
- solemn occasion, and forbid them to be for ever dwelling on my absent
- child, and on the dreadful possibility of finding him gone when I return;
- and surely God in His mercy will preserve me from so severe a trial: for
- my child’s own sake, if not for mine, He will not suffer him to be torn
- away.
- November 3rd.—I have made some further acquaintance with my neighbours.
- The fine gentleman and beau of the parish and its vicinity (in his own
- estimation, at least) is a young . . . .
- * * * * *
- Here it ended. The rest was torn away. How cruel, just when she was
- going to mention me! for I could not doubt it was your humble servant she
- was about to mention, though not very favourably, of course. I could
- tell that, as well by those few words as by the recollection of her whole
- aspect and demeanour towards me in the commencement of our acquaintance.
- Well! I could readily forgive her prejudice against me, and her hard
- thoughts of our sex in general, when I saw to what brilliant specimens
- her experience had been limited.
- Respecting me, however, she had long since seen her error, and perhaps
- fallen into another in the opposite extreme: for if, at first, her
- opinion of me had been lower than I deserved, I was convinced that now my
- deserts were lower than her opinion; and if the former part of this
- continuation had been torn away to avoid wounding my feelings, perhaps
- the latter portion had been removed for fear of ministering too much to
- my self-conceit. At any rate, I would have given much to have seen it
- all—to have witnessed the gradual change, and watched the progress of her
- esteem and friendship for me, and whatever warmer feeling she might have;
- to have seen how much of love there was in her regard, and how it had
- grown upon her in spite of her virtuous resolutions and strenuous
- exertions to—but no, I had no right to see it: all this was too sacred
- for any eyes but her own, and she had done well to keep it from me.
- CHAPTER XLV
- Well, Halford, what do you think of all this? and while you read it, did
- you ever picture to yourself what my feelings would probably be during
- its perusal? Most likely not; but I am not going to descant upon them
- now: I will only make this acknowledgment, little honourable as it may be
- to human nature, and especially to myself,—that the former half of the
- narrative was, to me, more painful than the latter, not that I was at all
- insensible to Mrs. Huntingdon’s wrongs or unmoved by her sufferings, but,
- I must confess, I felt a kind of selfish gratification in watching her
- husband’s gradual decline in her good graces, and seeing how completely
- he extinguished all her affection at last. The effect of the whole,
- however, in spite of all my sympathy for her, and my fury against him,
- was to relieve my mind of an intolerable burden, and fill my heart with
- joy, as if some friend had roused me from a dreadful nightmare.
- It was now near eight o’clock in the morning, for my candle had expired
- in the midst of my perusal, leaving me no alternative but to get another,
- at the expense of alarming the house, or to go to bed, and wait the
- return of daylight. On my mother’s account, I chose the latter; but how
- willingly I sought my pillow, and how much sleep it brought me, I leave
- you to imagine.
- At the first appearance of dawn, I rose, and brought the manuscript to
- the window, but it was impossible to read it yet. I devoted half an hour
- to dressing, and then returned to it again. Now, with a little
- difficulty, I could manage; and with intense and eager interest, I
- devoured the remainder of its contents. When it was ended, and my
- transient regret at its abrupt conclusion was over, I opened the window
- and put out my head to catch the cooling breeze, and imbibe deep draughts
- of the pure morning air. A splendid morning it was; the half-frozen dew
- lay thick on the grass, the swallows were twittering round me, the rooks
- cawing, and cows lowing in the distance; and early frost and summer
- sunshine mingled their sweetness in the air. But I did not think of
- that: a confusion of countless thoughts and varied emotions crowded upon
- me while I gazed abstractedly on the lovely face of nature. Soon,
- however, this chaos of thoughts and passions cleared away, giving place
- to two distinct emotions: joy unspeakable that my adored Helen was all I
- wished to think her—that through the noisome vapours of the world’s
- aspersions and my own fancied convictions, her character shone bright,
- and clear, and stainless as that sun I could not bear to look on; and
- shame and deep remorse for my own conduct.
- Immediately after breakfast I hurried over to Wildfell Hall. Rachel had
- risen many degrees in my estimation since yesterday. I was ready to
- greet her quite as an old friend; but every kindly impulse was checked by
- the look of cold distrust she cast upon me on opening the door. The old
- virgin had constituted herself the guardian of her lady’s honour, I
- suppose, and doubtless she saw in me another Mr. Hargrave, only the more
- dangerous in being more esteemed and trusted by her mistress.
- ‘Missis can’t see any one to-day, sir—she’s poorly,’ said she, in answer
- to my inquiry for Mrs. Graham.
- ‘But I must see her, Rachel,’ said I, placing my hand on the door to
- prevent its being shut against me.
- ‘Indeed, sir, you can’t,’ replied she, settling her countenance in still
- more iron frigidity than before.
- ‘Be so good as to announce me.’
- ‘It’s no manner of use, Mr. Markham; she’s poorly, I tell you.’
- Just in time to prevent me from committing the impropriety of taking the
- citadel by storm, and pushing forward unannounced, an inner door opened,
- and little Arthur appeared with his frolicsome playfellow, the dog. He
- seized my hand between both his, and smilingly drew me forward.
- ‘Mamma says you’re to come in, Mr. Markham,’ said he, ‘and I am to go out
- and play with Rover.’
- Rachel retired with a sigh, and I stepped into the parlour and shut the
- door. There, before the fire-place, stood the tall, graceful figure,
- wasted with many sorrows. I cast the manuscript on the table, and looked
- in her face. Anxious and pale, it was turned towards me; her clear, dark
- eyes were fixed on mine with a gaze so intensely earnest that they bound
- me like a spell.
- ‘Have you looked it over?’ she murmured. The spell was broken.
- ‘I’ve read it through,’ said I, advancing into the room,—‘and I want to
- know if you’ll forgive me—if you can forgive me?’
- She did not answer, but her eyes glistened, and a faint red mantled on
- her lip and cheek. As I approached, she abruptly turned away, and went
- to the window. It was not in anger, I was well assured, but only to
- conceal or control her emotion. I therefore ventured to follow and stand
- beside her there,—but not to speak. She gave me her hand, without
- turning her head, and murmured in a voice she strove in vain to
- steady,—‘Can you forgive me?’
- It might be deemed a breach of trust, I thought, to convey that lily hand
- to my lips, so I only gently pressed it between my own, and smilingly
- replied,—‘I hardly can. You should have told me this before. It shows a
- want of confidence—’
- ‘Oh, no,’ cried she, eagerly interrupting me; ‘it was not that. It was
- no want of confidence in you; but if I had told you anything of my
- history, I must have told you all, in order to excuse my conduct; and I
- might well shrink from such a disclosure, till necessity obliged me to
- make it. But you forgive me?—I have done very, very wrong, I know; but,
- as usual, I have reaped the bitter fruits of my own error,—and must reap
- them to the end.’
- Bitter, indeed, was the tone of anguish, repressed by resolute firmness,
- in which this was spoken. Now, I raised her hand to my lips, and
- fervently kissed it again and again; for tears prevented any other reply.
- She suffered these wild caresses without resistance or resentment; then,
- suddenly turning from me, she paced twice or thrice through the room. I
- knew by the contraction of her brow, the tight compression of her lips,
- and wringing of her hands, that meantime a violent conflict between
- reason and passion was silently passing within. At length she paused
- before the empty fire-place, and turning to me, said calmly—if that might
- be called calmness which was so evidently the result of a violent
- effort,—‘Now, Gilbert, you must leave me—not this moment, but soon—and
- you must never come again.’
- ‘Never again, Helen? just when I love you more than ever.’
- ‘For that very reason, if it be so, we should not meet again. I thought
- this interview was necessary—at least, I persuaded myself it was so—that
- we might severally ask and receive each other’s pardon for the past; but
- there can be no excuse for another. I shall leave this place, as soon as
- I have means to seek another asylum; but our intercourse must end here.’
- ‘End here!’ echoed I; and approaching the high, carved chimney-piece, I
- leant my hand against its heavy mouldings, and dropped my forehead upon
- it in silent, sullen despondency.
- ‘You must not come again,’ continued she. There was a slight tremor in
- her voice, but I thought her whole manner was provokingly composed,
- considering the dreadful sentence she pronounced. ‘You must know why I
- tell you so,’ she resumed; ‘and you must see that it is better to part at
- once: —if it be hard to say adieu for ever, you ought to help me.’ She
- paused. I did not answer. ‘Will you promise not to come?—if you won’t,
- and if you do come here again, you will drive me away before I know where
- to find another place of refuge—or how to seek it.’
- ‘Helen,’ said I, turning impatiently towards her, ‘I cannot discuss the
- matter of eternal separation calmly and dispassionately as you can do.
- It is no question of mere expedience with me; it is a question of life
- and death!’
- She was silent. Her pale lips quivered, and her fingers trembled with
- agitation, as she nervously entwined them in the hair-chain to which was
- appended her small gold watch—the only thing of value she had permitted
- herself to keep. I had said an unjust and cruel thing; but I must needs
- follow it up with something worse.
- ‘But, Helen!’ I began in a soft, low tone, not daring to raise my eyes to
- her face, ‘that man is not your husband: in the sight of heaven he has
- forfeited all claim to—‘ She seized my arm with a grasp of startling
- energy.
- ‘Gilbert, don’t!’ she cried, in a tone that would have pierced a heart of
- adamant. ‘For God’s sake, don’t you attempt these arguments! No fiend
- could torture me like this!’
- ‘I won’t, I won’t!’ said I, gently laying my hand on hers; almost as much
- alarmed at her vehemence as ashamed of my own misconduct.
- ‘Instead of acting like a true friend,’ continued she, breaking from me,
- and throwing herself into the old arm-chair, ‘and helping me with all
- your might—or rather taking your own part in the struggle of right
- against passion—you leave all the burden to me;—and not satisfied with
- that, you do your utmost to fight against me—when you know that!—‘ she
- paused, and hid her face in her handkerchief.
- ‘Forgive me, Helen!’ pleaded I. ‘I will never utter another word on the
- subject. But may we not still meet as friends?’
- ‘It will not do,’ she replied, mournfully shaking her head; and then she
- raised her eyes to mine, with a mildly reproachful look that seemed to
- say, ‘You must know that as well as I.’
- ‘Then what must we do?’ cried I, passionately. But immediately I added
- in a quieter tone—‘I’ll do whatever you desire; only don’t say that this
- meeting is to be our last.’
- ‘And why not? Don’t you know that every time we meet the thoughts of the
- final parting will become more painful? Don’t you feel that every
- interview makes us dearer to each other than the last?’
- The utterance of this last question was hurried and low, and the downcast
- eyes and burning blush too plainly showed that she, at least, had felt
- it. It was scarcely prudent to make such an admission, or to add—as she
- presently did—‘I have power to bid you go, now: another time it might be
- different,’—but I was not base enough to attempt to take advantage of her
- candour.
- ‘But we may write,’ I timidly suggested. ‘You will not deny me that
- consolation?’
- ‘We can hear of each other through my brother.’
- ‘Your brother!’ A pang of remorse and shame shot through me. She had
- not heard of the injury he had sustained at my hands; and I had not the
- courage to tell her. ‘Your brother will not help us,’ I said: ‘he would
- have all communion between us to be entirely at an end.’
- ‘And he would be right, I suppose. As a friend of both, he would wish us
- both well; and every friend would tell us it was our interest, as well as
- our duty, to forget each other, though we might not see it ourselves.
- But don’t be afraid, Gilbert,’ she added, smiling sadly at my manifest
- discomposure; ‘there is little chance of my forgetting you. But I did
- not mean that Frederick should be the means of transmitting messages
- between us—only that each might know, through him, of the other’s
- welfare;—and more than this ought not to be: for you are young, Gilbert,
- and you ought to marry—and will some time, though you may think it
- impossible now: and though I hardly can say I wish you to forget me, I
- know it is right that you should, both for your own happiness, and that
- of your future wife;—and therefore I must and will wish it,’ she added
- resolutely.
- ‘And you are young too, Helen,’ I boldly replied; ‘and when that
- profligate scoundrel has run through his career, you will give your hand
- to me—I’ll wait till then.’
- But she would not leave me this support. Independently of the moral evil
- of basing our hopes upon the death of another, who, if unfit for this
- world, was at least no less so for the next, and whose amelioration would
- thus become our bane and his greatest transgression our greatest
- benefit,—she maintained it to be madness: many men of Mr. Huntingdon’s
- habits had lived to a ripe though miserable old age. ‘And if I,’ said
- she, ‘am young in years, I am old in sorrow; but even if trouble should
- fail to kill me before vice destroys him, think, if he reached but fifty
- years or so, would you wait twenty or fifteen—in vague uncertainty and
- suspense—through all the prime of youth and manhood—and marry at last a
- woman faded and worn as I shall be—without ever having seen me from this
- day to that?—You would not,’ she continued, interrupting my earnest
- protestations of unfailing constancy,—‘or if you would, you should not.
- Trust me, Gilbert; in this matter I know better than you. You think me
- cold and stony-hearted, and you may, but—’
- ‘I don’t, Helen.’
- ‘Well, never mind: you might if you would: but I have not spent my
- solitude in utter idleness, and I am not speaking now from the impulse of
- the moment, as you do. I have thought of all these matters again and
- again; I have argued these questions with myself, and pondered well our
- past, and present, and future career; and, believe me, I have come to the
- right conclusion at last. Trust my words rather than your own feelings
- now, and in a few years you will see that I was right—though at present I
- hardly can see it myself,’ she murmured with a sigh as she rested her
- head on her hand. ‘And don’t argue against me any more: all you can say
- has been already said by my own heart and refuted by my reason. It was
- hard enough to combat those suggestions as they were whispered within me;
- in your mouth they are ten times worse, and if you knew how much they
- pain me you would cease at once, I know. If you knew my present
- feelings, you would even try to relieve them at the expense of your own.’
- ‘I will go—in a minute, if that can relieve you—and NEVER return!’ said
- I, with bitter emphasis. ‘But, if we may never meet, and never hope to
- meet again, is it a crime to exchange our thoughts by letter? May not
- kindred spirits meet, and mingle in communion, whatever be the fate and
- circumstances of their earthly tenements?’
- ‘They may, they may!’ cried she, with a momentary burst of glad
- enthusiasm. ‘I thought of that too, Gilbert, but I feared to mention it,
- because I feared you would not understand my views upon the subject. I
- fear it even now—I fear any kind friend would tell us we are both
- deluding ourselves with the idea of keeping up a spiritual intercourse
- without hope or prospect of anything further—without fostering vain
- regrets and hurtful aspirations, and feeding thoughts that should be
- sternly and pitilessly left to perish of inanition.’
- ‘Never mind our kind friends: if they can part our bodies, it is enough;
- in God’s name, let them not sunder our souls!’ cried I, in terror lest
- she should deem it her duty to deny us this last remaining consolation.
- ‘But no letters can pass between us here,’ said she, ‘without giving
- fresh food for scandal; and when I departed, I had intended that my new
- abode should be unknown to you as to the rest of the world; not that I
- should doubt your word if you promised not to visit me, but I thought you
- would be more tranquil in your own mind if you knew you could not do it,
- and likely to find less difficulty in abstracting yourself from me if you
- could not picture my situation to your mind. But listen,’ said she,
- smilingly putting up her finger to check my impatient reply: ‘in six
- months you shall hear from Frederick precisely where I am; and if you
- still retain your wish to write to me, and think you can maintain a
- correspondence all thought, all spirit—such as disembodied souls or
- unimpassioned friends, at least, might hold,—write, and I will answer
- you.’
- ‘Six months!’
- ‘Yes, to give your present ardour time to cool, and try the truth and
- constancy of your soul’s love for mine. And now, enough has been said
- between us. Why can’t we part at once?’ exclaimed she, almost wildly,
- after a moment’s pause, as she suddenly rose from her chair, with her
- hands resolutely clasped together. I thought it was my duty to go
- without delay; and I approached and half extended my hand as if to take
- leave—she grasped it in silence. But this thought of final separation
- was too intolerable: it seemed to squeeze the blood out of my heart; and
- my feet were glued to the floor.
- ‘And must we never meet again?’ I murmured, in the anguish of my soul.
- ‘We shall meet in heaven. Let us think of that,’ said she in a tone of
- desperate calmness; but her eyes glittered wildly, and her face was
- deadly pale.
- ‘But not as we are now,’ I could not help replying. ‘It gives me little
- consolation to think I shall next behold you as a disembodied spirit, or
- an altered being, with a frame perfect and glorious, but not like
- this!—and a heart, perhaps, entirely estranged from me.’
- ‘No, Gilbert, there is perfect love in heaven!’
- ‘So perfect, I suppose, that it soars above distinctions, and you will
- have no closer sympathy with me than with any one of the ten thousand
- thousand angels and the innumerable multitude of happy spirits round us.’
- ‘Whatever I am, you will be the same, and, therefore, cannot possibly
- regret it; and whatever that change may be we know it must be for the
- better.’
- ‘But if I am to be so changed that I shall cease to adore you with my
- whole heart and soul, and love you beyond every other creature, I shall
- not be myself; and though, if ever I win heaven at all, I must, I know,
- be infinitely better and happier than I am now, my earthly nature cannot
- rejoice in the anticipation of such beatitude, from which itself and its
- chief joy must be excluded.’
- ‘Is your love all earthly, then?’
- ‘No, but I am supposing we shall have no more intimate communion with
- each other than with the rest.’
- ‘If so, it will be because we love them more, and not each other less.
- Increase of love brings increase of happiness, when it is mutual, and
- pure as that will be.’
- ‘But can you, Helen, contemplate with delight this prospect of losing me
- in a sea of glory?’
- ‘I own I cannot; but we know not that it will be so;—and I do know that
- to regret the exchange of earthly pleasures for the joys of heaven, is as
- if the grovelling caterpillar should lament that it must one day quit the
- nibbled leaf to soar aloft and flutter through the air, roving at will
- from flower to flower, sipping sweet honey from their cups, or basking in
- their sunny petals. If these little creatures knew how great a change
- awaited them, no doubt they would regret it; but would not all such
- sorrow be misplaced? And if that illustration will not move you, here is
- another:—We are children now; we feel as children, and we understand as
- children; and when we are told that men and women do not play with toys,
- and that our companions will one day weary of the trivial sports and
- occupations that interest them and us so deeply now, we cannot help being
- saddened at the thoughts of such an alteration, because we cannot
- conceive that as we grow up our own minds will become so enlarged and
- elevated that we ourselves shall then regard as trifling those objects
- and pursuits we now so fondly cherish, and that, though our companions
- will no longer join us in those childish pastimes, they will drink with
- us at other fountains of delight, and mingle their souls with ours in
- higher aims and nobler occupations beyond our present comprehension, but
- not less deeply relished or less truly good for that, while yet both we
- and they remain essentially the same individuals as before. But,
- Gilbert, can you really derive no consolation from the thought that we
- may meet together where there is no more pain and sorrow, no more
- striving against sin, and struggling of the spirit against the flesh;
- where both will behold the same glorious truths, and drink exalted and
- supreme felicity from the same fountain of light and goodness—that Being
- whom both will worship with the same intensity of holy ardour—and where
- pure and happy creatures both will love with the same divine affection?
- If you cannot, never write to me!’
- ‘Helen, I can! if faith would never fail.’
- ‘Now, then,’ exclaimed she, ‘while this hope is strong within us—’
- ‘We will part,’ I cried. ‘You shall not have the pain of another effort
- to dismiss me. I will go at once; but—’
- I did not put my request in words: she understood it instinctively, and
- this time she yielded too—or rather, there was nothing so deliberate as
- requesting or yielding in the matter: there was a sudden impulse that
- neither could resist. One moment I stood and looked into her face, the
- next I held her to my heart, and we seemed to grow together in a close
- embrace from which no physical or mental force could rend us. A
- whispered ‘God bless you!’ and ‘Go—go!’ was all she said; but while she
- spoke she held me so fast that, without violence, I could not have obeyed
- her. At length, however, by some heroic effort, we tore ourselves apart,
- and I rushed from the house.
- I have a confused remembrance of seeing little Arthur running up the
- garden-walk to meet me, and of bolting over the wall to avoid him—and
- subsequently running down the steep fields, clearing the stone fences and
- hedges as they came in my way, till I got completely out of sight of the
- old hall and down to the bottom of the hill; and then of long hours spent
- in bitter tears and lamentations, and melancholy musings in the lonely
- valley, with the eternal music in my ears, of the west wind rushing
- through the overshadowing trees, and the brook babbling and gurgling
- along its stony bed; my eyes, for the most part, vacantly fixed on the
- deep, chequered shades restlessly playing over the bright sunny grass at
- my feet, where now and then a withered leaf or two would come dancing to
- share the revelry; but my heart was away up the hill in that dark room
- where she was weeping desolate and alone—she whom I was not to comfort,
- not to see again, till years or suffering had overcome us both, and torn
- our spirits from their perishing abodes of clay.
- There was little business done that day, you may be sure. The farm was
- abandoned to the labourers, and the labourers were left to their own
- devices. But one duty must be attended to; I had not forgotten my
- assault upon Frederick Lawrence; and I must see him to apologise for the
- unhappy deed. I would fain have put it off till the morrow; but what if
- he should denounce me to his sister in the meantime? No, no! I must ask
- his pardon to-day, and entreat him to be lenient in his accusation, if
- the revelation must be made. I deferred it, however, till the evening,
- when my spirits were more composed, and when—oh, wonderful perversity of
- human nature!—some faint germs of indefinite hopes were beginning to rise
- in my mind; not that I intended to cherish them, after all that had been
- said on the subject, but there they must lie for a while, uncrushed
- though not encouraged, till I had learnt to live without them.
- Arrived at Woodford, the young squire’s abode, I found no little
- difficulty in obtaining admission to his presence. The servant that
- opened the door told me his master was very ill, and seemed to think it
- doubtful whether he would be able to see me. I was not going to be
- baulked, however. I waited calmly in the hall to be announced, but
- inwardly determined to take no denial. The message was such as I
- expected—a polite intimation that Mr. Lawrence could see no one; he was
- feverish, and must not be disturbed.
- ‘I shall not disturb him long,’ said I; ‘but I must see him for a moment:
- it is on business of importance that I wish to speak to him.’
- ‘I’ll tell him, sir,’ said the man. And I advanced further into the hall
- and followed him nearly to the door of the apartment where his master
- was—for it seemed he was not in bed. The answer returned was that Mr.
- Lawrence hoped I would be so good as to leave a message or a note with
- the servant, as he could attend to no business at present.
- ‘He may as well see me as you,’ said I; and, stepping past the astonished
- footman, I boldly rapped at the door, entered, and closed it behind me.
- The room was spacious and handsomely furnished—very comfortably, too, for
- a bachelor. A clear, red fire was burning in the polished grate: a
- superannuated greyhound, given up to idleness and good living, lay
- basking before it on the thick, soft rug, on one corner of which, beside
- the sofa, sat a smart young springer, looking wistfully up in its
- master’s face—perhaps asking permission to share his couch, or, it might
- be, only soliciting a caress from his hand or a kind word from his lips.
- The invalid himself looked very interesting as he lay reclining there, in
- his elegant dressing-gown, with a silk handkerchief bound across his
- temples. His usually pale face was flushed and feverish; his eyes were
- half closed, until he became sensible of my presence—and then he opened
- them wide enough: one hand was thrown listlessly over the back of the
- sofa, and held a small volume, with which, apparently, he had been vainly
- attempting to beguile the weary hours. He dropped it, however, in his
- start of indignant surprise as I advanced into the room and stood before
- him on the rug. He raised himself on his pillows, and gazed upon me with
- equal degrees of nervous horror, anger, and amazement depicted on his
- countenance.
- ‘Mr. Markham, I scarcely expected this!’ he said; and the blood left his
- cheek as he spoke.
- ‘I know you didn’t,’ answered I; ‘but be quiet a minute, and I’ll tell
- you what I came for.’ Unthinkingly, I advanced a step or two nearer. He
- winced at my approach, with an expression of aversion and instinctive
- physical fear anything but conciliatory to my feelings. I stepped back,
- however.
- ‘Make your story a short one,’ said he, putting his hand on the small
- silver bell that stood on the table beside him, ‘or I shall be obliged to
- call for assistance. I am in no state to bear your brutalities now, or
- your presence either.’ And in truth the moisture started from his pores
- and stood on his pale forehead like dew.
- Such a reception was hardly calculated to diminish the difficulties of my
- unenviable task. It must be performed however, in some fashion; and so I
- plunged into it at once, and floundered through it as I could.
- ‘The truth is, Lawrence,’ said I, ‘I have not acted quite correctly
- towards you of late—especially on this last occasion; and I’m come to—in
- short, to express my regret for what has been done, and to beg your
- pardon. If you don’t choose to grant it,’ I added hastily, not liking
- the aspect of his face, ‘it’s no matter; only I’ve done my duty—that’s
- all.’
- ‘It’s easily done,’ replied he, with a faint smile bordering on a sneer:
- ‘to abuse your friend and knock him on the head without any assignable
- cause, and then tell him the deed was not quite correct, but it’s no
- matter whether he pardons it or not.’
- ‘I forgot to tell you that it was in consequence of a mistake,’—muttered
- I. ‘I should have made a very handsome apology, but you provoked me so
- confoundedly with your—. Well, I suppose it’s my fault. The fact is, I
- didn’t know that you were Mrs. Graham’s brother, and I saw and heard some
- things respecting your conduct towards her which were calculated to
- awaken unpleasant suspicions, that, allow me to say, a little candour and
- confidence on your part might have removed; and, at last, I chanced to
- overhear a part of a conversation between you and her that made me think
- I had a right to hate you.’
- ‘And how came you to know that I was her brother?’ asked he, in some
- anxiety.
- ‘She told me herself. She told me all. She knew I might be trusted.
- But you needn’t disturb yourself about that, Mr. Lawrence, for I’ve seen
- the last of her!’
- ‘The last! Is she gone, then?’
- ‘No; but she has bid adieu to me, and I have promised never to go near
- that house again while she inhabits it.’ I could have groaned aloud at
- the bitter thoughts awakened by this turn in the discourse. But I only
- clenched my hands and stamped my foot upon the rug. My companion,
- however, was evidently relieved.
- ‘You have done right,’ he said, in a tone of unqualified approbation,
- while his face brightened into almost a sunny expression. ‘And as for
- the mistake, I am sorry for both our sakes that it should have occurred.
- Perhaps you can forgive my want of candour, and remember, as some partial
- mitigation of the offence, how little encouragement to friendly
- confidence you have given me of late.’
- ‘Yes, yes—I remember it all: nobody can blame me more than I blame myself
- in my own heart; at any rate, nobody can regret more sincerely than I do
- the result of my brutality, as you rightly term it.’
- ‘Never mind that,’ said he, faintly smiling; ‘let us forget all
- unpleasant words on both sides, as well as deeds, and consign to oblivion
- everything that we have cause to regret. Have you any objection to take
- my hand, or you’d rather not?’ It trembled through weakness as he held
- it out, and dropped before I had time to catch it and give it a hearty
- squeeze, which he had not the strength to return.
- ‘How dry and burning your hand is, Lawrence,’ said I. ‘You are really
- ill, and I have made you worse by all this talk.’
- ‘Oh, it is nothing; only a cold got by the rain.’
- ‘My doing, too.’
- ‘Never mind that. But tell me, did you mention this affair to my
- sister?’
- ‘To confess the truth, I had not the courage to do so; but when you tell
- her, will you just say that I deeply regret it, and—?’
- ‘Oh, never fear! I shall say nothing against you, as long as you keep
- your good resolution of remaining aloof from her. She has not heard of
- my illness, then, that you are aware of?’
- ‘I think not.’
- ‘I’m glad of that, for I have been all this time tormenting myself with
- the fear that somebody would tell her I was dying, or desperately ill,
- and she would be either distressing herself on account of her inability
- to hear from me or do me any good, or perhaps committing the madness of
- coming to see me. I must contrive to let her know something about it, if
- I can,’ continued he, reflectively, ‘or she will be hearing some such
- story. Many would be glad to tell her such news, just to see how she
- would take it; and then she might expose herself to fresh scandal.’
- ‘I wish I had told her,’ said I. ‘If it were not for my promise, I would
- tell her now.’
- ‘By no means! I am not dreaming of that;—but if I were to write a short
- note, now, not mentioning you, Markham, but just giving a slight account
- of my illness, by way of excuse for my not coming to see her, and to put
- her on her guard against any exaggerated reports she may hear,—and
- address it in a disguised hand—would you do me the favour to slip it into
- the post-office as you pass? for I dare not trust any of the servants in
- such a case.’
- Most willingly I consented, and immediately brought him his desk. There
- was little need to disguise his hand, for the poor fellow seemed to have
- considerable difficulty in writing at all, so as to be legible. When the
- note was done, I thought it time to retire, and took leave, after asking
- if there was anything in the world I could do for him, little or great,
- in the way of alleviating his sufferings, and repairing the injury I had
- done.
- ‘No,’ said he; ‘you have already done much towards it; you have done more
- for me than the most skilful physician could do: for you have relieved my
- mind of two great burdens—anxiety on my sister’s account, and deep regret
- upon your own: for I do believe these two sources of torment have had
- more effect in working me up into a fever than anything else; and I am
- persuaded I shall soon recover now. There is one more thing you can do
- for me, and that is, come and see me now and then—for you see I am very
- lonely here, and I promise your entrance shall not be disputed again.’
- I engaged to do so, and departed with a cordial pressure of the hand. I
- posted the letter on my way home, most manfully resisting the temptation
- of dropping in a word from myself at the same time.
- CHAPTER XLVI
- I felt strongly tempted, at times, to enlighten my mother and sister on
- the real character and circumstances of the persecuted tenant of Wildfell
- Hall, and at first I greatly regretted having omitted to ask that lady’s
- permission to do so; but, on due reflection, I considered that if it were
- known to them, it could not long remain a secret to the Millwards and
- Wilsons, and such was my present appreciation of Eliza Millward’s
- disposition, that, if once she got a clue to the story, I should fear she
- would soon find means to enlighten Mr. Huntingdon upon the place of his
- wife’s retreat. I would therefore wait patiently till these weary six
- months were over, and then, when the fugitive had found another home, and
- I was permitted to write to her, I would beg to be allowed to clear her
- name from these vile calumnies: at present I must content myself with
- simply asserting that I knew them to be false, and would prove it some
- day, to the shame of those who slandered her. I don’t think anybody
- believed me, but everybody soon learned to avoid insinuating a word
- against her, or even mentioning her name in my presence. They thought I
- was so madly infatuated by the seductions of that unhappy lady that I was
- determined to support her in the very face of reason; and meantime I grow
- insupportably morose and misanthropical from the idea that every one I
- met was harbouring unworthy thoughts of the supposed Mrs. Graham, and
- would express them if he dared. My poor mother was quite distressed
- about me; but I couldn’t help it—at least I thought I could not, though
- sometimes I felt a pang of remorse for my undutiful conduct to her, and
- made an effort to amend, attended with some partial success; and indeed I
- was generally more humanised in my demeanour to her than to any one else,
- Mr. Lawrence excepted. Rose and Fergus usually shunned my presence; and
- it was well they did, for I was not fit company for them, nor they for
- me, under the present circumstances.
- Mrs. Huntingdon did not leave Wildfell Hall till above two months after
- our farewell interview. During that time she never appeared at church,
- and I never went near the house: I only knew she was still there by her
- brother’s brief answers to my many and varied inquiries respecting her.
- I was a very constant and attentive visitor to him throughout the whole
- period of his illness and convalescence; not only from the interest I
- took in his recovery, and my desire to cheer him up and make the utmost
- possible amends for my former ‘brutality,’ but from my growing attachment
- to himself, and the increasing pleasure I found in his society—partly
- from his increased cordiality to me, but chiefly on account of his close
- connection, both in blood and in affection, with my adored Helen. I
- loved him for it better than I liked to express: and I took a secret
- delight in pressing those slender white fingers, so marvellously like her
- own, considering he was not a woman, and in watching the passing changes
- in his fair, pale features, and observing the intonations of his voice,
- detecting resemblances which I wondered had never struck me before. He
- provoked me at times, indeed, by his evident reluctance to talk to me
- about his sister, though I did not question the friendliness of his
- motives in wishing to discourage my remembrance of her.
- His recovery was not quite so rapid as he had expected it to be; he was
- not able to mount his pony till a fortnight after the date of our
- reconciliation; and the first use he made of his returning strength was
- to ride over by night to Wildfell Hall, to see his sister. It was a
- hazardous enterprise both for him and for her, but he thought it
- necessary to consult with her on the subject of her projected departure,
- if not to calm her apprehensions respecting his health, and the worst
- result was a slight relapse of his illness, for no one knew of the visit
- but the inmates of the old Hall, except myself; and I believe it had not
- been his intention to mention it to me, for when I came to see him the
- next day, and observed he was not so well as he ought to have been, he
- merely said he had caught cold by being out too late in the evening.
- ‘You’ll never be able to see your sister, if you don’t take care of
- yourself,’ said I, a little provoked at the circumstance on her account,
- instead of commiserating him.
- ‘I’ve seen her already,’ said he, quietly.
- ‘You’ve seen her!’ cried I, in astonishment.
- ‘Yes.’ And then he told me what considerations had impelled him to make
- the venture, and with what precautions he had made it.
- ‘And how was she?’ I eagerly asked.
- ‘As usual,’ was the brief though sad reply.
- ‘As usual—that is, far from happy and far from strong.’
- ‘She is not positively ill,’ returned he; ‘and she will recover her
- spirits in a while, I have no doubt—but so many trials have been almost
- too much for her. How threatening those clouds look,’ continued he,
- turning towards the window. ‘We shall have thunder-showers before night,
- I imagine, and they are just in the midst of stacking my corn. Have you
- got yours all in yet?’
- ‘No. And, Lawrence, did she—did your sister mention me?’
- ‘She asked if I had seen you lately.’
- ‘And what else did she say?’
- ‘I cannot tell you all she said,’ replied he, with a slight smile; ‘for
- we talked a good deal, though my stay was but short; but our conversation
- was chiefly on the subject of her intended departure, which I begged her
- to delay till I was better able to assist her in her search after another
- home.’
- ‘But did she say no more about me?’
- ‘She did not say much about you, Markham. I should not have encouraged
- her to do so, had she been inclined; but happily she was not: she only
- asked a few questions concerning you, and seemed satisfied with my brief
- answers, wherein she showed herself wiser than her friend; and I may tell
- you, too, that she seemed to be far more anxious lest you should think
- too much of her, than lest you should forget her.’
- ‘She was right.’
- ‘But I fear your anxiety is quite the other way respecting her.’
- ‘No, it is not: I wish her to be happy; but I don’t wish her to forget me
- altogether. She knows it is impossible that I should forget her; and she
- is right to wish me not to remember her too well. I should not desire
- her to regret me too deeply; but I can scarcely imagine she will make
- herself very unhappy about me, because I know I am not worthy of it,
- except in my appreciation of her.’
- ‘You are neither of you worthy of a broken heart,—nor of all the sighs,
- and tears, and sorrowful thoughts that have been, and I fear will be,
- wasted upon you both; but, at present, each has a more exalted opinion of
- the other than, I fear, he or she deserves; and my sister’s feelings are
- naturally full as keen as yours, and I believe more constant; but she has
- the good sense and fortitude to strive against them in this particular;
- and I trust she will not rest till she has entirely weaned her thoughts—‘
- he hesitated.
- ‘From me,’ said I.
- ‘And I wish you would make the like exertions,’ continued he.
- ‘Did she tell you that that was her intention?’
- ‘No; the question was not broached between us: there was no necessity for
- it, for I had no doubt that such was her determination.’
- ‘To forget me?’
- ‘Yes, Markham! Why not?’
- ‘Oh, well!’ was my only audible reply; but I internally answered,—‘No,
- Lawrence, you’re wrong there: she is not determined to forget me. It
- would be wrong to forget one so deeply and fondly devoted to her, who can
- so thoroughly appreciate her excellencies, and sympathise with all her
- thoughts, as I can do, and it would be wrong in me to forget so excellent
- and divine a piece of God’s creation as she, when I have once so truly
- loved and known her.’ But I said no more to him on that subject. I
- instantly started a new topic of conversation, and soon took leave of my
- companion, with a feeling of less cordiality towards him than usual.
- Perhaps I had no right to be annoyed at him, but I was so nevertheless.
- In little more than a week after this I met him returning from a visit to
- the Wilsons’; and I now resolved to do him a good turn, though at the
- expense of his feelings, and perhaps at the risk of incurring that
- displeasure which is so commonly the reward of those who give
- disagreeable information, or tender their advice unasked. In this,
- believe me, I was actuated by no motives of revenge for the occasional
- annoyances I had lately sustained from him,—nor yet by any feeling of
- malevolent enmity towards Miss Wilson, but purely by the fact that I
- could not endure that such a woman should be Mrs. Huntingdon’s sister,
- and that, as well for his own sake as for hers, I could not bear to think
- of his being deceived into a union with one so unworthy of him, and so
- utterly unfitted to be the partner of his quiet home, and the companion
- of his life. He had had uncomfortable suspicions on that head himself, I
- imagined; but such was his inexperience, and such were the lady’s powers
- of attraction, and her skill in bringing them to bear upon his young
- imagination, that they had not disturbed him long; and I believe the only
- effectual causes of the vacillating indecision that had preserved him
- hitherto from making an actual declaration of love, was the consideration
- of her connections, and especially of her mother, whom he could not
- abide. Had they lived at a distance, he might have surmounted the
- objection, but within two or three miles of Woodford it was really no
- light matter.
- ‘You’ve been to call on the Wilsons, Lawrence,’ said I, as I walked
- beside his pony.
- ‘Yes,’ replied he, slightly averting his face: ‘I thought it but civil to
- take the first opportunity of returning their kind attentions, since they
- have been so very particular and constant in their inquiries throughout
- the whole course of my illness.’
- ‘It’s all Miss Wilson’s doing.’
- ‘And if it is,’ returned he, with a very perceptible blush, ‘is that any
- reason why I should not make a suitable acknowledgment?’
- ‘It is a reason why you should not make the acknowledgment she looks
- for.’
- ‘Let us drop that subject if you please,’ said he, in evident
- displeasure.
- ‘No, Lawrence, with your leave we’ll continue it a while longer; and I’ll
- tell you something, now we’re about it, which you may believe or not as
- you choose—only please to remember that it is not my custom to speak
- falsely, and that in this case I can have no motive for misrepresenting
- the truth—’
- ‘Well, Markham, what now?’
- ‘Miss Wilson hates your sister. It may be natural enough that, in her
- ignorance of the relationship, she should feel some degree of enmity
- against her, but no good or amiable woman would be capable of evincing
- that bitter, cold-blooded, designing malice towards a fancied rival that
- I have observed in her.’
- ‘Markham!’
- ‘Yes—and it is my belief that Eliza Millward and she, if not the very
- originators of the slanderous reports that have been propagated, were
- designedly the encouragers and chief disseminators of them. She was not
- desirous to mix up your name in the matter, of course, but her delight
- was, and still is, to blacken your sister’s character to the utmost of
- her power, without risking too greatly the exposure of her own
- malevolence!’
- ‘I cannot believe it,’ interrupted my companion, his face burning with
- indignation.
- ‘Well, as I cannot prove it, I must content myself with asserting that it
- is so to the best of my belief; but as you would not willingly marry Miss
- Wilson if it were so, you will do well to be cautious, till you have
- proved it to be otherwise.’
- ‘I never told you, Markham, that I intended to marry Miss Wilson,’ said
- he, proudly.
- ‘No, but whether you do or not, she intends to marry you.’
- ‘Did she tell you so?’
- ‘No, but—’
- ‘Then you have no right to make such an assertion respecting her.’ He
- slightly quickened his pony’s pace, but I laid my hand on its mane,
- determined he should not leave me yet.
- ‘Wait a moment, Lawrence, and let me explain myself; and don’t be so
- very—I don’t know what to call it—inaccessible as you are.—I know what
- you think of Jane Wilson; and I believe I know how far you are mistaken
- in your opinion: you think she is singularly charming, elegant, sensible,
- and refined: you are not aware that she is selfish, cold-hearted,
- ambitious, artful, shallow-minded—’
- ‘Enough, Markham—enough!’
- ‘No; let me finish:—you don’t know that, if you married her, your home
- would be rayless and comfortless; and it would break your heart at last
- to find yourself united to one so wholly incapable of sharing your
- tastes, feelings, and ideas—so utterly destitute of sensibility, good
- feeling, and true nobility of soul.’
- ‘Have you done?’ asked my companion quietly.
- ‘Yes;—I know you hate me for my impertinence, but I don’t care if it only
- conduces to preserve you from that fatal mistake.’
- ‘Well!’ returned he, with a rather wintry smile—‘I’m glad you have
- overcome or forgotten your own afflictions so far as to be able to study
- so deeply the affairs of others, and trouble your head so unnecessarily
- about the fancied or possible calamities of their future life.’
- We parted—somewhat coldly again: but still we did not cease to be
- friends; and my well-meant warning, though it might have been more
- judiciously delivered, as well as more thankfully received, was not
- wholly unproductive of the desired effect: his visit to the Wilsons was
- not repeated, and though, in our subsequent interviews, he never
- mentioned her name to me, nor I to him,—I have reason to believe he
- pondered my words in his mind, eagerly though covertly sought information
- respecting the fair lady from other quarters, secretly compared my
- character of her with what he had himself observed and what he heard from
- others, and finally came to the conclusion that, all things considered,
- she had much better remain Miss Wilson of Ryecote Farm than be transmuted
- into Mrs. Lawrence of Woodford Hall. I believe, too, that he soon
- learned to contemplate with secret amazement his former predilection, and
- to congratulate himself on the lucky escape he had made; but he never
- confessed it to me, or hinted one word of acknowledgment for the part I
- had had in his deliverance, but this was not surprising to any one that
- knew him as I did.
- As for Jane Wilson, she, of course, was disappointed and embittered by
- the sudden cold neglect and ultimate desertion of her former admirer.
- Had I done wrong to blight her cherished hopes? I think not; and
- certainly my conscience has never accused me, from that day to this, of
- any evil design in the matter.
- CHAPTER XLVII
- One morning, about the beginning of November, while I was inditing some
- business letters, shortly after breakfast, Eliza Millward came to call
- upon my sister. Rose had neither the discrimination nor the virulence to
- regard the little demon as I did, and they still preserved their former
- intimacy. At the moment of her arrival, however, there was no one in the
- room but Fergus and myself, my mother and sister being both of them
- absent, ‘on household cares intent’; but I was not going to lay myself
- out for her amusement, whoever else might so incline: I merely honoured
- her with a careless salutation and a few words of course, and then went
- on with my writing, leaving my brother to be more polite if he chose.
- But she wanted to tease me.
- ‘What a pleasure it is to find you at home, Mr. Markham!’ said she, with
- a disingenuously malicious smile. ‘I so seldom see you now, for you
- never come to the vicarage. Papa, is quite offended, I can tell you,’
- she added playfully, looking into my face with an impertinent laugh, as
- she seated herself, half beside and half before my desk, off the corner
- of the table.
- ‘I have had a good deal to do of late,’ said I, without looking up from
- my letter.
- ‘Have you, indeed! Somebody said you had been strangely neglecting your
- business these last few months.’
- ‘Somebody said wrong, for, these last two months especially, I have been
- particularly plodding and diligent.’
- ‘Ah! well, there’s nothing like active employment, I suppose, to console
- the afflicted;—and, excuse me, Mr. Markham, but you look so very far from
- well, and have been, by all accounts, so moody and thoughtful of late,—I
- could almost think you have some secret care preying on your spirits.
- Formerly,’ said she timidly, ‘I could have ventured to ask you what it
- was, and what I could do to comfort you: I dare not do it now.’
- ‘You’re very kind, Miss Eliza. When I think you can do anything to
- comfort me, I’ll make bold to tell you.’
- ‘Pray do!—I suppose I mayn’t guess what it is that troubles you?’
- ‘There’s no necessity, for I’ll tell you plainly. The thing that
- troubles me the most at present is a young lady sitting at my elbow, and
- preventing me from finishing my letter, and, thereafter, repairing to my
- daily business.’
- Before she could reply to this ungallant speech, Rose entered the room;
- and Miss Eliza rising to greet her, they both seated themselves near the
- fire, where that idle lad Fergus was standing, leaning his shoulder
- against the corner of the chimney-piece, with his legs crossed and his
- hands in his breeches-pockets.
- ‘Now, Rose, I’ll tell you a piece of news—I hope you have not heard it
- before: for good, bad, or indifferent, one always likes to be the first
- to tell. It’s about that sad Mrs. Graham—’
- ‘Hush-sh-sh!’ whispered Fergus, in a tone of solemn import. ‘“We never
- mention her; her name is never heard.”’ And glancing up, I caught him
- with his eye askance on me, and his finger pointed to his forehead; then,
- winking at the young lady with a doleful shake of the head, he
- whispered—‘A monomania—but don’t mention it—all right but that.’
- ‘I should be sorry to injure any one’s feelings,’ returned she, speaking
- below her breath. ‘Another time, perhaps.’
- ‘Speak out, Miss Eliza!’ said I, not deigning to notice the other’s
- buffooneries: ‘you needn’t fear to say anything in my presence.’
- ‘Well,’ answered she, ‘perhaps you know already that Mrs. Graham’s
- husband is not really dead, and that she had run away from him?’ I
- started, and felt my face glow; but I bent it over my letter, and went on
- folding it up as she proceeded. ‘But perhaps you did not know that she
- is now gone back to him again, and that a perfect reconciliation has
- taken place between them? Only think,’ she continued, turning to the
- confounded Rose, ‘what a fool the man must be!’
- ‘And who gave you this piece of intelligence, Miss Eliza?’ said I,
- interrupting my sister’s exclamations.
- ‘I had it from a very authentic source.’
- ‘From whom, may I ask?’
- ‘From one of the servants at Woodford.’
- ‘Oh! I was not aware that you were on such intimate terms with Mr.
- Lawrence’s household.’
- ‘It was not from the man himself that I heard it, but he told it in
- confidence to our maid Sarah, and Sarah told it to me.’
- ‘In confidence, I suppose? And you tell it in confidence to us? But I
- can tell you that it is but a lame story after all, and scarcely one-half
- of it true.’
- While I spoke I completed the sealing and direction of my letters, with a
- somewhat unsteady hand, in spite of all my efforts to retain composure,
- and in spite of my firm conviction that the story was a lame one—that the
- supposed Mrs. Graham, most certainly, had not voluntarily gone back to
- her husband, or dreamt of a reconciliation. Most likely she was gone
- away, and the tale-bearing servant, not knowing what was become of her,
- had conjectured that such was the case, and our fair visitor had detailed
- it as a certainty, delighted with such an opportunity of tormenting me.
- But it was possible—barely possible—that some one might have betrayed
- her, and she had been taken away by force. Determined to know the worst,
- I hastily pocketed my two letters, and muttered something about being too
- late for the post, left the room, rushed into the yard, and vociferously
- called for my horse. No one being there, I dragged him out of the stable
- myself, strapped the saddle on to his back and the bridle on to his head,
- mounted, and speedily galloped away to Woodford. I found its owner
- pensively strolling in the grounds.
- ‘Is your sister gone?’ were my first words as I grasped his hand, instead
- of the usual inquiry after his health.
- ‘Yes, she’s gone,’ was his answer, so calmly spoken that my terror was at
- once removed.
- ‘I suppose I mayn’t know where she is?’ said I, as I dismounted, and
- relinquished my horse to the gardener, who, being the only servant within
- call, had been summoned by his master, from his employment of raking up
- the dead leaves on the lawn, to take him to the stables.
- My companion gravely took my arm, and leading me away to the garden, thus
- answered my question,—‘She is at Grassdale Manor, in —shire.’
- ‘Where?’ cried I, with a convulsive start.
- ‘At Grassdale Manor.’
- ‘How was it?’ I gasped. ‘Who betrayed her?’
- ‘She went of her own accord.’
- ‘Impossible, Lawrence! She could not be so frantic!’ exclaimed I,
- vehemently grasping his arm, as if to force him to unsay those hateful
- words.
- ‘She did,’ persisted he in the same grave, collected manner as before;
- ‘and not without reason,’ he continued, gently disengaging himself from
- my grasp. ‘Mr. Huntingdon is ill.’
- ‘And so she went to nurse him?’
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘Fool!’ I could not help exclaiming, and Lawrence looked up with a rather
- reproachful glance. ‘Is he dying, then?’
- ‘I think not, Markham.’
- ‘And how many more nurses has he? How many ladies are there besides to
- take care of him?’
- ‘None; he was alone, or she would not have gone.’
- ‘Oh, confound it! This is intolerable!’
- ‘What is? That he should be alone?’
- I attempted no reply, for I was not sure that this circumstance did not
- partly conduce to my distraction. I therefore continued to pace the walk
- in silent anguish, with my hand pressed to my forehead; then suddenly
- pausing and turning to my companion, I impatiently exclaimed, ‘Why did
- she take this infatuated step? What fiend persuaded her to it?’
- ‘Nothing persuaded her but her own sense of duty.’
- ‘Humbug!’
- ‘I was half inclined to say so myself, Markham, at first. I assure you
- it was not by my advice that she went, for I detest that man as fervently
- as you can do,—except, indeed, that his reformation would give me much
- greater pleasure than his death; but all I did was to inform her of the
- circumstance of his illness (the consequence of a fall from his horse in
- hunting), and to tell her that that unhappy person, Miss Myers, had left
- him some time ago.’
- ‘It was ill done! Now, when he finds the convenience of her presence, he
- will make all manner of lying speeches and false, fair promises for the
- future, and she will believe him, and then her condition will be ten
- times worse and ten times more irremediable than before.’
- ‘There does not appear to be much ground for such apprehensions at
- present,’ said he, producing a letter from his pocket. ‘From the account
- I received this morning, I should say—’
- It was her writing! By an irresistible impulse I held out my hand, and
- the words, ‘Let me see it,’ involuntarily passed my lips. He was
- evidently reluctant to grant the request, but while he hesitated I
- snatched it from his hand. Recollecting myself, however, the minute
- after, I offered to restore it.
- ‘Here, take it,’ said I, ‘if you don’t want me to read it.’
- ‘No,’ replied he, ‘you may read it if you like.’
- I read it, and so may you.
- Grassdale, Nov. 4th.
- DEAR FREDERICK,—I know you will be anxious to hear from me, and I will
- tell you all I can. Mr. Huntingdon is very ill, but not dying, or in any
- immediate danger; and he is rather better at present than he was when I
- came. I found the house in sad confusion: Mrs. Greaves, Benson, every
- decent servant had left, and those that were come to supply their places
- were a negligent, disorderly set, to say no worse—I must change them
- again, if I stay. A professional nurse, a grim, hard old woman, had been
- hired to attend the wretched invalid. He suffers much, and has no
- fortitude to bear him through. The immediate injuries he sustained from
- the accident, however, were not very severe, and would, as the doctor
- says, have been but trifling to a man of temperate habits, but with him
- it is very different. On the night of my arrival, when I first entered
- his room, he was lying in a kind of half delirium. He did not notice me
- till I spoke, and then he mistook me for another.
- ‘Is it you, Alice, come again?’ he murmured. ‘What did you leave me
- for?’
- ‘It is I, Arthur—it is Helen, your wife,’ I replied.
- ‘My wife!’ said he, with a start. ‘For heaven’s sake, don’t mention
- her—I have none. Devil take her,’ he cried, a moment after, ‘and you,
- too! What did you do it for?’
- I said no more; but observing that he kept gazing towards the foot of the
- bed, I went and sat there, placing the light so as to shine full upon me,
- for I thought he might be dying, and I wanted him to know me. For a long
- time he lay silently looking upon me, first with a vacant stare, then
- with a fixed gaze of strange growing intensity. At last he startled me
- by suddenly raising himself on his elbow and demanding in a horrified
- whisper, with his eyes still fixed upon me, ‘Who is it?’
- ‘It is Helen Huntingdon,’ said I, quietly rising at the same time, and
- removing to a less conspicuous position.
- ‘I must be going mad,’ cried he, ‘or something—delirious, perhaps; but
- leave me, whoever you are. I can’t bear that white face, and those eyes.
- For God’s sake go, and send me somebody else that doesn’t look like
- that!’
- I went at once, and sent the hired nurse; but next morning I ventured to
- enter his chamber again, and, taking the nurse’s place by his bedside, I
- watched him and waited on him for several hours, showing myself as little
- as possible, and only speaking when necessary, and then not above my
- breath. At first he addressed me as the nurse, but, on my crossing the
- room to draw up the window-blinds, in obedience to his directions, he
- said, ‘No, it isn’t nurse; it’s Alice. Stay with me, do! That old hag
- will be the death of me.’
- ‘I mean to stay with you,’ said I. And after that he would call me
- Alice, or some other name almost equally repugnant to my feelings. I
- forced myself to endure it for a while, fearing a contradiction might
- disturb him too much; but when, having asked for a glass of water, while
- I held it to his lips, he murmured, ‘Thanks, dearest!’ I could not help
- distinctly observing, ‘You would not say so if you knew me,’ intending to
- follow that up with another declaration of my identity; but he merely
- muttered an incoherent reply, so I dropped it again, till some time
- after, when, as I was bathing his forehead and temples with vinegar and
- water to relieve the heat and pain in his head, he observed, after
- looking earnestly upon me for some minutes, ‘I have such strange
- fancies—I can’t get rid of them, and they won’t let me rest; and the most
- singular and pertinacious of them all is your face and voice—they seem
- just like hers. I could swear at this moment that she was by my side.’
- ‘She is,’ said I.
- ‘That seems comfortable,’ continued he, without noticing my words; ‘and
- while you do it, the other fancies fade away—but this only
- strengthens.—Go on—go on, till it vanishes, too. I can’t stand such a
- mania as this; it would kill me!’
- ‘It never will vanish,’ said I, distinctly, ‘for it is the truth!’
- ‘The truth!’ he cried, starting, as if an asp had stung him. ‘You don’t
- mean to say that you are really she?’
- ‘I do; but you needn’t shrink away from me, as if I were your greatest
- enemy: I am come to take care of you, and do what none of them would do.’
- ‘For God’s sake, don’t torment me now!’ cried he in pitiable agitation;
- and then he began to mutter bitter curses against me, or the evil fortune
- that had brought me there; while I put down the sponge and basin, and
- resumed my seat at the bed-side.
- ‘Where are they?’ said he: ‘have they all left me—servants and all?’
- ‘There are servants within call if you want them; but you had better lie
- down now and be quiet: none of them could or would attend you as
- carefully as I shall do.’
- ‘I can’t understand it at all,’ said he, in bewildered perplexity. ‘Was
- it a dream that—‘ and he covered his eyes with his hands, as if trying to
- unravel the mystery.
- ‘No, Arthur, it was not a dream, that your conduct was such as to oblige
- me to leave you; but I heard that you were ill and alone, and I am come
- back to nurse you. You need not fear to trust me: tell me all your
- wants, and I will try to satisfy them. There is no one else to care for
- you; and I shall not upbraid you now.’
- ‘Oh! I see,’ said he, with a bitter smile; ‘it’s an act of Christian
- charity, whereby you hope to gain a higher seat in heaven for yourself,
- and scoop a deeper pit in hell for me.’
- ‘No; I came to offer you that comfort and assistance your situation
- required; and if I could benefit your soul as well as your body, and
- awaken some sense of contrition and—’
- ‘Oh, yes; if you could overwhelm me with remorse and confusion of face,
- now’s the time. What have you done with my son?’
- ‘He is well, and you may see him some time, if you will compose yourself,
- but not now.’
- ‘Where is he?’
- ‘He is safe.’
- ‘Is he here?’
- ‘Wherever he is, you will not see him till you have promised to leave him
- entirely under my care and protection, and to let me take him away
- whenever and wherever I please, if I should hereafter judge it necessary
- to remove him again. But we will talk of that to-morrow: you must be
- quiet now.’
- ‘No, let me see him now, I promise, if it must be so.’
- ‘No—’
- ‘I swear it, as God is in heaven! Now, then, let me see him.’
- ‘But I cannot trust your oaths and promises: I must have a written
- agreement, and you must sign it in presence of a witness: but not
- to-day—to-morrow.’
- ‘No, to-day; now,’ persisted he: and he was in such a state of feverish
- excitement, and so bent upon the immediate gratification of his wish,
- that I thought it better to grant it at once, as I saw he would not rest
- till I did. But I was determined my son’s interest should not be
- forgotten; and having clearly written out the promise I wished Mr.
- Huntingdon to give upon a slip of paper, I deliberately read it over to
- him, and made him sign it in the presence of Rachel. He begged I would
- not insist upon this: it was a useless exposure of my want of faith in
- his word to the servant. I told him I was sorry, but since he had
- forfeited my confidence, he must take the consequence. He next pleaded
- inability to hold the pen. ‘Then we must wait until you can hold it,’
- said I. Upon which he said he would try; but then he could not see to
- write. I placed my finger where the signature was to be, and told him he
- might write his name in the dark, if he only knew where to put it. But
- he had not power to form the letters. ‘In that case, you must be too ill
- to see the child,’ said I; and finding me inexorable, he at length
- managed to ratify the agreement; and I bade Rachel send the boy.
- All this may strike you as harsh, but I felt I must not lose my present
- advantage, and my son’s future welfare should not be sacrificed to any
- mistaken tenderness for this man’s feelings. Little Arthur had not
- forgotten his father, but thirteen months of absence, during which he had
- seldom been permitted to hear a word about him, or hardly to whisper his
- name, had rendered him somewhat shy; and when he was ushered into the
- darkened room where the sick man lay, so altered from his former self,
- with fiercely flushed face and wildly-gleaming eyes—he instinctively
- clung to me, and stood looking on his father with a countenance
- expressive of far more awe than pleasure.
- ‘Come here, Arthur,’ said the latter, extending his hand towards him.
- The child went, and timidly touched that burning hand, but almost started
- in alarm, when his father suddenly clutched his arm and drew him nearer
- to his side.
- ‘Do you know me?’ asked Mr. Huntingdon, intently perusing his features.
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘Who am I?’
- ‘Papa.’
- ‘Are you glad to see me?’
- ‘Yes.’
- ‘You’re not!’ replied the disappointed parent, relaxing his hold, and
- darting a vindictive glance at me.
- Arthur, thus released, crept back to me and put his hand in mine. His
- father swore I had made the child hate him, and abused and cursed me
- bitterly. The instant he began I sent our son out of the room; and when
- he paused to breathe, I calmly assured him that he was entirely mistaken;
- I had never once attempted to prejudice his child against him.
- ‘I did indeed desire him to forget you,’ I said, ‘and especially to
- forget the lessons you taught him; and for that cause, and to lessen the
- danger of discovery, I own I have generally discouraged his inclination
- to talk about you; but no one can blame me for that, I think.’
- The invalid only replied by groaning aloud, and rolling his head on a
- pillow in a paroxysm of impatience.
- ‘I am in hell, already!’ cried he. ‘This cursed thirst is burning my
- heart to ashes! Will nobody—?’
- Before he could finish the sentence I had poured out a glass of some
- acidulated, cooling drink that was on the table, and brought it to him.
- He drank it greedily, but muttered, as I took away the glass,—‘I suppose
- you’re heaping coals of fire on my head, you think?’
- Not noticing this speech, I asked if there was anything else I could do
- for him.
- ‘Yes; I’ll give you another opportunity of showing your Christian
- magnanimity,’ sneered he: ‘set my pillow straight, and these confounded
- bed-clothes.’ I did so. ‘There: now get me another glass of that slop.’
- I complied. ‘This is delightful, isn’t it?’ said he with a malicious
- grin, as I held it to his lips; ‘you never hoped for such a glorious
- opportunity?’
- ‘Now, shall I stay with you?’ said I, as I replaced the glass on the
- table: ‘or will you be more quiet if I go and send the nurse?’
- ‘Oh, yes, you’re wondrous gentle and obliging! But you’ve driven me mad
- with it all!’ responded he, with an impatient toss.
- ‘I’ll leave you, then,’ said I; and I withdrew, and did not trouble him
- with my presence again that day, except for a minute or two at a time,
- just to see how he was and what he wanted.
- Next morning the doctor ordered him to be bled; and after that he was
- more subdued and tranquil. I passed half the day in his room at
- different intervals. My presence did not appear to agitate or irritate
- him as before, and he accepted my services quietly, without any bitter
- remarks: indeed, he scarcely spoke at all, except to make known his
- wants, and hardly then. But on the morrow, that is to say, in proportion
- as he recovered from the state of exhaustion and stupefaction, his
- ill-nature appeared to revive.
- ‘Oh, this sweet revenge!’ cried he, when I had been doing all I could to
- make him comfortable and to remedy the carelessness of his nurse. ‘And
- you can enjoy it with such a quiet conscience too, because it’s all in
- the way of duty.’
- ‘It is well for me that I am doing my duty,’ said I, with a bitterness I
- could not repress, ‘for it is the only comfort I have; and the
- satisfaction of my own conscience, it seems, is the only reward I need
- look for!’
- He looked rather surprised at the earnestness of my manner.
- ‘What reward did you look for?’ he asked.
- ‘You will think me a liar if I tell you; but I did hope to benefit you:
- as well to better your mind as to alleviate your present sufferings; but
- it appears I am to do neither; your own bad spirit will not let me. As
- far as you are concerned, I have sacrificed my own feelings, and all the
- little earthly comfort that was left me, to no purpose; and every little
- thing I do for you is ascribed to self-righteous malice and refined
- revenge!’
- ‘It’s all very fine, I daresay,’ said he, eyeing me with stupid
- amazement; ‘and of course I ought to be melted to tears of penitence and
- admiration at the sight of so much generosity and superhuman goodness;
- but you see I can’t manage it. However, pray do me all the good you can,
- if you do really find any pleasure in it; for you perceive I am almost as
- miserable just now as you need wish to see me. Since you came, I
- confess, I have had better attendance than before, for these wretches
- neglected me shamefully, and all my old friends seem to have fairly
- forsaken me. I’ve had a dreadful time of it, I assure you: I sometimes
- thought I should have died: do you think there’s any chance?’
- ‘There’s always a chance of death; and it is always well to live with
- such a chance in view.’
- ‘Yes, yes! but do you think there’s any likelihood that this illness will
- have a fatal termination?’
- ‘I cannot tell; but, supposing it should, how are you prepared to meet
- the event?’
- ‘Why, the doctor told me I wasn’t to think about it, for I was sure to
- get better if I stuck to his regimen and prescriptions.’
- ‘I hope you may, Arthur; but neither the doctor nor I can speak with
- certainty in such a case; there is internal injury, and it is difficult
- to know to what extent.’
- ‘There now! you want to scare me to death.’
- ‘No; but I don’t want to lull you to false security. If a consciousness
- of the uncertainty of life can dispose you to serious and useful
- thoughts, I would not deprive you of the benefit of such reflections,
- whether you do eventually recover or not. Does the idea of death appal
- you very much?’
- ‘It’s just the only thing I can’t bear to think of; so if you’ve any—’
- ‘But it must come some time,’ interrupted I, ‘and if it be years hence,
- it will as certainly overtake you as if it came to-day,—and no doubt be
- as unwelcome then as now, unless you—’
- ‘Oh, hang it! don’t torment me with your preachments now, unless you want
- to kill me outright. I can’t stand it, I tell you. I’ve sufferings
- enough without that. If you think there’s danger, save me from it; and
- then, in gratitude, I’ll hear whatever you like to say.’
- I accordingly dropped the unwelcome topic. And now, Frederick, I think I
- may bring my letter to a close. From these details you may form your own
- judgment of the state of my patient, and of my own position and future
- prospects. Let me hear from you soon, and I will write again to tell you
- how we get on; but now that my presence is tolerated, and even required,
- in the sick-room, I shall have but little time to spare between my
- husband and my son,—for I must not entirely neglect the latter: it would
- not do to keep him always with Rachel, and I dare not leave him for a
- moment with any of the other servants, or suffer him to be alone, lest he
- should meet them. If his father get worse, I shall ask Esther Hargrave
- to take charge of him for a time, till I have reorganised the household
- at least; but I greatly prefer keeping him under my own eye.
- I find myself in rather a singular position: I am exerting my utmost
- endeavours to promote the recovery and reformation of my husband, and if
- I succeed, what shall I do? My duty, of course,—but how? No matter; I
- can perform the task that is before me now, and God will give me strength
- to do whatever He requires hereafter. Good-by, dear Frederick.
- HELEN HUNTINGDON.
- ‘What do you think of it?’ said Lawrence, as I silently refolded the
- letter.
- ‘It seems to me,’ returned I, ‘that she is casting her pearls before
- swine. May they be satisfied with trampling them under their feet, and
- not turn again and rend her! But I shall say no more against her: I see
- that she was actuated by the best and noblest motives in what she has
- done; and if the act is not a wise one, may heaven protect her from its
- consequences! May I keep this letter, Lawrence?—you see she has never
- once mentioned me throughout—or made the most distant allusion to me;
- therefore, there can be no impropriety or harm in it.’
- ‘And, therefore, why should you wish to keep it?’
- ‘Were not these characters written by her hand? and were not these words
- conceived in her mind, and many of them spoken by her lips?’
- ‘Well,’ said he. And so I kept it; otherwise, Halford, you could never
- have become so thoroughly acquainted with its contents.
- ‘And when you write,’ said I, ‘will you have the goodness to ask her if I
- may be permitted to enlighten my mother and sister on her real history
- and circumstance, just so far as is necessary to make the neighbourhood
- sensible of the shameful injustice they have done her? I want no tender
- messages, but just ask her that, and tell her it is the greatest favour
- she could do me; and tell her—no, nothing more. You see I know the
- address, and I might write to her myself, but I am so virtuous as to
- refrain.’
- ‘Well, I’ll do this for you, Markham.’
- ‘And as soon as you receive an answer, you’ll let me know?’
- ‘If all be well, I’ll come myself and tell you immediately.’
- CHAPTER XLVIII
- Five or six days after this Mr. Lawrence paid us the honour of a call;
- and when he and I were alone together—which I contrived as soon as
- possible by bringing him out to look at my cornstacks—he showed me
- another letter from his sister. This one he was quite willing to submit
- to my longing gaze; he thought, I suppose, it would do me good. The only
- answer it gave to my message was this:—
- ‘Mr. Markham is at liberty to make such revelations concerning me as he
- judges necessary. He will know that I should wish but little to be said
- on the subject. I hope he is well; but tell him he must not think of
- me.’
- I can give you a few extracts from the rest of the letter, for I was
- permitted to keep this also—perhaps, as an antidote to all pernicious
- hopes and fancies.
- * * * * *
- He is decidedly better, but very low from the depressing effects of his
- severe illness and the strict regimen he is obliged to observe—so
- opposite to all his previous habits. It is deplorable to see how
- completely his past life has degenerated his once noble constitution, and
- vitiated the whole system of his organization. But the doctor says he
- may now be considered out of danger, if he will only continue to observe
- the necessary restrictions. Some stimulating cordials he must have, but
- they should be judiciously diluted and sparingly used; and I find it very
- difficult to keep him to this. At first, his extreme dread of death
- rendered the task an easy one; but in proportion as he feels his acute
- suffering abating, and sees the danger receding, the more intractable he
- becomes. Now, also, his appetite for food is beginning to return; and
- here, too, his long habits of self-indulgence are greatly against him. I
- watch and restrain him as well as I can, and often get bitterly abused
- for my rigid severity; and sometimes he contrives to elude my vigilance,
- and sometimes acts in opposition to my will. But he is now so completely
- reconciled to my attendance in general that he is never satisfied when I
- am not by his side. I am obliged to be a little stiff with him
- sometimes, or he would make a complete slave of me; and I know it would
- be unpardonable weakness to give up all other interests for him. I have
- the servants to overlook, and my little Arthur to attend to,—and my own
- health too, all of which would be entirely neglected were I to satisfy
- his exorbitant demands. I do not generally sit up at night, for I think
- the nurse who has made it her business is better qualified for such
- undertakings than I am;—but still, an unbroken night’s rest is what I but
- seldom enjoy, and never can venture to reckon upon; for my patient makes
- no scruple of calling me up at an hour when his wants or his fancies
- require my presence. But he is manifestly afraid of my displeasure; and
- if at one time he tries my patience by his unreasonable exactions, and
- fretful complaints and reproaches, at another he depresses me by his
- abject submission and deprecatory self-abasement when he fears he has
- gone too far. But all this I can readily pardon; I know it is chiefly
- the result of his enfeebled frame and disordered nerves. What annoys me
- the most, is his occasional attempts at affectionate fondness that I can
- neither credit nor return; not that I hate him: his sufferings and my own
- laborious care have given him some claim to my regard—to my affection
- even, if he would only be quiet and sincere, and content to let things
- remain as they are; but the more he tries to conciliate me, the more I
- shrink from him and from the future.
- ‘Helen, what do you mean to do when I get well?’ he asked this morning.
- ‘Will you run away again?’
- ‘It entirely depends upon your own conduct.’
- ‘Oh, I’ll be very good.’
- ‘But if I find it necessary to leave you, Arthur, I shall not “run away”:
- you know I have your own promise that I may go whenever I please, and
- take my son with me.’
- ‘Oh, but you shall have no cause.’ And then followed a variety of
- professions, which I rather coldly checked.
- ‘Will you not forgive me, then?’ said he.
- ‘Yes,—I have forgiven you: but I know you cannot love me as you once
- did—and I should be very sorry if you were to, for I could not pretend to
- return it: so let us drop the subject, and never recur to it again. By
- what I have done for you, you may judge of what I will do—if it be not
- incompatible with the higher duty I owe to my son (higher, because he
- never forfeited his claims, and because I hope to do more good to him
- than I can ever do to you); and if you wish me to feel kindly towards
- you, it is deeds not words which must purchase my affection and esteem.’
- His sole reply to this was a slight grimace, and a scarcely perceptible
- shrug. Alas, unhappy man! words, with him, are so much cheaper than
- deeds; it was as if I had said, ‘Pounds, not pence, must buy the article
- you want.’ And then he sighed a querulous, self-commiserating sigh, as
- if in pure regret that he, the loved and courted of so many worshippers,
- should be now abandoned to the mercy of a harsh, exacting, cold-hearted
- woman like that, and even glad of what kindness she chose to bestow.
- ‘It’s a pity, isn’t it?’ said I; and whether I rightly divined his
- musings or not, the observation chimed in with his thoughts, for he
- answered—‘It can’t be helped,’ with a rueful smile at my penetration.
- * * * * *
- I have seen Esther Hargrave twice. She is a charming creature, but her
- blithe spirit is almost broken, and her sweet temper almost spoiled, by
- the still unremitting persecutions of her mother in behalf of her
- rejected suitor—not violent, but wearisome and unremitting like a
- continual dropping. The unnatural parent seems determined to make her
- daughter’s life a burden, if she will not yield to her desires.
- ‘Mamma does all she can,’ said she, ‘to make me feel myself a burden and
- incumbrance to the family, and the most ungrateful, selfish, and
- undutiful daughter that ever was born; and Walter, too, is as stern and
- cold and haughty as if he hated me outright. I believe I should have
- yielded at once if I had known, from the beginning, how much resistance
- would have cost me; but now, for very obstinacy’s sake, I will stand
- out!’
- ‘A bad motive for a good resolve,’ I answered. ‘But, however, I know you
- have better motives, really, for your perseverance: and I counsel you to
- keep them still in view.’
- ‘Trust me I will. I threaten mamma sometimes that I’ll run away, and
- disgrace the family by earning my own livelihood, if she torments me any
- more; and then that frightens her a little. But I will do it, in good
- earnest, if they don’t mind.’
- ‘Be quiet and patient a while,’ said I, ‘and better times will come.’
- Poor girl! I wish somebody that was worthy to possess her would come and
- take her away—don’t you, Frederick?
- * * * * *
- If the perusal of this letter filled me with dismay for Helen’s future
- life and mine, there was one great source of consolation: it was now in
- my power to clear her name from every foul aspersion. The Millwards and
- the Wilsons should see with their own eyes the bright sun bursting from
- the cloud—and they should be scorched and dazzled by its beams;—and my
- own friends too should see it—they whose suspicions had been such gall
- and wormwood to my soul. To effect this I had only to drop the seed into
- the ground, and it would soon become a stately, branching herb: a few
- words to my mother and sister, I knew, would suffice to spread the news
- throughout the whole neighbourhood, without any further exertion on my
- part.
- Rose was delighted; and as soon as I had told her all I thought
- proper—which was all I affected to know—she flew with alacrity to put on
- her bonnet and shawl, and hasten to carry the glad tidings to the
- Millwards and Wilsons—glad tidings, I suspect, to none but herself and
- Mary Millward—that steady, sensible girl, whose sterling worth had been
- so quickly perceived and duly valued by the supposed Mrs. Graham, in
- spite of her plain outside; and who, on her part, had been better able to
- see and appreciate that lady’s true character and qualities than the
- brightest genius among them.
- As I may never have occasion to mention her again, I may as well tell you
- here that she was at this time privately engaged to Richard Wilson—a
- secret, I believe, to every one but themselves. That worthy student was
- now at Cambridge, where his most exemplary conduct and his diligent
- perseverance in the pursuit of learning carried him safely through, and
- eventually brought him with hard-earned honours, and an untarnished
- reputation, to the close of his collegiate career. In due time he became
- Mr. Millward’s first and only curate—for that gentleman’s declining years
- forced him at last to acknowledge that the duties of his extensive parish
- were a little too much for those vaunted energies which he was wont to
- boast over his younger and less active brethren of the cloth. This was
- what the patient, faithful lovers had privately planned and quietly
- waited for years ago; and in due time they were united, to the
- astonishment of the little world they lived in, that had long since
- declared them both born to single blessedness; affirming it impossible
- that the pale, retiring bookworm should ever summon courage to seek a
- wife, or be able to obtain one if he did, and equally impossible that the
- plain-looking, plain-dealing, unattractive, unconciliating Miss Millward
- should ever find a husband.
- They still continued to live at the vicarage, the lady dividing her time
- between her father, her husband, and their poor parishioners,—and
- subsequently her rising family; and now that the Reverend Michael
- Millward has been gathered to his fathers, full of years and honours, the
- Reverend Richard Wilson has succeeded him to the vicarage of Linden-hope,
- greatly to the satisfaction of its inhabitants, who had so long tried and
- fully proved his merits, and those of his excellent and well-loved
- partner.
- If you are interested in the after fate of that lady’s sister, I can only
- tell you—what perhaps you have heard from another quarter—that some
- twelve or thirteen years ago she relieved the happy couple of her
- presence by marrying a wealthy tradesman of L—; and I don’t envy him his
- bargain. I fear she leads him a rather uncomfortable life, though,
- happily, he is too dull to perceive the extent of his misfortune. I have
- little enough to do with her myself: we have not met for many years; but,
- I am well assured, she has not yet forgotten or forgiven either her
- former lover, or the lady whose superior qualities first opened his eyes
- to the folly of his boyish attachment.
- As for Richard Wilson’s sister, she, having been wholly unable to
- recapture Mr. Lawrence, or obtain any partner rich and elegant enough to
- suit her ideas of what the husband of Jane Wilson ought to be, is yet in
- single blessedness. Shortly after the death of her mother she withdrew
- the light of her presence from Ryecote Farm, finding it impossible any
- longer to endure the rough manners and unsophisticated habits of her
- honest brother Robert and his worthy wife, or the idea of being
- identified with such vulgar people in the eyes of the world, and took
- lodgings in — the county town, where she lived, and still lives, I
- suppose, in a kind of close-fisted, cold, uncomfortable gentility, doing
- no good to others, and but little to herself; spending her days in
- fancy-work and scandal; referring frequently to her ‘brother the vicar,’
- and her ‘sister, the vicar’s lady,’ but never to her brother the farmer
- and her sister the farmer’s wife; seeing as much company as she can
- without too much expense, but loving no one and beloved by none—a
- cold-hearted, supercilious, keenly, insidiously censorious old maid.
- CHAPTER XLIX
- Though Mr. Lawrence’s health was now quite re-established, my visits to
- Woodford were as unremitting as ever; though often less protracted than
- before. We seldom talked about Mrs. Huntingdon; but yet we never met
- without mentioning her, for I never sought his company but with the hope
- of hearing something about her, and he never sought mine at all, because
- he saw me often enough without. But I always began to talk of other
- things, and waited first to see if he would introduce the subject. If he
- did not, I would casually ask, ‘Have you heard from your sister lately?’
- If he said ‘No,’ the matter was dropped: if he said ‘Yes,’ I would
- venture to inquire, ‘How is she?’ but never ‘How is her husband?’ though
- I might be burning to know; because I had not the hypocrisy to profess
- any anxiety for his recovery, and I had not the face to express any
- desire for a contrary result. Had I any such desire?—I fear I must plead
- guilty; but since you have heard my confession, you must hear my
- justification as well —a few of the excuses, at least, wherewith I sought
- to pacify my own accusing conscience.
- In the first place, you see, his life did harm to others, and evidently
- no good to himself; and though I wished it to terminate, I would not have
- hastened its close if, by the lifting of a finger, I could have done so,
- or if a spirit had whispered in my ear that a single effort of the will
- would be enough,—unless, indeed, I had the power to exchange him for some
- other victim of the grave, whose life might be of service to his race,
- and whose death would be lamented by his friends. But was there any harm
- in wishing that, among the many thousands whose souls would certainly be
- required of them before the year was over, this wretched mortal might be
- one? I thought not; and therefore I wished with all my heart that it
- might please heaven to remove him to a better world, or if that might not
- be, still to take him out of this; for if he were unfit to answer the
- summons now, after a warning sickness, and with such an angel by his
- side, it seemed but too certain that he never would be—that, on the
- contrary, returning health would bring returning lust and villainy, and
- as he grew more certain of recovery, more accustomed to her generous
- goodness, his feelings would become more callous, his heart more flinty
- and impervious to her persuasive arguments—but God knew best. Meantime,
- however, I could not but be anxious for the result of His decrees;
- knowing, as I did, that (leaving myself entirely out of the question),
- however Helen might feel interested in her husband’s welfare, however she
- might deplore his fate, still while he lived she must be miserable.
- A fortnight passed away, and my inquiries were always answered in the
- negative. At length a welcome ‘yes’ drew from me the second question.
- Lawrence divined my anxious thoughts, and appreciated my reserve. I
- feared, at first, he was going to torture me by unsatisfactory replies,
- and either leave me quite in the dark concerning what I wanted to know,
- or force me to drag the information out of him, morsel by morsel, by
- direct inquiries. ‘And serve you right,’ you will say; but he was more
- merciful; and in a little while he put his sister’s letter into my hand.
- I silently read it, and restored it to him without comment or remark.
- This mode of procedure suited him so well, that thereafter he always
- pursued the plan of showing me her letters at once, when ‘inquired’ after
- her, if there were any to show—it was so much less trouble than to tell
- me their contents; and I received such confidences so quietly and
- discreetly that he was never induced to discontinue them.
- But I devoured those precious letters with my eyes, and never let them go
- till their contents were stamped upon my mind; and when I got home, the
- most important passages were entered in my diary among the remarkable
- events of the day.
- The first of these communications brought intelligence of a serious
- relapse in Mr. Huntingdon’s illness, entirely the result of his own
- infatuation in persisting in the indulgence of his appetite for
- stimulating drink. In vain had she remonstrated, in vain she had mingled
- his wine with water: her arguments and entreaties were a nuisance, her
- interference was an insult so intolerable that, at length, on finding she
- had covertly diluted the pale port that was brought him, he threw the
- bottle out of the window, swearing he would not be cheated like a baby,
- ordered the butler, on pain of instant dismissal, to bring a bottle of
- the strongest wine in the cellar, and affirming that he should have been
- well long ago if he had been let to have his own way, but she wanted to
- keep him weak in order that she might have him under her thumb—but, by
- the Lord Harry, he would have no more humbug—seized a glass in one hand
- and the bottle in the other, and never rested till he had drunk it dry.
- Alarming symptoms were the immediate result of this ‘imprudence,’ as she
- mildly termed it—symptoms which had rather increased than diminished
- since; and this was the cause of her delay in writing to her brother.
- Every former feature of his malady had returned with augmented virulence:
- the slight external wound, half healed, had broken out afresh; internal
- inflammation had taken place, which might terminate fatally if not soon
- removed. Of course, the wretched sufferer’s temper was not improved by
- this calamity—in fact, I suspect it was well nigh insupportable, though
- his kind nurse did not complain; but she said she had been obliged at
- last to give her son in charge to Esther Hargrave, as her presence was so
- constantly required in the sick-room that she could not possibly attend
- to him herself; and though the child had begged to be allowed to continue
- with her there, and to help her to nurse his papa, and though she had no
- doubt he would have been very good and quiet, she could not think of
- subjecting his young and tender feelings to the sight of so much
- suffering, or of allowing him to witness his father’s impatience, or hear
- the dreadful language he was wont to use in his paroxysms of pain or
- irritation.
- The latter (continued she) most deeply regrets the step that has
- occasioned his relapse; but, as usual, he throws the blame upon me. If I
- had reasoned with him like a rational creature, he says, it never would
- have happened; but to be treated like a baby or a fool was enough to put
- any man past his patience, and drive him to assert his independence even
- at the sacrifice of his own interest. He forgets how often I had
- reasoned him ‘past his patience’ before. He appears to be sensible of
- his danger; but nothing can induce him to behold it in the proper light.
- The other night, while I was waiting on him, and just as I had brought
- him a draught to assuage his burning thirst, he observed, with a return
- of his former sarcastic bitterness, ‘Yes, you’re mighty attentive now! I
- suppose there’s nothing you wouldn’t do for me now?’
- ‘You know,’ said I, a little surprised at his manner, ‘that I am willing
- to do anything I can to relieve you.’
- ‘Yes, now, my immaculate angel; but when once you have secured your
- reward, and find yourself safe in heaven, and me howling in hell-fire,
- catch you lifting a finger to serve me then! No, you’ll look
- complacently on, and not so much as dip the tip of your finger in water
- to cool my tongue!’
- ‘If so, it will be because of the great gulf over which I cannot pass;
- and if I could look complacently on in such a case, it would be only from
- the assurance that you were being purified from your sins, and fitted to
- enjoy the happiness I felt.—But are you determined, Arthur, that I shall
- not meet you in heaven?’
- ‘Humph! What should I do there, I should like to know?’
- ‘Indeed, I cannot tell; and I fear it is too certain that your tastes and
- feelings must be widely altered before you can have any enjoyment there.
- But do you prefer sinking, without an effort, into the state of torment
- you picture to yourself?’
- ‘Oh, it’s all a fable,’ said he, contemptuously.
- ‘Are you sure, Arthur? are you quite sure? Because, if there is any
- doubt, and if you should find yourself mistaken after all, when it is too
- late to turn—’
- ‘It would be rather awkward, to be sure,’ said he; ‘but don’t bother me
- now—I’m not going to die yet. I can’t and won’t,’ he added vehemently,
- as if suddenly struck with the appalling aspect of that terrible event.
- ‘Helen, you must save me!’ And he earnestly seized my hand, and looked
- into my face with such imploring eagerness that my heart bled for him,
- and I could not speak for tears.
- * * * * *
- The next letter brought intelligence that the malady was fast increasing;
- and the poor sufferer’s horror of death was still more distressing than
- his impatience of bodily pain. All his friends had not forsaken him; for
- Mr. Hattersley, hearing of his danger, had come to see him from his
- distant home in the north. His wife had accompanied him, as much for the
- pleasure of seeing her dear friend, from whom she had been parted so
- long, as to visit her mother and sister.
- Mrs. Huntingdon expressed herself glad to see Milicent once more, and
- pleased to behold her so happy and well. She is now at the Grove,
- continued the letter, but she often calls to see me. Mr. Hattersley
- spends much of his time at Arthur’s bed-side. With more good feeling
- than I gave him credit for, he evinces considerable sympathy for his
- unhappy friend, and is far more willing than able to comfort him.
- Sometimes he tries to joke and laugh with him, but that will not do;
- sometimes he endeavours to cheer him with talk about old times, and this
- at one time may serve to divert the sufferer from his own sad thoughts;
- at another, it will only plunge him into deeper melancholy than before;
- and then Hattersley is confounded, and knows not what to say, unless it
- be a timid suggestion that the clergyman might be sent for. But Arthur
- will never consent to that: he knows he has rejected the clergyman’s
- well-meant admonitions with scoffing levity at other times, and cannot
- dream of turning to him for consolation now.
- Mr. Hattersley sometimes offers his services instead of mine, but Arthur
- will not let me go: that strange whim still increases, as his strength
- declines—the fancy to have me always by his side. I hardly ever leave
- him, except to go into the next room, where I sometimes snatch an hour or
- so of sleep when he is quiet; but even then the door is left ajar, that
- he may know me to be within call. I am with him now, while I write, and
- I fear my occupation annoys him; though I frequently break off to attend
- to him, and though Mr. Hattersley is also by his side. That gentleman
- came, as he said, to beg a holiday for me, that I might have a run in the
- park, this fine frosty morning, with Milicent and Esther and little
- Arthur, whom he had driven over to see me. Our poor invalid evidently
- felt it a heartless proposition, and would have felt it still more
- heartless in me to accede to it. I therefore said I would only go and
- speak to them a minute, and then come back. I did but exchange a few
- words with them, just outside the portico, inhaling the fresh, bracing
- air as I stood, and then, resisting the earnest and eloquent entreaties
- of all three to stay a little longer, and join them in a walk round the
- garden, I tore myself away and returned to my patient. I had not been
- absent five minutes, but he reproached me bitterly for my levity and
- neglect. His friend espoused my cause.
- ‘Nay, nay, Huntingdon,’ said he, ‘you’re too hard upon her; she must have
- food and sleep, and a mouthful of fresh air now and then, or she can’t
- stand it, I tell you. Look at her, man! she’s worn to a shadow already.’
- ‘What are her sufferings to mine?’ said the poor invalid. ‘You don’t
- grudge me these attentions, do you, Helen?’
- ‘No, Arthur, if I could really serve you by them. I would give my life
- to save you, if I might.’
- ‘Would you, indeed? No!’
- ‘Most willingly I would.’
- ‘Ah! that’s because you think yourself more fit to die!’
- There was a painful pause. He was evidently plunged in gloomy
- reflections; but while I pondered for something to say that might benefit
- without alarming him, Hattersley, whose mind had been pursuing almost the
- same course, broke silence with, ‘I say, Huntingdon, I would send for a
- parson of some sort: if you didn’t like the vicar, you know, you could
- have his curate, or somebody else.’
- ‘No; none of them can benefit me if she can’t,’ was the answer. And the
- tears gushed from his eyes as he earnestly exclaimed, ‘Oh, Helen, if I
- had listened to you, it never would have come to this! and if I had heard
- you long ago—oh, God! how different it would have been!’
- ‘Hear me now, then, Arthur,’ said I, gently pressing his hand.
- ‘It’s too late now,’ said he despondingly. And after that another
- paroxysm of pain came on; and then his mind began to wander, and we
- feared his death was approaching: but an opiate was administered: his
- sufferings began to abate, he gradually became more composed, and at
- length sank into a kind of slumber. He has been quieter since; and now
- Hattersley has left him, expressing a hope that he shall find him better
- when he calls to-morrow.
- ‘Perhaps I may recover,’ he replied; ‘who knows? This may have been the
- crisis. What do you think, Helen?’ Unwilling to depress him, I gave the
- most cheering answer I could, but still recommended him to prepare for
- the possibility of what I inly feared was but too certain. But he was
- determined to hope. Shortly after he relapsed into a kind of doze, but
- now he groans again.
- There is a change. Suddenly he called me to his side, with such a
- strange, excited manner, that I feared he was delirious, but he was not.
- ‘That was the crisis, Helen!’ said he, delightedly. ‘I had an infernal
- pain here—it is quite gone now. I never was so easy since the fall—quite
- gone, by heaven!’ and he clasped and kissed my hand in the very fulness
- of his heart; but finding I did not participate in his joy, he quickly
- flung it from him, and bitterly cursed my coldness and insensibility.
- How could I reply? Kneeling beside him, I took his hand and fondly
- pressed it to my lips—for the first time since our separation—and told
- him, as well as tears would let me speak, that it was not that that kept
- me silent: it was the fear that this sudden cessation of pain was not so
- favourable a symptom as he supposed. I immediately sent for the doctor:
- we are now anxiously awaiting him. I will tell you what he says. There
- is still the same freedom from pain, the same deadness to all sensation
- where the suffering was most acute.
- My worst fears are realised: mortification has commenced. The doctor has
- told him there is no hope. No words can describe his anguish. I can
- write no more.
- * * * * *
- The next was still more distressing in the tenor of its contents. The
- sufferer was fast approaching dissolution—dragged almost to the verge of
- that awful chasm he trembled to contemplate, from which no agony of
- prayers or tears could save him. Nothing could comfort him now;
- Hattersley’s rough attempts at consolation were utterly in vain. The
- world was nothing to him: life and all its interests, its petty cares and
- transient pleasures, were a cruel mockery. To talk of the past was to
- torture him with vain remorse; to refer to the future was to increase his
- anguish; and yet to be silent was to leave him a prey to his own regrets
- and apprehensions. Often he dwelt with shuddering minuteness on the fate
- of his perishing clay—the slow, piecemeal dissolution already invading
- his frame: the shroud, the coffin, the dark, lonely grave, and all the
- horrors of corruption.
- ‘If I try,’ said his afflicted wife, ‘to divert him from these things—to
- raise his thoughts to higher themes, it is no better:—“Worse and worse!”
- he groans. “If there be really life beyond the tomb, and judgment after
- death, how can I face it?”—I cannot do him any good; he will neither be
- enlightened, nor roused, nor comforted by anything I say; and yet he
- clings to me with unrelenting pertinacity—with a kind of childish
- desperation, as if I could save him from the fate he dreads. He keeps me
- night and day beside him. He is holding my left hand now, while I write;
- he has held it thus for hours: sometimes quietly, with his pale face
- upturned to mine: sometimes clutching my arm with violence—the big drops
- starting from his forehead at the thoughts of what he sees, or thinks he
- sees, before him. If I withdraw my hand for a moment it distresses him.
- ‘“Stay with me, Helen,” he says; “let me hold you so: it seems as if harm
- could not reach me while you are here. But death will come—it is coming
- now—fast, fast!—and—oh, if I could believe there was nothing after!”
- ‘“Don’t try to believe it, Arthur; there is joy and glory after, if you
- will but try to reach it!”
- ‘“What, for me?” he said, with something like a laugh. “Are we not to be
- judged according to the deeds done in the body? Where’s the use of a
- probationary existence, if a man may spend it as he pleases, just
- contrary to God’s decrees, and then go to heaven with the best—if the
- vilest sinner may win the reward of the holiest saint, by merely saying,
- “I repent!””’
- ‘“But if you sincerely repent—”
- ‘“I can’t repent; I only fear.”
- ‘“You only regret the past for its consequences to yourself?”
- ‘“Just so—except that I’m sorry to have wronged you, Nell, because you’re
- so good to me.”
- ‘“Think of the goodness of God, and you cannot but be grieved to have
- offended Him.”
- ‘“What is God?—I cannot see Him or hear Him.—God is only an idea.”
- ‘“God is Infinite Wisdom, and Power, and Goodness—and LOVE; but if this
- idea is too vast for your human faculties—if your mind loses itself in
- its overwhelming infinitude, fix it on Him who condescended to take our
- nature upon Him, who was raised to heaven even in His glorified human
- body, in whom the fulness of the Godhead shines.”
- ‘But he only shook his head and sighed. Then, in another paroxysm of
- shuddering horror, he tightened his grasp on my hand and arm, and,
- groaning and lamenting, still clung to me with that wild, desperate
- earnestness so harrowing to my soul, because I know I cannot help him. I
- did my best to soothe and comfort him.
- ‘“Death is so terrible,” he cried, “I cannot bear it! You don’t know,
- Helen—you can’t imagine what it is, because you haven’t it before you!
- and when I’m buried, you’ll return to your old ways and be as happy as
- ever, and all the world will go on just as busy and merry as if I had
- never been; while I—” He burst into tears.
- ‘“You needn’t let that distress you,” I said; “we shall all follow you
- soon enough.”
- ‘“I wish to God I could take you with me now!” he exclaimed: “you should
- plead for me.”
- ‘“No man can deliver his brother, nor make agreement unto God for him,” I
- replied: “it cost more to redeem their souls—it cost the blood of an
- incarnate God, perfect and sinless in Himself, to redeem us from the
- bondage of the evil one:—let Him plead for you.”
- ‘But I seem to speak in vain. He does not now, as formerly, laugh these
- blessed truths to scorn: but still he cannot trust, or will not
- comprehend them. He cannot linger long. He suffers dreadfully, and so
- do those that wait upon him. But I will not harass you with further
- details: I have said enough, I think, to convince you that I did well to
- go to him.’
- * * * * *
- Poor, poor Helen! dreadful indeed her trials must have been! And I could
- do nothing to lessen them—nay, it almost seemed as if I had brought them
- upon her myself by my own secret desires; and whether I looked at her
- husband’s sufferings or her own, it seemed almost like a judgment upon
- myself for having cherished such a wish.
- The next day but one there came another letter. That too was put into my
- hands without a remark, and these are its contents:—
- Dec. 5th.
- He is gone at last. I sat beside him all night, with my hand fast locked
- in his, watching the changes of his features and listening to his failing
- breath. He had been silent a long time, and I thought he would never
- speak again, when he murmured, faintly but distinctly,—‘Pray for me,
- Helen!’
- ‘I do pray for you, every hour and every minute, Arthur; but you must
- pray for yourself.’
- His lips moved, but emitted no sound;—then his looks became unsettled;
- and, from the incoherent, half-uttered words that escaped him from time
- to time, supposing him to be now unconscious, I gently disengaged my hand
- from his, intending to steal away for a breath of air, for I was almost
- ready to faint; but a convulsive movement of the fingers, and a faintly
- whispered ‘Don’t leave me!’ immediately recalled me: I took his hand
- again, and held it till he was no more—and then I fainted. It was not
- grief; it was exhaustion, that, till then, I had been enabled
- successfully to combat. Oh, Frederick! none can imagine the miseries,
- bodily and mental, of that death-bed! How could I endure to think that
- that poor trembling soul was hurried away to everlasting torment? it
- would drive me mad. But, thank God, I have hope—not only from a vague
- dependence on the possibility that penitence and pardon might have
- reached him at the last, but from the blessed confidence that, through
- whatever purging fires the erring spirit may be doomed to pass—whatever
- fate awaits it—still it is not lost, and God, who hateth nothing that He
- hath made, will bless it in the end!
- His body will be consigned on Thursday to that dark grave he so much
- dreaded; but the coffin must be closed as soon as possible. If you will
- attend the funeral, come quickly, for I need help.
- HELEN HUNTINGDON.
- CHAPTER L
- On reading this I had no reason to disguise my joy and hope from
- Frederick Lawrence, for I had none to be ashamed of. I felt no joy but
- that his sister was at length released from her afflictive, overwhelming
- toil—no hope but that she would in time recover from the effects of it,
- and be suffered to rest in peace and quietness, at least, for the
- remainder of her life. I experienced a painful commiseration for her
- unhappy husband (though fully aware that he had brought every particle of
- his sufferings upon himself, and but too well deserved them all), and a
- profound sympathy for her own afflictions, and deep anxiety for the
- consequences of those harassing cares, those dreadful vigils, that
- incessant and deleterious confinement beside a living corpse—for I was
- persuaded she had not hinted half the sufferings she had had to endure.
- ‘You will go to her, Lawrence?’ said I, as I put the letter into his
- hand.
- ‘Yes, immediately.’
- ‘That’s right! I’ll leave you, then, to prepare for your departure.’
- ‘I’ve done that already, while you were reading the letter, and before
- you came; and the carriage is now coming round to the door.’
- Inly approving his promptitude, I bade him good-morning, and withdrew.
- He gave me a searching glance as we pressed each other’s hands at
- parting; but whatever he sought in my countenance, he saw there nothing
- but the most becoming gravity—it might be mingled with a little sternness
- in momentary resentment at what I suspected to be passing in his mind.
- Had I forgotten my own prospects, my ardent love, my pertinacious hopes?
- It seemed like sacrilege to revert to them now, but I had not forgotten
- them. It was, however, with a gloomy sense of the darkness of those
- prospects, the fallacy of those hopes, and the vanity of that affection,
- that I reflected on those things as I remounted my horse and slowly
- journeyed homewards. Mrs. Huntingdon was free now; it was no longer a
- crime to think of her—but did she ever think of me? Not now—of course it
- was not to be expected—but would she when this shock was over? In all
- the course of her correspondence with her brother (our mutual friend, as
- she herself had called him) she had never mentioned me but once—and that
- was from necessity. This alone afforded strong presumption that I was
- already forgotten; yet this was not the worst: it might have been her
- sense of duty that had kept her silent: she might be only trying to
- forget; but in addition to this, I had a gloomy conviction that the awful
- realities she had seen and felt, her reconciliation with the man she had
- once loved, his dreadful sufferings and death, must eventually efface
- from her mind all traces of her passing love for me. She might recover
- from these horrors so far as to be restored to her former health, her
- tranquillity, her cheerfulness even—but never to those feelings which
- would appear to her, henceforth, as a fleeting fancy, a vain, illusive
- dream; especially as there was no one to remind her of my existence—no
- means of assuring her of my fervent constancy, now that we were so far
- apart, and delicacy forbade me to see her or to write to her, for months
- to come at least. And how could I engage her brother in my behalf? how
- could I break that icy crust of shy reserve? Perhaps he would disapprove
- of my attachment now as highly as before; perhaps he would think me too
- poor—too lowly born, to match with his sister. Yes, there was another
- barrier: doubtless there was a wide distinction between the rank and
- circumstances of Mrs. Huntingdon, the lady of Grassdale Manor, and those
- of Mrs. Graham, the artist, the tenant of Wildfell Hall. And it might be
- deemed presumption in me to offer my hand to the former, by the world, by
- her friends, if not by herself; a penalty I might brave, if I were
- certain she loved me; but otherwise, how could I? And, finally, her
- deceased husband, with his usual selfishness, might have so constructed
- his will as to place restrictions upon her marrying again. So that you
- see I had reasons enough for despair if I chose to indulge it.
- Nevertheless, it was with no small degree of impatience that I looked
- forward to Mr. Lawrence’s return from Grassdale: impatience that
- increased in proportion as his absence was prolonged. He stayed away
- some ten or twelve days. All very right that he should remain to comfort
- and help his sister, but he might have written to tell me how she was, or
- at least to tell me when to expect his return; for he might have known I
- was suffering tortures of anxiety for her, and uncertainty for my own
- future prospects. And when he did return, all he told me about her was,
- that she had been greatly exhausted and worn by her unremitting exertions
- in behalf of that man who had been the scourge of her life, and had
- dragged her with him nearly to the portals of the grave, and was still
- much shaken and depressed by his melancholy end and the circumstances
- attendant upon it; but no word in reference to me; no intimation that my
- name had ever passed her lips, or even been spoken in her presence. To
- be sure, I asked no questions on the subject; I could not bring my mind
- to do so, believing, as I did, that Lawrence was indeed averse to the
- idea of my union with his sister.
- I saw that he expected to be further questioned concerning his visit, and
- I saw too, with the keen perception of awakened jealousy, or alarmed
- self-esteem, or by whatever name I ought to call it, that he rather
- shrank from that impending scrutiny, and was no less pleased than
- surprised to find it did not come. Of course, I was burning with anger,
- but pride obliged me to suppress my feelings, and preserve a smooth face,
- or at least a stoic calmness, throughout the interview. It was well it
- did, for, reviewing the matter in my sober judgment, I must say it would
- have been highly absurd and improper to have quarrelled with him on such
- an occasion. I must confess, too, that I wronged him in my heart: the
- truth was, he liked me very well, but he was fully aware that a union
- between Mrs. Huntingdon and me would be what the world calls a
- mesalliance; and it was not in his nature to set the world at defiance;
- especially in such a case as this, for its dread laugh, or ill opinion,
- would be far more terrible to him directed against his sister than
- himself. Had he believed that a union was necessary to the happiness of
- both, or of either, or had he known how fervently I loved her, he would
- have acted differently; but seeing me so calm and cool, he would not for
- the world disturb my philosophy; and though refraining entirely from any
- active opposition to the match, he would yet do nothing to bring it
- about, and would much rather take the part of prudence, in aiding us to
- overcome our mutual predilections, than that of feeling, to encourage
- them. ‘And he was in the right of it,’ you will say. Perhaps he was; at
- any rate, I had no business to feel so bitterly against him as I did; but
- I could not then regard the matter in such a moderate light; and, after a
- brief conversation upon indifferent topics, I went away, suffering all
- the pangs of wounded pride and injured friendship, in addition to those
- resulting from the fear that I was indeed forgotten, and the knowledge
- that she I loved was alone and afflicted, suffering from injured health
- and dejected spirits, and I was forbidden to console or assist her:
- forbidden even to assure her of my sympathy, for the transmission of any
- such message through Mr. Lawrence was now completely out of the question.
- But what should I do? I would wait, and see if she would notice me,
- which of course she would not, unless by some kind message intrusted to
- her brother, that, in all probability, he would not deliver, and then,
- dreadful thought! she would think me cooled and changed for not returning
- it, or, perhaps, he had already given her to understand that I had ceased
- to think of her. I would wait, however, till the six months after our
- parting were fairly passed (which would be about the close of February),
- and then I would send her a letter, modestly reminding her of her former
- permission to write to her at the close of that period, and hoping I
- might avail myself of it—at least to express my heartfelt sorrow for her
- late afflictions, my just appreciation of her generous conduct, and my
- hope that her health was now completely re-established, and that she
- would, some time, be permitted to enjoy those blessings of a peaceful,
- happy life, which had been denied her so long, but which none could more
- truly be said to merit than herself—adding a few words of kind
- remembrance to my little friend Arthur, with a hope that he had not
- forgotten me, and perhaps a few more in reference to bygone times, to the
- delightful hours I had passed in her society, and my unfading
- recollection of them, which was the salt and solace of my life, and a
- hope that her recent troubles had not entirely banished me from her mind.
- If she did not answer this, of course I should write no more: if she did
- (as surely she would, in some fashion), my future proceedings should be
- regulated by her reply.
- Ten weeks was long to wait in such a miserable state of uncertainty; but
- courage! it must be endured! and meantime I would continue to see
- Lawrence now and then, though not so often as before, and I would still
- pursue my habitual inquiries after his sister, if he had lately heard
- from her, and how she was, but nothing more.
- I did so, and the answers I received were always provokingly limited to
- the letter of the inquiry: she was much as usual: she made no complaints,
- but the tone of her last letter evinced great depression of mind: she
- said she was better: and, finally, she said she was well, and very busy
- with her son’s education, and with the management of her late husband’s
- property, and the regulation of his affairs. The rascal had never told
- me how that property was disposed, or whether Mr. Huntingdon had died
- intestate or not; and I would sooner die than ask him, lest he should
- misconstrue into covetousness my desire to know. He never offered to
- show me his sister’s letters now, and I never hinted a wish to see them.
- February, however, was approaching; December was past; January, at
- length, was almost over—a few more weeks, and then, certain despair or
- renewal of hope would put an end to this long agony of suspense.
- But alas! it was just about that time she was called to sustain another
- blow in the death of her uncle—a worthless old fellow enough in himself,
- I daresay, but he had always shown more kindness and affection to her
- than to any other creature, and she had always been accustomed to regard
- him as a parent. She was with him when he died, and had assisted her
- aunt to nurse him during the last stage of his illness. Her brother went
- to Staningley to attend the funeral, and told me, upon his return, that
- she was still there, endeavouring to cheer her aunt with her presence,
- and likely to remain some time. This was bad news for me, for while she
- continued there I could not write to her, as I did not know the address,
- and would not ask it of him. But week followed week, and every time I
- inquired about her she was still at Staningley.
- ‘Where is Staningley?’ I asked at last.
- ‘In —shire,’ was the brief reply; and there was something so cold and dry
- in the manner of it, that I was effectually deterred from requesting a
- more definite account.
- ‘When will she return to Grassdale?’ was my next question.
- ‘I don’t know.’
- ‘Confound it!’ I muttered.
- ‘Why, Markham?’ asked my companion, with an air of innocent surprise.
- But I did not deign to answer him, save by a look of silent, sullen
- contempt, at which he turned away, and contemplated the carpet with a
- slight smile, half pensive, half amused; but quickly looking up, he began
- to talk of other subjects, trying to draw me into a cheerful and friendly
- conversation, but I was too much irritated to discourse with him, and
- soon took leave.
- You see Lawrence and I somehow could not manage to get on very well
- together. The fact is, I believe, we were both of us a little too
- touchy. It is a troublesome thing, Halford, this susceptibility to
- affronts where none are intended. I am no martyr to it now, as you can
- bear me witness: I have learned to be merry and wise, to be more easy
- with myself and more indulgent to my neighbours, and I can afford to
- laugh at both Lawrence and you.
- Partly from accident, partly from wilful negligence on my part (for I was
- really beginning to dislike him), several weeks elapsed before I saw my
- friend again. When we did meet, it was he that sought me out. One
- bright morning, early in June, he came into the field, where I was just
- commencing my hay harvest.
- ‘It is long since I saw you, Markham,’ said he, after the first few words
- had passed between us. ‘Do you never mean to come to Woodford again?’
- ‘I called once, and you were out.’
- ‘I was sorry, but that was long since; I hoped you would call again, and
- now I have called, and you were out, which you generally are, or I would
- do myself the pleasure of calling more frequently; but being determined
- to see you this time, I have left my pony in the lane, and come over
- hedge and ditch to join you; for I am about to leave Woodford for a
- while, and may not have the pleasure of seeing you again for a month or
- two.’
- ‘Where are you going?’
- ‘To Grassdale first,’ said he, with a half-smile he would willingly have
- suppressed if he could.
- ‘To Grassdale! Is she there, then?’
- ‘Yes, but in a day or two she will leave it to accompany Mrs. Maxwell to
- F— for the benefit of the sea air, and I shall go with them.’ (F— was at
- that time a quiet but respectable watering-place: it is considerably more
- frequented now.)
- Lawrence seemed to expect me to take advantage of this circumstance to
- entrust him with some sort of a message to his sister; and I believe he
- would have undertaken to deliver it without any material objections, if I
- had had the sense to ask him, though of course he would not offer to do
- so, if I was content to let it alone. But I could not bring myself to
- make the request, and it was not till after he was gone, that I saw how
- fair an opportunity I had lost; and then, indeed, I deeply regretted my
- stupidity and my foolish pride, but it was now too late to remedy the
- evil.
- He did not return till towards the latter end of August. He wrote to me
- twice or thrice from F—, but his letters were most provokingly
- unsatisfactory, dealing in generalities or in trifles that I cared
- nothing about, or replete with fancies and reflections equally unwelcome
- to me at the time, saying next to nothing about his sister, and little
- more about himself. I would wait, however, till he came back; perhaps I
- could get something more out of him then. At all events, I would not
- write to her now, while she was with him and her aunt, who doubtless
- would be still more hostile to my presumptuous aspirations than himself.
- When she was returned to the silence and solitude of her own home, it
- would be my fittest opportunity.
- When Lawrence came, however, he was as reserved as ever on the subject of
- my keen anxiety. He told me that his sister had derived considerable
- benefit from her stay at F— that her son was quite well, and—alas! that
- both of them were gone, with Mrs. Maxwell, back to Staningley, and there
- they stayed at least three months. But instead of boring you with my
- chagrin, my expectations and disappointments, my fluctuations of dull
- despondency and flickering hope, my varying resolutions, now to drop it,
- and now to persevere—now to make a bold push, and now to let things pass
- and patiently abide my time,—I will employ myself in settling the
- business of one or two of the characters introduced in the course of this
- narrative, whom I may not have occasion to mention again.
- Some time before Mr. Huntingdon’s death Lady Lowborough eloped with
- another gallant to the Continent, where, having lived a while in reckless
- gaiety and dissipation, they quarrelled and parted. She went dashing on
- for a season, but years came and money went: she sunk, at length, in
- difficulty and debt, disgrace and misery; and died at last, as I have
- heard, in penury, neglect, and utter wretchedness. But this might be
- only a report: she may be living yet for anything I or any of her
- relatives or former acquaintances can tell; for they have all lost sight
- of her long years ago, and would as thoroughly forget her if they could.
- Her husband, however, upon this second misdemeanour, immediately sought
- and obtained a divorce, and, not long after, married again. It was well
- he did, for Lord Lowborough, morose and moody as he seemed, was not the
- man for a bachelor’s life. No public interests, no ambitious projects,
- or active pursuits,—or ties of friendship even (if he had had any
- friends), could compensate to him for the absence of domestic comforts
- and endearments. He had a son and a nominal daughter, it is true, but
- they too painfully reminded him of their mother, and the unfortunate
- little Annabella was a source of perpetual bitterness to his soul. He
- had obliged himself to treat her with paternal kindness: he had forced
- himself not to hate her, and even, perhaps, to feel some degree of kindly
- regard for her, at last, in return for her artless and unsuspecting
- attachment to himself; but the bitterness of his self-condemnation for
- his inward feelings towards that innocent being, his constant struggles
- to subdue the evil promptings of his nature (for it was not a generous
- one), though partly guessed at by those who knew him, could be known to
- God and his own heart alone;—so also was the hardness of his conflicts
- with the temptation to return to the vice of his youth, and seek oblivion
- for past calamities, and deadness to the present misery of a blighted
- heart a joyless, friendless life, and a morbidly disconsolate mind, by
- yielding again to that insidious foe to health, and sense, and virtue,
- which had so deplorably enslaved and degraded him before.
- The second object of his choice was widely different from the first.
- Some wondered at his taste; some even ridiculed it—but in this their
- folly was more apparent than his. The lady was about his own age—_i.e._,
- between thirty and forty—remarkable neither for beauty, nor wealth, nor
- brilliant accomplishments; nor any other thing that I ever heard of,
- except genuine good sense, unswerving integrity, active piety,
- warm-hearted benevolence, and a fund of cheerful spirits. These
- qualities, however, as you may readily imagine, combined to render her an
- excellent mother to the children, and an invaluable wife to his lordship.
- He, with his usual self-depreciation, thought her a world too good for
- him, and while he wondered at the kindness of Providence in conferring
- such a gift upon him, and even at her taste in preferring him to other
- men, he did his best to reciprocate the good she did him, and so far
- succeeded that she was, and I believe still is, one of the happiest and
- fondest wives in England; and all who question the good taste of either
- partner may be thankful if their respective selections afford them half
- the genuine satisfaction in the end, or repay their preference with
- affection half as lasting and sincere.
- If you are at all interested in the fate of that low scoundrel, Grimsby,
- I can only tell you that he went from bad to worse, sinking from bathos
- to bathos of vice and villainy, consorting only with the worst members of
- his club and the lowest dregs of society—happily for the rest of the
- world—and at last met his end in a drunken brawl, from the hands, it is
- said, of some brother scoundrel he had cheated at play.
- As for Mr. Hattersley, he had never wholly forgotten his resolution to
- ‘come out from among them,’ and behave like a man and a Christian, and
- the last illness and death of his once jolly friend Huntingdon so deeply
- and seriously impressed him with the evil of their former practices, that
- he never needed another lesson of the kind. Avoiding the temptations of
- the town, he continued to pass his life in the country, immersed in the
- usual pursuits of a hearty, active, country gentleman; his occupations
- being those of farming, and breeding horses and cattle, diversified with
- a little hunting and shooting, and enlivened by the occasional
- companionship of his friends (better friends than those of his youth),
- and the society of his happy little wife (now cheerful and confiding as
- heart could wish), and his fine family of stalwart sons and blooming
- daughters. His father, the banker, having died some years ago and left
- him all his riches, he has now full scope for the exercise of his
- prevailing tastes, and I need not tell you that Ralph Hattersley, Esq.,
- is celebrated throughout the country for his noble breed of horses.
- CHAPTER LI
- We will now turn to a certain still, cold, cloudy afternoon about the
- commencement of December, when the first fall of snow lay thinly
- scattered over the blighted fields and frozen roads, or stored more
- thickly in the hollows of the deep cart-ruts and footsteps of men and
- horses impressed in the now petrified mire of last month’s drenching
- rains. I remember it well, for I was walking home from the vicarage with
- no less remarkable a personage than Miss Eliza Millward by my side. I
- had been to call upon her father,—a sacrifice to civility undertaken
- entirely to please my mother, not myself, for I hated to go near the
- house; not merely on account of my antipathy to the once so bewitching
- Eliza, but because I had not half forgiven the old gentleman himself for
- his ill opinion of Mrs. Huntingdon; for though now constrained to
- acknowledge himself mistaken in his former judgment, he still maintained
- that she had done wrong to leave her husband; it was a violation of her
- sacred duties as a wife, and a tempting of Providence by laying herself
- open to temptation; and nothing short of bodily ill-usage (and that of no
- trifling nature) could excuse such a step—nor even that, for in such a
- case she ought to appeal to the laws for protection. But it was not of
- him I intended to speak; it was of his daughter Eliza. Just as I was
- taking leave of the vicar, she entered the room, ready equipped for a
- walk.
- ‘I was just coming to see, your sister, Mr. Markham,’ said she; ‘and so,
- if you have no objection, I’ll accompany you home. I like company when
- I’m walking out—don’t you?’
- ‘Yes, when it’s agreeable.’
- ‘That of course,’ rejoined the young lady, smiling archly.
- So we proceeded together.
- ‘Shall I find Rose at home, do you think?’ said she, as we closed the
- garden gate, and set our faces towards Linden-Car.
- ‘I believe so.’
- ‘I trust I shall, for I’ve a little bit of news for her—if you haven’t
- forestalled me.’
- ‘I?’
- ‘Yes: do you know what Mr. Lawrence is gone for?’ She looked up
- anxiously for my reply.
- ‘Is he gone?’ said I; and her face brightened.
- ‘Ah! then he hasn’t told you about his sister?’
- ‘What of her?’ I demanded in terror, lest some evil should have befallen
- her.
- ‘Oh, Mr. Markham, how you blush!’ cried she, with a tormenting laugh.
- ‘Ha, ha, you have not forgotten her yet. But you had better be quick
- about it, I can tell you, for—alas, alas!—she’s going to be married next
- Thursday!’
- ‘No, Miss Eliza, that’s false.’
- ‘Do you charge me with a falsehood, sir?’
- ‘You are misinformed.’
- ‘Am I? Do you know better, then?’
- ‘I think I do.’
- ‘What makes you look so pale then?’ said she, smiling with delight at my
- emotion. ‘Is it anger at poor me for telling such a fib? Well, I only
- “tell the tale as ’twas told to me:” I don’t vouch for the truth of it;
- but at the same time, I don’t see what reason Sarah should have for
- deceiving me, or her informant for deceiving her; and that was what she
- told me the footman told her:—that Mrs. Huntingdon was going to be
- married on Thursday, and Mr. Lawrence was gone to the wedding. She did
- tell me the name of the gentleman, but I’ve forgotten that. Perhaps you
- can assist me to remember it. Is there not some one that lives near—or
- frequently visits the neighbourhood, that has long been attached to
- her?—a Mr.—oh, dear! Mr.—’
- ‘Hargrave?’ suggested I, with a bitter smile.
- ‘You’re right,’ cried she; ‘that was the very name.’
- ‘Impossible, Miss Eliza!’ I exclaimed, in a tone that made her start.
- ‘Well, you know, that’s what they told me,’ said she, composedly staring
- me in the face. And then she broke out into a long shrill laugh that put
- me to my wit’s end with fury.
- ‘Really you must excuse me,’ cried she. ‘I know it’s very rude, but ha,
- ha, ha!—did you think to marry her yourself? Dear, dear, what a
- pity!—ha, ha, ha! Gracious, Mr. Markham, are you going to faint? Oh,
- mercy! shall I call this man? Here, Jacob—‘ But checking the word on
- her lips, I seized her arm and gave it, I think, a pretty severe squeeze,
- for she shrank into herself with a faint cry of pain or terror; but the
- spirit within her was not subdued: instantly rallying, she continued,
- with well-feigned concern, ‘What can I do for you? Will you have some
- water—some brandy? I daresay they have some in the public-house down
- there, if you’ll let me run.’
- ‘Have done with this nonsense!’ cried I, sternly. She looked
- confounded—almost frightened again, for a moment. ‘You know I hate such
- jests,’ I continued.
- ‘Jests indeed! I wasn’t jesting!’
- ‘You were laughing, at all events; and I don’t like to be laughed at,’
- returned I, making violent efforts to speak with proper dignity and
- composure, and to say nothing but what was coherent and sensible. ‘And
- since you are in such a merry mood, Miss Eliza, you must be good enough
- company for yourself; and therefore I shall leave you to finish your walk
- alone—for, now I think of it, I have business elsewhere; so
- good-evening.’
- With that I left her (smothering her malicious laughter) and turned aside
- into the fields, springing up the bank, and pushing through the nearest
- gap in the hedge. Determined at once to prove the truth—or rather the
- falsehood—of her story, I hastened to Woodford as fast as my legs could
- carry me; first veering round by a circuitous course, but the moment I
- was out of sight of my fair tormentor cutting away across the country,
- just as a bird might fly, over pasture-land, and fallow, and stubble, and
- lane, clearing hedges and ditches and hurdles, till I came to the young
- squire’s gates. Never till now had I known the full fervour of my
- love—the full strength of my hopes, not wholly crushed even in my hours
- of deepest despondency, always tenaciously clinging to the thought that
- one day she might be mine, or, if not that, at least that something of my
- memory, some slight remembrance of our friendship and our love, would be
- for ever cherished in her heart. I marched up to the door, determined,
- if I saw the master, to question him boldly concerning his sister, to
- wait and hesitate no longer, but cast false delicacy and stupid pride
- behind my back, and know my fate at once.
- ‘Is Mr. Lawrence at home?’ I eagerly asked of the servant that opened the
- door.
- ‘No, sir, master went yesterday,’ replied he, looking very alert.
- ‘Went where?’
- ‘To Grassdale, sir—wasn’t you aware, sir? He’s very close, is master,’
- said the fellow, with a foolish, simpering grin. ‘I suppose, sir—’
- But I turned and left him, without waiting to hear what he supposed. I
- was not going to stand there to expose my tortured feelings to the
- insolent laughter and impertinent curiosity of a fellow like that.
- But what was to be done now? Could it be possible that she had left me
- for that man? I could not believe it. Me she might forsake, but not to
- give herself to him! Well, I would know the truth; to no concerns of
- daily life could I attend while this tempest of doubt and dread, of
- jealousy and rage, distracted me. I would take the morning coach from L—
- (the evening one would be already gone), and fly to Grassdale—I must be
- there before the marriage. And why? Because a thought struck me that
- perhaps I might prevent it—that if I did not, she and I might both lament
- it to the latest moment of our lives. It struck me that someone might
- have belied me to her: perhaps her brother; yes, no doubt her brother had
- persuaded her that I was false and faithless, and taking advantage of her
- natural indignation, and perhaps her desponding carelessness about her
- future life, had urged her, artfully, cruelly, on to this other marriage,
- in order to secure her from me. If this was the case, and if she should
- only discover her mistake when too late to repair it—to what a life of
- misery and vain regret might she be doomed as well as me; and what
- remorse for me to think my foolish scruples had induced it all! Oh, I
- must see her—she must know my truth even if I told it at the church door!
- I might pass for a madman or an impertinent fool—even she might be
- offended at such an interruption, or at least might tell me it was now
- too late. But if I could save her, if she might be mine!—it was too
- rapturous a thought!
- Winged by this hope, and goaded by these fears, I hurried homewards to
- prepare for my departure on the morrow. I told my mother that urgent
- business which admitted no delay, but which I could not then explain,
- called me away.
- My deep anxiety and serious preoccupation could not be concealed from her
- maternal eyes; and I had much ado to calm her apprehensions of some
- disastrous mystery.
- That night there came a heavy fall of snow, which so retarded the
- progress of the coaches on the following day that I was almost driven to
- distraction. I travelled all night, of course, for this was Wednesday:
- to-morrow morning, doubtless, the marriage would take place. But the
- night was long and dark: the snow heavily clogged the wheels and balled
- the horses’ feet; the animals were consumedly lazy; the coachman most
- execrably cautious; the passengers confoundedly apathetic in their supine
- indifference to the rate of our progression. Instead of assisting me to
- bully the several coachmen and urge them forward, they merely stared and
- grinned at my impatience: one fellow even ventured to rally me upon
- it—but I silenced him with a look that quelled him for the rest of the
- journey; and when, at the last stage, I would have taken the reins into
- my own hand, they all with one accord opposed it.
- It was broad daylight when we entered M— and drew up at the ‘Rose and
- Crown.’ I alighted and called aloud for a post-chaise to Grassdale.
- There was none to be had: the only one in the town was under repair. ‘A
- gig, then—a fly—car—anything—only be quick!’ There was a gig, but not a
- horse to spare. I sent into the town to seek one: but they were such an
- intolerable time about it that I could wait no longer—I thought my own
- feet could carry me sooner; and bidding them send the conveyance after
- me, if it were ready within an hour, I set off as fast as I could walk.
- The distance was little more than six miles, but the road was strange,
- and I had to keep stopping to inquire my way; hallooing to carters and
- clodhoppers, and frequently invading the cottages, for there were few
- abroad that winter’s morning; sometimes knocking up the lazy people from
- their beds, for where so little work was to be done, perhaps so little
- food and fire to be had, they cared not to curtail their slumbers. I had
- no time to think of them, however; aching with weariness and desperation,
- I hurried on. The gig did not overtake me: and it was well I had not
- waited for it; vexatious rather, that I had been fool enough to wait so
- long.
- At length, however, I entered the neighbourhood of Grassdale. I
- approached the little rural church—but lo! there stood a train of
- carriages before it; it needed not the white favours bedecking the
- servants and horses, nor the merry voices of the village idlers assembled
- to witness the show, to apprise me that there was a wedding within. I
- ran in among them, demanding, with breathless eagerness, had the ceremony
- long commenced? They only gaped and stared. In my desperation, I pushed
- past them, and was about to enter the churchyard gate, when a group of
- ragged urchins, that had been hanging like bees to the window, suddenly
- dropped off and made a rush for the porch, vociferating in the uncouth
- dialect of their country something which signified, ‘It’s over—they’re
- coming out!’
- If Eliza Millward had seen me then she might indeed have been delighted.
- I grasped the gate-post for support, and stood intently gazing towards
- the door to take my last look on my soul’s delight, my first on that
- detested mortal who had torn her from my heart, and doomed her, I was
- certain, to a life of misery and hollow, vain repining—for what happiness
- could she enjoy with him? I did not wish to shock her with my presence
- now, but I had not power to move away. Forth came the bride and
- bridegroom. Him I saw not; I had eyes for none but her. A long veil
- shrouded half her graceful form, but did not hide it; I could see that
- while she carried her head erect, her eyes were bent upon the ground, and
- her face and neck were suffused with a crimson blush; but every feature
- was radiant with smiles, and gleaming through the misty whiteness of her
- veil were clusters of golden ringlets! Oh, heavens! it was not my Helen!
- The first glimpse made me start—but my eyes were darkened with exhaustion
- and despair. Dare I trust them? ‘Yes—it is not she! It was a younger,
- slighter, rosier beauty—lovely indeed, but with far less dignity and
- depth of soul—without that indefinable grace, that keenly spiritual yet
- gentle charm, that ineffable power to attract and subjugate the heart—my
- heart at least. I looked at the bridegroom—it was Frederick Lawrence! I
- wiped away the cold drops that were trickling down my forehead, and
- stepped back as he approached; but, his eyes fell upon me, and he knew
- me, altered as my appearance must have been.
- ‘Is that you, Markham?’ said he, startled and confounded at the
- apparition—perhaps, too, at the wildness of my looks.
- ‘Yes, Lawrence; is that you?’ I mustered the presence of mind to reply.
- He smiled and coloured, as if half-proud and half-ashamed of his
- identity; and if he had reason to be proud of the sweet lady on his arm,
- he had no less cause to be ashamed of having concealed his good fortune
- so long.
- ‘Allow me to introduce you to my bride,’ said he, endeavouring to hide
- his embarrassment by an assumption of careless gaiety. ‘Esther, this is
- Mr. Markham; my friend Markham, Mrs. Lawrence, late Miss Hargrave.’
- I bowed to the bride, and vehemently wrung the bridegroom’s hand.
- ‘Why did you not tell me of this?’ I said, reproachfully, pretending a
- resentment I did not feel (for in truth I was almost wild with joy to
- find myself so happily mistaken, and overflowing with affection to him
- for this and for the base injustice I felt that I had done him in my
- mind—he might have wronged me, but not to that extent; and as I had hated
- him like a demon for the last forty hours, the reaction from such a
- feeling was so great that I could pardon all offences for the moment—and
- love him in spite of them too).
- ‘I did tell you,’ said he, with an air of guilty confusion; ‘you received
- my letter?’
- ‘What letter?’
- ‘The one announcing my intended marriage.’
- ‘I never received the most distant hint of such an intention.’
- ‘It must have crossed you on your way then—it should have reached you
- yesterday morning—it was rather late, I acknowledge. But what brought
- you here, then, if you received no information?’
- It was now my turn to be confounded; but the young lady, who had been
- busily patting the snow with her foot during our short sotto-voce
- colloquy, very opportunely came to my assistance by pinching her
- companion’s arm and whispering a suggestion that his friend should be
- invited to step into the carriage and go with them; it being scarcely
- agreeable to stand there among so many gazers, and keeping their friends
- waiting into the bargain.
- ‘And so cold as it is too!’ said he, glancing with dismay at her slight
- drapery, and immediately handing her into the carriage. ‘Markham, will
- you come? We are going to Paris, but we can drop you anywhere between
- this and Dover.’
- ‘No, thank you. Good-by—I needn’t wish you a pleasant journey; but I
- shall expect a very handsome apology, some time, mind, and scores of
- letters, before we meet again.’
- He shook my hand, and hastened to take his place beside his lady. This
- was no time or place for explanation or discourse: we had already stood
- long enough to excite the wonder of the village sight-seers, and perhaps
- the wrath of the attendant bridal party; though, of course, all this
- passed in a much shorter time than I have taken to relate, or even than
- you will take to read it. I stood beside the carriage, and, the window
- being down, I saw my happy friend fondly encircle his companion’s waist
- with his arm, while she rested her glowing cheek on his shoulder, looking
- the very impersonation of loving, trusting bliss. In the interval
- between the footman’s closing the door and taking his place behind she
- raised her smiling brown eyes to his face, observing, playfully,—‘I fear
- you must think me very insensible, Frederick: I know it is the custom for
- ladies to cry on these occasions, but I couldn’t squeeze a tear for my
- life.’
- He only answered with a kiss, and pressed her still closer to his bosom.
- ‘But what is this?’ he murmured. ‘Why, Esther, you’re crying now!’
- ‘Oh, it’s nothing—it’s only too much happiness—and the wish,’ sobbed she,
- ‘that our dear Helen were as happy as ourselves.’
- ‘Bless you for that wish!’ I inwardly responded, as the carriage rolled
- away—‘and heaven grant it be not wholly vain!’
- I thought a cloud had suddenly darkened her husband’s face as she spoke.
- What did he think? Could he grudge such happiness to his dear sister and
- his friend as he now felt himself? At such a moment it was impossible.
- The contrast between her fate and his must darken his bliss for a time.
- Perhaps, too, he thought of me: perhaps he regretted the part he had had
- in preventing our union, by omitting to help us, if not by actually
- plotting against us. I exonerated him from that charge now, and deeply
- lamented my former ungenerous suspicions; but he had wronged us, still—I
- hoped, I trusted that he had. He had not attempted to cheek the course
- of our love by actually damming up the streams in their passage, but he
- had passively watched the two currents wandering through life’s arid
- wilderness, declining to clear away the obstructions that divided them,
- and secretly hoping that both would lose themselves in the sand before
- they could be joined in one. And meantime he had been quietly proceeding
- with his own affairs; perhaps, his heart and head had been so full of his
- fair lady that he had had but little thought to spare for others.
- Doubtless he had made his first acquaintance with her—his first intimate
- acquaintance at least—during his three months’ sojourn at F—, for I now
- recollected that he had once casually let fall an intimation that his
- aunt and sister had a young friend staying with them at the time, and
- this accounted for at least one-half his silence about all transactions
- there. Now, too, I saw a reason for many little things that had slightly
- puzzled me before; among the rest, for sundry departures from Woodford,
- and absences more or less prolonged, for which he never satisfactorily
- accounted, and concerning which he hated to be questioned on his return.
- Well might the servant say his master was ‘very close.’ But why this
- strange reserve to me? Partly, from that remarkable idiosyncrasy to
- which I have before alluded; partly, perhaps, from tenderness to my
- feelings, or fear to disturb my philosophy by touching upon the
- infectious theme of love.
- CHAPTER LII
- The tardy gig had overtaken me at last. I entered it, and bade the man
- who brought it drive to Grassdale Manor—I was too busy with my own
- thoughts to care to drive it myself. I would see Mrs. Huntingdon—there
- could be no impropriety in that now that her husband had been dead above
- a year—and by her indifference or her joy at my unexpected arrival I
- could soon tell whether her heart was truly mine. But my companion, a
- loquacious, forward fellow, was not disposed to leave me to the
- indulgence of my private cogitations.
- ‘There they go!’ said he, as the carriages filed away before us.
- ‘There’ll be brave doings on yonder to-day, as what come to-morra.—Know
- anything of that family, sir? or you’re a stranger in these parts?’
- ‘I know them by report.’
- ‘Humph! There’s the best of ’em gone, anyhow. And I suppose the old
- missis is agoing to leave after this stir’s gotten overed, and take
- herself off, somewhere, to live on her bit of a jointure; and the young
- ’un—at least the new ’un (she’s none so very young)—is coming down to
- live at the Grove.’
- ‘Is Mr. Hargrave married, then?’
- ‘Ay, sir, a few months since. He should a been wed afore, to a widow
- lady, but they couldn’t agree over the money: she’d a rare long purse,
- and Mr. Hargrave wanted it all to hisself; but she wouldn’t let it go,
- and so then they fell out. This one isn’t quite as rich, nor as handsome
- either, but she hasn’t been married before. She’s very plain, they say,
- and getting on to forty or past, and so, you know, if she didn’t jump at
- this hopportunity, she thought she’d never get a better. I guess she
- thought such a handsome young husband was worth all ‘at ever she had, and
- he might take it and welcome, but I lay she’ll rue her bargain afore
- long. They say she begins already to see ‘at he isn’t not altogether
- that nice, generous, perlite, delightful gentleman ‘at she thought him
- afore marriage—he begins a being careless and masterful already. Ay, and
- she’ll find him harder and carelesser nor she thinks on.’
- ‘You seem to be well acquainted with him,’ I observed.
- ‘I am, sir; I’ve known him since he was quite a young gentleman; and a
- proud ’un he was, and a wilful. I was servant yonder for several years;
- but I couldn’t stand their niggardly ways—she got ever longer and worse,
- did missis, with her nipping and screwing, and watching and grudging; so
- I thought I’d find another place.’
- ‘Are we not near the house?’ said I, interrupting him.
- ‘Yes, sir; yond’s the park.’
- My heart sank within me to behold that stately mansion in the midst of
- its expansive grounds. The park as beautiful now, in its wintry garb, as
- it could be in its summer glory: the majestic sweep, the undulating swell
- and fall, displayed to full advantage in that robe of dazzling purity,
- stainless and printless—save one long, winding track left by the trooping
- deer—the stately timber-trees with their heavy-laden branches gleaming
- white against the dull, grey sky; the deep, encircling woods; the broad
- expanse of water sleeping in frozen quiet; and the weeping ash and willow
- drooping their snow-clad boughs above it—all presented a picture,
- striking indeed, and pleasing to an unencumbered mind, but by no means
- encouraging to me. There was one comfort, however,—all this was entailed
- upon little Arthur, and could not under any circumstances, strictly
- speaking, be his mother’s. But how was she situated? Overcoming with a
- sudden effort my repugnance to mention her name to my garrulous
- companion, I asked him if he knew whether her late husband had left a
- will, and how the property had been disposed of. Oh, yes, he knew all
- about it; and I was quickly informed that to her had been left the full
- control and management of the estate during her son’s minority, besides
- the absolute, unconditional possession of her own fortune (but I knew
- that her father had not given her much), and the small additional sum
- that had been settled upon her before marriage.
- Before the close of the explanation we drew up at the park-gates. Now
- for the trial. If I should find her within—but alas! she might be still
- at Staningley: her brother had given me no intimation to the contrary. I
- inquired at the porter’s lodge if Mrs. Huntingdon were at home. No, she
- was with her aunt in —shire, but was expected to return before Christmas.
- She usually spent most of her time at Staningley, only coming to
- Grassdale occasionally, when the management of affairs, or the interest
- of her tenants and dependents, required her presence.
- ‘Near what town is Staningley situated?’ I asked. The requisite
- information was soon obtained. ‘Now then, my man, give me the reins, and
- we’ll return to M—. I must have some breakfast at the “Rose and Crown,”
- and then away to Staningley by the first coach for —.’
- At M— I had time before the coach started to replenish my forces with a
- hearty breakfast, and to obtain the refreshment of my usual morning’s
- ablutions, and the amelioration of some slight change in my toilet, and
- also to despatch a short note to my mother (excellent son that I was), to
- assure her that I was still in existence, and to excuse my non-appearance
- at the expected time. It was a long journey to Staningley for those
- slow-travelling days, but I did not deny myself needful refreshment on
- the road, nor even a night’s rest at a wayside inn, choosing rather to
- brook a little delay than to present myself worn, wild, and
- weather-beaten before my mistress and her aunt, who would be astonished
- enough to see me without that. Next morning, therefore, I not only
- fortified myself with as substantial a breakfast as my excited feelings
- would allow me to swallow, but I bestowed a little more than usual time
- and care upon my toilet; and, furnished with a change of linen from my
- small carpet-bag, well-brushed clothes, well-polished boots, and neat new
- gloves, I mounted ‘The Lightning,’ and resumed my journey. I had nearly
- two stages yet before me, but the coach, I was informed, passed through
- the neighbourhood of Staningley, and having desired to be set down as
- near the Hall as possible, I had nothing to do but to sit with folded
- arms and speculate upon the coming hour.
- It was a clear, frosty morning. The very fact of sitting exalted aloft,
- surveying the snowy landscape and sweet sunny sky, inhaling the pure,
- bracing air, and crunching away over the crisp frozen snow, was
- exhilarating enough in itself; but add to this the idea of to what goal I
- was hastening, and whom I expected to meet, and you may have some faint
- conception of my frame of mind at the time—only a faint one, though: for
- my heart swelled with unspeakable delight, and my spirits rose almost to
- madness, in spite of my prudent endeavours to bind them down to a
- reasonable platitude by thinking of the undeniable difference between
- Helen’s rank and mine; of all that she had passed through since our
- parting; of her long, unbroken silence; and, above all, of her cool,
- cautious aunt, whose counsels she would doubtless be careful not to
- slight again. These considerations made my heart flutter with anxiety,
- and my chest heave with impatience to get the crisis over; but they could
- not dim her image in my mind, or mar the vivid recollection of what had
- been said and felt between us, or destroy the keen anticipation of what
- was to be: in fact, I could not realise their terrors now. Towards the
- close of the journey, however, a couple of my fellow-passengers kindly
- came to my assistance, and brought me low enough.
- ‘Fine land this,’ said one of them, pointing with his umbrella to the
- wide fields on the right, conspicuous for their compact hedgerows, deep,
- well-cut ditches, and fine timber-trees, growing sometimes on the
- borders, sometimes in the midst of the enclosure: ‘very fine land, if you
- saw it in the summer or spring.’
- ‘Ay,’ responded the other, a gruff elderly man, with a drab greatcoat
- buttoned up to the chin, and a cotton umbrella between his knees. ‘It’s
- old Maxwell’s, I suppose.’
- ‘It was his, sir; but he’s dead now, you’re aware, and has left it all to
- his niece.’
- ‘All?’
- ‘Every rood of it, and the mansion-house and all! every hatom of his
- worldly goods, except just a trifle, by way of remembrance, to his nephew
- down in —shire, and an annuity to his wife.’
- ‘It’s strange, sir!’
- ‘It is, sir; and she wasn’t his own niece neither. But he had no near
- relations of his own—none but a nephew he’d quarrelled with; and he
- always had a partiality for this one. And then his wife advised him to
- it, they say: she’d brought most of the property, and it was her wish
- that this lady should have it.’
- ‘Humph! She’ll be a fine catch for somebody.’
- ‘She will so. She’s a widow, but quite young yet, and uncommon handsome:
- a fortune of her own, besides, and only one child, and she’s nursing a
- fine estate for him in —. There’ll be lots to speak for her! ’fraid
- there’s no chance for uz’—(facetiously jogging me with his elbow, as well
- as his companion)—‘ha, ha, ha! No offence, sir, I hope?’—(to me).
- ‘Ahem! I should think she’ll marry none but a nobleman myself. Look ye,
- sir,’ resumed he, turning to his other neighbour, and pointing past me
- with his umbrella, ‘that’s the Hall: grand park, you see, and all them
- woods—plenty of timber there, and lots of game. Hallo! what now?’
- This exclamation was occasioned by the sudden stoppage of the coach at
- the park-gates.
- ‘Gen’leman for Staningley Hall?’ cried the coachman and I rose and threw
- my carpet-bag on to the ground, preparatory to dropping myself down after
- it.
- ‘Sickly, sir?’ asked my talkative neighbour, staring me in the face. I
- daresay it was white enough.
- ‘No. Here, coachman!’
- ‘Thank’ee, sir.—All right!’
- The coachman pocketed his fee and drove away, leaving me, not walking up
- the park, but pacing to and fro before its gates, with folded arms, and
- eyes fixed upon the ground, an overwhelming force of images, thoughts,
- impressions crowding on my mind, and nothing tangibly distinct but this:
- My love had been cherished in vain—my hope was gone for ever; I must tear
- myself away at once, and banish or suppress all thoughts of her, like the
- remembrance of a wild, mad dream. Gladly would I have lingered round the
- place for hours, in the hope of catching at least one distant glimpse of
- her before I went, but it must not be—I must not suffer her to see me;
- for what could have brought me hither but the hope of reviving her
- attachment, with a view hereafter to obtain her hand? And could I bear
- that she should think me capable of such a thing?—of presuming upon the
- acquaintance—the love, if you will—accidentally contracted, or rather
- forced upon her against her will, when she was an unknown fugitive,
- toiling for her own support, apparently without fortune, family, or
- connections; to come upon her now, when she was reinstated in her proper
- sphere, and claim a share in her prosperity, which, had it never failed
- her, would most certainly have kept her unknown to me for ever? And
- this, too, when we had parted sixteen months ago, and she had expressly
- forbidden me to hope for a re-union in this world, and never sent me a
- line or a message from that day to this. No! The very idea was
- intolerable.
- And even if she should have a lingering affection for me still, ought I
- to disturb her peace by awakening those feelings? to subject her to the
- struggles of conflicting duty and inclination—to whichsoever side the
- latter might allure, or the former imperatively call her—whether she
- should deem it her duty to risk the slights and censures of the world,
- the sorrow and displeasure of those she loved, for a romantic idea of
- truth and constancy to me, or to sacrifice her individual wishes to the
- feelings of her friends and her own sense of prudence and the fitness of
- things? No—and I would not! I would go at once, and she should never
- know that I had approached the place of her abode: for though I might
- disclaim all idea of ever aspiring to her hand, or even of soliciting a
- place in her friendly regard, her peace should not be broken by my
- presence, nor her heart afflicted by the sight of my fidelity.
- ‘Adieu then, dear Helen, forever! Forever adieu!’
- So said I—and yet I could not tear myself away. I moved a few paces, and
- then looked back, for one last view of her stately home, that I might
- have its outward form, at least, impressed upon my mind as indelibly as
- her own image, which, alas! I must not see again—then walked a few steps
- further; and then, lost in melancholy musings, paused again and leant my
- back against a rough old tree that grew beside the road.
- CHAPTER LIII
- While standing thus, absorbed in my gloomy reverie, a gentleman’s
- carriage came round the corner of the road. I did not look at it; and
- had it rolled quietly by me, I should not have remembered the fact of its
- appearance at all; but a tiny voice from within it roused me by
- exclaiming, ‘Mamma, mamma, here’s Mr. Markham!’
- I did not hear the reply, but presently the same voice answered, ‘It is
- indeed, mamma—look for yourself.’
- I did not raise my eyes, but I suppose mamma looked, for a clear
- melodious voice, whose tones thrilled through my nerves, exclaimed, ‘Oh,
- aunt! here’s Mr. Markham, Arthur’s friend! Stop, Richard!’
- There was such evidence of joyous though suppressed excitement in the
- utterance of those few words—especially that tremulous, ‘Oh, aunt’—that
- it threw me almost off my guard. The carriage stopped immediately, and I
- looked up and met the eye of a pale, grave, elderly lady surveying me
- from the open window. She bowed, and so did I, and then she withdrew her
- head, while Arthur screamed to the footman to let him out; but before
- that functionary could descend from his box a hand was silently put forth
- from the carriage window. I knew that hand, though a black glove
- concealed its delicate whiteness and half its fair proportions, and
- quickly seizing it, I pressed it in my own—ardently for a moment, but
- instantly recollecting myself, I dropped it, and it was immediately
- withdrawn.
- ‘Were you coming to see us, or only passing by?’ asked the low voice of
- its owner, who, I felt, was attentively surveying my countenance from
- behind the thick black veil which, with the shadowing panels, entirely
- concealed her own from me.
- ‘I—I came to see the place,’ faltered I.
- ‘The place,’ repeated she, in a tone which betokened more displeasure or
- disappointment than surprise.
- ‘Will you not enter it, then?’
- ‘If you wish it.’
- ‘Can you doubt?’
- ‘Yes, yes! he must enter,’ cried Arthur, running round from the other
- door; and seizing my hand in both his, he shook it heartily.
- ‘Do you remember me, sir?’ said he.
- ‘Yes, full well, my little man, altered though you are,’ replied I,
- surveying the comparatively tall, slim young gentleman, with his mother’s
- image visibly stamped upon his fair, intelligent features, in spite of
- the blue eyes beaming with gladness, and the bright locks clustering
- beneath his cap.
- ‘Am I not grown?’ said he, stretching himself up to his full height.
- ‘Grown! three inches, upon my word!’
- ‘I was seven last birthday,’ was the proud rejoinder. ‘In seven years
- more I shall be as tall as you nearly.’
- ‘Arthur,’ said his mother, ‘tell him to come in. Go on, Richard.’
- There was a touch of sadness as well as coldness in her voice, but I knew
- not to what to ascribe it. The carriage drove on and entered the gates
- before us. My little companion led me up the park, discoursing merrily
- all the way. Arrived at the hall-door, I paused on the steps and looked
- round me, waiting to recover my composure, if possible—or, at any rate,
- to remember my new-formed resolutions and the principles on which they
- were founded; and it was not till Arthur had been for some time gently
- pulling my coat, and repeating his invitations to enter, that I at length
- consented to accompany him into the apartment where the ladies awaited
- us.
- Helen eyed me as I entered with a kind of gentle, serious scrutiny, and
- politely asked after Mrs. Markham and Rose. I respectfully answered her
- inquiries. Mrs. Maxwell begged me to be seated, observing it was rather
- cold, but she supposed I had not travelled far that morning.
- ‘Not quite twenty miles,’ I answered.
- ‘Not on foot!’
- ‘No, Madam, by coach.’
- ‘Here’s Rachel, sir,’ said Arthur, the only truly happy one amongst us,
- directing my attention to that worthy individual, who had just entered to
- take her mistress’s things. She vouchsafed me an almost friendly smile
- of recognition—a favour that demanded, at least, a civil salutation on my
- part, which was accordingly given and respectfully returned—she had seen
- the error of her former estimation of my character.
- When Helen was divested of her lugubrious bonnet and veil, her heavy
- winter cloak, &c., she looked so like herself that I knew not how to bear
- it. I was particularly glad to see her beautiful black hair, unstinted
- still, and unconcealed in its glossy luxuriance.
- ‘Mamma has left off her widow’s cap in honour of uncle’s marriage,’
- observed Arthur, reading my looks with a child’s mingled simplicity and
- quickness of observation. Mamma looked grave and Mrs. Maxwell shook her
- head. ‘And aunt Maxwell is never going to leave off hers,’ persisted the
- naughty boy; but when he saw that his pertness was seriously displeasing
- and painful to his aunt, he went and silently put his arm round her neck,
- kissed her cheek, and withdrew to the recess of one of the great
- bay-windows, where he quietly amused himself with his dog, while Mrs.
- Maxwell gravely discussed with me the interesting topics of the weather,
- the season, and the roads. I considered her presence very useful as a
- check upon my natural impulses—an antidote to those emotions of
- tumultuous excitement which would otherwise have carried me away against
- my reason and my will; but just then I felt the restraint almost
- intolerable, and I had the greatest difficulty in forcing myself to
- attend to her remarks and answer them with ordinary politeness; for I was
- sensible that Helen was standing within a few feet of me beside the fire.
- I dared not look at her, but I felt her eye was upon me, and from one
- hasty, furtive glance, I thought her cheek was slightly flushed, and that
- her fingers, as she played with her watch-chain, were agitated with that
- restless, trembling motion which betokens high excitement.
- ‘Tell me,’ said she, availing herself of the first pause in the attempted
- conversation between her aunt and me, and speaking fast and low, with her
- eyes bent on the gold chain—for I now ventured another glance—‘Tell me
- how you all are at Linden-hope—has nothing happened since I left you?’
- ‘I believe not.’
- ‘Nobody dead? nobody married?’
- ‘No.’
- ‘Or—or expecting to marry?—No old ties dissolved or new ones formed? no
- old friends forgotten or supplanted?’
- She dropped her voice so low in the last sentence that no one could have
- caught the concluding words but myself, and at the same time turned her
- eyes upon me with a dawning smile, most sweetly melancholy, and a look of
- timid though keen inquiry that made my cheeks tingle with inexpressible
- emotions.
- ‘I believe not,’ I answered. ‘Certainly not, if others are as little
- changed as I.’ Her face glowed in sympathy with mine.
- ‘And you really did not mean to call?’ she exclaimed.
- ‘I feared to intrude.’
- ‘To intrude!’ cried she, with an impatient gesture. ‘What—‘ but as if
- suddenly recollecting her aunt’s presence, she checked herself, and,
- turning to that lady, continued—‘Why, aunt, this man is my brother’s
- close friend, and was my own intimate acquaintance (for a few short
- months at least), and professed a great attachment to my boy—and when he
- passes the house, so many scores of miles from his home, he declines to
- look in for fear of intruding!’
- ‘Mr. Markham is over-modest,’ observed Mrs. Maxwell.
- ‘Over-ceremonious rather,’ said her niece—‘over—well, it’s no matter.’
- And turning from me, she seated herself in a chair beside the table, and
- pulling a book to her by the cover, began to turn over the leaves in an
- energetic kind of abstraction.
- ‘If I had known,’ said I, ‘that you would have honoured me by remembering
- me as an intimate acquaintance, I most likely should not have denied
- myself the pleasure of calling upon you, but I thought you had forgotten
- me long ago.’
- ‘You judged of others by yourself,’ muttered she without raising her eyes
- from the book, but reddening as she spoke, and hastily turning over a
- dozen leaves at once.
- There was a pause, of which Arthur thought he might venture to avail
- himself to introduce his handsome young setter, and show me how
- wonderfully it was grown and improved, and to ask after the welfare of
- its father Sancho. Mrs. Maxwell then withdrew to take off her things.
- Helen immediately pushed the book from her, and after silently surveying
- her son, his friend, and his dog for a few moments, she dismissed the
- former from the room under pretence of wishing him to fetch his last new
- book to show me. The child obeyed with alacrity; but I continued
- caressing the dog. The silence might have lasted till its master’s
- return, had it depended on me to break it; but, in half a minute or less,
- my hostess impatiently rose, and, taking her former station on the rug
- between me and the chimney corner, earnestly exclaimed—
- ‘Gilbert, what is the matter with you?—why are you so changed? It is a
- very indiscreet question, I know,’ she hastened to add: ‘perhaps a very
- rude one—don’t answer it if you think so—but I hate mysteries and
- concealments.’
- ‘I am not changed, Helen—unfortunately I am as keen and passionate as
- ever—it is not I, it is circumstances that are changed.’
- ‘What circumstances? Do tell me!’ Her cheek was blanched with the very
- anguish of anxiety—could it be with the fear that I had rashly pledged my
- faith to another?
- ‘I’ll tell you at once,’ said I. ‘I will confess that I came here for
- the purpose of seeing you (not without some monitory misgivings at my own
- presumption, and fears that I should be as little welcome as expected
- when I came), but I did not know that this estate was yours until
- enlightened on the subject of your inheritance by the conversation of two
- fellow-passengers in the last stage of my journey; and then I saw at once
- the folly of the hopes I had cherished, and the madness of retaining them
- a moment longer; and though I alighted at your gates, I determined not to
- enter within them; I lingered a few minutes to see the place, but was
- fully resolved to return to M— without seeing its mistress.’
- ‘And if my aunt and I had not been just returning from our morning drive,
- I should have seen and heard no more of you?’
- ‘I thought it would be better for both that we should not meet,’ replied
- I, as calmly as I could, but not daring to speak above my breath, from
- conscious inability to steady my voice, and not daring to look in her
- face lest my firmness should forsake me altogether. ‘I thought an
- interview would only disturb your peace and madden me. But I am glad,
- now, of this opportunity of seeing you once more and knowing that you
- have not forgotten me, and of assuring you that I shall never cease to
- remember you.’
- There was a moment’s pause. Mrs. Huntingdon moved away, and stood in the
- recess of the window. Did she regard this as an intimation that modesty
- alone prevented me from asking her hand? and was she considering how to
- repulse me with the smallest injury to my feelings? Before I could speak
- to relieve her from such a perplexity, she broke the silence herself by
- suddenly turning towards me and observing—
- ‘You might have had such an opportunity before—as far, I mean, as regards
- assuring me of your kindly recollections, and yourself of mine, if you
- had written to me.’
- ‘I would have done so, but I did not know your address, and did not like
- to ask your brother, because I thought he would object to my writing; but
- this would not have deterred me for a moment, if I could have ventured to
- believe that you expected to hear from me, or even wasted a thought upon
- your unhappy friend; but your silence naturally led me to conclude myself
- forgotten.’
- ‘Did you expect me to write to you, then?’
- ‘No, Helen—Mrs. Huntingdon,’ said I, blushing at the implied imputation,
- ‘certainly not; but if you had sent me a message through your brother, or
- even asked him about me now and then—’
- ‘I did ask about you frequently. I was not going to do more,’ continued
- she, smiling, ‘so long as you continued to restrict yourself to a few
- polite inquiries about my health.’
- ‘Your brother never told me that you had mentioned my name.’
- ‘Did you ever ask him?’
- ‘No; for I saw he did not wish to be questioned about you, or to afford
- the slightest encouragement or assistance to my too obstinate
- attachment.’ Helen did not reply. ‘And he was perfectly right,’ added
- I. But she remained in silence, looking out upon the snowy lawn. ‘Oh, I
- will relieve her of my presence,’ thought I; and immediately I rose and
- advanced to take leave, with a most heroic resolution—but pride was at
- the bottom of it, or it could not have carried me through.
- ‘Are you going already?’ said she, taking the hand I offered, and not
- immediately letting it go.
- ‘Why should I stay any longer?’
- ‘Wait till Arthur comes, at least.’
- Only too glad to obey, I stood and leant against the opposite side of the
- window.
- ‘You told me you were not changed,’ said my companion: ‘you are—very much
- so.’
- ‘No, Mrs. Huntingdon, I only ought to be.’
- ‘Do you mean to maintain that you have the same regard for me that you
- had when last we met?’
- ‘I have; but it would be wrong to talk of it now.’
- ‘It was wrong to talk of it then, Gilbert; it would not now—unless to do
- so would be to violate the truth.’
- I was too much agitated to speak; but, without waiting for an answer, she
- turned away her glistening eye and crimson cheek, and threw up the window
- and looked out, whether to calm her own, excited feelings, or to relieve
- her embarrassment, or only to pluck that beautiful half-blown
- Christmas-rose that grew upon the little shrub without, just peeping from
- the snow that had hitherto, no doubt, defended it from the frost, and was
- now melting away in the sun. Pluck it, however, she did, and having
- gently dashed the glittering powder from its leaves, approached it to her
- lips and said:
- ‘This rose is not so fragrant as a summer flower, but it has stood
- through hardships none of them could bear: the cold rain of winter has
- sufficed to nourish it, and its faint sun to warm it; the bleak winds
- have not blanched it, or broken its stem, and the keen frost has not
- blighted it. Look, Gilbert, it is still fresh and blooming as a flower
- can be, with the cold snow even now on its petals.—Will you have it?’
- I held out my hand: I dared not speak lest my emotion should overmaster
- me. She laid the rose across my palm, but I scarcely closed my fingers
- upon it, so deeply was I absorbed in thinking what might be the meaning
- of her words, and what I ought to do or say upon the occasion; whether to
- give way to my feelings or restrain them still. Misconstruing this
- hesitation into indifference—or reluctance even—to accept her gift, Helen
- suddenly snatched it from my hand, threw it out on to the snow, shut down
- the window with an emphasis, and withdrew to the fire.
- ‘Helen, what means this?’ I cried, electrified at this startling change
- in her demeanour.
- ‘You did not understand my gift,’ said she—‘or, what is worse, you
- despised it. I’m sorry I gave it you; but since I did make such a
- mistake, the only remedy I could think of was to take it away.’
- ‘You misunderstood me cruelly,’ I replied, and in a minute I had opened
- the window again, leaped out, picked up the flower, brought it in, and
- presented it to her, imploring her to give it me again, and I would keep
- it for ever for her sake, and prize it more highly than anything in the
- world I possessed.
- ‘And will this content you?’ said she, as she took it in her hand.
- ‘It shall,’ I answered.
- ‘There, then; take it.’
- I pressed it earnestly to my lips, and put it in my bosom, Mrs.
- Huntingdon looking on with a half-sarcastic smile.
- ‘Now, are you going?’ said she.
- ‘I will if—if I must.’
- ‘You are changed,’ persisted she—‘you are grown either very proud or very
- indifferent.’
- ‘I am neither, Helen—Mrs. Huntingdon. If you could see my heart—’
- ‘You must be one,—if not both. And why Mrs. Huntingdon?—why not Helen,
- as before?’
- ‘Helen, then—dear Helen!’ I murmured. I was in an agony of mingled love,
- hope, delight, uncertainty, and suspense.
- ‘The rose I gave you was an emblem of my heart,’ said she; ‘would you
- take it away and leave me here alone?’
- ‘Would you give me your hand too, if I asked it?’
- ‘Have I not said enough?’ she answered, with a most enchanting smile. I
- snatched her hand, and would have fervently kissed it, but suddenly
- checked myself, and said,—
- ‘But have you considered the consequences?’
- ‘Hardly, I think, or I should not have offered myself to one too proud to
- take me, or too indifferent to make his affection outweigh my worldly
- goods.’
- Stupid blockhead that I was!—I trembled to clasp her in my arms, but
- dared not believe in so much joy, and yet restrained myself to say,—
- ‘But if you should repent!’
- ‘It would be your fault,’ she replied: ‘I never shall, unless you
- bitterly disappoint me. If you have not sufficient confidence in my
- affection to believe this, let me alone.’
- ‘My darling angel—my own Helen,’ cried I, now passionately kissing the
- hand I still retained, and throwing my left arm around her, ‘you never
- shall repent, if it depend on me alone. But have you thought of your
- aunt?’ I trembled for the answer, and clasped her closer to my heart in
- the instinctive dread of losing my new-found treasure.
- ‘My aunt must not know of it yet,’ said she. ‘She would think it a rash,
- wild step, because she could not imagine how well I know you; but she
- must know you herself, and learn to like you. You must leave us now,
- after lunch, and come again in spring, and make a longer stay, and
- cultivate her acquaintance, and I know you will like each other.’
- ‘And then you will be mine,’ said I, printing a kiss upon her lips, and
- another, and another; for I was as daring and impetuous now as I had been
- backward and constrained before.
- ‘No—in another year,’ replied she, gently disengaging herself from my
- embrace, but still fondly clasping my hand.
- ‘Another year! Oh, Helen, I could not wait so long!’
- ‘Where is your fidelity?’
- ‘I mean I could not endure the misery of so long a separation.’
- ‘It would not be a separation: we will write every day: my spirit shall
- be always with you, and sometimes you shall see me with your bodily eye.
- I will not be such a hypocrite as to pretend that I desire to wait so
- long myself, but as my marriage is to please myself, alone, I ought to
- consult my friends about the time of it.’
- ‘Your friends will disapprove.’
- ‘They will not greatly disapprove, dear Gilbert,’ said she, earnestly
- kissing my hand; ‘they cannot, when they know you, or, if they could,
- they would not be true friends—I should not care for their estrangement.
- Now are you satisfied?’ She looked up in my face with a smile of
- ineffable tenderness.
- ‘Can I be otherwise, with your love? And you do love me, Helen?’ said I,
- not doubting the fact, but wishing to hear it confirmed by her own
- acknowledgment. ‘If you loved as I do,’ she earnestly replied, ‘you
- would not have so nearly lost me—these scruples of false delicacy and
- pride would never thus have troubled you—you would have seen that the
- greatest worldly distinctions and discrepancies of rank, birth, and
- fortune are as dust in the balance compared with the unity of accordant
- thoughts and feelings, and truly loving, sympathising hearts and souls.’
- ‘But this is too much happiness,’ said I, embracing her again; ‘I have
- not deserved it, Helen—I dare not believe in such felicity: and the
- longer I have to wait, the greater will be my dread that something will
- intervene to snatch you from me—and think, a thousand things may happen
- in a year!—I shall be in one long fever of restless terror and impatience
- all the time. And besides, winter is such a dreary season.’
- ‘I thought so too,’ replied she gravely: ‘I would not be married in
- winter—in December, at least,’ she added, with a shudder—for in that
- month had occurred both the ill-starred marriage that had bound her to
- her former husband, and the terrible death that released her—‘and
- therefore I said another year, in spring.’
- ‘Next spring?’
- ‘No, no—next autumn, perhaps.’
- ‘Summer, then?’
- ‘Well, the close of summer. There now! be satisfied.’
- While she was speaking Arthur re-entered the room—good boy for keeping
- out so long.
- ‘Mamma, I couldn’t find the book in either of the places you told me to
- look for it’ (there was a conscious something in mamma’s smile that
- seemed to say, ‘No, dear, I knew you could not’), ‘but Rachel got it for
- me at last. Look, Mr. Markham, a natural history, with all kinds of
- birds and beasts in it, and the reading as nice as the pictures!’
- In great good humour I sat down to examine the book, and drew the little
- fellow between my knees. Had he come a minute before I should have
- received him less graciously, but now I affectionately stroked his
- curling locks, and even kissed his ivory forehead: he was my own Helen’s
- son, and therefore mine; and as such I have ever since regarded him.
- That pretty child is now a fine young man: he has realised his mother’s
- brightest expectations, and is at present residing in Grassdale Manor
- with his young wife—the merry little Helen Hattersley of yore.
- I had not looked through half the book before Mrs. Maxwell appeared to
- invite me into the other room to lunch. That lady’s cool, distant
- manners rather chilled me at first; but I did my best to propitiate her,
- and not entirely without success, I think, even in that first short
- visit; for when I talked cheerfully to her, she gradually became more
- kind and cordial, and when I departed she bade me a gracious adieu,
- hoping ere long to have the pleasure of seeing me again.
- ‘But you must not go till you have seen the conservatory, my aunt’s
- winter garden,’ said Helen, as I advanced to take leave of her, with as
- much philosophy and self-command as I could summon to my aid.
- I gladly availed myself of such a respite, and followed her into a large
- and beautiful conservatory, plentifully furnished with flowers,
- considering the season—but, of course, I had little attention to spare
- for them. It was not, however, for any tender colloquy that my companion
- had brought me there:—
- ‘My aunt is particularly fond of flowers,’ she observed, ‘and she is fond
- of Staningley too: I brought you here to offer a petition in her behalf,
- that this may be her home as long as she lives, and—if it be not our home
- likewise—that I may often see her and be with her; for I fear she will be
- sorry to lose me; and though she leads a retired and contemplative life,
- she is apt to get low-spirited if left too much alone.’
- ‘By all means, dearest Helen!—do what you will with your own. I should
- not dream of wishing your aunt to leave the place under any
- circumstances; and we will live either here or elsewhere as you and she
- may determine, and you shall see her as often as you like. I know she
- must be pained to part with you, and I am willing to make any reparation
- in my power. I love her for your sake, and her happiness shall be as
- dear to me as that of my own mother.’
- ‘Thank you, darling! you shall have a kiss for that. Good-by. There
- now—there, Gilbert—let me go—here’s Arthur; don’t astonish his infantile
- brain with your madness.’
- * * * * *
- But it is time to bring my narrative to a close. Any one but you would
- say I had made it too long already. But for your satisfaction I will add
- a few words more; because I know you will have a fellow-feeling for the
- old lady, and will wish to know the last of her history. I did come
- again in spring, and, agreeably to Helen’s injunctions, did my best to
- cultivate her acquaintance. She received me very kindly, having been,
- doubtless, already prepared to think highly of my character by her
- niece’s too favourable report. I turned my best side out, of course, and
- we got along marvellously well together. When my ambitious intentions
- were made known to her, she took it more sensibly than I had ventured to
- hope. Her only remark on the subject, in my hearing, was—
- ‘And so, Mr. Markham, you are going to rob me of my niece, I understand.
- Well! I hope God will prosper your union, and make my dear girl happy at
- last. Could she have been contented to remain single, I own I should
- have been better satisfied; but if she must marry again, I know of no
- one, now living and of a suitable age, to whom I would more willingly
- resign her than yourself, or who would be more likely to appreciate her
- worth and make, her truly happy, as far as I can tell.’
- Of course I was delighted with the compliment, and hoped to show her that
- she was not mistaken in her favourable judgment.
- ‘I have, however, one request to offer,’ continued she. ‘It seems I am
- still to look on Staningley as my home: I wish you to make it yours
- likewise, for Helen is attached to the place and to me—as I am to her.
- There are painful associations connected with Grassdale, which she cannot
- easily overcome; and I shall not molest you with my company or
- interference here: I am a very quiet person, and shall keep my own
- apartments, and attend to my own concerns, and only see you now and
- then.’
- Of course I most readily consented to this; and we lived in the greatest
- harmony with our dear aunt until the day of her death, which melancholy
- event took place a few years after—melancholy, not to herself (for it
- came quietly upon her, and she was glad to reach her journey’s end), but
- only to the few loving friends and grateful dependents she left behind.
- To return, however, to my own affairs: I was married in summer, on a
- glorious August morning. It took the whole eight months, and all Helen’s
- kindness and goodness to boot, to overcome my mother’s prejudices against
- my bride-elect, and to reconcile her to the idea of my leaving Linden
- Grange and living so far away. Yet she was gratified at her son’s good
- fortune after all, and proudly attributed it all to his own superior
- merits and endowments. I bequeathed the farm to Fergus, with better
- hopes of its prosperity than I should have had a year ago under similar
- circumstances; for he had lately fallen in love with the Vicar of L—’s
- eldest daughter—a lady whose superiority had roused his latent virtues,
- and stimulated him to the most surprising exertions, not only to gain her
- affection and esteem, and to obtain a fortune sufficient to aspire to her
- hand, but to render himself worthy of her, in his own eyes, as well as in
- those of her parents; and in the end he was successful, as you already
- know. As for myself, I need not tell you how happily my Helen and I have
- lived together, and how blessed we still are in each other’s society, and
- in the promising young scions that are growing up about us. We are just
- now looking forward to the advent of you and Rose, for the time of your
- annual visit draws nigh, when you must leave your dusty, smoky, noisy,
- toiling, striving city for a season of invigorating relaxation and social
- retirement with us.
- Till then, farewell,
- GILBERT MARKHAM.
- STANINGLEY: _June_ 10_th_, 1847.
- * * * * *
- THE END
- * * * * *
- Printed by SPOTTISWOODE, BALLENTYNE & CO. LTD.
- Colchester, London & Eton, England.
- Footnotes:
- {0} Introduction to _Wuthering Heights_, p. xl. ‘Still, as I mused the
- naked room,’ &c.
- {1} This Preface is now printed here for the first time in a collected
- edition of the works of the Brontë sisters.
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