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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Shirley, by Charlotte Brontë
  • This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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  • Title: Shirley
  • Author: Charlotte Brontë
  • Release Date: November 16, 2009 [EBook #30486]
  • [Last updated: September 8, 2020]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SHIRLEY ***
  • Produced by Brenda Lewis, Fox in the Stars and the Online
  • Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at
  • http://www.pgdpcanada.net
  • [Illustration: Moore placed his hand on his cousin's shoulder, stooped,
  • and left a kiss on her forehead.]
  • SHIRLEY
  • BY CHARLOTTE BRONTË
  • T. Nelson & Sons
  • CONTENTS.
  • I. LEVITICAL 3
  • II. THE WAGONS 16
  • III. MR. YORKE 31
  • IV. MR. YORKE (CONTINUED) 40
  • V. HOLLOW'S COTTAGE 51
  • VI. CORIOLANUS 66
  • VII. THE CURATES AT TEA 85
  • VIII. NOAH AND MOSES 110
  • IX. BRIARMAINS 125
  • X. OLD MAIDS 147
  • XI. FIELDHEAD 164
  • XII. SHIRLEY AND CAROLINE 181
  • XIII. FURTHER COMMUNICATIONS ON BUSINESS 201
  • XIV. SHIRLEY SEEKS TO BE SAVED BY WORKS 226
  • XV. MR. DONNE'S EXODUS 239
  • XVI. WHITSUNTIDE 253
  • XVII. THE SCHOOL FEAST 264
  • XVIII. WHICH THE GENTEEL READER IS RECOMMENDED TO SKIP, LOW
  • PERSONS BEING HERE INTRODUCED 279
  • XIX. A SUMMER NIGHT 290
  • XX. TO-MORROW 306
  • XXI. MRS. PRYOR 319
  • XXII. TWO LIVES 336
  • XXIII. AN EVENING OUT 346
  • XXIV. THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH 365
  • XXV. THE WEST WIND BLOWS 384
  • XXVI. OLD COPY-BOOKS 392
  • XXVII. THE FIRST BLUESTOCKING 410
  • XXVIII. PHŒBE 433
  • XXIX. LOUIS MOORE 453
  • XXX. RUSHEDGE--A CONFESSIONAL 461
  • XXXI. UNCLE AND NIECE 475
  • XXXII. THE SCHOOLBOY AND THE WOOD-NYMPH 491
  • XXXIII. MARTIN'S TACTICS 502
  • XXXIV. CASE OF DOMESTIC PERSECUTION--REMARKABLE INSTANCE
  • OF PIOUS PERSEVERANCE IN THE DISCHARGE OF RELIGIOUS
  • DUTIES 513
  • XXXV. WHEREIN MATTERS MAKE SOME PROGRESS, BUT NOT MUCH 521
  • XXXVI. WRITTEN IN THE SCHOOLROOM 534
  • XXXVII. THE WINDING-UP 555
  • SHIRLEY.
  • CHAPTER I.
  • LEVITICAL.
  • Of late years an abundant shower of curates has fallen upon the north of
  • England: they lie very thick on the hills; every parish has one or more
  • of them; they are young enough to be very active, and ought to be doing
  • a great deal of good. But not of late years are we about to speak; we
  • are going back to the beginning of this century: late years--present
  • years are dusty, sunburnt, hot, arid; we will evade the noon, forget it
  • in siesta, pass the midday in slumber, and dream of dawn.
  • If you think, from this prelude, that anything like a romance is
  • preparing for you, reader, you never were more mistaken. Do you
  • anticipate sentiment, and poetry, and reverie? Do you expect passion,
  • and stimulus, and melodrama? Calm your expectations; reduce them to a
  • lowly standard. Something real, cool, and solid lies before you;
  • something unromantic as Monday morning, when all who have work wake with
  • the consciousness that they must rise and betake themselves thereto. It
  • is not positively affirmed that you shall not have a taste of the
  • exciting, perhaps towards the middle and close of the meal, but it is
  • resolved that the first dish set upon the table shall be one that a
  • Catholic--ay, even an Anglo-Catholic--might eat on Good Friday in
  • Passion Week: it shall be cold lentils and vinegar without oil; it shall
  • be unleavened bread with bitter herbs, and no roast lamb.
  • Of late years, I say, an abundant shower of curates has fallen upon the
  • north of England; but in eighteen-hundred-eleven-twelve that affluent
  • rain had not descended. Curates were scarce then: there was no Pastoral
  • Aid--no Additional Curates' Society to stretch a helping hand to
  • worn-out old rectors and incumbents, and give them the wherewithal to
  • pay a vigorous young colleague from Oxford or Cambridge. The present
  • successors of the apostles, disciples of Dr. Pusey and tools of the
  • Propaganda, were at that time being hatched under cradle-blankets, or
  • undergoing regeneration by nursery-baptism in wash-hand basins. You
  • could not have guessed by looking at any one of them that the
  • Italian-ironed double frills of its net-cap surrounded the brows of a
  • preordained, specially-sanctified successor of St. Paul, St. Peter, or
  • St. John; nor could you have foreseen in the folds of its long
  • night-gown the white surplice in which it was hereafter cruelly to
  • exercise the souls of its parishioners, and strangely to nonplus its
  • old-fashioned vicar by flourishing aloft in a pulpit the shirt-like
  • raiment which had never before waved higher than the reading-desk.
  • Yet even in those days of scarcity there were curates: the precious
  • plant was rare, but it might be found. A certain favoured district in
  • the West Riding of Yorkshire could boast three rods of Aaron blossoming
  • within a circuit of twenty miles. You shall see them, reader. Step into
  • this neat garden-house on the skirts of Whinbury, walk forward into the
  • little parlour. There they are at dinner. Allow me to introduce them to
  • you: Mr. Donne, curate of Whinbury; Mr. Malone, curate of Briarfield;
  • Mr. Sweeting, curate of Nunnely. These are Mr. Donne's lodgings, being
  • the habitation of one John Gale, a small clothier. Mr. Donne has kindly
  • invited his brethren to regale with him. You and I will join the party,
  • see what is to be seen, and hear what is to be heard. At present,
  • however, they are only eating; and while they eat we will talk aside.
  • These gentlemen are in the bloom of youth; they possess all the activity
  • of that interesting age--an activity which their moping old vicars would
  • fain turn into the channel of their pastoral duties, often expressing a
  • wish to see it expended in a diligent superintendence of the schools,
  • and in frequent visits to the sick of their respective parishes. But the
  • youthful Levites feel this to be dull work; they prefer lavishing their
  • energies on a course of proceeding which, though to other eyes it appear
  • more heavy with _ennui_, more cursed with monotony, than the toil of
  • the weaver at his loom, seems to yield them an unfailing supply of
  • enjoyment and occupation.
  • I allude to a rushing backwards and forwards, amongst themselves, to and
  • from their respective lodgings--not a round, but a triangle of visits,
  • which they keep up all the year through, in winter, spring, summer, and
  • autumn. Season and weather make no difference; with unintelligible zeal
  • they dare snow and hail, wind and rain, mire and dust, to go and dine,
  • or drink tea, or sup with each other. What attracts them it would be
  • difficult to say. It is not friendship, for whenever they meet they
  • quarrel. It is not religion--the thing is never named amongst them;
  • theology they may discuss occasionally, but piety--never. It is not the
  • love of eating and drinking: each might have as good a joint and
  • pudding, tea as potent, and toast as succulent, at his own lodgings, as
  • is served to him at his brother's. Mrs. Gale, Mrs. Hogg, and Mrs.
  • Whipp--their respective landladies--affirm that "it is just for naught
  • else but to give folk trouble." By "folk" the good ladies of course mean
  • themselves, for indeed they are kept in a continual "fry" by this system
  • of mutual invasion.
  • Mr. Donne and his guests, as I have said, are at dinner; Mrs. Gale waits
  • on them, but a spark of the hot kitchen fire is in her eye. She
  • considers that the privilege of inviting a friend to a meal
  • occasionally, without additional charge (a privilege included in the
  • terms on which she lets her lodgings), has been quite sufficiently
  • exercised of late. The present week is yet but at Thursday, and on
  • Monday Mr. Malone, the curate of Briarfield, came to breakfast and
  • stayed dinner; on Tuesday Mr. Malone and Mr. Sweeting of Nunnely came to
  • tea, remained to supper, occupied the spare bed, and favoured her with
  • their company to breakfast on Wednesday morning; now, on Thursday, they
  • are both here at dinner, and she is almost certain they will stay all
  • night. "C'en est trop," she would say, if she could speak French.
  • Mr. Sweeting is mincing the slice of roast beef on his plate, and
  • complaining that it is very tough; Mr. Donne says the beer is flat. Ay,
  • that is the worst of it: if they would only be civil Mrs. Gale wouldn't
  • mind it so much, if they would only seem satisfied with what they get
  • she wouldn't care; but "these young parsons is so high and so scornful,
  • they set everybody beneath their 'fit.' They treat her with less than
  • civility, just because she doesn't keep a servant, but does the work of
  • the house herself, as her mother did afore her; then they are always
  • speaking against Yorkshire ways and Yorkshire folk," and by that very
  • token Mrs. Gale does not believe one of them to be a real gentleman, or
  • come of gentle kin. "The old parsons is worth the whole lump of college
  • lads; they know what belongs to good manners, and is kind to high and
  • low."
  • "More bread!" cries Mr. Malone, in a tone which, though prolonged but to
  • utter two syllables, proclaims him at once a native of the land of
  • shamrocks and potatoes. Mrs. Gale hates Mr. Malone more than either of
  • the other two; but she fears him also, for he is a tall, strongly-built
  • personage, with real Irish legs and arms, and a face as genuinely
  • national--not the Milesian face, not Daniel O'Connell's style, but the
  • high-featured, North-American-Indian sort of visage, which belongs to a
  • certain class of the Irish gentry, and has a petrified and proud look,
  • better suited to the owner of an estate of slaves than to the landlord
  • of a free peasantry. Mr. Malone's father termed himself a gentleman: he
  • was poor and in debt, and besottedly arrogant; and his son was like him.
  • Mrs. Gale offered the loaf.
  • "Cut it, woman," said her guest; and the "woman" cut it accordingly. Had
  • she followed her inclinations, she would have cut the parson also; her
  • Yorkshire soul revolted absolutely from his manner of command.
  • The curates had good appetites, and though the beef was "tough," they
  • ate a great deal of it. They swallowed, too, a tolerable allowance of
  • the "flat beer," while a dish of Yorkshire pudding, and two tureens of
  • vegetables, disappeared like leaves before locusts. The cheese, too,
  • received distinguished marks of their attention; and a "spice-cake,"
  • which followed by way of dessert, vanished like a vision, and was no
  • more found. Its elegy was chanted in the kitchen by Abraham, Mrs. Gale's
  • son and heir, a youth of six summers; he had reckoned upon the reversion
  • thereof, and when his mother brought down the empty platter, he lifted
  • up his voice and wept sore.
  • The curates, meantime, sat and sipped their wine, a liquor of
  • unpretending vintage, moderately enjoyed. Mr. Malone, indeed, would much
  • rather have had whisky; but Mr. Donne, being an Englishman, did not keep
  • the beverage. While they sipped they argued, not on politics, nor on
  • philosophy, nor on literature--these topics were now, as ever, totally
  • without interest for them--not even on theology, practical or doctrinal,
  • but on minute points of ecclesiastical discipline, frivolities which
  • seemed empty as bubbles to all save themselves. Mr. Malone, who
  • contrived to secure two glasses of wine, when his brethren contented
  • themselves with one, waxed by degrees hilarious after his fashion; that
  • is, he grew a little insolent, said rude things in a hectoring tone, and
  • laughed clamorously at his own brilliancy.
  • Each of his companions became in turn his butt. Malone had a stock of
  • jokes at their service, which he was accustomed to serve out regularly
  • on convivial occasions like the present, seldom varying his wit; for
  • which, indeed, there was no necessity, as he never appeared to consider
  • himself monotonous, and did not at all care what others thought. Mr.
  • Donne he favoured with hints about his extreme meagreness, allusions to
  • his turned-up nose, cutting sarcasms on a certain threadbare chocolate
  • surtout which that gentleman was accustomed to sport whenever it rained
  • or seemed likely to rain, and criticisms on a choice set of cockney
  • phrases and modes of pronunciation, Mr. Donne's own property, and
  • certainly deserving of remark for the elegance and finish they
  • communicated to his style.
  • Mr. Sweeting was bantered about his stature--he was a little man, a mere
  • boy in height and breadth compared with the athletic Malone; rallied on
  • his musical accomplishments--he played the flute and sang hymns like a
  • seraph, some young ladies of his parish thought; sneered at as "the
  • ladies' pet;" teased about his mamma and sisters, for whom poor Mr.
  • Sweeting had some lingering regard, and of whom he was foolish enough
  • now and then to speak in the presence of the priestly Paddy, from whose
  • anatomy the bowels of natural affection had somehow been omitted.
  • The victims met these attacks each in his own way: Mr. Donne with a
  • stilted self-complacency and half-sullen phlegm, the sole props of his
  • otherwise somewhat rickety dignity; Mr. Sweeting with the indifference
  • of a light, easy disposition, which never professed to have any dignity
  • to maintain.
  • When Malone's raillery became rather too offensive, which it soon did,
  • they joined, in an attempt to turn the tables on him by asking him how
  • many boys had shouted "Irish Peter!" after him as he came along the road
  • that day (Malone's name was Peter--the Rev. Peter Augustus Malone);
  • requesting to be informed whether it was the mode in Ireland for
  • clergymen to carry loaded pistols in their pockets, and a shillelah in
  • their hands, when they made pastoral visits; inquiring the signification
  • of such words as vele, firrum, hellum, storrum (so Mr. Malone invariably
  • pronounced veil, firm, helm, storm), and employing such other methods of
  • retaliation as the innate refinement of their minds suggested.
  • This, of course, would not do. Malone, being neither good-natured nor
  • phlegmatic, was presently in a towering passion. He vociferated,
  • gesticulated; Donne and Sweeting laughed. He reviled them as Saxons and
  • snobs at the very top pitch of his high Celtic voice; they taunted him
  • with being the native of a conquered land. He menaced rebellion in the
  • name of his "counthry," vented bitter hatred against English rule; they
  • spoke of rags, beggary, and pestilence. The little parlour was in an
  • uproar; you would have thought a duel must follow such virulent abuse;
  • it seemed a wonder that Mr. and Mrs. Gale did not take alarm at the
  • noise, and send for a constable to keep the peace. But they were
  • accustomed to such demonstrations; they well knew that the curates never
  • dined or took tea together without a little exercise of the sort, and
  • were quite easy as to consequences, knowing that these clerical quarrels
  • were as harmless as they were noisy, that they resulted in nothing, and
  • that, on whatever terms the curates might part to-night, they would be
  • sure to meet the best friends in the world to-morrow morning.
  • As the worthy pair were sitting by their kitchen fire, listening to the
  • repeated and sonorous contact of Malone's fist with the mahogany plane
  • of the parlour table, and to the consequent start and jingle of
  • decanters and glasses following each assault, to the mocking laughter of
  • the allied English disputants, and the stuttering declamation of the
  • isolated Hibernian--as they thus sat, a foot was heard on the outer
  • door-step, and the knocker quivered to a sharp appeal.
  • Mr. Gale went and opened.
  • "Whom have you upstairs in the parlour?" asked a voice--a rather
  • remarkable voice, nasal in tone, abrupt in utterance.
  • "O Mr. Helstone, is it you, sir? I could hardly see you for the
  • darkness; it is so soon dark now. Will you walk in, sir?"
  • "I want to know first whether it is worth my while walking in. Whom have
  • you upstairs?"
  • "The curates, sir."
  • "What! all of them?"
  • "Yes, sir."
  • "Been dining here?"
  • "Yes, sir."
  • "That will do."
  • With these words a person entered--a middle-aged man, in black. He
  • walked straight across the kitchen to an inner door, opened it, inclined
  • his head forward, and stood listening. There was something to listen to,
  • for the noise above was just then louder than ever.
  • "Hey!" he ejaculated to himself; then turning to Mr. Gale--"Have you
  • often this sort of work?"
  • Mr. Gale had been a churchwarden, and was indulgent to the clergy.
  • "They're young, you know, sir--they're young," said he deprecatingly.
  • "Young! They want caning. Bad boys--bad boys! And if you were a
  • Dissenter, John Gale, instead of being a good Churchman, they'd do the
  • like--they'd expose themselves; but I'll----"
  • By way of finish to this sentence, he passed through the inner door,
  • drew it after him, and mounted the stair. Again he listened a few
  • minutes when he arrived at the upper room. Making entrance without
  • warning, he stood before the curates.
  • And they were silent; they were transfixed; and so was the invader.
  • He--a personage short of stature, but straight of port, and bearing on
  • broad shoulders a hawk's head, beak, and eye, the whole surmounted by a
  • Rehoboam, or shovel hat, which he did not seem to think it necessary to
  • lift or remove before the presence in which he then stood--_he_ folded
  • his arms on his chest and surveyed his young friends, if friends they
  • were, much at his leisure.
  • "What!" he began, delivering his words in a voice no longer nasal, but
  • deep--more than deep--a voice made purposely hollow and
  • cavernous--"what! has the miracle of Pentecost been renewed? Have the
  • cloven tongues come down again? Where are they? The sound filled the
  • whole house just now. I heard the seventeen languages in full action:
  • Parthians, and Medes, and Elamites, the dwellers in Mesopotamia, and in
  • Judea, and Cappadocia, in Pontus and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, in
  • Egypt and in the parts of Libya about Cyrene, strangers of Rome, Jews
  • and proselytes, Cretes and Arabians; every one of these must have had
  • its representative in this room two minutes since."
  • "I beg your pardon, Mr. Helstone," began Mr. Donne; "take a seat, pray,
  • sir. Have a glass of wine?"
  • His civilities received no answer. The falcon in the black coat
  • proceeded,--
  • "What do I talk about the gift of tongues? Gift, indeed! I mistook the
  • chapter, and book, and Testament--gospel for law, Acts for Genesis, the
  • city of Jerusalem for the plain of Shinar. It was no gift but the
  • confusion of tongues which has gabbled me deaf as a post. _You_,
  • apostles? What! you three? Certainly not; three presumptuous Babylonish
  • masons--neither more nor less!"
  • "I assure you, sir, we were only having a little chat together over a
  • glass of wine after a friendly dinner--settling the Dissenters!"
  • "Oh! settling the Dissenters, were you? Was Malone settling the
  • Dissenters? It sounded to me much more like settling his co-apostles.
  • You were quarrelling together, making almost as much noise--you three
  • alone--as Moses Barraclough, the preaching tailor, and all his hearers
  • are making in the Methodist chapel down yonder, where they are in the
  • thick of a revival. I know whose fault it is.--It is yours, Malone."
  • "Mine, sir?"
  • "Yours, sir. Donne and Sweeting were quiet before you came, and would be
  • quiet if you were gone. I wish, when you crossed the Channel, you had
  • left your Irish habits behind you. Dublin student ways won't do here.
  • The proceedings which might pass unnoticed in a wild bog and mountain
  • district in Connaught will, in a decent English parish, bring disgrace
  • on those who indulge in them, and, what is far worse, on the sacred
  • institution of which they are merely the humble appendages."
  • There was a certain dignity in the little elderly gentleman's manner of
  • rebuking these youths, though it was not, perhaps, quite the dignity
  • most appropriate to the occasion. Mr. Helstone, standing straight as a
  • ramrod, looking keen as a kite, presented, despite his clerical hat,
  • black coat, and gaiters, more the air of a veteran officer chiding his
  • subalterns than of a venerable priest exhorting his sons in the faith.
  • Gospel mildness, apostolic benignity, never seemed to have breathed
  • their influence over that keen brown visage, but firmness had fixed the
  • features, and sagacity had carved her own lines about them.
  • "I met Supplehough," he continued, "plodding through the mud this wet
  • night, going to preach at Milldean opposition shop. As I told you, I
  • heard Barraclough bellowing in the midst of a conventicle like a
  • possessed bull; and I find _you_, gentlemen, tarrying over your
  • half-pint of muddy port wine, and scolding like angry old women. No
  • wonder Supplehough should have dipped sixteen adult converts in a
  • day--which he did a fortnight since; no wonder Barraclough, scamp and
  • hypocrite as he is, should attract all the weaver-girls in their flowers
  • and ribbons, to witness how much harder are his knuckles than the wooden
  • brim of his tub; as little wonder that _you_, when you are left to
  • yourselves, without your rectors--myself, and Hall, and Boultby--to back
  • you, should too often perform the holy service of our church to bare
  • walls, and read your bit of a dry discourse to the clerk, and the
  • organist, and the beadle. But enough of the subject. I came to see
  • Malone.--I have an errand unto thee, O captain!"
  • "What is it?" inquired Malone discontentedly. "There can be no funeral
  • to take at this time of day."
  • "Have you any arms about you?"
  • "Arms, sir?--yes, and legs." And he advanced the mighty members.
  • "Bah! weapons I mean."
  • "I have the pistols you gave me yourself. I never part with them. I lay
  • them ready cocked on a chair by my bedside at night. I have my
  • blackthorn."
  • "Very good. Will you go to Hollow's Mill?"
  • "What is stirring at Hollow's Mill?"
  • "Nothing as yet, nor perhaps will be; but Moore is alone there. He has
  • sent all the workmen he can trust to Stilbro'; there are only two women
  • left about the place. It would be a nice opportunity for any of his
  • well-wishers to pay him a visit, if they knew how straight the path was
  • made before them."
  • "I am none of his well-wishers, sir. I don't care for him."
  • "Soh! Malone, you are afraid."
  • "You know me better than that. If I really thought there was a chance
  • of a row I would go: but Moore is a strange, shy man, whom I never
  • pretend to understand; and for the sake of his sweet company only I
  • would not stir a step."
  • "But there _is_ a chance of a row; if a positive riot does not take
  • place--of which, indeed, I see no signs--yet it is unlikely this night
  • will pass quite tranquilly. You know Moore has resolved to have new
  • machinery, and he expects two wagon-loads of frames and shears from
  • Stilbro' this evening. Scott, the overlooker, and a few picked men are
  • gone to fetch them."
  • "They will bring them in safely and quietly enough, sir."
  • "Moore says so, and affirms he wants nobody. Some one, however, he must
  • have, if it were only to bear evidence in case anything should happen. I
  • call him very careless. He sits in the counting-house with the shutters
  • unclosed; he goes out here and there after dark, wanders right up the
  • hollow, down Fieldhead Lane, among the plantations, just as if he were
  • the darling of the neighbourhood, or--being, as he is, its
  • detestation--bore a 'charmed life,' as they say in tale-books. He takes
  • no warning from the fate of Pearson, nor from that of Armitage--shot,
  • one in his own house and the other on the moor."
  • "But he should take warning, sir, and use precautions too," interposed
  • Mr. Sweeting; "and I think he would if he heard what I heard the other
  • day."
  • "What did you hear, Davy?"
  • "You know Mike Hartley, sir?"
  • "The Antinomian weaver? Yes."
  • "When Mike has been drinking for a few weeks together, he generally
  • winds up by a visit to Nunnely vicarage, to tell Mr. Hall a piece of his
  • mind about his sermons, to denounce the horrible tendency of his
  • doctrine of works, and warn him that he and all his hearers are sitting
  • in outer darkness."
  • "Well, that has nothing to do with Moore."
  • "Besides being an Antinomian, he is a violent Jacobin and leveller,
  • sir."
  • "I know. When he is very drunk, his mind is always running on regicide.
  • Mike is not unacquainted with history, and it is rich to hear him going
  • over the list of tyrants of whom, as he says, 'the revenger of blood has
  • obtained satisfaction.' The fellow exults strangely in murder done on
  • crowned heads or on any head for political reasons. I have already
  • heard it hinted that he seems to have a queer hankering after Moore. Is
  • that what you allude to, Sweeting?"
  • "You use the proper term, sir. Mr. Hall thinks Mike has no personal
  • hatred of Moore. Mike says he even likes to talk to him and run after
  • him, but he has a _hankering_ that Moore should be made an example of.
  • He was extolling him to Mr. Hall the other day as the mill-owner with
  • the most brains in Yorkshire, and for that reason he affirms Moore
  • should be chosen as a sacrifice, an oblation of a sweet savour. Is Mike
  • Hartley in his right mind, do you think, sir?" inquired Sweeting simply.
  • "Can't tell, Davy. He may be crazed, or he may be only crafty, or
  • perhaps a little of both."
  • "He talks of seeing visions, sir."
  • "Ay! He is a very Ezekiel or Daniel for visions. He came just when I was
  • going to bed last Friday night to describe one that had been revealed to
  • him in Nunnely Park that very afternoon."
  • "Tell it, sir. What was it?" urged Sweeting.
  • "Davy, thou hast an enormous organ of wonder in thy cranium. Malone, you
  • see, has none. Neither murders nor visions interest him. See what a big
  • vacant Saph he looks at this moment."
  • "Saph! Who was Saph, sir?"
  • "I thought you would not know. You may find it out. It is biblical. I
  • know nothing more of him than his name and race; but from a boy upwards
  • I have always attached a personality to Saph. Depend on it he was
  • honest, heavy, and luckless. He met his end at Gob by the hand of
  • Sibbechai."
  • "But the vision, sir?"
  • "Davy, thou shalt hear. Donne is biting his nails, and Malone yawning,
  • so I will tell it but to thee. Mike is out of work, like many others,
  • unfortunately. Mr. Grame, Sir Philip Nunnely's steward, gave him a job
  • about the priory. According to his account, Mike was busy hedging rather
  • late in the afternoon, but before dark, when he heard what he thought
  • was a band at a distance--bugles, fifes, and the sound of a trumpet; it
  • came from the forest, and he wondered that there should be music there.
  • He looked up. All amongst the trees he saw moving objects, red, like
  • poppies, or white, like may-blossom. The wood was full of them; they
  • poured out and filled the park. He then perceived they were
  • soldiers--thousands and tens of thousands; but they made no more noise
  • than a swarm of midges on a summer evening. They formed in order, he
  • affirmed, and marched, regiment after regiment, across the park. He
  • followed them to Nunnely Common; the music still played soft and
  • distant. On the common he watched them go through a number of
  • evolutions. A man clothed in scarlet stood in the centre and directed
  • them. They extended, he declared, over fifty acres. They were in sight
  • half an hour; then they marched away quite silently. The whole time he
  • heard neither voice nor tread--nothing but the faint music playing a
  • solemn march."
  • "Where did they go, sir?"
  • "Towards Briarfield. Mike followed them. They seemed passing Fieldhead,
  • when a column of smoke, such as might be vomited by a park of artillery,
  • spread noiseless over the fields, the road, the common, and rolled, he
  • said, blue and dim, to his very feet. As it cleared away he looked again
  • for the soldiers, but they were vanished; he saw them no more. Mike,
  • like a wise Daniel as he is, not only rehearsed the vision but gave the
  • interpretation thereof. It signifies, he intimated, bloodshed and civil
  • conflict."
  • "Do you credit it, sir?" asked Sweeting.
  • "Do you, Davy?--But come, Malone; why are you not off?"
  • "I am rather surprised, sir, you did not stay with Moore yourself. You
  • like this kind of thing."
  • "So I should have done, had I not unfortunately happened to engage
  • Boultby to sup with me on his way home from the Bible Society meeting at
  • Nunnely. I promised to send you as my substitute; for which, by-the-bye,
  • he did not thank me. He would much rather have had me than you, Peter.
  • Should there be any real need of help I shall join you. The mill-bell
  • will give warning. Meantime, go--unless (turning suddenly to Messrs.
  • Sweeting and Donne)--unless Davy Sweeting or Joseph Donne prefers
  • going.--What do you say, gentlemen? The commission is an honourable one,
  • not without the seasoning of a little real peril; for the country is in
  • a queer state, as you all know, and Moore and his mill and his machinery
  • are held in sufficient odium. There are chivalric sentiments, there is
  • high-beating courage, under those waistcoats of yours, I doubt not.
  • Perhaps I am too partial to my favourite Peter. Little David shall be
  • the champion, or spotless Joseph.--Malone, you are but a great
  • floundering Saul after all, good only to lend your armour. Out with your
  • firearms; fetch your shillelah. It is there--in the corner."
  • With a significant grin Malone produced his pistols, offering one to
  • each of his brethren. They were not readily seized on. With graceful
  • modesty each gentleman retired a step from the presented weapon.
  • "I never touch them. I never did touch anything of the kind," said Mr.
  • Donne.
  • "I am almost a stranger to Mr. Moore," murmured Sweeting.
  • "If you never touched a pistol, try the feel of it now, great satrap of
  • Egypt. As to the little minstrel, he probably prefers encountering the
  • Philistines with no other weapon than his flute.--Get their hats, Peter.
  • They'll both of 'em go."
  • "No, sir; no, Mr. Helstone. My mother wouldn't like it," pleaded
  • Sweeting.
  • "And I make it a rule never to get mixed up in affairs of the kind,"
  • observed Donne.
  • Helstone smiled sardonically; Malone laughed a horse-laugh. He then
  • replaced his arms, took his hat and cudgel, and saying that "he never
  • felt more in tune for a shindy in his life, and that he wished a score
  • of greasy cloth-dressers might beat up Moore's quarters that night," he
  • made his exit, clearing the stairs at a stride or two, and making the
  • house shake with the bang of the front-door behind him.
  • CHAPTER II.
  • THE WAGONS.
  • The evening was pitch dark: star and moon were quenched in gray
  • rain-clouds--gray they would have been by day; by night they looked
  • sable. Malone was not a man given to close observation of nature; her
  • changes passed, for the most part, unnoticed by him. He could walk miles
  • on the most varying April day and never see the beautiful dallying of
  • earth and heaven--never mark when a sunbeam kissed the hill-tops, making
  • them smile clear in green light, or when a shower wept over them, hiding
  • their crests with the low-hanging, dishevelled tresses of a cloud. He
  • did not, therefore, care to contrast the sky as it now appeared--a
  • muffled, streaming vault, all black, save where, towards the east, the
  • furnaces of Stilbro' ironworks threw a tremulous lurid shimmer on the
  • horizon--with the same sky on an unclouded frosty night. He did not
  • trouble himself to ask where the constellations and the planets were
  • gone, or to regret the "black-blue" serenity of the air-ocean which
  • those white islets stud, and which another ocean, of heavier and denser
  • element, now rolled below and concealed. He just doggedly pursued his
  • way, leaning a little forward as he walked, and wearing his hat on the
  • back of his head, as his Irish manner was. "Tramp, tramp," he went along
  • the causeway, where the road boasted the privilege of such an
  • accommodation; "splash, splash," through the mire-filled cart ruts,
  • where the flags were exchanged for soft mud. He looked but for certain
  • landmarks--the spire of Briarfield Church; farther on, the lights of
  • Redhouse. This was an inn; and when he reached it, the glow of a fire
  • through a half-curtained window, a vision of glasses on a round table,
  • and of revellers on an oaken settle, had nearly drawn aside the curate
  • from his course. He thought longingly of a tumbler of whisky-and-water.
  • In a strange place he would instantly have realized the dream; but the
  • company assembled in that kitchen were Mr. Helstone's own parishioners;
  • they all knew him. He sighed, and passed on.
  • The highroad was now to be quitted, as the remaining distance to
  • Hollow's Mill might be considerably reduced by a short cut across
  • fields. These fields were level and monotonous. Malone took a direct
  • course through them, jumping hedge and wall. He passed but one building
  • here, and that seemed large and hall-like, though irregular. You could
  • see a high gable, then a long front, then a low gable, then a thick,
  • lofty stack of chimneys. There were some trees behind it. It was dark;
  • not a candle shone from any window. It was absolutely still; the rain
  • running from the eaves, and the rather wild but very low whistle of the
  • wind round the chimneys and through the boughs were the sole sounds in
  • its neighbourhood.
  • This building passed, the fields, hitherto flat, declined in a rapid
  • descent. Evidently a vale lay below, through which you could hear the
  • water run. One light glimmered in the depth. For that beacon Malone
  • steered.
  • He came to a little white house--you could see it was white even through
  • this dense darkness--and knocked at the door. A fresh-faced servant
  • opened it. By the candle she held was revealed a narrow passage,
  • terminating in a narrow stair. Two doors covered with crimson baize, a
  • strip of crimson carpet down the steps, contrasted with light-coloured
  • walls and white floor, made the little interior look clean and fresh.
  • "Mr. Moore is at home, I suppose?"
  • "Yes, sir, but he is not in."
  • "Not in! Where is he then?"
  • "At the mill--in the counting-house."
  • Here one of the crimson doors opened.
  • "Are the wagons come, Sarah?" asked a female voice, and a female head at
  • the same time was apparent. It might not be the head of a
  • goddess--indeed a screw of curl-paper on each side the temples quite
  • forbade that supposition--but neither was it the head of a Gorgon; yet
  • Malone seemed to take it in the latter light. Big as he was, he shrank
  • bashfully back into the rain at the view thereof, and saying, "I'll go
  • to him," hurried in seeming trepidation down a short lane, across an
  • obscure yard, towards a huge black mill.
  • The work-hours were over; the "hands" were gone. The machinery was at
  • rest, the mill shut up. Malone walked round it. Somewhere in its great
  • sooty flank he found another chink of light; he knocked at another
  • door, using for the purpose the thick end of his shillelah, with which
  • he beat a rousing tattoo. A key turned; the door unclosed.
  • "Is it Joe Scott? What news of the wagons, Joe?"
  • "No; it's myself. Mr. Helstone would send me."
  • "Oh! Mr. Malone." The voice in uttering this name had the slightest
  • possible cadence of disappointment. After a moment's pause it continued,
  • politely but a little formally,--
  • "I beg you will come in, Mr. Malone. I regret extremely Mr. Helstone
  • should have thought it necessary to trouble you so far. There was no
  • necessity--I told him so--and on such a night; but walk forwards."
  • Through a dark apartment, of aspect undistinguishable, Malone followed
  • the speaker into a light and bright room within--very light and bright
  • indeed it seemed to eyes which, for the last hour, had been striving to
  • penetrate the double darkness of night and fog; but except for its
  • excellent fire, and for a lamp of elegant design and vivid lustre
  • burning on a table, it was a very plain place. The boarded floor was
  • carpetless; the three or four stiff-backed, green-painted chairs seemed
  • once to have furnished the kitchen of some farm-house; a desk of strong,
  • solid formation, the table aforesaid, and some framed sheets on the
  • stone-coloured walls, bearing plans for building, for gardening, designs
  • of machinery, etc., completed the furniture of the place.
  • Plain as it was, it seemed to satisfy Malone, who, when he had removed
  • and hung up his wet surtout and hat, drew one of the rheumatic-looking
  • chairs to the hearth, and set his knees almost within the bars of the
  • red grate.
  • "Comfortable quarters you have here, Mr. Moore; and all snug to
  • yourself."
  • "Yes, but my sister would be glad to see you, if you would prefer
  • stepping into the house."
  • "Oh no! The ladies are best alone, I never was a lady's man. You don't
  • mistake me for my friend Sweeting, do you, Mr. Moore?"
  • "Sweeting! Which of them is that? The gentleman in the chocolate
  • overcoat, or the little gentleman?"
  • "The little one--he of Nunnely; the cavalier of the Misses Sykes, with
  • the whole six of whom he is in love, ha! ha!"
  • "Better be generally in love with all than specially with one, I should
  • think, in that quarter."
  • "But he is specially in love with one besides, for when I and Donne
  • urged him to make a choice amongst the fair bevy, he named--which do you
  • think?"
  • With a queer, quiet smile Mr. Moore replied, "Dora, of course, or
  • Harriet."
  • "Ha! ha! you've an excellent guess. But what made you hit on those two?"
  • "Because they are the tallest, the handsomest, and Dora, at least, is
  • the stoutest; and as your friend Mr. Sweeting is but a little slight
  • figure, I concluded that, according to a frequent rule in such cases, he
  • preferred his contrast."
  • "You are right; Dora it is. But he has no chance, has he, Moore?"
  • "What has Mr. Sweeting besides his curacy?"
  • This question seemed to tickle Malone amazingly. He laughed for full
  • three minutes before he answered it.
  • "What has Sweeting? Why, David has his harp, or flute, which comes to
  • the same thing. He has a sort of pinchbeck watch; ditto, ring; ditto,
  • eyeglass. That's what he has."
  • "How would he propose to keep Miss Sykes in gowns only?"
  • "Ha! ha! Excellent! I'll ask him that next time I see him. I'll roast
  • him for his presumption. But no doubt he expects old Christopher Sykes
  • would do something handsome. He is rich, is he not? They live in a large
  • house."
  • "Sykes carries on an extensive concern."
  • "Therefore he must be wealthy, eh?"
  • "Therefore he must have plenty to do with his wealth, and in these times
  • would be about as likely to think of drawing money from the business to
  • give dowries to his daughters as I should be to dream of pulling down
  • the cottage there, and constructing on its ruins a house as large as
  • Fieldhead."
  • "Do you know what I heard, Moore, the other day?"
  • "No. Perhaps that I _was_ about to effect some such change. Your
  • Briarfield gossips are capable of saying that or sillier things."
  • "That you were going to take Fieldhead on a lease (I thought it looked a
  • dismal place, by-the-bye, to-night, as I passed it), and that it was
  • your intention to settle a Miss Sykes there as mistress--to be married,
  • in short, ha! ha! Now, which is it? Dora, I am sure. You said she was
  • the handsomest."
  • "I wonder how often it has been settled that I was to be married since I
  • came to Briarfield. They have assigned me every marriageable single
  • woman by turns in the district. Now it was the two Misses Wynns--first
  • the dark, then the light one; now the red-haired Miss Armitage; then the
  • mature Ann Pearson. At present you throw on my shoulders all the tribe
  • of the Misses Sykes. On what grounds this gossip rests God knows. I
  • visit nowhere; I seek female society about as assiduously as you do, Mr.
  • Malone. If ever I go to Whinbury, it is only to give Sykes or Pearson a
  • call in their counting-house, where our discussions run on other topics
  • than matrimony, and our thoughts are occupied with other things than
  • courtships, establishments, dowries. The cloth we can't sell, the hands
  • we can't employ, the mills we can't run, the perverse course of events
  • generally, which we cannot alter, fill our hearts, I take it, pretty
  • well at present, to the tolerably complete exclusion of such figments as
  • love-making, etc."
  • "I go along with you completely, Moore. If there is one notion I hate
  • more than another, it is that of marriage--I mean marriage in the vulgar
  • weak sense, as a mere matter of sentiment--two beggarly fools agreeing
  • to unite their indigence by some fantastic tie of feeling. Humbug! But
  • an advantageous connection, such as can be formed in consonance with
  • dignity of views and permanency of solid interests, is not so bad--eh?"
  • "No," responded Moore, in an absent manner. The subject seemed to have
  • no interest for him; he did not pursue it. After sitting for some time
  • gazing at the fire with a preoccupied air, he suddenly turned his head.
  • "Hark!" said he. "Did you hear wheels?"
  • Rising, he went to the window, opened it, and listened. He soon closed
  • it. "It is only the sound of the wind rising," he remarked, "and the
  • rivulet a little swollen, rushing down the hollow. I expected those
  • wagons at six; it is near nine now."
  • "Seriously, do you suppose that the putting up of this new machinery
  • will bring you into danger?" inquired Malone. "Helstone seems to think
  • it will."
  • "I only wish the machines--the frames--were safe here, and lodged within
  • the walls of this mill. Once put up, I defy the frame-breakers. Let them
  • only pay me a visit and take the consequences. My mill is my castle."
  • "One despises such low scoundrels," observed Malone, in a profound vein
  • of reflection. "I almost wish a party would call upon you to-night; but
  • the road seemed extremely quiet as I came along. I saw nothing astir."
  • "You came by the Redhouse?"
  • "Yes."
  • "There would be nothing on that road. It is in the direction of Stilbro'
  • the risk lies."
  • "And you think there is risk?"
  • "What these fellows have done to others they may do to me. There is only
  • this difference: most of the manufacturers seem paralyzed when they are
  • attacked. Sykes, for instance, when his dressing-shop was set on fire
  • and burned to the ground, when the cloth was torn from his tenters and
  • left in shreds in the field, took no steps to discover or punish the
  • miscreants: he gave up as tamely as a rabbit under the jaws of a ferret.
  • Now I, if I know myself, should stand by my trade, my mill, and my
  • machinery."
  • "Helstone says these three are your gods; that the 'Orders in Council'
  • are with you another name for the seven deadly sins; that Castlereagh is
  • your Antichrist, and the war-party his legions."
  • "Yes; I abhor all these things because they ruin me. They stand in my
  • way. I cannot get on. I cannot execute my plans because of them. I see
  • myself baffled at every turn by their untoward effects."
  • "But you are rich and thriving, Moore?"
  • "I am very rich in cloth I cannot sell. You should step into my
  • warehouse yonder, and observe how it is piled to the roof with pieces.
  • Roakes and Pearson are in the same condition. America used to be their
  • market, but the Orders in Council have cut that off."
  • Malone did not seem prepared to carry on briskly a conversation of this
  • sort. He began to knock the heels of his boots together, and to yawn.
  • "And then to think," continued Mr. Moore who seemed too much taken up
  • with the current of his own thoughts to note the symptoms of his guest's
  • _ennui_--"to think that these ridiculous gossips of Whinbury and
  • Briarfield will keep pestering one about being married! As if there was
  • nothing to be done in life but to 'pay attention,' as they say, to some
  • young lady, and then to go to church with her, and then to start on a
  • bridal tour, and then to run through a round of visits, and then, I
  • suppose, to be 'having a family.' Oh, que le diable emporte!" He broke
  • off the aspiration into which he was launching with a certain energy,
  • and added, more calmly, "I believe women talk and think only of these
  • things, and they naturally fancy men's minds similarly occupied."
  • "Of course--of course," assented Malone; "but never mind them." And he
  • whistled, looked impatiently round, and seemed to feel a great want of
  • something. This time Moore caught and, it appeared, comprehended his
  • demonstrations.
  • "Mr. Malone," said he, "you must require refreshment after your wet
  • walk. I forget hospitality."
  • "Not at all," rejoined Malone; but he looked as if the right nail was at
  • last hit on the head, nevertheless. Moore rose and opened a cupboard.
  • "It is my fancy," said he, "to have every convenience within myself, and
  • not to be dependent on the feminity in the cottage yonder for every
  • mouthful I eat or every drop I drink. I often spend the evening and sup
  • here alone, and sleep with Joe Scott in the mill. Sometimes I am my own
  • watchman. I require little sleep, and it pleases me on a fine night to
  • wander for an hour or two with my musket about the hollow. Mr. Malone,
  • can you cook a mutton chop?"
  • "Try me. I've done it hundreds of times at college."
  • "There's a dishful, then, and there's the gridiron. Turn them quickly.
  • You know the secret of keeping the juices in?"
  • "Never fear me; you shall see. Hand a knife and fork, please."
  • The curate turned up his coat-cuffs, and applied himself to the cookery
  • with vigour. The manufacturer placed on the table plates, a loaf of
  • bread, a black bottle, and two tumblers. He then produced a small copper
  • kettle--still from the same well-stored recess, his cupboard--filled it
  • with water from a large stone jar in a corner, set it on the fire beside
  • the hissing gridiron, got lemons, sugar, and a small china punch-bowl;
  • but while he was brewing the punch a tap at the door called him away.
  • "Is it you, Sarah?"
  • "Yes, sir. Will you come to supper, please, sir?"
  • "No; I shall not be in to-night; I shall sleep in the mill. So lock the
  • doors, and tell your mistress to go to bed."
  • He returned.
  • "You have your household in proper order," observed Malone approvingly,
  • as, with his fine face ruddy as the embers over which he bent, he
  • assiduously turned the mutton chops. "You are not under petticoat
  • government, like poor Sweeting, a man--whew! how the fat spits! it has
  • burnt my hand--destined to be ruled by women. Now you and I,
  • Moore--there's a fine brown one for you, and full of gravy--you and I
  • will have no gray mares in our stables when we marry."
  • "I don't know; I never think about it. If the gray mare is handsome and
  • tractable, why not?"
  • "The chops are done. Is the punch brewed?"
  • "There is a glassful. Taste it. When Joe Scott and his minions return
  • they shall have a share of this, provided they bring home the frames
  • intact."
  • Malone waxed very exultant over the supper. He laughed aloud at trifles,
  • made bad jokes and applauded them himself, and, in short, grew
  • unmeaningly noisy. His host, on the contrary, remained quiet as before.
  • It is time, reader, that you should have some idea of the appearance of
  • this same host. I must endeavour to sketch him as he sits at table.
  • He is what you would probably call, at first view, rather a
  • strange-looking man; for he is thin, dark, sallow, very foreign of
  • aspect, with shadowy hair carelessly streaking his forehead. It appears
  • that he spends but little time at his toilet, or he would arrange it
  • with more taste. He seems unconscious that his features are fine, that
  • they have a southern symmetry, clearness, regularity in their
  • chiselling; nor does a spectator become aware of this advantage till he
  • has examined him well, for an anxious countenance and a hollow, somewhat
  • haggard, outline of face disturb the idea of beauty with one of care.
  • His eyes are large, and grave, and gray; their expression is intent and
  • meditative, rather searching than soft, rather thoughtful than genial.
  • When he parts his lips in a smile, his physiognomy is agreeable--not
  • that it is frank or cheerful even then, but you feel the influence of a
  • certain sedate charm, suggestive, whether truly or delusively, of a
  • considerate, perhaps a kind nature, of feelings that may wear well at
  • home--patient, forbearing, possibly faithful feelings. He is still
  • young--not more than thirty; his stature is tall, his figure slender.
  • His manner of speaking displeases. He has an outlandish accent, which,
  • notwithstanding a studied carelessness of pronunciation and diction,
  • grates on a British, and especially on a Yorkshire, ear.
  • Mr. Moore, indeed, was but half a Briton, and scarcely that. He came of
  • a foreign ancestry by the mother's side, and was himself born and partly
  • reared on a foreign soil. A hybrid in nature, it is probable he had a
  • hybrid's feeling on many points--patriotism for one; it is likely that
  • he was unapt to attach himself to parties, to sects, even to climes and
  • customs; it is not impossible that he had a tendency to isolate his
  • individual person from any community amidst which his lot might
  • temporarily happen to be thrown, and that he felt it to be his best
  • wisdom to push the interests of Robert Gérard Moore, to the exclusion of
  • philanthropic consideration for general interests, with which he
  • regarded the said Gérard Moore as in a great measure disconnected. Trade
  • was Mr. Moore's hereditary calling: the Gérards of Antwerp had been
  • merchants for two centuries back. Once they had been wealthy merchants;
  • but the uncertainties, the involvements, of business had come upon them;
  • disastrous speculations had loosened by degrees the foundations of their
  • credit. The house had stood on a tottering base for a dozen years; and
  • at last, in the shock of the French Revolution, it had rushed down a
  • total ruin. In its fall was involved the English and Yorkshire firm of
  • Moore, closely connected with the Antwerp house, and of which one of the
  • partners, resident in Antwerp, Robert Moore, had married Hortense
  • Gérard, with the prospect of his bride inheriting her father Constantine
  • Gérard's share in the business. She inherited, as we have seen, but his
  • share in the liabilities of the firm; and these liabilities, though duly
  • set aside by a composition with creditors, some said her son Robert
  • accepted, in his turn, as a legacy, and that he aspired one day to
  • discharge them, and to rebuild the fallen house of Gérard and Moore on a
  • scale at least equal to its former greatness. It was even supposed that
  • he took by-past circumstances much to heart; and if a childhood passed
  • at the side of a saturnine mother, under foreboding of coming evil, and
  • a manhood drenched and blighted by the pitiless descent of the storm,
  • could painfully impress the mind, _his_ probably was impressed in no
  • golden characters.
  • If, however, he had a great end of restoration in view, it was not in
  • his power to employ great means for its attainment. He was obliged to be
  • content with the day of small things. When he came to Yorkshire,
  • he--whose ancestors had owned warehouses in this seaport, and factories
  • in that inland town, had possessed their town-house and their
  • country-seat--saw no way open to him but to rent a cloth-mill in an
  • out-of-the-way nook of an out-of-the-way district; to take a cottage
  • adjoining it for his residence, and to add to his possessions, as
  • pasture for his horse, and space for his cloth-tenters, a few acres of
  • the steep, rugged land that lined the hollow through which his
  • mill-stream brawled. All this he held at a somewhat high rent (for these
  • war times were hard, and everything was dear) of the trustees of the
  • Fieldhead estate, then the property of a minor.
  • At the time this history commences, Robert Moore had lived but two years
  • in the district, during which period he had at least proved himself
  • possessed of the quality of activity. The dingy cottage was converted
  • into a neat, tasteful residence. Of part of the rough land he had made
  • garden-ground, which he cultivated with singular, even with Flemish,
  • exactness and care. As to the mill, which was an old structure, and
  • fitted up with old machinery, now become inefficient and out of date, he
  • had from the first evinced the strongest contempt for all its
  • arrangements and appointments. His aim had been to effect a radical
  • reform, which he had executed as fast as his very limited capital would
  • allow; and the narrowness of that capital, and consequent check on his
  • progress, was a restraint which galled his spirit sorely. Moore ever
  • wanted to push on. "Forward" was the device stamped upon his soul; but
  • poverty curbed him. Sometimes (figuratively) he foamed at the mouth when
  • the reins were drawn very tight.
  • In this state of feeling, it is not to be expected that he would
  • deliberate much as to whether his advance was or was not prejudicial to
  • others. Not being a native, nor for any length of time a resident of the
  • neighbourhood, he did not sufficiently care when the new inventions
  • threw the old workpeople out of employ. He never asked himself where
  • those to whom he no longer paid weekly wages found daily bread; and in
  • this negligence he only resembled thousands besides, on whom the
  • starving poor of Yorkshire seemed to have a closer claim.
  • The period of which I write was an overshadowed one in British history,
  • and especially in the history of the northern provinces. War was then
  • at its height. Europe was all involved therein. England, if not weary,
  • was worn with long resistance--yes, and half her people were weary too,
  • and cried out for peace on any terms. National honour was become a mere
  • empty name, of no value in the eyes of many, because their sight was dim
  • with famine; and for a morsel of meat they would have sold their
  • birthright.
  • The "Orders in Council," provoked by Napoleon's Milan and Berlin
  • decrees, and forbidding neutral powers to trade with France, had, by
  • offending America, cut off the principal market of the Yorkshire woollen
  • trade, and brought it consequently to the verge of ruin. Minor foreign
  • markets were glutted, and would receive no more. The Brazils, Portugal,
  • Sicily, were all overstocked by nearly two years' consumption. At this
  • crisis certain inventions in machinery were introduced into the staple
  • manufactures of the north, which, greatly reducing the number of hands
  • necessary to be employed, threw thousands out of work, and left them
  • without legitimate means of sustaining life. A bad harvest supervened.
  • Distress reached its climax. Endurance, overgoaded, stretched the hand
  • of fraternity to sedition. The throes of a sort of moral earthquake were
  • felt heaving under the hills of the northern counties. But, as is usual
  • in such cases, nobody took much notice. When a food-riot broke out in a
  • manufacturing town, when a gig-mill was burnt to the ground, or a
  • manufacturer's house was attacked, the furniture thrown into the
  • streets, and the family forced to flee for their lives, some local
  • measures were or were not taken by the local magistracy. A ringleader
  • was detected, or more frequently suffered to elude detection; newspaper
  • paragraphs were written on the subject, and there the thing stopped. As
  • to the sufferers, whose sole inheritance was labour, and who had lost
  • that inheritance--who could not get work, and consequently could not get
  • wages, and consequently could not get bread--they were left to suffer
  • on, perhaps inevitably left. It would not do to stop the progress of
  • invention, to damage science by discouraging its improvements; the war
  • could not be terminated; efficient relief could not be raised. There was
  • no help then; so the unemployed underwent their destiny--ate the bread
  • and drank the waters of affliction.
  • Misery generates hate. These sufferers hated the machines which they
  • believed took their bread from them; they hated the buildings which
  • contained those machines; they hated the manufacturers who owned those
  • buildings. In the parish of Briarfield, with which we have at present to
  • do, Hollow's Mill was the place held most abominable; Gérard Moore, in
  • his double character of semi-foreigner and thorough-going progressist,
  • the man most abominated. And it perhaps rather agreed with Moore's
  • temperament than otherwise to be generally hated, especially when he
  • believed the thing for which he was hated a right and an expedient
  • thing; and it was with a sense of warlike excitement he, on this night,
  • sat in his counting-house waiting the arrival of his frame-laden wagons.
  • Malone's coming and company were, it may be, most unwelcome to him. He
  • would have preferred sitting alone; for he liked a silent, sombre,
  • unsafe solitude. His watchman's musket would have been company enough
  • for him; the full-flowing beck in the den would have delivered
  • continuously the discourse most genial to his ear.
  • * * * * *
  • With the queerest look in the world had the manufacturer for some ten
  • minutes been watching the Irish curate, as the latter made free with the
  • punch, when suddenly that steady gray eye changed, as if another vision
  • came between it and Malone. Moore raised his hand.
  • "Chut!" he said in his French fashion, as Malone made a noise with his
  • glass. He listened a moment, then rose, put his hat on, and went out at
  • the counting-house door.
  • The night was still, dark, and stagnant: the water yet rushed on full
  • and fast; its flow almost seemed a flood in the utter silence. Moore's
  • ear, however, caught another sound, very distant but yet dissimilar,
  • broken and rugged--in short, a sound of heavy wheels crunching a stony
  • road. He returned to the counting-house and lit a lantern, with which he
  • walked down the mill-yard, and proceeded to open the gates. The big
  • wagons were coming on; the dray-horses' huge hoofs were heard splashing
  • in the mud and water. Moore hailed them.
  • "Hey, Joe Scott! Is all right?"
  • Probably Joe Scott was yet at too great a distance to hear the inquiry.
  • He did not answer it.
  • "Is all right, I say?" again asked Moore, when the elephant-like
  • leader's nose almost touched his.
  • Some one jumped out from the foremost wagon into the road; a voice cried
  • aloud, "Ay, ay, divil; all's raight! We've smashed 'em."
  • And there was a run. The wagons stood still; they were now deserted.
  • "Joe Scott!" No Joe Scott answered. "Murgatroyd! Pighills! Sykes!" No
  • reply. Mr. Moore lifted his lantern and looked into the vehicles. There
  • was neither man nor machinery; they were empty and abandoned.
  • Now Mr. Moore loved his machinery. He had risked the last of his capital
  • on the purchase of these frames and shears which to-night had been
  • expected. Speculations most important to his interests depended on the
  • results to be wrought by them. Where were they?
  • The words "we've smashed 'em" rang in his ears. How did the catastrophe
  • affect him? By the light of the lantern he held were his features
  • visible, relaxing to a singular smile--the smile the man of determined
  • spirit wears when he reaches a juncture in his life where this
  • determined spirit is to feel a demand on its strength, when the strain
  • is to be made, and the faculty must bear or break. Yet he remained
  • silent, and even motionless; for at the instant he neither knew what to
  • say nor what to do. He placed the lantern on the ground, and stood with
  • his arms folded, gazing down and reflecting.
  • An impatient trampling of one of the horses made him presently look up.
  • His eye in the moment caught the gleam of something white attached to a
  • part of the harness. Examined by the light of the lantern this proved to
  • be a folded paper--a billet. It bore no address without; within was the
  • superscription:--
  • "To the Divil of Hollow's Miln."
  • We will not copy the rest of the orthography, which was very peculiar,
  • but translate it into legible English. It ran thus:--
  • "Your hellish machinery is shivered to smash on Stilbro' Moor, and your
  • men are lying bound hand and foot in a ditch by the roadside. Take this
  • as a warning from men that are starving, and have starving wives and
  • children to go home to when they have done this deed. If you get new
  • machines, or if you otherwise go on as you have done, you shall hear
  • from us again. Beware!"
  • "Hear from you again? Yes, I'll hear from you again, and you shall hear
  • from me. I'll speak to you directly. On Stilbro' Moor you shall hear
  • from me in a moment."
  • Having led the wagons within the gates, he hastened towards the cottage.
  • Opening the door, he spoke a few words quickly but quietly to two
  • females who ran to meet him in the passage. He calmed the seeming alarm
  • of one by a brief palliative account of what had taken place; to the
  • other he said, "Go into the mill, Sarah--there is the key--and ring the
  • mill-bell as loud as you can. Afterwards you will get another lantern
  • and help me to light up the front."
  • Returning to his horses, he unharnessed, fed, and stabled them with
  • equal speed and care, pausing occasionally, while so occupied, as if to
  • listen for the mill-bell. It clanged out presently, with irregular but
  • loud and alarming din. The hurried, agitated peal seemed more urgent
  • than if the summons had been steadily given by a practised hand. On that
  • still night, at that unusual hour, it was heard a long way round. The
  • guests in the kitchen of the Redhouse were startled by the clamour, and
  • declaring that "there must be summat more nor common to do at Hollow's
  • Miln," they called for lanterns, and hurried to the spot in a body. And
  • scarcely had they thronged into the yard with their gleaming lights,
  • when the tramp of horses was heard, and a little man in a shovel hat,
  • sitting erect on the back of a shaggy pony, "rode lightly in," followed
  • by an aide-de-camp mounted on a larger steed.
  • Mr. Moore, meantime, after stabling his dray-horses, had saddled his
  • hackney, and with the aid of Sarah, the servant, lit up his mill, whose
  • wide and long front now glared one great illumination, throwing a
  • sufficient light on the yard to obviate all fear of confusion arising
  • from obscurity. Already a deep hum of voices became audible. Mr. Malone
  • had at length issued from the counting-house, previously taking the
  • precaution to dip his head and face in the stone water-jug; and this
  • precaution, together with the sudden alarm, had nearly restored to him
  • the possession of those senses which the punch had partially scattered.
  • He stood with his hat on the back of his head, and his shillelah grasped
  • in his dexter fist, answering much at random the questions of the
  • newly-arrived party from the Redhouse. Mr. Moore now appeared, and was
  • immediately confronted by the shovel hat and the shaggy pony.
  • "Well, Moore, what is your business with us? I thought you would want us
  • to-night--me and the hetman here (patting his pony's neck), and Tom and
  • his charger. When I heard your mill-bell I could sit still no longer, so
  • I left Boultby to finish his supper alone. But where is the enemy? I do
  • not see a mask or a smutted face present; and there is not a pane of
  • glass broken in your windows. Have you had an attack, or do you expect
  • one?"
  • "Oh, not at all! I have neither had one nor expect one," answered Moore
  • coolly. "I only ordered the bell to be rung because I want two or three
  • neighbours to stay here in the Hollow while I and a couple or so more go
  • over to Stilbro' Moor."
  • "To Stilbro' Moor! What to do? To meet the wagons?"
  • "The wagons are come home an hour ago."
  • "Then all's right. What more would you have?"
  • "They came home empty; and Joe Scott and company are left on the moor,
  • and so are the frames. Read that scrawl."
  • Mr. Helstone received and perused the document of which the contents
  • have before been given.
  • "Hum! They've only served you as they serve others. But, however, the
  • poor fellows in the ditch will be expecting help with some impatience.
  • This is a wet night for such a berth. I and Tom will go with you. Malone
  • may stay behind and take care of the mill. What is the matter with him?
  • His eyes seem starting out of his head."
  • "He has been eating a mutton chop."
  • "Indeed!--Peter Augustus, be on your guard. Eat no more mutton chops
  • to-night. You are left here in command of these premises--an honourable
  • post!"
  • "Is anybody to stay with me?"
  • "As many of the present assemblage as choose.--My lads, how many of you
  • will remain here, and how many will go a little way with me and Mr.
  • Moore on the Stilbro' road, to meet some men who have been waylaid and
  • assaulted by frame-breakers?"
  • The small number of three volunteered to go; the rest preferred staying
  • behind. As Mr. Moore mounted his horse, the rector asked him in a low
  • voice whether he had locked up the mutton chops, so that Peter Augustus
  • could not get at them? The manufacturer nodded an affirmative, and the
  • rescue-party set out.
  • CHAPTER III.
  • MR. YORKE.
  • Cheerfulness, it would appear, is a matter which depends fully as much
  • on the state of things within as on the state of things without and
  • around us. I make this trite remark, because I happen to know that
  • Messrs. Helstone and Moore trotted forth from the mill-yard gates, at
  • the head of their very small company, in the best possible spirits. When
  • a ray from a lantern (the three pedestrians of the party carried each
  • one) fell on Mr. Moore's face, you could see an unusual, because a
  • lively, spark dancing in his eyes, and a new-found vivacity mantling on
  • his dark physiognomy; and when the rector's visage was illuminated, his
  • hard features were revealed all agrin and ashine with glee. Yet a
  • drizzling night, a somewhat perilous expedition, you would think were
  • not circumstances calculated to enliven those exposed to the wet and
  • engaged in the adventure. If any member or members of the crew who had
  • been at work on Stilbro' Moor had caught a view of this party, they
  • would have had great pleasure in shooting either of the leaders from
  • behind a wall: and the leaders knew this; and the fact is, being both
  • men of steely nerves and steady-beating hearts, were elate with the
  • knowledge.
  • I am aware, reader, and you need not remind me, that it is a dreadful
  • thing for a parson to be warlike; I am aware that he should be a man of
  • peace. I have some faint outline of an idea of what a clergyman's
  • mission is amongst mankind, and I remember distinctly whose servant he
  • is, whose message he delivers, whose example he should follow; yet, with
  • all this, if you are a parson-hater, you need not expect me to go along
  • with you every step of your dismal, downward-tending, unchristian road;
  • you need not expect me to join in your deep anathemas, at once so narrow
  • and so sweeping, in your poisonous rancour, so intense and so absurd,
  • against "the cloth;" to lift up my eyes and hands with a Supplehough,
  • or to inflate my lungs with a Barraclough, in horror and denunciation of
  • the diabolical rector of Briarfield.
  • He was not diabolical at all. The evil simply was--he had missed his
  • vocation. He should have been a soldier, and circumstances had made him
  • a priest. For the rest, he was a conscientious, hard-headed,
  • hard-handed, brave, stern, implacable, faithful little man; a man almost
  • without sympathy, ungentle, prejudiced, and rigid, but a man true to
  • principle, honourable, sagacious, and sincere. It seems to me, reader,
  • that you cannot always cut out men to fit their profession, and that you
  • ought not to curse them because their profession sometimes hangs on them
  • ungracefully. Nor will I curse Helstone, clerical Cossack as he was. Yet
  • he _was_ cursed, and by many of his own parishioners, as by others he
  • was adored--which is the frequent fate of men who show partiality in
  • friendship and bitterness in enmity, who are equally attached to
  • principles and adherent to prejudices.
  • Helstone and Moore being both in excellent spirits, and united for the
  • present in one cause, you would expect that, as they rode side by side,
  • they would converse amicably. Oh no! These two men, of hard, bilious
  • natures both, rarely came into contact but they chafed each other's
  • moods. Their frequent bone of contention was the war. Helstone was a
  • high Tory (there were Tories in those days), and Moore was a bitter
  • Whig--a Whig, at least, as far as opposition to the war-party was
  • concerned, that being the question which affected his own interest; and
  • only on that question did he profess any British politics at all. He
  • liked to infuriate Helstone by declaring his belief in the invincibility
  • of Bonaparte, by taunting England and Europe with the impotence of their
  • efforts to withstand him, and by coolly advancing the opinion that it
  • was as well to yield to him soon as late, since he must in the end crush
  • every antagonist, and reign supreme.
  • Helstone could not bear these sentiments. It was only on the
  • consideration of Moore being a sort of outcast and alien, and having but
  • half measure of British blood to temper the foreign gall which corroded
  • his veins, that he brought himself to listen to them without indulging
  • the wish he felt to cane the speaker. Another thing, too, somewhat
  • allayed his disgust--namely, a fellow-feeling for the dogged tone with
  • which these opinions were asserted, and a respect for the consistency
  • of Moore's crabbed contumacy.
  • As the party turned into the Stilbro' road, they met what little wind
  • there was; the rain dashed in their faces. Moore had been fretting his
  • companion previously, and now, braced up by the raw breeze, and perhaps
  • irritated by the sharp drizzle, he began to goad him.
  • "Does your Peninsular news please you still?" he asked.
  • "What do you mean?" was the surly demand of the rector.
  • "I mean, have you still faith in that Baal of a Lord Wellington?"
  • "And what do you mean now?"
  • "Do you still believe that this wooden-faced and pebble-hearted idol of
  • England has power to send fire down from heaven to consume the French
  • holocaust you want to offer up?"
  • "I believe Wellington will flog Bonaparte's marshals into the sea the
  • day it pleases him to lift his arm."
  • "But, my dear sir, you can't be serious in what you say. Bonaparte's
  • marshals are great men, who act under the guidance of an omnipotent
  • master-spirit. Your Wellington is the most humdrum of commonplace
  • martinets, whose slow, mechanical movements are further cramped by an
  • ignorant home government."
  • "Wellington is the soul of England. Wellington is the right champion of
  • a good cause, the fit representative of a powerful, a resolute, a
  • sensible, and an honest nation."
  • "Your good cause, as far as I understand it, is simply the restoration
  • of that filthy, feeble Ferdinand to a throne which he disgraced. Your
  • fit representative of an honest people is a dull-witted drover, acting
  • for a duller-witted farmer; and against these are arrayed victorious
  • supremacy and invincible genius."
  • "Against legitimacy is arrayed usurpation; against modest,
  • single-minded, righteous, and brave resistance to encroachment is
  • arrayed boastful, double-tongued, selfish, and treacherous ambition to
  • possess. God defend the right!"
  • "God often defends the powerful."
  • "What! I suppose the handful of Israelites standing dryshod on the
  • Asiatic side of the Red Sea was more powerful than the host of the
  • Egyptians drawn up on the African side? Were they more numerous? Were
  • they better appointed? Were they more mighty, in a word--eh? Don't
  • speak, or you'll tell a lie, Moore; you know you will. They were a poor,
  • overwrought band of bondsmen. Tyrants had oppressed them through four
  • hundred years; a feeble mixture of women and children diluted their thin
  • ranks; their masters, who roared to follow them through the divided
  • flood, were a set of pampered Ethiops, about as strong and brutal as the
  • lions of Libya. They were armed, horsed, and charioted; the poor Hebrew
  • wanderers were afoot. Few of them, it is likely, had better weapons than
  • their shepherds' crooks or their masons' building-tools; their meek and
  • mighty leader himself had only his rod. But bethink you, Robert Moore,
  • right was with them; the God of battles was on their side. Crime and the
  • lost archangel generalled the ranks of Pharaoh, and which triumphed? We
  • know that well. 'The Lord saved Israel that day out of the hand of the
  • Egyptians, and Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the sea-shore'--yea,
  • 'the depths covered them, they sank to the bottom as a stone.' The right
  • hand of the Lord became glorious in power; the right hand of the Lord
  • dashed in pieces the enemy!"
  • "You are all right; only you forget the true parallel. France is Israel,
  • and Napoleon is Moses. Europe, with her old overgorged empires and
  • rotten dynasties, is corrupt Egypt; gallant France is the Twelve Tribes,
  • and her fresh and vigorous Usurper the Shepherd of Horeb."
  • "I scorn to answer you."
  • Moore accordingly answered himself--at least, he subjoined to what he
  • had just said an additional observation in a lower voice.
  • "Oh, in Italy he was as great as any Moses! He was the right thing
  • there, fit to head and organize measures for the regeneration of
  • nations. It puzzles me to this day how the conqueror of Lodi should have
  • condescended to become an emperor, a vulgar, a stupid humbug; and still
  • more how a people who had once called themselves republicans should have
  • sunk again to the grade of mere slaves. I despise France! If England had
  • gone as far on the march of civilization as France did, she would hardly
  • have retreated so shamelessly."
  • "You don't mean to say that besotted imperial France is any worse than
  • bloody republican France?" demanded Helstone fiercely.
  • "I mean to say nothing, but I can think what I please, you know, Mr.
  • Helstone, both about France and England; and about revolutions, and
  • regicides, and restorations in general; and about the divine right of
  • kings, which you often stickle for in your sermons, and the duty of
  • non-resistance, and the sanity of war, and----"
  • Mr. Moore's sentence was here cut short by the rapid rolling up of a
  • gig, and its sudden stoppage in the middle of the road. Both he and the
  • rector had been too much occupied with their discourse to notice its
  • approach till it was close upon them.
  • "Nah, maister; did th' wagons hit home?" demanded a voice from the
  • vehicle.
  • "Can that be Joe Scott?"
  • "Ay, ay!" returned another voice; for the gig contained two persons, as
  • was seen by the glimmer of its lamp. The men with the lanterns had now
  • fallen into the rear, or rather, the equestrians of the rescue-party had
  • outridden the pedestrians. "Ay, Mr. Moore, it's Joe Scott. I'm bringing
  • him back to you in a bonny pickle. I fand him on the top of the moor
  • yonder, him and three others. What will you give me for restoring him to
  • you?"
  • "Why, my thanks, I believe; for I could better have afforded to lose a
  • better man. That is you, I suppose, Mr. Yorke, by your voice?"
  • "Ay, lad, it's me. I was coming home from Stilbro' market, and just as I
  • got to the middle of the moor, and was whipping on as swift as the wind
  • (for these, they say, are not safe times, thanks to a bad government!),
  • I heard a groan. I pulled up. Some would have whipt on faster; but I've
  • naught to fear that I know of. I don't believe there's a lad in these
  • parts would harm me--at least, I'd give them as good as I got if they
  • offered to do it. I said, 'Is there aught wrong anywhere?' ''Deed is
  • there,' somebody says, speaking out of the ground, like. 'What's to do?
  • Be sharp and tell me,' I ordered. 'Nobbut four on us ligging in a
  • ditch,' says Joe, as quiet as could be. I telled 'em more shame to 'em,
  • and bid them get up and move on, or I'd lend them a lick of the
  • gig-whip; for my notion was they were all fresh. 'We'd ha' done that an
  • hour sin', but we're teed wi' a bit o' band,' says Joe. So in a while I
  • got down and loosed 'em wi' my penknife; and Scott would ride wi' me, to
  • tell me all how it happened; and t' others are coming on as fast as
  • their feet will bring them."
  • "Well, I am greatly obliged to you, Mr. Yorke."
  • "Are you, my lad? You know you're not. However, here are the rest
  • approaching. And here, by the Lord, is another set with lights in their
  • pitchers, like the army of Gideon; and as we've th' parson wi',
  • us--good-evening, Mr. Helstone--we'se do."
  • Mr. Helstone returned the salutation of the individual in the gig very
  • stiffly indeed. That individual proceeded,--
  • "We're eleven strong men, and there's both horses and chariots amang us.
  • If we could only fall in wi' some of these starved ragamuffins of
  • frame-breakers we could win a grand victory. We could iv'ry one be a
  • Wellington--that would please ye, Mr. Helstone--and sich paragraphs as
  • we could contrive for t' papers! Briarfield suld be famous. But we'se
  • hev a column and a half i' th' _Stilbro' Courier_ ower this job, as it
  • is, I dare say. I'se expect no less."
  • "And I'll promise you no less, Mr. Yorke, for I'll write the article
  • myself," returned the rector.
  • "To be sure--sartainly! And mind ye recommend weel that them 'at brake
  • t' bits o' frames, and teed Joe Scott's legs wi' band, suld be hung
  • without benefit o' clergy. It's a hanging matter, or suld be. No doubt
  • o' that."
  • "If I judged them I'd give them short shrift!" cried Moore. "But I mean
  • to let them quite alone this bout, to give them rope enough, certain
  • that in the end they will hang themselves."
  • "Let them alone, will ye, Moore? Do you promise that?"
  • "Promise! No. All I mean to say is, I shall give myself no particular
  • trouble to catch them; but if one falls in my way----"
  • "You'll snap him up, of course. Only you would rather they would do
  • something worse than merely stop a wagon before you reckon with them.
  • Well, we'll say no more on the subject at present. Here we are at my
  • door, gentlemen, and I hope you and the men will step in. You will none
  • of you be the worse of a little refreshment."
  • Moore and Helstone opposed this proposition as unnecessary. It was,
  • however, pressed on them so courteously, and the night, besides, was so
  • inclement, and the gleam from the muslin-curtained windows of the house
  • before which they had halted looked so inviting, that at length they
  • yielded. Mr. Yorke, after having alighted from his gig, which he left in
  • charge of a man who issued from an outbuilding on his arrival, led the
  • way in.
  • It will have been remarked that Mr. Yorke varied a little in his
  • phraseology. Now he spoke broad Yorkshire, and anon he expressed himself
  • in very pure English. His manner seemed liable to equal alternations. He
  • could be polite and affable, and he could be blunt and rough. His
  • station then you could not easily determine by his speech and demeanour.
  • Perhaps the appearance of his residence may decide it.
  • The men he recommended to take the kitchen way, saying that he would
  • "see them served wi' summat to taste presently." The gentlemen were
  • ushered in at the front entrance. They found themselves in a matted
  • hall, lined almost to the ceiling with pictures. Through this they were
  • conducted to a large parlour, with a magnificent fire in the grate--the
  • most cheerful of rooms it appeared as a whole, and when you came to
  • examine details, the enlivening effect was not diminished. There was no
  • splendour, but there was taste everywhere, unusual taste--the taste, you
  • would have said, of a travelled man, a scholar, and a gentleman. A
  • series of Italian views decked the walls. Each of these was a specimen
  • of true art. A connoisseur had selected them; they were genuine and
  • valuable. Even by candle-light the bright clear skies, the soft
  • distances, with blue air quivering between the eye and the hills, the
  • fresh tints, and well-massed lights and shadows, charmed the view. The
  • subjects were all pastoral, the scenes were all sunny. There was a
  • guitar and some music on a sofa; there were cameos, beautiful
  • miniatures; a set of Grecian-looking vases on the mantelpiece; there
  • were books well arranged in two elegant bookcases.
  • Mr. Yorke bade his guests be seated. He then rang for wine. To the
  • servant who brought it he gave hospitable orders for the refreshment of
  • the men in the kitchen. The rector remained standing; he seemed not to
  • like his quarters; he would not touch the wine his host offered him.
  • "E'en as you will," remarked Mr. Yorke. "I reckon you're thinking of
  • Eastern customs, Mr. Helstone, and you'll not eat nor drink under my
  • roof, feared we suld be forced to be friends; but I am not so particular
  • or superstitious. You might sup the contents of that decanter, and you
  • might give me a bottle of the best in your own cellar, and I'd hold
  • myself free to oppose you at every turn still--in every vestry-meeting
  • and justice-meeting where we encountered one another."
  • "It is just what I should expect of you, Mr. Yorke."
  • "Does it agree wi' ye now, Mr. Helstone, to be riding out after rioters,
  • of a wet night, at your age?"
  • "It always agrees with me to be doing my duty; and in this case my duty
  • is a thorough pleasure. To hunt down vermin is a noble occupation, fit
  • for an archbishop."
  • "Fit for ye, at ony rate. But where's t' curate? He's happen gone to
  • visit some poor body in a sick gird, or he's happen hunting down vermin
  • in another direction."
  • "He is doing garrison-duty at Hollow's Mill."
  • "You left him a sup o' wine, I hope, Bob" (turning to Mr. Moore), "to
  • keep his courage up?"
  • He did not pause for an answer, but continued, quickly, still addressing
  • Moore, who had thrown himself into an old-fashioned chair by the
  • fireside--"Move it, Robert! Get up, my lad! That place is mine. Take the
  • sofa, or three other chairs, if you will, but not this. It belangs to
  • me, and nob'dy else."
  • "Why are you so particular to that chair, Mr. Yorke?" asked Moore,
  • lazily vacating the place in obedience to orders.
  • "My father war afore me, and that's all t' answer I sall gie thee; and
  • it's as good a reason as Mr. Helstone can give for the main feck o' his
  • notions."
  • "Moore, are you ready to go?" inquired the rector.
  • "Nay; Robert's not ready, or rather, I'm not ready to part wi' him. He's
  • an ill lad, and wants correcting."
  • "Why, sir? What have I done?"
  • "Made thyself enemies on every hand."
  • "What do I care for that? What difference does it make to me whether
  • your Yorkshire louts hate me or like me?"
  • "Ay, there it is. The lad is a mak' of an alien amang us. His father
  • would never have talked i' that way.--Go back to Antwerp, where you were
  • born and bred, mauvaise tête!"
  • "Mauvaise tête vous-même; je ne fais que mon devoir; quant à vos
  • lourdauds de paysans, je m'en moque!"
  • "En ravanche, mon garçon, nos lourdauds de paysans se moqueront de toi;
  • sois en certain," replied Yorke, speaking with nearly as pure a French
  • accent as Gérard Moore.
  • "C'est bon! c'est bon! Et puisque cela m'est égal, que mes amis ne s'en
  • inquiètent pas."
  • "Tes amis! Où sont-ils, tes amis?"
  • "Je fais écho, où sont-ils? et je suis fort aise que l'écho seul y
  • répond. Au diable les amis! Je me souviens encore du moment où mon père
  • et mes oncles Gérard appellèrent autour d'eux leurs amis, et Dieu sait
  • si les amis se sont empressés d'accourir à leur secours! Tenez, M.
  • Yorke, ce mot, ami, m'irrite trop; ne m'en parlez plus."
  • "Comme tu voudras."
  • And here Mr. Yorke held his peace; and while he sits leaning back in his
  • three-cornered carved oak chair, I will snatch my opportunity to sketch
  • the portrait of this French-speaking Yorkshire gentleman.
  • CHAPTER IV.
  • MR. YORKE (_continued_).
  • A Yorkshire gentleman he was, _par excellence_, in every point; about
  • fifty-five years old, but looking at first sight still older, for his
  • hair was silver white. His forehead was broad, not high; his face fresh
  • and hale; the harshness of the north was seen in his features, as it was
  • heard in his voice; every trait was thoroughly English--not a Norman
  • line anywhere; it was an inelegant, unclassic, unaristocratic mould of
  • visage. Fine people would perhaps have called it vulgar; sensible people
  • would have termed it characteristic; shrewd people would have delighted
  • in it for the pith, sagacity, intelligence, the rude yet real
  • originality marked in every lineament, latent in every furrow. But it
  • was an indocile, a scornful, and a sarcastic face--the face of a man
  • difficult to lead, and impossible to drive. His stature was rather tall,
  • and he was well made and wiry, and had a stately integrity of port;
  • there was not a suspicion of the clown about him anywhere.
  • I did not find it easy to sketch Mr. Yorke's person, but it is more
  • difficult to indicate his mind. If you expect to be treated to a
  • Perfection, reader, or even to a benevolent, philanthropic old gentleman
  • in him, you are mistaken. He has spoken with some sense and with some
  • good feeling to Mr. Moore, but you are not thence to conclude that he
  • always spoke and thought justly and kindly.
  • Mr. Yorke, in the first place, was without the organ of veneration--a
  • great want, and which throws a man wrong on every point where veneration
  • is required. Secondly, he was without the organ of comparison--a
  • deficiency which strips a man of sympathy; and thirdly, he had too
  • little of the organs of benevolence and ideality, which took the glory
  • and softness from his nature, and for him diminished those divine
  • qualities throughout the universe.
  • The want of veneration made him intolerant to those above him--kings and
  • nobles and priests, dynasties and parliaments and establishments, with
  • all their doings, most of their enactments, their forms, their rights,
  • their claims, were to him an abomination, all rubbish; he found no use
  • or pleasure in them, and believed it would be clear gain, and no damage
  • to the world, if its high places were razed, and their occupants crushed
  • in the fall. The want of veneration, too, made him dead at heart to the
  • electric delight of admiring what is admirable; it dried up a thousand
  • pure sources of enjoyment; it withered a thousand vivid pleasures. He
  • was not irreligious, though a member of no sect; but his religion could
  • not be that of one who knows how to venerate. He believed in God and
  • heaven; but his God and heaven were those of a man in whom awe,
  • imagination, and tenderness lack.
  • The weakness of his powers of comparison made him inconsistent; while he
  • professed some excellent general doctrines of mutual toleration and
  • forbearance, he cherished towards certain classes a bigoted antipathy.
  • He spoke of "parsons" and all who belonged to parsons, of "lords" and
  • the appendages of lords, with a harshness, sometimes an insolence, as
  • unjust as it was insufferable. He could not place himself in the
  • position of those he vituperated; he could not compare their errors with
  • their temptations, their defects with their disadvantages; he could not
  • realize the effect of such and such circumstances on himself similarly
  • situated, and he would often express the most ferocious and tyrannical
  • wishes regarding those who had acted, as he thought, ferociously and
  • tyrannically. To judge by his threats, he would have employed arbitrary,
  • even cruel, means to advance the cause of freedom and equality.
  • Equality! yes, Mr. Yorke talked about equality, but at heart he was a
  • proud man--very friendly to his workpeople, very good to all who were
  • beneath him, and submitted quietly to be beneath him, but haughty as
  • Beelzebub to whomsoever the world deemed (for he deemed no man) his
  • superior. Revolt was in his blood: he could not bear control; his
  • father, his grandfather before him, could not bear it, and his children
  • after him never could.
  • The want of general benevolence made him very impatient of imbecility,
  • and of all faults which grated on his strong, shrewd nature; it left no
  • check to his cutting sarcasm. As he was not merciful, he would sometimes
  • wound and wound again, without noticing how much he hurt, or caring how
  • deep he thrust.
  • As to the paucity of ideality in his mind, that can scarcely be called a
  • fault: a fine ear for music, a correct eye for colour and form, left him
  • the quality of taste; and who cares for imagination? Who does not think
  • it a rather dangerous, senseless attribute, akin to weakness, perhaps
  • partaking of frenzy--a disease rather than a gift of the mind?
  • Probably all think it so but those who possess, or fancy they possess,
  • it. To hear them speak, you would believe that their hearts would be
  • cold if that elixir did not flow about them, that their eyes would be
  • dim if that flame did not refine their vision, that they would be lonely
  • if this strange companion abandoned them. You would suppose that it
  • imparted some glad hope to spring, some fine charm to summer, some
  • tranquil joy to autumn, some consolation to winter, which you do not
  • feel. An illusion, of course; but the fanatics cling to their dream, and
  • would not give it for gold.
  • As Mr. Yorke did not possess poetic imagination himself, he considered
  • it a most superfluous quality in others. Painters and musicians he could
  • tolerate, and even encourage, because he could relish the results of
  • their art; he could see the charm of a fine picture, and feel the
  • pleasure of good music; but a quiet poet--whatever force struggled,
  • whatever fire glowed, in his breast--if he could not have played the man
  • in the counting-house, of the tradesman in the Piece Hall, might have
  • lived despised, and died scorned, under the eyes of Hiram Yorke.
  • And as there are many Hiram Yorkes in the world, it is well that the
  • true poet, quiet externally though he may be, has often a truculent
  • spirit under his placidity, and is full of shrewdness in his meekness,
  • and can measure the whole stature of those who look down on him, and
  • correctly ascertain the weight and value of the pursuits they disdain
  • him for not having followed. It is happy that he can have his own bliss,
  • his own society with his great friend and goddess Nature, quite
  • independent of those who find little pleasure in him, and in whom he
  • finds no pleasure at all. It is just that while the world and
  • circumstances often turn a dark, cold side to him--and properly, too,
  • because he first turns a dark, cold, careless side to them--he should be
  • able to maintain a festal brightness and cherishing glow in his bosom,
  • which makes all bright and genial for him; while strangers, perhaps,
  • deem his existence a Polar winter never gladdened by a sun. The true
  • poet is not one whit to be pitied, and he is apt to laugh in his sleeve
  • when any misguided sympathizer whines over his wrongs. Even when
  • utilitarians sit in judgment on him, and pronounce him and his art
  • useless, he hears the sentence with such a hard derision, such a broad,
  • deep, comprehensive, and merciless contempt of the unhappy Pharisees who
  • pronounce it, that he is rather to be chidden than condoled with. These,
  • however, are not Mr. Yorke's reflections, and it is with Mr. Yorke we
  • have at present to do.
  • I have told you some of his faults, reader: as to his good points, he
  • was one of the most honourable and capable men in Yorkshire; even those
  • who disliked him were forced to respect him. He was much beloved by the
  • poor, because he was thoroughly kind and very fatherly to them. To his
  • workmen he was considerate and cordial. When he dismissed them from an
  • occupation, he would try to set them on to something else, or, if that
  • was impossible, help them to remove with their families to a district
  • where work might possibly be had. It must also be remarked that if, as
  • sometimes chanced, any individual amongst his "hands" showed signs of
  • insubordination, Yorke--who, like many who abhor being controlled, knew
  • how to control with vigour--had the secret of crushing rebellion in the
  • germ, of eradicating it like a bad weed, so that it never spread or
  • developed within the sphere of his authority. Such being the happy state
  • of his own affairs, he felt himself at liberty to speak with the utmost
  • severity of those who were differently situated, to ascribe whatever was
  • unpleasant in their position entirely to their own fault, to sever
  • himself from the masters, and advocate freely the cause of the
  • operatives.
  • Mr. Yorke's family was the first and oldest in the district; and he,
  • though not the wealthiest, was one of the most influential men. His
  • education had been good. In his youth, before the French Revolution, he
  • had travelled on the Continent. He was an adept in the French and
  • Italian languages. During a two years' sojourn in Italy he had collected
  • many good paintings and tasteful rarities, with which his residence was
  • now adorned. His manners, when he liked, were those of a finished
  • gentleman of the old school; his conversation, when he was disposed to
  • please, was singularly interesting and original; and if he usually
  • expressed himself in the Yorkshire dialect, it was because he chose to
  • do so, preferring his native Doric to a more refined vocabulary, "A
  • Yorkshire burr," he affirmed, "was as much better than a cockney's lisp
  • as a bull's bellow than a raton's squeak."
  • Mr. Yorke knew every one, and was known by every one, for miles round;
  • yet his intimate acquaintances were very few. Himself thoroughly
  • original, he had no taste for what was ordinary: a racy, rough
  • character, high or low, ever found acceptance with him; a refined,
  • insipid personage, however exalted in station, was his aversion. He
  • would spend an hour any time in talking freely with a shrewd workman of
  • his own, or with some queer, sagacious old woman amongst his cottagers,
  • when he would have grudged a moment to a commonplace fine gentleman or
  • to the most fashionable and elegant, if frivolous, lady. His preferences
  • on these points he carried to an extreme, forgetting that there may be
  • amiable and even admirable characters amongst those who cannot be
  • original. Yet he made exceptions to his own rule. There was a certain
  • order of mind, plain, ingenuous, neglecting refinement, almost devoid of
  • intellectuality, and quite incapable of appreciating what was
  • intellectual in him, but which, at the same time, never felt disgust at
  • his rudeness, was not easily wounded by his sarcasm, did not closely
  • analyze his sayings, doings, or opinions, with which he was peculiarly
  • at ease, and, consequently, which he peculiarly preferred. He was lord
  • amongst such characters. They, while submitting implicitly to his
  • influence, never acknowledged, because they never reflected on, his
  • superiority; they were quite tractable, therefore, without running the
  • smallest danger of being servile; and their unthinking, easy, artless
  • insensibility was as acceptable, because as convenient, to Mr. Yorke as
  • that of the chair he sat on, or of the floor he trod.
  • It will have been observed that he was not quite uncordial with Mr.
  • Moore. He had two or three reasons for entertaining a faint partiality
  • to that gentleman. It may sound odd, but the first of these was that
  • Moore spoke English with a foreign, and French with a perfectly pure,
  • accent; and that his dark, thin face, with its fine though rather wasted
  • lines, had a most anti-British and anti-Yorkshire look. These points
  • seem frivolous, unlikely to influence a character like Yorke's; but the
  • fact is they recalled old, perhaps pleasurable, associations--they
  • brought back his travelling, his youthful days. He had seen, amidst
  • Italian cities and scenes, faces like Moore's; he had heard, in Parisian
  • cafés and theatres, voices like his. He was young then, and when he
  • looked at and listened to the alien, he seemed young again.
  • Secondly, he had known Moore's father, and had had dealings with him.
  • That was a more substantial, though by no means a more agreeable tie;
  • for as his firm had been connected with Moore's in business, it had
  • also, in some measure, been implicated in its losses.
  • Thirdly, he had found Robert himself a sharp man of business. He saw
  • reason to anticipate that he would, in the end, by one means or another,
  • make money; and he respected both his resolution and acuteness--perhaps,
  • also, his hardness. A fourth circumstance which drew them together was
  • that of Mr. Yorke being one of the guardians of the minor on whose
  • estate Hollow's Mill was situated; consequently Moore, in the course of
  • his alterations and improvements, had frequent occasion to consult him.
  • As to the other guest now present in Mr. Yorke's parlour, Mr. Helstone,
  • between him and his host there existed a double antipathy--the antipathy
  • of nature and that of circumstances. The free-thinker hated the
  • formalist; the lover of liberty detested the disciplinarian. Besides, it
  • was said that in former years they had been rival suitors of the same
  • lady.
  • Mr. Yorke, as a general rule, was, when young, noted for his preference
  • of sprightly and dashing women: a showy shape and air, a lively wit, a
  • ready tongue, chiefly seemed to attract him. He never, however, proposed
  • to any of these brilliant belles whose society he sought; and all at
  • once he seriously fell in love with and eagerly wooed a girl who
  • presented a complete contrast to those he had hitherto noticed--a girl
  • with the face of a Madonna; a girl of living marble--stillness
  • personified. No matter that, when he spoke to her, she only answered him
  • in monosyllables; no matter that his sighs seemed unheard, that his
  • glances were unreturned, that she never responded to his opinions,
  • rarely smiled at his jests, paid him no respect and no attention; no
  • matter that she seemed the opposite of everything feminine he had ever
  • in his whole life been known to admire. For him Mary Cave was perfect,
  • because somehow, for some reason--no doubt he had a reason--he loved
  • her.
  • Mr. Helstone, at that time curate of Briarfield, loved Mary too--or, at
  • any rate, he fancied her. Several others admired her, for she was
  • beautiful as a monumental angel; but the clergyman was preferred for his
  • office's sake--that office probably investing him with some of the
  • illusion necessary to allure to the commission of matrimony, and which
  • Miss Cave did not find in any of the young wool-staplers, her other
  • adorers. Mr. Helstone neither had, nor professed to have, Mr. Yorke's
  • absorbing passion for her. He had none of the humble reverence which
  • seemed to subdue most of her suitors; he saw her more as she really was
  • than the rest did. He was, consequently, more master of her and himself.
  • She accepted him at the first offer, and they were married.
  • Nature never intended Mr. Helstone to make a very good husband,
  • especially to a quiet wife. He thought so long as a woman was silent
  • nothing ailed her, and she wanted nothing. If she did not complain of
  • solitude, solitude, however continued, could not be irksome to her. If
  • she did not talk and put herself forward, express a partiality for this,
  • an aversion to that, she had no partialities or aversions, and it was
  • useless to consult her tastes. He made no pretence of comprehending
  • women, or comparing them with men. They were a different, probably a
  • very inferior, order of existence. A wife could not be her husband's
  • companion, much less his confidante, much less his stay. _His_ wife,
  • after a year or two, was of no great importance to him in any shape; and
  • when she one day, as he thought, suddenly--for he had scarcely noticed
  • her decline--but, as others thought, gradually, took her leave of him
  • and of life, and there was only a still, beautiful-featured mould of
  • clay left, cold and white, in the conjugal couch, he felt his
  • bereavement--who shall say how little? Yet, perhaps, more than he seemed
  • to feel it; for he was not a man from whom grief easily wrung tears.
  • His dry-eyed and sober mourning scandalized an old housekeeper, and
  • likewise a female attendant, who had waited upon Mrs. Helstone in her
  • sickness, and who, perhaps, had had opportunities of learning more of
  • the deceased lady's nature, of her capacity for feeling and loving, than
  • her husband knew. They gossiped together over the corpse, related
  • anecdotes, with embellishments of her lingering decline, and its real or
  • supposed cause. In short, they worked each other up to some indignation
  • against the austere little man, who sat examining papers in an adjoining
  • room, unconscious of what opprobrium he was the object.
  • Mrs. Helstone was hardly under the sod when rumours began to be rife in
  • the neighbourhood that she had died of a broken heart. These magnified
  • quickly into reports of hard usage, and, finally, details of harsh
  • treatment on the part of her husband--reports grossly untrue, but not
  • the less eagerly received on that account. Mr. Yorke heard them, partly
  • believed them. Already, of course, he had no friendly feeling to his
  • successful rival. Though himself a married man now, and united to a
  • woman who seemed a complete contrast to Mary Cave in all respects, he
  • could not forget the great disappointment of his life; and when he heard
  • that what would have been so precious to him had been neglected, perhaps
  • abused, by another, he conceived for that other a rooted and bitter
  • animosity.
  • Of the nature and strength of this animosity Mr. Helstone was but half
  • aware. He neither knew how much Yorke had loved Mary Cave, what he had
  • felt on losing her, nor was he conscious of the calumnies concerning his
  • treatment of her, familiar to every ear in the neighbourhood but his
  • own. He believed political and religious differences alone separated him
  • and Mr. Yorke. Had he known how the case really stood, he would hardly
  • have been induced by any persuasion to cross his former rival's
  • threshold.
  • * * * * *
  • Mr. Yorke did not resume his lecture of Robert Moore. The conversation
  • ere long recommenced in a more general form, though still in a somewhat
  • disputative tone. The unquiet state of the country, the various
  • depredations lately committed on mill-property in the district, supplied
  • abundant matter for disagreement, especially as each of the three
  • gentlemen present differed more or less in his views on these subjects.
  • Mr. Helstone thought the masters aggrieved, the workpeople unreasonable;
  • he condemned sweepingly the widespread spirit of disaffection against
  • constituted authorities, the growing indisposition to bear with patience
  • evils he regarded as inevitable. The cures he prescribed were vigorous
  • government interference, strict magisterial vigilance; when necessary,
  • prompt military coercion.
  • Mr. Yorke wished to know whether this interference, vigilance, and
  • coercion would feed those who were hungry, give work to those who wanted
  • work, and whom no man would hire. He scouted the idea of inevitable
  • evils. He said public patience was a camel, on whose back the last atom
  • that could be borne had already been laid, and that resistance was now a
  • duty; the widespread spirit of disaffection against constituted
  • authorities he regarded as the most promising sign of the times; the
  • masters, he allowed, were truly aggrieved, but their main grievances had
  • been heaped on them by a "corrupt, base, and bloody" government (these
  • were Mr. Yorke's epithets). Madmen like Pitt, demons like Castlereagh,
  • mischievous idiots like Perceval, were the tyrants, the curses of the
  • country, the destroyers of her trade. It was their infatuated
  • perseverance in an unjustifiable, a hopeless, a ruinous war, which had
  • brought the nation to its present pass. It was their monstrously
  • oppressive taxation, it was the infamous "Orders in Council"--the
  • originators of which deserved impeachment and the scaffold, if ever
  • public men did--that hung a millstone about England's neck.
  • "But where was the use of talking?" he demanded. "What chance was there
  • of reason being heard in a land that was king-ridden, priest-ridden,
  • peer-ridden; where a lunatic was the nominal monarch, an unprincipled
  • debauchee the real ruler; where such an insult to common sense as
  • hereditary legislators was tolerated; where such a humbug as a bench of
  • bishops, such an arrogant abuse as a pampered, persecuting established
  • church was endured and venerated; where a standing army was maintained,
  • and a host of lazy parsons and their pauper families were kept on the
  • fat of the land?"
  • Mr. Helstone, rising up and putting on his shovel-hat, observed in
  • reply, "that in the course of his life he had met with two or three
  • instances where sentiments of this sort had been very bravely maintained
  • so long as health, strength, and worldly prosperity had been the allies
  • of him who professed them; but there came a time," he said, "to all men,
  • 'when the keepers of the house should tremble; when they should be
  • afraid of that which is high, and fear should be in the way;' and that
  • time was the test of the advocate of anarchy and rebellion, the enemy of
  • religion and order. Ere now," he affirmed, "he had been called upon to
  • read those prayers our church has provided for the sick by the miserable
  • dying-bed of one of her most rancorous foes; he had seen such a one
  • stricken with remorse, solicitous to discover a place for repentance,
  • and unable to find any, though he sought it carefully with tears. He
  • must forewarn Mr. Yorke that blasphemy against God and the king was a
  • deadly sin, and that there was such a thing as 'judgment to come.'"
  • Mr. Yorke "believed fully that there was such a thing as judgment to
  • come. If it were otherwise, it would be difficult to imagine how all the
  • scoundrels who seemed triumphant in this world, who broke innocent
  • hearts with impunity, abused unmerited privileges, were a scandal to
  • honourable callings, took the bread out of the mouths of the poor,
  • browbeat the humble, and truckled meanly to the rich and proud, were to
  • be properly paid off in such coin as they had earned. But," he added,
  • "whenever he got low-spirited about such-like goings-on, and their
  • seeming success in this mucky lump of a planet, he just reached down t'
  • owd book" (pointing to a great Bible in the bookcase), "opened it like
  • at a chance, and he was sure to light of a verse blazing wi' a blue
  • brimstone low that set all straight. He knew," he said, "where some folk
  • war bound for, just as weel as if an angel wi' great white wings had
  • come in ower t' door-stone and told him."
  • "Sir," said Mr. Helstone, collecting all his dignity--"sir, the great
  • knowledge of man is to know himself, and the bourne whither his own
  • steps tend."
  • "Ay, ay. You'll recollect, Mr. Helstone, that Ignorance was carried away
  • from the very gates of heaven, borne through the air, and thrust in at a
  • door in the side of the hill which led down to hell."
  • "Nor have I forgotten, Mr. Yorke, that Vain-Confidence, not seeing the
  • way before him, fell into a deep pit, which was on purpose there made by
  • the prince of the grounds, to catch vainglorious fools withal, and was
  • dashed to pieces with his fall."
  • "Now," interposed Mr. Moore, who had hitherto sat a silent but amused
  • spectator of this worldly combat, and whose indifference to the party
  • politics of the day, as well as to the gossip of the neighbourhood, made
  • him an impartial, if apathetic, judge of the merits of such an
  • encounter, "you have both sufficiently blackballed each other, and
  • proved how cordially you detest each other, and how wicked you think
  • each other. For my part, my hate is still running in such a strong
  • current against the fellows who have broken my frames that I have none
  • to spare for my private acquaintance, and still less for such a vague
  • thing as a sect or a government. But really, gentlemen, you both seem
  • very bad by your own showing--worse than ever I suspected you to be.--I
  • dare not stay all night with a rebel and blasphemer like you, Yorke; and
  • I hardly dare ride home with a cruel and tyrannical ecclesiastic like
  • Mr. Helstone."
  • "I am going, however, Mr. Moore," said the rector sternly. "Come with me
  • or not, as you please."
  • "Nay, he shall not have the choice; he _shall_ go with you," responded
  • Yorke. "It's midnight, and past; and I'll have nob'dy staying up i' my
  • house any longer. Ye mun all go."
  • He rang the bell.
  • "Deb," said he to the servant who answered it, "clear them folk out o'
  • t' kitchen, and lock t' doors, and be off to bed.--Here is your way,
  • gentlemen," he continued to his guests; and, lighting them through the
  • passage, he fairly put them out at his front door.
  • They met their party hurrying out pell-mell by the back way. Their
  • horses stood at the gate; they mounted, and rode off, Moore laughing at
  • their abrupt dismissal, Helstone deeply indignant thereat.
  • CHAPTER V.
  • HOLLOW'S COTTAGE.
  • Moore's good spirits were still with him when he rose next morning. He
  • and Joe Scott had both spent the night in the mill, availing themselves
  • of certain sleeping accommodations producible from recesses in the front
  • and back counting-houses. The master, always an early riser, was up
  • somewhat sooner even than usual. He awoke his man by singing a French
  • song as he made his toilet.
  • "Ye're not custen dahn, then, maister?" cried Joe.
  • "Not a stiver, mon garçon--which means, my lad. Get up, and we'll take a
  • turn through the mill before the hands come in, and I'll explain my
  • future plans. We'll have the machinery yet, Joseph. You never heard of
  • Bruce, perhaps?"
  • "And th' arrand (spider)? Yes, but I hev. I've read th' history o'
  • Scotland, and happen knaw as mich on't as ye; and I understand ye to
  • mean to say ye'll persevere."
  • "I do."
  • "Is there mony o' your mak' i' your country?" inquired Joe, as he folded
  • up his temporary bed, and put it away.
  • "In my country! Which is my country?"
  • "Why, France--isn't it?"
  • "Not it, indeed! The circumstance of the French having seized Antwerp,
  • where I was born, does not make me a Frenchman."
  • "Holland, then?"
  • "I am not a Dutchman. Now you are confounding Antwerp with Amsterdam."
  • "Flanders?"
  • "I scorn the insinuation, Joe! I a Flamand! Have I a Flemish face--the
  • clumsy nose standing out, the mean forehead falling back, the pale blue
  • eyes 'à fleur de tête'? Am I all body and no legs, like a Flamand? But
  • you don't know what they are like, those Netherlanders. Joe, I'm an
  • Anversois. My mother was an Anversoise, though she came of French
  • lineage, which is the reason I speak French."
  • "But your father war Yorkshire, which maks ye a bit Yorkshire too; and
  • onybody may see ye're akin to us, ye're so keen o' making brass, and
  • getting forrards."
  • "Joe, you're an impudent dog; but I've always been accustomed to a
  • boorish sort of insolence from my youth up. The 'classe ouvrière'--that
  • is, the working people in Belgium--bear themselves brutally towards
  • their employers; and by _brutally_, Joe, I mean _brutalement_--which,
  • perhaps, when properly translated, should be _roughly_."
  • "We allus speak our minds i' this country; and them young parsons and
  • grand folk fro' London is shocked at wer 'incivility;' and we like weel
  • enough to gi'e 'em summat to be shocked at, 'cause it's sport to us to
  • watch 'em turn up the whites o' their een, and spreed out their bits o'
  • hands, like as they're flayed wi' bogards, and then to hear 'em say,
  • nipping off their words short like, 'Dear! dear! Whet seveges! How very
  • corse!'"
  • "You _are_ savages, Joe. You don't suppose you're civilized, do you?"
  • "Middling, middling, maister. I reckon 'at us manufacturing lads i' th'
  • north is a deal more intelligent, and knaws a deal more nor th' farming
  • folk i' th' south. Trade sharpens wer wits; and them that's mechanics
  • like me is forced to think. Ye know, what wi' looking after machinery
  • and sich like, I've getten into that way that when I see an effect, I
  • look straight out for a cause, and I oft lig hold on't to purpose; and
  • then I like reading, and I'm curious to knaw what them that reckons to
  • govern us aims to do for us and wi' us. And there's many 'cuter nor me;
  • there's many a one amang them greasy chaps 'at smells o' oil, and amang
  • them dyers wi' blue and black skins, that has a long head, and that can
  • tell what a fooil of a law is, as well as ye or old Yorke, and a deal
  • better nor soft uns like Christopher Sykes o' Whinbury, and greet
  • hectoring nowts like yond' Irish Peter, Helstone's curate."
  • "You think yourself a clever fellow, I know, Scott."
  • "Ay! I'm fairish. I can tell cheese fro' chalk, and I'm varry weel aware
  • that I've improved sich opportunities as I have had, a deal better nor
  • some 'at reckons to be aboon me; but there's thousands i' Yorkshire
  • that's as good as me, and a two-three that's better."
  • "You're a great man--you're a sublime fellow; but you're a prig, a
  • conceited noodle with it all, Joe! You need not to think that because
  • you've picked up a little knowledge of practical mathematics, and
  • because you have found some scantling of the elements of chemistry at
  • the bottom of a dyeing vat, that therefore you're a neglected man of
  • science; and you need not to suppose that because the course of trade
  • does not always run smooth, and you, and such as you, are sometimes
  • short of work and of bread, that therefore your class are martyrs, and
  • that the whole form of government under which you live is wrong. And,
  • moreover, you need not for a moment to insinuate that the virtues have
  • taken refuge in cottages and wholly abandoned slated houses. Let me tell
  • you, I particularly abominate that sort of trash, because I know so well
  • that human nature is human nature everywhere, whether under tile or
  • thatch, and that in every specimen of human nature that breathes, vice
  • and virtue are ever found blended, in smaller or greater proportions,
  • and that the proportion is not determined by station. I have seen
  • villains who were rich, and I have seen villains who were poor, and I
  • have seen villains who were neither rich nor poor, but who had realized
  • Agar's wish, and lived in fair and modest competency. The clock is going
  • to strike six. Away with you, Joe, and ring the mill bell."
  • It was now the middle of the month of February; by six o'clock therefore
  • dawn was just beginning to steal on night, to penetrate with a pale ray
  • its brown obscurity, and give a demi-translucence to its opaque shadows.
  • Pale enough that ray was on this particular morning: no colour tinged
  • the east, no flush warmed it. To see what a heavy lid day slowly lifted,
  • what a wan glance she flung along the hills, you would have thought the
  • sun's fire quenched in last night's floods. The breath of this morning
  • was chill as its aspect; a raw wind stirred the mass of night-cloud, and
  • showed, as it slowly rose, leaving a colourless, silver-gleaming ring
  • all round the horizon, not blue sky, but a stratum of paler vapour
  • beyond. It had ceased to rain, but the earth was sodden, and the pools
  • and rivulets were full.
  • The mill-windows were alight, the bell still rung loud, and now the
  • little children came running in, in too great a hurry, let us hope, to
  • feel very much nipped by the inclement air; and indeed, by contrast,
  • perhaps the morning appeared rather favourable to them than otherwise,
  • for they had often come to their work that winter through snow-storms,
  • through heavy rain, through hard frost.
  • Mr. Moore stood at the entrance to watch them pass. He counted them as
  • they went by. To those who came rather late he said a word of reprimand,
  • which was a little more sharply repeated by Joe Scott when the lingerers
  • reached the work-rooms. Neither master nor overlooker spoke savagely.
  • They were not savage men either of them, though it appeared both were
  • rigid, for they fined a delinquent who came considerably too late. Mr.
  • Moore made him pay his penny down ere he entered, and informed him that
  • the next repetition of the fault would cost him twopence.
  • Rules, no doubt, are necessary in such cases, and coarse and cruel
  • masters will make coarse and cruel rules, which, at the time we treat of
  • at least, they used sometimes to enforce tyrannically; but though I
  • describe imperfect characters (every character in this book will be
  • found to be more or less imperfect, my pen refusing to draw anything in
  • the model line), I have not undertaken to handle degraded or utterly
  • infamous ones. Child-torturers, slave masters and drivers, I consign to
  • the hands of jailers. The novelist may be excused from sullying his page
  • with the record of their deeds.
  • Instead, then, of harrowing up my reader's soul and delighting his organ
  • of wonder with effective descriptions of stripes and scourgings, I am
  • happy to be able to inform him that neither Mr. Moore nor his overlooker
  • ever struck a child in their mill. Joe had, indeed, once very severely
  • flogged a son of his own for telling a lie and persisting in it; but,
  • like his employer, he was too phlegmatic, too calm, as well as too
  • reasonable a man, to make corporal chastisement other than the exception
  • to his treatment of the young.
  • Mr. Moore haunted his mill, his mill-yard, his dye-house, and his
  • warehouse till the sickly dawn strengthened into day. The sun even
  • rose--at least a white disc, clear, tintless, and almost chill-looking
  • as ice, peeped over the dark crest of a hill, changed to silver the
  • livid edge of the cloud above it, and looked solemnly down the whole
  • length of the den, or narrow dale, to whose strait bounds we are at
  • present limited. It was eight o'clock; the mill lights were all
  • extinguished; the signal was given for breakfast; the children, released
  • for half an hour from toil, betook themselves to the little tin cans
  • which held their coffee, and to the small baskets which contained their
  • allowance of bread. Let us hope they have enough to eat; it would be a
  • pity were it otherwise.
  • And now at last Mr. Moore quitted the mill-yard, and bent his steps to
  • his dwelling-house. It was only a short distance from the factory, but
  • the hedge and high bank on each side of the lane which conducted to it
  • seemed to give it something of the appearance and feeling of seclusion.
  • It was a small, whitewashed place, with a green porch over the door;
  • scanty brown stalks showed in the garden soil near this porch, and
  • likewise beneath the windows--stalks budless and flowerless now, but
  • giving dim prediction of trained and blooming creepers for summer days.
  • A grass plat and borders fronted the cottage. The borders presented only
  • black mould yet, except where, in sheltered nooks, the first shoots of
  • snowdrop or crocus peeped, green as emerald, from the earth. The spring
  • was late; it had been a severe and prolonged winter; the last deep snow
  • had but just disappeared before yesterday's rains; on the hills, indeed,
  • white remnants of it yet gleamed, flecking the hollows and crowning the
  • peaks; the lawn was not verdant, but bleached, as was the grass on the
  • bank, and under the hedge in the lane. Three trees, gracefully grouped,
  • rose beside the cottage. They were not lofty, but having no rivals near,
  • they looked well and imposing where they grew. Such was Mr. Moore's
  • home--a snug nest for content and contemplation, but one within which
  • the wings of action and ambition could not long lie folded.
  • Its air of modest comfort seemed to possess no particular attraction for
  • its owner. Instead of entering the house at once he fetched a spade from
  • a little shed and began to work in the garden. For about a quarter of an
  • hour he dug on uninterrupted. At length, however, a window opened, and a
  • female voice called to him,--
  • "Eh, bien! Tu ne déjeûnes pas ce matin?"
  • The answer, and the rest of the conversation, was in French; but as this
  • is an English book, I shall translate it into English.
  • "Is breakfast ready, Hortense?"
  • "Certainly; it has been ready half an hour."
  • "Then I am ready too. I have a canine hunger."
  • He threw down his spade, and entered the house. The narrow passage
  • conducted him to a small parlour, where a breakfast of coffee and bread
  • and butter, with the somewhat un-English accompaniment of stewed pears,
  • was spread on the table. Over these viands presided the lady who had
  • spoken from the window. I must describe her before I go any farther.
  • She seemed a little older than Mr. Moore--perhaps she was thirty-five,
  • tall, and proportionately stout; she had very black hair, for the
  • present twisted up in curl-papers, a high colour in her cheeks, a small
  • nose, a pair of little black eyes. The lower part of her face was large
  • in proportion to the upper; her forehead was small and rather
  • corrugated; she had a fretful though not an ill-natured expression of
  • countenance; there was something in her whole appearance one felt
  • inclined to be half provoked with and half amused at. The strangest
  • point was her dress--a stuff petticoat and a striped cotton camisole.
  • The petticoat was short, displaying well a pair of feet and ankles which
  • left much to be desired in the article of symmetry.
  • You will think I have depicted a remarkable slattern, reader. Not at
  • all. Hortense Moore (she was Mr. Moore's sister) was a very orderly,
  • economical person. The petticoat, camisole, and curl-papers were her
  • morning costume, in which, of forenoons, she had always been accustomed
  • to "go her household ways" in her own country. She did not choose to
  • adopt English fashions because she was obliged to live in England; she
  • adhered to her old Belgian modes, quite satisfied that there was a merit
  • in so doing.
  • Mademoiselle had an excellent opinion of herself--an opinion not wholly
  • undeserved, for she possessed some good and sterling qualities; but she
  • rather over-estimated the kind and degree of these qualities, and quite
  • left out of the account sundry little defects which accompanied them.
  • You could never have persuaded her that she was a prejudiced and
  • narrow-minded person, that she was too susceptible on the subject of her
  • own dignity and importance, and too apt to take offence about trifles;
  • yet all this was true. However, where her claims to distinction were not
  • opposed, and where her prejudices were not offended, she could be kind
  • and friendly enough. To her two brothers (for there was another Gérard
  • Moore besides Robert) she was very much attached. As the sole remaining
  • representatives of their decayed family, the persons of both were almost
  • sacred in her eyes. Of Louis, however, she knew less than of Robert. He
  • had been sent to England when a mere boy, and had received his education
  • at an English school. His education not being such as to adapt him for
  • trade, perhaps, too, his natural bent not inclining him to mercantile
  • pursuits, he had, when the blight of hereditary prospects rendered it
  • necessary for him to push his own fortune, adopted the very arduous and
  • very modest career of a teacher. He had been usher in a school, and was
  • said now to be tutor in a private family. Hortense, when she mentioned
  • Louis, described him as having what she called "des moyens," but as
  • being too backward and quiet. Her praise of Robert was in a different
  • strain, less qualified: she was very proud of him; she regarded him as
  • the greatest man in Europe; all he said and did was remarkable in her
  • eyes, and she expected others to behold him from the same point of view;
  • nothing could be more irrational, monstrous, and infamous than
  • opposition from any quarter to Robert, unless it were opposition to
  • herself.
  • Accordingly, as soon as the said Robert was seated at the
  • breakfast-table, and she had helped him to a portion of stewed pears,
  • and cut him a good-sized Belgian tartine, she began to pour out a flood
  • of amazement and horror at the transaction of last night, the
  • destruction of the frames.
  • "Quelle idée! to destroy them. Quelle action honteuse! On voyait bien
  • que les ouvriers de ce pays étaient à la fois betes et méchants. C'était
  • absolument comme les domestiques anglais, les servantes surtout: rien
  • d'insupportable comme cette Sara, par exemple!"
  • "She looks clean and industrious," Mr. Moore remarked.
  • "Looks! I don't know how she looks, and I do not say that she is
  • altogether dirty or idle, mais elle est d'une insolence! She disputed
  • with me a quarter of an hour yesterday about the cooking of the beef;
  • she said I boiled it to rags, that English people would never be able to
  • eat such a dish as our bouilli, that the bouillon was no better than
  • greasy warm water, and as to the choucroute, she affirms she cannot
  • touch it! That barrel we have in the cellar--delightfully prepared by my
  • own hands--she termed a tub of hog-wash, which means food for pigs. I am
  • harassed with the girl, and yet I cannot part with her lest I should get
  • a worse. You are in the same position with your workmen, pauvre cher
  • frère!"
  • "I am afraid you are not very happy in England, Hortense."
  • "It is my duty to be happy where you are, brother; but otherwise there
  • are certainly a thousand things which make me regret our native town.
  • All the world here appears to me ill-bred (mal-élevé). I find my habits
  • considered ridiculous. If a girl out of your mill chances to come into
  • the kitchen and find me in my jupon and camisole preparing dinner (for
  • you know I cannot trust Sarah to cook a single dish), she sneers. If I
  • accept an invitation out to tea, which I have done once or twice, I
  • perceive I am put quite into the background; I have not that attention
  • paid me which decidedly is my due. Of what an excellent family are the
  • Gérards, as we know, and the Moores also! They have a right to claim a
  • certain respect, and to feel wounded when it is withheld from them. In
  • Antwerp I was always treated with distinction; here, one would think
  • that when I open my lips in company I speak English with a ridiculous
  • accent, whereas I am quite assured that I pronounce it perfectly."
  • "Hortense, in Antwerp we were known rich; in England we were never known
  • but poor."
  • "Precisely, and thus mercenary are mankind. Again, dear brother, last
  • Sunday, if you recollect, was very wet; accordingly I went to church in
  • my neat black sabots, objects one would not indeed wear in a fashionable
  • city, but which in the country I have ever been accustomed to use for
  • walking in dirty roads. Believe me, as I paced up the aisle, composed
  • and tranquil, as I am always, four ladies, and as many gentlemen,
  • laughed and hid their faces behind their prayer-books."
  • "Well, well! don't put on the sabots again. I told you before I thought
  • they were not quite the thing for this country."
  • "But, brother, they are not common sabots, such as the peasantry wear. I
  • tell you, they are sabots noirs, très propres, très convenables. At Mons
  • and Leuze--cities not very far removed from the elegant capital of
  • Brussels--it is very seldom that the respectable people wear anything
  • else for walking in winter. Let any one try to wade the mud of the
  • Flemish chaussées in a pair of Paris brodequins, on m'en dirait des
  • nouvelles!"
  • "Never mind Mons and Leuze and the Flemish chaussées; do at Rome as the
  • Romans do. And as to the camisole and jupon, I am not quite sure about
  • them either. I never see an English lady dressed in such garments. Ask
  • Caroline Helstone."
  • "Caroline! _I_ ask Caroline? _I_ consult her about my dress? It is _she_
  • who on all points should consult _me_. She is a child."
  • "She is eighteen, or at least seventeen--old enough to know all about
  • gowns, petticoats, and chaussures."
  • "Do not spoil Caroline, I entreat you, brother. Do not make her of more
  • consequence than she ought to be. At present she is modest and
  • unassuming: let us keep her so."
  • "With all my heart. Is she coming this morning?"
  • "She will come at ten, as usual, to take her French lesson."
  • "You don't find that she sneers at you, do you?"
  • "She does not. She appreciates me better than any one else here; but
  • then she has more intimate opportunities of knowing me. She sees that I
  • have education, intelligence, manner, principles--all, in short, which
  • belongs to a person well born and well bred."
  • "Are you at all fond of her?"
  • "For _fond_ I cannot say. I am not one who is prone to take violent
  • fancies, and, consequently, my friendship is the more to be depended on.
  • I have a regard for her as my relative; her position also inspires
  • interest, and her conduct as my pupil has hitherto been such as rather
  • to enhance than diminish the attachment that springs from other causes."
  • "She behaves pretty well at lessons?"
  • "To _me_ she behaves very well; but you are conscious, brother, that I
  • have a manner calculated to repel over-familiarity, to win esteem, and
  • to command respect. Yet, possessed of penetration, I perceive clearly
  • that Caroline is not perfect, that there is much to be desired in her."
  • "Give me a last cup of coffee, and while I am drinking it amuse me with
  • an account of her faults."
  • "Dear brother, I am happy to see you eat your breakfast with relish,
  • after the fatiguing night you have passed. Caroline, then, is defective;
  • but with my forming hand and almost motherly care she may improve. There
  • is about her an occasional something--a reserve, I think--which I do not
  • quite like, because it is not sufficiently girlish and submissive; and
  • there are glimpses of an unsettled hurry in her nature, which put me
  • out. Yet she is usually most tranquil, too dejected and thoughtful
  • indeed sometimes. In time, I doubt not, I shall make her uniformly
  • sedate and decorous, without being unaccountably pensive. I ever
  • disapprove what is not intelligible."
  • "I don't understand your account in the least. What do you mean by
  • 'unsettled hurries,' for instance?"
  • "An example will, perhaps, be the most satisfactory explanation. I
  • sometimes, you are aware, make her read French poetry by way of
  • practice in pronunciation. She has in the course of her lessons gone
  • through much of Corneille and Racine, in a very steady, sober spirit,
  • such as I approve. Occasionally she showed, indeed, a degree of languor
  • in the perusal of those esteemed authors, partaking rather of apathy
  • than sobriety; and apathy is what I cannot tolerate in those who have
  • the benefit of my instructions--besides, one should not be apathetic in
  • studying standard works. The other day I put into her hands a volume of
  • short fugitive pieces. I sent her to the window to learn one by heart,
  • and when I looked up I saw her turning the leaves over impatiently, and
  • curling her lip, absolutely with scorn, as she surveyed the little poems
  • cursorily. I chid her. 'Ma cousine,' said she, 'tout cela m'ennuie à la
  • mort.' I told her this was improper language. 'Dieu!' she exclaimed, 'il
  • n'y a donc pas deux lignes de poësie dans toute la littérature
  • française?' I inquired what she meant. She begged my pardon with proper
  • submission. Ere long she was still. I saw her smiling to herself over
  • the book. She began to learn assiduously. In half an hour she came and
  • stood before me, presented the volume, folded her hands, as I always
  • require her to do, and commenced the repetition of that short thing by
  • Chénier, 'La Jeune Captive.' If you had heard the manner in which she
  • went through this, and in which she uttered a few incoherent comments
  • when she had done, you would have known what I meant by the phrase
  • 'unsettled hurry.' One would have thought Chénier was more moving than
  • all Racine and all Corneille. You, brother, who have so much sagacity,
  • will discern that this disproportionate preference argues an
  • ill-regulated mind; but she is fortunate in her preceptress. I will give
  • her a system, a method of thought, a set of opinions; I will give her
  • the perfect control and guidance of her feelings."
  • "Be sure you do, Hortense. Here she comes. That was her shadow passed
  • the window, I believe."
  • "Ah! truly. She is too early--half an hour before her time.--My child,
  • what brings you here before I have breakfasted?"
  • This question was addressed to an individual who now entered the room, a
  • young girl, wrapped in a winter mantle, the folds of which were gathered
  • with some grace round an apparently slender figure.
  • "I came in haste to see how you were, Hortense, and how Robert was too.
  • I was sure you would be both grieved by what happened last night. I did
  • not hear till this morning. My uncle told me at breakfast."
  • "Ah! it is unspeakable. You sympathize with us? Your uncle sympathizes
  • with us?"
  • "My uncle is very angry--but he was with Robert, I believe, was he
  • not?--Did he not go with you to Stilbro' Moor?"
  • "Yes, we set out in very martial style, Caroline; but the prisoners we
  • went to rescue met us half-way."
  • "Of course nobody was hurt?"
  • "Why, no; only Joe Scott's wrists were a little galled with being
  • pinioned too tightly behind his back."
  • "You were not there? You were not with the wagons when they were
  • attacked?"
  • "No. One seldom has the fortune to be present at occurrences at which
  • one would particularly wish to assist."
  • "Where are you going this morning? I saw Murgatroyd saddling your horse
  • in the yard."
  • "To Whinbury. It is market day."
  • "Mr. Yorke is going too. I met him in his gig. Come home with him."
  • "Why?"
  • "Two are better than one, and nobody dislikes Mr. Yorke--at least, poor
  • people do not dislike him."
  • "Therefore he would be a protection to me, who am hated?"
  • "Who are _misunderstood_. That, probably, is the word. Shall you be
  • late?--Will he be late, Cousin Hortense?"
  • "It is too probable. He has often much business to transact at Whinbury.
  • Have you brought your exercise-book, child?"
  • "Yes.--What time will you return, Robert?"
  • "I generally return at seven. Do you wish me to be at home earlier?"
  • "Try rather to be back by six. It is not absolutely dark at six now, but
  • by seven daylight is quite gone."
  • "And what danger is to be apprehended, Caroline, when daylight _is_
  • gone? What peril do you conceive comes as the companion of darkness for
  • me?"
  • "I am not sure that I can define my fears, but we all have a certain
  • anxiety at present about our friends. My uncle calls these times
  • dangerous. He says, too, that mill-owners are unpopular."
  • "And I am one of the most unpopular? Is not that the fact? You are
  • reluctant to speak out plainly, but at heart you think me liable to
  • Pearson's fate, who was shot at--not, indeed, from behind a hedge, but
  • in his own house, through his staircase window, as he was going to bed."
  • "Anne Pearson showed me the bullet in the chamber-door," remarked
  • Caroline gravely, as she folded her mantle and arranged it and her muff
  • on a side-table. "You know," she continued, "there is a hedge all the
  • way along the road from here to Whinbury, and there are the Fieldhead
  • plantations to pass; but you will be back by six--or before?"
  • "Certainly he will," affirmed Hortense. "And now, my child, prepare your
  • lessons for repetition, while I put the peas to soak for the purée at
  • dinner."
  • With this direction she left the room.
  • "You suspect I have many enemies, then, Caroline," said Mr. Moore, "and
  • doubtless you know me to be destitute of friends?"
  • "Not destitute, Robert. There is your sister, your brother Louis, whom I
  • have never seen; there is Mr. Yorke, and there is my uncle--besides, of
  • course, many more."
  • Robert smiled. "You would be puzzled to name your 'many more,'" said he.
  • "But show me your exercise-book. What extreme pains you take with the
  • writing! My sister, I suppose, exacts this care. She wants to form you
  • in all things after the model of a Flemish school-girl. What life are
  • you destined for, Caroline? What will you do with your French, drawing,
  • and other accomplishments, when they are acquired?"
  • "You may well say, when they are acquired; for, as you are aware, till
  • Hortense began to teach me, I knew precious little. As to the life I am
  • destined for, I cannot tell. I suppose to keep my uncle's house
  • till----" She hesitated.
  • "Till what? Till he dies?"
  • "No. How harsh to say that! I never think of his dying. He is only
  • fifty-five. But till--in short, till events offer other occupations for
  • me."
  • "A remarkably vague prospect! Are you content with it?"
  • "I used to be, formerly. Children, you know, have little reflection, or
  • rather their reflections run on ideal themes. There are moments _now_
  • when I am not quite satisfied."
  • "Why?"
  • "I am making no money--earning nothing."
  • "You come to the point, Lina. You too, then, wish to make money?"
  • "I do. I should like an occupation; and if I were a boy, it would not be
  • so difficult to find one. I see such an easy, pleasant way of learning a
  • business, and making my way in life."
  • "Go on. Let us hear what way."
  • "I could be apprenticed to your trade--the cloth-trade. I could learn it
  • of you, as we are distant relations. I would do the counting-house work,
  • keep the books, and write the letters, while you went to market. I know
  • you greatly desire to be rich, in order to pay your father's debts;
  • perhaps I could help you to get rich."
  • "Help _me_? You should think of yourself."
  • "I do think of myself; but must one for ever think only of oneself?"
  • "Of whom else do I think? Of whom else _dare_ I think? The poor ought to
  • have no large sympathies; it is their duty to be narrow."
  • "No, Robert----"
  • "Yes, Caroline. Poverty is necessarily selfish, contracted, grovelling,
  • anxious. Now and then a poor man's heart, when certain beams and dews
  • visit it, may smell like the budding vegetation in yonder garden on this
  • spring day, may feel ripe to evolve in foliage, perhaps blossom; but he
  • must not encourage the pleasant impulse; he must invoke Prudence to
  • check it, with that frosty breath of hers, which is as nipping as any
  • north wind."
  • "No cottage would be happy then."
  • "When I speak of poverty, I do not so much mean the natural, habitual
  • poverty of the working-man, as the embarrassed penury of the man in
  • debt. My grub-worm is always a straitened, struggling, care-worn
  • tradesman."
  • "Cherish hope, not anxiety. Certain ideas have become too fixed in your
  • mind. It may be presumptuous to say it, but I have the impression that
  • there is something wrong in your notions of the best means of attaining
  • happiness, as there is in----" Second hesitation.
  • "I am all ear, Caroline."
  • "In (courage! let me speak the truth)--in your manner--mind, I say only
  • _manner_--to these Yorkshire workpeople."
  • "You have often wanted to tell me that, have you not?"
  • "Yes; often--very often."
  • "The faults of my manner are, I think, only negative. I am not proud.
  • What has a man in my position to be proud of? I am only taciturn,
  • phlegmatic, and joyless."
  • "As if your living cloth-dressers were all machines like your frames and
  • shears. In your own house you seem different."
  • "To those of my own house I am no alien, which I am to these English
  • clowns. I might act the benevolent with them, but acting is not my
  • _forte_. I find them irrational, perverse; they hinder me when I long to
  • hurry forward. In treating them justly I fulfil my whole duty towards
  • them."
  • "You don't expect them to love you, of course?"
  • "Nor wish it."
  • "Ah!" said the monitress, shaking her head and heaving a deep sigh. With
  • this ejaculation, indicative that she perceived a screw to be loose
  • somewhere, but that it was out of her reach to set it right, she bent
  • over her grammar, and sought the rule and exercise for the day.
  • "I suppose I am not an affectionate man, Caroline. The attachment of a
  • very few suffices me."
  • "If you please, Robert, will you mend me a pen or two before you go?"
  • "First let me rule your book, for you always contrive to draw the lines
  • aslant. There now. And now for the pens. You like a fine one, I think?"
  • "Such as you generally make for me and Hortense; not your own broad
  • points."
  • "If I were of Louis's calling I might stay at home and dedicate this
  • morning to you and your studies, whereas I must spend it in Skyes's
  • wool-warehouse."
  • "You will be making money."
  • "More likely losing it."
  • As he finished mending the pens, a horse, saddled and bridled, was
  • brought up to the garden-gate.
  • "There, Fred is ready for me; I must go. I'll take one look to see what
  • the spring has done in the south border, too, first."
  • He quitted the room, and went out into the garden ground behind the
  • mill. A sweet fringe of young verdure and opening flowers--snowdrop,
  • crocus, even primrose--bloomed in the sunshine under the hot wall of the
  • factory. Moore plucked here and there a blossom and leaf, till he had
  • collected a little bouquet. He returned to the parlour, pilfered a
  • thread of silk from his sister's work-basket, tied the flowers, and laid
  • them on Caroline's desk.
  • "Now, good-morning."
  • "Thank you, Robert. It is pretty; it looks, as it lies there, like
  • sparkles of sunshine and blue sky. Good-morning."
  • He went to the door, stopped, opened his lips as if to speak, said
  • nothing, and moved on. He passed through the wicket, and mounted his
  • horse. In a second he had flung himself from his saddle again,
  • transferred the reins to Murgatroyd, and re-entered the cottage.
  • "I forgot my gloves," he said, appearing to take something from the
  • side-table; then, as an impromptu thought, he remarked, "You have no
  • binding engagement at home perhaps, Caroline?"
  • "I never have. Some children's socks, which Mrs. Ramsden has ordered, to
  • knit for the Jew's basket; but they will keep."
  • "Jew's basket be--sold! Never was utensil better named. Anything more
  • Jewish than it--its contents and their prices--cannot be conceived. But
  • I see something, a very tiny curl, at the corners of your lip, which
  • tells me that you know its merits as well as I do. Forget the Jew's
  • basket, then, and spend the day here as a change. Your uncle won't break
  • his heart at your absence?"
  • She smiled. "No."
  • "The old Cossack! I dare say not," muttered Moore.
  • "Then stay and dine with Hortense; she will be glad of your company. I
  • shall return in good time. We will have a little reading in the evening.
  • The moon rises at half-past eight, and I will walk up to the rectory
  • with you at nine. Do you agree?"
  • She nodded her head, and her eyes lit up.
  • Moore lingered yet two minutes. He bent over Caroline's desk and glanced
  • at her grammar, he fingered her pen, he lifted her bouquet and played
  • with it; his horse stamped impatient; Fred Murgatroyd hemmed and coughed
  • at the gate, as if he wondered what in the world his master was doing.
  • "Good-morning," again said Moore, and finally vanished.
  • Hortense, coming in ten minutes after, found, to her surprise, that
  • Caroline had not yet commenced her exercise.
  • CHAPTER VI.
  • CORIOLANUS.
  • Mademoiselle Moore had that morning a somewhat absent-minded pupil.
  • Caroline forgot, again and again, the explanations which were given to
  • her. However, she still bore with unclouded mood the chidings her
  • inattention brought upon her. Sitting in the sunshine near the window,
  • she seemed to receive with its warmth a kind influence, which made her
  • both happy and good. Thus disposed, she looked her best, and her best
  • was a pleasing vision.
  • To her had not been denied the gift of beauty. It was not absolutely
  • necessary to know her in order to like her; she was fair enough to
  • please, even at the first view. Her shape suited her age: it was
  • girlish, light, and pliant; every curve was neat, every limb
  • proportionate; her face was expressive and gentle; her eyes were
  • handsome, and gifted at times with a winning beam that stole into the
  • heart, with a language that spoke softly to the affections. Her mouth
  • was very pretty; she had a delicate skin, and a fine flow of brown hair,
  • which she knew how to arrange with taste; curls became her, and she
  • possessed them in picturesque profusion. Her style of dress announced
  • taste in the wearer--very unobtrusive in fashion, far from costly in
  • material, but suitable in colour to the fair complexion with which it
  • contrasted, and in make to the slight form which it draped. Her present
  • winter garb was of merino--the same soft shade of brown as her hair; the
  • little collar round her neck lay over a pink ribbon, and was fastened
  • with a pink knot. She wore no other decoration.
  • So much for Caroline Helstone's appearance. As to her character or
  • intellect, if she had any, they must speak for themselves in due time.
  • Her connections are soon explained. She was the child of parents
  • separated soon after her birth, in consequence of disagreement of
  • disposition. Her mother was the half-sister of Mr. Moore's father; thus,
  • though there was no mixture of blood, she was, in a distant sense, the
  • cousin of Robert, Louis, and Hortense. Her father was the brother of Mr.
  • Helstone--a man of the character friends desire not to recall, after
  • death has once settled all earthly accounts. He had rendered his wife
  • unhappy. The reports which were known to be true concerning him had
  • given an air of probability to those which were falsely circulated
  • respecting his better-principled brother. Caroline had never known her
  • mother, as she was taken from her in infancy, and had not since seen
  • her; her father died comparatively young, and her uncle, the rector, had
  • for some years been her sole guardian. He was not, as we are aware, much
  • adapted, either by nature or habits, to have the charge of a young girl.
  • He had taken little trouble about her education; probably he would have
  • taken none if she, finding herself neglected, had not grown anxious on
  • her own account, and asked, every now and then, for a little attention,
  • and for the means of acquiring such amount of knowledge as could not be
  • dispensed with. Still, she had a depressing feeling that she was
  • inferior, that her attainments were fewer than were usually possessed by
  • girls of her age and station; and very glad was she to avail herself of
  • the kind offer made by her cousin Hortense, soon after the arrival of
  • the latter at Hollow's Mill, to teach her French and fine needle-work.
  • Mdlle. Moore, for her part, delighted in the task, because it gave her
  • importance; she liked to lord it a little over a docile yet quick pupil.
  • She took Caroline precisely at her own estimate, as an
  • irregularly-taught, even ignorant girl; and when she found that she made
  • rapid and eager progress, it was to no talent, no application, in the
  • scholar she ascribed the improvement, but entirely to her own superior
  • method of teaching. When she found that Caroline, unskilled in routine,
  • had a knowledge of her own, desultory but varied, the discovery caused
  • her no surprise, for she still imagined that from her conversation had
  • the girl unawares gleaned these treasures. She thought it even when
  • forced to feel that her pupil knew much on subjects whereof she knew
  • little. The idea was not logical, but Hortense had perfect faith in it.
  • Mademoiselle, who prided herself on possessing "un esprit positif," and
  • on entertaining a decided preference for dry studies, kept her young
  • cousin to the same as closely as she could. She worked her unrelentingly
  • at the grammar of the French language, assigning her, as the most
  • improving exercise she could devise, interminable "analyses logiques."
  • These "analyses" were by no means a source of particular pleasure to
  • Caroline; she thought she could have learned French just as well without
  • them, and grudged excessively the time spent in pondering over
  • "propositions, principales, et incidents;" in deciding the "incidente
  • determinative," and the "incidente applicative;" in examining whether
  • the proposition was "pleine," "elliptique," or "implicite." Sometimes
  • she lost herself in the maze, and when so lost she would, now and then
  • (while Hortense was rummaging her drawers upstairs--an unaccountable
  • occupation in which she spent a large portion of each day, arranging,
  • disarranging, rearranging, and counter-arranging), carry her book to
  • Robert in the counting-house, and get the rough place made smooth by his
  • aid. Mr. Moore possessed a clear, tranquil brain of his own. Almost as
  • soon as he looked at Caroline's little difficulties they seemed to
  • dissolve beneath his eye. In two minutes he would explain all, in two
  • words give the key to the puzzle. She thought if Hortense could only
  • teach like him, how much faster she might learn! Repaying him by an
  • admiring and grateful smile, rather shed at his feet than lifted to his
  • face, she would leave the mill reluctantly to go back to the cottage,
  • and then, while she completed the exercise, or worked out the sum (for
  • Mdlle. Moore taught her arithmetic too), she would wish nature had made
  • her a boy instead of a girl, that she might ask Robert to let her be his
  • clerk, and sit with him in the counting-house, instead of sitting with
  • Hortense in the parlour.
  • Occasionally--but this happened very rarely--she spent the evening at
  • Hollow's Cottage. Sometimes during these visits Moore was away attending
  • a market; sometimes he was gone to Mr. Yorke's; often he was engaged
  • with a male visitor in another room; but sometimes, too, he was at home,
  • disengaged, free to talk with Caroline. When this was the case, the
  • evening hours passed on wings of light; they were gone before they were
  • counted. There was no room in England so pleasant as that small parlour
  • when the three cousins occupied it. Hortense, when she was not teaching,
  • or scolding, or cooking, was far from ill-humoured; it was her custom to
  • relax towards evening, and to be kind to her young English kinswoman.
  • There was a means, too, of rendering her delightful, by inducing her to
  • take her guitar and sing and play. She then became quite good-natured.
  • And as she played with skill, and had a well-toned voice, it was not
  • disagreeable to listen to her. It would have been absolutely agreeable,
  • except that her formal and self-important character modulated her
  • strains, as it impressed her manners and moulded her countenance.
  • Mr. Moore, released from the business yoke, was, if not lively himself,
  • a willing spectator of Caroline's liveliness, a complacent listener to
  • her talk, a ready respondent to her questions. He was something
  • agreeable to sit near, to hover round, to address and look at. Sometimes
  • he was better than this--almost animated, quite gentle and friendly.
  • The drawback was that by the next morning he was sure to be frozen up
  • again; and however much he seemed, in his quiet way, to enjoy these
  • social evenings, he rarely contrived their recurrence. This circumstance
  • puzzled the inexperienced head of his cousin. "If I had a means of
  • happiness at my command," she thought, "I would employ that means often.
  • I would keep it bright with use, and not let it lie for weeks aside,
  • till it gets rusty."
  • Yet she was careful not to put in practice her own theory. Much as she
  • liked an evening visit to the cottage, she never paid one unasked.
  • Often, indeed, when pressed by Hortense to come, she would refuse,
  • because Robert did not second, or but slightly seconded the request.
  • This morning was the first time he had ever, of his own unprompted will,
  • given her an invitation; and then he had spoken so kindly that in
  • hearing him she had received a sense of happiness sufficient to keep her
  • glad for the whole day.
  • The morning passed as usual. Mademoiselle, ever breathlessly busy, spent
  • it in bustling from kitchen to parlour, now scolding Sarah, now looking
  • over Caroline's exercise or hearing her repetition-lesson. However
  • faultlessly these tasks were achieved, she never commended: it was a
  • maxim with her that praise is inconsistent with a teacher's dignity, and
  • that blame, in more or less unqualified measure, is indispensable to it.
  • She thought incessant reprimand, severe or slight, quite necessary to
  • the maintenance of her authority; and if no possible error was to be
  • found in the lesson, it was the pupil's carriage, or air, or dress, or
  • mien, which required correction.
  • The usual affray took place about the dinner, which meal, when Sarah at
  • last brought it into the room, she almost flung upon the table, with a
  • look that expressed quite plainly, "I never dished such stuff i' my life
  • afore; it's not fit for dogs." Notwithstanding Sarah's scorn, it was a
  • savoury repast enough. The soup was a sort of purée of dried peas, which
  • mademoiselle had prepared amidst bitter lamentations that in this
  • desolate country of England no haricot beans were to be had. Then came a
  • dish of meat--nature unknown, but supposed to be
  • miscellaneous--singularly chopped up with crumbs of bread, seasoned
  • uniquely though not unpleasantly, and baked in a mould--a queer but by
  • no means unpalatable dish. Greens, oddly bruised, formed the
  • accompanying vegetable; and a pâté of fruit, conserved after a recipe
  • devised by Madame Gérard Moore's "grand'mère," and from the taste of
  • which it appeared probable that "mélasse" had been substituted for
  • sugar, completed the dinner.
  • Caroline had no objection to this Belgian cookery--indeed she rather
  • liked it for a change; and it was well she did so, for had she evinced
  • any disrelish thereof, such manifestation would have injured her in
  • mademoiselle's good graces for ever; a positive crime might have been
  • more easily pardoned than a symptom of distaste for the foreign
  • comestibles.
  • Soon after dinner Caroline coaxed her governess-cousin upstairs to
  • dress. This manœuvre required management. To have hinted that the
  • jupon, camisole, and curl-papers were odious objects, or indeed other
  • than quite meritorious points, would have been a felony. Any premature
  • attempt to urge their disappearance was therefore unwise, and would be
  • likely to issue in the persevering wear of them during the whole day.
  • Carefully avoiding rocks and quicksands, however, the pupil, on pretence
  • of requiring a change of scene, contrived to get the teacher aloft; and,
  • once in the bedroom, she persuaded her that it was not worth while
  • returning thither, and that she might as well make her toilet now; and
  • while mademoiselle delivered a solemn homily on her own surpassing merit
  • in disregarding all frivolities of fashion, Caroline denuded her of the
  • camisole, invested her with a decent gown, arranged her collar, hair,
  • etc., and made her quite presentable. But Hortense would put the
  • finishing touches herself, and these finishing touches consisted in a
  • thick handkerchief tied round the throat, and a large, servant-like
  • black apron, which spoiled everything. On no account would mademoiselle
  • have appeared in her own house without the thick handkerchief and the
  • voluminous apron. The first was a positive matter of morality--it was
  • quite improper not to wear a fichu; the second was the ensign of a good
  • housewife--she appeared to think that by means of it she somehow
  • effected a large saving in her brother's income. She had, with her own
  • hands, made and presented to Caroline similar equipments; and the only
  • serious quarrel they had ever had, and which still left a soreness in
  • the elder cousin's soul, had arisen from the refusal of the younger one
  • to accept of and profit by these elegant presents.
  • "I wear a high dress and a collar," said Caroline, "and I should feel
  • suffocated with a handkerchief in addition; and my short aprons do quite
  • as well as that very long one. I would rather make no change."
  • Yet Hortense, by dint of perseverance, would probably have compelled her
  • to make a change, had not Mr. Moore chanced to overhear a dispute on the
  • subject, and decided that Caroline's little aprons would suffice, and
  • that, in his opinion, as she was still but a child, she might for the
  • present dispense with the fichu, especially as her curls were long, and
  • almost touched her shoulders.
  • There was no appeal against Robert's opinion, therefore his sister was
  • compelled to yield; but she disapproved entirely of the piquant neatness
  • of Caroline's costume, and the ladylike grace of her appearance.
  • Something more solid and homely she would have considered "beaucoup plus
  • convenable."
  • The afternoon was devoted to sewing. Mademoiselle, like most Belgian
  • ladies, was specially skilful with her needle. She by no means thought
  • it waste of time to devote unnumbered hours to fine embroidery,
  • sight-destroying lace-work, marvellous netting and knitting, and, above
  • all, to most elaborate stocking-mending. She would give a day to the
  • mending of two holes in a stocking any time, and think her "mission"
  • nobly fulfilled when she had accomplished it. It was another of
  • Caroline's troubles to be condemned to learn this foreign style of
  • darning, which was done stitch by stitch, so as exactly to imitate the
  • fabric of the stocking itself--a wearifu' process, but considered by
  • Hortense Gérard, and by her ancestresses before her for long generations
  • back, as one of the first "duties of a woman." She herself had had a
  • needle, cotton, and a fearfully torn stocking put into her hand while
  • she yet wore a child's coif on her little black head; her "hauts faits"
  • in the darning line had been exhibited to company ere she was six years
  • old; and when she first discovered that Caroline was profoundly ignorant
  • of this most essential of attainments, she could have wept with pity
  • over her miserably-neglected youth.
  • No time did she lose in seeking up a hopeless pair of hose, of which the
  • heels were entirely gone, and in setting the ignorant English girl to
  • repair the deficiency. This task had been commenced two years ago, and
  • Caroline had the stockings in her work-bag yet. She did a few rows every
  • day, by way of penance for the expiation of her sins. They were a
  • grievous burden to her; she would much have liked to put them in the
  • fire; and once Mr. Moore, who had observed her sitting and sighing over
  • them, had proposed a private incremation in the counting-house; but to
  • this proposal Caroline knew it would have been impolitic to accede--the
  • result could only be a fresh pair of hose, probably in worse condition.
  • She adhered, therefore, to the ills she knew.
  • All the afternoon the two ladies sat and sewed, till the eyes and
  • fingers, and even the spirits of one of them, were weary. The sky since
  • dinner had darkened; it had begun to rain again, to pour fast. Secret
  • fears began to steal on Caroline that Robert would be persuaded by Mr.
  • Sykes or Mr. Yorke to remain at Whinbury till it cleared, and of that
  • there appeared no present chance. Five o'clock struck, and time stole
  • on; still the clouds streamed. A sighing wind whispered in the
  • roof-trees of the cottage; day seemed already closing; the parlour fire
  • shed on the clear hearth a glow ruddy as at twilight.
  • "It will not be fair till the moon rises," pronounced Mademoiselle
  • Moore, "consequently I feel assured that my brother will not return till
  • then. Indeed I should be sorry if he did. We will have coffee. It would
  • be vain to wait for him."
  • "I am tired. May I leave my work now, cousin?"
  • "You may, since it grows too dark to see to do it well. Fold it up; put
  • it carefully in your bag; then step into the kitchen and desire Sarah to
  • bring in the goûter, or tea, as you call it."
  • "But it has not yet struck six. He may still come."
  • "He will not, I tell you. I can calculate his movements. I understand my
  • brother."
  • Suspense is irksome, disappointment bitter. All the world has, some
  • time or other, felt that. Caroline, obedient to orders, passed into the
  • kitchen. Sarah was making a dress for herself at the table.
  • "You are to bring in coffee," said the young lady in a spiritless tone;
  • and then she leaned her arm and head against the kitchen mantelpiece,
  • and hung listlessly over the fire.
  • "How low you seem, miss! But it's all because your cousin keeps you so
  • close to work. It's a shame!"
  • "Nothing of the kind, Sarah," was the brief reply.
  • "Oh! but I know it is. You're fit to cry just this minute, for nothing
  • else but because you've sat still the whole day. It would make a kitten
  • dull to be mewed up so."
  • "Sarah, does your master often come home early from market when it is
  • wet?"
  • "Never, hardly; but just to-day, for some reason, he has made a
  • difference."
  • "What do you mean?"
  • "He is come. I am certain I saw Murgatroyd lead his horse into the yard
  • by the back-way, when I went to get some water at the pump five minutes
  • since. He was in the counting-house with Joe Scott, I believe."
  • "You are mistaken."
  • "What should I be mistaken for? I know his horse surely?"
  • "But you did not see himself?"
  • "I heard him speak, though. He was saying something to Joe Scott about
  • having settled all concerning ways and means, and that there would be a
  • new set of frames in the mill before another week passed, and that this
  • time he would get four soldiers from Stilbro' barracks to guard the
  • wagon."
  • "Sarah, are you making a gown?"
  • "Yes. Is it a handsome one?"
  • "Beautiful! Get the coffee ready. I'll finish cutting out that sleeve
  • for you, and I'll give you some trimming for it. I have some narrow
  • satin ribbon of a colour that will just match it."
  • "You're very kind, miss."
  • "Be quick; there's a good girl. But first put your master's shoes on the
  • hearth: he will take his boots off when he comes in. I hear him; he is
  • coming."
  • "Miss, you are cutting the stuff wrong."
  • "So I am; but it is only a snip. There is no harm done."
  • The kitchen door opened; Mr. Moore entered, very wet and cold. Caroline
  • half turned from her dressmaking occupation, but renewed it for a
  • moment, as if to gain a minute's time for some purpose. Bent over the
  • dress, her face was hidden; there was an attempt to settle her features
  • and veil their expression, which failed. When she at last met Mr. Moore,
  • her countenance beamed.
  • "We had ceased to expect you. They asserted you would not come," she
  • said.
  • "But I promised to return soon. _You_ expected me, I suppose?"
  • "No, Robert; I dared not when it rained so fast. And you are wet and
  • chilled. Change everything. If you took cold, I should--we should blame
  • ourselves in some measure."
  • "I am not wet through: my riding-coat is waterproof. Dry shoes are all I
  • require. There--the fire is pleasant after facing the cold wind and rain
  • for a few miles."
  • He stood on the kitchen hearth; Caroline stood beside him. Mr. Moore,
  • while enjoying the genial glow, kept his eyes directed towards the
  • glittering brasses on the shelf above. Chancing for an instant to look
  • down, his glance rested on an uplifted face, flushed, smiling, happy,
  • shaded with silky curls, lit with fine eyes. Sarah was gone into the
  • parlour with the tray; a lecture from her mistress detained her there.
  • Moore placed his hand a moment on his young cousin's shoulder, stooped,
  • and left a kiss on her forehead.
  • "Oh!" said she, as if the action had unsealed her lips, "I was miserable
  • when I thought you would not come. I am almost too happy now. Are you
  • happy, Robert? Do you like to come home?"
  • "I think I do--to-night, at least."
  • "Are you certain you are not fretting about your frames, and your
  • business, and the war?"
  • "Not just now."
  • "Are you positive you don't feel Hollow's Cottage too small for you, and
  • narrow, and dismal?"
  • "At this moment, no."
  • "Can you affirm that you are not bitter at heart because rich and great
  • people forget you?"
  • "No more questions. You are mistaken if you think I am anxious to curry
  • favour with rich and great people. I only want means--a position--a
  • career."
  • "Which your own talent and goodness shall win you. You were made to be
  • great; you _shall_ be great."
  • "I wonder now, if you spoke honestly out of your heart, what recipe you
  • would give me for acquiring this same greatness; but I know it--better
  • than you know it yourself. Would it be efficacious? Would it work?
  • Yes--poverty, misery, bankruptcy. Oh, life is not what you think it,
  • Lina!"
  • "But you are what I think you."
  • "I am not."
  • "You are better, then?"
  • "Far worse."
  • "No; far better. I know you are good."
  • "How do you know it?"
  • "You look so, and I feel you _are_ so."
  • "Where do you feel it?"
  • "In my heart."
  • "Ah! You judge me with your heart, Lina: you should judge me with your
  • head."
  • "I do; and then I am quite proud of you. Robert, you cannot tell all my
  • thoughts about you."
  • Mr. Moore's dark face mustered colour; his lips smiled, and yet were
  • compressed; his eyes laughed, and yet he resolutely knit his brow.
  • "Think meanly of me, Lina," said he. "Men, in general, are a sort of
  • scum, very different to anything of which you have an idea. I make no
  • pretension to be better than my fellows."
  • "If you did, I should not esteem you so much. It is because you are
  • modest that I have such confidence in your merit."
  • "Are you flattering me?" he demanded, turning sharply upon her, and
  • searching her face with an eye of acute penetration.
  • "No," she said softly, laughing at his sudden quickness. She seemed to
  • think it unnecessary to proffer any eager disavowal of the charge.
  • "You don't care whether I think you flatter me or not?"
  • "No."
  • "You are so secure of your own intentions?"
  • "I suppose so."
  • "What are they, Caroline?"
  • "Only to ease my mind by expressing for once part of what I think, and
  • then to make you better satisfied with yourself."
  • "By assuring me that my kinswoman is my sincere friend?"
  • "Just so. I am your sincere friend, Robert."
  • "And I am--what chance and change shall make me, Lina."
  • "Not my enemy, however?"
  • The answer was cut short by Sarah and her mistress entering the kitchen
  • together in some commotion. They had been improving the time which Mr.
  • Moore and Miss Helstone had spent in dialogue by a short dispute on the
  • subject of "café au lait," which Sarah said was the queerest mess she
  • ever saw, and a waste of God's good gifts, as it was "the nature of
  • coffee to be boiled in water," and which mademoiselle affirmed to be "un
  • breuvage royal," a thousand times too good for the mean person who
  • objected to it.
  • The former occupants of the kitchen now withdrew into the parlour.
  • Before Hortense followed them thither, Caroline had only time again to
  • question, "Not my enemy, Robert?" And Moore, Quaker-like, had replied
  • with another query, "Could I be?" And then, seating himself at the
  • table, had settled Caroline at his side.
  • Caroline scarcely heard mademoiselle's explosion of wrath when she
  • rejoined them; the long declamation about the "conduite indigne de cette
  • méchante créature" sounded in her ear as confusedly as the agitated
  • rattling of the china. Robert laughed a little at it, in very subdued
  • sort, and then, politely and calmly entreating his sister to be
  • tranquil, assured her that if it would yield her any satisfaction, she
  • should have her choice of an attendant amongst all the girls in his
  • mill. Only he feared they would scarcely suit her, as they were most of
  • them, he was informed, completely ignorant of household work; and pert
  • and self-willed as Sarah was, she was, perhaps, no worse than the
  • majority of the women of her class.
  • Mademoiselle admitted the truth of this conjecture: according to her,
  • "ces paysannes anglaises étaient tout insupportables." What would she
  • not give for some "bonne cuisinière anversoise," with the high cap,
  • short petticoat, and decent sabots proper to her class--something
  • better, indeed, than an insolent coquette in a flounced gown, and
  • absolutely without cap! (For Sarah, it appears, did not partake the
  • opinion of St. Paul that "it is a shame for a woman to go with her head
  • uncovered;" but, holding rather a contrary doctrine, resolutely refused
  • to imprison in linen or muslin the plentiful tresses of her yellow hair,
  • which it was her wont to fasten up smartly with a comb behind, and on
  • Sundays to wear curled in front.)
  • "Shall I try and get you an Antwerp girl?" asked Mr. Moore, who, stern
  • in public, was on the whole very kind in private.
  • "Merci du cadeau!" was the answer. "An Antwerp girl would not stay here
  • ten days, sneered at as she would be by all the young coquines in your
  • factory;" then softening, "You are very good, dear brother--excuse my
  • petulance--but truly my domestic trials are severe, yet they are
  • probably my destiny; for I recollect that our revered mother experienced
  • similar sufferings, though she had the choice of all the best servants
  • in Antwerp. Domestics are in all countries a spoiled and unruly set."
  • Mr. Moore had also certain reminiscences about the trials of his revered
  • mother. A good mother she had been to him, and he honoured her memory;
  • but he recollected that she kept a hot kitchen of it in Antwerp, just as
  • his faithful sister did here in England. Thus, therefore, he let the
  • subject drop, and when the coffee-service was removed, proceeded to
  • console Hortense by fetching her music-book and guitar; and having
  • arranged the ribbon of the instrument round her neck with a quiet
  • fraternal kindness he knew to be all-powerful in soothing her most
  • ruffled moods, he asked her to give him some of their mother's favourite
  • songs.
  • Nothing refines like affection. Family jarring vulgarizes; family union
  • elevates. Hortense, pleased with her brother, and grateful to him,
  • looked, as she touched her guitar, almost graceful, almost handsome; her
  • everyday fretful look was gone for a moment, and was replaced by a
  • "sourire plein de bonté." She sang the songs he asked for, with feeling;
  • they reminded her of a parent to whom she had been truly attached; they
  • reminded her of her young days. She observed, too, that Caroline
  • listened with naïve interest; this augmented her good-humour; and the
  • exclamation at the close of the song, "I wish I could sing and play like
  • Hortense!" achieved the business, and rendered her charming for the
  • evening.
  • It is true a little lecture to Caroline followed, on the vanity of
  • _wishing_ and the duty of _trying_. "As Rome," it was suggested, "had
  • not been built in a day, so neither had Mademoiselle Gérard Moore's
  • education been completed in a week, or by merely _wishing_ to be clever.
  • It was effort that had accomplished that great work. She was ever
  • remarkable for her perseverance, for her industry. Her masters had
  • remarked that it was as delightful as it was uncommon to find so much
  • talent united with so much solidity, and so on." Once on the theme of
  • her own merits, mademoiselle was fluent.
  • Cradled at last in blissful self-complacency, she took her knitting, and
  • sat down tranquil. Drawn curtains, a clear fire, a softly-shining lamp,
  • gave now to the little parlour its best, its evening charm. It is
  • probable that the three there present felt this charm. They all looked
  • happy.
  • "What shall we do now, Caroline?" asked Mr. Moore, returning to his seat
  • beside his cousin.
  • "What shall we do, Robert?" repeated she playfully. "You decide."
  • "Not play at chess?"
  • "No."
  • "Nor draughts, nor backgammon?"
  • "No, no; we both hate silent games that only keep one's hands employed,
  • don't we?"
  • "I believe we do. Then shall we talk scandal?"
  • "About whom? Are we sufficiently interested in anybody to take a
  • pleasure in pulling their character to pieces?"
  • "A question that comes to the point. For my part, unamiable as it
  • sounds, I must say no."
  • "And I too. But it is strange, though we want no third--fourth, I mean
  • (she hastily and with contrition glanced at Hortense), living person
  • among us--so selfish we are in our happiness--though we don't want to
  • think of the present existing world, it would be pleasant to go back to
  • the past, to hear people that have slept for generations in graves that
  • are perhaps no longer graves now, but gardens and fields, speak to us
  • and tell us their thoughts, and impart their ideas."
  • "Who shall be the speaker? What language shall he utter? French?"
  • "Your French forefathers don't speak so sweetly, nor so solemnly, nor so
  • impressively as your English ancestors, Robert. To-night you shall be
  • entirely English. You shall read an English book."
  • "An old English book?"
  • "Yes, an old English book--one that you like; and I will choose a part
  • of it that is toned quite in harmony with something in you. It shall
  • waken your nature, fill your mind with music; it shall pass like a
  • skilful hand over your heart, and make its strings sound. Your heart is
  • a lyre, Robert; but the lot of your life has not been a minstrel to
  • sweep it, and it is often silent. Let glorious William come near and
  • touch it. You will see how he will draw the English power and melody out
  • of its chords."
  • "I must read Shakespeare?"
  • "You must have his spirit before you; you must hear his voice with your
  • mind's ear; you must take some of his soul into yours."
  • "With a view to making me better? Is it to operate like a sermon?"
  • "It is to stir you, to give you new sensations. It is to make you feel
  • your life strongly--not only your virtues, but your vicious, perverse
  • points."
  • "Dieu! que dit-elle?" cried Hortense, who hitherto had been counting
  • stitches in her knitting, and had not much attended to what was said,
  • but whose ear these two strong words caught with a tweak.
  • "Never mind her, sister; let her talk. Now just let her say anything she
  • pleases to-night. She likes to come down hard upon your brother
  • sometimes. It amuses me, so let her alone."
  • Caroline, who, mounted on a chair, had been rummaging the bookcase,
  • returned with a book.
  • "Here's Shakespeare," she said, "and there's 'Coriolanus.' Now, read,
  • and discover by the feelings the reading will give you at once how low
  • and how high you are."
  • "Come, then, sit near me, and correct when I mispronounce."
  • "I am to be the teacher then, and you my pupil?"
  • "Ainsi, soit-il!"
  • "And Shakespeare is our science, since we are going to study?"
  • "It appears so."
  • "And you are not going to be French, and sceptical, and sneering? You
  • are not going to think it a sign of wisdom to refuse to admire?"
  • "I don't know."
  • "If you do, Robert, I'll take Shakespeare away; and I'll shrivel up
  • within myself, and put on my bonnet and go home."
  • "Sit down. Here I begin."
  • "One minute, if you please, brother," interrupted mademoiselle. "When
  • the gentleman of a family reads, the ladies should always
  • sew.--Caroline, dear child, take your embroidery. You may get three
  • sprigs done to-night."
  • Caroline looked dismayed. "I can't see by lamp-light; my eyes are tired,
  • and I can't do two things well at once. If I sew, I cannot listen; if I
  • listen, I cannot sew."
  • "Fi, donc! Quel enfantillage!" began Hortense. Mr. Moore, as usual,
  • suavely interposed.
  • "Permit her to neglect the embroidery for this evening. I wish her whole
  • attention to be fixed on my accent; and to ensure this, she must follow
  • the reading with her eyes--she must look at the book."
  • He placed it between them, reposed his arm on the back of Caroline's
  • chair, and thus began to read.
  • The very first scene in "Coriolanus" came with smart relish to his
  • intellectual palate, and still as he read he warmed. He delivered the
  • haughty speech of Caius Marcius to the starving citizens with unction;
  • he did not say he thought his irrational pride right, but he seemed to
  • feel it so. Caroline looked up at him with a singular smile.
  • "There's a vicious point hit already," she said. "You sympathize with
  • that proud patrician who does not sympathize with his famished
  • fellow-men, and insults them. There, go on." He proceeded. The warlike
  • portions did not rouse him much; he said all that was out of date, or
  • should be; the spirit displayed was barbarous; yet the encounter
  • single-handed between Marcius and Tullus Aufidius he delighted in. As he
  • advanced, he forgot to criticise; it was evident he appreciated the
  • power, the truth of each portion; and, stepping out of the narrow line
  • of private prejudices, began to revel in the large picture of human
  • nature, to feel the reality stamped upon the characters who were
  • speaking from that page before him.
  • He did not read the comic scenes well; and Caroline, taking the book out
  • of his hand, read these parts for him. From her he seemed to enjoy them,
  • and indeed she gave them with a spirit no one could have expected of
  • her, with a pithy expression with which she seemed gifted on the spot,
  • and for that brief moment only. It may be remarked, in passing, that the
  • general character of her conversation that evening, whether serious or
  • sprightly, grave or gay, was as of something untaught, unstudied,
  • intuitive, fitful--when once gone, no more to be reproduced as it had
  • been than the glancing ray of the meteor, than the tints of the dew-gem,
  • than the colour or form of the sunset cloud, than the fleeting and
  • glittering ripple varying the flow of a rivulet.
  • Coriolanus in glory, Coriolanus in disaster, Coriolanus banished,
  • followed like giant shades one after the other. Before the vision of the
  • banished man Moore's spirit seemed to pause. He stood on the hearth of
  • Aufidius's hall, facing the image of greatness fallen, but greater than
  • ever in that low estate. He saw "the grim appearance," the dark face
  • "bearing command in it," "the noble vessel with its tackle torn." With
  • the revenge of Caius Marcius, Moore perfectly sympathized; he was not
  • scandalized by it; and again Caroline whispered, "There I see another
  • glimpse of brotherhood in error."
  • The march on Rome, the mother's supplication, the long resistance, the
  • final yielding of bad passions to good, which ever must be the case in a
  • nature worthy the epithet of noble, the rage of Aufidius at what he
  • considered his ally's weakness, the death of Coriolanus, the final
  • sorrow of his great enemy--all scenes made of condensed truth and
  • strength--came on in succession and carried with them in their deep,
  • fast flow the heart and mind of reader and listener.
  • "Now, have you felt Shakespeare?" asked Caroline, some ten minutes after
  • her cousin had closed the book.
  • "I think so."
  • "And have you felt anything in Coriolanus like you?"
  • "Perhaps I have."
  • "Was he not faulty as well as great?"
  • Moore nodded.
  • "And what was his fault? What made him hated by the citizens? What
  • caused him to be banished by his countrymen?"
  • "What do you think it was?"
  • "I ask again--
  • 'Whether was it pride,
  • Which out of daily fortune ever taints
  • The happy man? whether defect of judgment,
  • To fail in the disposing of those chances
  • Which he was lord of? or whether nature,
  • Not to be other than one thing, not moving
  • From the casque to the cushion, but commanding peace
  • Even with the same austerity and garb
  • As he controlled the war?'"
  • "Well, answer yourself, Sphinx."
  • "It was a spice of all; and you must not be proud to your workpeople;
  • you must not neglect chances of soothing them; and you must not be of an
  • inflexible nature, uttering a request as austerely as if it were a
  • command."
  • "That is the moral you tack to the play. What puts such notions into
  • your head?"
  • "A wish for your good, a care for your safety, dear Robert, and a fear,
  • caused by many things which I have heard lately, that you will come to
  • harm."
  • "Who tells you these things?"
  • "I hear my uncle talk about you. He praises your hard spirit, your
  • determined cast of mind, your scorn of low enemies, your resolution not
  • 'to truckle to the mob,' as he says."
  • "And would you have me truckle to them?"
  • "No, not for the world. I never wish you to lower yourself; but somehow
  • I cannot help thinking it unjust to include all poor working-people
  • under the general and insulting name of 'the mob,' and continually to
  • think of them and treat them haughtily."
  • "You are a little democrat, Caroline. If your uncle knew, what would he
  • say?"
  • "I rarely talk to my uncle, as you know, and never about such things. He
  • thinks everything but sewing and cooking above women's comprehension,
  • and out of their line."
  • "And do you fancy you comprehend the subjects on which you advise me?"
  • "As far as they concern you, I comprehend them. I know it would be
  • better for you to be loved by your workpeople than to be hated by them,
  • and I am sure that kindness is more likely to win their regard than
  • pride. If you were proud and cold to me and Hortense, should we love
  • you? When you are cold to me, as you _are_ sometimes, can I venture to
  • be affectionate in return?"
  • "Now, Lina, I've had my lesson both in languages and ethics, with a
  • touch on politics; it is your turn. Hortense tells me you were much
  • taken by a little piece of poetry you learned the other day, a piece by
  • poor André Chénier--'La Jeune Captive.' Do you remember it still?"
  • "I think so."
  • "Repeat it, then. Take your time and mind your accent; especially let us
  • have no English _u_'s."
  • Caroline, beginning in a low, rather tremulous voice, but gaining
  • courage as she proceeded, repeated the sweet verses of Chénier. The last
  • three stanzas she rehearsed well.
  • "Mon beau voyage encore est si loin de sa fin!
  • Je pars, et des ormeaux qui bordent le chemin
  • J'ai passé le premiers à peine.
  • Au banquet de la vie à peine commencé,
  • Un instant seulement mes lèvres ont pressé
  • La coupe en mes mains encore pleine.
  • "Je ne suis qu'au printemps--je veux voir la moisson;
  • Et comme le soleil, de saison en saison,
  • Je veux achever mon année,
  • Brillante sur ma tige, et l'honneur du jardin
  • Je n'ai vu luire encore que les feux du matin,
  • Je veux achever ma journée!"
  • Moore listened at first with his eyes cast down, but soon he furtively
  • raised them. Leaning back in his chair he could watch Caroline without
  • her perceiving where his gaze was fixed. Her cheek had a colour, her
  • eyes a light, her countenance an expression this evening which would
  • have made even plain features striking; but there was not the grievous
  • defect of plainness to pardon in her case. The sunshine was not shed on
  • rough barrenness; it fell on soft bloom. Each lineament was turned with
  • grace; the whole aspect was pleasing. At the present moment--animated,
  • interested, touched--she might be called beautiful. Such a face was
  • calculated to awaken not only the calm sentiment of esteem, the distant
  • one of admiration, but some feeling more tender, genial,
  • intimate--friendship, perhaps, affection, interest. When she had
  • finished, she turned to Moore, and met his eye.
  • "Is that pretty well repeated?" she inquired, smiling like any happy,
  • docile child.
  • "I really don't know."
  • "Why don't you know? Have you not listened?"
  • "Yes--and looked. You are fond of poetry, Lina?"
  • "When I meet with _real_ poetry, I cannot rest till I have learned it by
  • heart, and so made it partly mine."
  • Mr. Moore now sat silent for several minutes. It struck nine o'clock.
  • Sarah entered, and said that Mr. Helstone's servant was come for Miss
  • Caroline.
  • "Then the evening is gone already," she observed, "and it will be long,
  • I suppose, before I pass another here."
  • Hortense had been for some time nodding over her knitting; fallen into a
  • doze now, she made no response to the remark.
  • "You would have no objection to come here oftener of an evening?"
  • inquired Robert, as he took her folded mantle from the side-table, where
  • it still lay, and carefully wrapped it round her.
  • "I like to come here; but I have no desire to be intrusive. I am not
  • hinting to be asked; you must understand that."
  • "Oh! I understand thee, child. You sometimes lecture me for wishing to
  • be rich, Lina; but if I _were_ rich, you should live here always--at any
  • rate, you should live with me wherever my habitation might be."
  • "That would be pleasant; and if you were poor--ever so poor--it would
  • still be pleasant. Good-night, Robert."
  • "I promised to walk with you up to the rectory."
  • "I know you did; but I thought you had forgotten, and I hardly knew how
  • to remind you, though I wished to do it. But would you like to go? It is
  • a cold night, and as Fanny is come, there is no necessity----"
  • "Here is your muff; don't wake Hortense--come."
  • The half mile to the rectory was soon traversed. They parted in the
  • garden without kiss, scarcely with a pressure of hands; yet Robert sent
  • his cousin in excited and joyously troubled. He had been singularly kind
  • to her that day--not in phrase, compliment, profession, but in manner,
  • in look, and in soft and friendly tones.
  • For himself, he came home grave, almost morose. As he stood leaning on
  • his own yard-gate, musing in the watery moonlight all alone, the hushed,
  • dark mill before him, the hill-environed hollow round, he exclaimed,
  • abruptly,--
  • "This won't do! There's weakness--there's downright ruin in all this.
  • However," he added, dropping his voice, "the frenzy is quite temporary.
  • I know it very well; I have had it before. It will be gone to-morrow."
  • CHAPTER VII.
  • The Curates at Tea.
  • Caroline Helstone was just eighteen years old, and at eighteen the true
  • narrative of life is yet to be commenced. Before that time we sit
  • listening to a tale, a marvellous fiction, delightful sometimes, and sad
  • sometimes, almost always unreal. Before that time our world is heroic,
  • its inhabitants half-divine or semi-demon; its scenes are dream-scenes;
  • darker woods and stranger hills, brighter skies, more dangerous waters,
  • sweeter flowers, more tempting fruits, wider plains, drearier deserts,
  • sunnier fields than are found in nature, overspread our enchanted globe.
  • What a moon we gaze on before that time! How the trembling of our hearts
  • at her aspect bears witness to its unutterable beauty! As to our sun, it
  • is a burning heaven--the world of gods.
  • At that time, at eighteen, drawing near the confines of illusive, void
  • dreams, Elf-land lies behind us, the shores of Reality rise in front.
  • These shores are yet distant; they look so blue, soft, gentle, we long
  • to reach them. In sunshine we see a greenness beneath the azure, as of
  • spring meadows; we catch glimpses of silver lines, and imagine the roll
  • of living waters. Could we but reach this land, we think to hunger and
  • thirst no more; whereas many a wilderness, and often the flood of death,
  • or some stream of sorrow as cold and almost as black as death, is to be
  • crossed ere true bliss can be tasted. Every joy that life gives must be
  • earned ere it is secured; and how hardly earned, those only know who
  • have wrestled for great prizes. The heart's blood must gem with red
  • beads the brow of the combatant, before the wreath of victory rustles
  • over it.
  • At eighteen we are not aware of this. Hope, when she smiles on us, and
  • promises happiness to-morrow, is implicitly believed; Love, when he
  • comes wandering like a lost angel to our door, is at once admitted,
  • welcomed, embraced. His quiver is not seen; if his arrows penetrate,
  • their wound is like a thrill of new life. There are no fears of poison,
  • none of the barb which no leech's hand can extract. That perilous
  • passion--an agony ever in some of its phases; with many, an agony
  • throughout--is believed to be an unqualified good. In short, at eighteen
  • the school of experience is to be entered, and her humbling, crushing,
  • grinding, but yet purifying and invigorating lessons are yet to be
  • learned.
  • Alas, Experience! No other mentor has so wasted and frozen a face as
  • yours, none wears a robe so black, none bears a rod so heavy, none with
  • hand so inexorable draws the novice so sternly to his task, and forces
  • him with authority so resistless to its acquirement. It is by your
  • instructions alone that man or woman can ever find a safe track through
  • life's wilds; without it, how they stumble, how they stray! On what
  • forbidden grounds do they intrude, down what dread declivities are they
  • hurled!
  • Caroline, having been convoyed home by Robert, had no wish to pass what
  • remained of the evening with her uncle. The room in which he sat was
  • very sacred ground to her; she seldom intruded on it; and to-night she
  • kept aloof till the bell rang for prayers. Part of the evening church
  • service was the form of worship observed in Mr. Helstone's household. He
  • read it in his usual nasal voice, clear, loud, and monotonous. The rite
  • over, his niece, according to her wont, stepped up to him.
  • "Good-night, uncle."
  • "Hey! You've been gadding abroad all day--visiting, dining out, and what
  • not!"
  • "Only at the cottage."
  • "And have you learned your lessons?"
  • "Yes."
  • "And made a shirt?"
  • "Only part of one."
  • "Well, that will do. Stick to the needle, learn shirt-making and
  • gown-making and piecrust-making, and you'll be a clever woman some day.
  • Go to bed now. I'm busy with a pamphlet here."
  • Presently the niece was enclosed in her small bedroom, the door bolted,
  • her white dressing-gown assumed, her long hair loosened and falling
  • thick, soft, and wavy to her waist; and as, resting from the task of
  • combing it out, she leaned her check on her hand and fixed her eyes on
  • the carpet, before her rose, and close around her drew, the visions we
  • see at eighteen years.
  • Her thoughts were speaking with her, speaking pleasantly, as it seemed,
  • for she smiled as she listened. She looked pretty meditating thus; but a
  • brighter thing than she was in that apartment--the spirit of youthful
  • Hope. According to this flattering prophet, she was to know
  • disappointment, to feel chill no more; she had entered on the dawn of a
  • summer day--no false dawn, but the true spring of morning--and her sun
  • would quickly rise. Impossible for her now to suspect that she was the
  • sport of delusion; her expectations seemed warranted, the foundation on
  • which they rested appeared solid.
  • "When people love, the next step is they marry," was her argument. "Now,
  • I love Robert, and I feel sure that Robert loves me. I have thought so
  • many a time before; to-day I _felt_ it. When I looked up at him after
  • repeating Chénier's poem, his eyes (what handsome eyes he has!) sent the
  • truth through my heart. Sometimes I am afraid to speak to him, lest I
  • should be too frank, lest I should seem forward--for I have more than
  • once regretted bitterly overflowing, superfluous words, and feared I had
  • said more than he expected me to say, and that he would disapprove what
  • he might deem my indiscretion; now, to-night I could have ventured to
  • express any thought, he was so indulgent. How kind he was as we walked
  • up the lane! He does not flatter or say foolish things; his love-making
  • (friendship, I mean; of course I don't yet account him my lover, but I
  • hope he will be so some day) is not like what we read of in books,--it
  • is far better--original, quiet, manly, sincere. I _do_ like him; I would
  • be an excellent wife to him if he did marry me; I would tell him of his
  • faults (for he has a few faults), but I would study his comfort, and
  • cherish him, and do my best to make him happy. Now, I am sure he will
  • not be cold to-morrow. I feel almost certain that to-morrow evening he
  • will either come here, or ask me to go there."
  • She recommenced combing her hair, long as a mermaid's. Turning her head
  • as she arranged it she saw her own face and form in the glass. Such
  • reflections are soberizing to plain people: their own eyes are not
  • enchanted with the image; they are confident then that the eyes of
  • others can see in it no fascination. But the fair must naturally draw
  • other conclusions: the picture is charming, and must charm. Caroline saw
  • a shape, a head, that, daguerreotyped in that attitude and with that
  • expression, would have been lovely. She could not choose but derive
  • from the spectacle confirmation to her hopes. It was then in
  • undiminished gladness she sought her couch.
  • And in undiminished gladness she rose the next day. As she entered her
  • uncle's breakfast-room, and with soft cheerfulness wished him
  • good-morning, even that little man of bronze himself thought, for an
  • instant, his niece was growing "a fine girl." Generally she was quiet
  • and timid with him--very docile, but not communicative; this morning,
  • however, she found many things to say. Slight topics alone might be
  • discussed between them; for with a woman--a girl--Mr. Helstone would
  • touch on no other. She had taken an early walk in the garden, and she
  • told him what flowers were beginning to spring there; she inquired when
  • the gardener was to come and trim the borders; she informed him that
  • certain starlings were beginning to build their nests in the
  • church-tower (Briarfield church was close to Briarfield rectory); she
  • wondered the tolling of the bells in the belfry did not scare them.
  • Mr. Helstone opined that "they were like other fools who had just
  • paired--insensible to inconvenience just for the moment." Caroline, made
  • perhaps a little too courageous by her temporary good spirits, here
  • hazarded a remark of a kind she had never before ventured to make on
  • observations dropped by her revered relative.
  • "Uncle," said she, "whenever you speak of marriage you speak of it
  • scornfully. Do you think people shouldn't marry?"
  • "It is decidedly the wisest plan to remain single, especially for
  • women."
  • "Are all marriages unhappy?"
  • "Millions of marriages are unhappy. If everybody confessed the truth,
  • perhaps all are more or less so."
  • "You are always vexed when you are asked to come and marry a couple.
  • Why?"
  • "Because one does not like to act as accessory to the commission of a
  • piece of pure folly."
  • Mr. Helstone spoke so readily, he seemed rather glad of the opportunity
  • to give his niece a piece of his mind on this point. Emboldened by the
  • impunity which had hitherto attended her questions, she went a little
  • further.
  • "But why," said she, "should it be pure folly? If two people like each
  • other, why shouldn't they consent to live together?"
  • "They tire of each other--they tire of each other in a month. A
  • yokefellow is not a companion; he or she is a fellow-sufferer."
  • It was by no means naïve simplicity which inspired Caroline's next
  • remark; it was a sense of antipathy to such opinions, and of displeasure
  • at him who held them.
  • "One would think you had never been married, uncle. One would think you
  • were an old bachelor."
  • "Practically, I am so."
  • "But you have been married. Why were you so inconsistent as to marry?"
  • "Every man is mad once or twice in his life."
  • "So you tired of my aunt, and my aunt of you, and you were miserable
  • together?"
  • Mr. Helstone pushed out his cynical lip, wrinkled his brown forehead,
  • and gave an inarticulate grunt.
  • "Did she not suit you? Was she not good-tempered? Did you not get used
  • to her? Were you not sorry when she died?"
  • "Caroline," said Mr. Helstone, bringing his hand slowly down to within
  • an inch or two of the table, and then smiting it suddenly on the
  • mahogany, "understand this: it is vulgar and puerile to confound
  • generals with particulars. In every case there is the rule and there are
  • the exceptions. Your questions are stupid and babyish. Ring the bell, if
  • you have done breakfast."
  • The breakfast was taken away, and that meal over, it was the general
  • custom of uncle and niece to separate, and not to meet again till
  • dinner; but to-day the niece, instead of quitting the room, went to the
  • window-seat, and sat down there. Mr. Helstone looked round uneasily once
  • or twice, as if he wished her away; but she was gazing from the window,
  • and did not seem to mind him: so he continued the perusal of his morning
  • paper--a particularly interesting one it chanced to be, as new movements
  • had just taken place in the Peninsula, and certain columns of the
  • journal were rich in long dispatches from General Lord Wellington. He
  • little knew, meantime, what thoughts were busy in his niece's
  • mind--thoughts the conversation of the past half-hour had revived but
  • not generated; tumultuous were they now, as disturbed bees in a hive,
  • but it was years since they had first made their cells in her brain.
  • She was reviewing his character, his disposition, repeating his
  • sentiments on marriage. Many a time had she reviewed them before, and
  • sounded the gulf between her own mind and his; and then, on the other
  • side of the wide and deep chasm, she had seen, and she now saw, another
  • figure standing beside her uncle's--a strange shape, dim, sinister,
  • scarcely earthly--the half-remembered image of her own father, James
  • Helstone, Matthewson Helstone's brother.
  • Rumours had reached her ear of what that father's character was; old
  • servants had dropped hints; she knew, too, that he was not a good man,
  • and that he was never kind to her. She recollected--a dark recollection
  • it was--some weeks that she had spent with him in a great town
  • somewhere, when she had had no maid to dress her or take care of her;
  • when she had been shut up, day and night, in a high garret-room, without
  • a carpet, with a bare uncurtained bed, and scarcely any other furniture;
  • when he went out early every morning, and often forgot to return and
  • give her her dinner during the day, and at night, when he came back, was
  • like a madman, furious, terrible, or--still more painful--like an idiot,
  • imbecile, senseless. She knew she had fallen ill in this place, and that
  • one night, when she was very sick he had come raving into the room, and
  • said he would kill her, for she was a burden to him. Her screams had
  • brought aid; and from the moment she was then rescued from him she had
  • never seen him, except as a dead man in his coffin.
  • That was her father. Also she had a mother, though Mr. Helstone never
  • spoke to her of that mother, though she could not remember having seen
  • her; but that she was alive she knew. This mother was then the
  • drunkard's wife. What had _their_ marriage been? Caroline, turning from
  • the lattice, whence she had been watching the starlings (though without
  • seeing them), in a low voice, and with a sad, bitter tone, thus broke
  • the silence of the room,--
  • "You term marriage miserable, I suppose, from what you saw of my father
  • and mother's. If my mother suffered what I suffered when I was with
  • papa, she must have had a dreadful life."
  • Mr. Helstone, thus addressed, wheeled about in his chair, and looked
  • over his spectacles at his niece. He was taken aback.
  • Her father and mother! What had put it into her head to mention her
  • father and mother, of whom he had never, during the twelve years she had
  • lived with him, spoken to her? That the thoughts were self-matured, that
  • she had any recollections or speculations about her parents, he could
  • not fancy.
  • "Your father and mother? Who has been talking to you about them?"
  • "Nobody; but I remember something of what papa was, and I pity mamma.
  • Where is she?"
  • This "Where is she?" had been on Caroline's lips hundreds of times
  • before, but till now she had never uttered it.
  • "I hardly know," returned Mr. Helstone; "I was little acquainted with
  • her. I have not heard from her for years: but wherever she is, she
  • thinks nothing of you; she never inquires about you. I have reason to
  • believe she does not wish to see you. Come, it is school-time. You go to
  • your cousin at ten, don't you? The clock has struck."
  • Perhaps Caroline would have said more; but Fanny, coming in, informed
  • her master that the churchwardens wanted to speak to him in the vestry.
  • He hastened to join them, and his niece presently set out for the
  • cottage.
  • The road from the rectory to Hollow's Mill inclined downwards; she ran,
  • therefore, almost all the way. Exercise, the fresh air, the thought of
  • seeing Robert, at least of being on his premises, in his vicinage,
  • revived her somewhat depressed spirits quickly. Arriving in sight of the
  • white house, and within hearing of the thundering mill and its rushing
  • watercourse, the first thing she saw was Moore at his garden gate. There
  • he stood, in his belted Holland blouse, a light cap covering his head,
  • which undress costume suited him. He was looking down the lane, not in
  • the direction of his cousin's approach. She stopped, withdrawing a
  • little behind a willow, and studied his appearance.
  • "He has not his peer," she thought. "He is as handsome as he is
  • intelligent. What a keen eye he has! What clearly-cut, spirited
  • features--thin and serious, but graceful! I do like his face, I do like
  • his aspect, I do like him so much--better than any of those shuffling
  • curates, for instance--better than anybody; bonny Robert!"
  • She sought "bonny Robert's" presence speedily. For his part, when she
  • challenged his sight, I believe he would have passed from before her
  • eyes like a phantom, if he could; but being a tall fact, and no fiction,
  • he was obliged to stand the greeting. He made it brief. It was
  • cousin-like, brother-like, friend-like, anything but lover-like. The
  • nameless charm of last night had left his manner: he was no longer the
  • same man: or, at any rate, the same heart did not beat in his breast.
  • Rude disappointment, sharp cross! At first the eager girl would not
  • believe in the change, though she saw and felt it. It was difficult to
  • withdraw her hand from his, till he had bestowed at least something like
  • a kind pressure; it was difficult to turn her eyes from his eyes, till
  • his looks had expressed something more and fonder than that cool
  • welcome.
  • A lover masculine so disappointed can speak and urge explanation, a
  • lover feminine can say nothing; if she did, the result would be shame
  • and anguish, inward remorse for self-treachery. Nature would brand such
  • demonstration as a rebellion against her instincts, and would
  • vindictively repay it afterwards by the thunderbolt of self-contempt
  • smiting suddenly in secret. Take the matter as you find it: ask no
  • questions, utter no remonstrances; it is your best wisdom. You expected
  • bread, and you have got a stone: break your teeth on it, and don't
  • shriek because the nerves are martyrized; do not doubt that your mental
  • stomach--if you have such a thing--is strong as an ostrich's; the stone
  • will digest. You held out your hand for an egg, and fate put into it a
  • scorpion. Show no consternation: close your fingers firmly upon the
  • gift; let it sting through your palm. Never mind; in time, after your
  • hand and arm have swelled and quivered long with torture, the squeezed
  • scorpion will die, and you will have learned the great lesson how to
  • endure without a sob. For the whole remnant of your life, if you survive
  • the test--some, it is said, die under it--you will be stronger, wiser,
  • less sensitive. This you are not aware of, perhaps, at the time, and so
  • cannot borrow courage of that hope. Nature, however, as has been
  • intimated, is an excellent friend in such cases, sealing the lips,
  • interdicting utterance, commanding a placid dissimulation--a
  • dissimulation often wearing an easy and gay mien at first, settling down
  • to sorrow and paleness in time, then passing away, and leaving a
  • convenient stoicism, not the less fortifying because it is half-bitter.
  • Half-bitter! Is that wrong? No; it should be bitter: bitterness is
  • strength--it is a tonic. Sweet, mild force following acute suffering you
  • find nowhere; to talk of it is delusion. There may be apathetic
  • exhaustion after the rack. If energy remains, it will be rather a
  • dangerous energy--deadly when confronted with injustice.
  • Who has read the ballad of "Puir Mary Lee"--that old Scotch ballad,
  • written I know not in what generation nor by what hand? Mary had been
  • ill-used--probably in being made to believe that truth which was
  • falsehood. She is not complaining, but she is sitting alone in the
  • snowstorm, and you hear her thoughts. They are not the thoughts of a
  • model heroine under her circumstances, but they are those of a
  • deeply-feeling, strongly-resentful peasant-girl. Anguish has driven her
  • from the ingle-nook of home to the white-shrouded and icy hills.
  • Crouched under the "cauld drift," she recalls every image of
  • horror--"the yellow-wymed ask," "the hairy adder," "the auld moon-bowing
  • tyke," "the ghaist at e'en,", "the sour bullister," "the milk on the
  • taed's back." She hates these, but "waur she hates Robin-a-Ree."
  • "Oh, ance I lived happily by yon bonny burn--
  • The warld was in love wi' me;
  • But now I maun sit 'neath the cauld drift and mourn,
  • And curse black Robin-a-Ree!
  • "Then whudder awa, thou bitter biting blast,
  • And sough through the scrunty tree,
  • And smoor me up in the snaw fu' fast,
  • And n'er let the sun me see!
  • "Oh, never melt awa, thou wreath o' snaw,
  • That's sae kind in graving me;
  • But hide me frae the scorn and guffaw
  • O' villains like Robin-a-Ree!"
  • But what has been said in the last page or two is not germane to
  • Caroline Helstone's feelings, or to the state of things between her and
  • Robert Moore. Robert had done her no wrong; he had told her no lie; it
  • was she that was to blame, if any one was. What bitterness her mind
  • distilled should and would be poured on her own head. She had loved
  • without being asked to love--a natural, sometimes an inevitable chance,
  • but big with misery.
  • Robert, indeed, had sometimes seemed to be fond of her; but why? Because
  • she had made herself so pleasing to him, he could not, in spite of all
  • his efforts, help testifying a state of feeling his judgment did not
  • approve nor his will sanction. He was about to withdraw decidedly from
  • intimate communication with her, because he did not choose to have his
  • affections inextricably entangled, nor to be drawn, despite his reason,
  • into a marriage he believed imprudent. Now, what was she to do? To give
  • way to her feelings, or to vanquish them? To pursue him, or to turn
  • upon herself? If she is weak, she will try the first expedient--will
  • lose his esteem and win his aversion; if she has sense, she will be her
  • own governor, and resolve to subdue and bring under guidance the
  • disturbed realm of her emotions. She will determine to look on life
  • steadily, as it is; to begin to learn its severe truths seriously, and
  • to study its knotty problems closely, conscientiously.
  • It appeared she had a little sense, for she quitted Robert quietly,
  • without complaint or question, without the alteration of a muscle or the
  • shedding of a tear, betook herself to her studies under Hortense as
  • usual, and at dinner-time went home without lingering.
  • When she had dined, and found herself in the rectory drawing-room alone,
  • having left her uncle over his temperate glass of port wine, the
  • difficulty that occurred to and embarrassed her was, "How am I to get
  • through this day?"
  • Last night she had hoped it would be spent as yesterday was, that the
  • evening would be again passed with happiness and Robert. She had learned
  • her mistake this morning; and yet she could not settle down, convinced
  • that no chance would occur to recall her to Hollow's Cottage, or to
  • bring Moore again into her society.
  • He had walked up after tea more than once to pass an hour with her
  • uncle. The door-bell had rung, his voice had been heard in the passage
  • just at twilight, when she little expected such a pleasure; and this had
  • happened twice after he had treated her with peculiar reserve; and
  • though he rarely talked to her in her uncle's presence, he had looked at
  • her relentingly as he sat opposite her work-table during his stay. The
  • few words he had spoken to her were comforting; his manner on bidding
  • her good-night was genial. Now, he might come this evening, said False
  • Hope. She almost knew it was False Hope which breathed the whisper, and
  • yet she listened.
  • She tried to read--her thoughts wandered; she tried to sew--every stitch
  • she put in was an _ennui_, the occupation was insufferably tedious; she
  • opened her desk and attempted to write a French composition--she wrote
  • nothing but mistakes.
  • Suddenly the door-bell sharply rang; her heart leaped; she sprang to the
  • drawing-room door, opened it softly, peeped through the aperture. Fanny
  • was admitting a visitor--a gentleman--a tall man--just the height of
  • Robert. For one second she thought it was Robert--for one second she
  • exulted; but the voice asking for Mr. Helstone undeceived her. That
  • voice was an Irish voice, consequently not Moore's, but the
  • curate's--Malone's. He was ushered into the dining-room, where,
  • doubtless, he speedily helped his rector to empty the decanters.
  • It was a fact to be noted, that at whatever house in Briarfield,
  • Whinbury, or Nunnely one curate dropped in to a meal--dinner or tea, as,
  • the case might be--another presently followed, often two more. Not that
  • they gave each other the rendezvous, but they were usually all on the
  • run at the same time; and when Donne, for instance, sought Malone at his
  • lodgings and found him not, he inquired whither he had posted, and
  • having learned of the landlady his destination, hastened with all speed
  • after him. The same causes operated in the same way with Sweeting. Thus
  • it chanced on that afternoon that Caroline's ears were three times
  • tortured with the ringing of the bell and the advent of undesired
  • guests; for Donne followed Malone, and Sweeting followed Donne; and more
  • wine was ordered up from the cellar into the dining-room (for though old
  • Helstone chid the inferior priesthood when he found them "carousing," as
  • he called it, in their own tents, yet at his hierarchical table he ever
  • liked to treat them to a glass of his best), and through the closed
  • doors Caroline heard their boyish laughter, and the vacant cackle of
  • their voices. Her fear was lest they should stay to tea, for she had no
  • pleasure in making tea for that particular trio. What distinctions
  • people draw! These three were men--young men--educated men, like Moore;
  • yet, for her, how great the difference! Their society was a bore--his a
  • delight.
  • Not only was she destined to be favoured with their clerical company,
  • but Fortune was at this moment bringing her four other guests--lady
  • guests, all packed in a pony-phaeton now rolling somewhat heavily along
  • the road from Whinbury: an elderly lady and three of her buxom daughters
  • were coming to see her "in a friendly way," as the custom of that
  • neighbourhood was. Yes, a fourth time the bell clanged. Fanny brought
  • the present announcement to the drawing-room,--
  • "Mrs. Sykes and the three Misses Sykes."
  • When Caroline was going to receive company, her habit was to wring her
  • hands very nervously, to flush a little, and come forward hurriedly yet
  • hesitatingly, wishing herself meantime at Jericho. She was, at such
  • crises, sadly deficient in finished manner, though she had once been at
  • school a year. Accordingly, on this occasion, her small white hands
  • sadly maltreated each other, while she stood up, waiting the entrance of
  • Mrs. Sykes.
  • In stalked that lady, a tall, bilious gentlewoman, who made an ample and
  • not altogether insincere profession of piety, and was greatly given to
  • hospitality towards the clergy. In sailed her three daughters, a showy
  • trio, being all three well-grown, and more or less handsome.
  • In English country ladies there is this point to be remarked. Whether
  • young or old, pretty or plain, dull or sprightly, they all (or almost
  • all) have a certain expression stamped on their features, which seems to
  • say, "I know--I do not boast of it, but I _know_ that I am the standard
  • of what is proper; let every one therefore whom I approach, or who
  • approaches me, keep a sharp lookout, for wherein they differ from me--be
  • the same in dress, manner, opinion, principle, or practice--therein they
  • are wrong."
  • Mrs. and Misses Sykes, far from being exceptions to this observation,
  • were pointed illustrations of its truth. Miss Mary--a well-looked,
  • well-meant, and, on the whole, well-dispositioned girl--wore her
  • complacency with some state, though without harshness. Miss Harriet--a
  • beauty--carried it more overbearingly; she looked high and cold. Miss
  • Hannah, who was conceited, dashing, pushing, flourished hers consciously
  • and openly. The mother evinced it with the gravity proper to her age and
  • religious fame.
  • The reception was got through somehow. Caroline "was glad to see them"
  • (an unmitigated fib), hoped they were well, hoped Mrs. Sykes's cough was
  • better (Mrs. Sykes had had a cough for the last twenty years), hoped the
  • Misses Sykes had left their sisters at home well; to which inquiry the
  • Misses Sykes, sitting on three chairs opposite the music-stool, whereon
  • Caroline had undesignedly come to anchor, after wavering for some
  • seconds between it and a large arm-chair, into which she at length
  • recollected she ought to induct Mrs. Sykes--and indeed that lady saved
  • her the trouble by depositing herself therein--the Misses Sykes replied
  • to Caroline by one simultaneous bow, very majestic and mighty awful. A
  • pause followed. This bow was of a character to ensure silence for the
  • next five minutes, and it did. Mrs. Sykes then inquired after Mr.
  • Helstone, and whether he had had any return of rheumatism, and whether
  • preaching twice on a Sunday fatigued him, and if he was capable of
  • taking a full service now; and on being assured he was, she and all her
  • daughters, combining in chorus, expressed their opinion that he was "a
  • wonderful man of his years."
  • Pause second.
  • Miss Mary, getting up the steam in her turn, asked whether Caroline had
  • attended the Bible Society meeting which had been held at Nunnely last
  • Thursday night. The negative answer which truth compelled Caroline to
  • utter--for last Thursday evening she had been sitting at home, reading a
  • novel which Robert had lent her--elicited a simultaneous expression of
  • surprise from the lips of the four ladies.
  • "We were all there," said Miss Mary--"mamma and all of us. We even
  • persuaded papa to go. Hannah would insist upon it. But he fell asleep
  • while Mr. Langweilig, the German Moravian minister, was speaking. I felt
  • quite ashamed, he nodded so."
  • "And there was Dr. Broadbent," cried Hannah--"such a beautiful speaker!
  • You couldn't expect it of him, for he is almost a vulgar-looking man."
  • "But such a dear man," interrupted Mary.
  • "And such a good man, such a useful man," added her mother.
  • "Only like a butcher in appearance," interposed the fair, proud Harriet.
  • "I couldn't bear to look at him. I listened with my eyes shut."
  • Miss Helstone felt her ignorance and incompetency. Not having seen Dr.
  • Broadbent, she could not give her opinion. Pause third came on. During
  • its continuance, Caroline was feeling at her heart's core what a
  • dreaming fool she was, what an unpractical life she led, how little
  • fitness there was in her for ordinary intercourse with the ordinary
  • world. She was feeling how exclusively she had attached herself to the
  • white cottage in the Hollow, how in the existence of one inmate of that
  • cottage she had pent all her universe. She was sensible that this would
  • not do, and that some day she would be forced to make an alteration. It
  • could not be said that she exactly wished to resemble the ladies before
  • her, but she wished to become superior to her present self, so as to
  • feel less scared by their dignity.
  • The sole means she found of reviving the flagging discourse was by
  • asking them if they would all stay to tea; and a cruel struggle it cost
  • her to perform this piece of civility. Mrs. Sykes had begun, "We are
  • much obliged to you, but----" when in came Fanny once more.
  • "The gentlemen will stay the evening, ma'am," was the message she
  • brought from Mr. Helstone.
  • "What gentlemen have you?" now inquired Mrs. Sykes. Their names were
  • specified; she and her daughters interchanged glances. The curates were
  • not to them what they were to Caroline. Mr. Sweeting was quite a
  • favourite with them; even Mr. Malone rather so, because he was a
  • clergyman. "Really, since you have company already, I think we will
  • stay," remarked Mrs. Sykes. "We shall be quite a pleasant little party.
  • I always like to meet the clergy."
  • And now Caroline had to usher them upstairs, to help them to unshawl,
  • smooth their hair, and make themselves smart; to reconduct them to the
  • drawing-room, to distribute amongst them books of engravings, or odd
  • things purchased from the Jew-basket. She was obliged to be a purchaser,
  • though she was but a slack contributor; and if she had possessed plenty
  • of money, she would rather, when it was brought to the rectory--an awful
  • incubus!--have purchased the whole stock than contributed a single
  • pin-cushion.
  • It ought perhaps to be explained in passing, for the benefit of those
  • who are not _au fait_ to the mysteries of the "Jew-basket" and
  • "missionary-basket," that these _meubles_ are willow repositories, of
  • the capacity of a good-sized family clothes-basket, dedicated to the
  • purpose of conveying from house to house a monster collection of
  • pin-cushions, needle-books, card-racks, workbags, articles of infant
  • wear, etc., etc., etc., made by the willing or reluctant hands of the
  • Christian ladies of a parish, and sold perforce to the heathenish
  • gentlemen thereof, at prices unblushingly exorbitant. The proceeds of
  • such compulsory sales are applied to the conversion of the Jews, the
  • seeking up of the ten missing tribes, or to the regeneration of the
  • interesting coloured population of the globe. Each lady contributor
  • takes it in her turn to keep the basket a month, to sew for it, and to
  • foist off its contents on a shrinking male public. An exciting time it
  • is when that turn comes round. Some active-minded woman, with a good
  • trading spirit, like it, and enjoy exceedingly the fun of making
  • hard-handed worsted-spinners cash up, to the tune of four or five
  • hundred per cent. above cost price, for articles quite useless to them;
  • other feebler souls object to it, and would rather see the prince of
  • darkness himself at their door any morning than that phantom basket,
  • brought with "Mrs. Rouse's compliments; and please, ma'am, she says it's
  • your turn now."
  • Miss Helstone's duties of hostess performed, more anxiously than
  • cheerily, she betook herself to the kitchen, to hold a brief
  • privy-council with Fanny and Eliza about the tea.
  • "What a lot on 'em!" cried Eliza, who was cook. "And I put off the
  • baking to-day because I thought there would be bread plenty to fit while
  • morning. We shall never have enow."
  • "Are there any tea-cakes?" asked the young mistress.
  • "Only three and a loaf. I wish these fine folk would stay at home till
  • they're asked; and I want to finish trimming my hat" (bonnet she meant).
  • "Then," suggested Caroline, to whom the importance of the emergency gave
  • a certain energy, "Fanny must run down to Briarfield and buy some
  • muffins and crumpets and some biscuits. And don't be cross, Eliza; we
  • can't help it now."
  • "And which tea-things are we to have?"
  • "Oh, the best, I suppose. I'll get out the silver service." And she ran
  • upstairs to the plate-closet, and presently brought down teapot,
  • cream-ewer, and sugar-basin.
  • "And mun we have th' urn?"
  • "Yes; and now get it ready as quickly as you can, for the sooner we have
  • tea over the sooner they will go--at least, I hope so. Heigh-ho! I wish
  • they were gone," she sighed, as she returned to the drawing-room.
  • "Still," she thought, as she paused at the door ere opening it, "if
  • Robert would but come even now how bright all would be! How
  • comparatively easy the task of amusing these people if he were present!
  • There would be an interest in hearing him talk (though he never says
  • much in company) and in talking in his presence. There can be no
  • interest in hearing any of them, or in speaking to them. How they will
  • gabble when the curates come in, and how weary I shall grow with
  • listening to them! But I suppose I am a selfish fool. These are very
  • respectable gentlefolks. I ought, no doubt, to be proud of their
  • countenance. I don't say they are not as good as I am--far from it--but
  • they are different from me."
  • She went in.
  • Yorkshire people in those days took their tea round the table, sitting
  • well into it, with their knees duly introduced under the mahogany. It
  • was essential to have a multitude of plates of bread and butter, varied
  • in sorts and plentiful in quantity. It was thought proper, too, that on
  • the centre plate should stand a glass dish of marmalade. Among the
  • viands was expected to be found a small assortment of cheesecakes and
  • tarts. If there was also a plate of thin slices of pink ham garnished
  • with green parsley, so much the better.
  • Eliza, the rector's cook, fortunately knew her business as provider. She
  • had been put out of humour a little at first, when the invaders came so
  • unexpectedly in such strength; but it appeared that she regained her
  • cheerfulness with action, for in due time the tea was spread forth in
  • handsome style, and neither ham, tarts, nor marmalade were wanting among
  • its accompaniments.
  • The curates, summoned to this bounteous repast, entered joyous; but at
  • once, on seeing the ladies, of whose presence they had not been
  • forewarned, they came to a stand in the doorway. Malone headed the
  • party; he stopped short and fell back, almost capsizing Donne, who was
  • behind him. Donne, staggering three paces in retreat, sent little
  • Sweeting into the arms of old Helstone, who brought up the rear. There
  • was some expostulation, some tittering. Malone was desired to mind what
  • he was about, and urged to push forward, which at last he did, though
  • colouring to the top of his peaked forehead a bluish purple. Helstone,
  • advancing, set the shy curates aside, welcomed all his fair guests,
  • shook hands and passed a jest with each, and seated himself snugly
  • between the lovely Harriet and the dashing Hannah. Miss Mary he
  • requested to move to the seat opposite to him, that he might see her if
  • he couldn't be near her. Perfectly easy and gallant, in his way, were
  • his manners always to young ladies, and most popular was he amongst
  • them; yet at heart he neither respected nor liked the sex, and such of
  • them as circumstances had brought into intimate relation with him had
  • ever feared rather than loved him.
  • The curates were left to shift for themselves. Sweeting, who was the
  • least embarrassed of the three, took refuge beside Mrs. Sykes, who, he
  • knew, was almost as fond of him as if he had been her son. Donne, after
  • making his general bow with a grace all his own, and saying in a high,
  • pragmatical voice, "How d'ye do, Miss Helstone?" dropped into a seat at
  • Caroline's elbow, to her unmitigated annoyance, for she had a peculiar
  • antipathy to Donne, on account of his stultified and immovable
  • self-conceit and his incurable narrowness of mind. Malone, grinning most
  • unmeaningly, inducted himself into the corresponding seat on the other
  • side. She was thus blessed in a pair of supporters, neither of whom, she
  • knew, would be of any mortal use, whether for keeping up the
  • conversation, handing cups, circulating the muffins, or even lifting the
  • plate from the slop-basin. Little Sweeting, small and boyish as he was,
  • would have been worth twenty of them.
  • Malone, though a ceaseless talker when there were only men present, was
  • usually tongue-tied in the presence of ladies. Three phrases, however,
  • he had ready cut and dried, which he never failed to produce:--
  • 1stly. "Have you had a walk to-day, Miss Helstone?"
  • 2ndly. "Have you seen your cousin Moore lately?"
  • 3rdly. "Does your class at the Sunday school keep up its number?"
  • These three questions being put and responded to, between Caroline and
  • Malone reigned silence.
  • With Donne it was otherwise; he was troublesome, exasperating. He had a
  • stock of small-talk on hand, at once the most trite and perverse that
  • can well be imagined--abuse of the people of Briarfield; of the natives
  • of Yorkshire generally; complaints of the want of high society; of the
  • backward state of civilization in these districts; murmurings against
  • the disrespectful conduct of the lower orders in the north toward their
  • betters; silly ridicule of the manner of living in these parts--the want
  • of style, the absence of elegance, as if he, Donne, had been accustomed
  • to very great doings indeed, an insinuation which his somewhat underbred
  • manner and aspect failed to bear out. These strictures, he seemed to
  • think, must raise him in the estimation of Miss Helstone or of any other
  • lady who heard him; whereas with her, at least, they brought him to a
  • level below contempt, though sometimes, indeed, they incensed her; for,
  • a Yorkshire girl herself, she hated to hear Yorkshire abused by such a
  • pitiful prater; and when wrought up to a certain pitch, she would turn
  • and say something of which neither the matter nor the manner recommended
  • her to Mr. Donne's good-will. She would tell him it was no proof of
  • refinement to be ever scolding others for vulgarity, and no sign of a
  • good pastor to be eternally censuring his flock. She would ask him what
  • he had entered the church for, since he complained there were only
  • cottages to visit, and poor people to preach to--whether he had been
  • ordained to the ministry merely to wear soft clothing and sit in king's
  • houses. These questions were considered by all the curates as, to the
  • last degree, audacious and impious.
  • Tea was a long time in progress; all the guests gabbled as their hostess
  • had expected they would. Mr. Helstone, being in excellent spirits--when,
  • indeed, was he ever otherwise in society, attractive female society? it
  • being only with the one lady of his own family that he maintained a grim
  • taciturnity--kept up a brilliant flow of easy prattle with his
  • right-hand and left-hand neighbours, and even with his _vis-à-vis_, Miss
  • Mary; though, as Mary was the most sensible, the least coquettish, of
  • the three, to her the elderly widower was the least attentive. At heart
  • he could not abide sense in women. He liked to see them as silly, as
  • light-headed, as vain, as open to ridicule as possible, because they
  • were then in reality what he held them to be, and wished them to
  • be--inferior, toys to play with, to amuse a vacant hour, and to be
  • thrown away.
  • Hannah was his favourite. Harriet, though beautiful, egotistical, and
  • self-satisfied, was not quite weak enough for him. She had some genuine
  • self-respect amidst much false pride, and if she did not talk like an
  • oracle, neither would she babble like one crazy; she would not permit
  • herself to be treated quite as a doll, a child, a plaything; she
  • expected to be bent to like a queen.
  • Hannah, on the contrary, demanded no respect, only flattery. If her
  • admirers only _told_ her that she was an angel, she would let them
  • _treat_ her like an idiot. So very credulous and frivolous was she, so
  • very silly did she become when besieged with attention, flattered and
  • admired to the proper degree, that there were moments when Helstone
  • actually felt tempted to commit matrimony a second time, and to try the
  • experiment of taking her for his second helpmeet; but fortunately the
  • salutary recollection of the _ennuis_ of his first marriage, the
  • impression still left on him of the weight of the millstone he had once
  • worn round his neck, the fixity of his feelings respecting the
  • insufferable evils of conjugal existence, operated as a check to his
  • tenderness, suppressed the sigh heaving his old iron lungs, and
  • restrained him from whispering to Hannah proposals it would have been
  • high fun and great satisfaction to her to hear.
  • It is probable she would have married him if he had asked her; her
  • parents would have quite approved the match. To them his fifty-five
  • years, his bend-leather heart, could have presented no obstacles; and as
  • he was a rector, held an excellent living, occupied a good house, and
  • was supposed even to have private property (though in that the world was
  • mistaken; every penny of the £5,000 inherited by him from his father had
  • been devoted to the building and endowing of a new church at his native
  • village in Lancashire--for he could show a lordly munificence when he
  • pleased, and if the end was to his liking, never hesitated about making
  • a grand sacrifice to attain it)--her parents, I say, would have
  • delivered Hannah over to his lovingkindness and his tender mercies
  • without one scruple; and the second Mrs. Helstone, inverting the natural
  • order of insect existence, would have fluttered through the honeymoon a
  • bright, admired butterfly, and crawled the rest of her days a sordid,
  • trampled worm.
  • Little Mr. Sweeting, seated between Mrs. Sykes and Miss Mary, both of
  • whom were very kind to him, and having a dish of tarts before him, and
  • marmalade and crumpet upon his plate, looked and felt more content than
  • any monarch. He was fond of all the Misses Sykes; they were all fond of
  • him. He thought them magnificent girls, quite proper to mate with one of
  • his inches. If he had a cause of regret at this blissful moment, it was
  • that Miss Dora happened to be absent--Dora being the one whom he
  • secretly hoped one day to call Mrs. David Sweeting, with whom he dreamt
  • of taking stately walks, leading her like an empress through the village
  • of Nunnely; and an empress she would have been, if size could make an
  • empress. She was vast, ponderous. Seen from behind, she had the air of a
  • very stout lady of forty; but withal she possessed a good face, and no
  • unkindly character.
  • The meal at last drew to a close. It would have been over long ago if
  • Mr. Donne had not persisted in sitting with his cup half full of cold
  • tea before him, long after the rest had finished and after he himself
  • had discussed such allowance of viands as he felt competent to
  • swallow--long, indeed, after signs of impatience had been manifested
  • all round the board, till chairs were pushed back, till the talk
  • flagged, till silence fell. Vainly did Caroline inquire repeatedly if he
  • would have another cup, if he would take a little hot tea, as that must
  • be cold, etc.; he would neither drink it nor leave it. He seemed to
  • think that this isolated position of his gave him somehow a certain
  • importance, that it was dignified and stately to be the last, that it
  • was grand to keep all the others waiting. So long did he linger, that
  • the very urn died; it ceased to hiss. At length, however, the old rector
  • himself, who had hitherto been too pleasantly engaged with Hannah to
  • care for the delay, got impatient.
  • "For whom are we waiting?" he asked.
  • "For me, I believe," returned Donne complacently, appearing to think it
  • much to his credit that a party should thus be kept dependent on his
  • movements.
  • "Tut!" cried Helstone. Then standing up, "Let us return thanks," said
  • he; which he did forthwith, and all quitted the table. Donne, nothing
  • abashed, still sat ten minutes quite alone, whereupon Mr. Helstone rang
  • the bell for the things to be removed. The curate at length saw himself
  • forced to empty his cup, and to relinquish the _rôle_ which, he thought,
  • had given him such a felicitous distinction, drawing upon him such
  • flattering general notice.
  • And now, in the natural course of events (Caroline, knowing how it would
  • be, had opened the piano, and produced music-books in readiness), music
  • was asked for. This was Mr. Sweeting's chance for showing off. He was
  • eager to commence. He undertook, therefore, the arduous task of
  • persuading the young ladies to favour the company with an air--a song.
  • _Con amore_ he went through the whole business of begging, praying,
  • resisting excuses, explaining away difficulties, and at last succeeded
  • in persuading Miss Harriet to allow herself to be led to the instrument.
  • Then out came the pieces of his flute (he always carried them in his
  • pocket, as unfailingly as he carried his handkerchief). They were
  • screwed and arranged, Malone and Donne meanwhile herding together and
  • sneering at him, which the little man, glancing over his shoulder, saw,
  • but did not heed at all. He was persuaded their sarcasm all arose from
  • envy. They could not accompany the ladies as he could; he was about to
  • enjoy a triumph over them.
  • The triumph began. Malone, much chagrined at hearing him pipe up in most
  • superior style, determined to earn distinction too, if possible, and
  • all at once assuming the character of a swain (which character he had
  • endeavoured to enact once or twice before, but in which he had not
  • hitherto met with the success he doubtless opined his merits deserved),
  • approached a sofa on which Miss Helstone was seated, and depositing his
  • great Irish frame near her, tried his hand (or rather tongue) at a fine
  • speech or two, accompanied by grins the most extraordinary and
  • incomprehensible. In the course of his efforts to render himself
  • agreeable, he contrived to possess himself of the two long sofa cushions
  • and a square one; with which, after rolling them about for some time
  • with strange gestures, he managed to erect a sort of barrier between
  • himself and the object of his attentions. Caroline, quite willing that
  • they should be sundered, soon devised an excuse for stepping over to the
  • opposite side of the room, and taking up a position beside Mrs. Sykes,
  • of which good lady she entreated some instruction in a new stitch in
  • ornamental knitting, a favour readily granted; and thus Peter Augustus
  • was thrown out.
  • Very sullenly did his countenance lower when he saw himself
  • abandoned--left entirely to his own resources, on a large sofa, with the
  • charge of three small cushions on his hands. The fact was, he felt
  • disposed seriously to cultivate acquaintance with Miss Helstone, because
  • he thought, in common with others, that her uncle possessed money, and
  • concluded that, since he had no children, he would probably leave it to
  • his niece. Gérard Moore was better instructed on this point: he had seen
  • the neat church that owed its origin to the rector's zeal and cash, and
  • more than once, in his inmost soul, had cursed an expensive caprice
  • which crossed his wishes.
  • The evening seemed long to one person in that room. Caroline at
  • intervals dropped her knitting on her lap, and gave herself up to a sort
  • of brain-lethargy--closing her eyes and depressing her head--caused by
  • what seemed to her the unmeaning hum around her,--the inharmonious,
  • tasteless rattle of the piano keys, the squeaking and gasping notes of
  • the flute, the laughter and mirth of her uncle, and Hannah, and Mary,
  • she could not tell whence originating, for she heard nothing comic or
  • gleeful in their discourse; and more than all, by the interminable
  • gossip of Mrs. Sykes murmured close at her ear, gossip which rang the
  • changes on four subjects--her own health and that of the various
  • members of her family; the missionary and Jew baskets and their
  • contents; the late meeting at Nunnely, and one which was expected to
  • come off next week at Whinbury.
  • Tired at length to exhaustion, she embraced the opportunity of Mr.
  • Sweeting coming up to speak to Mrs. Sykes to slip quietly out of the
  • apartment, and seek a moment's respite in solitude. She repaired to the
  • dining-room, where the clear but now low remnant of a fire still burned
  • in the grate. The place was empty and quiet, glasses and decanters were
  • cleared from the table, the chairs were put back in their places, all
  • was orderly. Caroline sank into her uncle's large easy-chair, half shut
  • her eyes, and rested herself--rested at least her limbs, her senses, her
  • hearing, her vision--weary with listening to nothing, and gazing on
  • vacancy. As to her mind, that flew directly to the Hollow. It stood on
  • the threshold of the parlour there, then it passed to the
  • counting-house, and wondered which spot was blessed by the presence of
  • Robert. It so happened that neither locality had that honour; for Robert
  • was half a mile away from both, and much nearer to Caroline than her
  • deadened spirit suspected. He was at this moment crossing the
  • churchyard, approaching the rectory garden-gate--not, however, coming to
  • see his cousin, but intent solely on communicating a brief piece of
  • intelligence to the rector.
  • Yes, Caroline; you hear the wire of the bell vibrate; it rings again for
  • the fifth time this afternoon. You start, and you are certain now that
  • this must be he of whom you dream. Why you are so certain you cannot
  • explain to yourself, but you know it. You lean forward, listening
  • eagerly as Fanny opens the door. Right! That is _the_ voice--low, with
  • the slight foreign accent, but so sweet, as you fancy. You half rise.
  • "Fanny will tell him Mr. Helstone is with company, and then he will go
  • away." Oh! she cannot let him go. In spite of herself, in spite of her
  • reason, she walks half across the room; she stands ready to dart out in
  • case the step should retreat; but he enters the passage. "Since your
  • master is engaged," he says, "just show me into the dining-room. Bring
  • me pen and ink. I will write a short note and leave it for him."
  • Now, having caught these words, and hearing him advance, Caroline, if
  • there was a door within the dining-room, would glide through it and
  • disappear. She feels caught, hemmed in; she dreads her unexpected
  • presence may annoy him. A second since she would have flown to him;
  • that second past, she would flee from him. She cannot. There is no way
  • of escape. The dining-room has but one door, through which now enters
  • her cousin. The look of troubled surprise she expected to see in his
  • face has appeared there, has shocked her, and is gone. She has stammered
  • a sort of apology:--
  • "I only left the drawing-room a minute for a little quiet."
  • There was something so diffident and downcast in the air and tone with
  • which she said this, any one might perceive that some saddening change
  • had lately passed over her prospects, and that the faculty of cheerful
  • self-possession had left her. Mr. Moore, probably, remembered how she
  • had formerly been accustomed to meet him with gentle ardour and hopeful
  • confidence. He must have seen how the check of this morning had
  • operated. Here was an opportunity for carrying out his new system with
  • effect, if he chose to improve it. Perhaps he found it easier to
  • practise that system in broad daylight, in his mill-yard, amidst busy
  • occupations, than in a quiet parlour, disengaged, at the hour of
  • eventide. Fanny lit the candles, which before had stood unlit on the
  • table, brought writing materials, and left the room. Caroline was about
  • to follow her. Moore, to act consistently, should have let her go;
  • whereas he stood in the doorway, and, holding out his hand, gently kept
  • her back. He did not ask her to stay, but he would not let her go.
  • "Shall I tell my uncle you are here?" asked she, still in the same
  • subdued voice.
  • "No; I can say to you all I had to say to him. You will be my
  • messenger?"
  • "Yes, Robert."
  • "Then you may just inform him that I have got a clue to the identity of
  • one, at least, of the men who broke my frames; that he belongs to the
  • same gang who attacked Sykes and Pearson's dressing-shop, and that I
  • hope to have him in custody to-morrow. You can remember that?"
  • "Oh yes!" These two monosyllables were uttered in a sadder tone than
  • ever; and as she said them she shook her head slightly and sighed. "Will
  • you prosecute him?"
  • "Doubtless."
  • "No, Robert."
  • "And why no, Caroline?"
  • "Because it will set all the neighbourhood against you more than ever."
  • "That is no reason why I should not do my duty, and defend my property.
  • This fellow is a great scoundrel, and ought to be incapacitated from
  • perpetrating further mischief."
  • "But his accomplices will take revenge on you. You do not know how the
  • people of this country bear malice. It is the boast of some of them that
  • they can keep a stone in their pocket seven years, turn it at the end of
  • that time, keep it seven years longer, and hurl it and hit their mark
  • 'at last.'"
  • Moore laughed.
  • "A most pithy vaunt," said he--"one that redounds vastly to the credit
  • of your dear Yorkshire friends. But don't fear for me, Lina. I am on my
  • guard against these lamb-like compatriots of yours. Don't make yourself
  • uneasy about me."
  • "How can I help it? You are my cousin. If anything happened----" She
  • stopped.
  • "Nothing will happen, Lina. To speak in your own language, there is a
  • Providence above all--is there not?"
  • "Yes, dear Robert. May He guard you!"
  • "And if prayers have efficacy, yours will benefit me. You pray for me
  • sometimes?"
  • "Not _sometimes_, Robert. You, and Louis, and Hortense are _always_
  • remembered."
  • "So I have often imagined. It has occurred to me when, weary and vexed,
  • I have myself gone to bed like a heathen, that another had asked
  • forgiveness for my day, and safety for my night. I don't suppose such
  • vicarial piety will avail much, but the petitions come out of a sincere
  • breast, from innocent lips. They should be acceptable as Abel's
  • offering; and doubtless would be, if the object deserved them."
  • "Annihilate that doubt. It is groundless."
  • "When a man has been brought up only to make money, and lives to make
  • it, and for nothing else, and scarcely breathes any other air than that
  • of mills and markets, it seems odd to utter his name in a prayer, or to
  • mix his idea with anything divine; and very strange it seems that a
  • good, pure heart should take him in and harbour him, as if he had any
  • claim to that sort of nest. If I could guide that benignant heart, I
  • believe I should counsel it to exclude one who does not profess to have
  • any higher aim in life than that of patching up his broken fortune, and
  • wiping clean from his _bourgeois_ scutcheon the foul stain of
  • bankruptcy."
  • The hint, though conveyed thus tenderly and modestly (as Caroline
  • thought), was felt keenly and comprehended clearly.
  • "Indeed, I only think--or I _will only_ think--of you as my cousin," was
  • the quick answer. "I am beginning to understand things better than I
  • did, Robert, when you first came to England--better than I did a week, a
  • day ago. I know it is your duty to try to get on, and that it won't do
  • for you to be romantic; but in future you must not misunderstand me if I
  • seem friendly. You misunderstood me this morning, did you not?"
  • "What made you think so?"
  • "Your look--your manner."
  • "But look at me now----"
  • "Oh! you are different now. At present I dare speak to you."
  • "Yet I am the same, except that I have left the tradesman behind me in
  • the Hollow. Your kinsman alone stands before you."
  • "My cousin Robert--not Mr. Moore."
  • "Not a bit of Mr. Moore. Caroline----"
  • Here the company was heard rising in the other room. The door was
  • opened; the pony-carriage was ordered; shawls and bonnets were demanded;
  • Mr. Helstone called for his niece.
  • "I must go, Robert."
  • "Yes, you must go, or they will come in and find us here; and I, rather
  • than meet all that host in the passage, will take my departure through
  • the window. Luckily it opens like a door. One minute only--put down the
  • candle an instant--good-night. I kiss you because we are cousins, and,
  • being cousins, one--two--three kisses are allowable. Caroline,
  • good-night."
  • CHAPTER VIII.
  • NOAH AND MOSES.
  • The next day Moore had risen before the sun, and had taken a ride to
  • Whinbury and back ere his sister had made the café au lait or cut the
  • tartines for his breakfast. What business he transacted there he kept to
  • himself. Hortense asked no questions: it was not her wont to comment on
  • his movements, nor his to render an account of them. The secrets of
  • business--complicated and often dismal mysteries--were buried in his
  • breast, and never came out of their sepulchre save now and then to scare
  • Joe Scott, or give a start to some foreign correspondent. Indeed, a
  • general habit of reserve on whatever was important seemed bred in his
  • mercantile blood.
  • Breakfast over, he went to his counting-house. Henry, Joe Scott's boy,
  • brought in the letters and the daily papers; Moore seated himself at his
  • desk, broke the seals of the documents, and glanced them over. They were
  • all short, but not, it seemed, sweet--probably rather sour, on the
  • contrary, for as Moore laid down the last, his nostrils emitted a
  • derisive and defiant snuff, and though he burst into no soliloquy, there
  • was a glance in his eye which seemed to invoke the devil, and lay
  • charges on him to sweep the whole concern to Gehenna. However, having
  • chosen a pen and stripped away the feathered top in a brief spasm of
  • finger-fury (only finger-fury--his face was placid), he dashed off a
  • batch of answers, sealed them, and then went out and walked through the
  • mill. On coming back he sat down to read his newspaper.
  • The contents seemed not absorbingly interesting; he more than once laid
  • it across his knee, folded his arms, and gazed into the fire; he
  • occasionally turned his head towards the window; he looked at intervals
  • at his watch; in short, his mind appeared preoccupied. Perhaps he was
  • thinking of the beauty of the weather--for it was a fine and mild
  • morning for the season--and wishing to be out in the fields enjoying
  • it. The door of his counting-house stood wide open. The breeze and
  • sunshine entered freely; but the first visitant brought no spring
  • perfume on its wings, only an occasional sulphur-puff from the
  • soot-thick column of smoke rushing sable from the gaunt mill-chimney.
  • A dark-blue apparition (that of Joe Scott, fresh from a dyeing vat)
  • appeared momentarily at the open door, uttered the words "He's comed,
  • sir," and vanished.
  • Mr. Moore raised not his eyes from the paper. A large man,
  • broad-shouldered and massive-limbed, clad in fustian garments and gray
  • worsted stockings, entered, who was received with a nod, and desired to
  • take a seat, which he did, making the remark, as he removed his hat (a
  • very bad one), stowed it away under his chair, and wiped his forehead
  • with a spotted cotton handkerchief extracted from the hat-crown, that it
  • was "raight dahn warm for Febewerry." Mr. Moore assented--at least he
  • uttered some slight sound, which, though inarticulate, might pass for an
  • assent. The visitor now carefully deposited in the corner beside him an
  • official-looking staff which he bore in his hand; this done, he
  • whistled, probably by way of appearing at his ease.
  • "You have what is necessary, I suppose?" said Mr. Moore.
  • "Ay, ay! all's right."
  • He renewed his whistling, Mr. Moore his reading. The paper apparently
  • had become more interesting. Presently, however, he turned to his
  • cupboard, which was within reach of his long arm, opened it without
  • rising, took out a black bottle--the same he had produced for Malone's
  • benefit--a tumbler, and a jug, placed them on the table, and said to his
  • guest,--
  • "Help yourself; there's water in that jar in the corner."
  • "I dunnut knaw that there's mich need, for all a body is dry (thirsty)
  • in a morning," said the fustian gentleman, rising and doing as
  • requested.
  • "Will you tak naught yourseln, Mr. Moore?" he inquired, as with skilled
  • hand he mixed a portion, and having tested it by a deep draught, sank
  • back satisfied and bland in his seat. Moore, chary of words, replied by
  • a negative movement and murmur.
  • "Yah'd as good," continued his visitor; "it 'uld set ye up wald a sup o'
  • this stuff. Uncommon good hollands. Ye get it fro' furrin parts, I'se
  • think?"
  • "Ay!"
  • "Tak my advice and try a glass on't. Them lads 'at's coming 'll keep ye
  • talking, nob'dy knows how long. Ye'll need propping."
  • "Have you seen Mr. Sykes this morning?" inquired Moore.
  • "I seed him a hauf an hour--nay, happen a quarter of an hour sin', just
  • afore I set off. He said he aimed to come here, and I sudn't wonder but
  • ye'll have old Helstone too. I seed 'em saddling his little nag as I
  • passed at back o' t' rectory."
  • The speaker was a true prophet, for the trot of a little nag's hoofs
  • was, five minutes after, heard in the yard. It stopped, and a well-known
  • nasal voice cried aloud, "Boy" (probably addressing Harry Scott, who
  • usually hung about the premises from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.), "take my horse
  • and lead him into the stable."
  • Helstone came in marching nimbly and erect, looking browner, keener, and
  • livelier than usual.
  • "Beautiful morning, Moore. How do, my boy? Ha! whom have we here?"
  • (turning to the personage with the staff). "Sugden! What! you're going
  • to work directly? On my word, you lose no time. But I come to ask
  • explanations. Your message was delivered to me. Are you sure you are on
  • the right scent? How do you mean to set about the business? Have you got
  • a warrant?"
  • "Sugden has."
  • "Then you are going to seek him now? I'll accompany you."
  • "You will be spared that trouble, sir; he is coming to seek me. I'm just
  • now sitting in state waiting his arrival."
  • "And who is it? One of my parishioners?"
  • Joe Scott had entered unobserved. He now stood, a most sinister phantom,
  • half his person being dyed of the deepest tint of indigo, leaning on the
  • desk. His master's answer to the rector's question was a smile. Joe took
  • the word. Putting on a quiet but pawky look, he said,--
  • "It's a friend of yours, Mr. Helstone, a gentleman you often speak of."
  • "Indeed! His name, Joe? You look well this morning."
  • "Only the Rev. Moses Barraclough; t' tub orator you call him sometimes,
  • I think."
  • "Ah!" said the rector, taking out his snuff-box, and administering to
  • himself a very long pinch--"ah! couldn't have supposed it. Why, the
  • pious man never was a workman of yours, Moore. He's a tailor by trade."
  • "And so much the worse grudge I owe him, for interfering and setting my
  • discarded men against me."
  • "And Moses was actually present at the battle of Stilbro' Moor? He went
  • there, wooden leg and all?"
  • "Ay, sir," said Joe; "he went there on horseback, that his leg mightn't
  • be noticed. He was the captain, and wore a mask. The rest only had their
  • faces blackened."
  • "And how was he found out?"
  • "I'll tell you, sir," said Joe. "T' maister's not so fond of talking.
  • I've no objections. He courted Sarah, Mr. Moore's sarvant lass, and so
  • it seems she would have nothing to say to him; she either didn't like
  • his wooden leg or she'd some notion about his being a hypocrite. Happen
  • (for women is queer hands; we may say that amang werseln when there's
  • none of 'em nigh) she'd have encouraged him, in spite of his leg and his
  • deceit, just to pass time like. I've known some on 'em do as mich, and
  • some o' t' bonniest and mimmest-looking, too--ay, I've seen clean, trim
  • young things, that looked as denty and pure as daisies, and wi' time a
  • body fun' 'em out to be nowt but stinging, venomed nettles."
  • "Joe's a sensible fellow," interjected Helstone.
  • "Howsiver, Sarah had another string to her bow. Fred Murgatroyd, one of
  • our lads, is for her; and as women judge men by their faces--and Fred
  • has a middling face, while Moses is none so handsome, as we all
  • knaw--the lass took on wi' Fred. A two-three months sin', Murgatroyd and
  • Moses chanced to meet one Sunday night; they'd both come lurking about
  • these premises wi' the notion of counselling Sarah to tak a bit of a
  • walk wi' them. They fell out, had a tussle, and Fred was worsted, for
  • he's young and small, and Barraclough, for all he has only one leg, is
  • almost as strong as Sugden there--indeed, anybody that hears him roaring
  • at a revival or a love-feast may be sure he's no weakling."
  • "Joe, you're insupportable," here broke in Mr. Moore. "You spin out your
  • explanation as Moses spins out his sermons. The long and short of it is,
  • Murgatroyd was jealous of Barraclough; and last night, as he and a
  • friend took shelter in a barn from a shower, they heard and saw Moses
  • conferring with some associates within. From their discourse it was
  • plain he had been the leader, not only at Stilbro' Moor, but in the
  • attack on Sykes's property. Moreover they planned a deputation to wait
  • on me this morning, which the tailor is to head, and which, in the most
  • religious and peaceful spirit, is to entreat me to put the accursed
  • thing out of my tent. I rode over to Whinbury this morning, got a
  • constable and a warrant, and I am now waiting to give my friend the
  • reception he deserves. Here, meantime, comes Sykes. Mr. Helstone, you
  • must spirit him up. He feels timid at the thoughts of prosecuting."
  • A gig was heard to roll into the yard. Mr. Sykes entered--a tall stout
  • man of about fifty, comely of feature, but feeble of physiognomy. He
  • looked anxious.
  • "Have they been? Are they gone? Have you got him? Is it over?" he asked.
  • "Not yet," returned Moore with phlegm. "We are waiting for them."
  • "They'll not come; it's near noon. Better give it up. It will excite bad
  • feeling--make a stir--cause perhaps fatal consequences."
  • "_You_ need not appear," said Moore. "I shall meet them in the yard when
  • they come; _you_ can stay here."
  • "But my name must be seen in the law proceedings. A wife and family, Mr.
  • Moore--a wife and family make a man cautious."
  • Moore looked disgusted. "Give way, if you please," said he; "leave me to
  • myself. I have no objection to act alone; only be assured you will not
  • find safety in submission. Your partner Pearson gave way, and conceded,
  • and forbore. Well, that did not prevent them from attempting to shoot
  • him in his own house."
  • "My dear sir, take a little wine and water," recommended Mr. Helstone.
  • The wine and water was hollands and water, as Mr. Sykes discovered when
  • he had compounded and swallowed a brimming tumbler thereof. It
  • transfigured him in two minutes, brought the colour back to his face,
  • and made him at least _word_-valiant. He now announced that he hoped he
  • was above being trampled on by the common people; he was determined to
  • endure the insolence of the working-classes no longer; he had considered
  • of it, and made up his mind to go all lengths; if money and spirit could
  • put down these rioters, they should be put down; Mr. Moore might do as
  • he liked, but _he_--Christie Sykes--would spend his last penny in law
  • before he would be beaten; he'd settle them, or he'd see.
  • "Take another glass," urged Moore.
  • Mr. Sykes didn't mind if he did. This was a cold morning (Sugden had
  • found it a warm one); it was necessary to be careful at this season of
  • the year--it was proper to take something to keep the damp out; he had a
  • little cough already (here he coughed in attestation of the fact);
  • something of this sort (lifting the black bottle) was excellent, taken
  • medicinally (he poured the physic into his tumbler); he didn't make a
  • practice of drinking spirits in a morning, but occasionally it really
  • was prudent to take precautions.
  • "Quite prudent, and take them by all means," urged the host.
  • Mr. Sykes now addressed Mr. Helstone, who stood on the hearth, his
  • shovel-hat on his head, watching him significantly with his little, keen
  • eyes.
  • "You, sir, as a clergyman," said he, "may feel it disagreeable to be
  • present amidst scenes of hurry and flurry, and, I may say, peril. I dare
  • say your nerves won't stand it. You're a man of peace, sir; but we
  • manufacturers, living in the world, and always in turmoil, get quite
  • belligerent. Really, there's an ardour excited by the thoughts of danger
  • that makes my heart pant. When Mrs. Sykes is afraid of the house being
  • attacked and broke open--as she is every night--I get quite excited. I
  • couldn't describe to you, sir, my feelings. Really, if anybody was to
  • come--thieves or anything--I believe I should enjoy it, such is my
  • spirit."
  • The hardest of laughs, though brief and low, and by no means insulting,
  • was the response of the rector. Moore would have pressed upon the heroic
  • mill-owner a third tumbler, but the clergyman, who never transgressed,
  • nor would suffer others in his presence to transgress, the bounds of
  • decorum, checked him.
  • "Enough is as good as a feast, is it not, Mr. Sykes?" he said; and Mr.
  • Sykes assented, and then sat and watched Joe Scott remove the bottle at
  • a sign from Helstone, with a self-satisfied simper on his lips and a
  • regretful glisten in his eye. Moore looked as if he should have liked to
  • fool him to the top of his bent. What would a certain young kinswoman of
  • his have said could she have seen her dear, good, great Robert--her
  • Coriolanus--just now? Would she have acknowledged in that mischievous,
  • sardonic visage the same face to which she had looked up with such love,
  • which had bent over her with such gentleness last night? Was that the
  • man who had spent so quiet an evening with his sister and his cousin--so
  • suave to one, so tender to the other--reading Shakespeare and listening
  • to Chénier?
  • Yes, it was the same man, only seen on a different side--a side Caroline
  • had not yet fairly beheld, though perhaps she had enough sagacity
  • faintly to suspect its existence. Well, Caroline had, doubtless, her
  • defective side too. She was human. She must, then, have been very
  • imperfect; and had she seen Moore on his very worst side, she would
  • probably have said this to herself and excused him. Love can excuse
  • anything except meanness; but meanness kills love, cripples even natural
  • affection; without esteem true love cannot exist. Moore, with all his
  • faults, might be esteemed; for he had no moral scrofula in his mind, no
  • hopeless polluting taint--such, for instance, as that of falsehood;
  • neither was he the slave of his appetites. The active life to which he
  • had been born and bred had given him something else to do than to join
  • the futile chase of the pleasure-hunter. He was a man undegraded, the
  • disciple of reason, _not_ the votary of sense. The same might be said of
  • old Helstone. Neither of these two would look, think, or speak a lie;
  • for neither of them had the wretched black bottle, which had just been
  • put away, any charms. Both might boast a valid claim to the proud title
  • of "lord of the creation," for no animal vice was lord of them; they
  • looked and were superior beings to poor Sykes.
  • A sort of gathering and trampling sound was heard in the yard, and then
  • a pause. Moore walked to the window; Helstone followed. Both stood on
  • one side, the tall junior behind the under-sized senior, looking forth
  • carefully, so that they might not be visible from without. Their sole
  • comment on what they saw was a cynical smile flashed into each other's
  • stern eyes.
  • A flourishing oratorical cough was now heard, followed by the
  • interjection "Whisht!" designed, as it seemed, to still the hum of
  • several voices. Moore opened his casement an inch or two to admit sound
  • more freely.
  • "Joseph Scott," began a snuffling voice--Scott was standing sentinel at
  • the counting-house door--"might we inquire if your master be within, and
  • is to be spoken to?"
  • "He's within, ay," said Joe nonchalantly.
  • "Would you then, if _you_ please" (emphasis on "you"), "have the
  • goodness to tell _him_ that twelve gentlemen wants to see him."
  • "He'd happen ax what for," suggested Joe. "I mught as weel tell him that
  • at t' same time."
  • "For a purpose," was the answer. Joe entered.
  • "Please, sir, there's twelve gentlemen wants to see ye, 'for a
  • purpose.'"
  • "Good, Joe; I'm their man.--Sugden, come when I whistle."
  • Moore went out, chuckling dryly. He advanced into the yard, one hand in
  • his pocket, the other in his waistcoat, his cap brim over his eyes,
  • shading in some measure their deep dancing ray of scorn. Twelve men
  • waited in the yard, some in their shirt-sleeves, some in blue aprons.
  • Two figured conspicuously in the van of the party. One, a little dapper
  • strutting man with a turned-up nose; the other a broad-shouldered
  • fellow, distinguished no less by his demure face and cat like, trustless
  • eyes than by a wooden leg and stout crutch. There was a kind of leer
  • about his lips; he seemed laughing in his sleeve at some person or
  • thing; his whole air was anything but that of a true man.
  • "Good-morning, Mr. Barraclough," said Moore debonairly, for him.
  • "Peace be unto you!" was the answer, Mr. Barraclough entirely closing
  • his naturally half-shut eyes as he delivered it.
  • "I'm obliged to you. Peace is an excellent thing; there's nothing I more
  • wish for myself. But that is not all you have to say to me, I suppose? I
  • imagine peace is not your purpose?"
  • "As to our purpose," began Barraclough, "it's one that may sound strange
  • and perhaps foolish to ears like yours, for the childer of this world is
  • wiser in their generation than the childer of light."
  • "To the point, if you please, and let me hear what it is."
  • "Ye'se hear, sir. If I cannot get it off, there's eleven behint can help
  • me. It is a grand purpose, and" (changing his voice from a half-sneer to
  • a whine) "it's the Looard's own purpose, and that's better."
  • "Do you want a subscription to a new Ranter's chapel, Mr. Barraclough?
  • Unless your errand be something of that sort, I cannot see what you have
  • to do with it."
  • "I hadn't that duty on my mind, sir; but as Providence has led ye to
  • mention the subject, I'll make it i' my way to tak ony trifle ye may
  • have to spare; the smallest contribution will be acceptable."
  • With that he doffed his hat, and held it out as a begging-box, a brazen
  • grin at the same time crossing his countenance.
  • "If I gave you sixpence you would drink it."
  • Barraclough uplifted the palms of his hands and the whites of his eyes,
  • evincing in the gesture a mere burlesque of hypocrisy.
  • "You seem a fine fellow," said Moore, quite coolly and dryly; "you don't
  • care for showing me that you are a double-dyed hypocrite, that your
  • trade is fraud. You expect indeed to make me laugh at the cleverness
  • with which you play your coarsely farcical part, while at the same time
  • you think you are deceiving the men behind you."
  • Moses' countenance lowered. He saw he had gone too far. He was going to
  • answer, when the second leader, impatient of being hitherto kept in the
  • background, stepped forward. This man did not look like a traitor,
  • though he had an exceedingly self-confident and conceited air.
  • "Mr. Moore," commenced he, speaking also in his throat and nose, and
  • enunciating each word very slowly, as if with a view to giving his
  • audience time to appreciate fully the uncommon elegance of the
  • phraseology, "it might, perhaps, justly be said that reason rather than
  • peace is our purpose. We come, in the first place, to request you to
  • hear reason; and should _you_ refuse, it is my duty to warn _you_, in
  • very decided terms, that measures will be had resort to" (he meant
  • recourse) "which will probably terminate in--in bringing _you_ to a
  • sense of the unwisdom, of the--the foolishness which seems to guide and
  • guard your proceedings as a tradesman in this manufacturing part of the
  • country. Hem! Sir, I would beg to allude that as a furriner, coming from
  • a distant coast, another quarter and hemisphere of this globe, thrown,
  • as I may say, a perfect outcast on these shores--the cliffs of
  • Albion--you have not that understanding of huz and wer ways which might
  • conduce to the benefit of the working-classes. If, to come at once to
  • partic'lars, you'd consider to give up this here miln, and go without
  • further protractions straight home to where you belong, it 'ud happen be
  • as well. I can see naught ageean such a plan.--What hev ye to say
  • tull't, lads?" turning round to the other members of the deputation,
  • who responded unanimously, "Hear, hear!"
  • "Brayvo, Noah o' Tim's!" murmured Joe Scott, who stood behind Mr. Moore.
  • "Moses'll niver beat that. Cliffs o' Albion, and t' other hemisphere! My
  • certy! Did ye come fro' th' Antarctic Zone, maister? Moses is dished."
  • Moses, however, refused to be dished. He thought he would try again.
  • Casting a somewhat ireful glance at "Noah o' Tim's," he launched out in
  • his turn; and now he spoke in a serious tone, relinquishing the sarcasm
  • which he found had not answered.
  • "Or iver you set up the pole o' your tent amang us, Mr. Moore, we lived
  • i' peace and quietness--yea, I may say, in all loving-kindness. I am not
  • myself an aged person as yet, but I can remember as far back as maybe
  • some twenty year, when hand-labour were encouraged and respected, and no
  • mischief-maker had ventured to introduce these here machines which is so
  • pernicious. Now, I'm not a cloth-dresser myself, but by trade a tailor.
  • Howsiver, my heart is of a softish nature. I'm a very feeling man, and
  • when I see my brethren oppressed, like my great namesake of old, I stand
  • up for 'em; for which intent I this day speak with you face to face, and
  • advises you to part wi' your infernal machinery, and tak on more hands."
  • "What if I don't follow your advice, Mr. Barraclough?"
  • "The Looard pardon you! The Looard soften your heart, sir!"
  • "Are you in connection with the Wesleyans now, Mr. Barraclough?"
  • "Praise God! Bless His name! I'm a joined Methody!"
  • "Which in no respect prevents you from being at the same time a drunkard
  • and a swindler. I saw you one night a week ago laid dead-drunk by the
  • roadside, as I returned from Stilbro' market; and while you preach
  • peace, you make it the business of your life to stir up dissension. You
  • no more sympathize with the poor who are in distress than you sympathize
  • with me. You incite them to outrage for bad purposes of your own; so
  • does the individual called Noah of Tim's. You two are restless,
  • meddling, impudent scoundrels, whose chief motive-principle is a selfish
  • ambition, as dangerous as it is puerile. The persons behind you are some
  • of them honest though misguided men; but you two I count altogether
  • bad."
  • Barraclough was going to speak.
  • "Silence! You have had your say, and now I will have mine. As to being
  • dictated to by you, or any Jack, Jem, or Jonathan on earth, I shall not
  • suffer it for a moment. You desire me to quit the country; you request
  • me to part with my machinery. In case I refuse, you threaten me. I _do_
  • refuse--point-blank! Here I stay, and by this mill I stand, and into it
  • will I convey the best machinery inventors can furnish. What will you
  • do? The utmost you _can_ do--and this you will never _dare_ to do--is to
  • burn down my mill, destroy its contents, and shoot me. What then?
  • Suppose that building was a ruin and I was a corpse--what then, you lads
  • behind these two scamps? Would that stop invention or exhaust science?
  • Not for the fraction of a second of time! Another and better gig-mill
  • would rise on the ruins of this, and perhaps a more enterprising owner
  • come in my place. Hear me! I'll make my cloth as I please, and according
  • to the best lights I have. In its manufacture I will employ what means I
  • choose. Whoever, after hearing this, shall dare to interfere with me may
  • just take the consequences. An example shall prove I'm in earnest."
  • He whistled shrill and loud. Sugden, his staff and warrant, came on the
  • scene.
  • Moore turned sharply to Barraclough. "You were at Stilbro'," said he; "I
  • have proof of that. You were on the moor, you wore a mask, you knocked
  • down one of my men with your own hand--you! a preacher of the
  • gospel!--Sugden, arrest him!"
  • Moses was captured. There was a cry and a rush to rescue, but the right
  • hand which all this while had lain hidden in Moore's breast,
  • reappearing, held out a pistol.
  • "Both barrels are loaded," said he. "I'm quite determined! Keep off!"
  • Stepping backwards, facing the foe as he went, he guarded his prey to
  • the counting-house. He ordered Joe Scott to pass in with Sugden and the
  • prisoner, and to bolt the door inside. For himself, he walked backwards
  • and forwards along the front of the mill, looking meditatively on the
  • ground, his hand hanging carelessly by his side, but still holding the
  • pistol. The eleven remaining deputies watched him some time, talking
  • under their breath to each other. At length one of them approached. This
  • man looked very different from either of the two who had previously
  • spoken; he was hard-favoured, but modest and manly-looking.
  • "I've not much faith i' Moses Barraclough," said he, "and I would speak
  • a word to you myseln, Mr. Moore. It's out o' no ill-will that I'm here,
  • for my part; it's just to mak a effort to get things straightened, for
  • they're sorely a-crooked. Ye see we're ill off--varry ill off; wer
  • families is poor and pined. We're thrown out o' work wi' these frames;
  • we can get nought to do; we can earn nought. What is to be done? Mun we
  • say, wisht! and lig us down and dee? Nay; I've no grand words at my
  • tongue's end, Mr. Moore, but I feel that it wad be a low principle for a
  • reasonable man to starve to death like a dumb cratur. I willn't do't.
  • I'm not for shedding blood: I'd neither kill a man nor hurt a man; and
  • I'm not for pulling down mills and breaking machines--for, as ye say,
  • that way o' going on'll niver stop invention; but I'll talk--I'll mak as
  • big a din as ever I can. Invention may be all right, but I know it isn't
  • right for poor folks to starve. Them that governs mun find a way to help
  • us; they mun make fresh orderations. Ye'll say that's hard to do. So
  • mich louder mun we shout out then, for so much slacker will t'
  • Parliament-men be to set on to a tough job."
  • "Worry the Parliament-men as much as you please," said Moore; "but to
  • worry the mill-owners is absurd, and I for one won't stand it."
  • "Ye're a raight hard un!" returned the workman. "Willn't ye gie us a bit
  • o' time? Willn't ye consent to mak your changes rather more slowly?"
  • "Am I the whole body of clothiers in Yorkshire? Answer me that."
  • "Ye're yourseln."
  • "And only myself. And if I stopped by the way an instant, while others
  • are rushing on, I should be trodden down. If I did as you wish me to do,
  • I should be bankrupt in a month; and would my bankruptcy put bread into
  • your hungry children's mouths? William Farren, neither to your dictation
  • nor to that of any other will I submit. Talk to me no more about
  • machinery. I will have my own way. I shall get new frames in to-morrow.
  • If you broke these, I would still get more. _I'll never give in._"
  • Here the mill-bell rang twelve o'clock. It was the dinner-hour. Moore
  • abruptly turned from the deputation and re-entered his counting-house.
  • His last words had left a bad, harsh impression; he, at least, had
  • "failed in the disposing of a chance he was lord of." By speaking kindly
  • to William Farren--who was a very honest man, without envy or hatred of
  • those more happily circumstanced than himself, thinking it no hardship
  • and no injustice to be forced to live by labour, disposed to be
  • honourably content if he could but get work to do--Moore might have made
  • a friend. It seemed wonderful how he could turn from such a man without
  • a conciliatory or a sympathizing expression. The poor fellow's face
  • looked haggard with want; he had the aspect of a man who had not known
  • what it was to live in comfort and plenty for weeks, perhaps months,
  • past, and yet there was no ferocity, no malignity in his countenance; it
  • was worn, dejected, austere, but still patient. How could Moore leave
  • him thus, with the words, "I'll never give in," and not a whisper of
  • good-will, or hope, or aid?
  • Farren, as he went home to his cottage--once, in better times, a decent,
  • clean, pleasant place, but now, though still clean, very dreary, because
  • so poor--asked himself this question. He concluded that the foreign
  • mill-owner was a selfish, an unfeeling, and, he thought, too, a foolish
  • man. It appeared to him that emigration, had he only the means to
  • emigrate, would be preferable to service under such a master. He felt
  • much cast down--almost hopeless.
  • On his entrance his wife served out, in orderly sort, such dinner as she
  • had to give him and the bairns. It was only porridge, and too little of
  • that. Some of the younger children asked for more when they had done
  • their portion--an application which disturbed William much. While his
  • wife quieted them as well as she could, he left his seat and went to the
  • door. He whistled a cheery stave, which did not, however, prevent a
  • broad drop or two (much more like the "first of a thunder-shower" than
  • those which oozed from the wound of the gladiator) from gathering on the
  • lids of his gray eyes, and plashing thence to the threshold. He cleared
  • his vision with his sleeve, and the melting mood over, a very stern one
  • followed.
  • He still stood brooding in silence, when a gentleman in black came up--a
  • clergyman, it might be seen at once, but neither Helstone, nor Malone,
  • nor Donne, nor Sweeting. He might be forty years old; he was
  • plain-looking, dark-complexioned, and already rather gray-haired. He
  • stooped a little in walking. His countenance, as he came on, wore an
  • abstracted and somewhat doleful air; but in approaching Farren he looked
  • up, and then a hearty expression illuminated the preoccupied, serious
  • face.
  • "Is it you, William? How are you?" he asked.
  • "Middling, Mr. Hall. How are _ye_? Will ye step in and rest ye?"
  • Mr. Hall, whose name the reader has seen mentioned before (and who,
  • indeed, was vicar of Nunnely, of which parish Farren was a native, and
  • from whence he had removed but three years ago to reside in Briarfield,
  • for the convenience of being near Hollow's Mill, where he had obtained
  • work), entered the cottage, and having greeted the good-wife and the
  • children, sat down. He proceeded to talk very cheerfully about the
  • length of time that had elapsed since the family quitted his parish, the
  • changes which had occurred since; he answered questions touching his
  • sister Margaret, who was inquired after with much interest; he asked
  • questions in his turn, and at last, glancing hastily and anxiously round
  • through his spectacles (he wore spectacles, for he was short-sighted) at
  • the bare room, and at the meagre and wan faces of the circle about
  • him--for the children had come round his knee, and the father and mother
  • stood before him--he said abruptly,--
  • "And how are you all? How do you get on?"
  • Mr. Hall, be it remarked, though an accomplished scholar, not only spoke
  • with a strong northern accent, but, on occasion, used freely
  • north-country expressions.
  • "We get on poorly," said William; "we're all out of work. I've selled
  • most o' t' household stuff, as ye may see; and what we're to do next,
  • God knows."
  • "Has Mr. Moore turned you off?"
  • "He has turned us off; and I've sich an opinion of him now that I think
  • if he'd tak me on again to-morrow I wouldn't work for him."
  • "It is not like you to say so, William."
  • "I know it isn't; but I'm getting different to mysel'; I feel I am
  • changing. I wadn't heed if t' bairns and t' wife had enough to live on;
  • but they're pinched--they're pined----"
  • "Well, my lad, and so are you; I see you are. These are grievous times;
  • I see suffering wherever I turn. William, sit down. Grace, sit down. Let
  • us talk it over."
  • And in order the better to talk it over, Mr. Hall lifted the least of
  • the children on to his knee, and placed his hand on the head of the
  • next least; but when the small things began to chatter to him he bade
  • them "Whisht!" and fixing his eyes on the grate, he regarded the handful
  • of embers which burned there very gravely.
  • "Sad times," he said, "and they last long. It is the will of God. His
  • will be done. But He tries us to the utmost."
  • Again he reflected.
  • "You've no money, William, and you've nothing you could sell to raise a
  • small sum?"
  • "No. I've selled t' chest o' drawers, and t' clock, and t' bit of a
  • mahogany stand, and t' wife's bonny tea-tray and set o' cheeney 'at she
  • brought for a portion when we were wed."
  • "And if somebody lent you a pound or two, could you make any good use of
  • it? Could you get into a new way of doing something?"
  • Farren did not answer, but his wife said quickly, "Ay, I'm sure he
  • could, sir. He's a very contriving chap is our William. If he'd two or
  • three pounds he could begin selling stuff."
  • "Could you, William?"
  • "Please God," returned William deliberately, "I could buy groceries, and
  • bits o' tapes, and thread, and what I thought would sell, and I could
  • begin hawking at first."
  • "And you know, sir," interposed Grace, "you're sure William would
  • neither drink, nor idle, nor waste, in any way. He's my husband, and I
  • shouldn't praise him; but I _will_ say there's not a soberer, honester
  • man i' England nor he is."
  • "Well, I'll speak to one or two friends, and I think I can promise to
  • let him have £5 in a day or two--as a loan, ye mind, not a gift. He must
  • pay it back."
  • "I understand, sir. I'm quite agreeable to that."
  • "Meantime, there's a few shillings for you, Grace, just to keep the pot
  • boiling till custom comes.--Now, bairns, stand up in a row and say your
  • catechism, while your mother goes and buys some dinner; for you've not
  • had much to-day, I'll be bound.--You begin, Ben. What is your name?"
  • Mr. Hall stayed till Grace came back; then he hastily took his leave,
  • shaking hands with both Farren and his wife. Just at the door he said to
  • them a few brief but very earnest words of religious consolation and
  • exhortation. With a mutual "God bless you, sir!" "God bless you, my
  • friends!" they separated.
  • CHAPTER IX.
  • BRIARMAINS.
  • Messrs. Helstone and Sykes began to be extremely jocose and
  • congratulatory with Mr. Moore when he returned to them after dismissing
  • the deputation. He was so quiet, however, under their compliments upon
  • his firmness, etc., and wore a countenance so like a still, dark day,
  • equally beamless and breezeless, that the rector, after glancing
  • shrewdly into his eyes, buttoned up his felicitations with his coat, and
  • said to Sykes, whose senses were not acute enough to enable him to
  • discover unassisted where his presence and conversation were a nuisance,
  • "Come, sir; your road and mine lie partly together. Had we not better
  • bear each other company? We'll bid Moore good-morning, and leave him to
  • the happy fancies he seems disposed to indulge."
  • "And where is Sugden?" demanded Moore, looking up.
  • "Ah, ha!" cried Helstone. "I've not been quite idle while you were busy.
  • I've been helping you a little; I flatter myself not injudiciously. I
  • thought it better not to lose time; so, while you were parleying with
  • that down-looking gentleman--Farren I think his name is--I opened this
  • back window, shouted to Murgatroyd, who was in the stable, to bring Mr.
  • Sykes's gig round; then I smuggled Sugden and brother Moses--wooden leg
  • and all--through the aperture, and saw them mount the gig (always with
  • our good friend Sykes's permission, of course). Sugden took the
  • reins--he drives like Jehu--and in another quarter of an hour
  • Barraclough will be safe in Stilbro' jail."
  • "Very good; thank you," said Moore; "and good-morning, gentlemen," he
  • added, and so politely conducted them to the door, and saw them clear of
  • his premises.
  • He was a taciturn, serious man the rest of the day. He did not even
  • bandy a repartee with Joe Scott, who, for his part, said to his master
  • only just what was absolutely necessary to the progress of business,
  • but looked at him a good deal out of the corners of his eyes, frequently
  • came to poke the counting-house fire for him, and once, as he was
  • locking up for the day (the mill was then working short time, owing to
  • the slackness of trade), observed that it was a grand evening, and he
  • "could wish Mr. Moore to take a bit of a walk up th' Hollow. It would do
  • him good."
  • At this recommendation Mr. Moore burst into a short laugh, and after
  • demanding of Joe what all this solicitude meant, and whether he took him
  • for a woman or a child, seized the keys from his hand, and shoved him by
  • the shoulders out of his presence. He called him back, however, ere he
  • had reached the yard-gate.
  • "Joe, do you know those Farrens? They are not well off, I suppose?"
  • "They cannot be well off, sir, when they've not had work as a three
  • month. Ye'd see yoursel' 'at William's sorely changed--fair paired.
  • They've selled most o' t' stuff out o' th' house."
  • "He was not a bad workman?"
  • "Ye never had a better, sir, sin' ye began trade."
  • "And decent people--the whole family?"
  • "Niver dacenter. Th' wife's a raight cant body, and as clean--ye mught
  • eat your porridge off th' house floor. They're sorely comed down. I wish
  • William could get a job as gardener or summat i' that way; he
  • understands gardening weel. He once lived wi' a Scotchman that tached
  • him the mysteries o' that craft, as they say."
  • "Now, then, you can go, Joe. You need not stand there staring at me."
  • "Ye've no orders to give, sir?"
  • "None, but for you to take yourself off."
  • Which Joe did accordingly.
  • * * * * *
  • Spring evenings are often cold and raw, and though this had been a fine
  • day, warm even in the morning and meridian sunshine, the air chilled at
  • sunset, the ground crisped, and ere dusk a hoar frost was insidiously
  • stealing over growing grass and unfolding bud. It whitened the pavement
  • in front of Briarmains (Mr. Yorke's residence), and made silent havoc
  • among the tender plants in his garden, and on the mossy level of his
  • lawn. As to that great tree, strong-trunked and broad-armed, which
  • guarded the gable nearest the road, it seemed to defy a spring-night
  • frost to harm its still bare boughs; and so did the leafless grove of
  • walnut-trees rising tall behind the house.
  • In the dusk of the moonless if starry night, lights from windows shone
  • vividly. This was no dark or lonely scene, nor even a silent one.
  • Briarmains stood near the highway. It was rather an old place, and had
  • been built ere that highway was cut, and when a lane winding up through
  • fields was the only path conducting to it. Briarfield lay scarce a mile
  • off; its hum was heard, its glare distinctly seen. Briar Chapel, a
  • large, new, raw Wesleyan place of worship, rose but a hundred yards
  • distant; and as there was even now a prayer-meeting being held within
  • its walls, the illumination of its windows cast a bright reflection on
  • the road, while a hymn of a most extraordinary description, such as a
  • very Quaker might feel himself moved by the Spirit to dance to, roused
  • cheerily all the echoes of the vicinage. The words were distinctly
  • audible by snatches. Here is a quotation or two from different strains;
  • for the singers passed jauntily from hymn to hymn and from tune to tune,
  • with an ease and buoyancy all their own:--
  • "Oh! who can explain
  • This struggle for life,
  • This travail and pain,
  • This trembling and strife?
  • Plague, earthquake, and famine,
  • And tumult and war,
  • The wonderful coming
  • Of Jesus declare!
  • "For every fight
  • Is dreadful and loud:
  • The warrior's delight
  • Is slaughter and blood,
  • His foes overturning,
  • Till all shall expire:
  • And this is with burning,
  • And fuel, and fire!"
  • Here followed an interval of clamorous prayer, accompanied by fearful
  • groans. A shout of "I've found liberty!" "Doad o' Bill's has fun'
  • liberty!" rang from the chapel, and out all the assembly broke again.
  • "What a mercy is this!
  • What a heaven of bliss!
  • How unspeakably happy am I!
  • Gathered into the fold,
  • With Thy people enrolled,
  • With Thy people to live and to die!
  • "Oh, the goodness of God
  • In employing a clod
  • His tribute of glory to raise;
  • His standard to bear,
  • And with triumph declare
  • His unspeakable riches of grace!
  • "Oh, the fathomless love
  • That has deigned to approve
  • And prosper the work of my hands.
  • With my pastoral crook
  • I went over the brook,
  • And behold I am spread into bands!
  • "Who, I ask in amaze,
  • Hath begotten me these?
  • And inquire from what quarter they came.
  • My full heart it replies,
  • They are born from the skies,
  • And gives glory to God and the Lamb!"
  • The stanza which followed this, after another and longer interregnum of
  • shouts, yells, ejaculations, frantic cries, agonized groans, seemed to
  • cap the climax of noise and zeal.
  • "Sleeping on the brink of sin,
  • Tophet gaped to take us in;
  • Mercy to our rescue flew,
  • Broke the snare, and brought us through.
  • "Here, as in a lion's den,
  • Undevoured we still remain,
  • Pass secure the watery flood,
  • Hanging on the arm of God.
  • "Here----"
  • (Terrible, most distracting to the ear, was the strained shout in which
  • the last stanza was given.)
  • "Here we raise our voices higher,
  • Shout in the refiner's fire,
  • Clap our hands amidst the flame,
  • Glory give to Jesus' name!"
  • The roof of the chapel did _not_ fly off, which speaks volumes in praise
  • of its solid slating.
  • But if Briar Chapel seemed alive, so also did Briarmains, though
  • certainly the mansion appeared to enjoy a quieter phase of existence
  • than the temple. Some of its windows too were aglow; the lower casements
  • opened upon the lawn; curtains concealed the interior, and partly
  • obscured the ray of the candles which lit it, but they did not entirely
  • muffle the sound of voice and laughter. We are privileged to enter that
  • front door, and to penetrate to the domestic sanctum.
  • It is not the presence of company which makes Mr. Yorke's habitation
  • lively, for there is none within it save his own family, and they are
  • assembled in that farthest room to the right, the back parlour.
  • This is the usual sitting-room of an evening. Those windows would be
  • seen by daylight to be of brilliantly-stained glass, purple and amber
  • the predominant hues, glittering round a gravely-tinted medallion in the
  • centre of each, representing the suave head of William Shakespeare, and
  • the serene one of John Milton. Some Canadian views hung on the
  • walls--green forest and blue water scenery--and in the midst of them
  • blazes a night-eruption of Vesuvius; very ardently it glows, contrasted
  • with the cool foam and azure of cataracts, and the dusky depths of
  • woods.
  • The fire illuminating this room, reader, is such as, if you be a
  • southern, you do not often see burning on the hearth of a private
  • apartment. It is a clear, hot coal fire, heaped high in the ample
  • chimney. Mr. Yorke _will_ have such fires even in warm summer weather.
  • He sits beside it with a book in his hand, a little round stand at his
  • elbow supporting a candle; but he is not reading--he is watching his
  • children. Opposite to him sits his lady--a personage whom I might
  • describe minutely, but I feel no vocation to the task. I see her,
  • though, very plainly before me--a large woman of the gravest aspect,
  • care on her front and on her shoulders, but not overwhelming, inevitable
  • care, rather the sort of voluntary, exemplary cloud and burden people
  • ever carry who deem it their duty to be gloomy. Ah, well-a-day! Mrs.
  • Yorke had that notion, and grave as Saturn she was, morning, noon, and,
  • night; and hard things she thought if any unhappy wight--especially of
  • the female sex--who dared in her presence to show the light of a gay
  • heart on a sunny countenance. In her estimation, to be mirthful was to
  • be profane, to be cheerful was to be frivolous. She drew no
  • distinctions. Yet she was a very good wife, a very careful mother,
  • looked after her children unceasingly, was sincerely attached to her
  • husband; only the worst of it was, if she could have had her will, she
  • would not have permitted him to have any friend in the world beside
  • herself. All his relations were insupportable to her, and she kept them
  • at arm's length.
  • Mr. Yorke and she agreed perfectly well, yet he was naturally a social,
  • hospitable man, an advocate for family unity; and in his youth, as has
  • been said, he liked none but lively, cheerful women. Why he chose her,
  • how they contrived to suit each other, is a problem puzzling enough, but
  • which might soon be solved if one had time to go into the analysis of
  • the case. Suffice it here to say that Yorke had a shadowy side as well
  • as a sunny side to his character, and that his shadowy side found
  • sympathy and affinity in the whole of his wife's uniformly overcast
  • nature. For the rest, she was a strong-minded woman; never said a weak
  • or a trite thing; took stern, democratic views of society, and rather
  • cynical ones of human nature; considered herself perfect and safe, and
  • the rest of the world all wrong. Her main fault was a brooding, eternal,
  • immitigable suspicion of all men, things, creeds, and parties; this
  • suspicion was a mist before her eyes, a false guide in her path,
  • wherever she looked, wherever she turned.
  • It may be supposed that the children of such a pair were not likely to
  • turn out quite ordinary, commonplace beings; and they were not. You see
  • six of them, reader. The youngest is a baby on the mother's knee. It is
  • all her own yet, and that one she has not yet begun to doubt, suspect,
  • condemn; it derives its sustenance from her, it hangs on her, it clings
  • to her, it loves her above everything else in the world. She is sure of
  • that, because, as it lives by her, it cannot be otherwise, therefore she
  • loves it.
  • The two next are girls, Rose and Jessy; they are both now at their
  • father's knee; they seldom go near their mother, except when obliged to
  • do so. Rose, the elder, is twelve years old; she is like her father--the
  • most like him of the whole group--but it is a granite head copied in
  • ivory; all is softened in colour and line. Yorke himself has a harsh
  • face--his daughter's is not harsh, neither is it quite pretty; it is
  • simple, childlike in feature; the round cheeks bloom: as to the gray
  • eyes, they are otherwise than childlike; a serious soul lights them--a
  • young soul yet, but it will mature, if the body lives; and neither
  • father nor mother have a spirit to compare with it. Partaking of the
  • essence of each, it will one day be better than either--stronger, much
  • purer, more aspiring. Rose is a still, sometimes a stubborn, girl now.
  • Her mother wants to make of her such a woman as she is herself--a woman
  • of dark and dreary duties; and Rose has a mind full-set, thick-sown with
  • the germs of ideas her mother never knew. It is agony to her often to
  • have these ideas trampled on and repressed. She has never rebelled yet;
  • but if hard driven, she will rebel one day, and then it will be once for
  • all. Rose loves her father: her father does not rule her with a rod of
  • iron; he is good to her. He sometimes fears she will not live, so bright
  • are the sparks of intelligence which, at moments, flash from her glance
  • and gleam in her language. This idea makes him often sadly tender to
  • her.
  • He has no idea that little Jessy will die young, she is so gay and
  • chattering, arch, original even now; passionate when provoked, but most
  • affectionate if caressed; by turns gentle and rattling; exacting, yet
  • generous; fearless--of her mother, for instance, whose irrationally hard
  • and strict rule she has often defied--yet reliant on any who will help
  • her. Jessy, with her little piquant face, engaging prattle, and winning
  • ways, is made to be a pet, and her father's pet she accordingly is. It
  • is odd that the doll should resemble her mother feature by feature, as
  • Rose resembles her father, and yet the physiognomy--how different!
  • Mr. Yorke, if a magic mirror were now held before you, and if therein
  • were shown you your two daughters as they will be twenty years from this
  • night, what would you think? The magic mirror is here: you shall learn
  • their destinies--and first that of your little life, Jessy.
  • Do you know this place? No, you never saw it; but you recognize the
  • nature of these trees, this foliage--the cypress, the willow, the yew.
  • Stone crosses like these are not unfamiliar to you, nor are these dim
  • garlands of everlasting flowers. Here is the place--green sod and a gray
  • marble headstone. Jessy sleeps below. She lived through an April day;
  • much loved was she, much loving. She often, in her brief life, shed
  • tears, she had frequent sorrows; she smiled between, gladdening whatever
  • saw her. Her death was tranquil and happy in Rose's guardian arms, for
  • Rose had been her stay and defence through many trials. The dying and
  • the watching English girls were at that hour alone in a foreign
  • country, and the soil of that country gave Jessy a grave.
  • Now, behold Rose two years later. The crosses and garlands looked
  • strange, but the hills and woods of this landscape look still stranger.
  • This, indeed, is far from England; remote must be the shores which wear
  • that wild, luxuriant aspect. This is some virgin solitude. Unknown birds
  • flutter round the skirts of that forest; no European river this, on
  • whose banks Rose sits thinking. The little quiet Yorkshire girl is a
  • lonely emigrant in some region of the southern hemisphere. Will she ever
  • come back?
  • The three eldest of the family are all boys--Matthew, Mark, and Martin.
  • They are seated together in that corner, engaged in some game. Observe
  • their three heads: much alike at a first glance; at a second, different;
  • at a third, contrasted. Dark-haired, dark-eyed, red-cheeked are the
  • whole trio; small English features they all possess; all own a blended
  • resemblance to sire and mother; and yet a distinctive physiognomy, mark
  • of a separate character, belongs to each.
  • I shall not say much about Matthew, the first-born of the house, though
  • it is impossible to avoid gazing at him long, and conjecturing what
  • qualities that visage hides or indicates. He is no plain-looking boy:
  • that jet-black hair, white brow, high-coloured cheek, those quick, dark
  • eyes, are good points in their way. How is it that, look as long as you
  • will, there is but one object in the room, and that the most sinister,
  • to which Matthew's face seems to bear an affinity, and of which, ever
  • and anon, it reminds you strangely--the eruption of Vesuvius? Flame and
  • shadow seem the component parts of that lad's soul--no daylight in it,
  • and no sunshine, and no pure, cool moonbeam ever shone there. He has an
  • English frame, but, apparently, not an English mind--you would say, an
  • Italian stiletto in a sheath of British workmanship. He is crossed in
  • the game--look at his scowl. Mr. Yorke sees it, and what does he say? In
  • a low voice he pleads, "Mark and Martin, don't anger your brother." And
  • this is ever the tone adopted by both parents. Theoretically, they decry
  • partiality--no rights of primogeniture are to be allowed in that house;
  • but Matthew is never to be vexed, never to be opposed; they avert
  • provocation from him as assiduously as they would avert fire from a
  • barrel of gunpowder. "Concede, conciliate," is their motto wherever he
  • is concerned. The republicans are fast making a tyrant of their own
  • flesh and blood. This the younger scions know and feel, and at heart
  • they all rebel against the injustice. They cannot read their parents'
  • motives; they only see the difference of treatment. The dragon's teeth
  • are already sown amongst Mr. Yorke's young olive-branches; discord will
  • one day be the harvest.
  • Mark is a bonny-looking boy, the most regular-featured of the family. He
  • is exceedingly calm; his smile is shrewd; he can say the driest, most
  • cutting things in the quietest of tones. Despite his tranquillity, a
  • somewhat heavy brow speaks temper, and reminds you that the smoothest
  • waters are not always the safest. Besides, he is too still, unmoved,
  • phlegmatic, to be happy. Life will never have much joy in it for Mark.
  • By the time he is five-and-twenty he will wonder why people ever laugh,
  • and think all fools who seem merry. Poetry will not exist for Mark,
  • either in literature or in life; its best effusions will sound to him
  • mere rant and jargon. Enthusiasm will be his aversion and contempt. Mark
  • will have no youth; while he looks juvenile and blooming, he will be
  • already middle-aged in mind. His body is now fourteen years of age, but
  • his soul is already thirty.
  • Martin, the youngest of the three, owns another nature. Life may, or may
  • not, be brief for him, but it will certainly be brilliant. He will pass
  • through all its illusions, half believe in them, wholly enjoy them, then
  • outlive them. That boy is not handsome--not so handsome as either of his
  • brothers. He is plain; there is a husk upon him, a dry shell, and he
  • will wear it till he is near twenty, then he will put it off. About that
  • period he will make himself handsome. He will wear uncouth manners till
  • that age, perhaps homely garments; but the chrysalis will retain the
  • power of transfiguring itself into the butterfly, and such
  • transfiguration will, in due season, take place. For a space he will be
  • vain, probably a downright puppy, eager for pleasure and desirous of
  • admiration, athirst, too, for knowledge. He will want all that the world
  • can give him, both of enjoyment and lore; he will, perhaps, take deep
  • draughts at each fount. That thirst satisfied, what next? I know not.
  • Martin might be a remarkable man. Whether he will or not, the seer is
  • powerless to predict: on that subject there has been no open vision.
  • Take Mr. Yorke's family in the aggregate: there is as much mental power
  • in those six young heads, as much originality, as much activity and
  • vigour of brain, as--divided amongst half a dozen commonplace
  • broods--would give to each rather more than an average amount of sense
  • and capacity. Mr. Yorke knows this, and is proud of his race. Yorkshire
  • has such families here and there amongst her hills and wolds--peculiar,
  • racy, vigorous; of good blood and strong brain; turbulent somewhat in
  • the pride of their strength, and intractable in the force of their
  • native powers; wanting polish, wanting consideration, wanting docility,
  • but sound, spirited, and true-bred as the eagle on the cliff or the
  • steed in the steppe.
  • A low tap is heard at the parlour door; the boys have been making such a
  • noise over their game, and little Jessy, besides, has been singing so
  • sweet a Scotch song to her father--who delights in Scotch and Italian
  • songs, and has taught his musical little daughter some of the best--that
  • the ring at the outer door was not observed.
  • "Come in," says Mrs. Yorke, in that conscientiously constrained and
  • solemnized voice of hers, which ever modulates itself to a funereal
  • dreariness of tone, though the subject it is exercised upon be but to
  • give orders for the making of a pudding in the kitchen, to bid the boys
  • hang up their caps in the hall, or to call the girls to their
  • sewing--"come in!" And in came Robert Moore.
  • Moore's habitual gravity, as well as his abstemiousness (for the case of
  • spirit decanters is never ordered up when he pays an evening visit), has
  • so far recommended him to Mrs. Yorke that she has not yet made him the
  • subject of private animadversions with her husband; she has not yet
  • found out that he is hampered by a secret intrigue which prevents him
  • from marrying, or that he is a wolf in sheep's clothing--discoveries
  • which she made at an early date after marriage concerning most of her
  • husband's bachelor friends, and excluded them from her board
  • accordingly; which part of her conduct, indeed, might be said to have
  • its just and sensible as well as its harsh side.
  • "Well, is it you?" she says to Mr. Moore, as he comes up to her and
  • gives his hand. "What are you roving about at this time of night for?
  • You should be at home."
  • "Can a single man be said to have a home, madam?" he asks.
  • "Pooh!" says Mrs. Yorke, who despises conventional smoothness quite as
  • much as her husband does, and practises it as little, and whose plain
  • speaking on all occasions is carried to a point calculated, sometimes,
  • to awaken admiration, but oftener alarm--"pooh! you need not talk
  • nonsense to me; a single man can have a home if he likes. Pray, does not
  • your sister make a home for you?"
  • "Not she," joined in Mr. Yorke. "Hortense is an honest lass. But when I
  • was Robert's age I had five or six sisters, all as decent and proper as
  • she is; but you see, Hesther, for all that it did not hinder me from
  • looking out for a wife."
  • "And sorely he has repented marrying me," added Mrs. Yorke, who liked
  • occasionally to crack a dry jest against matrimony, even though it
  • should be at her own expense. "He has repented it in sackcloth and
  • ashes, Robert Moore, as you may well believe when you see his
  • punishment" (here she pointed to her children). "Who would burden
  • themselves with such a set of great, rough lads as those, if they could
  • help it? It is not only bringing them into the world, though that is bad
  • enough, but they are all to feed, to clothe, to rear, to settle in life.
  • Young sir, when you feel tempted to marry, think of our four sons and
  • two daughters, and look twice before you leap."
  • "I am not tempted now, at any rate. I think these are not times for
  • marrying or giving in marriage."
  • A lugubrious sentiment of this sort was sure to obtain Mrs. Yorke's
  • approbation. She nodded and groaned acquiescence; but in a minute she
  • said, "I make little account of the wisdom of a Solomon of your age; it
  • will be upset by the first fancy that crosses you. Meantime, sit down,
  • sir. You can talk, I suppose, as well sitting as standing?"
  • This was her way of inviting her guest to take a chair. He had no sooner
  • obeyed her than little Jessy jumped from her father's knee and ran into
  • Mr. Moore's arms, which were very promptly held out to receive her.
  • "You talk of marrying him," said she to her mother, quite indignantly,
  • as she was lifted lightly to his knee, "and he is married now, or as
  • good. He promised that I should be his wife last summer, the first time
  • he saw me in my new white frock and blue sash. Didn't he, father?"
  • (These children were not accustomed to say papa and mamma; their mother
  • would allow no such "namby-pamby.")
  • "Ay, my little lassie, he promised; I'll bear witness. But make him say
  • it over again now, Jessy. Such as he are only false loons."
  • "He is not false. He is too bonny to be false," said Jessy, looking up
  • to her tall sweetheart with the fullest confidence in his faith.
  • "Bonny!" cried Mr. Yorke. "That's the reason that he should be, and
  • proof that he is, a scoundrel."
  • "But he looks too sorrowful to be false," here interposed a quiet voice
  • from behind the father's chair. "If he was always laughing, I should
  • think he forgot promises soon, but Mr. Moore never laughs."
  • "Your sentimental buck is the greatest cheat of all, Rose," remarked Mr.
  • Yorke.
  • "He's not sentimental," said Rose.
  • Mr. Moore turned to her with a little surprise, smiling at the same
  • time.
  • "How do you know I am not sentimental, Rose?"
  • "Because I heard a lady say you were not."
  • "Voilà, qui devient intéressant!" exclaimed Mr. Yorke, hitching his
  • chair nearer the fire. "A lady! That has quite a romantic twang. We must
  • guess who it is.--Rosy, whisper the name low to your father. Don't let
  • _him_ hear."
  • "Rose, don't be too forward to talk," here interrupted Mrs. Yorke, in
  • her usual kill-joy fashion, "nor Jessy either. It becomes all children,
  • especially girls, to be silent in the presence of their elders."
  • "Why have we tongues, then?" asked Jessy pertly; while Rose only looked
  • at her mother with an expression that seemed to say she should take that
  • maxim in and think it over at her leisure. After two minutes' grave
  • deliberation, she asked, "And why especially girls, mother?"
  • "Firstly, because I say so; and secondly, because discretion and reserve
  • are a girl's best wisdom."
  • "My dear madam," observed Moore, "what you say is excellent--it reminds
  • me, indeed, of my dear sister's observations; but really it is not
  • applicable to these little ones. Let Rose and Jessy talk to me freely,
  • or my chief pleasure in coming here is gone. I like their prattle; it
  • does me good."
  • "Does it not?" asked Jessy. "More good than if the rough lads came round
  • you.--You call them rough, mother, yourself."
  • "Yes, mignonne, a thousand times more good. I have rough lads enough
  • about me all day long, poulet."
  • "There are plenty of people," continued she, "who take notice of the
  • boys. All my uncles and aunts seem to think their nephews better than
  • their nieces, and when gentlemen come here to dine, it is always
  • Matthew, and Mark, and Martin that are talked to, and never Rose and me.
  • Mr. Moore is _our_ friend, and we'll keep him.--But mind, Rose, he's not
  • so much your friend as he is mine. He is my _particular acquaintance_;
  • remember that!" And she held up her small hand with an admonitory
  • gesture.
  • Rose was quite accustomed to be admonished by that small hand. Her will
  • daily bent itself to that of the impetuous little Jessy. She was guided,
  • overruled by Jessy in a thousand things. On all occasions of show and
  • pleasure Jessy took the lead, and Rose fell quietly into the background;
  • whereas, when the disagreeables of life--its work and privations--were
  • in question, Rose instinctively took upon her, in addition to her own
  • share, what she could of her sister's. Jessy had already settled it in
  • her mind that she, when she was old enough, was to be married; Rose, she
  • decided, must be an old maid, to live with her, look after her children,
  • keep her house. This state of things is not uncommon between two
  • sisters, where one is plain and the other pretty; but in this case, if
  • there _was_ a difference in external appearance, Rose had the advantage:
  • her face was more regular-featured than that of the piquant little
  • Jessy. Jessy, however, was destined to possess, along with sprightly
  • intelligence and vivacious feeling, the gift of fascination, the power
  • to charm when, where, and whom she would. Rose was to have a fine,
  • generous soul, a noble intellect profoundly cultivated, a heart as true
  • as steel, but the manner to attract was not to be hers.
  • "Now, Rose, tell me the name of this lady who denied that I was
  • sentimental," urged Mr. Moore.
  • Rose had no idea of tantalization, or she would have held him a while in
  • doubt. She answered briefly, "I can't. I don't know her name."
  • "Describe her to me. What was she like? Where did you see her?"
  • "When Jessy and I went to spend the day at Whinbury with Kate and Susan
  • Pearson, who were just come home from school, there was a party at Mrs.
  • Pearson's, and some grown-up ladies were sitting in a corner of the
  • drawing-room talking about you."
  • "Did you know none of them?"
  • "Hannah, and Harriet, and Dora, and Mary Sykes."
  • "Good. Were they abusing me, Rosy?"
  • "Some of them were. They called you a misanthrope. I remember the word.
  • I looked for it in the dictionary when I came home. It means a
  • man-hater."
  • "What besides?"
  • "Hannah Sykes said you were a solemn puppy."
  • "Better!" cried Mr. Yorke, laughing. "Oh, excellent! Hannah! that's the
  • one with the red hair--a fine girl, but half-witted."
  • "She has wit enough for me, it appears," said Moore. "A solemn puppy,
  • indeed! Well, Rose, go on."
  • "Miss Pearson said she believed there was a good deal of affectation
  • about you, and that with your dark hair and pale face you looked to her
  • like some sort of a sentimental noodle."
  • Again Mr. Yorke laughed. Mrs. Yorke even joined in this time. "You see
  • in what esteem you are held behind your back," said she; "yet I believe
  • _that_ Miss Pearson would like to catch you. She set her cap at you when
  • you first came into the country, old as she is."
  • "And who contradicted her, Rosy?" inquired Moore.
  • "A lady whom I don't know, because she never visits here, though I see
  • her every Sunday at church. She sits in the pew near the pulpit. I
  • generally look at her, instead of looking at my prayer-book, for she is
  • like a picture in our dining-room, that woman with the dove in her
  • hand--at least she has eyes like it, and a nose too, a straight nose,
  • that makes all her face look, somehow, what I call clear."
  • "And you don't know her!" exclaimed Jessy, in a tone of exceeding
  • surprise. "That's so like Rose. Mr. Moore, I often wonder in what sort
  • of a world my sister lives. I am sure she does not live all her time in
  • this. One is continually finding out that she is quite ignorant of some
  • little matter which everybody else knows. To think of her going solemnly
  • to church every Sunday, and looking all service-time at one particular
  • person, and never so much as asking that person's name. She means
  • Caroline Helstone, the rector's niece. I remember all about it. Miss
  • Helstone was quite angry with Anne Pearson. She said, 'Robert Moore is
  • neither affected nor sentimental; you mistake his character utterly, or
  • rather not one of you here knows anything about it.' Now, shall I tell
  • you what she is like? I can tell what people are like, and how they are
  • dressed, better than Rose can."
  • "Let us hear."
  • "She is nice; she is fair; she has a pretty white slender throat; she
  • has long curls, not stiff ones--they hang loose and soft, their colour
  • is brown but not dark; she speaks quietly, with a clear tone; she never
  • makes a bustle in moving; she often wears a gray silk dress; she is neat
  • all over--her gowns, and her shoes, and her gloves always fit her. She
  • is what I call a lady, and when I am as tall as she is, I mean to be
  • like her. Shall I suit you if I am? Will you really marry me?"
  • Moore stroked Jessy's hair. For a minute he seemed as if he would draw
  • her nearer to him, but instead he put her a little farther off.
  • "Oh! you won't have me? You push me away."
  • "Why, Jessy, you care nothing about me. You never come to see me now at
  • the Hollow."
  • "Because you don't ask me."
  • Hereupon Mr. Moore gave both the little girls an invitation to pay him a
  • visit next day, promising that, as he was going to Stilbro' in the
  • morning, he would buy them each a present, of what nature he would not
  • then declare, but they must come and see. Jessy was about to reply, when
  • one of the boys unexpectedly broke in,--
  • "I know that Miss Helstone you have all been palavering about. She's an
  • ugly girl. I hate her. I hate all womenites. I wonder what they were
  • made for."
  • "Martin!" said his father, for Martin it was. The lad only answered by
  • turning his cynical young face, half-arch, half-truculent, towards the
  • paternal chair. "Martin, my lad, thou'rt a swaggering whelp now; thou
  • wilt some day be an outrageous puppy. But stick to those sentiments of
  • thine. See, I'll write down the words now i' my pocket-book." (The
  • senior took out a morocco-covered book, and deliberately wrote therein.)
  • "Ten years hence, Martin, if thou and I be both alive at that day, I'll
  • remind thee of that speech."
  • "I'll say the same then. I mean always to hate women. They're such
  • dolls; they do nothing but dress themselves finely, and go swimming
  • about to be admired. I'll never marry. I'll be a bachelor."
  • "Stick to it! stick to it!--Hesther" (addressing his wife), "I was like
  • him when I was his age--a regular misogamist; and, behold! by the time I
  • was three-and-twenty--being then a tourist in France and Italy, and the
  • Lord knows where--I curled my hair every night before I went to bed, and
  • wore a ring i' my ear, and would have worn one i' my nose if it had been
  • the fashion, and all that I might make myself pleasing and charming to
  • the ladies. Martin will do the like."
  • "Will I? Never! I've more sense. What a guy you were, father! As to
  • dressing, I make this vow: I'll never dress more finely than as you see
  • me at present.--Mr. Moore, I'm clad in blue cloth from top to toe, and
  • they laugh at me, and call me sailor at the grammar-school. I laugh
  • louder at them, and say they are all magpies and parrots, with their
  • coats one colour, and their waistcoats another, and their trousers a
  • third. I'll always wear blue cloth, and nothing but blue cloth. It is
  • beneath a human being's dignity to dress himself in parti-coloured
  • garments."
  • "Ten years hence, Martin, no tailor's shop will have choice of colours
  • varied enough for thy exacting taste; no perfumer's stores essences
  • exquisite enough for thy fastidious senses."
  • Martin looked disdain, but vouchsafed no further reply. Meantime Mark,
  • who for some minutes had been rummaging amongst a pile of books on a
  • side-table, took the word. He spoke in a peculiarly slow, quiet voice,
  • and with an expression of still irony in his face not easy to describe.
  • "Mr. Moore," said he, "you think perhaps it was a compliment on Miss
  • Caroline Helstone's part to say you were not sentimental. I thought you
  • appeared confused when my sisters told you the words, as if you felt
  • flattered. You turned red, just like a certain vain little lad at our
  • school, who always thinks proper to blush when he gets a rise in the
  • class. For your benefit, Mr. Moore, I've been looking up the word
  • 'sentimental' in the dictionary, and I find it to mean 'tinctured with
  • sentiment.' On examining further, 'sentiment' is explained to be
  • thought, idea, notion. A sentimental man, then, is one who has thoughts,
  • ideas, notions; an unsentimental man is one destitute of thought, idea,
  • or notion."
  • And Mark stopped. He did not smile, he did not look round for
  • admiration. He had said his say, and was silent.
  • "Ma foi! mon ami," observed Mr. Moore to Yorke, "ce sont vraiment des
  • enfants terribles, que les vôtres!"
  • Rose, who had been listening attentively to Mark's speech, replied to
  • him, "There are different kinds of thoughts, ideas, and notions," said
  • she, "good and bad. Sentimental must refer to the bad, or Miss Helstone
  • must have taken it in that sense, for she was not blaming Mr. Moore; she
  • was defending him."
  • "That's my kind little advocate!" said Moore, taking Rose's hand.
  • "She was defending him," repeated Rose, "as I should have done had I
  • been in her place, for the other ladies seemed to speak spitefully."
  • "Ladies always do speak spitefully," observed Martin. "It is the nature
  • of womenites to be spiteful."
  • Matthew now, for the first time, opened his lips. "What a fool Martin
  • is, to be always gabbling about what he does not understand!"
  • "It is my privilege, as a freeman, to gabble on whatever subject I
  • like," responded Martin.
  • "You use it, or rather abuse it, to such an extent," rejoined the elder
  • brother, "that you prove you ought to have been a slave."
  • "A slave! a slave! That to a Yorke, and from a Yorke! This fellow," he
  • added, standing up at the table, and pointing across it to
  • Matthew--"this fellow forgets, what every cottier in Briarfield knows,
  • that all born of our house have that arched instep under which water can
  • flow--proof that there has not been a slave of the blood for three
  • hundred years."
  • "Mountebank!" said Matthew.
  • "Lads, be silent!" exclaimed Mr. Yorke.--"Martin, you are a
  • mischief-maker. There would have been no disturbance but for you."
  • "Indeed! Is that correct? Did I begin, or did Matthew? Had I spoken to
  • him when he accused me of gabbling like a fool?"
  • "A presumptuous fool!" repeated Matthew.
  • Here Mrs. Yorke commenced rocking herself--rather a portentous movement
  • with her, as it was occasionally followed, especially when Matthew was
  • worsted in a conflict, by a fit of hysterics.
  • "I don't see why I should bear insolence from Matthew Yorke, or what
  • right he has to use bad language to me," observed Martin.
  • "He has no right, my lad; but forgive your brother until
  • seventy-and-seven times," said Mr. Yorke soothingly.
  • "Always alike, and theory and practice always adverse!" murmured Martin
  • as he turned to leave the room.
  • "Where art thou going, my son?" asked the father.
  • "Somewhere where I shall be safe from insult, if in this house I can
  • find any such place."
  • Matthew laughed very insolently. Martin threw a strange look at him, and
  • trembled through all his slight lad's frame; but he restrained himself.
  • "I suppose there is no objection to my withdrawing?" he inquired.
  • "No. Go, my lad; but remember not to bear malice."
  • Martin went, and Matthew sent another insolent laugh after him. Rose,
  • lifting her fair head from Moore's shoulder, against which, for a
  • moment, it had been resting, said, as she directed a steady gaze to
  • Matthew, "Martin is grieved, and you are glad; but I would rather be
  • Martin than you. I dislike your nature."
  • Here Mr. Moore, by way of averting, or at least escaping, a scene--which
  • a sob from Mrs. Yorke warned him was likely to come on--rose, and
  • putting Jessy off his knee, he kissed her and Rose, reminding them, at
  • the same time, to be sure and come to the Hollow in good time to-morrow
  • afternoon; then, having taken leave of his hostess, he said to Mr.
  • Yorke, "May I speak a word with you?" and was followed by him from the
  • room. Their brief conference took place in the hall.
  • "Have you employment for a good workman?" asked Moore.
  • "A nonsense question in these times, when you know that every master has
  • many good workmen to whom he cannot give full employment."
  • "You must oblige me by taking on this man, if possible."
  • "My lad, I can take on no more hands to oblige all England."
  • "It does not signify; I must find him a place somewhere."
  • "Who is he?"
  • "William Farren."
  • "I know William. A right-down honest man is William."
  • "He has been out of work three months. He has a large family. We are
  • sure they cannot live without wages. He was one of the deputation of
  • cloth-dressers who came to me this morning to complain and threaten.
  • William did not threaten. He only asked me to give them rather more
  • time--to make my changes more slowly. You know I cannot do that:
  • straitened on all sides as I am, I have nothing for it but to push on. I
  • thought it would be idle to palaver long with them. I sent them away,
  • after arresting a rascal amongst them, whom I hope to transport--a
  • fellow who preaches at the chapel yonder sometimes."
  • "Not Moses Barraclough?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Ah! you've arrested him? Good! Then out of a scoundrel you're going to
  • make a martyr. You've done a wise thing."
  • "I've done a right thing. Well, the short and the long of it is, I'm
  • determined to get Farren a place, and I reckon on you to give him one."
  • "This is cool, however!" exclaimed Mr. Yorke. "What right have you to
  • reckon on me to provide for your dismissed workmen? What do I know about
  • your Farrens and your Williams? I've heard he's an honest man, but am I
  • to support all the honest men in Yorkshire? You may say that would be no
  • great charge to undertake; but great or little, I'll none of it."
  • "Come, Mr. Yorke, what can you find for him to do?"
  • "_I_ find! You'll make me use language I'm not accustomed to use. I wish
  • you would go home. Here is the door; set off."
  • Moore sat down on one of the hall chairs.
  • "You can't give him work in your mill--good; but you have land. Find him
  • some occupation on your land, Mr. Yorke."
  • "Bob, I thought you cared nothing about our _lourdauds de paysans_. I
  • don't understand this change."
  • "I do. The fellow spoke to me nothing but truth and sense. I answered
  • him just as roughly as I did the rest, who jabbered mere gibberish. I
  • couldn't make distinctions there and then. His appearance told what he
  • had gone through lately clearer than his words; but where is the use of
  • explaining? Let him have work."
  • "Let him have it yourself. If you are so very much in earnest, strain a
  • point."
  • "If there was a point left in my affairs to strain, I would strain it
  • till it cracked again; but I received letters this morning which showed
  • me pretty clearly where I stand, and it is not far off the end of the
  • plank. My foreign market, at any rate, is gorged. If there is no
  • change--if there dawns no prospect of peace--if the Orders in Council
  • are not, at least, suspended, so as to open our way in the West--I do
  • not know where I am to turn. I see no more light than if I were sealed
  • in a rock, so that for me to pretend to offer a man a livelihood would
  • be to do a dishonest thing."
  • "Come, let us take a turn on the front. It is a starlight night," said
  • Mr. Yorke.
  • They passed out, closing the front door after them, and side by side
  • paced the frost-white pavement to and fro.
  • "Settle about Farren at once," urged Mr. Moore. "You have large
  • fruit-gardens at Yorke Mills. He is a good gardener. Give him work
  • there."
  • "Well, so be it. I'll send for him to-morrow, and we'll see. And now, my
  • lad, you're concerned about the condition of your affairs?"
  • "Yes, a second failure--which I may delay, but which, at this moment, I
  • see no way finally to avert--would blight the name of Moore completely;
  • and you are aware I had fine intentions of paying off every debt and
  • re-establishing the old firm on its former basis."
  • "You want capital--that's all you want."
  • "Yes; but you might as well say that breath is all a dead man wants to
  • live."
  • "I know--I know capital is not to be had for the asking; and if you were
  • a married man, and had a family, like me, I should think your case
  • pretty nigh desperate; but the young and unencumbered have chances
  • peculiar to themselves. I hear gossip now and then about your being on
  • the eve of marriage with this miss and that; but I suppose it is none of
  • it true?"
  • "You may well suppose that. I think I am not in a position to be
  • dreaming of marriage. Marriage! I cannot bear the word; it sounds so
  • silly and utopian. I have settled it decidedly that marriage and love
  • are superfluities, intended only for the rich, who live at ease, and
  • have no need to take thought for the morrow; or desperations--the last
  • and reckless joy of the deeply wretched, who never hope to rise out of
  • the slough of their utter poverty."
  • "I should not think so if I were circumstanced as you are. I should
  • think I could very likely get a wife with a few thousands, who would
  • suit both me and my affairs."
  • "I wonder where?"
  • "Would you try if you had a chance?"
  • "I don't know. It depends on--in short, it depends on many things."
  • "Would you take an old woman?"
  • "I'd rather break stones on the road."
  • "So would I. Would you take an ugly one?"
  • "Bah! I hate ugliness and delight in beauty. My eyes and heart, Yorke,
  • take pleasure in a sweet, young, fair face, as they are repelled by a
  • grim, rugged, meagre one. Soft delicate lines and hues please, harsh
  • ones prejudice me. I won't have an ugly wife."
  • "Not if she were rich?"
  • "Not if she were dressed in gems. I could not love--I could not fancy--I
  • could not endure her. My taste must have satisfaction, or disgust would
  • break out in despotism, or worse--freeze to utter iciness."
  • "What! Bob, if you married an honest, good-natured, and wealthy lass,
  • though a little hard-favoured, couldn't you put up with the high
  • cheek-bones, the rather wide mouth, and reddish hair?"
  • "I'll never try, I tell you. Grace at least I _will_ have, and youth and
  • symmetry--yes, and what I call beauty."
  • "And poverty, and a nursery full of bairns you can neither clothe nor
  • feed, and very soon an anxious, faded mother; and then bankruptcy,
  • discredit--a life-long struggle."
  • "Let me alone, Yorke."
  • "If you are romantic, Robert, and especially if you are already in love,
  • it is of no use talking."
  • "I am not romantic. I am stripped of romance as bare as the white
  • tenters in that field are of cloth."
  • "Always use such figures of speech, lad; I can understand them. And
  • there is no love affair to disturb your judgment?"
  • "I thought I had said enough on that subject before. Love for me?
  • Stuff!"
  • "Well, then, if you are sound both in heart and head, there is no
  • reason why you should not profit by a good chance if it offers;
  • therefore, wait and see."
  • "You are quite oracular, Yorke."
  • "I think I am a bit i' that line. I promise ye naught and I advise ye
  • naught; but I bid ye keep your heart up, and be guided by
  • circumstances."
  • "My namesake the physician's almanac could not speak more guardedly."
  • "In the meantime, I care naught about ye, Robert Moore: ye are nothing
  • akin to me or mine, and whether ye lose or find a fortune it maks no
  • difference to me. Go home, now. It has stricken ten. Miss Hortense will
  • be wondering where ye are."
  • CHAPTER X.
  • OLD MAIDS.
  • Time wore on, and spring matured. The surface of England began to look
  • pleasant: her fields grew green, her hills fresh, her gardens blooming;
  • but at heart she was no better. Still her poor were wretched, still
  • their employers were harassed. Commerce, in some of its branches, seemed
  • threatened with paralysis, for the war continued; England's blood was
  • shed and her wealth lavished--all, it seemed, to attain most inadequate
  • ends. Some tidings there were indeed occasionally of successes in the
  • Peninsula, but these came in slowly; long intervals occurred between, in
  • which no note was heard but the insolent self-felicitations of Bonaparte
  • on his continued triumphs. Those who suffered from the results of the
  • war felt this tedious, and, as they thought, hopeless struggle against
  • what their fears or their interests taught them to regard as an
  • invincible power, most insufferable. They demanded peace on any terms.
  • Men like Yorke and Moore--and there were thousands whom the war placed
  • where it placed them, shuddering on the verge of bankruptcy--insisted on
  • peace with the energy of desperation.
  • They held meetings, they made speeches, they got up petitions to extort
  • this boon; on what terms it was made they cared not.
  • All men, taken singly, are more or less selfish; and taken in bodies,
  • they are intensely so. The British merchant is no exception to this
  • rule: the mercantile classes illustrate it strikingly. These classes
  • certainly think too exclusively of making money; they are too oblivious
  • of every national consideration but that of extending England's--that
  • is, their own--commerce. Chivalrous feeling, disinterestedness, pride in
  • honour, is too dead in their hearts. A land ruled by them alone would
  • too often make ignominious submission--not at all from the motives
  • Christ teaches, but rather from those Mammon instils. During the late
  • war, the tradesmen of England would have endured buffets from the
  • French on the right cheek and on the left; their cloak they would have
  • given to Napoleon, and then have politely offered him their coat also,
  • nor would they have withheld their waistcoat if urged; they would have
  • prayed permission only to retain their one other garment, for the sake
  • of the purse in its pocket. Not one spark of spirit, not one symptom of
  • resistance, would they have shown till the hand of the Corsican bandit
  • had grasped that beloved purse; _then_, perhaps, transfigured at once
  • into British bulldogs, they would have sprung at the robber's throat,
  • and there they would have fastened, and there hung, inveterate,
  • insatiable, till the treasure had been restored. Tradesmen, when they
  • speak against war, always profess to hate it because it is a bloody and
  • barbarous proceeding. You would think, to hear them talk, that they are
  • peculiarly civilized--especially gentle and kindly of disposition to
  • their fellow-men. This is not the case. Many of them are extremely
  • narrow and cold-hearted; have no good feeling for any class but their
  • own; are distant, even hostile, to all others; call them useless; seem
  • to question their right to exist; seem to grudge them the very air they
  • breathe, and to think the circumstance of their eating, drinking, and
  • living in decent houses quite unjustifiable. They do not know what
  • others do in the way of helping, pleasing, or teaching their race; they
  • will not trouble themselves to inquire. Whoever is not in trade is
  • accused of eating the bread of idleness, of passing a useless existence.
  • Long may it be ere England really becomes a nation of shop-keepers!
  • We have already said that Moore was no self-sacrificing patriot, and we
  • have also explained what circumstances rendered him specially prone to
  • confine his attention and efforts to the furtherance of his individual
  • interest; accordingly, when he felt himself urged a second time to the
  • brink of ruin, none struggled harder than he against the influences
  • which would have thrust him over. What he _could_ do towards stirring
  • agitation in the north against the war he did, and he instigated others
  • whose money and connections gave them more power than he possessed.
  • Sometimes, by flashes, he felt there was little reason in the demands
  • his party made on Government. When he heard of all Europe threatened by
  • Bonaparte, and of all Europe arming to resist him; when he saw Russia
  • menaced, and beheld Russia rising, incensed and stern, to defend her
  • frozen soil, her wild provinces of serfs, her dark native despotism,
  • from the tread, the yoke, the tyranny of a foreign victor--he knew that
  • England, a free realm, could not _then_ depute her sons to make
  • concessions and propose terms to the unjust, grasping French leader.
  • When news came from time to time of the movements of that MAN then
  • representing England in the Peninsula, of his advance from success to
  • success--that advance so deliberate but so unswerving, so circumspect
  • but so certain, so "unhasting" but so "unresting;" when he read Lord
  • Wellington's own dispatches in the columns of the newspapers, documents
  • written by modesty to the dictation of truth--Moore confessed at heart
  • that a power was with the troops of Britain, of that vigilant, enduring,
  • genuine, unostentatious sort, which must win victory to the side it led,
  • in the end. In the end! But that end, he thought, was yet far off; and
  • meantime he, Moore, as an individual, would be crushed, his hopes ground
  • to dust. It was himself he had to care for, his hopes he had to pursue;
  • and he would fulfil his destiny.
  • He fulfilled it so vigorously that ere long he came to a decisive
  • rupture with his old Tory friend the rector. They quarrelled at a public
  • meeting, and afterwards exchanged some pungent letters in the
  • newspapers. Mr. Helstone denounced Moore as a Jacobin, ceased to see
  • him, would not even speak to him when they met. He intimated also to his
  • niece, very distinctly, that her communications with Hollow's Cottage
  • must for the present cease; she must give up taking French lessons. The
  • language, he observed, was a bad and frivolous one at the best, and most
  • of the works it boasted were bad and frivolous, highly injurious in
  • their tendency to weak female minds. He wondered (he remarked
  • parenthetically) what noodle first made it the fashion to teach women
  • French. Nothing was more improper for them. It was like feeding a
  • rickety child on chalk and water gruel. Caroline must give it up, and
  • give up her cousins too. They were dangerous people.
  • Mr. Helstone quite expected opposition to this order; he expected tears.
  • Seldom did he trouble himself about Caroline's movements, but a vague
  • idea possessed him that she was fond of going to Hollow's Cottage; also
  • he suspected that she liked Robert Moore's occasional presence at the
  • rectory. The Cossack had perceived that whereas if Malone stepped in of
  • an evening to make himself sociable and charming, by pinching the ears
  • of an aged black cat, which usually shared with Miss Helstone's feet the
  • accommodation of her footstool, or by borrowing a fowling-piece, and
  • banging away at a tool shed door in the garden while enough of daylight
  • remained to show that conspicuous mark, keeping the passage and
  • sitting-room doors meantime uncomfortably open for the convenience of
  • running in and out to announce his failures and successes with noisy
  • _brusquerie_--he had observed that under such entertaining circumstances
  • Caroline had a trick of disappearing, tripping noiselessly upstairs, and
  • remaining invisible till called down to supper. On the other hand, when
  • Robert Moore was the guest, though he elicited no vivacities from the
  • cat, did nothing to it, indeed, beyond occasionally coaxing it from the
  • stool to his knee, and there letting it purr, climb to his shoulder, and
  • rub its head against his cheek; though there was no ear-splitting
  • cracking off of firearms, no diffusion of sulphurous gunpowder perfume,
  • no noise, no boasting during his stay--that still Caroline sat in the
  • room, and seemed to find wondrous content in the stitching of Jew-basket
  • pin-cushions and the knitting of missionary-basket socks.
  • She was very quiet, and Robert paid her little attention, scarcely ever
  • addressing his discourse to her; but Mr. Helstone, not being one of
  • those elderly gentlemen who are easily blinded--on the contrary, finding
  • himself on all occasions extremely wide-awake--had watched them when
  • they bade each other good-night. He had just seen their eyes meet
  • once--only once. Some natures would have taken pleasure in the glance
  • then surprised, because there was no harm and some delight in it. It was
  • by no means a glance of mutual intelligence, for mutual love secrets
  • existed not between them. There was nothing then of craft and
  • concealment to offend: only Mr. Moore's eyes, looking into Caroline's,
  • felt they were clear and gentle; and Caroline's eyes, encountering Mr.
  • Moore's, confessed they were manly and searching. Each acknowledged the
  • charm in his or her own way. Moore smiled slightly, and Caroline
  • coloured as slightly. Mr. Helstone could, on the spot, have rated them
  • both. They annoyed him. Why? Impossible to say. If you had asked him
  • what Moore merited at that moment, he would have said a "horsewhip;" if
  • you had inquired into Caroline's deserts, he would have adjudged her a
  • box on the ear; if you had further demanded the reason of such
  • chastisements, he would have stormed against flirtation and
  • love-making, and vowed he would have no such folly going on under his
  • roof.
  • These private considerations, combined with political reasons, fixed his
  • resolution of separating the cousins. He announced his will to Caroline
  • one evening as she was sitting at work near the drawing-room window. Her
  • face was turned towards him, and the light fell full upon it. It had
  • struck him a few minutes before that she was looking paler and quieter
  • than she used to look. It had not escaped him either that Robert Moore's
  • name had never, for some three weeks past, dropped from her lips; nor
  • during the same space of time had that personage made his appearance at
  • the rectory. Some suspicion of clandestine meetings haunted his mind.
  • Having but an indifferent opinion of women, he always suspected them. He
  • thought they needed constant watching. It was in a tone dryly
  • significant he desired her to cease her daily visits to the Hollow. He
  • expected a start, a look of depreciation. The start he saw, but it was a
  • very slight one; no look whatever was directed to him.
  • "Do you hear me?" he asked.
  • "Yes, uncle."
  • "Of course you mean to attend to what I say?"
  • "Yes, certainly."
  • "And there must be no letter-scribbling to your cousin Hortense--no
  • intercourse whatever. I do not approve of the principles of the family.
  • They are Jacobinical."
  • "Very well," said Caroline quietly. She acquiesced then. There was no
  • vexed flushing of the face, no gathering tears; the shadowy
  • thoughtfulness which had covered her features ere Mr. Helstone spoke
  • remained undisturbed; she was obedient.
  • Yes, perfectly; because the mandate coincided with her own previous
  • judgment; because it was now become pain to her to go to Hollow's
  • Cottage; nothing met her there but disappointment. Hope and love had
  • quitted that little tenement, for Robert seemed to have deserted its
  • precincts. Whenever she asked after him--which she very seldom did,
  • since the mere utterance of his name made her face grow hot--the answer
  • was, he was from home, or he was quite taken up with business. Hortense
  • feared he was killing himself by application. He scarcely ever took a
  • meal in the house; he lived in the counting-house.
  • At church only Caroline had the chance of seeing him, and there she
  • rarely looked at him. It was both too much pain and too much pleasure
  • to look--it excited too much emotion; and that it was all wasted emotion
  • she had learned well to comprehend.
  • Once, on a dark, wet Sunday, when there were few people at church, and
  • when especially certain ladies were absent, of whose observant faculties
  • and tomahawk tongues Caroline stood in awe, she had allowed her eye to
  • seek Robert's pew, and to rest awhile on its occupant. He was there
  • alone. Hortense had been kept at home by prudent considerations relative
  • to the rain and a new spring _chapeau_. During the sermon he sat with
  • folded arms and eyes cast down, looking very sad and abstracted. When
  • depressed, the very hue of his face seemed more dusk than when he
  • smiled, and to-day cheek and forehead wore their most tintless and sober
  • olive. By instinct Caroline knew, as she examined that clouded
  • countenance, that his thoughts were running in no familiar or kindly
  • channel; that they were far away, not merely from her, but from all
  • which she could comprehend, or in which she could sympathize. Nothing
  • that they had ever talked of together was now in his mind: he was wrapt
  • from her by interests and responsibilities in which it was deemed such
  • as she could have no part.
  • Caroline meditated in her own way on the subject; speculated on his
  • feelings, on his life, on his fears, on his fate; mused over the mystery
  • of "business," tried to comprehend more about it than had ever been told
  • her--to understand its perplexities, liabilities, duties, exactions;
  • endeavoured to realize the state of mind of a "man of business," to
  • enter into it, feel what he would feel, aspire to what he would aspire.
  • Her earnest wish was to see things as they were, and not to be romantic.
  • By dint of effort she contrived to get a glimpse of the light of truth
  • here and there, and hoped that scant ray might suffice to guide her.
  • "Different, indeed," she concluded, "is Robert's mental condition to
  • mine. I think only of him; he has no room, no leisure, to think of me.
  • The feeling called love is and has been for two years the predominant
  • emotion of my heart--always there, always awake, always astir. Quite
  • other feelings absorb his reflections and govern his faculties. He is
  • rising now, going to leave the church, for service is over. Will he turn
  • his head towards this pew? No, not once. He has not one look for me.
  • That is hard. A kind glance would have made me happy till to-morrow. I
  • have not got it; he would not give it; he is gone. Strange that grief
  • should now almost choke me, because another human being's eye has failed
  • to greet mine."
  • That Sunday evening, Mr. Malone coming, as usual, to pass it with his
  • rector, Caroline withdrew after tea to her chamber. Fanny, knowing her
  • habits, had lit her a cheerful little fire, as the weather was so gusty
  • and chill. Closeted there, silent and solitary, what could she do but
  • think? She noiselessly paced to and fro the carpeted floor, her head
  • drooped, her hands folded. It was irksome to sit; the current of
  • reflection ran rapidly through her mind; to-night she was mutely
  • excited.
  • Mute was the room, mute the house. The double door of the study muffled
  • the voices of the gentlemen. The servants were quiet in the kitchen,
  • engaged with books their young mistress had lent them--books which she
  • had told them were "fit for Sunday reading." And she herself had another
  • of the same sort open on the table, but she could not read it. Its
  • theology was incomprehensible to her, and her own mind was too busy,
  • teeming, wandering, to listen to the language of another mind.
  • Then, too, her imagination was full of pictures--images of Moore, scenes
  • where he and she had been together; winter fireside sketches; a glowing
  • landscape of a hot summer afternoon passed with him in the bosom of
  • Nunnely Wood; divine vignettes of mild spring or mellow autumn moments,
  • when she had sat at his side in Hollow's Copse, listening to the call of
  • the May cuckoo, or sharing the September treasure of nuts and ripe
  • blackberries--a wild dessert which it was her morning's pleasure to
  • collect in a little basket, and cover with green leaves and fresh
  • blossoms, and her afternoon's delight to administer to Moore, berry by
  • berry, and nut by nut, like a bird feeding its fledgling.
  • Robert's features and form were with her; the sound of his voice was
  • quite distinct in her ear; his few caresses seemed renewed. But these
  • joys, being hollow, were, ere long, crushed in. The pictures faded, the
  • voice failed, the visionary clasp melted chill from her hand, and where
  • the warm seal of lips had made impress on her forehead, it felt now as
  • if a sleety rain-drop had fallen. She returned from an enchanted region
  • to the real world: for Nunnely Wood in June she saw her narrow chamber;
  • for the songs of birds in alleys she heard the rain on her casement; for
  • the sigh of the south wind came the sob of the mournful east; and for
  • Moore's manly companionship she had the thin illusion of her own dim
  • shadow on the wall. Turning from the pale phantom which reflected
  • herself in its outline, and her reverie in the drooped attitude of its
  • dim head and colourless tresses, she sat down--inaction would suit the
  • frame of mind into which she was now declining--she said to herself, "I
  • have to live, perhaps, till seventy years. As far as I know, I have good
  • health; half a century of existence may lie before me. How am I to
  • occupy it? What am I to do to fill the interval of time which spreads
  • between me and the grave?"
  • She reflected.
  • "I shall not be married, it appears," she continued. "I suppose, as
  • Robert does not care for me, I shall never have a husband to love, nor
  • little children to take care of. Till lately I had reckoned securely on
  • the duties and affections of wife and mother to occupy my existence. I
  • considered, somehow, as a matter of course, that I was growing up to the
  • ordinary destiny, and never troubled myself to seek any other; but now I
  • perceive plainly I may have been mistaken. Probably I shall be an old
  • maid. I shall live to see Robert married to some one else, some rich
  • lady. I shall never marry. What was I created for, I wonder? Where is my
  • place in the world?"
  • She mused again.
  • "Ah! I see," she pursued presently; "that is the question which most old
  • maids are puzzled to solve. Other people solve it for them by saying,
  • 'Your place is to do good to others, to be helpful whenever help is
  • wanted.' That is right in some measure, and a very convenient doctrine
  • for the people who hold it; but I perceive that certain sets of human
  • beings are very apt to maintain that other sets should give up their
  • lives to them and their service, and then they requite them by praise;
  • they call them devoted and virtuous. Is this enough? Is it to live? Is
  • there not a terrible hollowness, mockery, want, craving, in that
  • existence which is given away to others, for want of something of your
  • own to bestow it on? I suspect there is. Does virtue lie in abnegation
  • of self? I do not believe it. Undue humility makes tyranny; weak
  • concession creates selfishness. The Romish religion especially teaches
  • renunciation of self, submission to others, and nowhere are found so
  • many grasping tyrants as in the ranks of the Romish priesthood. Each
  • human being has his share of rights. I suspect it would conduce to the
  • happiness and welfare of all if each knew his allotment, and held to it
  • as tenaciously as the martyr to his creed. Queer thoughts these that
  • surge in my mind. Are they right thoughts? I am not certain.
  • "Well, life is short at the best. Seventy years, they say, pass like a
  • vapour, like a dream when one awaketh; and every path trod by human feet
  • terminates in one bourne--the grave, the little chink in the surface of
  • this great globe, the furrow where the mighty husbandman with the scythe
  • deposits the seed he has shaken from the ripe stem; and there it falls,
  • decays, and thence it springs again, when the world has rolled round a
  • few times more. So much for the body. The soul meantime wings its long
  • flight upward, folds its wings on the brink of the sea of fire and
  • glass, and gazing down through the burning clearness, finds there
  • mirrored the vision of the Christian's triple Godhead--the sovereign
  • Father, the mediating Son, the Creator Spirit. Such words, at least,
  • have been chosen to express what is inexpressible, to describe what
  • baffles description. The soul's real hereafter who shall guess?"
  • Her fire was decayed to its last cinder; Malone had departed; and now
  • the study bell rang for prayers.
  • The next day Caroline had to spend altogether alone, her uncle being
  • gone to dine with his friend Dr. Boultby, vicar of Whinbury. The whole
  • time she was talking inwardly in the same strain--looking forwards,
  • asking what she was to do with life. Fanny, as she passed in and out of
  • the room occasionally, intent on housemaid errands, perceived that her
  • young mistress sat very still. She was always in the same place, always
  • bent industriously over a piece of work. She did not lift her head to
  • speak to Fanny, as her custom was; and when the latter remarked that the
  • day was fine, and she ought to take a walk, she only said, "It is cold."
  • "You are very diligent at that sewing, Miss Caroline," continued the
  • girl, approaching her little table.
  • "I am tired of it, Fanny."
  • "Then why do you go on with it? Put it down. Read, or do something to
  • amuse you."
  • "It is solitary in this house, Fanny. Don't you think so?"
  • "I don't find it so, miss. Me and Eliza are company for one another; but
  • you are quite too still. You should visit more. Now, be persuaded: go
  • upstairs and dress yourself smart, and go and take tea, in a friendly
  • way, with Miss Mann or Miss Ainley. I am certain either of those ladies
  • would be delighted to see you."
  • "But their houses are dismal: they are both old maids. I am certain old
  • maids are a very unhappy race."
  • "Not they, miss. They can't be unhappy; they take such care of
  • themselves. They are all selfish."
  • "Miss Ainley is not selfish, Fanny. She is always doing good. How
  • devotedly kind she was to her step-mother as long as the old lady lived;
  • and now when she is quite alone in the world, without brother or sister,
  • or any one to care for her, how charitable she is to the poor, as far as
  • her means permit! Still nobody thinks much of her, or has pleasure in
  • going to see her; and how gentlemen always sneer at her!"
  • "They shouldn't, miss. I believe she is a good woman. But gentlemen
  • think only of ladies' looks."
  • "I'll go and see her," exclaimed Caroline, starting up; "and if she asks
  • me to stay to tea, I'll stay. How wrong it is to neglect people because
  • they are not pretty, and young, and merry! And I will certainly call to
  • see Miss Mann too. She may not be amiable, but what has made her
  • unamiable? What has life been to her?"
  • Fanny helped Miss Helstone to put away her work, and afterwards assisted
  • her to dress.
  • "_You_'ll not be an old maid, Miss Caroline," she said, as she tied the
  • sash of her brown silk frock, having previously smoothed her soft, full,
  • and shining curls; "there are no signs of an old maid about you."
  • Caroline looked at the little mirror before her, and she thought there
  • were some signs. She could see that she was altered within the last
  • month; that the hues of her complexion were paler, her eyes changed--a
  • wan shade seemed to circle them; her countenance was dejected--she was
  • not, in short, so pretty or so fresh as she used to be. She distantly
  • hinted this to Fanny, from whom she got no direct answer, only a remark
  • that people did vary in their looks, but that at her age a little
  • falling away signified nothing; she would soon come round again, and be
  • plumper and rosier than ever. Having given this assurance, Fanny showed
  • singular zeal in wrapping her up in warm shawls and handkerchiefs, till
  • Caroline, nearly smothered with the weight, was fain to resist further
  • additions.
  • She paid her visits--first to Miss Mann, for this was the most difficult
  • point. Miss Mann was certainly not quite a lovable person. Till now,
  • Caroline had always unhesitatingly declared she disliked her, and more
  • than once she had joined her cousin Robert in laughing at some of her
  • peculiarities. Moore was not habitually given to sarcasm, especially on
  • anything humbler or weaker than himself; but he had once or twice
  • happened to be in the room when Miss Mann had made a call on his sister,
  • and after listening to her conversation and viewing her features for a
  • time, he had gone out into the garden where his little cousin was
  • tending some of his favourite flowers, and while standing near and
  • watching her he had amused himself with comparing fair youth, delicate
  • and attractive, with shrivelled eld, livid and loveless, and in
  • jestingly repeating to a smiling girl the vinegar discourse of a
  • cankered old maid. Once on such an occasion Caroline had said to him,
  • looking up from the luxuriant creeper she was binding to its frame, "Ah!
  • Robert, you do not like old maids. I, too, should come under the lash of
  • your sarcasm if I were an old maid."
  • "You an old maid!" he had replied. "A piquant notion suggested by lips
  • of that tint and form. I can fancy you, though, at forty, quietly
  • dressed, pale and sunk, but still with that straight nose, white
  • forehead, and those soft eyes. I suppose, too, you will keep your voice,
  • which has another 'timbre' than that hard, deep organ of Miss Mann's.
  • Courage, Cary! Even at fifty you will not be repulsive."
  • "Miss Mann did not make herself, or tune her voice, Robert."
  • "Nature made her in the mood in which she makes her briars and thorns;
  • whereas for the creation of some women she reserves the May morning
  • hours, when with light and dew she wooes the primrose from the turf and
  • the lily from the wood-moss."
  • * * * * *
  • Ushered into Miss Mann's little parlour, Caroline found her, as she
  • always found her, surrounded by perfect neatness, cleanliness, and
  • comfort (after all, is it not a virtue in old maids that solitude rarely
  • makes them negligent or disorderly?)--no dust on her polished furniture,
  • none on her carpet, fresh flowers in the vase on her table, a bright
  • fire in the grate. She herself sat primly and somewhat grimly-tidy in a
  • cushioned rocking-chair, her hands busied with some knitting. This was
  • her favourite work, as it required the least exertion. She scarcely rose
  • as Caroline entered. To avoid excitement was one of Miss Mann's aims in
  • life. She had been composing herself ever since she came down in the
  • morning, and had just attained a certain lethargic state of tranquillity
  • when the visitor's knock at the door startled her, and undid her day's
  • work. She was scarcely pleased, therefore, to see Miss Helstone. She
  • received her with reserve, bade her be seated with austerity, and when
  • she got her placed opposite, she fixed her with her eye.
  • This was no ordinary doom--to be fixed with Miss Mann's eye. Robert
  • Moore had undergone it once, and had never forgotten the circumstance.
  • He considered it quite equal to anything Medusa could do. He professed
  • to doubt whether, since that infliction, his flesh had been quite what
  • it was before--whether there was not something stony in its texture. The
  • gaze had had such an effect on him as to drive him promptly from the
  • apartment and house; it had even sent him straightway up to the rectory,
  • where he had appeared in Caroline's presence with a very queer face, and
  • amazed her by demanding a cousinly salute on the spot, to rectify a
  • damage that had been done him.
  • Certainly Miss Mann had a formidable eye for one of the softer sex. It
  • was prominent, and showed a great deal of the white, and looked as
  • steadily, as unwinkingly, at you as if it were a steel ball soldered in
  • her head; and when, while looking, she began to talk in an indescribably
  • dry, monotonous tone--a tone without vibration or inflection--you felt
  • as if a graven image of some bad spirit were addressing you. But it was
  • all a figment of fancy, a matter of surface. Miss Mann's goblin grimness
  • scarcely went deeper than the angel sweetness of hundreds of beauties.
  • She was a perfectly honest, conscientious woman, who had performed
  • duties in her day from whose severe anguish many a human Peri,
  • gazelle-eyed, silken-tressed, and silver-tongued, would have shrunk
  • appalled. She had passed alone through protracted scenes of suffering,
  • exercised rigid self-denial, made large sacrifices of time, money,
  • health for those who had repaid her only by ingratitude, and now her
  • main--almost her sole--fault was that she was censorious.
  • Censorious she certainly was. Caroline had not sat five minutes ere her
  • hostess, still keeping her under the spell of that dread and Gorgon
  • gaze, began flaying alive certain of the families in the neighbourhood.
  • She went to work at this business in a singularly cool, deliberate
  • manner, like some surgeon practising with his scalpel on a lifeless
  • subject. She made few distinctions; she allowed scarcely any one to be
  • good; she dissected impartially almost all her acquaintance. If her
  • auditress ventured now and then to put in a palliative word she set it
  • aside with a certain disdain. Still, though thus pitiless in moral
  • anatomy, she was no scandal-monger. She never disseminated really
  • malignant or dangerous reports. It was not her heart so much as her
  • temper that was wrong.
  • Caroline made this discovery for the first time to-day, and moved
  • thereby to regret divers unjust judgments she had more than once passed
  • on the crabbed old maid, she began to talk to her softly, not in
  • sympathizing words, but with a sympathizing voice. The loneliness of her
  • condition struck her visitor in a new light, as did also the character
  • of her ugliness--a bloodless pallor of complexion, and deeply worn lines
  • of feature. The girl pitied the solitary and afflicted woman; her looks
  • told what she felt. A sweet countenance is never so sweet as when the
  • moved heart animates it with compassionate tenderness. Miss Mann, seeing
  • such a countenance raised to her, was touched in her turn. She
  • acknowledged her sense of the interest thus unexpectedly shown in her,
  • who usually met with only coldness and ridicule, by replying to her
  • candidly. Communicative on her own affairs she usually was not, because
  • no one cared to listen to her; but to-day she became so, and her
  • confidante shed tears as she heard her speak, for she told of cruel,
  • slow-wasting, obstinate sufferings. Well might she be corpse-like; well
  • might she look grim, and never smile; well might she wish to avoid
  • excitement, to gain and retain composure! Caroline, when she knew all,
  • acknowledged that Miss Mann was rather to be admired for fortitude than
  • blamed for moroseness. Reader! when you behold an aspect for whose
  • constant gloom and frown you cannot account, whose unvarying cloud
  • exasperates you by its apparent causelessness, be sure that there is a
  • canker somewhere, and a canker not the less deeply corroding because
  • concealed.
  • Miss Mann felt that she was understood partly, and wished to be
  • understood further; for, however old, plain, humble, desolate, afflicted
  • we may be, so long as our hearts preserve the feeblest spark of life,
  • they preserve also, shivering near that pale ember, a starved, ghostly
  • longing for appreciation and affection. To this extenuated spectre,
  • perhaps, a crumb is not thrown once a year, but when ahungered and
  • athirst to famine--when all humanity has forgotten the dying tenant of a
  • decaying house--Divine mercy remembers the mourner, and a shower of
  • manna falls for lips that earthly nutriment is to pass no more. Biblical
  • promises, heard first in health, but then unheeded, come whispering to
  • the couch of sickness; it is felt that a pitying God watches what all
  • mankind have forsaken. The tender compassion of Jesus is recalled and
  • relied on; the faded eye, gazing beyond time, sees a home, a friend, a
  • refuge in eternity.
  • Miss Mann, drawn on by the still attention of her listener, proceeded to
  • allude to circumstances in her past life. She spoke like one who tells
  • the truth--simply, and with a certain reserve; she did not boast, nor
  • did she exaggerate. Caroline found that the old maid had been a most
  • devoted daughter and sister, an unwearied watcher by lingering
  • deathbeds; that to prolonged and unrelaxing attendance on the sick the
  • malady that now poisoned her own life owed its origin; that to one
  • wretched relative she had been a support and succour in the depths of
  • self-earned degradation, and that it was still her hand which kept him
  • from utter destitution. Miss Helstone stayed the whole evening, omitting
  • to pay her other intended visit; and when she left Miss Mann it was with
  • the determination to try in future to excuse her faults; never again to
  • make light of her peculiarities or to laugh at her plainness; and, above
  • all things, not to neglect her, but to come once a week, and to offer
  • her, from one human heart at least, the homage of affection and respect.
  • She felt she could now sincerely give her a small tribute of each
  • feeling.
  • Caroline, on her return, told Fanny she was very glad she had gone out,
  • as she felt much better for the visit. The next day she failed not to
  • seek Miss Ainley. This lady was in narrower circumstances than Miss
  • Mann, and her dwelling was more humble. It was, however, if possible,
  • yet more exquisitely clean, though the decayed gentlewoman could not
  • afford to keep a servant, but waited on herself, and had only the
  • occasional assistance of a little girl who lived in a cottage near.
  • Not only was Miss Ainley poorer, but she was even plainer than the other
  • old maid. In her first youth she must have been ugly; now, at the age of
  • fifty, she was _very_ ugly. At first sight, all but peculiarly
  • well-disciplined minds were apt to turn from her with annoyance, to
  • conceive against her a prejudice, simply on the ground of her
  • unattractive look. Then she was prim in dress and manner; she looked,
  • spoke, and moved the complete old maid.
  • Her welcome to Caroline was formal, even in its kindness--for it was
  • kind; but Miss Helstone excused this. She knew something of the
  • benevolence of the heart which beat under that starched kerchief; all
  • the neighbourhood--at least all the female neighbourhood--knew something
  • of it. No one spoke against Miss Ainley except lively young gentlemen
  • and inconsiderate old ones, who declared her hideous.
  • Caroline was soon at home in that tiny parlour. A kind hand took from
  • her her shawl and bonnet, and installed her in the most comfortable seat
  • near the fire. The young and the antiquated woman were presently deep in
  • kindly conversation, and soon Caroline became aware of the power a most
  • serene, unselfish, and benignant mind could exercise over those to whom
  • it was developed. She talked never of herself, always of others. Their
  • faults she passed over. Her theme was their wants, which she sought to
  • supply; their sufferings, which she longed to alleviate. She was
  • religious, a professor of religion--what some would call "a saint;" and
  • she referred to religion often in sanctioned phrase--in phrase which
  • those who possess a perception of the ridiculous, without owning the
  • power of exactly testing and truly judging character, would certainly
  • have esteemed a proper subject for satire, a matter for mimicry and
  • laughter. They would have been hugely mistaken for their pains.
  • Sincerity is never ludicrous; it is always respectable. Whether
  • truth--be it religious or moral truth--speak eloquently and in
  • well-chosen language or not, its voice should be heard with reverence.
  • Let those who cannot nicely, and with certainty, discern the difference
  • between the tones of hypocrisy and those of sincerity, never presume to
  • laugh at all, lest they should have the miserable misfortune to laugh in
  • the wrong place, and commit impiety when they think they are achieving
  • wit.
  • Not from Miss Ainley's own lips did Caroline hear of her good works, but
  • she knew much of them nevertheless. Her beneficence was the familiar
  • topic of the poor in Briarfield. They were not works of almsgiving. The
  • old maid was too poor to give much, though she straitened herself to
  • privation that she might contribute her mite when needful. They were the
  • works of a Sister of Charity--far more difficult to perform than those
  • of a Lady Bountiful. She would watch by any sick-bed; she seemed to fear
  • no disease. She would nurse the poorest whom none else would nurse. She
  • was serene, humble, kind, and equable through everything.
  • For this goodness she got but little reward in this life. Many of the
  • poor became so accustomed to her services that they hardly thanked her
  • for them. The rich heard them mentioned with wonder, but were silent,
  • from a sense of shame at the difference between her sacrifices and their
  • own. Many ladies, however, respected her deeply. They could not help it.
  • One gentleman--one only--gave her his friendship and perfect confidence.
  • This was Mr. Hall, the vicar of Nunnely. He said, and said truly, that
  • her life came nearer the life of Christ than that of any other human
  • being he had ever met with. You must not think, reader, that in
  • sketching Miss Ainley's character I depict a figment of imagination. No.
  • We seek the originals of such portraits in real life only.
  • Miss Helstone studied well the mind and heart now revealed to her. She
  • found no high intellect to admire--the old maid was merely sensible--but
  • she discovered so much goodness, so much usefulness, so much mildness,
  • patience, truth, that she bent her own mind before Miss Ainley's in
  • reverence. What was her love of nature, what was her sense of beauty,
  • what were her more varied and fervent emotions, what was her deeper
  • power of thought, what her wider capacity to comprehend, compared to the
  • practical excellence of this good woman? Momently, they seemed only
  • beautiful forms of selfish delight; mentally, she trod them under foot.
  • It is true she still felt with pain that the life which made Miss Ainley
  • happy could not make her happy. Pure and active as it was, in her heart
  • she deemed it deeply dreary, because it was so loveless--to her ideas,
  • so forlorn. Yet, doubtless, she reflected, it needed only habit to make
  • it practicable and agreeable to any one. It was despicable, she felt, to
  • pine sentimentally, to cherish secret griefs, vain memories, to be
  • inert, to waste youth in aching languor, to grow old doing nothing.
  • "I will bestir myself," was her resolution, "and try to be wise if I
  • cannot be good."
  • She proceeded to make inquiry of Miss Ainley if she could help her in
  • anything. Miss Ainley, glad of an assistant, told her that she could,
  • and indicated some poor families in Briarfield that it was desirable she
  • should visit, giving her likewise, at her further request, some work to
  • do for certain poor women who had many children, and who were unskilled
  • in using the needle for themselves.
  • Caroline went home, laid her plans, and took a resolve not to swerve
  • from them. She allotted a certain portion of her time for her various
  • studies, and a certain portion for doing anything Miss Ainley might
  • direct her to do. The remainder was to be spent in exercise; not a
  • moment was to be left for the indulgence of such fevered thoughts as had
  • poisoned last Sunday evening.
  • To do her justice, she executed her plans conscientiously,
  • perseveringly. It was very hard work at first--it was even hard work to
  • the end--but it helped her to stem and keep down anguish; it forced her
  • to be employed; it forbade her to brood; and gleams of satisfaction
  • chequered her gray life here and there when she found she had done good,
  • imparted pleasure, or allayed suffering.
  • Yet I must speak truth. These efforts brought her neither health of body
  • nor continued peace of mind. With them all she wasted, grew more joyless
  • and more wan; with them all her memory kept harping on the name of
  • Robert Moore; an elegy over the past still rung constantly in her ear; a
  • funereal inward cry haunted and harassed her; the heaviness of a broken
  • spirit, and of pining and palsying faculties, settled slow on her
  • buoyant youth. Winter seemed conquering her spring; the mind's soil and
  • its treasures were freezing gradually to barren stagnation.
  • CHAPTER XI.
  • FIELDHEAD.
  • Yet Caroline refused tamely to succumb. She had native strength in her
  • girl's heart, and she used it. Men and women never struggle so hard as
  • when they struggle alone, without witness, counsellor, or confidant,
  • unencouraged, unadvised, and unpitied.
  • Miss Helstone was in this position. Her sufferings were her only spur,
  • and being very real and sharp, they roused her spirit keenly. Bent on
  • victory over a mortal pain, she did her best to quell it. Never had she
  • been seen so busy, so studious, and, above all, so active. She took
  • walks in all weathers, long walks in solitary directions. Day by day she
  • came back in the evening, pale and wearied-looking, yet seemingly not
  • fatigued; for still, as soon as she had thrown off her bonnet and shawl,
  • she would, instead of resting, begin to pace her apartment. Sometimes
  • she would not sit down till she was literally faint. She said she did
  • this to tire herself well, that she might sleep soundly at night. But if
  • that was her aim it was unattained; for at night, when others slumbered,
  • she was tossing on her pillow, or sitting at the foot of her couch in
  • the darkness, forgetful, apparently, of the necessity of seeking repose.
  • Often, unhappy girl! she was crying--crying in a sort of intolerable
  • despair, which, when it rushed over her, smote down her strength, and
  • reduced her to childlike helplessness.
  • When thus prostrate, temptations besieged her. Weak suggestions
  • whispered in her weary heart to write to Robert, and say that she was
  • unhappy because she was forbidden to see him and Hortense, and that she
  • feared he would withdraw his friendship (not love) from her, and forget
  • her entirely, and begging him to remember her, and sometimes to write to
  • her. One or two such letters she actually indited, but she never sent
  • them: shame and good sense forbade.
  • At last the life she led reached the point when it seemed she could bear
  • it no longer, that she must seek and find a change somehow, or her heart
  • and head would fail under the pressure which strained them. She longed
  • to leave Briarfield, to go to some very distant place. She longed for
  • something else--the deep, secret, anxious yearning to discover and know
  • her mother strengthened daily; but with the desire was coupled a doubt,
  • a dread--if she knew her, could she love her? There was cause for
  • hesitation, for apprehension on this point. Never in her life had she
  • heard that mother praised; whoever mentioned her mentioned her coolly.
  • Her uncle seemed to regard his sister-in-law with a sort of tacit
  • antipathy; an old servant, who had lived with Mrs. James Helstone for a
  • short time after her marriage, whenever she referred to her former
  • mistress, spoke with chilling reserve--sometimes she called her "queer,"
  • sometimes she said she did not understand her. These expressions were
  • ice to the daughter's heart; they suggested the conclusion that it was
  • perhaps better never to know her parent than to know her and not like
  • her.
  • But one project could she frame whose execution seemed likely to bring
  • her a hope of relief: it was to take a situation, to be a governess; she
  • could do nothing else. A little incident brought her to the point, when
  • she found courage to break her design to her uncle.
  • Her long and late walks lay always, as has been said, on lonely roads;
  • but in whatever direction she had rambled--whether along the drear
  • skirts of Stilbro' Moor or over the sunny stretch of Nunnely Common--her
  • homeward path was still so contrived as to lead her near the Hollow. She
  • rarely descended the den, but she visited its brink at twilight almost
  • as regularly as the stars rose over the hillcrests. Her resting-place
  • was at a certain stile under a certain old thorn. Thence she could look
  • down on the cottage, the mill, the dewy garden-ground, the still, deep
  • dam; thence was visible the well-known counting-house window, from whose
  • panes at a fixed hour shot, suddenly bright, the ray of the well-known
  • lamp. Her errand was to watch for this ray, her reward to catch it,
  • sometimes sparkling bright in clear air, sometimes shimmering dim
  • through mist, and anon flashing broken between slant lines of rain--for
  • she came in all weathers.
  • There were nights when it failed to appear. She knew then that Robert
  • was from home, and went away doubly sad; whereas its kindling rendered
  • her elate, as though she saw in it the promise of some indefinite hope.
  • If, while she gazed, a shadow bent between the light and lattice, her
  • heart leaped. That eclipse was Robert; she had seen him. She would
  • return home comforted, carrying in her mind a clearer vision of his
  • aspect, a distincter recollection of his voice, his smile, his bearing;
  • and blent with these impressions was often a sweet persuasion that, if
  • she could get near him, his heart might welcome her presence yet, that
  • at this moment he might be willing to extend his hand and draw her to
  • him, and shelter her at his side as he used to do. That night, though
  • she might weep as usual, she would fancy her tears less scalding; the
  • pillow they watered seemed a little softer; the temples pressed to that
  • pillow ached less.
  • The shortest path from the Hollow to the rectory wound near a certain
  • mansion, the same under whose lone walls Malone passed on that
  • night-journey mentioned in an early chapter of this work--the old and
  • tenantless dwelling yclept Fieldhead. Tenantless by the proprietor it
  • had been for ten years, but it was no ruin. Mr. Yorke had seen it kept
  • in good repair, and an old gardener and his wife had lived in it,
  • cultivated the grounds, and maintained the house in habitable condition.
  • If Fieldhead had few other merits as a building, it might at least be
  • termed picturesque. Its regular architecture, and the gray and mossy
  • colouring communicated by time, gave it a just claim to this epithet.
  • The old latticed windows, the stone porch, the walls, the roof, the
  • chimney-stacks, were rich in crayon touches and sepia lights and shades.
  • The trees behind were fine, bold, and spreading; the cedar on the lawn
  • in front was grand; and the granite urns on the garden wall, the fretted
  • arch of the gateway, were, for an artist, as the very desire of the eye.
  • One mild May evening Caroline, passing near about moonrise, and feeling,
  • though weary, unwilling yet to go home, where there was only the bed of
  • thorns and the night of grief to anticipate, sat down on the mossy
  • ground near the gate, and gazed through towards cedar and mansion. It
  • was a still night--calm, dewy, cloudless; the gables, turned to the
  • west, reflected the clear amber of the horizon they faced; the oaks
  • behind were black; the cedar was blacker. Under its dense, raven boughs
  • a glimpse of sky opened gravely blue. It was full of the moon, which
  • looked solemnly and mildly down on Caroline from beneath that sombre
  • canopy.
  • She felt this night and prospect mournfully lovely. She wished she could
  • be happy; she wished she could know inward peace; she wondered
  • Providence had no pity on her, and would not help or console her.
  • Recollections of happy trysts of lovers, commemorated in old ballads,
  • returned on her mind; she thought such tryst in such scene would be
  • blissful. Where now was Robert? she asked. Not at the Hollow; she had
  • watched for his lamp long, and had not seen it. She questioned within
  • herself whether she and Moore were ever destined to meet and speak
  • again. Suddenly the door within the stone porch of the hall opened, and
  • two men came out--one elderly and white-headed, the other young,
  • dark-haired, and tall. They passed across the lawn, out through a portal
  • in the garden wall. Caroline saw them cross the road, pass the stile,
  • descend the fields; she saw them disappear. Robert Moore had passed
  • before her with his friend Mr. Yorke. Neither had seen her.
  • The apparition had been transient--scarce seen ere gone; but its
  • electric passage left her veins kindled, her soul insurgent. It found
  • her despairing, it left her desperate--two different states.
  • "Oh, had he but been alone! had he but seen me!" was her cry. "He would
  • have said something. He would have given me his hand. He _does_, he
  • _must_, love me a little. He would have shown some token of affection.
  • In his eye, on his lips, I should have read comfort; but the chance is
  • lost. The wind, the cloud's shadow, does not pass more silently, more
  • emptily than he. I have been mocked, and Heaven is cruel!"
  • Thus, in the utter sickness of longing and disappointment, she went
  • home.
  • The next morning at breakfast, where she appeared white-cheeked and
  • miserable-looking as one who had seen a ghost, she inquired of Mr.
  • Helstone, "Have you any objection, uncle, to my inquiring for a
  • situation in a family?"
  • Her uncle, ignorant as the table supporting his coffee-cup of all his
  • niece had undergone and was undergoing, scarcely believed his ears.
  • "What whim now?" he asked. "Are you bewitched? What can you mean?"
  • "I am not well, and need a change," she said.
  • He examined her. He discovered she had _experienced_ a change, at any
  • rate. Without his being aware of it, the rose had dwindled and faded to
  • a mere snowdrop; bloom had vanished, flesh wasted; she sat before him
  • drooping, colourless, and thin. But for the soft expression of her brown
  • eyes, the delicate lines of her features, and the flowing abundance of
  • her hair, she would no longer have possessed a claim to the epithet
  • pretty.
  • "What on earth is the matter with you?" he asked. "What is wrong? How
  • are you ailing?"
  • No answer; only the brown eyes filled, the faintly-tinted lips trembled.
  • "Look out for a situation, indeed! For what situation are you fit? What
  • have you been doing with yourself? You are not well."
  • "I should be well if I went from home."
  • "These women are incomprehensible. They have the strangest knack of
  • startling you with unpleasant surprises. To-day you see them bouncing,
  • buxom, red as cherries, and round as apples; to-morrow they exhibit
  • themselves effete as dead weeds, blanched and broken down. And the
  • reason of it all? That's the puzzle. She has her meals, her liberty, a
  • good house to live in, and good clothes to wear, as usual. A while since
  • that sufficed to keep her handsome and cheery, and there she sits now a
  • poor, little, pale, puling chit enough. Provoking! Then comes the
  • question, What is to be done? I suppose I must send for advice. Will you
  • have a doctor, child?"
  • "No, uncle, I don't want one. A doctor could do me no good. I merely
  • want change of air and scene."
  • "Well, if that be the caprice, it shall be gratified. You shall go to a
  • watering-place. I don't mind the expense. Fanny shall accompany you."
  • "But, uncle, some day I must do something for myself; I have no fortune.
  • I had better begin now."
  • "While I live, you shall not turn out as a governess, Caroline. I will
  • not have it said that my niece is a governess."
  • "But the later in life one makes a change of that sort, uncle, the more
  • difficult and painful it is. I should wish to get accustomed to the yoke
  • before any habits of ease and independence are formed."
  • "I beg you will not harass me, Caroline. I mean to provide for you. I
  • have always meant to provide for you. I will purchase an annuity. Bless
  • me! I am but fifty-five; my health and constitution are excellent.
  • There is plenty of time to save and take measures. Don't make yourself
  • anxious respecting the future. Is that what frets you?"
  • "No, uncle; but I long for a change."
  • He laughed. "There speaks the woman!" cried he, "the very woman! A
  • change! a change! Always fantastical and whimsical! Well, it's in her
  • sex."
  • "But it is not fantasy and whim, uncle."
  • "What is it then?"
  • "Necessity, I think. I feel weaker than formerly. I believe I should
  • have more to do."
  • "Admirable! She feels weak, and _therefore_ she should be set to hard
  • labour--'clair comme le jour,' as Moore--confound Moore! You shall go to
  • Cliff Bridge; and there are two guineas to buy a new frock. Come, Cary,
  • never fear. We'll find balm in Gilead."
  • "Uncle, I wish you were less generous and more----"
  • "More what?"
  • Sympathizing was the word on Caroline's lips, but it was not uttered.
  • She checked herself in time. Her uncle would indeed have laughed if that
  • namby-pamby word had escaped her. Finding her silent, he said, "The fact
  • is, you don't know precisely what you want."
  • "Only to be a governess."
  • "Pooh! mere nonsense! I'll not hear of governessing. Don't mention it
  • again. It is rather too feminine a fancy. I have finished breakfast.
  • Ring the bell. Put all crotchets out of your head, and run away and
  • amuse yourself."
  • "What with? My doll?" asked Caroline to herself as she quitted the room.
  • A week or two passed; her bodily and mental health neither grew worse
  • nor better. She was now precisely in that state when, if her
  • constitution had contained the seeds of consumption, decline, or slow
  • fever, those diseases would have been rapidly developed, and would soon
  • have carried her quietly from the world. People never die of love or
  • grief alone, though some die of inherent maladies which the tortures of
  • those passions prematurely force into destructive action. The sound by
  • nature undergo these tortures, and are racked, shaken, shattered; their
  • beauty and bloom perish, but life remains untouched. They are brought to
  • a certain point of dilapidation; they are reduced to pallor, debility,
  • and emaciation. People think, as they see them gliding languidly about,
  • that they will soon withdraw to sick-beds, perish there, and cease from
  • among the healthy and happy. This does not happen. They live on; and
  • though they cannot regain youth and gaiety, they may regain strength and
  • serenity. The blossom which the March wind nips, but fails to sweep
  • away, may survive to hang a withered apple on the tree late into autumn:
  • having braved the last frosts of spring, it may also brave the first of
  • winter.
  • Every one noticed the change in Miss Helstone's appearance, and most
  • people said she was going to die. She never thought so herself. She felt
  • in no dying case; she had neither pain nor sickness. Her appetite was
  • diminished; she knew the reason. It was because she wept so much at
  • night. Her strength was lessened; she could account for it. Sleep was
  • coy and hard to be won; dreams were distressing and baleful. In the far
  • future she still seemed to anticipate a time when this passage of misery
  • should be got over, and when she should once more be calm, though
  • perhaps never again happy.
  • Meanwhile her uncle urged her to visit, to comply with the frequent
  • invitations of their acquaintance. This she evaded doing. She could not
  • be cheerful in company; she felt she was observed there with more
  • curiosity than sympathy. Old ladies were always offering her their
  • advice, recommending this or that nostrum; young ladies looked at her in
  • a way she understood, and from which she shrank. Their eyes said they
  • knew she had been "disappointed," as custom phrases it; by whom, they
  • were not certain.
  • Commonplace young ladies can be quite as hard as commonplace young
  • gentlemen--quite as worldly and selfish. Those who suffer should always
  • avoid them. Grief and calamity they despise; they seem to regard them as
  • the judgments of God on the lowly. With them, to "love" is merely to
  • contrive a scheme for achieving a good match; to be "disappointed" is to
  • have their scheme seen through and frustrated. They think the feelings
  • and projects of others on the subject of love similar to their own, and
  • judge them accordingly.
  • All this Caroline knew, partly by instinct, partly by observation. She
  • regulated her conduct by her knowledge, keeping her pale face and wasted
  • figure as much out of sight as she could. Living thus in complete
  • seclusion, she ceased to receive intelligence of the little transactions
  • of the neighbourhood.
  • One morning her uncle came into the parlour, where she sat endeavouring
  • to find some pleasure in painting a little group of wild flowers,
  • gathered under a hedge at the top of the Hollow fields, and said to her
  • in his abrupt manner, "Come, child, you are always stooping over
  • palette, or book, or sampler; leave that tinting work. By-the-bye, do
  • you put your pencil to your lips when you paint?"
  • "Sometimes, uncle, when I forget."
  • "Then it is that which is poisoning you. The paints are deleterious,
  • child. There is white lead and red lead, and verdigris, and gamboge, and
  • twenty other poisons in those colour cakes. Lock them up! lock them up!
  • Get your bonnet on. I want you to make a call with me."
  • "With _you_, uncle?"
  • This question was asked in a tone of surprise. She was not accustomed to
  • make calls with her uncle. She never rode or walked out with him on any
  • occasion.
  • "Quick! quick! I am always busy, you know. I have no time to lose."
  • She hurriedly gathered up her materials, asking, meantime, where they
  • were going.
  • "To Fieldhead."
  • "Fieldhead! What! to see old James Booth, the gardener? Is he ill?"
  • "We are going to see Miss Shirley Keeldar."
  • "Miss Keeldar! Is she coming to Yorkshire? Is she at Fieldhead?"
  • "She is. She has been there a week. I met her at a party last
  • night--that party to which you would not go. I was pleased with her. I
  • choose that you shall make her acquaintance. It will do you good."
  • "She is now come of age, I suppose?"
  • "She is come of age, and will reside for a time on her property. I
  • lectured her on the subject; I showed her her duty. She is not
  • intractable. She is rather a fine girl; she will teach you what it is to
  • have a sprightly spirit. Nothing lackadaisical about _her_."
  • "I don't think she will want to see me, or to have me introduced to her.
  • What good can I do her? How can I amuse her?"
  • "Pshaw! Put your bonnet on."
  • "Is she proud, uncle?"
  • "Don't know. You hardly imagine she would show her pride to me, I
  • suppose? A chit like that would scarcely presume to give herself airs
  • with the rector of her parish, however rich she might be."
  • "No. But how did she behave to other people?"
  • "Didn't observe. She holds her head high, and probably can be saucy
  • enough where she dare. She wouldn't be a woman otherwise. There! Away
  • now for your bonnet at once!"
  • Not naturally very confident, a failure of physical strength and a
  • depression of spirits had not tended to increase Caroline's presence of
  • mind and ease of manner, or to give her additional courage to face
  • strangers, and she quailed, in spite of self-remonstrance, as she and
  • her uncle walked up the broad, paved approach leading from the gateway
  • of Fieldhead to its porch. She followed Mr. Helstone reluctantly through
  • that porch into the sombre old vestibule beyond.
  • Very sombre it was--long, vast, and dark; one latticed window lit it but
  • dimly. The wide old chimney contained now no fire, for the present warm
  • weather needed it not; it was filled instead with willow-boughs. The
  • gallery on high, opposite the entrance, was seen but in outline, so
  • shadowy became this hall towards its ceiling. Carved stags' heads, with
  • real antlers, looked down grotesquely from the walls. This was neither a
  • grand nor a comfortable house; within as without it was antique,
  • rambling, and incommodious. A property of a thousand a year belonged to
  • it, which property had descended, for lack of male heirs, on a female.
  • There were mercantile families in the district boasting twice the
  • income, but the Keeldars, by virtue of their antiquity, and their
  • distinction of lords of the manor, took the precedence of all.
  • Mr. and Miss Helstone were ushered into a parlour. Of course, as was to
  • be expected in such a Gothic old barrack, this parlour was lined with
  • oak: fine, dark, glossy panels compassed the walls gloomily and grandly.
  • Very handsome, reader, these shining brown panels are, very mellow in
  • colouring and tasteful in effect, but--if you know what a "spring clean"
  • is--very execrable and inhuman. Whoever, having the bowels of humanity,
  • has seen servants scrubbing at these polished wooden walls with
  • beeswaxed cloths on a warm May day must allow that they are "intolerable
  • and not to be endured;" and I cannot but secretly applaud the benevolent
  • barbarian who had painted another and larger apartment of Fieldhead--the
  • drawing-room, to wit, formerly also an oak-room--of a delicate pinky
  • white, thereby earning for himself the character of a Hun, but mightily
  • enhancing the cheerfulness of that portion of his abode, and saving
  • future housemaids a world of toil.
  • The brown-panelled parlour was furnished all in old style, and with real
  • old furniture. On each side of the high mantelpiece stood two antique
  • chairs of oak, solid as silvan thrones, and in one of these sat a lady.
  • But if this were Miss Keeldar, she must have come of age at least some
  • twenty years ago. She was of matronly form, and though she wore no cap,
  • and possessed hair of quite an undimmed auburn, shading small and
  • naturally young-looking features, she had no youthful aspect, nor
  • apparently the wish to assume it. You could have wished her attire of a
  • newer fashion. In a well-cut, well-made gown hers would have been no
  • uncomely presence. It puzzled you to guess why a garment of handsome
  • materials should be arranged in such scanty folds, and devised after
  • such an obsolete mode. You felt disposed to set down the wearer as
  • somewhat eccentric at once.
  • This lady received the visitors with a mixture of ceremony and
  • diffidence quite English. No middle-aged matron who was not an
  • Englishwoman _could_ evince precisely the same manner--a manner so
  • uncertain of herself, of her own merits, of her power to please, and yet
  • so anxious to be proper, and, if possible, rather agreeable than
  • otherwise. In the present instance, however, more embarrassment was
  • shown than is usual even with diffident Englishwomen. Miss Helstone felt
  • this, sympathized with the stranger, and knowing by experience what was
  • good for the timid, took a seat quietly near her, and began to talk to
  • her with a gentle ease, communicated for the moment by the presence of
  • one less self-possessed than herself.
  • She and this lady would, if alone, have at once got on extremely well
  • together. The lady had the clearest voice imaginable--infinitely softer
  • and more tuneful than could have been reasonably expected from forty
  • years--and a form decidedly inclined to _embonpoint_. This voice
  • Caroline liked; it atoned for the formal, if correct, accent and
  • language. The lady would soon have discovered she liked it and her, and
  • in ten minutes they would have been friends. But Mr. Helstone stood on
  • the rug looking at them both, looking especially at the strange lady
  • with his sarcastic, keen eye, that clearly expressed impatience of her
  • chilly ceremony, and annoyance at her want of _aplomb_. His hard gaze
  • and rasping voice discomfited the lady more and more. She tried,
  • however, to get up little speeches about the weather, the aspect of the
  • country, etc.; but the impracticable Mr. Helstone presently found
  • himself somewhat deaf. Whatever she said he affected not to hear
  • distinctly, and she was obliged to go over each elaborately-constructed
  • nothing twice. The effort soon became too much for her. She was just
  • rising in a perplexed flutter, nervously murmuring that she knew not
  • what detained Miss Keeldar, that she would go and look for her, when
  • Miss Keeldar saved her the trouble by appearing. It was to be presumed
  • at least that she who now came in through a glass door from the garden
  • owned that name.
  • There is real grace in ease of manner, and so old Helstone felt when an
  • erect, slight girl walked up to him, retaining with her left hand her
  • little silk apron full of flowers, and, giving him her right hand, said
  • pleasantly, "I knew you would come to see me, though you _do_ think Mr.
  • Yorke has made me a Jacobin. Good-morning."
  • "But we'll not have you a Jacobin," returned he. "No, Miss Shirley; they
  • shall not steal the flower of my parish from me. Now that you are
  • amongst us, you shall be my pupil in politics and religion; I'll teach
  • you sound doctrine on both points."
  • "Mrs. Pryor has anticipated you," she replied, turning to the elder
  • lady. "Mrs. Pryor, you know, was my governess, and is still my friend;
  • and of all the high and rigid Tories she is queen; of all the stanch
  • churchwomen she is chief. I have been well drilled both in theology and
  • history, I assure you, Mr. Helstone."
  • The rector immediately bowed very low to Mrs. Pryor, and expressed
  • himself obliged to her.
  • The ex-governess disclaimed skill either in political or religious
  • controversy, explained that she thought such matters little adapted for
  • female minds, but avowed herself in general terms the advocate of order
  • and loyalty, and, of course, truly attached to the Establishment. She
  • added she was ever averse to change under any circumstances, and
  • something scarcely audible about the extreme danger of being too ready
  • to take up new ideas closed her sentence.
  • "Miss Keeldar thinks as you think, I hope, madam."
  • "Difference of age and difference of temperament occasion difference of
  • sentiment," was the reply. "It can scarcely be expected that the eager
  • and young should hold the opinions of the cool and middle-aged."
  • "Oh! oh! we are independent; we think for ourselves!" cried Mr.
  • Helstone. "We are a little Jacobin, for anything I know--a little
  • freethinker, in good earnest. Let us have a confession of faith on the
  • spot."
  • And he took the heiress's two hands--causing her to let fall her whole
  • cargo of flowers--and seated her by him on the sofa.
  • "Say your creed," he ordered.
  • "The Apostles' Creed?"
  • "Yes."
  • She said it like a child.
  • "Now for St. Athanasius's. That's the test!"
  • "Let me gather up my flowers. Here is Tartar coming; he will tread upon
  • them."
  • Tartar was a rather large, strong, and fierce-looking dog, very ugly,
  • being of a breed between mastiff and bulldog, who at this moment entered
  • through the glass door, and posting directly to the rug, snuffed the
  • fresh flowers scattered there. He seemed to scorn them as food; but
  • probably thinking their velvety petals might be convenient as litter, he
  • was turning round preparatory to depositing his tawny bulk upon them,
  • when Miss Helstone and Miss Keeldar simultaneously stooped to the
  • rescue.
  • "Thank you," said the heiress, as she again held out her little apron
  • for Caroline to heap the blossoms into it. "Is this your daughter, Mr.
  • Helstone?" she asked.
  • "My niece Caroline."
  • Miss Keeldar shook hands with her, and then looked at her. Caroline also
  • looked at her hostess.
  • Shirley Keeldar (she had no Christian name but Shirley: her parents, who
  • had wished to have a son, finding that, after eight years of marriage,
  • Providence had granted them only a daughter, bestowed on her the same
  • masculine family cognomen they would have bestowed on a boy, if with a
  • boy they had been blessed)--Shirley Keeldar was no ugly heiress. She was
  • agreeable to the eye. Her height and shape were not unlike Miss
  • Helstone's; perhaps in stature she might have the advantage by an inch
  • or two. She was gracefully made, and her face, too, possessed a charm as
  • well described by the word grace as any other. It was pale naturally,
  • but intelligent, and of varied expression. She was not a blonde, like
  • Caroline. Clear and dark were the characteristics of her aspect as to
  • colour. Her face and brow were clear, her eyes of the darkest gray (no
  • green lights in them--transparent, pure, neutral gray), and her hair of
  • the darkest brown. Her features were distinguished--by which I do not
  • mean that they were high, bony, and Roman, being indeed rather small and
  • slightly marked than otherwise, but only that they were, to use a few
  • French words, "fins, gracieux, spirituels"--mobile they were and
  • speaking; but their changes were not to be understood nor their language
  • interpreted all at once. She examined Caroline seriously, inclining her
  • head a little to one side, with a thoughtful air.
  • "You see she is only a feeble chick," observed Mr. Helstone.
  • "She looks young--younger than I.--How old are you?" she inquired in a
  • manner that would have been patronizing if it had not been extremely
  • solemn and simple.
  • "Eighteen years and six months."
  • "And I am twenty-one."
  • She said no more. She had now placed her flowers on the table, and was
  • busied in arranging them.
  • "And St. Athanasius's Creed?" urged the rector. "You believe it all,
  • don't you?"
  • "I can't remember it quite all. I will give you a nosegay, Mr. Helstone,
  • when I have given your niece one."
  • She had selected a little bouquet of one brilliant and two or three
  • delicate flowers, relieved by a spray of dark verdure. She tied it with
  • silk from her work-box, and placed it on Caroline's lap; and then she
  • put her hands behind her, and stood bending slightly towards her guest,
  • still regarding her, in the attitude and with something of the aspect of
  • a grave but gallant little cavalier. This temporary expression of face
  • was aided by the style in which she wore her hair, parted on one temple,
  • and brushed in a glossy sweep above the forehead, whence it fell in
  • curls that looked natural, so free were their wavy undulations.
  • "Are you tired with your walk?" she inquired.
  • "No--not in the least. It is but a short distance--but a mile."
  • "You look pale.--Is she always so pale?" she asked, turning to the
  • rector.
  • "She used to be as rosy as the reddest of your flowers."
  • "Why is she altered? What has made her pale? Has she been ill?"
  • "She tells me she wants a change."
  • "She ought to have one. You ought to give her one. You should send her
  • to the sea-coast."
  • "I will, ere summer is over. Meantime, I intend her to make acquaintance
  • with you, if you have no objection."
  • "I am sure Miss Keeldar will have no objection," here observed Mrs.
  • Pryor. "I think I may take it upon me to say that Miss Helstone's
  • frequent presence at Fieldhead will be esteemed a favour."
  • "You speak my sentiments precisely, ma'am," said Shirley, "and I thank
  • you for anticipating me.--Let me tell you," she continued, turning again
  • to Caroline, "that you also ought to thank my governess. It is not every
  • one she would welcome as she has welcomed you. You are distinguished
  • more than you think. This morning, as soon as you are gone, I shall ask
  • Mrs. Pryor's opinion of you. I am apt to rely on her judgment of
  • character, for hitherto I have found it wondrous accurate. Already I
  • foresee a favourable answer to my inquiries.--Do I not guess rightly,
  • Mrs. Pryor?"
  • "My dear, you said but now you would ask my opinion when Miss Helstone
  • was gone. I am scarcely likely to give it in her presence."
  • "No; and perhaps it will be long enough before I obtain it.--I am
  • sometimes sadly tantalized, Mr. Helstone, by Mrs. Pryor's extreme
  • caution. Her judgments ought to be correct when they come, for they are
  • often as tardy of delivery as a Lord Chancellor's. On some people's
  • characters I cannot get her to pronounce a sentence, entreat as I may."
  • Mrs. Pryor here smiled.
  • "Yes," said her pupil, "I know what that smile means. You are thinking
  • of my gentleman-tenant.--Do you know Mr. Moore of the Hollow?" she asked
  • Mr. Helstone.
  • "Ay! ay! Your tenant--so he is. You have seen a good deal of him, no
  • doubt, since you came?"
  • "I have been obliged to see him. There was business to transact.
  • Business! Really the word makes me conscious I am indeed no longer a
  • girl, but quite a woman and something more. I am an esquire! Shirley
  • Keeldar, Esquire, ought to be my style and title. They gave me a man's
  • name; I hold a man's position. It is enough to inspire me with a touch
  • of manhood; and when I see such people as that stately
  • Anglo-Belgian--that Gérard Moore--before me, gravely talking to me of
  • business, really I feel quite gentlemanlike. You must choose me for your
  • churchwarden, Mr. Helstone, the next time you elect new ones. They ought
  • to make me a magistrate and a captain of yeomanry. Tony Lumpkin's mother
  • was a colonel, and his aunt a justice of the peace. Why shouldn't I be?"
  • "With all my heart. If you choose to get up a requisition on the
  • subject, I promise to head the list of signatures with my name. But you
  • were speaking of Moore?"
  • "Ah! yes. I find it a little difficult to understand Mr. Moore, to know
  • what to think of him, whether to like him or not. He seems a tenant of
  • whom any proprietor might be proud--and proud of him I am, in that
  • sense; but as a neighbour, what is he? Again and again I have entreated
  • Mrs. Pryor to say what she thinks of him, but she still evades returning
  • a direct answer. I hope you will be less oracular, Mr. Helstone, and
  • pronounce at once. Do you like him?"
  • "Not at all, just now. His name is entirely blotted from my good books."
  • "What is the matter? What has he done?"
  • "My uncle and he disagree on politics," interposed the low voice of
  • Caroline. She had better not have spoken just then. Having scarcely
  • joined in the conversation before, it was not apropos to do it now. She
  • felt this with nervous acuteness as soon as she had spoken, and coloured
  • to the eyes.
  • "What are Moore's politics?" inquired Shirley.
  • "Those of a tradesman," returned the rector--"narrow, selfish, and
  • unpatriotic. The man is eternally writing and speaking against the
  • continuance of the war. I have no patience with him."
  • "The war hurts his trade. I remember he remarked that only yesterday.
  • But what other objection have you to him?"
  • "That is enough."
  • "He looks the gentleman, in my sense of the term," pursued Shirley, "and
  • it pleases me to think he is such."
  • Caroline rent the Tyrian petals of the one brilliant flower in her
  • bouquet, and answered in distinct tones, "Decidedly he is." Shirley,
  • hearing this courageous affirmation, flashed an arch, searching glance
  • at the speaker from her deep, expressive eyes.
  • "_You_ are his friend, at any rate," she said. "You defend him in his
  • absence."
  • "I am both his friend and his relative," was the prompt reply. "Robert
  • Moore is my cousin."
  • "Oh, then, you can tell me all about him. Just give me a sketch of his
  • character."
  • Insuperable embarrassment seized Caroline when this demand was made. She
  • could not, and did not, attempt to comply with it. Her silence was
  • immediately covered by Mrs. Pryor, who proceeded to address sundry
  • questions to Mr. Helstone regarding a family or two in the
  • neighbourhood, with whose connections in the south she said she was
  • acquainted. Shirley soon withdrew her gaze from Miss Helstone's face.
  • She did not renew her interrogations, but returning to her flowers,
  • proceeded to choose a nosegay for the rector. She presented it to him as
  • he took leave, and received the homage of a salute on the hand in
  • return.
  • "Be sure you wear it for my sake," said she.
  • "Next my heart, of course," responded Helstone.--"Mrs. Pryor, take care
  • of this future magistrate, this churchwarden in perspective, this
  • captain of yeomanry, this young squire of Briarfield, in a word. Don't
  • let him exert himself too much; don't let him break his neck in hunting;
  • especially, let him mind how he rides down that dangerous hill near the
  • Hollow."
  • "I like a descent," said Shirley; "I like to clear it rapidly; and
  • especially I like that romantic Hollow with all my heart."
  • "Romantic, with a mill in it?"
  • "Romantic with a mill in it. The old mill and the white cottage are each
  • admirable in its way."
  • "And the counting-house, Mr. Keeldar?"
  • "The counting-house is better than my bloom-coloured drawing-room. I
  • adore the counting-house."
  • "And the trade? The cloth, the greasy wool, the polluting dyeing-vats?"
  • "The trade is to be thoroughly respected."
  • "And the tradesman is a hero? Good!"
  • "I am glad to hear you say so. I thought the tradesman looked heroic."
  • Mischief, spirit, and glee sparkled all over her face as she thus
  • bandied words with the old Cossack, who almost equally enjoyed the tilt.
  • "Captain Keeldar, you have no mercantile blood in your veins. Why are
  • you so fond of trade?"
  • "Because I am a mill-owner, of course. Half my income comes from the
  • works in that Hollow."
  • "Don't enter into partnership--that's all."
  • "You've put it into my head! you've put it into my head!" she exclaimed,
  • with a joyous laugh. "It will never get out. Thank you." And waving her
  • hand, white as a lily and fine as a fairy's, she vanished within the
  • porch, while the rector and his niece passed out through the arched
  • gateway.
  • CHAPTER XII.
  • SHIRLEY AND CAROLINE.
  • Shirley showed she had been sincere in saying she should be glad of
  • Caroline's society, by frequently seeking it; and, indeed, if she had
  • not sought it, she would not have had it, for Miss Helstone was slow to
  • make fresh acquaintance. She was always held back by the idea that
  • people could not want her, that she could not amuse them; and a
  • brilliant, happy, youthful creature like the heiress of Fieldhead seemed
  • to her too completely independent of society so uninteresting as hers
  • ever to find it really welcome.
  • Shirley might be brilliant, and probably happy likewise, but no one is
  • independent of genial society; and though in about a month she had made
  • the acquaintance of most of the families round, and was on quite free
  • and easy terms with all the Misses Sykes, and all the Misses Pearson,
  • and the two superlative Misses Wynne of Walden Hall, yet, it appeared,
  • she found none amongst them very genial: she fraternized with none of
  • them, to use her own words. If she had had the bliss to be really
  • Shirley Keeldar, Esq., lord of the manor of Briarfield, there was not a
  • single fair one in this and the two neighbouring parishes whom she
  • should have felt disposed to request to become Mrs. Keeldar, lady of the
  • manor. This declaration she made to Mrs. Pryor, who received it very
  • quietly, as she did most of her pupil's off-hand speeches, responding,
  • "My dear, do not allow that habit of alluding to yourself as a gentleman
  • to be confirmed. It is a strange one. Those who do not know you, hearing
  • you speak thus, would think you affected masculine manners."
  • Shirley never laughed at her former governess; even the little
  • formalities and harmless peculiarities of that lady were respectable in
  • her eyes. Had it been otherwise, she would have proved herself a weak
  • character at once; for it is only the weak who make a butt of quiet
  • worth. Therefore she took her remonstrance in silence. She stood
  • quietly near the window, looking at the grand cedar on her lawn
  • watching a bird on one of its lower boughs. Presently she began to
  • chirrup to the bird; soon her chirrup grew clearer; ere long she was
  • whistling; the whistle struck into a tune, and very sweetly and deftly
  • it was executed.
  • "My dear!" expostulated Mrs. Pryor.
  • "Was I whistling?" said Shirley. "I forgot. I beg your pardon, ma'am. I
  • had resolved to take care not to whistle before you."
  • "But, Miss Keeldar, where did you learn to whistle? You must have got
  • the habit since you came down into Yorkshire. I never knew you guilty of
  • it before."
  • "Oh! I learned to whistle a long while ago."
  • "Who taught you?"
  • "No one. I took it up by listening, and I had laid it down again. But
  • lately, yesterday evening, as I was coming up our lane, I heard a
  • gentleman whistling that very tune in the field on the other side of the
  • hedge, and that reminded me."
  • "What gentleman was it?"
  • "We have only one gentleman in this region, ma'am, and that is Mr.
  • Moore--at least he is the only gentleman who is not gray-haired. My two
  • venerable favourites, Mr. Helstone and Mr. Yorke, it is true, are fine
  • old beaus, infinitely better than any of the stupid young ones."
  • Mrs. Pryor was silent.
  • "You do not like Mr. Helstone, ma'am?"
  • "My dear, Mr. Helstone's office secures him from criticism."
  • "You generally contrive to leave the room when he is announced."
  • "Do you walk out this morning, my dear?"
  • "Yes, I shall go to the rectory, and seek and find Caroline Helstone,
  • and make her take some exercise. She shall have a breezy walk over
  • Nunnely Common."
  • "If you go in that direction, my dear, have the goodness to remind Miss
  • Helstone to wrap up well, as there is a fresh wind, and she appears to
  • me to require care."
  • "You shall be minutely obeyed, Mrs. Pryor. Meantime, will you not
  • accompany us yourself?"
  • "No, my love; I should be a restraint upon you. I am stout, and cannot
  • walk so quickly as you would wish to do."
  • Shirley easily persuaded Caroline to go with her, and when they were
  • fairly out on the quiet road, traversing the extensive and solitary
  • sweep of Nunnely Common, she as easily drew her into conversation. The
  • first feelings of diffidence overcome, Caroline soon felt glad to talk
  • with Miss Keeldar. The very first interchange of slight observations
  • sufficed to give each an idea of what the other was. Shirley said she
  • liked the green sweep of the common turf, and, better still, the heath
  • on its ridges, for the heath reminded her of moors. She had seen moors
  • when she was travelling on the borders near Scotland. She remembered
  • particularly a district traversed one long afternoon, on a sultry but
  • sunless day in summer. They journeyed from noon till sunset, over what
  • seemed a boundless waste of deep heath, and nothing had they seen but
  • wild sheep, nothing heard but the cries of wild birds.
  • "I know how the heath would look on such a day," said Caroline;
  • "purple-black--a deeper shade of the sky-tint, and that would be livid."
  • "Yes, quite livid, with brassy edges to the clouds, and here and there a
  • white gleam, more ghastly than the lurid tinge, which, as you looked at
  • it, you momentarily expected would kindle into blinding lightning."
  • "Did it thunder?"
  • "It muttered distant peals, but the storm did not break till evening,
  • after we had reached our inn--that inn being an isolated house at the
  • foot of a range of mountains."
  • "Did you watch the clouds come down over the mountains?"
  • "I did. I stood at the window an hour watching them. The hills seemed
  • rolled in a sullen mist, and when the rain fell in whitening sheets,
  • suddenly they were blotted from the prospect; they were washed from the
  • world."
  • "I have seen such storms in hilly districts in Yorkshire; and at their
  • riotous climax, while the sky was all cataract, the earth all flood, I
  • have remembered the Deluge."
  • "It is singularly reviving after such hurricanes to feel calm return,
  • and from the opening clouds to receive a consolatory gleam, softly
  • testifying that the sun is not quenched."
  • "Miss Keeldar, just stand still now, and look down at Nunnely dale and
  • wood."
  • They both halted on the green brow of the common. They looked down on
  • the deep valley robed in May raiment; on varied meads, some pearled with
  • daisies, and some golden with king-cups. To-day all this young verdure
  • smiled clear in sunlight; transparent emerald and amber gleams played
  • over it. On Nunnwood--the sole remnant of antique British forest in a
  • region whose lowlands were once all silvan chase, as its highlands were
  • breast-deep heather--slept the shadow of a cloud; the distant hills were
  • dappled, the horizon was shaded and tinted like mother-of-pearl; silvery
  • blues, soft purples, evanescent greens and rose-shades, all melting into
  • fleeces of white cloud, pure as azury snow, allured the eye as with a
  • remote glimpse of heaven's foundations. The air blowing on the brow was
  • fresh, and sweet, and bracing.
  • "Our England is a bonny island," said Shirley, "and Yorkshire is one of
  • her bonniest nooks."
  • "You are a Yorkshire girl too?"
  • "I am--Yorkshire in blood and birth. Five generations of my race sleep
  • under the aisles of Briarfield Church. I drew my first breath in the old
  • black hall behind us."
  • Hereupon Caroline presented her hand, which was accordingly taken and
  • shaken. "We are compatriots," said she.
  • "Yes," agreed Shirley, with a grave nod.
  • "And that," asked Miss Keeldar, pointing to the forest--"that is
  • Nunnwood?"
  • "It is."
  • "Were you ever there?"
  • "Many a time."
  • "In the heart of it?"
  • "Yes."
  • "What is it like?"
  • "It is like an encampment of forest sons of Anak. The trees are huge and
  • old. When you stand at their roots, the summits seem in another region.
  • The trunks remain still and firm as pillars, while the boughs sway to
  • every breeze. In the deepest calm their leaves are never quite hushed,
  • and in high wind a flood rushes, a sea thunders above you."
  • "Was it not one of Robin Hood's haunts?"
  • "Yes, and there are mementos of him still existing. To penetrate into
  • Nunnwood, Miss Keeldar, is to go far back into the dim days of old. Can
  • you see a break in the forest, about the centre?"
  • "Yes, distinctly."
  • "That break is a dell--a deep, hollow cup, lined with turf as green and
  • short as the sod of this common. The very oldest of the trees, gnarled
  • mighty oaks, crowd about the brink of this dell. In the bottom lie the
  • ruins of a nunnery."
  • "We will go--you and I alone, Caroline--to that wood, early some fine
  • summer morning, and spend a long day there. We can take pencils and
  • sketch-books, and any interesting reading book we like; and of course we
  • shall take something to eat. I have two little baskets, in which Mrs.
  • Gill, my housekeeper, might pack our provisions, and we could each carry
  • our own. It would not tire you too much to walk so far?"
  • "Oh no; especially if we rested the whole day in the wood. And I know
  • all the pleasantest spots. I know where we could get nuts in nutting
  • time; I know where wild strawberries abound; I know certain lonely,
  • quite untrodden glades, carpeted with strange mosses, some yellow as if
  • gilded, some a sober gray, some gem-green. I know groups of trees that
  • ravish the eye with their perfect, picture-like effects--rude oak,
  • delicate birch, glossy beech, clustered in contrast; and ash trees
  • stately as Saul, standing isolated; and superannuated wood-giants clad
  • in bright shrouds of ivy. Miss Keeldar, I could guide you."
  • "You would be dull with me alone?"
  • "I should not. I think we should suit; and what third person is there
  • whose presence would not spoil our pleasure?"
  • "Indeed, I know of none about our own ages--no lady at least; and as to
  • gentlemen----"
  • "An excursion becomes quite a different thing when there are gentlemen
  • of the party," interrupted Caroline.
  • "I agree with you--quite a different thing to what we were proposing."
  • "We were going simply to see the old trees, the old ruins; to pass a day
  • in old times, surrounded by olden silence, and above all by quietude."
  • "You are right; and the presence of gentlemen dispels the last charm, I
  • think. If they are of the wrong sort, like your Malones, and your young
  • Sykes, and Wynnes, irritation takes the place of serenity. If they are
  • of the right sort, there is still a change; I can hardly tell what
  • change--one easy to feel, difficult to describe."
  • "We forget Nature, _imprimis_."
  • "And then Nature forgets us, covers her vast calm brow with a dim veil,
  • conceals her face, and withdraws the peaceful joy with which, if we had
  • been content to worship her only, she would have filled our hearts."
  • "What does she give us instead?"
  • "More elation and more anxiety; an excitement that steals the hours away
  • fast, and a trouble that ruffles their course."
  • "Our power of being happy lies a good deal in ourselves, I believe,"
  • remarked Caroline sagely. "I have gone to Nunnwood with a large
  • party--all the curates and some other gentry of these parts, together
  • with sundry ladies--and I found the affair insufferably tedious and
  • absurd; and I have gone quite alone, or accompanied but by Fanny, who
  • sat in the woodman's hut and sewed, or talked to the goodwife, while I
  • roamed about and made sketches, or read; and I have enjoyed much
  • happiness of a quiet kind all day long. But that was when I was
  • young--two years ago."
  • "Did you ever go with your cousin, Robert Moore?"
  • "Yes; once."
  • "What sort of a companion is he on these occasions?"
  • "A cousin, you know, is different to a stranger."
  • "I am aware of that; but cousins, if they are stupid, are still more
  • insupportable than strangers, because you cannot so easily keep them at
  • a distance. But your cousin is not stupid?"
  • "No; but----"
  • "Well?"
  • "If the company of fools irritates, as you say, the society of clever
  • men leaves its own peculiar pain also. Where the goodness or talent of
  • your friend is beyond and above all doubt, your own worthiness to be his
  • associate often becomes a matter of question."
  • "Oh! there I cannot follow you. That crotchet is not one I should choose
  • to entertain for an instant. I consider myself not unworthy to be the
  • associate of the best of them--of gentlemen, I mean--though that is
  • saying a great deal. Where they are good, they are very good, I believe.
  • Your uncle, by-the-bye, is not a bad specimen of the elderly gentleman.
  • I am always glad to see his brown, keen, sensible old face, either in my
  • own house or any other. Are you fond of him? Is he kind to you? Now,
  • speak the truth."
  • "He has brought me up from childhood, I doubt not, precisely as he would
  • have brought up his own daughter, if he had had one; and that is
  • kindness. But I am not fond of him. I would rather be out of his
  • presence than in it."
  • "Strange, when he has the art of making himself so agreeable."
  • "Yes, in company; but he is stern and silent at home. As he puts away
  • his cane and shovel-hat in the rectory hall, so he locks his liveliness
  • in his book-case and study-desk: the knitted brow and brief word for the
  • fireside; the smile, the jest, the witty sally for society."
  • "Is he tyrannical?"
  • "Not in the least. He is neither tyrannical nor hypocritical. He is
  • simply a man who is rather liberal than good-natured, rather brilliant
  • than genial, rather scrupulously equitable than truly just--if you can
  • understand such superfine distinctions."
  • "Oh yes! Good-nature implies indulgence, which he has not; geniality,
  • warmth of heart, which he does not own; and genuine justice is the
  • offspring of sympathy and considerateness, of which, I can well
  • conceive, my bronzed old friend is quite innocent."
  • "I often wonder, Shirley, whether most men resemble my uncle in their
  • domestic relations; whether it is necessary to be new and unfamiliar to
  • them in order to seem agreeable or estimable in their eyes; and whether
  • it is impossible to their natures to retain a constant interest and
  • affection for those they see every day."
  • "I don't know. I can't clear up your doubts. I ponder over similar ones
  • myself sometimes. But, to tell you a secret, if I were convinced that
  • they are necessarily and universally different from us--fickle, soon
  • petrifying, unsympathizing--I would never marry. I should not like to
  • find out that what I loved did not love me, that it was weary of me, and
  • that whatever effort I might make to please would hereafter be worse
  • than useless, since it was inevitably in its nature to change and become
  • indifferent. That discovery once made, what should I long for? To go
  • away, to remove from a presence where my society gave no pleasure."
  • "But you could not if you were married."
  • "No, I could not. There it is. I could never be my own mistress more. A
  • terrible thought! It suffocates me! Nothing irks me like the idea of
  • being a burden and a bore--an inevitable burden, a ceaseless bore! Now,
  • when I feel my company superfluous, I can comfortably fold my
  • independence round me like a mantle, and drop my pride like a veil, and
  • withdraw to solitude. If married, that could not be."
  • "I wonder we don't all make up our minds to remain single," said
  • Caroline. "We should if we listened to the wisdom of experience. My
  • uncle always speaks of marriage as a burden; and I believe whenever he
  • hears of a man being married he invariably regards him as a fool, or, at
  • any rate, as doing a foolish thing."
  • "But, Caroline, men are not all like your uncle. Surely not. I hope
  • not."
  • She paused and mused.
  • "I suppose we each find an exception in the one we love, till we _are_
  • married," suggested Caroline.
  • "I suppose so. And this exception we believe to be of sterling
  • materials. We fancy it like ourselves; we imagine a sense of harmony. We
  • think his voice gives the softest, truest promise of a heart that will
  • never harden against us; we read in his eyes that faithful
  • feeling--affection. I don't think we should trust to what they call
  • passion at all, Caroline. I believe it is a mere fire of dry sticks,
  • blazing up and vanishing. But we watch him, and see him kind to animals,
  • to little children, to poor people. He is kind to us likewise, good,
  • considerate. He does not flatter women, but he is patient with them, and
  • he seems to be easy in their presence, and to find their company genial.
  • He likes them not only for vain and selfish reasons, but as _we_ like
  • him--because we like him. Then we observe that he is just, that he
  • always speaks the truth, that he is conscientious. We feel joy and peace
  • when he comes into a room; we feel sadness and trouble when he leaves
  • it. We know that this man has been a kind son, that he is a kind
  • brother. Will any one dare to tell me that he will not be a kind
  • husband?"
  • "My uncle would affirm it unhesitatingly. 'He will be sick of you in a
  • month,' he would say."
  • "Mrs. Pryor would seriously intimate the same."
  • "Mrs. Yorke and Miss Mann would darkly suggest ditto."
  • "If they are true oracles, it is good never to fall in love."
  • "Very good, if you can avoid it."
  • "I choose to doubt their truth."
  • "I am afraid that proves you are already caught."
  • "Not I. But if I were, do you know what soothsayers I would consult?"
  • "Let me hear."
  • "Neither man nor woman, elderly nor young: the little Irish beggar that
  • comes barefoot to my door; the mouse that steals out of the cranny in
  • the wainscot; the bird that in frost and snow pecks at my window for a
  • crumb; the dog that licks my hand and sits beside my knee."
  • "Did you ever see any one who was kind to such things?"
  • "Did you ever see any one whom such things seemed instinctively to
  • follow, like, rely on?"
  • "We have a black cat and an old dog at the rectory. I know somebody to
  • whose knee that black cat loves to climb, against whose shoulder and
  • cheek it likes to purr. The old dog always comes out of his kennel and
  • wags his tail, and whines affectionately when somebody passes."
  • "And what does that somebody do?"
  • "He quietly strokes the cat, and lets her sit while he conveniently can;
  • and when he must disturb her by rising, he puts her softly down, and
  • never flings her from him roughly. He always whistles to the dog and
  • gives him a caress."
  • "Does he? It is not Robert?"
  • "But it is Robert."
  • "Handsome fellow!" said Shirley, with enthusiasm. Her eyes sparkled.
  • "Is he not handsome? Has he not fine eyes and well-cut features, and a
  • clear, princely forehead?"
  • "He has all that, Caroline. Bless him! he is both graceful and good."
  • "I was sure you would see that he was. When I first looked at your face
  • I knew you would."
  • "I was well inclined to him before I saw him. I liked him when I did see
  • him. I admire him now. There is charm in beauty for itself, Caroline;
  • when it is blent with goodness, there is a powerful charm."
  • "When mind is added, Shirley?"
  • "Who can resist it?"
  • "Remember my uncle, Mesdames Pryor, Yorke, and Mann."
  • "Remember the croaking of the frogs of Egypt. He is a noble being. I
  • tell you when they _are_ good they are the lords of the creation--they
  • are the sons of God. Moulded in their Maker's image, the minutest spark
  • of His spirit lifts them almost above mortality. Indisputably, a great,
  • good, handsome man is the first of created things."
  • "Above us?"
  • "I would scorn to contend for empire with him--I would scorn it. Shall
  • my left hand dispute for precedence with my right? Shall my heart
  • quarrel with my pulse? Shall my veins be jealous of the blood which
  • fills them?"
  • "Men and women, husbands and wives, quarrel horribly, Shirley."
  • "Poor things! Poor, fallen, degenerate things! God made them for another
  • lot, for other feelings."
  • "But are we men's equals, or are we not?"
  • "Nothing ever charms me more than when I meet my superior--one who makes
  • me sincerely feel that he is my superior."
  • "Did you ever meet him?"
  • "I should be glad to see him any day. The higher above me, so much the
  • better. It degrades to stoop; it is glorious to look up. What frets me
  • is, that when I try to esteem, I am baffled; when religiously inclined,
  • there are but false gods to adore. I disdain to be a pagan."
  • "Miss Keeldar, will you come in? We are here at the rectory gates."
  • "Not to-day, but to-morrow I shall fetch you to spend the evening with
  • me. Caroline Helstone, if you really are what at present to me you seem,
  • you and I will suit. I have never in my whole life been able to talk to
  • a young lady as I have talked to you this morning. Kiss me--and
  • good-bye."
  • * * * * *
  • Mrs. Pryor seemed as well disposed to cultivate Caroline's acquaintance
  • as Shirley. She, who went nowhere else, called on an early day at the
  • rectory. She came in the afternoon, when the rector happened to be out.
  • It was rather a close day; the heat of the weather had flushed her, and
  • she seemed fluttered too by the circumstance of entering a strange
  • house, for it appeared her habits were most retiring and secluded. When
  • Miss Helstone went to her in the dining-room she found her seated on the
  • sofa, trembling, fanning herself with her handkerchief, and seeming to
  • contend with a nervous discomposure that threatened to become
  • hysterical.
  • Caroline marvelled somewhat at this unusual want of self-command in a
  • lady of her years, and also at the lack of real strength in one who
  • appeared almost robust--for Mrs. Pryor hastened to allege the fatigue of
  • her walk, the heat of the sun, etc., as reasons for her temporary
  • indisposition; and still as, with more hurry than coherence, she again
  • and again enumerated these causes of exhaustion, Caroline gently sought
  • to relieve her by opening her shawl and removing her bonnet. Attentions
  • of this sort Mrs. Pryor would not have accepted from every one. In
  • general she recoiled from touch or close approach with a mixture of
  • embarrassment and coldness far from flattering to those who offered her
  • aid. To Miss Helstone's little light hand, however, she yielded
  • tractably, and seemed soothed by its contact. In a few minutes she
  • ceased to tremble, and grew quiet and tranquil.
  • Her usual manner being resumed, she proceeded to talk of ordinary
  • topics. In a miscellaneous company Mrs. Pryor rarely opened her lips,
  • or, if obliged to speak, she spoke under restraint, and consequently not
  • well; in dialogue she was a good converser. Her language, always a
  • little formal, was well chosen; her sentiments were just; her
  • information was varied and correct. Caroline felt it pleasant to listen
  • to her, more pleasant than she could have anticipated.
  • On the wall opposite the sofa where they sat hung three pictures--the
  • centre one, above the mantelpiece, that of a lady; the two others, male
  • portraits.
  • "That is a beautiful face," said Mrs. Pryor, interrupting a brief pause
  • which had followed half an hour's animated conversation. "The features
  • may be termed perfect; no statuary's chisel could improve them. It is a
  • portrait from the life, I presume?"
  • "It is a portrait of Mrs. Helstone."
  • "Of Mrs. Matthewson Helstone? Of your uncle's wife?"
  • "It is, and is said to be a good likeness. Before her marriage she was
  • accounted the beauty of the district."
  • "I should say she merited the distinction. What accuracy in all the
  • lineaments! It is, however, a passive face. The original could not have
  • been what is generally termed 'a woman of spirit.'"
  • "I believe she was a remarkably still, silent person."
  • "One would scarcely have expected, my dear, that your uncle's choice
  • should have fallen on a partner of that description. Is he not fond of
  • being amused by lively chat?"
  • "In company he is. But he always says he could never do with a talking
  • wife. He must have quiet at home. You go out to gossip, he affirms; you
  • come home to read and reflect."
  • "Mrs. Matthewson lived but a few years after her marriage, I think I
  • have heard?"
  • "About five years."
  • "Well, my dear," pursued Mrs. Pryor, rising to go, "I trust it is
  • understood that you will frequently come to Fieldhead. I hope you will.
  • You must feel lonely here, having no female relative in the house; you
  • must necessarily pass much of your time in solitude."
  • "I am inured to it. I have grown up by myself. May I arrange your shawl
  • for you?"
  • Mrs. Pryor submitted to be assisted.
  • "Should you chance to require help in your studies," she said, "you may
  • command me."
  • Caroline expressed her sense of such kindness.
  • "I hope to have frequent conversations with you. I should wish to be of
  • use to you."
  • Again Miss Helstone returned thanks. She thought what a kind heart was
  • hidden under her visitor's seeming chilliness. Observing that Mrs. Pryor
  • again glanced with an air of interest towards the portraits, as she
  • walked down the room, Caroline casually explained: "The likeness that
  • hangs near the window, you will see, is my uncle, taken twenty years
  • ago; the other, to the left of the mantelpiece, is his brother James, my
  • father."
  • "They resemble each other in some measure," said Mrs. Pryor; "yet a
  • difference of character may be traced in the different mould of the brow
  • and mouth."
  • "What difference?" inquired Caroline, accompanying her to the door.
  • "James Helstone--that is, my father--is generally considered the
  • best-looking of the two. Strangers, I remark, always exclaim, 'What a
  • handsome man!' Do you think his picture handsome, Mrs. Pryor?"
  • "It is much softer or finer featured than that of your uncle."
  • "But where or what is the difference of character to which you alluded?
  • Tell me. I wish to see if you guess right."
  • "My dear, your uncle is a man of principle. His forehead and his lips
  • are firm, and his eye is steady."
  • "Well, and the other? Do not be afraid of offending me. I always like
  • the truth."
  • "Do you like the truth? It is well for you. Adhere to that
  • preference--never swerve thence. The other, my dear, if he had been
  • living now, would probably have furnished little support to his
  • daughter. It is, however, a graceful head--taken in youth, I should
  • think. My dear" (turning abruptly), "you acknowledge an inestimable
  • value in principle?"
  • "I am sure no character can have true worth without it."
  • "You feel what you say? You have considered the subject?"
  • "Often. Circumstances early forced it upon my attention."
  • "The lesson was not lost, then, though it came so prematurely. I suppose
  • the soil is not light nor stony, otherwise seed falling in that season
  • never would have borne fruit. My dear, do not stand in the air of the
  • door; you will take cold. Good-afternoon."
  • Miss Helstone's new acquaintance soon became of value to her: their
  • society was acknowledged a privilege. She found she would have been in
  • error indeed to have let slip this chance of relief, to have neglected
  • to avail herself of this happy change. A turn was thereby given to her
  • thoughts; a new channel was opened for them, which, diverting a few of
  • them at least from the one direction in which all had hitherto tended,
  • abated the impetuosity of their rush, and lessened the force of their
  • pressure on one worn-down point.
  • Soon she was content to spend whole days at Fieldhead, doing by turns
  • whatever Shirley or Mrs. Pryor wished her to do; and now one would claim
  • her, now the other. Nothing could be less demonstrative than the
  • friendship of the elder lady, but also nothing could be more vigilant,
  • assiduous, untiring. I have intimated that she was a peculiar personage,
  • and in nothing was her peculiarity more shown than in the nature of the
  • interest she evinced for Caroline. She watched all her movements; she
  • seemed as if she would have guarded all her steps. It gave her pleasure
  • to be applied to by Miss Helstone for advice and assistance. She yielded
  • her aid, when asked, with such quiet yet obvious enjoyment that Caroline
  • ere long took delight in depending on her.
  • Shirley Keeldar's complete docility with Mrs. Pryor had at first
  • surprised Miss Helstone, and not less the fact of the reserved
  • ex-governess being so much at home and at ease in the residence of her
  • young pupil, where she filled with such quiet independency a very
  • dependent post; but she soon found that it needed but to know both
  • ladies to comprehend fully the enigma. Every one, it seemed to her, must
  • like, must love, must prize Mrs. Pryor when they knew her. No matter
  • that she perseveringly wore old-fashioned gowns; that her speech was
  • formal and her manner cool; that she had twenty little ways such as
  • nobody else had: she was still such a stay, such a counsellor, so
  • truthful, so kind in her way, that, in Caroline's idea, none once
  • accustomed to her presence could easily afford to dispense with it.
  • As to dependency or humiliation, Caroline did not feel it in her
  • intercourse with Shirley, and why should Mrs. Pryor? The heiress was
  • rich--very rich--compared with her new friend: one possessed a clear
  • thousand a year, the other not a penny; and yet there was a safe sense
  • of equality experienced in her society, never known in that of the
  • ordinary Briarfield and Whinbury gentry.
  • The reason was, Shirley's head ran on other things than money and
  • position. She was glad to be independent as to property; by fits she was
  • even elated at the notion of being lady of the manor, and having tenants
  • and an estate. She was especially tickled with an agreeable complacency
  • when reminded of "all that property" down in the Hollow, "comprising an
  • excellent cloth-mill, dyehouse, warehouse, together with the messuage,
  • gardens, and outbuildings, termed Hollow's Cottage;" but her exultation
  • being quite undisguised was singularly inoffensive; and, for her serious
  • thoughts, they tended elsewhere. To admire the great, reverence the
  • good, and be joyous with the genial, was very much the bent of Shirley's
  • soul: she mused, therefore, on the means of following this bent far
  • oftener than she pondered on her social superiority.
  • In Caroline Miss Keeldar had first taken an interest because she was
  • quiet, retiring, looked delicate, and seemed as if she needed some one
  • to take care of her. Her predilection increased greatly when she
  • discovered that her own way of thinking and talking was understood and
  • responded to by this new acquaintance. She had hardly expected it. Miss
  • Helstone, she fancied, had too pretty a face, manners and voice too
  • soft, to be anything out of the common way in mind and attainments; and
  • she very much wondered to see the gentle features light up archly to the
  • reveille of a dry sally or two risked by herself; and more did she
  • wonder to discover the self-won knowledge treasured, and the untaught
  • speculations working in that girlish, curl-veiled head. Caroline's
  • instinct of taste, too, was like her own. Such books as Miss Keeldar had
  • read with the most pleasure were Miss Helstone's delight also. They held
  • many aversions too in common, and could have the comfort of laughing
  • together over works of false sentimentality and pompous pretension.
  • Few, Shirley conceived, men or women have the right taste in poetry, the
  • right sense for discriminating between what is real and what is false.
  • She had again and again heard very clever people pronounce this or that
  • passage, in this or that versifier, altogether admirable, which, when
  • she read, her soul refused to acknowledge as anything but cant,
  • flourish, and tinsel, or at the best elaborate wordiness, curious,
  • clever, learned, perhaps, haply even tinged with the fascinating hues of
  • fancy, but, God knows, as different from real poetry as the gorgeous and
  • massy vase of mosaic is from the little cup of pure metal; or, to give
  • the reader a choice of similes, as the milliner's artificial wreath is
  • from the fresh-gathered lily of the field.
  • Caroline, she found, felt the value of the true ore, and knew the
  • deception of the flashy dross. The minds of the two girls being toned in
  • harmony often chimed very sweetly together.
  • One evening they chanced to be alone in the oak-parlour. They had passed
  • a long wet day together without _ennui_. It was now on the edge of dark;
  • candles were not yet brought in; both, as twilight deepened, grew
  • meditative and silent. A western wind roared high round the hall,
  • driving wild clouds and stormy rain up from the far-remote ocean; all
  • was tempest outside the antique lattices, all deep peace within. Shirley
  • sat at the window, watching the rack in heaven, the mist on earth,
  • listening to certain notes of the gale that plained like restless
  • spirits--notes which, had she not been so young, gay, and healthy, would
  • have swept her trembling nerves like some omen, some anticipatory dirge.
  • In this her prime of existence and bloom of beauty they but subdued
  • vivacity to pensiveness. Snatches of sweet ballads haunted her ear; now
  • and then she sang a stanza. Her accents obeyed the fitful impulse of the
  • wind; they swelled as its gusts rushed on, and died as they wandered
  • away. Caroline, withdrawn to the farthest and darkest end of the room,
  • her figure just discernible by the ruby shine of the flameless fire,
  • was pacing to and fro, muttering to herself fragments of well-remembered
  • poetry. She spoke very low, but Shirley heard her; and while singing
  • softly, she listened. This was the strain:--
  • "Obscurest night involved the sky,
  • The Atlantic billows roared,
  • When such a destined wretch as I,
  • Washed headlong from on board,
  • Of friends, of hope, of all bereft,
  • His floating home for ever left."
  • Here the fragment stopped, because Shirley's song, erewhile somewhat
  • full and thrilling, had become delicately faint.
  • "Go on," said she.
  • "Then you go on too. I was only repeating 'The Castaway.'"
  • "I know. If you can remember it all, say it all."
  • And as it was nearly dark, and, after all, Miss Keeldar was no
  • formidable auditor, Caroline went through it. She went through it as she
  • should have gone through it. The wild sea, the drowning mariner, the
  • reluctant ship swept on in the storm, you heard were realized by her;
  • and more vividly was realized the heart of the poet, who did not weep
  • for "The Castaway," but who, in an hour of tearless anguish, traced a
  • semblance to his own God-abandoned misery in the fate of that
  • man-forsaken sailor, and cried from the depths where he struggled,--
  • "No voice divine the storm allayed,
  • No light propitious shone,
  • When, snatched from all effectual aid,
  • We perished--each alone!
  • But I beneath a rougher sea,
  • And whelmed in deeper gulfs than he."
  • "I hope William Cowper is safe and calm in heaven now," said Caroline.
  • "Do you pity what he suffered on earth?" asked Miss Keeldar.
  • "Pity him, Shirley? What can I do else? He was nearly broken-hearted
  • when he wrote that poem, and it almost breaks one's heart to read it.
  • But he found relief in writing it--I know he did; and that gift of
  • poetry--the most divine bestowed on man--was, I believe, granted to
  • allay emotions when their strength threatens harm. It seems to me,
  • Shirley, that nobody should write poetry to exhibit intellect or
  • attainment. Who cares for that sort of poetry? Who cares for
  • learning--who cares for fine words in poetry? And who does not care for
  • feeling--real feeling--however simply, even rudely expressed?"
  • "It seems you care for it, at all events; and certainly, in hearing that
  • poem, one discovers that Cowper was under an impulse strong as that of
  • the wind which drove the ship--an impulse which, while it would not
  • suffer him to stop to add ornament to a single stanza, filled him with
  • force to achieve the whole with consummate perfection. You managed to
  • recite it with a steady voice, Caroline. I wonder thereat."
  • "Cowper's hand did not tremble in writing the lines. Why should my voice
  • falter in repeating them? Depend on it, Shirley, no tear blistered the
  • manuscript of 'The Castaway.' I hear in it no sob of sorrow, only the
  • cry of despair; but, that cry uttered, I believe the deadly spasm passed
  • from his heart, that he wept abundantly, and was comforted."
  • Shirley resumed her ballad minstrelsy. Stopping short, she remarked ere
  • long, "One could have loved Cowper, if it were only for the sake of
  • having the privilege of comforting him."
  • "You never would have loved Cowper," rejoined Caroline promptly. "He was
  • not made to be loved by woman."
  • "What do you mean?"
  • "What I say. I know there is a kind of natures in the world--and very
  • noble, elevated natures too--whom love never comes near. You might have
  • sought Cowper with the intention of loving him, and you would have
  • looked at him, pitied him, and left him, forced away by a sense of the
  • impossible, the incongruous, as the crew were borne from their drowning
  • comrade by 'the furious blast.'"
  • "You may be right. Who told you this?"
  • "And what I say of Cowper, I should say of Rousseau. Was Rousseau ever
  • loved? He loved passionately; but was his passion ever returned? I am
  • certain, never. And if there were any female Cowpers and Rousseaus, I
  • should assert the same of them."
  • "Who told you this, I ask? Did Moore?"
  • "Why should anybody have told me? Have I not an instinct? Can I not
  • divine by analogy? Moore never talked to me either about Cowper, or
  • Rousseau, or love. The voice we hear in solitude told me all I know on
  • these subjects."
  • "Do you like characters of the Rousseau order, Caroline?"
  • "Not at all, as a whole. I sympathize intensely with certain qualities
  • they possess. Certain divine sparks in their nature dazzle my eyes, and
  • make my soul glow. Then, again, I scorn them. They are made of clay and
  • gold. The refuse and the ore make a mass of weakness: taken altogether,
  • I feel them unnatural, unhealthy, repulsive."
  • "I dare say I should be more tolerant of a Rousseau than you would,
  • Cary. Submissive and contemplative yourself, you like the stern and the
  • practical. By the way, you must miss that Cousin Robert of yours very
  • much, now that you and he never meet."
  • "I do."
  • "And he must miss you?"
  • "That he does not."
  • "I cannot imagine," pursued Shirley, who had lately got a habit of
  • introducing Moore's name into the conversation, even when it seemed to
  • have no business there--"I cannot imagine but that he was fond of you,
  • since he took so much notice of you, talked to you, and taught you so
  • much."
  • "He never was fond of me; he never professed to be fond of me. He took
  • pains to prove that he only just tolerated me."
  • Caroline, determined not to err on the flattering side in estimating her
  • cousin's regard for her, always now habitually thought of it and
  • mentioned it in the most scanty measure. She had her own reasons for
  • being less sanguine than ever in hopeful views of the future, less
  • indulgent to pleasurable retrospections of the past.
  • "Of course, then," observed Miss Keeldar, "you only just tolerated him
  • in return?"
  • "Shirley, men and women are so different; they are in such a different
  • position. Women have so few things to think about, men so many. You may
  • have a friendship for a man, while he is almost indifferent to you. Much
  • of what cheers your life may be dependent on him, while not a feeling or
  • interest of moment in his eyes may have reference to you. Robert used to
  • be in the habit of going to London, sometimes for a week or a fortnight
  • together. Well, while he was away, I found his absence a void. There
  • was something wanting; Briarfield was duller. Of course, I had my usual
  • occupations; still I missed him. As I sat by myself in the evenings, I
  • used to feel a strange certainty of conviction I cannot describe, that
  • if a magician or a genius had, at that moment, offered me Prince Ali's
  • tube (you remember it in the 'Arabian Nights'?), and if, with its aid, I
  • had been enabled to take a view of Robert--to see where he was, how
  • occupied--I should have learned, in a startling manner, the width of the
  • chasm which gaped between such as he and such as I. I knew that, however
  • my thoughts might adhere to him, his were effectually sundered from me."
  • "Caroline," demanded Miss Keeldar abruptly, "don't you wish you had a
  • profession--a trade?"
  • "I wish it fifty times a day. As it is, I often wonder what I came into
  • the world for. I long to have something absorbing and compulsory to fill
  • my head and hands and to occupy my thoughts."
  • "Can labour alone make a human being happy?"
  • "No; but it can give varieties of pain, and prevent us from breaking our
  • hearts with a single tyrant master-torture. Besides, successful labour
  • has its recompense; a vacant, weary, lonely, hopeless life has none."
  • "But hard labour and learned professions, they say, make women
  • masculine, coarse, unwomanly."
  • "And what does it signify whether unmarried and never-to-be-married
  • women are unattractive and inelegant or not? Provided only they are
  • decent, decorous, and neat, it is enough. The utmost which ought to be
  • required of old maids, in the way of appearance, is that they should not
  • absolutely offend men's eyes as they pass them in the street; for the
  • rest, they should be allowed, without too much scorn, to be as absorbed,
  • grave, plain-looking, and plain-dressed as they please."
  • "You might be an old maid yourself, Caroline, you speak so earnestly."
  • "I shall be one. It is my destiny. I will never marry a Malone or a
  • Sykes; and no one else will ever marry me."
  • Here fell a long pause. Shirley broke it. Again the name by which she
  • seemed bewitched was almost the first on her lips.
  • "Lina--did not Moore call you Lina sometimes?"
  • "Yes. It is sometimes used as the abbreviation of Caroline in his native
  • country."
  • "Well, Lina, do you remember my one day noticing an inequality in your
  • hair--a curl wanting on that right side--and your telling me that it was
  • Robert's fault, as he had once cut therefrom a long lock?"
  • "Yes."
  • "If he is, and always was, as indifferent to you as you say, why did he
  • steal your hair?"
  • "I don't know--yes, I do. It was my doing, not his. Everything of that
  • sort always was my doing. He was going from home--to London, as usual;
  • and the night before he went, I had found in his sister's workbox a lock
  • of black hair--a short, round curl. Hortense told me it was her
  • brother's, and a keepsake. He was sitting near the table. I looked at
  • his head. He has plenty of hair; on the temples were many such round
  • curls. I thought he could spare me one. I knew I should like to have it,
  • and I asked for it. He said, on condition that he might have his choice
  • of a tress from my head. So he got one of my long locks of hair, and I
  • got one of his short ones. I keep his, but I dare say he has lost mine.
  • It was my doing, and one of those silly deeds it distresses the heart
  • and sets the face on fire to think of; one of those small but sharp
  • recollections that return, lacerating your self-respect like tiny
  • penknives, and forcing from your lips, as you sit alone, sudden,
  • insane-sounding interjections."
  • "Caroline!"
  • "I _do_ think myself a fool, Shirley, in some respects; I _do_ despise
  • myself. But I said I would not make you my confessor, for you cannot
  • reciprocate foible for foible; you are not weak. How steadily you watch
  • me now! Turn aside your clear, strong, she-eagle eye; it is an insult to
  • fix it on me thus."
  • "What a study of character you are--weak, certainly, but not in the
  • sense you think!--Come in!"
  • This was said in answer to a tap at the door. Miss Keeldar happened to
  • be near it at the moment, Caroline at the other end of the room. She saw
  • a note put into Shirley's hands, and heard the words, "From Mr. Moore,
  • ma'am."
  • "Bring candles," said Miss Keeldar.
  • Caroline sat expectant.
  • "A communication on business," said the heiress; but when candles were
  • brought, she neither opened nor read it. The rector's Fanny was
  • presently announced, and the rector's niece went home.
  • CHAPTER XIII.
  • FURTHER COMMUNICATIONS ON BUSINESS.
  • In Shirley's nature prevailed at times an easy indolence. There were
  • periods when she took delight in perfect vacancy of hand and
  • eye--moments when her thoughts, her simple existence, the fact of the
  • world being around and heaven above her, seemed to yield her such
  • fullness of happiness that she did not need to lift a finger to increase
  • the joy. Often, after an active morning, she would spend a sunny
  • afternoon in lying stirless on the turf, at the foot of some tree of
  • friendly umbrage. No society did she need but that of Caroline, and it
  • sufficed if she were within call; no spectacle did she ask but that of
  • the deep blue sky, and such cloudlets as sailed afar and aloft across
  • its span; no sound but that of the bee's hum, the leaf's whisper. Her
  • sole book in such hours was the dim chronicle of memory or the sibyl
  • page of anticipation. From her young eyes fell on each volume a glorious
  • light to read by; round her lips at moments played a smile which
  • revealed glimpses of the tale or prophecy. It was not sad, not dark.
  • Fate had been benign to the blissful dreamer, and promised to favour her
  • yet again. In her past were sweet passages, in her future rosy hopes.
  • Yet one day when Caroline drew near to rouse her, thinking she had lain
  • long enough, behold, as she looked down, Shirley's cheek was wet as if
  • with dew; those fine eyes of hers shone humid and brimming.
  • "Shirley, why do _you_ cry?" asked Caroline, involuntarily laying stress
  • on _you_.
  • Miss Keeldar smiled, and turned her picturesque head towards the
  • questioner. "Because it pleases me mightily to cry," she said. "My heart
  • is both sad and glad. But why, you good, patient child--why do you not
  • bear me company? I only weep tears, delightful and soon wiped away; you
  • might weep gall, if you choose."
  • "Why should I weep gall?"
  • "Mateless, solitary bird!" was the only answer.
  • "And are not you too mateless, Shirley?"
  • "At heart--no."
  • "Oh! who nestles there, Shirley?"
  • But Shirley only laughed gaily at this question, and alertly started up.
  • "I have dreamed," she said, "a mere day-dream--certainly bright,
  • probably baseless!"
  • * * * * *
  • Miss Helstone was by this time free enough from illusions: she took a
  • sufficiently grave view of the future, and fancied she knew pretty well
  • how her own destiny and that of some others were tending. Yet old
  • associations retained their influence over her, and it was these and the
  • power of habit which still frequently drew her of an evening to the
  • field-style and the old thorn overlooking the Hollow.
  • One night, the night after the incident of the note, she had been at her
  • usual post, watching for her beacon--watching vainly: that evening no
  • lamp was lit. She waited till the rising of certain constellations
  • warned her of lateness and signed her away. In passing Fieldhead, on her
  • return, its moonlight beauty attracted her glance, and stayed her step
  • an instant. Tree and hall rose peaceful under the night sky and clear
  • full orb; pearly paleness gilded the building; mellow brown gloom
  • bosomed it round; shadows of deep green brooded above its oak-wreathed
  • roof. The broad pavement in front shone pale also; it gleamed as if some
  • spell had transformed the dark granite to glistering Parian. On the
  • silvery space slept two sable shadows, thrown sharply defined from two
  • human figures. These figures when first seen were motionless and mute;
  • presently they moved in harmonious step, and spoke low in harmonious
  • key. Earnest was the gaze that scrutinized them as they emerged from
  • behind the trunk of the cedar. "Is it Mrs. Pryor and Shirley?"
  • Certainly it is Shirley. Who else has a shape so lithe, and proud, and
  • graceful? And her face, too, is visible--her countenance careless and
  • pensive, and musing and mirthful, and mocking and tender. Not fearing
  • the dew, she has not covered her head; her curls are free--they veil her
  • neck and caress her shoulder with their tendril rings. An ornament of
  • gold gleams through the half-closed folds of the scarf she has wrapped
  • across her bust, and a large bright gem glitters on the white hand
  • which confines it. Yes, that is Shirley.
  • Her companion then is, of course, Mrs. Pryor?
  • Yes, if Mrs. Pryor owns six feet of stature, and if she has changed her
  • decent widow's weeds for masculine disguise. The figure walking at Miss
  • Keeldar's side is a man--a tall, young, stately man; it is her tenant,
  • Robert Moore.
  • The pair speak softly; their words are not distinguishable. To remain a
  • moment to gaze is not to be an eavesdropper; and as the moon shines so
  • clearly and their countenances are so distinctly apparent, who can
  • resist the attraction of such interest? Caroline, it seems, cannot, for
  • she lingers.
  • There was a time when, on summer nights, Moore had been wont to walk
  • with his cousin, as he was now walking with the heiress. Often had she
  • gone up the Hollow with him after sunset, to scent the freshness of the
  • earth, where a growth of fragrant herbage carpeted a certain narrow
  • terrace, edging a deep ravine, from whose rifted gloom was heard a sound
  • like the spirit of the lonely watercourse, moaning amongst its wet
  • stones, and between its weedy banks, and under its dark bower of alders.
  • "But I used to be closer to him," thought Caroline. "He felt no
  • obligation to treat me with homage; I needed only kindness. He used to
  • hold my hand; he does not touch hers. And yet Shirley is not proud where
  • she loves. There is no haughtiness in her aspect now, only a little in
  • her port--what is natural to and inseparable from her, what she retains
  • in her most careless as in her most guarded moments. Robert must think,
  • as I think, that he is at this instant looking down on a fine face; and
  • he must think it with a man's brain, not with mine. She has such
  • generous yet soft fire in her eyes. She smiles--what makes her smile so
  • sweet? I saw that Robert felt its beauty, and he must have felt it with
  • his man's heart, not with my dim woman's perceptions. They look to me
  • like two great happy spirits. Yonder silvered pavement reminds me of
  • that white shore we believe to be beyond the death-flood. They have
  • reached it; they walk there united. And what am I, standing here in
  • shadow, shrinking into concealment, my mind darker than my hiding-place?
  • I am one of this world, no spirit--a poor doomed mortal, who asks, in
  • ignorance and hopelessness, wherefore she was born, to what end she
  • lives; whose mind for ever runs on the question, how she shall at last
  • encounter, and by whom be sustained through death.
  • "This is the worst passage I have come to yet; still I was quite
  • prepared for it. I gave Robert up, and gave him up to Shirley, the first
  • day I heard she was come, the first moment I saw her--rich, youthful,
  • and lovely. She has him now. He is her lover. She is his darling. She
  • will be far more his darling yet when they are married. The more Robert
  • knows of Shirley the more his soul will cleave to her. They will both be
  • happy, and I do not grudge them their bliss; but I groan under my own
  • misery. Some of my suffering is very acute. Truly I ought not to have
  • been born; they should have smothered me at the first cry."
  • Here, Shirley stepping aside to gather a dewy flower, she and her
  • companion turned into a path that lay nearer the gate. Some of their
  • conversation became audible. Caroline would not stay to listen. She
  • passed away noiselessly, and the moonlight kissed the wall which her
  • shadow had dimmed. The reader is privileged to remain, and try what he
  • can make of the discourse.
  • "I cannot conceive why nature did not give you a bulldog's head, for you
  • have all a bulldog's tenacity," said Shirley.
  • "Not a flattering idea. Am I so ignoble?"
  • "And something also you have of the same animal's silent ways of going
  • about its work. You give no warning; you come noiselessly behind, seize
  • fast, and hold on."
  • "This is guess-work. You have witnessed no such feat on my part. In your
  • presence I have been no bulldog."
  • "Your very silence indicates your race. How little you talk in general,
  • yet how deeply you scheme! You are far-seeing; you are calculating."
  • "I know the ways of these people. I have gathered information of their
  • intentions. My note last night informed you that Barraclough's trial had
  • ended in his conviction and sentence to transportation. His associates
  • will plot vengeance. I shall lay my plans so as to counteract or at
  • least be prepared for theirs--that is all. Having now given you as clear
  • an explanation as I can, am I to understand that for what I propose
  • doing I have your approbation?"
  • "I shall stand by you so long as you remain on the defensive. Yes."
  • "Good! Without any aid--even opposed or disapproved by you--I believe I
  • should have acted precisely as I now intend to act, but in another
  • spirit. I now feel satisfied. On the whole, I relish the position."
  • "I dare say you do. That is evident. You relish the work which lies
  • before you still better than you would relish the execution of a
  • government order for army-cloth."
  • "I certainly feel it congenial."
  • "So would old Helstone. It is true there is a shade of difference in
  • your motives--many shades, perhaps. Shall I speak to Mr. Helstone? I
  • will, if you like."
  • "Act as you please. Your judgment, Miss Keeldar, will guide you
  • accurately. I could rely on it myself in a more difficult crisis. But I
  • should inform you Mr. Helstone is somewhat prejudiced against me at
  • present."
  • "I am aware--I have heard all about your differences. Depend upon it,
  • they will melt away. He cannot resist the temptation of an alliance
  • under present circumstances."
  • "I should be glad to have him; he is of true metal."
  • "I think so also."
  • "An old blade, and rusty somewhat, but the edge and temper still
  • excellent."
  • "Well, you shall have him, Mr. Moore--that is, if I can win him."
  • "Whom can you not win?"
  • "Perhaps not the rector; but I will make the effort."
  • "Effort! He will yield for a word--a smile."
  • "By no means. It will cost me several cups of tea, some toast and cake,
  • and an ample measure of remonstrances, expostulations, and persuasions.
  • It grows rather chill."
  • "I perceive you shiver. Am I acting wrongly to detain you here? Yet it
  • is so calm--I even feel it warm--and society such as yours is a pleasure
  • to me so rare. If you were wrapped in a thicker shawl----"
  • "I might stay longer, and forget how late it is, which would chagrin
  • Mrs. Pryor. We keep early and regular hours at Fieldhead, Mr. Moore; and
  • so, I am sure, does your sister at the cottage."
  • "Yes; but Hortense and I have an understanding the most convenient in
  • the world, that we shall each do as we please."
  • "How do you please to do?"
  • "Three nights in the week I sleep in the mill--but I require little
  • rest--and when it is moonlight and mild I often haunt the Hollow till
  • daybreak."
  • "When I was a very little girl, Mr. Moore, my nurse used to tell me
  • tales of fairies being seen in that Hollow. That was before my father
  • built the mill, when it was a perfectly solitary ravine. You will be
  • falling under enchantment."
  • "I fear it is done," said Moore, in a low voice.
  • "But there are worse things than fairies to be guarded against," pursued
  • Miss Keeldar.
  • "Things more perilous," he subjoined.
  • "Far more so. For instance, how would you like to meet Michael Hartley,
  • that mad Calvinist and Jacobin weaver? They say he is addicted to
  • poaching, and often goes abroad at night with his gun."
  • "I have already had the luck to meet him. We held a long argument
  • together one night. A strange little incident it was; I liked it."
  • "Liked it? I admire your taste! Michael is not sane. Where did you meet
  • him?"
  • "In the deepest, shadiest spot in the glen, where the water runs low,
  • under brushwood. We sat down near that plank bridge. It was moonlight,
  • but clouded, and very windy. We had a talk."
  • "On politics?"
  • "And religion. I think the moon was at the full, and Michael was as near
  • crazed as possible. He uttered strange blasphemy in his Antinomian
  • fashion."
  • "Excuse me, but I think you must have been nearly as mad as he, to sit
  • listening to him."
  • "There is a wild interest in his ravings. The man would be half a poet,
  • if he were not wholly a maniac; and perhaps a prophet, if he were not a
  • profligate. He solemnly informed me that hell was foreordained my
  • inevitable portion; that he read the mark of the beast on my brow; that
  • I had been an outcast from the beginning. God's vengeance, he said, was
  • preparing for me, and affirmed that in a vision of the night he had
  • beheld the manner and the instrument of my doom. I wanted to know
  • further, but he left me with these words, 'The end is not yet.'"
  • "Have you ever seen him since?"
  • "About a month afterwards, in returning from market, I encountered him
  • and Moses Barraclough, both in an advanced stage of inebriation. They
  • were praying in frantic sort at the roadside. They accosted me as Satan,
  • bid me avaunt, and clamoured to be delivered from temptation. Again, but
  • a few days ago, Michael took the trouble of appearing at the
  • counting-house door, hatless, in his shirt-sleeves--his coat and castor
  • having been detained at the public-house in pledge. He delivered himself
  • of the comfortable message that he could wish Mr. Moore to set his house
  • in order, as his soul was likely shortly to be required of him."
  • "Do you make light of these things?"
  • "The poor man had been drinking for weeks, and was in a state bordering
  • on delirium tremens."
  • "What then? He is the more likely to attempt the fulfilment of his own
  • prophecies."
  • "It would not do to permit incidents of this sort to affect one's
  • nerves."
  • "Mr. Moore, go home!"
  • "So soon?"
  • "Pass straight down the fields, not round by the lade and plantations."
  • "It is early yet."
  • "It is late. For my part, I am going in. Will you promise me not to
  • wander in the Hollow to-night?"
  • "If you wish it."
  • "I do wish it. May I ask whether you consider life valueless?"
  • "By no means. On the contrary, of late I regard my life as invaluable."
  • "Of late?"
  • "Existence is neither aimless nor hopeless to me now, and it was both
  • three months ago. I was then drowning, and rather wished the operation
  • over. All at once a hand was stretched to me--such a delicate hand I
  • scarcely dared trust it; its strength, however, has rescued me from
  • ruin."
  • "Are you really rescued?"
  • "For the time. Your assistance has given me another chance."
  • "Live to make the best of it. Don't offer yourself as a target to
  • Michael Hartley; and good-night!"
  • * * * * *
  • Miss Helstone was under a promise to spend the evening of the next day
  • at Fieldhead. She kept her promise. Some gloomy hours had she spent in
  • the interval. Most of the time had been passed shut up in her own
  • apartment, only issuing from it, indeed, to join her uncle at meals, and
  • anticipating inquiries from Fanny by telling her that she was busy
  • altering a dress, and preferred sewing upstairs, to avoid interruption.
  • She did sew. She plied her needle continuously, ceaselessly, but her
  • brain worked faster than her fingers. Again, and more intensely than
  • ever, she desired a fixed occupation, no matter how onerous, how
  • irksome. Her uncle must be once more entreated, but first she would
  • consult Mrs. Pryor. Her head laboured to frame projects as diligently as
  • her hands to plait and stitch the thin texture of the muslin summer
  • dress spread on the little white couch at the foot of which she sat. Now
  • and then, while thus doubly occupied, a tear would fill her eyes and
  • fall on her busy hands; but this sign of emotion was rare and quickly
  • effaced. The sharp pang passed; the dimness cleared from her vision. She
  • would re-thread her needle, rearrange tuck and trimming, and work on.
  • Late in the afternoon she dressed herself. She reached Fieldhead, and
  • appeared in the oak parlour just as tea was brought in. Shirley asked
  • her why she came so late.
  • "Because I have been making my dress," said she. "These fine sunny days
  • began to make me ashamed of my winter merino, so I have furbished up a
  • lighter garment."
  • "In which you look as I like to see you," said Shirley. "You are a
  • lady-like little person, Caroline.--Is she not, Mrs. Pryor?"
  • Mrs. Pryor never paid compliments, and seldom indulged in remarks,
  • favourable or otherwise, on personal appearance. On the present occasion
  • she only swept Caroline's curls from her cheek as she took a seat near
  • her, caressed the oval outline, and observed, "You get somewhat thin, my
  • love, and somewhat pale. Do you sleep well? your eyes have a languid
  • look." And she gazed at her anxiously.
  • "I sometimes dream melancholy dreams," answered Caroline; "and if I lie
  • awake for an hour or two in the night, I am continually thinking of the
  • rectory as a dreary old place. You know it is very near the churchyard.
  • The back part of the house is extremely ancient, and it is said that the
  • out-kitchens there were once enclosed in the churchyard, and that there
  • are graves under them. I rather long to leave the rectory."
  • "My dear, you are surely not superstitious?"
  • "No, Mrs. Pryor; but I think I grow what is called nervous. I see things
  • under a darker aspect than I used to do. I have fears I never used to
  • have--not of ghosts, but of omens and disastrous events; and I have an
  • inexpressible weight on my mind which I would give the world to shake
  • off, and I cannot do it."
  • "Strange!" cried Shirley. "I never feel so." Mrs. Pryor said nothing.
  • "Fine weather, pleasant days, pleasant scenes, are powerless to give me
  • pleasure," continued Caroline. "Calm evenings are not calm to me.
  • Moonlight, which I used to think mild, now only looks mournful. Is this
  • weakness of mind, Mrs. Pryor, or what is it? I cannot help it. I often
  • struggle against it. I reason; but reason and effort make no
  • difference."
  • "You should take more exercise," said Mrs. Pryor.
  • "Exercise! I exercise sufficiently. I exercise till I am ready to drop."
  • "My dear, you should go from home."
  • "Mrs. Pryor, I should like to go from home, but not on any purposeless
  • excursion or visit. I wish to be a governess, as you have been. It would
  • oblige me greatly if you would speak to my uncle on the subject."
  • "Nonsense!" broke in Shirley. "What an idea! Be a governess! Better be a
  • slave at once. Where is the necessity of it? Why should you dream of
  • such a painful step?"
  • "My dear," said Mrs. Pryor, "you are very young to be a governess, and
  • not sufficiently robust. The duties a governess undertakes are often
  • severe."
  • "And I believe I want severe duties to occupy me."
  • "Occupy you!" cried Shirley. "When are you idle? I never saw a more
  • industrious girl than you. You are always at work. Come," she
  • continued--"come and sit by my side, and take some tea to refresh you.
  • You don't care much for my friendship, then, that you wish to leave me?"
  • "Indeed I do, Shirley; and I don't wish to leave you. I shall never find
  • another friend so dear."
  • At which words Miss Keeldar put her hand into Caroline's with an
  • impulsively affectionate movement, which was well seconded by the
  • expression of her face.
  • "If you think so, you had better make much of me," she said, "and not
  • run away from me. I hate to part with those to whom I am become
  • attached. Mrs. Pryor there sometimes talks of leaving me, and says I
  • might make a more advantageous connection than herself. I should as soon
  • think of exchanging an old-fashioned mother for something modish and
  • stylish. As for you--why, I began to flatter myself we were thoroughly
  • friends; that you liked Shirley almost as well as Shirley likes you, and
  • she does not stint her regard."
  • "I _do_ like Shirley. I like her more and more every day. But that does
  • not make me strong or happy."
  • "And would it make you strong or happy to go and live as a dependent
  • amongst utter strangers? It would not. And the experiment must not be
  • tried; I tell you it would fail. It is not in your nature to bear the
  • desolate life governesses generally lead; you would fall ill. I won't
  • hear of it."
  • And Miss Keeldar paused, having uttered this prohibition very decidedly.
  • Soon she recommenced, still looking somewhat _courroucée_, "Why, it is
  • my daily pleasure now to look out for the little cottage bonnet and the
  • silk scarf glancing through the trees in the lane, and to know that my
  • quiet, shrewd, thoughtful companion and monitress is coming back to me;
  • that I shall have her sitting in the room to look at, to talk to or to
  • let alone, as she and I please. This may be a selfish sort of
  • language--I know it is--but it is the language which naturally rises to
  • my lips, therefore I utter it."
  • "I would write to you, Shirley."
  • "And what are letters? Only a sort of _pis aller_. Drink some tea,
  • Caroline. Eat something--you eat nothing. Laugh and be cheerful, and
  • stay at home."
  • Miss Helstone shook her head and sighed. She felt what difficulty she
  • would have to persuade any one to assist or sanction her in making that
  • change in her life which she believed desirable. Might she only follow
  • her own judgment, she thought she should be able to find perhaps a harsh
  • but an effectual cure for her sufferings. But this judgment, founded on
  • circumstances she could fully explain to none, least of all to Shirley,
  • seemed, in all eyes but her own, incomprehensible and fantastic, and
  • was opposed accordingly.
  • There really was no present pecuniary need for her to leave a
  • comfortable home and "take a situation;" and there was every probability
  • that her uncle might, in some way, permanently provide for her. So her
  • friends thought, and, as far as their lights enabled them to see, they
  • reasoned correctly; but of Caroline's strange sufferings, which she
  • desired so eagerly to overcome or escape, they had no idea, of her
  • racked nights and dismal days no suspicion. It was at once impossible
  • and hopeless to explain; to wait and endure was her only plan. Many that
  • want food and clothing have cheerier lives and brighter prospects than
  • she had; many, harassed by poverty, are in a strait less afflictive.
  • "Now, is your mind quieted?" inquired Shirley. "Will you consent to stay
  • at home?"
  • "I shall not leave it against the approbation of my friends," was the
  • reply; "but I think in time they will be obliged to think as I do."
  • During this conversation Mrs. Pryor looked far from easy. Her extreme
  • habitual reserve would rarely permit her to talk freely or to
  • interrogate others closely. She could think a multitude of questions she
  • never ventured to put, give advice in her mind which her tongue never
  • delivered. Had she been alone with Caroline, she might possibly have
  • said something to the point: Miss Keeldar's presence, accustomed as she
  • was to it, sealed her lips. Now, as on a thousand other occasions,
  • inexplicable nervous scruples kept her back from interfering. She merely
  • showed her concern for Miss Helstone in an indirect way, by asking her
  • if the fire made her too warm, placing a screen between her chair and
  • the hearth, closing a window whence she imagined a draught proceeded,
  • and often and restlessly glancing at her. Shirley resumed: "Having
  • destroyed your plan," she said, "which I hope I have done, I shall
  • construct a new one of my own. Every summer I make an excursion. This
  • season I propose spending two months either at the Scotch lochs or the
  • English lakes--that is, I shall go there provided you consent to
  • accompany me. If you refuse, I shall not stir a foot."
  • "You are very good, Shirley."
  • "I would be very good if you would let me. I have every disposition to
  • be good. It is my misfortune and habit, I know, to think of myself
  • paramount to anybody else; but who is not like me in that respect?
  • However, when Captain Keeldar is made comfortable, accommodated with all
  • he wants, including a sensible, genial comrade, it gives him a thorough
  • pleasure to devote his spare efforts to making that comrade happy. And
  • should we not be happy, Caroline, in the Highlands? We will go to the
  • Highlands. We will, if you can bear a sea-voyage, go to the Isles--the
  • Hebrides, the Shetland, the Orkney Islands. Would you not like that? I
  • see you would.--Mrs. Pryor, I call you to witness. Her face is all
  • sunshine at the bare mention of it."
  • "I should like it much," returned Caroline, to whom, indeed, the notion
  • of such a tour was not only pleasant, but gloriously reviving. Shirley
  • rubbed her hands.
  • "Come; I can bestow a benefit," she exclaimed. "I can do a good deed
  • with my cash. My thousand a year is not merely a matter of dirty
  • bank-notes and jaundiced guineas (let me speak respectfully of both,
  • though, for I adore them), but, it may be, health to the drooping,
  • strength to the weak, consolation to the sad. I was determined to make
  • something of it better than a fine old house to live in, than satin
  • gowns to wear, better than deference from acquaintance and homage from
  • the poor. Here is to begin. This summer, Caroline, Mrs. Pryor and I go
  • out into the North Atlantic, beyond the Shetland, perhaps to the Faroe
  • Isles. We will see seals in Suderoe, and, doubtless, mermaids in
  • Stromoe.--Caroline is laughing, Mrs. Pryor. _I_ made her laugh; _I_ have
  • done her good."
  • "I shall like to go, Shirley," again said Miss Helstone. "I long to hear
  • the sound of waves--ocean-waves--and to see them as I have imagined them
  • in dreams, like tossing banks of green light, strewed with vanishing and
  • reappearing wreaths of foam, whiter than lilies. I shall delight to pass
  • the shores of those lone rock-islets where the sea-birds live and breed
  • unmolested. We shall be on the track of the old Scandinavians--of the
  • Norsemen. We shall almost see the shores of Norway. This is a very vague
  • delight that I feel, communicated by your proposal, but it _is_ a
  • delight."
  • "Will you think of Fitful Head now when you lie awake at night, of gulls
  • shrieking round it, and waves tumbling in upon it, rather than of the
  • graves under the rectory back-kitchen?"
  • "I will try; and instead of musing about remnants of shrouds, and
  • fragments of coffins, and human bones and mould, I will fancy seals
  • lying in the sunshine on solitary shores, where neither fisherman nor
  • hunter ever come; of rock crevices full of pearly eggs bedded in
  • seaweed; of unscared birds covering white sands in happy flocks."
  • "And what will become of that inexpressible weight you said you had on
  • your mind?"
  • "I will try to forget it in speculation on the sway of the whole great
  • deep above a herd of whales rushing through the livid and liquid thunder
  • down from the frozen zone--a hundred of them, perhaps, wallowing,
  • flashing, rolling in the wake of a patriarch bull, huge enough to have
  • been spawned before the Flood, such a creature as poor Smart had in his
  • mind when he said,--
  • 'Strong against tides, the enormous whale
  • Emerges as he goes.'"
  • "I hope our bark will meet with no such shoal, or herd as you term it,
  • Caroline. (I suppose you fancy the sea-mammoths pasturing about the
  • bases of the 'everlasting hills,' devouring strange provender in the
  • vast valleys through and above which sea-billows roll.) I should not
  • like to be capsized by the patriarch bull."
  • "I suppose you expect to see mermaids, Shirley?"
  • "One of them, at any rate--I do not bargain for less--and she is to
  • appear in some such fashion as this. I am to be walking by myself on
  • deck, rather late of an August evening, watching and being watched by a
  • full harvest moon. Something is to rise white on the surface of the sea,
  • over which that moon mounts silent and hangs glorious. The object
  • glitters and sinks. It rises again. I think I hear it cry with an
  • articulate voice; I call you up from the cabin; I show you an image,
  • fair as alabaster, emerging from the dim wave. We both see the long
  • hair, the lifted and foam-white arm, the oval mirror brilliant as a
  • star. It glides nearer; a human face is plainly visible--a face in the
  • style of yours--whose straight, pure (excuse the word, it is
  • appropriate)--whose straight, pure lineaments paleness does not
  • disfigure. It looks at us, but not with your eyes. I see a preternatural
  • lure in its wily glance. It beckons. Were we men, we should spring at
  • the sign--the cold billow would be dared for the sake of the colder
  • enchantress; being women, we stand safe, though not dreadless. She
  • comprehends our unmoved gaze; she feels herself powerless; anger crosses
  • her front; she cannot charm, but she will appal us; she rises high, and
  • glides all revealed on the dark wave-ridge. Temptress-terror! monstrous
  • likeness of ourselves! Are you not glad, Caroline, when at last, and
  • with a wild shriek, she dives?"
  • "But, Shirley, she is not like us. We are neither temptresses, nor
  • terrors, nor monsters."
  • "Some of our kind, it is said, are all three. There are men who ascribe
  • to 'woman,' in general, such attributes."
  • "My dears," here interrupted Mrs. Pryor, "does it not strike you that
  • your conversation for the last ten minutes has been rather fanciful?"
  • "But there is no harm in our fancies; is there, ma'am?"
  • "We are aware that mermaids do not exist; why speak of them as if they
  • did? How can you find interest in speaking of a nonentity?"
  • "I don't know," said Shirley.
  • "My dear, I think there is an arrival. I heard a step in the lane while
  • you were talking; and is not that the garden-gate which creaks?"
  • Shirley stepped to the window.
  • "Yes, there is some one," said she, turning quietly away; and as she
  • resumed her seat a sensitive flush animated her face, while a trembling
  • ray at once kindled and softened her eye. She raised her hand to her
  • chin, cast her gaze down, and seemed to think as she waited.
  • The servant announced Mr. Moore, and Shirley turned round when Mr. Moore
  • appeared at the door. His figure seemed very tall as he entered, and
  • stood in contrast with the three ladies, none of whom could boast a
  • stature much beyond the average. He was looking well, better than he had
  • been known to look for the past twelve months. A sort of renewed youth
  • glowed in his eye and colour, and an invigorated hope and settled
  • purpose sustained his bearing. Firmness his countenance still indicated,
  • but not austerity. It looked as cheerful as it was earnest.
  • "I am just returned from Stilbro'," he said to Miss Keeldar, as he
  • greeted her; "and I thought I would call to impart to you the result of
  • my mission."
  • "You did right not to keep me in suspense," she said, "and your visit is
  • well timed. Sit down. We have not finished tea. Are you English enough
  • to relish tea, or do you faithfully adhere to coffee?"
  • Moore accepted tea.
  • "I am learning to be a naturalized Englishman," said he; "my foreign
  • habits are leaving me one by one."
  • And now he paid his respects to Mrs. Pryor, and paid them well, with a
  • grave modesty that became his age compared with hers. Then he looked at
  • Caroline--not, however, for the first time: his glance had fallen upon
  • her before. He bent towards her as she sat, gave her his hand, and asked
  • her how she was. The light from the window did not fall upon Miss
  • Helstone; her back was turned towards it. A quiet though rather low
  • reply, a still demeanour, and the friendly protection of early twilight
  • kept out of view each traitorous symptom. None could affirm that she had
  • trembled or blushed, that her heart had quaked or her nerves thrilled;
  • none could prove emotion; a greeting showing less effusion was never
  • interchanged. Moore took the empty chair near her, opposite Miss
  • Keeldar. He had placed himself well. His neighbour, screened by the very
  • closeness of his vicinage from his scrutiny, and sheltered further by
  • the dusk which deepened each moment, soon regained not merely _seeming_
  • but _real_ mastery of the feelings which had started into insurrection
  • at the first announcement of his name.
  • He addressed his conversation to Miss Keeldar.
  • "I went to the barracks," he said, "and had an interview with Colonel
  • Ryde. He approved my plans, and promised the aid I wanted. Indeed, he
  • offered a more numerous force than I require--half a dozen will suffice.
  • I don't intend to be swamped by redcoats. They are needed for appearance
  • rather than anything else. My main reliance is on my own civilians."
  • "And on their captain," interposed Shirley.
  • "What, Captain Keeldar?" inquired Moore, slightly smiling, and not
  • lifting his eyes. The tone of raillery in which he said this was very
  • respectful and suppressed.
  • "No," returned Shirley, answering the smile; "Captain Gérard Moore, who
  • trusts much to the prowess of his own right arm, I believe."
  • "Furnished with his counting-house ruler," added Moore. Resuming his
  • usual gravity, he went on: "I received by this evening's post a note
  • from the Home Secretary in answer to mine. It appears they are uneasy at
  • the state of matters here in the north; they especially condemn the
  • supineness and pusillanimity of the mill-owners. They say, as I have
  • always said, that inaction, under present circumstances, is criminal,
  • and that cowardice is cruelty, since both can only encourage disorder,
  • and lead finally to sanguinary outbreaks. There is the note--I brought
  • it for your perusal; and there is a batch of newspapers, containing
  • further accounts of proceedings in Nottingham, Manchester, and
  • elsewhere."
  • He produced letters and journals, and laid them before Miss Keeldar.
  • While she perused them he took his tea quietly; but though his tongue
  • was still, his observant faculties seemed by no means off duty. Mrs.
  • Pryor, sitting in the background, did not come within the range of his
  • glance, but the two younger ladies had the full benefit thereof.
  • Miss Keeldar, placed directly opposite, was seen without effort. She was
  • the object his eyes, when lifted, naturally met first; and as what
  • remained of daylight--the gilding of the west--was upon her, her shape
  • rose in relief from the dark panelling behind. Shirley's clear cheek was
  • tinted yet with the colour which had risen into it a few minutes since.
  • The dark lashes of her eyes looking down as she read, the dusk yet
  • delicate line of her eyebrows, the almost sable gloss of her curls, made
  • her heightened complexion look fine as the bloom of a red wild flower by
  • contrast. There was natural grace in her attitude, and there was
  • artistic effect in the ample and shining folds of her silk dress--an
  • attire simply fashioned, but almost splendid from the shifting
  • brightness of its dye, warp and woof being of tints deep and changing as
  • the hue on a pheasant's neck. A glancing bracelet on her arm produced
  • the contrast of gold and ivory. There was something brilliant in the
  • whole picture. It is to be supposed that Moore thought so, as his eye
  • dwelt long on it, but he seldom permitted his feelings or his opinions
  • to exhibit themselves in his face. His temperament boasted a certain
  • amount of phlegm, and he preferred an undemonstrative, not ungentle, but
  • serious aspect to any other.
  • He could not, by looking straight before him, see Caroline, as she was
  • close at his side. It was necessary, therefore, to manœuvre a little to
  • get her well within the range of his observation. He leaned back in his
  • chair, and looked down on her. In Miss Helstone neither he nor any one
  • else could discover brilliancy. Sitting in the shade, without flowers
  • or ornaments, her attire the modest muslin dress, colourless but for its
  • narrow stripe of pale azure, her complexion unflushed, unexcited, the
  • very brownness of her hair and eyes invisible by this faint light, she
  • was, compared with the heiress, as a graceful pencil sketch compared
  • with a vivid painting. Since Robert had seen her last a great change had
  • been wrought in her. Whether he perceived it might not be ascertained.
  • He said nothing to that effect.
  • "How is Hortense?" asked Caroline softly.
  • "Very well; but she complains of being unemployed. She misses you."
  • "Tell her that I miss her, and that I write and read a portion of French
  • every day."
  • "She will ask if you sent your love; she is always particular on that
  • point. You know she likes attention."
  • "My best love--my very best. And say to her that whenever she has time
  • to write me a little note I shall be glad to hear from her."
  • "What if I forget? I am not the surest messenger of compliments."
  • "No, don't forget, Robert. It is no compliment; it is in good earnest."
  • "And must, therefore, be delivered punctually."
  • "If you please."
  • "Hortense will be ready to shed tears. She is tenderhearted on the
  • subject of her pupil; yet she reproaches you sometimes for obeying your
  • uncle's injunctions too literally. Affection, like love, will be unjust
  • now and then."
  • And Caroline made no answer to this observation; for indeed her heart
  • was troubled, and to her eyes she would have raised her handkerchief if
  • she had dared. If she had dared, too, she would have declared how the
  • very flowers in the garden of Hollow's Cottage were dear to her; how the
  • little parlour of that house was her earthly paradise; how she longed to
  • return to it, as much almost as the first woman, in her exile, must have
  • longed to revisit Eden. Not daring, however, to say these things, she
  • held her peace; she sat quiet at Robert's side, waiting for him to say
  • something more. It was long since this proximity had been hers--long
  • since his voice had addressed her; could she, with any show of
  • probability, even of possibility, have imagined that the meeting gave
  • him pleasure, to her it would have given deep bliss. Yet, even in doubt
  • that it pleased, in dread that it might annoy him, she received the
  • boon of the meeting as an imprisoned bird would the admission of
  • sunshine to its cage. It was of no use arguing, contending against the
  • sense of present happiness; to be near Robert was to be revived.
  • Miss Keeldar laid down the papers.
  • "And are you glad or sad for all these menacing tidings?" she inquired
  • of her tenant.
  • "Not precisely either; but I certainly am instructed. I see that our
  • only plan is to be firm. I see that efficient preparation and a resolute
  • attitude are the best means of averting bloodshed."
  • He then inquired if she had observed some particular paragraph, to which
  • she replied in the negative, and he rose to show it to her. He continued
  • the conversation standing before her. From the tenor of what he said, it
  • appeared evident that they both apprehended disturbances in the
  • neighbourhood of Briarfield, though in what form they expected them to
  • break out was not specified. Neither Caroline nor Mrs. Pryor asked
  • questions. The subject did not appear to be regarded as one ripe for
  • free discussion; therefore the lady and her tenant were suffered to keep
  • details to themselves, unimportuned by the curiosity of their listeners.
  • Miss Keeldar, in speaking to Mr. Moore, took a tone at once animated and
  • dignified, confidential and self-respecting. When, however, the candles
  • were brought in, and the fire was stirred up, and the fullness of light
  • thus produced rendered the expression of her countenance legible, you
  • could see that she was all interest, life, and earnestness. There was
  • nothing coquettish in her demeanour; whatever she felt for Moore she
  • felt it seriously. And serious, too, were his feelings, and settled were
  • his views, apparently, for he made no petty effort to attract, dazzle,
  • or impress. He contrived, notwithstanding, to command a little; because
  • the deeper voice, however mildly modulated, the somewhat harder mind,
  • now and then, though involuntarily and unintentionally, bore down by
  • some peremptory phrase or tone the mellow accents and susceptible, if
  • high, nature of Shirley. Miss Keeldar looked happy in conversing with
  • him, and her joy seemed twofold--a joy of the past and present, of
  • memory and of hope.
  • What I have just said are Caroline's ideas of the pair. She felt what
  • has just been described. In thus feeling she tried not to suffer, but
  • suffered sharply nevertheless. She suffered, indeed, miserably. A few
  • minutes before her famished heart had tasted a drop and crumb of
  • nourishment, that, if freely given, would have brought back abundance of
  • life where life was failing; but the generous feast was snatched from
  • her, spread before another, and she remained but a bystander at the
  • banquet.
  • The clock struck nine; it was Caroline's time for going home. She
  • gathered up her work, put the embroidery, the scissors, the thimble into
  • her bag. She bade Mrs. Pryor a quiet good-night, receiving from that
  • lady a warmer pressure of the hand than usual. She stepped up to Miss
  • Keeldar.
  • "Good-night, Shirley!"
  • Shirley started up. "What! so soon? Are you going already?"
  • "It is past nine."
  • "I never heard the clock. You will come again to-morrow, and you will be
  • happy to-night, will you not? Remember our plans."
  • "Yes," said Caroline; "I have not forgotten."
  • Her mind misgave her that neither those plans nor any other could
  • permanently restore her mental tranquillity. She turned to Robert, who
  • stood close behind her. As he looked up, the light of the candles on the
  • mantelpiece fell full on her face. All its paleness, all its change, all
  • its forlorn meaning were clearly revealed. Robert had good eyes, and
  • might have seen it if he would; whether he did see it, nothing
  • indicated.
  • "Good-night!" she said, shaking like a leaf, offering her thin hand
  • hastily, anxious to part from him quickly.
  • "You are going home?" he asked, not touching her hand.
  • "Yes."
  • "Is Fanny come for you?"
  • "Yes."
  • "I may as well accompany you a step of the way; not up to the rectory,
  • though, lest my old friend Helstone should shoot me from the window."
  • He laughed, and took his hat. Caroline spoke of unnecessary trouble; he
  • told her to put on her bonnet and shawl. She was quickly ready, and they
  • were soon both in the open air. Moore drew her hand under his arm, just
  • in his old manner--that manner which she ever felt to be so kind.
  • "You may run on, Fanny," he said to the housemaid; "we shall overtake
  • you." And when the girl had got a little in advance, he enclosed
  • Caroline's hand in his, and said he was glad to find she was a familiar
  • guest at Fieldhead. He hoped her intimacy with Miss Keeldar would
  • continue; such society would be both pleasant and improving.
  • Caroline replied that she liked Shirley.
  • "And there is no doubt the liking is mutual," said Moore. "If she
  • professes friendship, be certain she is sincere. She cannot feign; she
  • scorns hypocrisy. And, Caroline, are we never to see you at Hollow's
  • Cottage again?"
  • "I suppose not, unless my uncle should change his mind."
  • "Are you much alone now?"
  • "Yes, a good deal. I have little pleasure in any society but Miss
  • Keeldar's."
  • "Have you been quite well lately?"
  • "Quite."
  • "You must take care of yourself. Be sure not to neglect exercise. Do you
  • know I fancied you somewhat altered--a little fallen away, and pale. Is
  • your uncle kind to you?"
  • "Yes; he is just as he always is."
  • "Not too tender, that is to say--not too protective and attentive. And
  • what ails you, then? Tell me, Lina."
  • "Nothing, Robert." But her voice faltered.
  • "That is to say, nothing that you will tell me. I am not to be taken
  • into confidence. Separation is then quite to estrange us, is it?"
  • "I do not know. Sometimes I almost fear it is."
  • "But it ought not to have that effect. 'Should auld acquaintance be
  • forgot, and days o' lang syne?'"
  • "Robert, I don't forget."
  • "It is two months, I should think, Caroline, since you were at the
  • cottage."
  • "Since I was _within_ it--yes."
  • "Have you ever passed that way in your walk?"
  • "I have come to the top of the fields sometimes of an evening and looked
  • down. Once I saw Hortense in the garden watering her flowers, and I know
  • at what time you light your lamp in the counting-house. I have waited
  • for it to shine out now and then, and I have seen you bend between it
  • and the window. I knew it was you; I could almost trace the outline of
  • your form."
  • "I wonder I never encountered you. I occasionally walk to the top of the
  • Hollow's fields after sunset."
  • "I know you do. I had almost spoken to you one night, you passed so near
  • me."
  • "Did I? I passed near you, and did not see you! Was I alone?"
  • "I saw you twice, and neither time were you alone."
  • "Who was my companion? Probably nothing but Joe Scott, or my own shadow
  • by moonlight."
  • "No; neither Joe Scott nor your shadow, Robert. The first time you were
  • with Mr. Yorke; and the second time what you call your shadow was a
  • shape with a white forehead and dark curls, and a sparkling necklace
  • round its neck. But I only just got a glimpse of you and that fairy
  • shadow; I did not wait to hear you converse."
  • "It appears you walk invisible. I noticed a ring on your hand this
  • evening; can it be the ring of Gyges? Henceforth, when sitting in the
  • counting-house by myself, perhaps at dead of night, I shall permit
  • myself to imagine that Caroline may be leaning over my shoulder reading
  • with me from the same book, or sitting at my side engaged in her own
  • particular task, and now and then raising her unseen eyes to my face to
  • read there my thoughts."
  • "You need fear no such infliction. I do not come near you; I only stand
  • afar off, watching what may become of you."
  • "When I walk out along the hedgerows in the evening after the mill is
  • shut, or at night when I take the watchman's place, I shall fancy the
  • flutter of every little bird over its nest, the rustle of every leaf, a
  • movement made by you; tree-shadows will take your shape; in the white
  • sprays of hawthorn I shall imagine glimpses of you. Lina, you will haunt
  • me."
  • "I will never be where you would not wish me to be, nor see nor hear
  • what you would wish unseen and unheard."
  • "I shall see you in my very mill in broad daylight. Indeed, I have seen
  • you there once. But a week ago I was standing at the top of one of my
  • long rooms; girls were working at the other end, and amongst half a
  • dozen of them, moving to and fro, I seemed to see a figure resembling
  • yours. It was some effect of doubtful light or shade, or of dazzling
  • sunbeam. I walked up to this group. What I sought had glided away; I
  • found myself between two buxom lasses in pinafores."
  • "I shall not follow you into your mill, Robert, unless you call me
  • there."
  • "Nor is that the only occasion on which imagination has played me a
  • trick. One night, when I came home late from market, I walked into the
  • cottage parlour thinking to find Hortense; but instead of her I thought
  • I found you. There was no candle in the room; my sister had taken the
  • light upstairs with her. The window-blind was not drawn, and broad
  • moonbeams poured through the panes. There you were, Lina, at the
  • casement, shrinking a little to one side in an attitude not unusual with
  • you. You were dressed in white, as I have seen you dressed at an evening
  • party. For half a second your fresh, living face seemed turned towards
  • me, looking at me; for half a second my idea was to go and take your
  • hand, to chide you for your long absence, and welcome your present
  • visit. Two steps forward broke the spell. The drapery of the dress
  • changed outline; the tints of the complexion dissolved, and were
  • formless. Positively, as I reached the spot, there was nothing left but
  • the sweep of a white muslin curtain, and a balsam plant in a flower-pot,
  • covered with a flush of bloom. 'Sic transit,' et cetera."
  • "It was not my wraith, then? I almost thought it was."
  • "No; only gauze, crockery, and pink blossom--a sample of earthly
  • illusions."
  • "I wonder you have time for such illusions, occupied as your mind must
  • be."
  • "So do I. But I find in myself, Lina, two natures--one for the world and
  • business, and one for home and leisure. Gérard Moore is a hard dog,
  • brought up to mill and market; the person you call your cousin Robert is
  • sometimes a dreamer, who lives elsewhere than in Cloth-hall and
  • counting-house."
  • "Your two natures agree with you. I think you are looking in good
  • spirits and health. You have quite lost that harassed air which it often
  • pained one to see in your face a few months ago."
  • "Do you observe that? Certainly I am disentangled of some difficulties.
  • I have got clear of some shoals, and have more sea-room."
  • "And, with a fair wind, you may now hope to make a prosperous voyage?"
  • "I may _hope_ it--yes--but hope is deceptive. There is no controlling
  • wind or wave. Gusts and swells perpetually trouble the mariner's
  • course; he dare not dismiss from his mind the expectation of tempest."
  • "But you are ready for a breeze; you are a good seaman, an able
  • commander. You are a skilful pilot, Robert; you will weather the storm."
  • "My kinswoman always thinks the best of me, but I will take her words
  • for a propitious omen. I will consider that in meeting her to-night I
  • have met with one of those birds whose appearance is to the sailor the
  • harbinger of good luck."
  • "A poor harbinger of good luck is she who can do nothing, who has no
  • power. I feel my incapacity. It is of no use saying I have the will to
  • serve you when I cannot prove it. Yet I have that will. I wish you
  • success. I wish you high fortune and true happiness."
  • "When did you ever wish me anything else? What is Fanny waiting for? I
  • told her to walk on. Oh! we have reached the churchyard. Then we are to
  • part here, I suppose. We might have sat a few minutes in the church
  • porch, if the girl had not been with us. It is so fine a night, so
  • summer-mild and still, I have no particular wish to return yet to the
  • Hollow."
  • "But we cannot sit in the porch now, Robert."
  • Caroline said this because Moore was turning her round towards it.
  • "Perhaps not. But tell Fanny to go in. Say we are coming. A few minutes
  • will make no difference."
  • The church clock struck ten.
  • "My uncle will be coming out to take his usual sentinel round, and he
  • always surveys the church and churchyard."
  • "And if he does? If it were not for Fanny, who knows we are here, I
  • should find pleasure in dodging and eluding him. We could be under the
  • east window when he is at the porch; as he came round to the north side
  • we could wheel off to the south; we might at a pinch hide behind some of
  • the monuments. That tall erection of the Wynnes would screen us
  • completely."
  • "Robert, what good spirits you have! Go! go!" added Caroline hastily. "I
  • hear the front door----"
  • "I don't want to go; on the contrary, I want to stay."
  • "You know my uncle will be terribly angry. He forbade me to see you
  • because you are a Jacobin."
  • "A queer Jacobin!"
  • "Go, Robert, he is coming; I hear him cough."
  • "Diable! It is strange--what a pertinacious wish I feel to stay!"
  • "You remember what he did to Fanny's--" began Caroline, and stopped
  • abruptly short. "Sweetheart" was the word that ought to have followed,
  • but she could not utter it. It seemed calculated to suggest ideas she
  • had no intention to suggest--ideas delusive and disturbing. Moore was
  • less scrupulous. "Fanny's sweetheart?" he said at once. "He gave him a
  • shower-bath under the pump, did he not? He'd do as much for me, I dare
  • say, with pleasure. I should like to provoke the old Turk--not, however,
  • against you. But he would make a distinction between a cousin and a
  • lover, would he not?"
  • "Oh, he would not think of you in that way, of course not; his quarrel
  • with you is entirely political. Yet I should not like the breach to be
  • widened, and he is so testy. Here he is at the garden gate. For your own
  • sake and mine, Robert, go!"
  • The beseeching words were aided by a beseeching gesture and a more
  • beseeching look. Moore covered her clasped hands an instant with his,
  • answered her upward by a downward gaze, said "Good-night!" and went.
  • Caroline was in a moment at the kitchen door behind Fanny. The shadow of
  • the shovel-hat at that very instant fell on a moonlit tomb. The rector
  • emerged, erect as a cane, from his garden, and proceeded in slow march,
  • his hands behind him, down the cemetery. Moore was almost caught. He had
  • to "dodge" after all, to coast round the church, and finally to bend his
  • tall form behind the Wynnes' ambitious monument. There he was forced to
  • hide full ten minutes, kneeling with one knee on the turf, his hat off,
  • his curls bare to the dew, his dark eye shining, and his lips parted
  • with inward laughter at his position; for the rector meantime stood
  • coolly star-gazing, and taking snuff within three feet of him.
  • It happened, however, that Mr. Helstone had no suspicion whatever on his
  • mind; for being usually but vaguely informed of his niece's movements,
  • not thinking it worth while to follow them closely, he was not aware
  • that she had been out at all that day, and imagined her then occupied
  • with book or work in her chamber--where, indeed, she was by this time,
  • though not absorbed in the tranquil employment he ascribed to her, but
  • standing at her window with fast-throbbing heart, peeping anxiously from
  • behind the blind, watching for her uncle to re-enter and her cousin to
  • escape. And at last she was gratified. She heard Mr. Helstone come in;
  • she saw Robert stride the tombs and vault the wall; she then went down
  • to prayers. When she returned to her chamber, it was to meet the memory
  • of Robert. Slumber's visitation was long averted. Long she sat at her
  • lattice, long gazed down on the old garden and older church, on the
  • tombs laid out all gray and calm, and clear in moonlight. She followed
  • the steps of the night, on its pathway of stars, far into the "wee sma'
  • hours ayont the twal'." She was with Moore, in spirit, the whole time;
  • she was at his side; she heard his voice; she gave her hand into his
  • hand; it rested warm in his fingers. When the church clock struck, when
  • any other sound stirred, when a little mouse familiar to her chamber--an
  • intruder for which she would never permit Fanny to lay a trap--came
  • rattling amongst the links of her locket-chain, her one ring, and
  • another trinket or two on the toilet-table, to nibble a bit of biscuit
  • laid ready for it, she looked up, recalled momentarily to the real. Then
  • she said half aloud, as if deprecating the accusation of some unseen and
  • unheard monitor, "I am not cherishing love dreams; I am only thinking
  • because I cannot sleep. Of course, I know he will marry Shirley."
  • With returning silence, with the lull of the chime, and the retreat of
  • her small untamed and unknown _protégé_, she still resumed the dream,
  • nestling to the vision's side--listening to, conversing with it. It
  • paled at last. As dawn approached, the setting stars and breaking day
  • dimmed the creation of fancy; the wakened song of birds hushed her
  • whispers. The tale full of fire, quick with interest, borne away by the
  • morning wind, became a vague murmur. The shape that, seen in a moonbeam,
  • lived, had a pulse, had movement, wore health's glow and youth's
  • freshness, turned cold and ghostly gray, confronted with the red of
  • sunrise. It wasted. She was left solitary at last. She crept to her
  • couch, chill and dejected.
  • CHAPTER XIV.
  • SHIRLEY SEEKS TO BE SAVED BY WORKS.
  • "Of course, I know he will marry Shirley," were her first words when she
  • rose in the morning. "And he ought to marry her. She can help him," she
  • added firmly. "But I shall be forgotten when they _are_ married," was
  • the cruel succeeding thought. "Oh! I shall be wholly forgotten! And
  • what--_what_ shall I do when Robert is taken quite from me? Where shall
  • I turn? _My_ Robert! I wish I could justly call him mine. But I am
  • poverty and incapacity; Shirley is wealth and power. And she is beauty
  • too, and love. I cannot deny it. This is no sordid suit. She loves
  • him--not with inferior feelings. She loves, or _will_ love, as he must
  • feel proud to be loved. Not a valid objection can be made. Let them be
  • married, then. But afterwards I shall be nothing to him. As for being
  • his sister, and all that stuff, I despise it. I will either be all or
  • nothing to a man like Robert; no feeble shuffling or false cant is
  • endurable. Once let that pair be united, and I will certainly leave
  • them. As for lingering about, playing the hypocrite, and pretending to
  • calm sentiments of friendship, when my soul will be wrung with other
  • feelings, I shall not descend to such degradation. As little could I
  • fill the place of their mutual friend as that of their deadly foe; as
  • little could I stand between them as trample over them. Robert is a
  • first-rate man--in my eyes. I _have_ loved, _do_ love, and _must___ love
  • him. I would be his wife if I could; as I cannot, I must go where I
  • shall never see him. There is but one alternative--to cleave to him as
  • if I were a part of him, or to be sundered from him wide as the two
  • poles of a sphere.--Sunder me then, Providence. Part us speedily."
  • Some such aspirations as these were again working in her mind late in
  • the afternoon, when the apparition of one of the personages haunting her
  • thoughts passed the parlour window. Miss Keeldar sauntered slowly by,
  • her gait, her countenance, wearing that mixture of wistfulness and
  • carelessness which, when quiescent, was the wonted cast of her look and
  • character of her bearing. When animated, the carelessness quite
  • vanished, the wistfulness became blent with a genial gaiety, seasoning
  • the laugh, the smile, the glance, with a unique flavour of sentiment, so
  • that mirth from her never resembled "the crackling of thorns under a
  • pot."
  • "What do you mean by not coming to see me this afternoon, as you
  • promised?" was her address to Caroline as she entered the room.
  • "I was not in the humour," replied Miss Helstone, very truly.
  • Shirley had already fixed on her a penetrating eye.
  • "No," she said; "I see you are not in the humour for loving me. You are
  • in one of your sunless, inclement moods, when one feels a
  • fellow-creature's presence is not welcome to you. You have such moods.
  • Are you aware of it?"
  • "Do you mean to stay long, Shirley?"
  • "Yes. I am come to have my tea, and must have it before I go. I shall
  • take the liberty, then, of removing my bonnet, without being asked."
  • And this she did, and then stood on the rug with her hands behind her.
  • "A pretty expression you have in your countenance," she went on, still
  • gazing keenly, though not inimically--rather indeed pityingly--at
  • Caroline. "Wonderfully self-supported you look, you solitude-seeking,
  • wounded deer. Are you afraid Shirley will worry you if she discovers
  • that you are hurt, and that you bleed?"
  • "I never do fear Shirley."
  • "But sometimes you dislike her; often you avoid her. Shirley can feel
  • when she is slighted and shunned. If you had not walked home in the
  • company you did last night, you would have been a different girl to-day.
  • What time did you reach the rectory?"
  • "By ten."
  • "Humph! You took three-quarters of an hour to walk a mile. Was it you,
  • or Moore, who lingered so?"
  • "Shirley, you talk nonsense."
  • "_He_ talked nonsense--that I doubt not; or he looked it, which is a
  • thousand times worse. I see the reflection of his eyes on your forehead
  • at this moment. I feel disposed to call him out, if I could only get a
  • trustworthy second. I feel desperately irritated. I felt so last night,
  • and have felt it all day."
  • "You don't ask me why," she proceeded, after a pause, "you little
  • silent, over-modest thing; and you don't deserve that I should pour out
  • my secrets into your lap without an invitation. Upon my word, I could
  • have found it in my heart to have dogged Moore yesterday evening with
  • dire intent. I have pistols, and can use them."
  • "Stuff, Shirley! Which would you have shot--me or Robert?"
  • "Neither, perhaps. Perhaps myself--more likely a bat or a tree-bough. He
  • is a puppy, your cousin--a quiet, serious, sensible, judicious,
  • ambitious puppy. I see him standing before me, talking his half-stern,
  • half-gentle talk, bearing me down (as I am very conscious he does) with
  • his fixity of purpose, etc.; and then--I have no patience with him!"
  • Miss Keeldar started off on a rapid walk through the room, repeating
  • energetically that she had no patience with men in general, and with her
  • tenant in particular.
  • "You are mistaken," urged Caroline, in some anxiety. "Robert is no puppy
  • or male flirt; I can vouch for that."
  • "_You_ vouch for it! Do you think I'll take your word on the subject?
  • There is no one's testimony I would not credit sooner than yours. To
  • advance Moore's fortune you would cut off your right hand."
  • "But not tell lies. And if I speak the truth, I must assure you that he
  • was just civil to me last night--that was all."
  • "I never asked what he was. I can guess. I saw him from the window take
  • your hand in his long fingers, just as he went out at my gate."
  • "That is nothing. I am not a stranger, you know. I am an old
  • acquaintance, and his cousin."
  • "I feel indignant, and that is the long and short of the matter,"
  • responded Miss Keeldar. "All my comfort," she added presently, "is
  • broken up by his manœuvres. He keeps intruding between you and me.
  • Without him we should be good friends; but that six feet of puppyhood
  • makes a perpetually-recurring eclipse of our friendship. Again and again
  • he crosses and obscures the disc I want always to see clear; ever and
  • anon he renders me to you a mere bore and nuisance."
  • "No, Shirley, no."
  • "He does. You did not want my society this afternoon, and I feel it
  • hard. You are naturally somewhat reserved, but I am a social personage,
  • who cannot live alone. If we were but left unmolested, I have that
  • regard for you that I could bear you in my presence for ever, and not
  • for the fraction of a second do I ever wish to be rid of you. You cannot
  • say as much respecting me."
  • "Shirley, I can say anything you wish. Shirley, I like you."
  • "You will wish me at Jericho to-morrow, Lina."
  • "I shall not. I am every day growing more accustomed to--fonder of you.
  • You know I am too English to get up a vehement friendship all at once;
  • but you are so much better than common--you are so different to
  • every-day young ladies--I esteem you, I value you; you are never a
  • burden to me--never. Do you believe what I say?"
  • "Partly," replied Miss Keeldar, smiling rather incredulously; "but you
  • are a peculiar personage. Quiet as you look, there is both a force and a
  • depth somewhere within not easily reached or appreciated. Then you
  • certainly are not happy."
  • "And unhappy people are rarely good. Is that what you mean?"
  • "Not at all. I mean rather that unhappy people are often preoccupied,
  • and not in the mood for discoursing with companions of my nature.
  • Moreover, there is a sort of unhappiness which not only depresses, but
  • corrodes; and that, I fear, is your portion. Will pity do you any good,
  • Lina? If it will, take some from Shirley; she offers largely, and
  • warrants the article genuine."
  • "Shirley, I never had a sister--you never had a sister; but it flashes
  • on me at this moment how sisters feel towards each other--affection
  • twined with their life, which no shocks of feeling can uproot, which
  • little quarrels only trample an instant, that it may spring more freshly
  • when the pressure is removed; affection that no passion can ultimately
  • outrival, with which even love itself cannot do more than compete in
  • force and truth. Love hurts us so, Shirley. It is so tormenting, so
  • racking, and it burns away our strength with its flame. In affection is
  • no pain and no fire, only sustenance and balm. I am supported and
  • soothed when you--that is, _you only_--are near, Shirley. Do you
  • believe me now?"
  • "I am always easy of belief when the creed pleases me. We really are
  • friends, then, Lina, in spite of the black eclipse?"
  • "We really are," returned the other, drawing Shirley towards her, and
  • making her sit down, "chance what may."
  • "Come, then; we will talk of something else than the Troubler." But at
  • this moment the rector came in, and the "something else" of which Miss
  • Keeldar was about to talk was not again alluded to till the moment of
  • her departure. She then delayed a few minutes in the passage to say,
  • "Caroline, I wish to tell you that I have a great weight on my mind; my
  • conscience is quite uneasy as if I had committed, or was going to
  • commit, a crime. It is not my _private_ conscience, you must understand,
  • but my landed-proprietor and lord-of-the-manor conscience. I have got
  • into the clutch of an eagle with iron talons. I have fallen under a
  • stern influence, which I scarcely approve, but cannot resist. Something
  • will be done ere long, I fear, which it by no means pleases me to think
  • of. To ease my mind, and to prevent harm as far as I can, I mean to
  • enter on a series of good works. Don't be surprised, therefore, if you
  • see me all at once turn outrageously charitable. I have no idea how to
  • begin, but you must give me some advice. We will talk more on the
  • subject to-morrow; and just ask that excellent person, Miss Ainley, to
  • step up to Fieldhead. I have some notion of putting myself under her
  • tuition. Won't she have a precious pupil? Drop a hint to her, Lina,
  • that, though a well-meaning, I am rather a neglected character, and then
  • she will feel less scandalized at my ignorance about clothing societies
  • and such things."
  • On the morrow Caroline found Shirley sitting gravely at her desk, with
  • an account-book, a bundle of banknotes, and a well-filled purse before
  • her. She was looking mighty serious, but a little puzzled. She said she
  • had been "casting an eye" over the weekly expenditure in housekeeping at
  • the hall, trying to find out where she could retrench; that she had also
  • just given audience to Mrs. Gill, the cook, and had sent that person
  • away with a notion that her (Shirley's) brain was certainly crazed. "I
  • have lectured her on the duty of being careful," said she, "in a way
  • quite new to her. So eloquent was I on the text of economy that I
  • surprised myself; for, you see, it is altogether a fresh idea. I never
  • thought, much less spoke, on the subject till lately. But it is all
  • theory; for when I came to the practical part I could retrench nothing.
  • I had not firmness to take off a single pound of butter, or to prosecute
  • to any clear result an inquest into the destiny of either dripping,
  • lard, bread, cold meat, or other kitchen perquisite whatever. I know we
  • never get up illuminations at Fieldhead, but I could not ask the meaning
  • of sundry quite unaccountable pounds of candles. We do not wash for the
  • parish, yet I viewed in silence items of soap and bleaching-powder
  • calculated to satisfy the solicitude of the most anxious inquirer after
  • our position in reference to those articles. Carnivorous I am not, nor
  • is Mrs. Pryor, nor is Mrs. Gill herself, yet I only hemmed and opened my
  • eyes a little wide when I saw butchers' bills whose figures seemed to
  • prove that fact--falsehood, I mean. Caroline, you may laugh at me, but
  • you can't change me. I am a poltroon on certain points; I feel it. There
  • is a base alloy of moral cowardice in my composition. I blushed and hung
  • my head before Mrs. Gill, when she ought to have been faltering
  • confessions to me. I found it impossible to get up the spirit even to
  • hint, much less to prove, to her that she was a cheat. I have no calm
  • dignity, no true courage about me."
  • "Shirley, what fit of self-injustice is this? My uncle, who is not given
  • to speak well of women, says there are not ten thousand men in England
  • as genuinely fearless as you."
  • "I am fearless, physically; I am never nervous about danger. I was not
  • startled from self-possession when Mr. Wynne's great red bull rose with
  • a bellow before my face, as I was crossing the cowslip lea alone,
  • stooped his begrimed, sullen head, and made a run at me; but I was
  • afraid of seeing Mrs. Gill brought to shame and confusion of face. You
  • have twice--ten times--my strength of mind on certain subjects,
  • Caroline. You, whom no persuasion can induce to pass a bull, however
  • quiet he looks, would have firmly shown my housekeeper she had done
  • wrong; then you would have gently and wisely admonished her; and at
  • last, I dare say, provided she had seemed penitent, you would have very
  • sweetly forgiven her. Of this conduct I am incapable. However, in spite
  • of exaggerated imposition, I still find we live within our means. I have
  • money in hand, and I really must do some good with it. The Briarfield
  • poor are badly off; they must be helped. What ought I to do, think you,
  • Lina? Had I not better distribute the cash at once?"
  • "No, indeed, Shirley; you will not manage properly. I have often noticed
  • that your only notion of charity is to give shillings and half-crowns in
  • a careless, free-handed sort of way, which is liable to continual abuse.
  • You must have a prime minister, or you will get yourself into a series
  • of scrapes. You suggested Miss Ainley yourself; to Miss Ainley I will
  • apply. And, meantime, promise to keep quiet, and not begin throwing away
  • your money. What a great deal you have, Shirley! You must feel very rich
  • with all that?"
  • "Yes; I feel of consequence. It is not an immense sum, but I feel
  • responsible for its disposal; and really this responsibility weighs on
  • my mind more heavily than I could have expected. They say that there are
  • some families almost starving to death in Briarfield. Some of my own
  • cottagers are in wretched circumstances. I must and will help them."
  • "Some people say we shouldn't give alms to the poor, Shirley."
  • "They are great fools for their pains. For those who are not hungry, it
  • is easy to palaver about the degradation of charity, and so on: but they
  • forget the brevity of life, as well as its bitterness. We have none of
  • us long to live. Let us help each other through seasons of want and woe
  • as well as we can, without heeding in the least the scruples of vain
  • philosophy."
  • "But you do help others, Shirley. You give a great deal as it is."
  • "Not enough. I must give more, or, I tell you, my brother's blood will
  • some day be crying to Heaven against me. For, after all, if political
  • incendiaries come here to kindle conflagration in the neighbourhood, and
  • my property is attacked, I shall defend it like a tigress--I know I
  • shall. Let me listen to Mercy as long as she is near me. Her voice once
  • drowned by the shout of ruffian defiance, and I shall be full of
  • impulses to resist and quell. If once the poor gather and rise in the
  • form of the mob, I shall turn against them as an aristocrat; if they
  • bully me, I must defy: if they attack, I must resist, and I will."
  • "You talk like Robert."
  • "I feel like Robert, only more fierily. Let them meddle with Robert, or
  • Robert's mill, or Robert's interests, and I shall hate them. At present
  • I am no patrician, nor do I regard the poor around me as plebeians; but
  • if once they violently wrong me or mine, and then presume to dictate to
  • us, I shall quite forget pity for their wretchedness and respect for
  • their poverty, in scorn of their ignorance and wrath at their
  • insolence."
  • "Shirley, how your eyes flash!"
  • "Because my soul burns. Would you, any more than me, let Robert be borne
  • down by numbers?"
  • "If I had your power to aid Robert, I would use it as you mean to use
  • it. If I could be such a friend to him as you can be, I would stand by
  • him, as you mean to stand by him, till death."
  • "And now, Lina, though your eyes don't flash, they glow. You drop your
  • lids; but I saw a kindled spark. However, it is not yet come to
  • fighting. What I want to do is to _prevent_ mischief. I cannot forget,
  • either day or night, that these embittered feelings of the poor against
  • the rich have been generated in suffering: they would neither hate nor
  • envy us if they did not deem us so much happier than themselves. To
  • allay this suffering, and thereby lessen this hate, let me, out of my
  • abundance, give abundantly; and that the donation may go farther, let it
  • be made wisely. To that intent, we must introduce some clear, calm,
  • practical sense into our councils. So go and fetch Miss Ainley."
  • Without another word Caroline put on her bonnet and departed. It may,
  • perhaps, appear strange that neither she nor Shirley thought of
  • consulting Mrs. Pryor on their scheme; but they were wise in abstaining.
  • To have consulted her--and this they knew by instinct--would only have
  • been to involve her in painful embarrassment. She was far better
  • informed, better read, a deeper thinker than Miss Ainley, but of
  • administrative energy, of executive activity, she had none. She would
  • subscribe her own modest mite to a charitable object willingly--secret
  • almsgiving suited her; but in public plans, on a large scale, she could
  • take no part; as to originating them, that was out of the question. This
  • Shirley knew, and therefore she did not trouble Mrs. Pryor by unavailing
  • conferences, which could only remind her of her own deficiencies, and do
  • no good.
  • It was a bright day for Miss Ainley when she was summoned to Fieldhead
  • to deliberate on projects so congenial to her; when she was seated with
  • all honour and deference at a table with paper, pen, ink, and--what was
  • best of all--cash before her, and requested to draw up a regular plan
  • for administering relief to the destitute poor of Briarfield. She, who
  • knew them all, had studied their wants, had again and again felt in what
  • way they might best be succoured, could the means of succour only be
  • found, was fully competent to the undertaking, and a meek exultation
  • gladdened her kind heart as she felt herself able to answer clearly and
  • promptly the eager questions put by the two young girls, as she showed
  • them in her answers how much and what serviceable knowledge she had
  • acquired of the condition of her fellow-creatures around her.
  • Shirley placed at her disposal £300, and at sight of the money Miss
  • Ainley's eyes filled with joyful tears; for she already saw the hungry
  • fed, the naked clothed, the sick comforted thereby. She quickly drew up
  • a simple, sensible plan for its expenditure; and she assured them
  • brighter times would now come round, for she doubted not the lady of
  • Fieldhead's example would be followed by others. She should try to get
  • additional subscriptions, and to form a fund; but first she must consult
  • the clergy. Yes, on that point she was peremptory. Mr. Helstone, Dr.
  • Boultby, Mr. Hall, _must_ be consulted (for not only must Briarfield be
  • relieved, but Whinbury and Nunnely). It would, she averred, be
  • presumption in her to take a single step unauthorized by them.
  • The clergy were sacred beings in Miss Ainley's eyes; no matter what
  • might be the insignificance of the individual, his station made him
  • holy. The very curates--who, in their trivial arrogance, were hardly
  • worthy to tie her patten-strings, or carry her cotton umbrella, or check
  • woollen shawl--she, in her pure, sincere enthusiasm, looked upon as
  • sucking saints. No matter how clearly their little vices and enormous
  • absurdities were pointed out to her, she could not see them; she was
  • blind to ecclesiastical defects; the white surplice covered a multitude
  • of sins.
  • Shirley, knowing this harmless infatuation on the part of her
  • recently-chosen prime minister, stipulated expressly that the curates
  • were to have no voice in the disposal of the money, that their meddling
  • fingers were not to be inserted into the pie. The rectors, of course,
  • must be paramount, and they might be trusted. They had some experience,
  • some sagacity, and Mr. Hall, at least, had sympathy and loving-kindness
  • for his fellow-men; but as for the youth under them, they must be set
  • aside, kept down, and taught that subordination and silence best became
  • their years and capacity.
  • It was with some horror Miss Ainley heard this language. Caroline,
  • however, interposing with a mild word or two in praise of Mr Sweeting,
  • calmed her again. Sweeting was, indeed, her own favourite. She
  • endeavoured to respect Messrs. Malone and Donne, but the slices of
  • sponge-cake and glasses of cowslip or primrose wine she had at different
  • times administered to Sweeting, when he came to see her in her little
  • cottage, were ever offered with sentiments of truly motherly regard. The
  • same innocuous collation she had once presented to Malone; but that
  • personage evinced such open scorn of the offering, she had never
  • ventured to renew it. To Donne she always served the treat, and was
  • happy to see his approbation of it proved beyond a doubt by the fact of
  • his usually eating two pieces of cake, and putting a third in his
  • pocket.
  • Indefatigable in her exertions where good was to be done, Miss Ainley
  • would immediately have set out on a walk of ten miles round to the three
  • rectors, in order to show her plan, and humbly solicit their approval;
  • but Miss Keeldar interdicted this, and proposed, as an amendment, to
  • collect the clergy in a small select reunion that evening at Fieldhead.
  • Miss Ainley was to meet them, and the plan was to be discussed in full
  • privy council.
  • Shirley managed to get the senior priesthood together accordingly, and
  • before the old maid's arrival, she had, further, talked all the
  • gentlemen into the most charming mood imaginable. She herself had taken
  • in hand Dr. Boultby and Mr. Helstone. The first was a stubborn old
  • Welshman, hot, opinionated, and obstinate, but withal a man who did a
  • great deal of good, though not without making some noise about it. The
  • latter we know. She had rather a friendly feeling for both, especially
  • for old Helstone; and it cost her no trouble to be quite delightful to
  • them. She took them round the garden; she gathered them flowers; she was
  • like a kind daughter to them. Mr. Hall she left to Caroline--or rather,
  • it was to Caroline's care Mr. Hall consigned himself.
  • He generally sought Caroline in every party where she and he happened to
  • be. He was not in general a lady's man, though all ladies liked him;
  • something of a book-worm he was, near-sighted, spectacled, now and then
  • abstracted. To old ladies he was kind as a son. To men of every
  • occupation and grade he was acceptable. The truth, simplicity, frankness
  • of his manners, the nobleness of his integrity, the reality and
  • elevation of his piety, won him friends in every grade. His poor clerk
  • and sexton delighted in him; the noble patron of his living esteemed him
  • highly. It was only with young, handsome, fashionable, and stylish
  • ladies he felt a little shy. Being himself a plain man--plain in aspect,
  • plain in manners, plain in speech--he seemed to fear their dash,
  • elegance, and airs. But Miss Helstone had neither dash nor airs, and her
  • native elegance was of a very quiet order--quiet as the beauty of a
  • ground-loving hedge-flower. He was a fluent, cheerful, agreeable talker.
  • Caroline could talk too in a _tête-à-tête_. She liked Mr. Hall to come
  • and take the seat next her in a party, and thus secure her from Peter
  • Augustus Malone, Joseph Donne, or John Sykes; and Mr. Hall never failed
  • to avail himself of this privilege when he possibly could. Such
  • preference shown by a single gentleman to a single lady would certainly,
  • in ordinary cases, have set in motion the tongues of the gossips; but
  • Cyril Hall was forty-five years old, slightly bald, and slightly gray,
  • and nobody ever said or thought he was likely to be married to Miss
  • Helstone. Nor did he think so himself. He was wedded already to his
  • books and his parish. His kind sister Margaret, spectacled and learned
  • like himself, made him happy in his single state; he considered it too
  • late to change. Besides, he had known Caroline as a pretty little girl.
  • She had sat on his knee many a time; he had bought her toys and given
  • her books; he felt that her friendship for him was mixed with a sort of
  • filial respect; he could not have brought himself to attempt to give
  • another colour to her sentiments, and his serene mind could glass a fair
  • image without feeling its depths troubled by the reflection.
  • When Miss Ainley arrived, she was made kindly welcome by every one. Mrs.
  • Pryor and Margaret Hall made room for her on the sofa between them; and
  • when the three were seated, they formed a trio which the gay and
  • thoughtless would have scorned, indeed, as quite worthless and
  • unattractive--a middle-aged widow and two plain, spectacled old
  • maids--yet which had its own quiet value, as many a suffering and
  • friendless human being knew.
  • Shirley opened the business and showed the plan.
  • "I know the hand which drew up that," said Mr. Hall, glancing at Miss
  • Ainley, and smiling benignantly. His approbation was won at once.
  • Boultby heard and deliberated with bent brow and protruded under lip.
  • His consent he considered too weighty to be given in a hurry. Helstone
  • glanced sharply round with an alert, suspicious expression, as if he
  • apprehended that female craft was at work, and that something in
  • petticoats was somehow trying underhand to acquire too much influence,
  • and make itself of too much importance. Shirley caught and comprehended
  • the expression. "This scheme is nothing," said she carelessly. "It is
  • only an outline--a mere suggestion. You, gentlemen, are requested to
  • draw up rules of your own."
  • And she directly fetched her writing-case, smiling queerly to herself as
  • she bent over the table where it stood. She produced a sheet of paper, a
  • new pen, drew an arm-chair to the table, and presenting her hand to old
  • Helstone, begged permission to install him in it. For a minute he was a
  • little stiff, and stood wrinkling his copper-coloured forehead
  • strangely. At last he muttered, "Well, you are neither my wife nor my
  • daughter, so I'll be led for once; but mind--I know I _am_ led. Your
  • little female manœuvres don't blind me."
  • "Oh!" said Shirley, dipping the pen in the ink, and putting it into his
  • hand, "you must regard me as Captain Keeldar to-day. This is quite a
  • gentleman's affair--yours and mine entirely, doctor" (so she had dubbed
  • the rector). "The ladies there are only to be our aides-de-camp, and at
  • their peril they speak, till we have settled the whole business."
  • He smiled a little grimly, and began to write. He soon interrupted
  • himself to ask questions, and consult his brethren, disdainfully lifting
  • his glance over the curly heads of the two girls and the demure caps of
  • the elder ladies, to meet the winking glasses and gray pates of the
  • priests. In the discussion which ensued, all three gentlemen, to their
  • infinite credit, showed a thorough acquaintance with the poor of their
  • parishes--an even minute knowledge of their separate wants. Each rector
  • knew where clothing was needed, where food would be most acceptable,
  • where money could be bestowed with a probability of it being judiciously
  • laid out. Wherever their memories fell short, Miss Ainley or Miss Hall,
  • if applied to, could help them out; but both ladies took care not to
  • speak unless spoken to. Neither of them wanted to be foremost, but each
  • sincerely desired to be useful; and useful the clergy consented to make
  • them--with which boon they were content.
  • Shirley stood behind the rectors, leaning over their shoulders now and
  • then to glance at the rules drawn up and the list of cases making out,
  • listening to all they said, and still at intervals smiling her queer
  • smile--a smile not ill-natured, but significant--too significant to be
  • generally thought amiable. Men rarely like such of their fellows as read
  • their inward nature too clearly and truly. It is good for women,
  • especially, to be endowed with a soft blindness; to have mild, dim eyes,
  • that never penetrate below the surface of things--that take all for what
  • it seems. Thousands, knowing this, keep their eyelids drooped on system;
  • but the most downcast glance has its loophole, through which it can, on
  • occasion, take its sentinel-survey of life. I remember once seeing a
  • pair of blue eyes, that were usually thought sleepy, secretly on the
  • alert, and I knew by their expression--an expression which chilled my
  • blood, it was in that quarter so wondrously unexpected--that for years
  • they had been accustomed to silent soul-reading. The world called the
  • owner of these blue eyes _bonne petite femme_ (she was not an
  • Englishwoman). I learned her nature afterwards--got it off by
  • heart--studied it in its farthest, most hidden recesses. She was the
  • finest, deepest, subtlest schemer in Europe.
  • When all was at length settled to Miss Keeldar's mind, and the clergy
  • had entered so fully into the spirit of her plans as to head the
  • subscription-list with their signatures for £50 each, she ordered supper
  • to be served, having previously directed Mrs. Gill to exercise her
  • utmost skill in the preparation of this repast. Mr. Hall was no _bon
  • vivant_--he was naturally an abstemious man, indifferent to luxury; but
  • Boultby and Helstone both liked good cookery. The _recherché_ supper
  • consequently put them into excellent humour. They did justice to it,
  • though in a gentlemanly way--not in the mode Mr. Donne would have done
  • had he been present. A glass of fine wine was likewise tasted, with
  • discerning though most decorous relish. Captain Keeldar was complimented
  • on his taste; the compliment charmed him. It had been his aim to gratify
  • and satisfy his priestly guests. He had succeeded, and was radiant with
  • glee.
  • CHAPTER XV.
  • MR. DONNE'S EXODUS.
  • The next day Shirley expressed to Caroline how delighted she felt that
  • the little party had gone off so well.
  • "I rather like to entertain a circle of gentlemen," said she. "It is
  • amusing to observe how they enjoy a judiciously concocted repast. For
  • ourselves, you see, these choice wines and these scientific dishes are
  • of no importance to us; but gentlemen seem to retain something of the
  • _naïveté_ of children about food, and one likes to please them--that is,
  • when they show the becoming, decent self-government of our admirable
  • rectors. I watch Moore sometimes, to try and discover how he can be
  • pleased; but he has not that child's simplicity about him. Did you ever
  • find out his accessible point, Caroline? you have seen more of him than
  • I."
  • "It is not, at any rate, that of my uncle and Dr. Boultby," returned
  • Caroline, smiling. She always felt a sort of shy pleasure in following
  • Miss Keeldar's lead respecting the discussion of her cousin's character.
  • Left to herself, she would never have touched on the subject; but when
  • invited, the temptation of talking about him of whom she was ever
  • thinking was irresistible. "But," she added, "I really don't know what
  • it is, for I never watched Robert in my life but my scrutiny was
  • presently baffled by finding he was watching me."
  • "There it is!" exclaimed Shirley. "You can't fix your eyes on him but
  • his presently flash on you. He is never off his guard. He won't give you
  • an advantage. Even when he does not look at you, his thoughts seem to be
  • busy amongst your own thoughts, tracing your words and actions to their
  • source, contemplating your motives at his ease. Oh! I know that sort of
  • character, or something in the same style. It is one that piques me
  • singularly. How does it affect you?"
  • This question was a specimen of one of Shirley's sharp, sudden turns.
  • Caroline used to be fluttered by them at first, but she had now got into
  • the way of parrying these home-thrusts like a little Quakeress.
  • "Pique you? In what way does it pique you?" she said.
  • "Here he comes!" suddenly exclaimed Shirley, breaking off, starting up
  • and running to the window. "Here comes a diversion. I never told you of
  • a superb conquest I have made lately--made at those parties to which I
  • can never persuade you to accompany me; and the thing has been done
  • without effort or intention on my part--that I aver. There is the
  • bell--and, by all that's delicious! there are two of them. Do they never
  • hunt, then, except in couples? You may have one, Lina, and you may take
  • your choice. I hope I am generous enough. Listen to Tartar!"
  • The black-muzzled, tawny dog, a glimpse of which was seen in the chapter
  • which first introduced its mistress to the reader, here gave tongue in
  • the hall, amidst whose hollow space the deep bark resounded formidably.
  • A growl more terrible than the bark, menacing as muttered thunder,
  • succeeded.
  • "Listen!" again cried Shirley, laughing. "You would think that the
  • prelude to a bloody onslaught. They will be frightened. They don't know
  • old Tartar as I do. They are not aware his uproars are all sound and
  • fury, signifying nothing!"
  • Some bustle was heard. "Down, sir, down!" exclaimed a high-toned,
  • imperious voice, and then came a crack of a cane or whip. Immediately
  • there was a yell--a scutter--a run--a positive tumult.
  • "O Malone, Malone!"
  • "Down! down! down!" cried the high voice.
  • "He really is worrying them!" exclaimed Shirley. "They have struck him.
  • A blow is what he is not used to, and will not take."
  • Out she ran. A gentleman was fleeing up the oak staircase, making for
  • refuge in the gallery or chambers in hot haste; another was backing fast
  • to the stairfoot, wildly flourishing a knotty stick, at the same time
  • reiterating, "Down! down! down!" while the tawny dog bayed, bellowed,
  • howled at him, and a group of servants came bundling from the kitchen.
  • The dog made a spring; the second gentleman turned tail and rushed after
  • his comrade. The first was already safe in a bedroom; he held the door
  • against his fellow--nothing so merciless as terror. But the other
  • fugitive struggled hard; the door was about to yield to his strength.
  • "Gentlemen," was uttered in Miss Keeldar's silvery but vibrating tones,
  • "spare my locks, if you please. Calm yourselves! Come down! Look at
  • Tartar; he won't harm a cat."
  • She was caressing the said Tartar. He lay crouched at her feet, his fore
  • paws stretched out, his tail still in threatening agitation, his
  • nostrils snorting, his bulldog eyes conscious of a dull fire. He was an
  • honest, phlegmatic, stupid, but stubborn canine character. He loved his
  • mistress and John--the man who fed him--but was mostly indifferent to
  • the rest of the world. Quiet enough he was, unless struck or threatened
  • with a stick, and that put a demon into him at once.
  • "Mr. Malone, how do you do?" continued Shirley, lifting up her mirth-lit
  • face to the gallery. "That is not the way to the oak parlour; that is
  • Mrs. Pryor's apartment. Request your friend Mr. Donne to evacuate. I
  • shall have the greatest pleasure in receiving him in a lower room."
  • "Ha! ha!" cried Malone, in hollow laughter, quitting the door, and
  • leaning over the massive balustrade. "Really that animal alarmed Donne.
  • He is a little timid," he proceeded, stiffening himself, and walking
  • trimly to the stairhead. "I thought it better to follow, in order to
  • reassure him."
  • "It appears you did. Well, come down, if you please.--John" (turning to
  • her manservant), "go upstairs and liberate Mr. Donne.--Take care, Mr.
  • Malone; the stairs are slippery."
  • In truth they were, being of polished oak. The caution came a little
  • late for Malone. He had slipped already in his stately descent, and was
  • only saved from falling by a clutch at the banisters, which made the
  • whole structure creak again.
  • Tartar seemed to think the visitor's descent effected with unwarranted
  • _éclat_, and accordingly he growled once more. Malone, however, was no
  • coward. The spring of the dog had taken him by surprise, but he passed
  • him now in suppressed fury rather than fear. If a look could have
  • strangled Tartar, he would have breathed no more. Forgetting politeness
  • in his sullen rage, Malone pushed into the parlour before Miss Keeldar.
  • He glanced at Miss Helstone; he could scarcely bring himself to bend to
  • her. He glared on both the ladies. He looked as if, had either of them
  • been his wife, he would have made a glorious husband at the moment. In
  • each hand he seemed as if he would have liked to clutch one and gripe
  • her to death.
  • However, Shirley took pity. She ceased to laugh; and Caroline was too
  • true a lady to smile even at any one under mortification. Tartar was
  • dismissed; Peter Augustus was soothed--for Shirley had looks and tones
  • that might soothe a very bull. He had sense to feel that, since he could
  • not challenge the owner of the dog, he had better be civil. And civil he
  • tried to be; and his attempts being well received, he grew presently
  • _very_ civil and quite himself again. He had come, indeed, for the
  • express purpose of making himself charming and fascinating. Rough
  • portents had met him on his first admission to Fieldhead; but that
  • passage got over, charming and fascinating he resolved to be. Like
  • March, having come in like a lion, he purposed to go out like a lamb.
  • For the sake of air, as it appeared, or perhaps for that of ready exit
  • in case of some new emergency arising, he took his seat,--not on the
  • sofa, where Miss Keeldar offered him enthronization, nor yet near the
  • fireside, to which Caroline, by a friendly sign, gently invited him, but
  • on a chair close to the door. Being no longer sullen or furious, he
  • grew, after his fashion, constrained and embarrassed. He talked to the
  • ladies by fits and starts, choosing for topics whatever was most
  • intensely commonplace. He sighed deeply, significantly, at the close of
  • every sentence; he sighed in each pause; he sighed ere he opened his
  • mouth. At last, finding it desirable to add ease to his other charms, he
  • drew forth to aid him an ample silk pocket-handkerchief. This was to be
  • the graceful toy with which his unoccupied hands were to trifle. He went
  • to work with a certain energy. He folded the red-and-yellow square
  • cornerwise; he whipped it open with a waft; again he folded it in
  • narrower compass; he made of it a handsome band. To what purpose would
  • he proceed to apply the ligature? Would he wrap it about his throat--his
  • head? Should it be a comforter or a turban? Neither. Peter Augustus had
  • an inventive, an original genius. He was about to show the ladies graces
  • of action possessing at least the charm of novelty. He sat on the chair
  • with his athletic Irish legs crossed, and these legs, in that attitude,
  • he circled with the bandana and bound firmly together. It was evident
  • he felt this device to be worth an encore; he repeated it more than
  • once. The second performance sent Shirley to the window, to laugh her
  • silent but irrepressible laugh unseen; it turned Caroline's head aside,
  • that her long curls might screen the smile mantling on her features.
  • Miss Helstone, indeed, was amused by more than one point in Peter's
  • demeanour. She was edified at the complete though abrupt diversion of
  • his homage from herself to the heiress. The £5,000 he supposed her
  • likely one day to inherit were not to be weighed in the balance against
  • Miss Keeldar's estate and hall. He took no pains to conceal his
  • calculations and tactics. He pretended to no gradual change of views; he
  • wheeled about at once. The pursuit of the lesser fortune was openly
  • relinquished for that of the greater. On what grounds he expected to
  • succeed in his chase himself best knew; certainly not by skilful
  • management.
  • From the length of time that elapsed, it appeared that John had some
  • difficulty in persuading Mr. Donne to descend. At length, however, that
  • gentleman appeared; nor, as he presented himself at the oak-parlour
  • door, did he seem in the slightest degree ashamed or confused--not a
  • whit. Donne, indeed, was of that coldly phlegmatic, immovably
  • complacent, densely self-satisfied nature which is insensible to shame.
  • He had never blushed in his life; no humiliation could abash him; his
  • nerves were not capable of sensation enough to stir his life and make
  • colour mount to his cheek; he had no fire in his blood and no modesty in
  • his soul; he was a frontless, arrogant, decorous slip of the
  • commonplace--conceited, inane, insipid; and this gentleman had a notion
  • of wooing Miss Keeldar! He knew no more, however, how to set about the
  • business than if he had been an image carved in wood. He had no idea of
  • a taste to be pleased, a heart to be reached in courtship. His notion
  • was, when he should have formally visited her a few times, to write a
  • letter proposing marriage. Then he calculated she would accept him for
  • love of his office; then they would be married; then he should be master
  • of Fieldhead; and he should live very comfortably, have servants at his
  • command, eat and drink of the best, and be a great man. You would not
  • have suspected his intentions when he addressed his intended bride in an
  • impertinent, injured tone--"A very dangerous dog that, Miss Keeldar. I
  • wonder you should keep such an animal."
  • "Do you, Mr. Donne? Perhaps you will wonder more when I tell you I am
  • very fond of him."
  • "I should say you are not serious in the assertion. Can't fancy a lady
  • fond of that brute--'tis so ugly--a mere carter's dog. Pray hang him."
  • "Hang what I am fond of!"
  • "And purchase in his stead some sweetly pooty pug or poodle--something
  • appropriate to the fair sex. Ladies generally like lap-dogs."
  • "Perhaps I am an exception."
  • "Oh, you can't be, you know. All ladies are alike in those matters. That
  • is universally allowed."
  • "Tartar frightened you terribly, Mr. Donne. I hope you won't take any
  • harm."
  • "That I shall, no doubt. He gave me a turn I shall not soon forget. When
  • I _sor_ him" (such was Mr. Donne's pronunciation) "about to spring, I
  • thought I should have fainted."
  • "Perhaps you did faint in the bedroom; you were a long time there."
  • "No; I bore up that I might hold the door fast. I was determined not to
  • let any one enter. I thought I would keep a barrier between me and the
  • enemy."
  • "But what if your friend Mr. Malone had been worried?"
  • "Malone must take care of himself. Your man persuaded me to come out at
  • last by saying the dog was chained up in his kennel. If I had not been
  • assured of this, I would have remained all day in the chamber. But what
  • is that? I declare the man has told a falsehood! The dog is there!"
  • And indeed Tartar walked past the glass door opening to the garden,
  • stiff, tawny, and black-muzzled as ever. He still seemed in bad humour.
  • He was growling again, and whistling a half-strangled whistle, being an
  • inheritance from the bulldog side of his ancestry.
  • "There are other visitors coming," observed Shirley, with that provoking
  • coolness which the owners of formidable-looking dogs are apt to show
  • while their animals are all bristle and bay. Tartar sprang down the
  • pavement towards the gate, bellowing _avec explosion_. His mistress
  • quietly opened the glass door, and stepped out chirruping to him. His
  • bellow was already silenced, and he was lifting up his huge, blunt,
  • stupid head to the new callers to be patted.
  • "What! Tartar, Tartar!" said a cheery, rather boyish voice, "don't you
  • know us? Good-morning, old boy!"
  • And little Mr. Sweeting, whose conscious good nature made him
  • comparatively fearless of man, woman, child, or brute, came through the
  • gate, caressing the guardian. His vicar, Mr. Hall, followed. He had no
  • fear of Tartar either, and Tartar had no ill-will to him. He snuffed
  • both the gentlemen round, and then, as if concluding that they were
  • harmless, and might be allowed to pass, he withdrew to the sunny front
  • of the hall, leaving the archway free. Mr. Sweeting followed, and would
  • have played with him; but Tartar took no notice of his caresses. It was
  • only his mistress's hand whose touch gave him pleasure; to all others he
  • showed himself obstinately insensible.
  • Shirley advanced to meet Messrs. Hall and Sweeting, shaking hands with
  • them cordially. They were come to tell her of certain successes they had
  • achieved that morning in applications for subscriptions to the fund. Mr.
  • Hall's eyes beamed benignantly through his spectacles, his plain face
  • looked positively handsome with goodness; and when Caroline, seeing who
  • was come, ran out to meet him, and put both her hands into his, he gazed
  • down on her with a gentle, serene, affectionate expression that gave him
  • the aspect of a smiling Melanchthon.
  • Instead of re-entering the house, they strayed through the garden, the
  • ladies walking one on each side of Mr. Hall. It was a breezy sunny day;
  • the air freshened the girls' cheeks and gracefully dishevelled their
  • ringlets. Both of them looked pretty--one gay. Mr. Hall spoke oftenest
  • to his brilliant companion, looked most frequently at the quiet one.
  • Miss Keeldar gathered handfuls of the profusely blooming flowers whose
  • perfume filled the enclosure. She gave some to Caroline, telling her to
  • choose a nosegay for Mr. Hall; and with her lap filled with delicate and
  • splendid blossoms, Caroline sat down on the steps of a summer-house. The
  • vicar stood near her, leaning on his cane.
  • Shirley, who could not be inhospitable, now called out the neglected
  • pair in the oak parlour. She convoyed Donne past his dread enemy Tartar,
  • who, with his nose on his fore paws, lay snoring under the meridian sun.
  • Donne was not grateful--he never _was_ grateful for kindness and
  • attention--but he was glad of the safeguard. Miss Keeldar, desirous of
  • being impartial, offered the curates flowers. They accepted them with
  • native awkwardness. Malone seemed specially at a loss, when a bouquet
  • filled one hand, while his shillelah occupied the other. Donne's "Thank
  • you!" was rich to hear. It was the most fatuous and arrogant of sounds,
  • implying that he considered this offering a homage to his merits, and an
  • attempt on the part of the heiress to ingratiate herself into his
  • priceless affections. Sweeting alone received the posy like a smart,
  • sensible little man, as he was, putting it gallantly and nattily into
  • his buttonhole.
  • As a reward for his good manners, Miss Keeldar, beckoning him apart,
  • gave him some commission, which made his eyes sparkle with glee. Away he
  • flew, round by the courtyard to the kitchen. No need to give him
  • directions; he was always at home everywhere. Ere long he reappeared,
  • carrying a round table, which he placed under the cedar; then he
  • collected six garden-chairs from various nooks and bowers in the
  • grounds, and placed them in a circle. The parlour-maid--Miss Keeldar
  • kept no footman--came out, bearing a napkin-covered tray. Sweeting's
  • nimble fingers aided in disposing glasses, plates, knives, and forks; he
  • assisted her too in setting forth a neat luncheon, consisting of cold
  • chicken, ham, and tarts.
  • This sort of impromptu regale it was Shirley's delight to offer any
  • chance guests; and nothing pleased her better than to have an alert,
  • obliging little friend, like Sweeting, to run about her hand, cheerily
  • receive and briskly execute her hospitable hints. David and she were on
  • the best terms in the world; and his devotion to the heiress was quite
  • disinterested, since it prejudiced in nothing his faithful allegiance to
  • the magnificent Dora Sykes.
  • The repast turned out a very merry one. Donne and Malone, indeed,
  • contributed but little to its vivacity, the chief part they played in it
  • being what concerned the knife, fork, and wine-glass; but where four
  • such natures as Mr. Hall, David Sweeting, Shirley, and Caroline were
  • assembled in health and amity, on a green lawn, under a sunny sky,
  • amidst a wilderness of flowers, there could not be ungenial dullness.
  • In the course of conversation Mr. Hall reminded the ladies that
  • Whitsuntide was approaching, when the grand united Sunday-school
  • tea-drinking and procession of the three parishes of Briarfield,
  • Whinbury, and Nunnely were to take place. Caroline, he knew, would be at
  • her post as teacher, he said, and he hoped Miss Keeldar would not be
  • wanting. He hoped she would make her first public appearance amongst
  • them at that time. Shirley was not the person to miss an occasion of
  • this sort. She liked festive excitement, a gathering of happiness, a
  • concentration and combination of pleasant details, a throng of glad
  • faces, a muster of elated hearts. She told Mr. Hall they might count on
  • her with security. She did not know what she would have to do, but they
  • might dispose of her as they pleased.
  • "And," said Caroline, "you will promise to come to my table, and to sit
  • near me, Mr. Hall?"
  • "I shall not fail, _Deo volente_," said he.--"I have occupied the place
  • on her right hand at these monster tea-drinkings for the last six
  • years," he proceeded, turning to Miss Keeldar. "They made her a
  • Sunday-school teacher when she was a little girl of twelve. She is not
  • particularly self-confident by nature, as you may have observed; and the
  • first time she had to 'take a tray,' as the phrase is, and make tea in
  • public, there was some piteous trembling and flushing. I observed the
  • speechless panic, the cups shaking in the little hand, and the
  • overflowing teapot filled too full from the urn. I came to her aid, took
  • a seat near her, managed the urn and the slop-basin, and in fact made
  • the tea for her like any old woman."
  • "I was very grateful to you," interposed Caroline.
  • "You were. You told me so with an earnest sincerity that repaid me well,
  • inasmuch as it was not like the majority of little ladies of twelve,
  • whom you may help and caress for ever without their evincing any quicker
  • sense of the kindness done and meant than if they were made of wax and
  • wood instead of flesh and nerves.--She kept close to me, Miss Keeldar,
  • the rest of the evening, walking with me over the grounds where the
  • children were playing; she followed me into the vestry when all were
  • summoned into church; she would, I believe, have mounted with me to the
  • pulpit, had I not taken the previous precaution of conducting her to the
  • rectory pew."
  • "And he has been my friend ever since," said Caroline.
  • "And always sat at her table, near her tray, and handed the cups--that
  • is the extent of my services. The next thing I do for her will be to
  • marry her some day to some curate or mill-owner.--But mind, Caroline, I
  • shall inquire about the bridegroom's character; and if he is not a
  • gentleman likely to render happy the little girl who walked with me
  • hand in hand over Nunnely Common, I will not officiate. So take care."
  • "The caution is useless. I am not going to be married. I shall live
  • single, like your sister Margaret, Mr. Hall."
  • "Very well. You might do worse. Margaret is not unhappy. She has her
  • books for a pleasure, and her brother for a care, and is content. If
  • ever you want a home, if the day should come when Briarfield rectory is
  • yours no longer, come to Nunnely vicarage. Should the old maid and
  • bachelor be still living, they will make you tenderly welcome."
  • "There are your flowers. Now," said Caroline, who had kept the nosegay
  • she had selected for him till this moment, "_you_ don't care for a
  • bouquet, but you must give it to Margaret; only--to be sentimental for
  • once--keep that little forget-me-not, which is a wild flower I gathered
  • from the grass; and--to be still more sentimental--let me take two or
  • three of the blue blossoms and put them in my souvenir."
  • And she took out a small book with enamelled cover and silver clasp,
  • wherein, having opened it, she inserted the flowers, writing round them
  • in pencil, "To be kept for the sake of the Rev. Cyril Hall, my friend.
  • May --, 18--."
  • The Rev. Cyril Hall, on his part, also placed a sprig in safety between
  • the leaves of a pocket Testament. He only wrote on the margin,
  • "Caroline."
  • "Now," said he, smiling, "I trust we are romantic enough. Miss Keeldar,"
  • he continued (the curates, by-the-bye, during this conversation, were
  • too much occupied with their own jokes to notice what passed at the
  • other end of the table), "I hope you are laughing at this trait of
  • '_exaltation_' in the old gray-headed vicar; but the fact is, I am so
  • used to comply with the requests of this young friend of yours, I don't
  • know how to refuse her when she tells me to do anything. You would say
  • it is not much in my way to traffic with flowers and forget-me-nots;
  • but, you see, when requested to be sentimental, I am obedient."
  • "He is naturally rather sentimental," remarked Caroline. "Margaret told
  • me so, and I know what pleases him."
  • "That you should be good and happy? Yes; that is one of my greatest
  • pleasures. May God long preserve to you the blessings of peace and
  • innocence! By which phrase I mean _comparative_ innocence; for in His
  • sight, I am well aware, _none_ are pure. What to our human perceptions
  • looks spotless as we fancy angels, is to Him but frailty, needing the
  • blood of His Son to cleanse, and the strength of His Spirit to sustain.
  • Let us each and all cherish humility--I, as you, my young friends; and
  • we may well do it when we look into our own hearts, and see there
  • temptations, inconsistencies, propensities, even we blush to recognize.
  • And it is not youth, nor good looks, nor grace, nor any gentle outside
  • charm which makes either beauty or goodness in God's eyes.--Young
  • ladies, when your mirror or men's tongues flatter you, remember that, in
  • the sight of her Maker, Mary Ann Ainley--a woman whom neither glass nor
  • lips have ever panegyrized--is fairer and better than either of you. She
  • is indeed," he added, after a pause--"she is indeed. You young things,
  • wrapt up in yourselves and in earthly hopes, scarcely live as Christ
  • lived. Perhaps you cannot do it yet, while existence is so sweet and
  • earth so smiling to you; it would be too much to expect. She, with meek
  • heart and due reverence, treads close in her Redeemer's steps."
  • Here the harsh voice of Donne broke in on the mild tones of Mr. Hall.
  • "Ahem!" he began, clearing his throat evidently for a speech of some
  • importance--"ahem! Miss Keeldar, your attention an instant, if you
  • please."
  • "Well," said Shirley nonchalantly, "what is it? I listen. All of me is
  • ear that is not eye."
  • "I hope part of you is hand also," returned Donne, in his vulgarly
  • presumptuous and familiar style, "and part purse. It is to the hand and
  • purse I propose to appeal. I came here this morning with a view to beg
  • of you----"
  • "You should have gone to Mrs. Gill; she is my almoner."
  • "To beg of you a subscription to a school. I and Dr. Boultby intend to
  • erect one in the hamlet of Ecclefigg, which is under our vicarage of
  • Whinbury. The Baptists have got possession of it. They have a chapel
  • there, and we want to dispute the ground."
  • "But I have nothing to do with Ecclefigg. I possess no property there."
  • "What does that signify? You're a churchwoman, ain't you?"
  • "Admirable creature!" muttered Shirley, under her breath. "Exquisite
  • address! Fine style! What raptures he excites in me!" Then aloud, "I am
  • a churchwoman, certainly."
  • "Then you can't refuse to contribute in this case. The population of
  • Ecclefigg are a parcel of brutes; we want to civilize them."
  • "Who is to be the missionary?"
  • "Myself, probably."
  • "You won't fail through lack of sympathy with your flock."
  • "I hope not--I expect success; but we must have money. There is the
  • paper. Pray give a handsome sum."
  • When asked for money, Shirley rarely held back. She put down her name
  • for £5. After the £300 she had lately given, and the many smaller sums
  • she was giving constantly, it was as much as she could at present
  • afford. Donne looked at it, declared the subscription "shabby," and
  • clamorously demanded more. Miss Keeldar flushed up with some indignation
  • and more astonishment.
  • "At present I shall give no more," said she.
  • "Not give more! Why, I expected you to head the list with a cool
  • hundred. With your property, you should never put down a signature for
  • less."
  • She was silent.
  • "In the south," went on Donne, "a lady with a thousand a year would be
  • ashamed to give five pounds for a public object."
  • Shirley, so rarely haughty, looked so now. Her slight frame became
  • nerved; her distinguished face quickened with scorn.
  • "Strange remarks?" said she--"most inconsiderate! Reproach in return for
  • bounty is misplaced."
  • "Bounty! Do you call five pounds bounty?"
  • "I do; and bounty which, had I not given it to Dr. Boultby's intended
  • school, of the erection of which I approve, and in no sort to his
  • curate, who seems ill-advised in his manner of applying for, or rather
  • extorting, subscriptions--bounty, I repeat, which, but for this
  • consideration, I should instantly reclaim."
  • Donne was thick-skinned. He did not feel all or half that the tone, air,
  • glance of the speaker expressed. He knew not on what ground he stood.
  • "Wretched place this Yorkshire," he went on. "I could never have formed
  • an idea_r_ of the country had I not seen it. And the people--rich and
  • poor--what a set! How _corse_ and uncultivated! They would be scouted in
  • the south."
  • Shirley leaned forwards on the table, her nostrils dilating a little,
  • her taper fingers interlaced and compressing each other hard.
  • "The rich," pursued the infatuated and unconscious Donne, "are a parcel
  • of misers, never living as persons with their incomes ought to live. You
  • scarsley"--(you must excuse Mr. Donne's pronunciation, reader; it was
  • very choice; he considered it genteel, and prided himself on his
  • southern accent; northern ears received with singular sensations his
  • utterance of certain words)--"you scarsley ever see a fam'ly where a
  • propa carriage or a reg'la butla is kep; and as to the poor--just look
  • at them when they come crowding about the church doors on the occasion
  • of a marriage or a funeral, clattering in clogs; the men in their
  • shirt-sleeves and wool-combers' aprons, the women in mob-caps and
  • bed-gowns. They positively deserve that one should turn a mad cow in
  • amongst them to rout their rabble-ranks. He-he! what fun it would be!"
  • "There! you have reached the climax," said Shirley quietly. "You have
  • reached the climax," she repeated, turning her glowing glance towards
  • him. "You cannot go beyond it, and," she added with emphasis, "you
  • _shall_ not, in my house."
  • Up she rose--nobody could control her now, for she was
  • exasperated--straight she walked to her garden gates, wide she flung
  • them open.
  • "Walk through," she said austerely, "and pretty quickly, and set foot on
  • this pavement no more."
  • Donne was astounded. He had thought all the time he was showing himself
  • off to high advantage, as a lofty-souled person of the first "ton;" he
  • imagined he was producing a crushing impression. Had he not expressed
  • disdain of everything in Yorkshire? What more conclusive proof could be
  • given that he was better than anything there? And yet here was he about
  • to be turned like a dog out of a Yorkshire garden! Where, under such
  • circumstances, was the "concatenation accordingly"?
  • "Rid me of you instantly--instantly!" reiterated Shirley, as he
  • lingered.
  • "Madam--a clergyman! turn out a clergyman!"
  • "Off! Were you an archbishop you have proved yourself no gentleman, and
  • must go. Quick!"
  • She was quite resolved. There was no trifling with her. Besides, Tartar
  • was again rising; he perceived symptoms of a commotion; he manifested a
  • disposition to join in. There was evidently nothing for it but to go,
  • and Donne made his exodus, the heiress sweeping him a deep curtsy as she
  • closed the gates on him.
  • "How dare the pompous priest abuse his flock! How dare the lisping
  • cockney revile Yorkshire!" was her sole observation on the circumstance,
  • as she returned to the table.
  • Ere long the little party broke up; Miss Keeldar's ruffled and darkened
  • brow, curled lip, and incensed eye gave no invitation to further social
  • enjoyment.
  • CHAPTER XVI.
  • WHITSUNTIDE.
  • The fund prospered. By dint of Miss Keeldar's example, the three
  • rectors' vigorous exertions, and the efficient though quiet aid of their
  • spinster and spectacled lieutenants, Mary Ann Ainley and Margaret Hall,
  • a handsome sum was raised; and this being judiciously managed, served
  • for the present greatly to alleviate the distress of the unemployed
  • poor. The neighbourhood seemed to grow calmer. For a fortnight past no
  • cloth had been destroyed; no outrage on mill or mansion had been
  • committed in the three parishes. Shirley was sanguine that the evil she
  • wished to avert was almost escaped, that the threatened storm was
  • passing over. With the approach of summer she felt certain that trade
  • would improve--it always did; and then this weary war could not last for
  • ever; peace must return one day. With peace, what an impulse would be
  • given to commerce!
  • Such was the usual tenor of her observations to her tenant, Gérard
  • Moore, whenever she met him where they could converse; and Moore would
  • listen very quietly--too quietly to satisfy her. She would then by her
  • impatient glance demand something more from him--some explanation, or at
  • least some additional remark. Smiling in his way, with that expression
  • which gave a remarkable cast of sweetness to his mouth, while his brow
  • remained grave, he would answer to the effect that himself too trusted
  • in the finite nature of the war; that it was indeed on that ground the
  • anchor of his hopes was fixed; thereon his speculations depended. "For
  • you are aware," he would continue, "that I now work Hollow's Mill
  • entirely on speculation. I sell nothing; there is no market for my
  • goods. I manufacture for a future day. I make myself ready to take
  • advantage of the first opening that shall occur. Three months ago this
  • was impossible to me; I had exhausted both credit and capital. You well
  • know who came to my rescue, from what hand I received the loan which
  • saved me. It is on the strength of that loan I am enabled to continue
  • the bold game which, a while since, I feared I should never play more.
  • Total ruin I know will follow loss, and I am aware that gain is
  • doubtful; but I am quite cheerful. So long as I can be active, so long
  • as I can strive, so long, in short, as my hands are not tied, it is
  • impossible for me to be depressed. One year--nay, but six months--of the
  • reign of the olive, and I am safe; for, as you say, peace will give an
  • impulse to commerce. In this you are right; but as to the restored
  • tranquillity of the neighbourhood, as to the permanent good effect of
  • your charitable fund, I doubt. Eleemosynary relief never yet
  • tranquillized the working-classes--it never made them grateful; it is
  • not in human nature that it should. I suppose, were all things ordered
  • aright, they ought not to be in a position to need that humiliating
  • relief; and this they feel. We should feel it were we so placed.
  • Besides, to whom should they be grateful? To you, to the clergy perhaps,
  • but not to us mill-owners. They hate us worse than ever. Then the
  • disaffected here are in correspondence with the disaffected elsewhere.
  • Nottingham is one of their headquarters, Manchester another, Birmingham
  • a third. The subalterns receive orders from their chiefs; they are in a
  • good state of discipline; no blow is struck without mature deliberation.
  • In sultry weather you have seen the sky threaten thunder day by day, and
  • yet night after night the clouds have cleared, and the sun has set
  • quietly; but the danger was not gone--it was only delayed. The
  • long-threatening storm is sure to break at last. There is analogy
  • between the moral and physical atmosphere."
  • "Well, Mr. Moore" (so these conferences always ended), "take care of
  • yourself. If you think that I have ever done you any good, reward me by
  • promising to take care of yourself."
  • "I do; I will take close and watchful care. I wish to live, not to die.
  • The future opens like Eden before me; and still, when I look deep into
  • the shades of my paradise, I see a vision that I like better than seraph
  • or cherub glide across remote vistas."
  • "Do you? Pray, what vision?"
  • "I see----"
  • The maid came bustling in with the tea-things.
  • The early part of that May, as we have seen, was fine; the middle was
  • wet; but in the last week, at change of moon, it cleared again. A fresh
  • wind swept off the silver-white, deep-piled rain-clouds, bearing them,
  • mass on mass, to the eastern horizon, on whose verge they dwindled, and
  • behind whose rim they disappeared, leaving the vault behind all pure
  • blue space, ready for the reign of the summer sun. That sun rose broad
  • on Whitsuntide. The gathering of the schools was signalized by splendid
  • weather.
  • Whit-Tuesday was the great day, in preparation for which the two large
  • schoolrooms of Briarfield, built by the present rector, chiefly at his
  • own expense, were cleaned out, whitewashed, repainted, and decorated
  • with flowers and evergreens--some from the rectory garden, two cartloads
  • from Fieldhead, and a wheel-barrowful from the more stingy domain of De
  • Walden, the residence of Mr. Wynne. In these schoolrooms twenty tables,
  • each calculated to accommodate twenty guests, were laid out, surrounded
  • with benches, and covered with white cloths. Above them were suspended
  • at least some twenty cages, containing as many canaries, according to a
  • fancy of the district, specially cherished by Mr. Helstone's clerk, who
  • delighted in the piercing song of these birds, and knew that amidst
  • confusion of tongues they always carolled loudest. These tables, be it
  • understood, were not spread for the twelve hundred scholars to be
  • assembled from the three parishes, but only for the patrons and teachers
  • of the schools. The children's feast was to be spread in the open air.
  • At one o'clock the troops were to come in; at two they were to be
  • marshalled; till four they were to parade the parish; then came the
  • feast, and afterwards the meeting, with music and speechifying in the
  • church.
  • Why Briarfield was chosen for the point of rendezvous--the scene of the
  • _fête_--should be explained. It was not because it was the largest or
  • most populous parish--Whinbury far outdid it in that respect; nor
  • because it was the oldest, antique as were the hoary church and
  • rectory--Nunnely's low-roofed temple and mossy parsonage, buried both in
  • coeval oaks, outstanding sentinels of Nunnwood, were older still. It was
  • simply because Mr. Helstone willed it so, and Mr. Helstone's will was
  • stronger than that of Boultby or Hall; the former _could_ not, the
  • latter _would_ not, dispute a point of precedence with their resolute
  • and imperious brother. They let him lead and rule.
  • This notable anniversary had always hitherto been a trying day to
  • Caroline Helstone, because it dragged her perforce into public,
  • compelling her to face all that was wealthy, respectable, influential in
  • the neighbourhood; in whose presence, but for the kind countenance of
  • Mr. Hall, she would have appeared unsupported. Obliged to be
  • conspicuous; obliged to walk at the head of her regiment as the rector's
  • niece, and first teacher of the first class; obliged to make tea at the
  • first table for a mixed multitude of ladies and gentlemen, and to do all
  • this without the countenance of mother, aunt, or other chaperon--she,
  • meantime, being a nervous person, who mortally feared publicity--it will
  • be comprehended that, under these circumstances, she trembled at the
  • approach of Whitsuntide.
  • But this year Shirley was to be with her, and that changed the aspect of
  • the trial singularly--it changed it utterly. It was a trial no
  • longer--it was almost an enjoyment. Miss Keeldar was better in her
  • single self than a host of ordinary friends. Quite self-possessed, and
  • always spirited and easy; conscious of her social importance, yet never
  • presuming upon it--it would be enough to give one courage only to look
  • at her. The only fear was lest the heiress should not be punctual to
  • tryst. She often had a careless way of lingering behind time, and
  • Caroline knew her uncle would not wait a second for any one. At the
  • moment of the church clock tolling two, the bells would clash out and
  • the march begin. She must look after Shirley, then, in this matter, or
  • her expected companion would fail her.
  • Whit-Tuesday saw her rise almost with the sun. She, Fanny, and Eliza
  • were busy the whole morning arranging the rectory parlours in first-rate
  • company order, and setting out a collation of cooling
  • refreshments--wine, fruit, cakes--on the dining-room sideboard. Then she
  • had to dress in her freshest and fairest attire of white muslin: the
  • perfect fineness of the day and the solemnity of the occasion warranted,
  • and even exacted, such costume. Her new sash--a birthday present from
  • Margaret Hall, which she had reason to believe Cyril himself had bought,
  • and in return for which she had indeed given him a set of cambric bands
  • in a handsome case--was tied by the dexterous fingers of Fanny, who took
  • no little pleasure in arraying her fair young mistress for the occasion.
  • Her simple bonnet had been trimmed to correspond with her sash; her
  • pretty but inexpensive scarf of white crape suited her dress. When ready
  • she formed a picture, not bright enough to dazzle, but fair enough to
  • interest; not brilliantly striking, but very delicately pleasing--a
  • picture in which sweetness of tint, purity of air, and grace of mien
  • atoned for the absence of rich colouring and magnificent contour. What
  • her brown eye and clear forehead showed of her mind was in keeping with
  • her dress and face--modest, gentle, and, though pensive, harmonious. It
  • appeared that neither lamb nor dove need fear her, but would welcome
  • rather, in her look of simplicity and softness, a sympathy with their
  • own natures, or with the natures we ascribe to them.
  • After all, she was an imperfect, faulty human being, fair enough of
  • form, hue, and array, but, as Cyril Hall said, neither so good nor so
  • great as the withered Miss Ainley, now putting on her best black gown
  • and Quaker drab shawl and bonnet in her own narrow cottage chamber.
  • Away Caroline went, across some very sequestered fields and through some
  • quite hidden lanes, to Fieldhead. She glided quickly under the green
  • hedges and across the greener leas. There was no dust, no moisture, to
  • soil the hem of her stainless garment, or to damp her slender sandal.
  • After the late rains all was clean, and under the present glowing sun
  • all was dry. She walked fearlessly, then, on daisy and turf, and through
  • thick plantations; she reached Fieldhead, and penetrated to Miss
  • Keeldar's dressing-room.
  • It was well she had come, or Shirley would have been too late. Instead
  • of making ready with all speed, she lay stretched on a couch, absorbed
  • in reading. Mrs. Pryor stood near, vainly urging her to rise and dress.
  • Caroline wasted no words. She immediately took the book from her, and
  • with her own hands commenced the business of disrobing and rerobing her.
  • Shirley, indolent with the heat, and gay with her youth and pleasurable
  • nature, wanted to talk, laugh, and linger; but Caroline, intent on being
  • in time, persevered in dressing her as fast as fingers could fasten
  • strings or insert pins. At length, as she united a final row of hooks
  • and eyes, she found leisure to chide her, saying she was very naughty to
  • be so unpunctual, that she looked even now the picture of incorrigible
  • carelessness; and so Shirley did, but a very lovely picture of that
  • tiresome quality.
  • She presented quite a contrast to Caroline. There was style in every
  • fold of her dress and every line of her figure. The rich silk suited her
  • better than a simpler costume; the deep embroidered scarf became her.
  • She wore it negligently but gracefully. The wreath on her bonnet
  • crowned her well. The attention to fashion, the tasteful appliance of
  • ornament in each portion of her dress, were quite in place with her. All
  • this suited her, like the frank light in her eyes, the rallying smile
  • about her lips, like her shaft-straight carriage and lightsome step.
  • Caroline took her hand when she was dressed, hurried her downstairs, out
  • of doors; and thus they sped through the fields, laughing as they went,
  • and looking very much like a snow-white dove and gem-tinted bird of
  • paradise joined in social flight.
  • Thanks to Miss Helstone's promptitude, they arrived in good time. While
  • yet trees hid the church, they heard the bell tolling a measured but
  • urgent summons for all to assemble. The trooping in of numbers, the
  • trampling of many steps and murmuring of many voices, were likewise
  • audible. From a rising ground, they presently saw, on the Whinbury road,
  • the Whinbury school approaching. It numbered five hundred souls. The
  • rector and curate, Boultby and Donne, headed it--the former looming
  • large in full canonicals, walking as became a beneficed priest, under
  • the canopy of a shovel-hat, with the dignity of an ample corporation,
  • the embellishment of the squarest and vastest of black coats, and the
  • support of the stoutest of gold-headed canes. As the doctor walked, he
  • now and then slightly flourished his cane, and inclined his shovel-hat
  • with a dogmatical wag towards his aide-de-camp. That
  • aide-de-camp--Donne, to wit--narrow as the line of his shape was,
  • compared to the broad bulk of his principal, contrived, notwithstanding,
  • to look every inch a curate. All about him was pragmatical and
  • self-complacent, from his turned-up nose and elevated chin to his
  • clerical black gaiters, his somewhat short, strapless trousers, and his
  • square-toed shoes.
  • Walk on, Mr. Donne! You have undergone scrutiny. You think you look
  • well. Whether the white and purple figures watching you from yonder hill
  • think so is another question.
  • These figures come running down when the regiment has marched by. The
  • churchyard is full of children and teachers, all in their very best
  • holiday attire; and, distressed as is the district, bad as are the
  • times, it is wonderful to see how respectably, how handsomely even, they
  • have contrived to clothe themselves. That British love of decency will
  • work miracles. The poverty which reduces an Irish girl to rags is
  • impotent to rob the English girl of the neat wardrobe she knows
  • necessary to her self-respect. Besides, the lady of the manor--that
  • Shirley, now gazing with pleasure on this well-dressed and happy-looking
  • crowd--has really done them good. Her seasonable bounty consoled many a
  • poor family against the coming holiday, and supplied many a child with a
  • new frock or bonnet for the occasion. She knows it, and is elate with
  • the consciousness--glad that her money, example, and influence have
  • really, substantially, benefited those around her. She cannot be
  • charitable like Miss Ainley: it is not in her nature. It relieves her to
  • feel that there is another way of being charitable, practicable for
  • other characters, and under other circumstances.
  • Caroline, too, is pleased, for she also has done good in her small
  • way--robbed herself of more than one dress, ribbon, or collar she could
  • ill spare, to aid in fitting out the scholars of her class; and as she
  • could not give money, she has followed Miss Ainley's example in giving
  • her time and her industry to sew for the children.
  • Not only is the churchyard full, but the rectory garden is also
  • thronged. Pairs and parties of ladies and gentlemen are seen walking
  • amongst the waving lilacs and laburnums. The house also is occupied: at
  • the wide-open parlour windows gay groups are standing. These are the
  • patrons and teachers, who are to swell the procession. In the parson's
  • croft, behind the rectory, are the musicians of the three parish bands,
  • with their instruments. Fanny and Eliza, in the smartest of caps and
  • gowns, and the whitest of aprons, move amongst them, serving out quarts
  • of ale, whereof a stock was brewed very sound and strong some weeks
  • since by the rector's orders, and under his special superintendence.
  • Whatever he had a hand in must be managed handsomely. "Shabby doings" of
  • any description were not endured under his sanction. From the erection
  • of a public building, a church, school, or court-house, to the cooking
  • of a dinner, he still advocated the lordly, liberal, and effective. Miss
  • Keeldar was like him in this respect, and they mutually approved each
  • other's arrangements.
  • Caroline and Shirley were soon in the midst of the company. The former
  • met them very easily for her. Instead of sitting down in a retired
  • corner, or stealing away to her own room till the procession should be
  • marshalled, according to her wont, she moved through the three
  • parlours, conversed and smiled, absolutely spoke once or twice ere she
  • was spoken to, and, in short, seemed a new creature. It was Shirley's
  • presence which thus transformed her; the view of Miss Keeldar's air and
  • manner did her a world of good. Shirley had no fear of her kind, no
  • tendency to shrink from, to avoid it. All human beings--men, women, or
  • children--whom low breeding or coarse presumption did not render
  • positively offensive, were welcome enough to her--some much more so than
  • others, of course; but, generally speaking, till a man had indisputably
  • proved himself bad and a nuisance, Shirley was willing to think him good
  • and an acquisition, and to treat him accordingly. This disposition made
  • her a general favourite, for it robbed her very raillery of its sting,
  • and gave her serious or smiling conversation a happy charm; nor did it
  • diminish the value of her intimate friendship, which was a distinct
  • thing from this social benevolence--depending, indeed, on quite a
  • different part of her character. Miss Helstone was the choice of her
  • affection and intellect; the Misses Pearson, Sykes, Wynne, etc., etc.,
  • only the profiteers by her good-nature and vivacity.
  • Donne happened to come into the drawing-room while Shirley, sitting on
  • the sofa, formed the centre of a tolerably wide circle. She had already
  • forgotten her exasperation against him, and she bowed and smiled
  • good-humouredly. The disposition of the man was then seen. He knew
  • neither how to decline the advance with dignity, as one whose just pride
  • has been wounded, nor how to meet it with frankness, as one who is glad
  • to forget and forgive. His punishment had impressed him with no sense of
  • shame, and he did not experience that feeling on encountering his
  • chastiser. He was not vigorous enough in evil to be actively
  • malignant--he merely passed by sheepishly with a rated, scowling look.
  • Nothing could ever again reconcile him to his enemy; while no passion of
  • resentment, for even sharper and more ignominious inflictions, could his
  • lymphatic nature know.
  • "He was not worth a scene!" said Shirley to Caroline. "What a fool I
  • was! To revenge on poor Donne his silly spite at Yorkshire is something
  • like crushing a gnat for attacking the hide of a rhinoceros. Had I been
  • a gentleman, I believe I should have helped him off the premises by dint
  • of physical force. I am glad now I only employed the moral weapon. But
  • he must come near me no more. I don't like him. He irritates me. There
  • is not even amusement to be had out of him. Malone is better sport."
  • It seemed as if Malone wished to justify the preference, for the words
  • were scarcely out of the speaker's mouth when Peter Augustus came up,
  • all in _grande tenue_, gloved and scented, with his hair oiled and
  • brushed to perfection, and bearing in one hand a huge bunch of
  • cabbage-roses, five or six in full blow. These he presented to the
  • heiress with a grace to which the most cunning pencil could do but
  • defective justice. And who, after this, could dare to say that Peter was
  • not a lady's man? He had gathered and he had given flowers; he had
  • offered a sentimental, a poetic tribute at the shrine of Love or Mammon.
  • Hercules holding the distaff was but a faint type of Peter bearing the
  • roses. He must have thought this himself, for he seemed amazed at what
  • he had done. He backed without a word; he was going away with a husky
  • chuckle of self-satisfaction; then he bethought himself to stop and
  • turn, to ascertain by ocular testimony that he really had presented a
  • bouquet. Yes, there were the six red cabbages on the purple satin lap, a
  • very white hand, with some gold rings on the fingers, slightly holding
  • them together, and streaming ringlets, half hiding a laughing face,
  • drooped over them. Only _half_ hiding! Peter saw the laugh; it was
  • unmistakable. He was made a joke of; his gallantry, his chivalry, were
  • the subject of a jest for a petticoat--for two petticoats: Miss Helstone
  • too was smiling. Moreover, he felt he was seen through, and Peter grew
  • black as a thunder-cloud. When Shirley looked up, a fell eye was
  • fastened on her. Malone, at least, had energy enough in hate. She saw it
  • in his glance.
  • "Peter _is_ worth a scene, and shall have it, if he likes, one day," she
  • whispered to her friend.
  • And now--solemn and sombre as to their colour, though bland enough as to
  • their faces--appeared at the dining-room door the three rectors. They
  • had hitherto been busy in the church, and were now coming to take some
  • little refreshment for the body, ere the march commenced. The large
  • morocco-covered easy-chair had been left vacant for Dr. Boultby. He was
  • put into it, and Caroline, obeying the instigations of Shirley, who told
  • her now was the time to play the hostess, hastened to hand to her
  • uncle's vast, revered, and, on the whole, worthy friend, a glass of
  • wine and a plate of macaroons. Boultby's churchwardens, patrons of the
  • Sunday school both, as he insisted on their being, were already beside
  • him; Mrs. Sykes and the other ladies of his congregation were on his
  • right hand and on his left, expressing their hopes that he was not
  • fatigued, their fears that the day would be too warm for him. Mrs.
  • Boultby, who held an opinion that when her lord dropped asleep after a
  • good dinner his face became as the face of an angel, was bending over
  • him, tenderly wiping some perspiration, real or imaginary, from his
  • brow. Boultby, in short, was in his glory, and in a round, sound _voix
  • de poitrine_ he rumbled out thanks for attentions and assurances of his
  • tolerable health. Of Caroline he took no manner of notice as she came
  • near, save to accept what she offered. He did not see her--he never did
  • see her; he hardly knew that such a person existed. He saw the
  • macaroons, however, and being fond of sweets, possessed himself of a
  • small handful thereof. The wine Mrs. Boultby insisted on mingling with
  • hot water, and qualifying with sugar and nutmeg.
  • Mr. Hall stood near an open window, breathing the fresh air and scent of
  • flowers, and talking like a brother to Miss Ainley. To him Caroline
  • turned her attention with pleasure. "What should she bring him? He must
  • not help himself--he must be served by her." And she provided herself
  • with a little salver, that she might offer him variety. Margaret Hall
  • joined them; so did Miss Keeldar. The four ladies stood round their
  • favourite pastor. They also had an idea that they looked on the face of
  • an earthly angel. Cyril Hall was their pope, infallible to them as Dr.
  • Thomas Boultby to his admirers. A throng, too, enclosed the rector of
  • Briarfield--twenty or more pressed round him; and no parson was ever
  • more potent in a circle than old Helstone. The curates, herding together
  • after their manner, made a constellation of three lesser planets. Divers
  • young ladies watched them afar off, but ventured not nigh.
  • Mr. Helstone produced his watch. "Ten minutes to two," he announced
  • aloud. "Time for all to fall into line. Come." He seized his shovel-hat
  • and marched away. All rose and followed _en masse_.
  • The twelve hundred children were drawn up in three bodies of four
  • hundred souls each; in the rear of each regiment was stationed a band;
  • between every twenty there was an interval, wherein Helstone posted the
  • teachers in pairs. To the van of the armies he summoned,--
  • "Grace Boultby and Mary Sykes lead out Whinbury.
  • "Margaret Hall and Mary Ann Ainley conduct Nunnely.
  • "Caroline Helstone and Shirley Keeldar head Briarfield."
  • Then again he gave command,--
  • "Mr. Donne to Whinbury; Mr. Sweeting to Nunnely; Mr. Malone to
  • Briarfield."
  • And these gentlemen stepped up before the lady-generals.
  • The rectors passed to the full front; the parish clerks fell to the
  • extreme rear. Helstone lifted his shovel-hat. In an instant out clashed
  • the eight bells in the tower, loud swelled the sounding bands, flute
  • spoke and clarion answered, deep rolled the drums, and away they
  • marched.
  • The broad white road unrolled before the long procession, the sun and
  • sky surveyed it cloudless, the wind tossed the tree boughs above it, and
  • the twelve hundred children and one hundred and forty adults of which it
  • was composed trod on in time and tune, with gay faces and glad hearts.
  • It was a joyous scene, and a scene to do good. It was a day of happiness
  • for rich and poor--the work, first of God, and then of the clergy. Let
  • England's priests have their due. They are a faulty set in some
  • respects, being only of common flesh and blood like us all; but the land
  • would be badly off without them. Britain would miss her church, if that
  • church fell. God save it! God also reform it!
  • CHAPTER XVII.
  • THE SCHOOL FEAST.
  • Not on combat bent, nor of foemen in search, was this priest-led and
  • woman-officered company; yet their music played martial tunes, and, to
  • judge by the eyes and carriage of some--Miss Keeldar, for
  • instance--these sounds awoke, if not a martial, yet a longing spirit.
  • Old Helstone, turning by chance, looked into her face; and he laughed,
  • and she laughed at him.
  • "There is no battle in prospect," he said; "our country does not want us
  • to fight for it. No foe or tyrant is questioning or threatening our
  • liberty. There is nothing to be done. We are only taking a walk. Keep
  • your hand on the reins, captain, and slack the fire of that spirit. It
  • is not wanted, the more's the pity."
  • "Take your own advice, doctor," was Shirley's response. To Caroline she
  • murmured, "I'll borrow of imagination what reality will not give me. We
  • are not soldiers--bloodshed is not my desire--or if we are, we are
  • soldiers of the Cross. Time has rolled back some hundreds of years, and
  • we are bound on a pilgrimage to Palestine. But no; that is too
  • visionary. I need a sterner dream. We are Lowlanders of Scotland,
  • following a Covenanting captain up into the hills to hold a meeting out
  • of the reach of persecuting troopers. We know that battle may follow
  • prayer; and as we believe that in the worst issue of battle heaven must
  • be our reward, we are ready and willing to redden the peat-moss with our
  • blood. That music stirs my soul; it wakens all my life; it makes my
  • heart beat--not with its temperate daily pulse, but with a new,
  • thrilling vigour. I almost long for danger--for a faith, a land, or at
  • least a lover to defend."
  • "Look, Shirley!" interrupted Caroline. "What is that red speck above
  • Stilbro' Brow? You have keener sight than I. Just turn your eagle eye to
  • it."
  • Miss Keeldar looked. "I see," she said; then added presently, "there is
  • a line of red. They are soldiers--cavalry soldiers," she subjoined
  • quickly. "They ride fast. There are six of them. They will pass us. No;
  • they have turned off to the right. They saw our procession, and avoid it
  • by making a circuit. Where are they going?"
  • "Perhaps they are only exercising their horses."
  • "Perhaps so. We see them no more now."
  • Mr. Helstone here spoke.
  • "We shall pass through Royd Lane, to reach Nunnely Common by a short
  • cut," said he.
  • And into the straits of Royd Lane they accordingly defiled. It was very
  • narrow--so narrow that only two could walk abreast without falling into
  • the ditch which ran along each side. They had gained the middle of it,
  • when excitement became obvious in the clerical commanders. Boultby's
  • spectacles and Helstone's Rehoboam were agitated; the curates nudged
  • each other; Mr. Hall turned to the ladies and smiled.
  • "What is the matter?" was the demand.
  • He pointed with his staff to the end of the lane before them. Lo and
  • behold! another, an opposition, procession was there entering, headed
  • also by men in black, and followed also, as they could now hear, by
  • music.
  • "Is it our double?" asked Shirley, "our manifold wraith? Here is a card
  • turned up."
  • "If you wanted a battle, you are likely to get one--at least of looks,"
  • whispered Caroline, laughing.
  • "They shall not pass us!" cried the curates unanimously; "we'll not give
  • way!"
  • "Give way!" retorted Helstone sternly, turning round; "who talks of
  • giving way? You, boys, mind what you are about. The ladies, I know, will
  • be firm. I can trust them. There is not a churchwoman here but will
  • stand her ground against these folks, for the honour of the
  • Establishment.--What does Miss Keeldar say?"
  • "She asks what is it."
  • "The Dissenting and Methodist schools, the Baptists, Independents, and
  • Wesleyans, joined in unholy alliance, and turning purposely into this
  • lane with the intention of obstructing our march and driving us back."
  • "Bad manners!" said Shirley, "and I hate bad manners. Of course, they
  • must have a lesson."
  • "A lesson in politeness," suggested Mr. Hall, who was ever for peace;
  • "not an example of rudeness."
  • Old Helstone moved on. Quickening his step, he marched some yards in
  • advance of his company. He had nearly reached the other sable leaders,
  • when he who appeared to act as the hostile commander-in-chief--a large,
  • greasy man, with black hair combed flat on his forehead--called a halt.
  • The procession paused. He drew forth a hymn book, gave out a verse, set
  • a tune, and they all struck up the most dolorous of canticles.
  • Helstone signed to his bands. They clashed out with all the power of
  • brass. He desired them to play "Rule, Britannia!" and ordered the
  • children to join in vocally, which they did with enthusiastic spirit.
  • The enemy was sung and stormed down, his psalm quelled. As far as noise
  • went, he was conquered.
  • "Now, follow me!" exclaimed Helstone; "not at a run, but at a firm,
  • smart pace. Be steady, every child and woman of you. Keep together. Hold
  • on by each other's skirts, if necessary."
  • And he strode on with such a determined and deliberate gait, and was,
  • besides, so well seconded by his scholars and teachers, who did exactly
  • as he told them, neither running nor faltering, but marching with cool,
  • solid impetus--the curates, too, being compelled to do the same, as they
  • were between two fires, Helstone and Miss Keeldar, both of whom watched
  • any deviation with lynx-eyed vigilance, and were ready, the one with his
  • cane, the other with her parasol, to rebuke the slightest breach of
  • orders, the least independent or irregular demonstration--that the body
  • of Dissenters were first amazed, then alarmed, then borne down and
  • pressed back, and at last forced to turn tail and leave the outlet from
  • Royd Lane free. Boultby suffered in the onslaught, but Helstone and
  • Malone, between them, held him up, and brought him through the business,
  • whole in limb, though sorely tried in wind.
  • The fat Dissenter who had given out the hymn was left sitting in the
  • ditch. He was a spirit merchant by trade, a leader of the
  • Nonconformists, and, it was said, drank more water in that one afternoon
  • than he had swallowed for a twelvemonth before. Mr. Hall had taken care
  • of Caroline, and Caroline of him. He and Miss Ainley made their own
  • quiet comments to each other afterwards on the incident. Miss Keeldar
  • and Mr. Helstone shook hands heartily when they had fairly got the whole
  • party through the lane. The curates began to exult, but Mr. Helstone
  • presently put the curb on their innocent spirits. He remarked that they
  • never had sense to know what to say, and had better hold their tongues;
  • and he reminded them that the business was none of their managing.
  • About half-past three the procession turned back, and at four once more
  • regained the starting-place. Long lines of benches were arranged in the
  • close-shorn fields round the school. There the children were seated, and
  • huge baskets, covered up with white cloths, and great smoking tin
  • vessels were brought out. Ere the distribution of good things commenced,
  • a brief grace was pronounced by Mr. Hall and sung by the children. Their
  • young voices sounded melodious, even touching, in the open air. Large
  • currant buns and hot, well-sweetened tea were then administered in the
  • proper spirit of liberality. No stinting was permitted on this day, at
  • least; the rule for each child's allowance being that it was to have
  • about twice as much as it could possibly eat, thus leaving a reserve to
  • be carried home for such as age, sickness, or other impediment prevented
  • from coming to the feast. Buns and beer circulated, meantime, amongst
  • the musicians and church-singers; afterwards the benches were removed,
  • and they were left to unbend their spirits in licensed play.
  • A bell summoned the teachers, patrons, and patronesses to the
  • schoolroom. Miss Keeldar, Miss Helstone, and many other ladies were
  • already there, glancing over the arrangement of their separate trays and
  • tables. Most of the female servants of the neighbourhood, together with
  • the clerks', the singers', and the musicians' wives, had been pressed
  • into the service of the day as waiters. Each vied with the other in
  • smartness and daintiness of dress, and many handsome forms were seen
  • amongst the younger ones. About half a score were cutting bread and
  • butter, another half-score supplying hot water, brought from the coppers
  • of the rector's kitchen. The profusion of flowers and evergreens
  • decorating the white walls, the show of silver teapots and bright
  • porcelain on the tables, the active figures, blithe faces, gay dresses
  • flitting about everywhere, formed altogether a refreshing and lively
  • spectacle. Everybody talked, not very loudly, but merrily, and the
  • canary birds sang shrill in their high-hung cages.
  • Caroline, as the rector's niece, took her place at one of the three
  • first tables; Mrs. Boultby and Margaret Hall officiated at the others.
  • At these tables the _élite_ of the company were to be entertained,
  • strict rules of equality not being more in fashion at Briarfield than
  • elsewhere. Miss Helstone removed her bonnet and scarf, that she might be
  • less oppressed with the heat. Her long curls, falling on her neck,
  • served almost in place of a veil; and for the rest, her muslin dress was
  • fashioned modestly as a nun's robe, enabling her thus to dispense with
  • the encumbrance of a shawl.
  • The room was filling. Mr. Hall had taken his post beside Caroline, who
  • now, as she rearranged the cups and spoons before her, whispered to him
  • in a low voice remarks on the events of the day. He looked a little
  • grave about what had taken place in Royd Lane, and she tried to smile
  • him out of his seriousness. Miss Keeldar sat near--for a wonder, neither
  • laughing nor talking; on the contrary, very still, and gazing round her
  • vigilantly. She seemed afraid lest some intruder should take a seat she
  • apparently wished to reserve next her own. Ever and anon she spread her
  • satin dress over an undue portion of the bench, or laid her gloves or
  • her embroidered handkerchief upon it. Caroline noticed this _manège_ at
  • last, and asked her what friend she expected. Shirley bent towards her,
  • almost touched her ear with her rosy lips, and whispered with a musical
  • softness that often characterized her tones when what she said tended
  • even remotely to stir some sweet secret source of feeling in her heart,
  • "I expect Mr. Moore. I saw him last night, and I made him promise to
  • come with his sister, and to sit at our table. He won't fail me, I feel
  • certain; but I apprehend his coming too late, and being separated from
  • us. Here is a fresh batch arriving; every place will be taken.
  • Provoking!"
  • In fact, Mr. Wynne the magistrate, his wife, his son, and his two
  • daughters now entered in high state. They were Briarfield gentry. Of
  • course their place was at the first table, and being conducted thither,
  • they filled up the whole remaining space. For Miss Keeldar's comfort,
  • Mr. Sam Wynne inducted himself into the very vacancy she had kept for
  • Moore, planting himself solidly on her gown, her gloves, and her
  • handkerchief. Mr. Sam was one of the objects of her aversion, and the
  • more so because he showed serious symptoms of an aim at her hand. The
  • old gentleman, too, had publicly declared that the Fieldhead estate and
  • the De Walden estate were delightfully _contagious_--a malapropism which
  • rumour had not failed to repeat to Shirley.
  • Caroline's ears yet rung with that thrilling whisper, "I expect Mr.
  • Moore," her heart yet beat and her cheek yet glowed with it, when a note
  • from the organ pealed above the confused hum of the place. Dr. Boultby,
  • Mr. Helstone, and Mr. Hall rose, so did all present, and grace was sung
  • to the accompaniment of the music; and then tea began. She was kept too
  • busy with her office for a while to have leisure for looking round, but
  • the last cup being filled, she threw a restless glance over the room.
  • There were some ladies and several gentlemen standing about yet
  • unaccommodated with seats. Amidst a group she recognized her spinster
  • friend, Miss Mann, whom the fine weather had tempted, or some urgent
  • friend had persuaded, to leave her drear solitude for one hour of social
  • enjoyment. Miss Mann looked tired of standing; a lady in a yellow bonnet
  • brought her a chair. Caroline knew well that _chapeau en satin jaune_;
  • she knew the black hair, and the kindly though rather opinionated and
  • froward-looking face under it; she knew that _robe de soie noire_, she
  • knew even that _schall gris de lin_; she knew, in short, Hortense Moore,
  • and she wanted to jump up and run to her and kiss her--to give her one
  • embrace for her own sake and two for her brother's. She half rose,
  • indeed, with a smothered exclamation, and perhaps--for the impulse was
  • very strong--she would have run across the room and actually saluted
  • her; but a hand replaced her in her seat, and a voice behind her
  • whispered, "Wait till after tea, Lina, and then I'll bring her to you."
  • And when she _could_ look up she did, and there was Robert himself close
  • behind, smiling at her eagerness, looking better than she had ever seen
  • him look--looking, indeed, to her partial eyes, so very handsome that
  • she dared not trust herself to hazard a second glance; for his image
  • struck on her vision with painful brightness, and pictured itself on her
  • memory as vividly as if there daguerreotyped by a pencil of keen
  • lightning.
  • He moved on, and spoke to Miss Keeldar. Shirley, irritated by some
  • unwelcome attentions from Sam Wynne, and by the fact of that gentleman
  • being still seated on her gloves and handkerchief--and probably, also,
  • by Moore's want of punctuality--was by no means in good humour. She
  • first shrugged her shoulders at him, and then she said a bitter word or
  • two about his "insupportable tardiness." Moore neither apologized nor
  • retorted. He stood near her quietly, as if waiting to see whether she
  • would recover her temper; which she did in little more than three
  • minutes, indicating the change by offering him her hand. Moore took it
  • with a smile, half-corrective, half-grateful. The slightest possible
  • shake of the head delicately marked the former quality; it is probable a
  • gentle pressure indicated the latter.
  • "You may sit where you can now, Mr. Moore," said Shirley, also smiling.
  • "You see there is not an inch of room for you here; but I discern plenty
  • of space at Mrs. Boultby's table, between Miss Armitage and Miss
  • Birtwhistle. Go! John Sykes will be your _vis-à-vis_, and you will sit
  • with your back towards us."
  • Moore, however, preferred lingering about where he was. He now and then
  • took a turn down the long room, pausing in his walk to interchange
  • greetings with other gentlemen in his own placeless predicament; but
  • still he came back to the magnet, Shirley, bringing with him, each time
  • he returned, observations it was necessary to whisper in her ear.
  • Meantime poor Sam Wynne looked far from comfortable. His fair neighbour,
  • judging from her movements, appeared in a mood the most unquiet and
  • unaccommodating. She would not sit still two seconds. She was hot; she
  • fanned herself; complained of want of air and space. She remarked that,
  • in her opinion, when people had finished their tea they ought to leave
  • the tables, and announced distinctly that she expected to faint if the
  • present state of things continued. Mr. Sam offered to accompany her into
  • the open air; just the way to give her her death of cold, she alleged.
  • In short, his post became untenable; and having swallowed his quantum of
  • tea, he judged it expedient to evacuate.
  • Moore should have been at hand, whereas he was quite at the other
  • extremity of the room, deep in conference with Christopher Sykes. A
  • large corn-factor, Timothy Ramsden, Esq., happened to be nearer; and
  • feeling himself tired of standing, he advanced to fill the vacant seat.
  • Shirley's expedients did not fail her. A sweep of her scarf upset her
  • teacup: its contents were shared between the bench and her own satin
  • dress. Of course, it became necessary to call a waiter to remedy the
  • mischief. Mr. Ramsden, a stout, puffy gentleman, as large in person as
  • he was in property, held aloof from the consequent commotion. Shirley,
  • usually almost culpably indifferent to slight accidents affecting dress,
  • etc., now made a commotion that might have become the most delicate and
  • nervous of her sex. Mr. Ramsden opened his mouth, withdrew slowly, and,
  • as Miss Keeldar again intimated her intention to "give way" and swoon on
  • the spot, he turned on his heel, and beat a heavy retreat.
  • Moore at last returned. Calmly surveying the bustle, and somewhat
  • quizzically scanning Shirley's enigmatical-looking countenance, he
  • remarked that in truth this was the hottest end of the room, that he
  • found a climate there calculated to agree with none but cool
  • temperaments like his own; and putting the waiters, the napkins, the
  • satin robe--the whole turmoil, in short--to one side, he installed
  • himself where destiny evidently decreed he should sit. Shirley subsided;
  • her features altered their lines; the raised knit brow and inexplicable
  • curve of the mouth became straight again; wilfulness and roguery gave
  • place to other expressions; and all the angular movements with which she
  • had vexed the soul of Sam Wynne were conjured to rest as by a charm.
  • Still no gracious glance was cast on Moore. On the contrary, he was
  • accused of giving her a world of trouble, and roundly charged with being
  • the cause of depriving her of the esteem of Mr. Ramsden and the
  • invaluable friendship of Mr. Samuel Wynne.
  • "Wouldn't have offended either gentleman for the world," she averred. "I
  • have always been accustomed to treat both with the most respectful
  • consideration, and there, owing to you, how they have been used! I shall
  • not be happy till I have made it up. I never am happy till I am friends
  • with my neighbours. So to-morrow I must make a pilgrimage to Royd
  • corn-mill, soothe the miller, and praise the grain; and next day I must
  • call at De Walden--where I hate to go--and carry in my reticule half an
  • oatcake to give to Mr. Sam's favourite pointers."
  • "You know the surest path to the heart of each swain, I doubt not," said
  • Moore quietly. He looked very content to have at last secured his
  • present place; but he made no fine speech expressive of gratification,
  • and offered no apology for the trouble he had given. His phlegm became
  • him wonderfully. It made him look handsomer, he was so composed; it made
  • his vicinage pleasant, it was so peace-restoring. You would not have
  • thought, to look at him, that he was a poor, struggling man seated
  • beside a rich woman; the calm of equality stilled his aspect; perhaps
  • that calm, too, reigned in his soul. Now and then, from the way in which
  • he looked down on Miss Keeldar as he addressed her, you would have
  • fancied his station towered above hers as much as his stature did.
  • Almost stern lights sometimes crossed his brow and gleamed in his eyes.
  • Their conversation had become animated, though it was confined to a low
  • key; she was urging him with questions--evidently he refused to her
  • curiosity all the gratification it demanded. She sought his eye once
  • with hers. You read, in its soft yet eager expression, that it solicited
  • clearer replies. Moore smiled pleasantly, but his lips continued sealed.
  • Then she was piqued, and turned away; but he recalled her attention in
  • two minutes. He seemed making promises, which he soothed her into
  • accepting in lieu of information.
  • It appeared that the heat of the room did not suit Miss Helstone. She
  • grew paler and paler as the process of tea-making was protracted. The
  • moment thanks were returned she quitted the table, and hastened to
  • follow her cousin Hortense, who, with Miss Mann, had already sought the
  • open air. Robert Moore had risen when she did--perhaps he meant to speak
  • to her; but there was yet a parting word to exchange with Miss Keeldar,
  • and while it was being uttered Caroline had vanished.
  • Hortense received her former pupil with a demeanour of more dignity than
  • warmth. She had been seriously offended by Mr. Helstone's proceedings,
  • and had all along considered Caroline to blame in obeying her uncle too
  • literally.
  • "You are a very great stranger," she said austerely, as her pupil held
  • and pressed her hand. The pupil knew her too well to remonstrate or
  • complain of coldness. She let the punctilious whim pass, sure that her
  • natural _bonté_ (I use this French word because it expresses just what I
  • mean--neither goodness nor good-nature, but something between the two)
  • would presently get the upper hand. It did. Hortense had no sooner
  • examined her face well, and observed the change its somewhat wasted
  • features betrayed, than her mien softened. Kissing her on both cheeks,
  • she asked anxiously after her health. Caroline answered gaily. It would,
  • however, have been her lot to undergo a long cross-examination, followed
  • by an endless lecture on this head, had not Miss Mann called off the
  • attention of the questioner by requesting to be conducted home. The poor
  • invalid was already fatigued. Her weariness made her cross--too cross
  • almost to speak to Caroline; and besides, that young person's white
  • dress and lively look were displeasing in the eyes of Miss Mann. The
  • everyday garb of brown stuff or gray gingham, and the everyday air of
  • melancholy, suited the solitary spinster better; she would hardly know
  • her young friend to-night, and quitted her with a cool nod. Hortense
  • having promised to accompany her home, they departed together.
  • Caroline now looked round for Shirley. She saw the rainbow scarf and
  • purple dress in the centre of a throng of ladies, all well known to
  • herself, but all of the order whom she systematically avoided whenever
  • avoidance was possible. Shyer at some moments than at others, she felt
  • just now no courage at all to join this company. She could not, however,
  • stand alone where all others went in pairs or parties; so she approached
  • a group of her own scholars, great girls, or rather young women, who
  • were standing watching some hundreds of the younger children playing at
  • blind-man's buff.
  • Miss Helstone knew these girls liked her, yet she was shy even with them
  • out of school. They were not more in awe of her than she of them. She
  • drew near them now, rather to find protection in their company than to
  • patronize them with her presence. By some instinct they knew her
  • weakness, and with natural politeness they respected it. Her knowledge
  • commanded their esteem when she taught them; her gentleness attracted
  • their regard; and because she was what they considered wise and good
  • when _on_ duty, they kindly overlooked her evident timidity when off.
  • They did not take advantage of it. Peasant girls as they were, they had
  • too much of our own English sensibility to be guilty of the coarse
  • error. They stood round her still, civil, friendly, receiving her slight
  • smiles and rather hurried efforts to converse with a good feeling and
  • good breeding--the last quality being the result of the first--which
  • soon set her at her ease.
  • Mr. Sam Wynne coming up with great haste, to insist on the elder girls
  • joining in the game as well as the younger ones, Caroline was again left
  • alone. She was meditating a quiet retreat to the house, when Shirley,
  • perceiving from afar her isolation, hastened to her side.
  • "Let us go to the top of the fields," she said. "I know you don't like
  • crowds, Caroline."
  • "But it will be depriving you of a pleasure, Shirley, to take you from
  • all these fine people, who court your society so assiduously, and to
  • whom you can, without art or effort, make yourself so pleasant."
  • "Not quite without effort; I am already tired of the exertion. It is but
  • insipid, barren work, talking and laughing with the good gentlefolks of
  • Briarfield. I have been looking out for your white dress for the last
  • ten minutes. I like to watch those I love in a crowd, and to compare
  • them with others. I have thus compared you. You resemble none of the
  • rest, Lina. There are some prettier faces than yours here. You are not a
  • model beauty like Harriet Sykes, for instance--beside her your person
  • appears almost insignificant--but you look agreeable, you look
  • reflective, you look what I call interesting."
  • "Hush, Shirley! you flatter me."
  • "I don't wonder that your scholars like you."
  • "Nonsense, Shirley! Talk of something else."
  • "We will talk of Moore, then, and we will watch him. I see him even
  • now."
  • "Where?" And as Caroline asked the question she looked not over the
  • fields, but into Miss Keeldar's eyes, as was her wont whenever Shirley
  • mentioned any object she descried afar. Her friend had quicker vision
  • than herself, and Caroline seemed to think that the secret of her eagle
  • acuteness might be read in her dark gray irides, or rather, perhaps, she
  • only sought guidance by the direction of those discriminating and
  • brilliant spheres.
  • "There is Moore," said Shirley, pointing right across the wide field
  • where a thousand children were playing, and now nearly a thousand adult
  • spectators walking about. "There--can you miss the tall stature and
  • straight port? He looks amidst the set that surround him like Eliab
  • amongst humbler shepherds--like Saul in a war-council; and a war-council
  • it is, if I am not mistaken."
  • "Why so, Shirley?" asked Caroline, whose eye had at last caught the
  • object it sought. "Robert is just now speaking to my uncle, and they are
  • shaking hands. They are then reconciled."
  • "Reconciled not without good reason, depend on it--making common cause
  • against some common foe. And why, think you, are Messrs. Wynne and
  • Sykes, and Armitage and Ramsden, gathered in such a close circle round
  • them? And why is Malone beckoned to join them? Where _he_ is summoned,
  • be sure a strong arm is needed."
  • Shirley, as she watched, grew restless; her eyes flashed.
  • "They won't trust me," she said. "That is always the way when it comes
  • to the point."
  • "What about?"
  • "Cannot you feel? There is some mystery afloat; some event is expected;
  • some preparation is to be made, I am certain. I saw it all in Mr.
  • Moore's manner this evening. He was excited, yet hard."
  • "Hard to _you_, Shirley?"
  • "Yes, to _me_. He often is hard to me. We seldom converse _tête-à-tête_
  • but I am made to feel that the basis of his character is not of eider
  • down."
  • "Yet he seemed to talk to you softly."
  • "Did he not? Very gentle tones and quiet manner. Yet the man is
  • peremptory and secret: his secrecy vexes me."
  • "Yes, Robert is secret."
  • "Which he has scarcely a right to be with me, especially as he commenced
  • by giving me his confidence. Having done nothing to forfeit that
  • confidence, it ought not to be withdrawn; but I suppose I am not
  • considered iron-souled enough to be trusted in a crisis."
  • "He fears, probably, to occasion you uneasiness."
  • "An unnecessary precaution. I am of elastic materials, not soon crushed.
  • He ought to know that. But the man is proud. He has his faults, say what
  • you will, Lina. Observe how engaged that group appear. They do not know
  • we are watching them."
  • "If we keep on the alert, Shirley, we shall perhaps find the clue to
  • their secret."
  • "There will be some unusual movements ere long--perhaps to-morrow,
  • possibly to-night. But my eyes and ears are wide open. Mr. Moore, you
  • shall be under surveillance. Be you vigilant also, Lina."
  • "I will. Robert is going; I saw him turn. I believe he noticed us. They
  • are shaking hands."
  • "Shaking hands, with emphasis," added Shirley, "as if they were
  • ratifying some solemn league and covenant."
  • They saw Robert quit the group, pass through a gate, and disappear.
  • "And he has not bid us good-bye," murmured Caroline.
  • Scarcely had the words escaped her lips when she tried by a smile to
  • deny the confession of disappointment they seemed to imply. An unbidden
  • suffusion for one moment both softened and brightened her eyes.
  • "Oh, that is soon remedied!" exclaimed Shirley: "we'll _make_ him bid us
  • good-bye."
  • "_Make_ him! That is not the same thing," was the answer.
  • "It _shall_ be the same thing."
  • "But he is gone; you can't overtake him."
  • "I know a shorter way than that he has taken. We will intercept him."
  • "But, Shirley, I would rather not go."
  • Caroline said this as Miss Keeldar seized her arm and hurried her down
  • the fields. It was vain to contend. Nothing was so wilful as Shirley
  • when she took a whim into her head. Caroline found herself out of sight
  • of the crowd almost before she was aware, and ushered into a narrow
  • shady spot, embowered above with hawthorns, and enamelled under foot
  • with daisies. She took no notice of the evening sun chequering the turf,
  • nor was she sensible of the pure incense exhaling at this hour from tree
  • and plant; she only heard the wicket opening at one end, and knew Robert
  • was approaching. The long sprays of the hawthorns, shooting out before
  • them, served as a screen. They saw him before he observed them. At a
  • glance Caroline perceived that his social hilarity was gone; he had left
  • it behind him in the joy-echoing fields round the school. What remained
  • now was his dark, quiet, business countenance. As Shirley had said, a
  • certain hardness characterized his air, while his eye was excited, but
  • austere. So much the worse timed was the present freak of Shirley's. If
  • he had looked disposed for holiday mirth, it would not have mattered
  • much; but now----
  • "I told you not to come," said Caroline, somewhat bitterly, to her
  • friend. She seemed truly perturbed. To be intruded on Robert thus,
  • against her will and his expectation, and when he evidently would rather
  • not be delayed, keenly annoyed her. It did not annoy Miss Keeldar in the
  • least. She stepped forward and faced her tenant, barring his way. "You
  • omitted to bid us good-bye," she said.
  • "Omitted to bid you good-bye! Where did you come from? Are you fairies?
  • I left two like you, one in purple and one in white, standing at the top
  • of a bank, four fields off, but a minute ago."
  • "You left us there and find us here. We have been watching you, and
  • shall watch you still. You must be questioned one day, but not now. At
  • present all you have to do is to say good-night, and then pass."
  • Moore glanced from one to the other without unbending his aspect. "Days
  • of fête have their privileges, and so have days of hazard," observed he
  • gravely.
  • "Come, don't moralize. Say good-night, and pass," urged Shirley.
  • "Must I say good-night to you, Miss Keeldar?"
  • "Yes, and to Caroline likewise. It is nothing new, I hope. You have bid
  • us both good-night before."
  • He took her hand, held it in one of his, and covered it with the other.
  • He looked down at her gravely, kindly, yet commandingly. The heiress
  • could not make this man her subject. In his gaze on her bright face
  • there was no servility, hardly homage; but there were interest and
  • affection, heightened by another feeling. Something in his tone when he
  • spoke, as well as in his words, marked that last sentiment to be
  • gratitude.
  • "Your debtor bids you good-night! May you rest safely and serenely till
  • morning."
  • "And you, Mr. Moore--what are you going to do? What have you been saying
  • to Mr. Helstone, with whom I saw you shake hands? Why did all those
  • gentlemen gather round you? Put away reserve for once. Be frank with
  • me."
  • "Who can resist you? I will be frank. To-morrow, if there is anything to
  • relate, you shall hear it."
  • "Just now," pleaded Shirley; "don't procrastinate."
  • "But I could only tell half a tale. And my time is limited; I have not a
  • moment to spare. Hereafter I will make amends for delay by candour."
  • "But are you going home?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Not to leave it any more to-night?"
  • "Certainly not. At present, farewell to both of you."
  • He would have taken Caroline's hand and joined it in the same clasp in
  • which he held Shirley's, but somehow it was not ready for him. She had
  • withdrawn a few steps apart. Her answer to Moore's adieu was only a
  • slight bend of the head and a gentle, serious smile. He sought no more
  • cordial token. Again he said "Farewell," and quitted them both.
  • "There! it is over," said Shirley when he was gone. "We have made him
  • bid us good-night, and yet not lost ground in his esteem, I think,
  • Cary."
  • "I hope not," was the brief reply.
  • "I consider you very timid and undemonstrative," remarked Miss Keeldar.
  • "Why did you not give Moore your hand when he offered you his? He is
  • your cousin; you like him. Are you ashamed to let him perceive your
  • affection?"
  • "He perceives all of it that interests him. No need to make a display of
  • feeling."
  • "You are laconic; you would be stoical if you could. Is love, in your
  • eyes, a crime, Caroline?"
  • "Love a crime! No, Shirley; love is a divine virtue. But why drag that
  • word into the conversation? It is singularly irrelevant."
  • "Good!" pronounced Shirley.
  • The two girls paced the green lane in silence. Caroline first resumed.
  • "Obtrusiveness is a crime, forwardness is a crime, and both disgust; but
  • love! no purest angel need blush to love. And when I see or hear either
  • man or woman couple shame with love, I know their minds are coarse,
  • their associations debased. Many who think themselves refined ladies and
  • gentlemen, and on whose lips the word 'vulgarity' is for ever hovering,
  • cannot mention 'love' without betraying their own innate and imbecile
  • degradation. It is a low feeling in their estimation, connected only
  • with low ideas for them."
  • "You describe three-fourths of the world, Caroline."
  • "They are cold--they are cowardly--they are stupid on the subject,
  • Shirley! They never loved--they never were loved!"
  • "Thou art right, Lina. And in their dense ignorance they blaspheme
  • living fire, seraph-brought from a divine altar."
  • "They confound it with sparks mounting from Tophet."
  • The sudden and joyous clash of bells here stopped the dialogue by
  • summoning all to the church.
  • CHAPTER XVIII.
  • WHICH THE GENTEEL READER IS RECOMMENDED TO SKIP, LOW PERSONS BEING HERE
  • INTRODUCED.
  • The evening was still and warm; close and sultry it even promised to
  • become. Round the descending sun the clouds glowed purple; summer tints,
  • rather Indian than English, suffused the horizon, and cast rosy
  • reflections on hillside, house-front, tree-bole, on winding road and
  • undulating pasture-ground. The two girls came down from the fields
  • slowly. By the time they reached the churchyard the bells were hushed;
  • the multitudes were gathered into the church. The whole scene was
  • solitary.
  • "How pleasant and calm it is!" said Caroline.
  • "And how hot it will be in the church!" responded Shirley. "And what a
  • dreary long speech Dr. Boultby will make! And how the curates will
  • hammer over their prepared orations! For my part, I would rather not
  • enter."
  • "But my uncle will be angry if he observes our absence."
  • "I will bear the brunt of his wrath; he will not devour me. I shall be
  • sorry to miss his pungent speech. I know it will be all sense for the
  • church, and all causticity for schism. He'll not forget the battle of
  • Royd Lane. I shall be sorry also to deprive you of Mr. Hall's sincere
  • friendly homily, with all its racy Yorkshireisms; but here I must stay.
  • The gray church and grayer tombs look divine with this crimson gleam on
  • them. Nature is now at her evening prayers; she is kneeling before those
  • red hills. I see her prostrate on the great steps of her altar, praying
  • for a fair night for mariners at sea, for travellers in deserts, for
  • lambs on moors, and unfledged birds in woods. Caroline, I see her, and I
  • will tell you what she is like. She is like what Eve was when she and
  • Adam stood alone on earth."
  • "And that is not Milton's Eve, Shirley."
  • "Milton's Eve! Milton's Eve! I repeat. No, by the pure Mother of God,
  • she is not! Cary, we are alone; we may speak what we think. Milton was
  • great; but was he good? His brain was right; how was his heart? He saw
  • heaven; he looked down on hell. He saw Satan, and Sin his daughter, and
  • Death their horrible offspring. Angels serried before him their
  • battalions; the long lines of adamantine shields flashed back on his
  • blind eyeballs the unutterable splendour of heaven. Devils gathered
  • their legions in his sight; their dim, discrowned, and tarnished armies
  • passed rank and file before him. Milton tried to see the first woman;
  • but, Cary, he saw her not."
  • "You are bold to say so, Shirley."
  • "Not more bold than faithful. It was his cook that he saw; or it was
  • Mrs. Gill, as I have seen her, making custards, in the heat of summer,
  • in the cool dairy, with rose-trees and nasturtiums about the latticed
  • window, preparing a cold collation for the rectors--preserves and
  • 'dulcet creams;' puzzled 'what choice to choose for delicacy best; what
  • order so contrived as not to mix tastes, not well-joined, inelegant, but
  • bring taste after taste, upheld with kindliest change.'"
  • "All very well too, Shirley."
  • "I would beg to remind him that the first men of the earth were Titans,
  • and that Eve was their mother; from her sprang Saturn, Hyperion,
  • Oceanus; she bore Prometheus----"
  • "Pagan that you are! what does that signify?"
  • "I say, there were giants on the earth in those days--giants that strove
  • to scale heaven. The first woman's breast that heaved with life on this
  • world yielded the daring which could contend with Omnipotence, the
  • strength which could bear a thousand years of bondage, the vitality
  • which could feed that vulture death through uncounted ages, the
  • unexhausted life and uncorrupted excellence, sisters to immortality,
  • which, after millenniums of crimes, struggles, and woes, could conceive
  • and bring forth a Messiah. The first woman was heaven-born. Vast was the
  • heart whence gushed the well-spring of the blood of nations, and grand
  • the undegenerate head where rested the consort-crown of creation."
  • "She coveted an apple, and was cheated by a snake; but you have got such
  • a hash of Scripture and mythology into your head that there is no making
  • any sense of you. You have not yet told me what you saw kneeling on
  • those hills."
  • "I saw--I now see--a woman-Titan. Her robe of blue air spreads to the
  • outskirts of the heath, where yonder flock is grazing; a veil white as
  • an avalanche sweeps from her head to her feet, and arabesques of
  • lightning flame on its borders. Under her breast I see her zone, purple
  • like that horizon; through its blush shines the star of evening. Her
  • steady eyes I cannot picture. They are clear, they are deep as lakes,
  • they are lifted and full of worship, they tremble with the softness of
  • love and the lustre of prayer. Her forehead has the expanse of a cloud,
  • and is paler than the early moon, risen long before dark gathers. She
  • reclines her bosom on the ridge of Stilbro' Moor; her mighty hands are
  • joined beneath it. So kneeling, face to face she speaks with God. That
  • Eve is Jehovah's daughter, as Adam was His son."
  • "She is very vague and visionary. Come, Shirley, we ought to go into
  • church."
  • "Caroline, I will not; I will stay out here with my mother Eve, in these
  • days called Nature. I love her--undying, mighty being! Heaven may have
  • faded from her brow when she fell in paradise, but all that is glorious
  • on earth shines there still. She is taking me to her bosom, and showing
  • me her heart. Hush, Caroline! You will see her and feel as I do, if we
  • are both silent."
  • "I will humour your whim; but you will begin talking again ere ten
  • minutes are over."
  • Miss Keeldar, on whom the soft excitement of the warm summer evening
  • seemed working with unwonted power, leaned against an upright headstone;
  • she fixed her eyes on the deep-burning west, and sank into a pleasurable
  • trance. Caroline, going a little apart, paced to and fro beneath the
  • rectory garden wall, dreaming too in her way. Shirley had mentioned the
  • word "mother." That word suggested to Caroline's imagination not the
  • mighty and mystical parent of Shirley's visions, but a gentle human
  • form--the form she ascribed to her own mother, unknown, unloved, but not
  • unlonged for.
  • "Oh that the day would come when she would remember her child! Oh that I
  • might know her, and knowing, love her!"
  • Such was her aspiration.
  • The longing of her childhood filled her soul again. The desire which
  • many a night had kept her awake in her crib, and which fear of its
  • fallacy had of late years almost extinguished, relit suddenly, and
  • glowed warm in her heart, that her mother might come some happy day,
  • and send for her to her presence, look upon her fondly with loving eyes,
  • and say to her tenderly, in a sweet voice, "Caroline, my child, I have a
  • home for you; you shall live with me. All the love you have needed, and
  • not tasted, from infancy, I have saved for you carefully. Come; it shall
  • cherish you now."
  • A noise on the road roused Caroline from her filial hopes, and Shirley
  • from her Titan visions. They listened, and heard the tramp of horses.
  • They looked, and saw a glitter through the trees. They caught through
  • the foliage glimpses of martial scarlet; helm shone, plume waved. Silent
  • and orderly, six soldiers rode softly by.
  • "The same we saw this afternoon," whispered Shirley. "They have been
  • halting somewhere till now. They wish to be as little noticed as
  • possible, and are seeking their rendezvous at this quiet hour, while the
  • people are at church. Did I not say we should see unusual things ere
  • long?"
  • Scarcely were sight and sound of the soldiers lost, when another and
  • somewhat different disturbance broke the night-hush--a child's impatient
  • scream. They looked. A man issued from the church, carrying in his arms
  • an infant--a robust, ruddy little boy of some two years old--roaring
  • with all the power of his lungs. He had probably just awaked from a
  • church-sleep. Two little girls, of nine and ten, followed. The influence
  • of the fresh air, and the attraction of some flowers gathered from a
  • grave, soon quieted the child. The man sat down with him, dandling him
  • on his knee as tenderly as any woman; the two little girls took their
  • places one on each side.
  • "Good-evening, William," said Shirley, after due scrutiny of the man. He
  • had seen her before, and apparently was waiting to be recognized. He now
  • took off his hat, and grinned a smile of pleasure. He was a
  • rough-headed, hard-featured personage, not old, but very weather-beaten.
  • His attire was decent and clean; that of his children singularly neat.
  • It was our old friend Farren. The young ladies approached him.
  • "You are not going into the church?" he inquired, gazing at them
  • complacently, yet with a mixture of bashfulness in his look--a sentiment
  • not by any means the result of awe of their station, but only of
  • appreciation of their elegance and youth. Before gentlemen--such as
  • Moore or Helstone, for instance--William was often a little dogged;
  • with proud or insolent ladies, too, he was quite unmanageable, sometimes
  • very resentful; but he was most sensible of, most tractable to,
  • good-humour and civility. His nature--a stubborn one--was repelled by
  • inflexibility in other natures; for which reason he had never been able
  • to like his former master, Moore; and unconscious of that gentleman's
  • good opinion of himself, and of the service he had secretly rendered him
  • in recommending him as gardener to Mr. Yorke, and by this means to other
  • families in the neighbourhood, he continued to harbour a grudge against
  • his austerity. Latterly he had often worked at Fieldhead. Miss Keeldar's
  • frank, hospitable manners were perfectly charming to him. Caroline he
  • had known from her childhood; unconsciously she was his ideal of a lady.
  • Her gentle mien, step, gestures, her grace of person and attire, moved
  • some artist-fibres about his peasant heart. He had a pleasure in looking
  • at her, as he had in examining rare flowers or in seeing pleasant
  • landscapes. Both the ladies liked William; it was their delight to lend
  • him books, to give him plants; and they preferred his conversation far
  • before that of many coarse, hard, pretentious people immeasurably higher
  • in station.
  • "Who was speaking, William, when you came out?" asked Shirley.
  • "A gentleman ye set a deal of store on, Miss Shirley--Mr. Donne."
  • "You look knowing, William. How did you find out my regard for Mr.
  • Donne?"
  • "Ay, Miss Shirley, there's a gleg light i' your een sometimes which
  • betrays you. You look raight down scornful sometimes when Mr. Donne is
  • by."
  • "Do you like him yourself, William?"
  • "Me? I'm stalled o' t' curates, and so is t' wife. They've no manners.
  • They talk to poor folk fair as if they thought they were beneath them.
  • They're allus magnifying their office. It is a pity but their office
  • could magnify them; but it does nought o' t' soart. I fair hate pride."
  • "But you are proud in your own way yourself," interposed Caroline. "You
  • are what you call house-proud: you like to have everything handsome
  • about you. Sometimes you look as if you were almost too proud to take
  • your wages. When you were out of work, you were too proud to get
  • anything on credit. But for your children, I believe you would rather
  • have starved than gone to the shops without money; and when I wanted to
  • give you something, what a difficulty I had in making you take it!"
  • "It is partly true, Miss Caroline. Ony day I'd rather give than take,
  • especially from sich as ye. Look at t' difference between us. Ye're a
  • little, young, slender lass, and I'm a great strong man; I'm rather more
  • nor twice your age. It is not _my_ part, then, I think, to tak fro'
  • _ye_--to be under obligations (as they say) to _ye_. And that day ye
  • came to our house, and called me to t' door, and offered me five
  • shillings, which I doubt ye could ill spare--for ye've no fortin', I
  • know--that day I war fair a rebel, a radical, an insurrectionist; and
  • _ye_ made me so. I thought it shameful that, willing and able as I was
  • to work, I suld be i' such a condition that a young cratur about the age
  • o' my own eldest lass suld think it needful to come and offer me her bit
  • o' brass."
  • "I suppose you were angry with me, William?"
  • "I almost was, in a way. But I forgave ye varry soon. Ye meant well. Ay,
  • _I am_ proud, and so are _ye_; but your pride and mine is t' raight
  • mak--what we call i' Yorkshire clean pride--such as Mr. Malone and Mr.
  • Donne knows nought about. Theirs is mucky pride. Now, I shall teach my
  • lasses to be as proud as Miss Shirley there, and my lads to be as proud
  • as myseln; but I dare ony o' 'em to be like t' curates. I'd lick little
  • Michael if I seed him show any signs o' that feeling."
  • "What is the difference, William?"
  • "Ye know t' difference weel enow, but ye want me to get a gate o'
  • talking. Mr. Malone and Mr. Donne is almost too proud to do aught for
  • theirseln; _we_ are almost too proud to let anybody do aught for us. T'
  • curates can hardly bide to speak a civil word to them they think beneath
  • them; _we_ can hardly bide to tak an uncivil word fro' them that thinks
  • themseln aboon us."
  • "Now, William, be humble enough to tell me truly how you are getting on
  • in the world. Are you well off?"
  • "Miss Shirley, I am varry well off. Since I got into t' gardening line,
  • wi' Mr. Yorke's help, and since Mr. Hall (another o' t' raight sort)
  • helped my wife to set up a bit of a shop, I've nought to complain of. My
  • family has plenty to eat and plenty to wear. My pride makes me find
  • means to have an odd pound now and then against rainy days; for I think
  • I'd die afore I'd come to t' parish; and me and mine is content. But t'
  • neighbours is poor yet. I see a great deal of distress."
  • "And, consequently, there is still discontent, I suppose?" inquired Miss
  • Keeldar.
  • "_Consequently_--ye say right--_consequently_. In course, starving folk
  • cannot be satisfied or settled folk. The country's not in a safe
  • condition--I'll say so mich!"
  • "But what can be done? What more can I do, for instance?"
  • "Do? Ye can do not mich, poor young lass! Ye've gi'en your brass; ye've
  • done well. If ye could transport your tenant, Mr. Moore, to Botany Bay,
  • ye'd happen do better. Folks hate him."
  • "William, for shame!" exclaimed Caroline warmly. "If folks _do_ hate
  • him, it is to their disgrace, not his. Mr. Moore himself hates nobody.
  • He only wants to do his duty, and maintain his rights. You are wrong to
  • talk so."
  • "I talk as I think. He has a cold, unfeeling heart, yond' Moore."
  • "But," interposed Shirley, "supposing Moore was driven from the country,
  • and his mill razed to the ground, would people have more work?"
  • "They'd have less. I know that, and they know that; and there is many an
  • honest lad driven desperate by the certainty that whichever way he turns
  • he cannot better himself; and there is dishonest men plenty to guide
  • them to the devil, scoundrels that reckons to be the 'people's friends,'
  • and that knows nought about the people, and is as insincere as Lucifer.
  • I've lived aboon forty year in the world, and I believe that 'the
  • people' will never have any true friends but theirseln and them two or
  • three good folk i' different stations that is friends to all the world.
  • Human natur', taking it i' th' lump, is nought but selfishness. It is
  • but excessive few, it is but just an exception here and there, now and
  • then, sich as ye two young uns and me, that, being in a different
  • sphere, can understand t' one t' other, and be friends wi'out
  • slavishness o' one hand or pride o' t' other. Them that reckons to be
  • friends to a lower class than their own fro' political motives is never
  • to be trusted; they always try to make their inferiors tools. For my own
  • part, I will neither be patronized nor misled for no man's pleasure.
  • I've had overtures made to me lately that I saw were treacherous, and I
  • flung 'em back i' the faces o' them that offered 'em."
  • "You won't tell us what overtures?"
  • "I will not. It would do no good. It would mak no difference. Them they
  • concerned can look after theirseln."
  • "Ay, we'se look after werseln," said another voice. Joe Scott had
  • sauntered forth from the church to get a breath of fresh air, and there
  • he stood.
  • "I'll warrant _ye_, Joe," observed William, smiling.
  • "And I'll warrant my maister," was the answer.--"Young ladies,"
  • continued Joe, assuming a lordly air, "ye'd better go into th' house."
  • "I wonder what for?" inquired Shirley, to whom the overlooker's somewhat
  • pragmatical manners were familiar, and who was often at war with him;
  • for Joe, holding supercilious theories about women in general, resented
  • greatly, in his secret soul, the fact of his master and his master's
  • mill being, in a manner, under petticoat government, and had felt as
  • wormwood and gall certain business visits of the heiress to the Hollow's
  • counting-house.
  • "Because there is nought agate that fits women to be consarned in."
  • "Indeed! There is prayer and preaching agate in that church. Are we not
  • concerned in that?"
  • "Ye have been present neither at the prayer nor preaching, ma'am, if I
  • have observed aright. What I alluded to was politics. William Farren
  • here was touching on that subject, if I'm not mista'en."
  • "Well, what then? Politics are our habitual study, Joe. Do you know I
  • see a newspaper every day, and two of a Sunday?"
  • "I should think you'll read the marriages, probably, miss, and the
  • murders, and the accidents, and sich like?"
  • "I read the leading articles, Joe, and the foreign intelligence, and I
  • look over the market prices. In short, I read just what gentlemen read."
  • Joe looked as if he thought this talk was like the chattering of a pie.
  • He replied to it by a disdainful silence.
  • "Joe," continued Miss Keeldar, "I never yet could ascertain properly
  • whether you are a Whig or a Tory. Pray, which party has the honour of
  • your alliance?"
  • "It is rayther difficult to explain where you are sure not to be
  • understood," was Joe's haughty response; "but as to being a Tory, I'd as
  • soon be an old woman, or a young one, which is a more flimsier article
  • still. It is the Tories that carries on the war and ruins trade; and if
  • I be of any party--though political parties is all nonsense--I'm of
  • that which is most favourable to peace, and, by consequence, to the
  • mercantile interests of this here land."
  • "So am I, Joe," replied Shirley, who had rather a pleasure in teasing
  • the overlooker, by persisting in talking on subjects with which he
  • opined she, as a woman, had no right to meddle--"partly, at least. I
  • have rather a leaning to the agricultural interest, too; as good reason
  • is, seeing that I don't desire England to be under the feet of France,
  • and that if a share of my income comes from Hollow's Mill, a larger
  • share comes from the landed estate around it. It would not do to take
  • any measures injurious to the farmers, Joe, I think?"
  • "The dews at this hour is unwholesome for females," observed Joe.
  • "If you make that remark out of interest in me, I have merely to assure
  • you that I am impervious to cold. I should not mind taking my turn to
  • watch the mill one of these summer nights, armed with your musket, Joe."
  • Joe Scott's chin was always rather prominent. He poked it out, at this
  • speech, some inches farther than usual.
  • "But--to go back to my sheep," she proceeded--"clothier and mill-owner
  • as I am, besides farmer, I cannot get out of my head a certain idea that
  • we manufacturers and persons of business are sometimes a little--a _very
  • little_--selfish and short-sighted in our views, and rather _too_
  • regardless of human suffering, rather heartless in our pursuit of gain.
  • Don't you agree with me, Joe?"
  • "I cannot argue where I cannot be comprehended," was again the answer.
  • "Man of mystery! Your master will argue with me sometimes, Joe. He is
  • not so stiff as you are."
  • "Maybe not. We've all our own ways."
  • "Joe, do you seriously think all the wisdom in the world is lodged in
  • male skulls?"
  • "I think that women are a kittle and a froward generation; and I've a
  • great respect for the doctrines delivered in the second chapter of St.
  • Paul's first Epistle to Timothy."
  • "What doctrines, Joe?"
  • "'Let the woman learn in silence, with all subjection. I suffer not a
  • woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in
  • silence. For Adam was first formed, then Eve.'"
  • "What has that to do with the business?" interjected Shirley. "That
  • smacks of rights of primogeniture. I'll bring it up to Mr. Yorke the
  • first time he inveighs against those rights."
  • "And," continued Joe Scott, "Adam was not deceived, but the woman being
  • deceived was in the transgression."
  • "More shame to Adam to sin with his eyes open!" cried Miss Keeldar. "To
  • confess the honest truth, Joe, I never was easy in my mind concerning
  • that chapter. It puzzles me."
  • "It is very plain, miss. He that runs may read."
  • "He may read it in his own fashion," remarked Caroline, now joining in
  • the dialogue for the first time. "You allow the right of private
  • judgment, I suppose, Joe?"
  • "My certy, that I do! I allow and claim it for every line of the holy
  • Book."
  • "Women may exercise it as well as men?"
  • "Nay. Women is to take their husbands' opinion, both in politics and
  • religion. It's wholesomest for them."
  • "Oh! oh!" exclaimed both Shirley and Caroline.
  • "To be sure; no doubt on't," persisted the stubborn overlooker.
  • "Consider yourself groaned down, and cried shame over, for such a stupid
  • observation," said Miss Keeldar. "You might as well say men are to take
  • the opinions of their priests without examination. Of what value would a
  • religion so adopted be? It would be mere blind, besotted superstition."
  • "And what is _your_ reading, Miss Helstone, o' these words o' St.
  • Paul's?"
  • "Hem! I--I account for them in this way. He wrote that chapter for a
  • particular congregation of Christians, under peculiar circumstances; and
  • besides, I dare say, if I could read the original Greek, I should find
  • that many of the words have been wrongly translated, perhaps
  • misapprehended altogether. It would be possible, I doubt not, with a
  • little ingenuity, to give the passage quite a contrary turn--to make it
  • say, 'Let the woman speak out whenever she sees fit to make an
  • objection.' 'It is permitted to a woman to teach and to exercise
  • authority as much as may be. Man, meantime, cannot do better than hold
  • his peace;' and so on."
  • "That willn't wash, miss."
  • "I dare say it will. My notions are dyed in faster colours than yours,
  • Joe. Mr. Scott, you are a thoroughly dogmatical person, and always
  • were. I like William better than you."
  • "Joe is well enough in his own house," said Shirley. "I have seen him as
  • quiet as a lamb at home. There is not a better nor a kinder husband in
  • Briarfield. He does not dogmatize to his wife."
  • "My wife is a hard-working, plain woman; time and trouble has ta'en all
  • the conceit out of her. But that is not the case with you, young misses.
  • And then you reckon to have so much knowledge; and i' my thoughts it's
  • only superficial sort o' vanities you're acquainted with. I can
  • tell--happen a year sin'--one day Miss Caroline coming into our
  • counting-house when I war packing up summat behind t' great desk, and
  • she didn't see me, and she brought a slate wi' a sum on it to t'
  • maister. It war only a bit of a sum in practice, that our Harry would
  • have settled i' two minutes. She couldn't do it. Mr. Moore had to show
  • her how. And when he did show her, she couldn't understand him."
  • "Nonsense, Joe!"
  • "Nay, it's no nonsense. And Miss Shirley there reckons to hearken to t'
  • maister when he's talking ower trade, so attentive like, as if she
  • followed him word for word, and all war as clear as a lady's
  • looking-glass to her een; and all t' while she's peeping and peeping out
  • o' t' window to see if t' mare stands quiet; and then looking at a bit
  • of a splash on her riding-skirt; and then glancing glegly round at wer
  • counting-house cobwebs and dust, and thinking what mucky folk we are,
  • and what a grand ride she'll have just i' now ower Nunnely Common. She
  • hears no more o' Mr. Moore's talk nor if he spake Hebrew."
  • "Joe, you are a real slanderer. I would give you your answer, only the
  • people are coming out of church. We must leave you. Man of prejudice,
  • good-bye.--William, good-bye.--Children, come up to Fieldhead to-morrow,
  • and you shall choose what you like best out of Mrs. Gill's store-room."
  • CHAPTER XIX.
  • A SUMMER NIGHT.
  • The hour was now that of dusk. A clear air favoured the kindling of the
  • stars.
  • "There will be just light enough to show me the way home," said Miss
  • Keeldar, as she prepared to take leave of Caroline at the rectory garden
  • door.
  • "You must not go alone, Shirley; Fanny shall accompany you."
  • "That she shall not. Of what need I be afraid in my own parish? I would
  • walk from Fieldhead to the church any fine midsummer night, three hours
  • later than this, for the mere pleasure of seeing the stars and the
  • chance of meeting a fairy."
  • "But just wait till the crowd is cleared away."
  • "Agreed. There are the five Misses Armitage streaming by. Here comes
  • Mrs. Sykes's phaeton, Mr. Wynne's close carriage, Mrs. Birtwhistle's
  • car. I don't wish to go through the ceremony of bidding them all
  • good-bye, so we will step into the garden and take shelter amongst the
  • laburnums for an instant."
  • The rectors, their curates, and their churchwardens now issued from the
  • church porch. There was a great confabulation, shaking of hands,
  • congratulation on speeches, recommendation to be careful of the night
  • air, etc. By degrees the throng dispersed, the carriages drove off. Miss
  • Keeldar was just emerging from her flowery refuge when Mr. Helstone
  • entered the garden and met her.
  • "Oh, I want you!" he said. "I was afraid you were already
  • gone.--Caroline, come here."
  • Caroline came, expecting, as Shirley did, a lecture on not having been
  • visible at church. Other subjects, however, occupied the rector's mind.
  • "I shall not sleep at home to-night," he continued. "I have just met
  • with an old friend, and promised to accompany him. I shall return
  • probably about noon to-morrow. Thomas, the clerk, is engaged, and I
  • cannot get him to sleep in the house, as I usually do when I am absent
  • for a night. Now----"
  • "Now," interrupted Shirley, "you want me as a gentleman--the first
  • gentleman in Briarfield, in short--to supply your place, be master of
  • the rectory and guardian of your niece and maids while you are away?"
  • "Exactly, captain. I thought the post would suit you. Will you favour
  • Caroline so far as to be her guest for one night? Will you stay here
  • instead of going back to Fieldhead?"
  • "And what will Mrs. Pryor do? she expects me home."
  • "I will send her word. Come, make up your mind to stay. It grows late;
  • the dew falls heavily. You and Caroline will enjoy each other's society,
  • I doubt not."
  • "I promise you, then, to stay with Caroline," replied Shirley. "As you
  • say, we shall enjoy each other's society. We will not be separated
  • to-night. Now, rejoin your old friend, and fear nothing for us."
  • "If there should chance to be any disturbance in the night, captain; if
  • you should hear the picking of a lock, the cutting out of a pane of
  • glass, a stealthy tread of steps about the house (and I need not fear to
  • tell _you_, who bear a well-tempered, mettlesome heart under your girl's
  • ribbon sash, that such little incidents are very possible in the present
  • time), what would you do?"
  • "Don't know; faint, perhaps--fall down, and have to be picked up again.
  • But, doctor, if you assign me the post of honour, you must give me arms.
  • What weapons are there in your stronghold?"
  • "You could not wield a sword?"
  • "No; I could manage the carving-knife better."
  • "You will find a good one in the dining-room sideboard--a lady's knife,
  • light to handle, and as sharp-pointed as a poniard."
  • "It will suit Caroline. But you must give me a brace of pistols. I know
  • you have pistols."
  • "I have two pairs. One pair I can place at your disposal. You will find
  • them suspended over the mantelpiece of my study in cloth cases."
  • "Loaded?"
  • "Yes, but not on the cock. Cock them before you go to bed. It is paying
  • you a great compliment, captain, to lend you these. Were you one of the
  • awkward squad you should not have them."
  • "I will take care. You need delay no longer, Mr. Helstone. You may go
  • now.--He is gracious to me to lend me his pistols," she remarked, as the
  • rector passed out at the garden gate. "But come, Lina," she continued,
  • "let us go in and have some supper. I was too much vexed at tea with the
  • vicinage of Mr. Sam Wynne to be able to eat, and now I am really
  • hungry."
  • Entering the house, they repaired to the darkened dining-room, through
  • the open windows of which apartment stole the evening air, bearing the
  • perfume of flowers from the garden, the very distant sound of
  • far-retreating steps from the road, and a soft, vague murmur whose
  • origin Caroline explained by the remark, uttered as she stood listening
  • at the casement, "Shirley, I hear the beck in the Hollow."
  • Then she rang the bell, asked for a candle and some bread and milk--Miss
  • Keeldar's usual supper and her own. Fanny, when she brought in the tray,
  • would have closed the windows and the shutters, but was requested to
  • desist for the present. The twilight was too calm, its breath too balmy
  • to be yet excluded. They took their meal in silence. Caroline rose once
  • to remove to the window-sill a glass of flowers which stood on the
  • sideboard, the exhalation from the blossoms being somewhat too powerful
  • for the sultry room. In returning she half opened a drawer, and took
  • from it something that glittered clear and keen in her hand.
  • "You assigned this to me, then, Shirley, did you? It is bright,
  • keen-edged, finely tapered; it is dangerous-looking. I never yet felt
  • the impulse which could move me to direct this against a
  • fellow-creature. It is difficult to fancy that circumstances could nerve
  • my arm to strike home with this long knife."
  • "I should hate to do it," replied Shirley, "but I think I could do it,
  • if goaded by certain exigencies which I can imagine." And Miss Keeldar
  • quietly sipped her glass of new milk, looking somewhat thoughtful and a
  • little pale; though, indeed, when did she not look pale? She was never
  • florid.
  • The milk sipped and the bread eaten, Fanny was again summoned. She and
  • Eliza were recommended to go to bed, which they were quite willing to
  • do, being weary of the day's exertions, of much cutting of currant-buns,
  • and filling of urns and teapots, and running backwards and forwards
  • with trays. Ere long the maids' chamber door was heard to close.
  • Caroline took a candle and went quietly all over the house, seeing that
  • every window was fast and every door barred. She did not even evade the
  • haunted back kitchen nor the vault-like cellars. These visited, she
  • returned.
  • "There is neither spirit nor flesh in the house at present," she said,
  • "which should not be there. It is now near eleven o'clock, fully
  • bedtime; yet I would rather sit up a little longer, if you do not
  • object, Shirley. Here," she continued, "I have brought the brace of
  • pistols from my uncle's study. You may examine them at your leisure."
  • She placed them on the table before her friend.
  • "Why would you rather sit up longer?" asked Miss Keeldar, taking up the
  • firearms, examining them, and again laying them down.
  • "Because I have a strange, excited feeling in my heart."
  • "So have I."
  • "Is this state of sleeplessness and restlessness caused by something
  • electrical in the air, I wonder?"
  • "No; the sky is clear, the stars numberless. It is a fine night."
  • "But very still. I hear the water fret over its stony bed in Hollow's
  • Copse as distinctly as if it ran below the churchyard wall."
  • "I am glad it is so still a night. A moaning wind or rushing rain would
  • vex me to fever just now."
  • "Why, Shirley?"
  • "Because it would baffle my efforts to listen."
  • "Do you listen towards the Hollow?"
  • "Yes; it is the only quarter whence we can hear a sound just now."
  • "The only one, Shirley."
  • They both sat near the window, and both leaned their arms on the sill,
  • and both inclined their heads towards the open lattice. They saw each
  • other's young faces by the starlight and that dim June twilight which
  • does not wholly fade from the west till dawn begins to break in the
  • east.
  • "Mr. Helstone thinks we have no idea which way he is gone," murmured
  • Miss Keeldar, "nor on what errand, nor with what expectations, nor how
  • prepared. But I guess much; do not you?"
  • "I guess something."
  • "All those gentlemen--your cousin Moore included--think that you and I
  • are now asleep in our beds, unconscious."
  • "Caring nothing about them--hoping and fearing nothing for them," added
  • Caroline.
  • Both kept silent for full half an hour. The night was silent too; only
  • the church clock measured its course by quarters. Some words were
  • interchanged about the chill of the air. They wrapped their scarves
  • closer round them, resumed their bonnets, which they had removed, and
  • again watched.
  • Towards midnight the teasing, monotonous bark of the house-dog disturbed
  • the quietude of their vigil. Caroline rose, and made her way noiselessly
  • through the dark passages to the kitchen, intending to appease him with
  • a piece of bread. She succeeded. On returning to the dining-room she
  • found it all dark, Miss Keeldar having extinguished the candle. The
  • outline of her shape was visible near the still open window, leaning
  • out. Miss Helstone asked no questions; she stole to her side. The dog
  • recommenced barking furiously. Suddenly he stopped, and seemed to
  • listen. The occupants of the dining-room listened too, and not merely
  • now to the flow of the mill-stream. There was a nearer, though a
  • muffled, sound on the road below the churchyard--a measured, beating,
  • approaching sound--a dull tramp of marching feet.
  • It drew near. Those who listened by degrees comprehended its extent. It
  • was not the tread of two, nor of a dozen, nor of a score of men; it was
  • the tread of hundreds. They could see nothing; the high shrubs of the
  • garden formed a leafy screen between them and the road. To hear,
  • however, was not enough, and this they felt as the troop trod forwards,
  • and seemed actually passing the rectory. They felt it more when a human
  • voice--though that voice spoke but one word--broke the hush of the
  • night.
  • "Halt!"
  • A halt followed. The march was arrested. Then came a low conference, of
  • which no word was distinguishable from the dining-room.
  • "We _must_ hear this," said Shirley.
  • She turned, took her pistols from the table, silently passed out through
  • the middle window of the dining-room, which was, in fact, a glass door,
  • stole down the walk to the garden wall, and stood listening under the
  • lilacs. Caroline would not have quitted the house had she been alone,
  • but where Shirley went she would go. She glanced at the weapon on the
  • sideboard, but left it behind her, and presently stood at her friend's
  • side. They dared not look over the wall, for fear of being seen; they
  • were obliged to crouch behind it. They heard these words,--
  • "It looks a rambling old building. Who lives in it besides the damned
  • parson?"
  • "Only three women--his niece and two servants."
  • "Do you know where they sleep?"
  • "The lasses behind; the niece in a front room."
  • "And Helstone?"
  • "Yonder is his chamber. He was burning a light, but I see none now."
  • "Where would you get in?"
  • "If I were ordered to do his job--and he desarves it--I'd try yond' long
  • window; it opens to the dining-room. I could grope my way upstairs, and
  • I know his chamber."
  • "How would you manage about the women folk?"
  • "Let 'em alone except they shrieked, and then I'd soon quieten 'em. I
  • could wish to find the old chap asleep. If he waked, he'd be dangerous."
  • "Has he arms?"
  • "Firearms, allus--and allus loadened."
  • "Then you're a fool to stop us here. A shot would give the alarm. Moore
  • would be on us before we could turn round. We should miss our main
  • object."
  • "You might go on, I tell you. I'd engage Helstone alone."
  • A pause. One of the party dropped some weapon, which rang on the stone
  • causeway. At this sound the rectory dog barked again
  • furiously--fiercely.
  • "That spoils all!" said the voice. "He'll awake. A noise like that might
  • rouse the dead. You did not say there was a dog. Damn you! Forward!"
  • Forward they went--tramp, tramp--with mustering, manifold, slow-filing
  • tread. They were gone.
  • Shirley stood erect, looked over the wall, along the road.
  • "Not a soul remains," she said.
  • She stood and mused. "Thank God!" was the next observation.
  • Caroline repeated the ejaculation--not in so steady a tone. She was
  • trembling much. Her heart was beating fast and thick; her face was cold,
  • her forehead damp.
  • "Thank God for us!" she reiterated. "But what will happen elsewhere?
  • They have passed us by that they may make sure of others."
  • "They have done well," returned Shirley, with composure. "The others
  • will defend themselves. They can do it. They are prepared for them. With
  • us it is otherwise. My finger was on the trigger of this pistol. I was
  • quite ready to give that man, if he had entered, such a greeting as he
  • little calculated on; but behind him followed three hundred. I had
  • neither three hundred hands nor three hundred weapons. I could not have
  • effectually protected either you, myself, or the two poor women asleep
  • under that roof. Therefore I again earnestly thank God for insult and
  • peril escaped."
  • After a second pause she continued: "What is it my duty and wisdom to do
  • next? Not to stay here inactive, I am glad to say, but, of course, to
  • walk over to the Hollow."
  • "To the Hollow, Shirley?"
  • "To the Hollow. Will you go with me?"
  • "Where those men are gone?"
  • "They have taken the highway; we should not encounter them. The road
  • over the fields is as safe, silent, and solitary as a path through the
  • air would be. Will you go?"
  • "Yes," was the answer, given mechanically, not because the speaker
  • wished or was prepared to go, or, indeed, was otherwise than scared at
  • the prospect of going, but because she felt she could not abandon
  • Shirley.
  • "Then we must fasten up these windows, and leave all as secure as we can
  • behind us. Do you know what we are going for, Cary?"
  • "Yes--no--because you wish it."
  • "Is that all? And are you so obedient to a mere caprice of mine? What a
  • docile wife you would make to a stern husband! The moon's face is not
  • whiter than yours at this moment, and the aspen at the gate does not
  • tremble more than your busy fingers; and so, tractable and
  • terror-struck, and dismayed and devoted, you would follow me into the
  • thick of real danger! Cary, let me give your fidelity a motive. We are
  • going for Moore's sake--to see if we can be of use to him, to make an
  • effort to warn him of what is coming."
  • "To be sure! I am a blind, weak fool, and you are acute and sensible,
  • Shirley. I will go with you; I will gladly go with you!"
  • "I do not doubt it. You would die blindly and meekly for me, but you
  • would intelligently and gladly die for Moore. But, in truth, there is no
  • question of death to-night; we run no risk at all."
  • Caroline rapidly closed shutter and lattice. "Do not fear that I shall
  • not have breath to run as fast as you can possibly run, Shirley. Take my
  • hand. Let us go straight across the fields."
  • "But you cannot climb walls?"
  • "To-night I can."
  • "You are afraid of hedges, and the beck which we shall be forced to
  • cross?"
  • "I can cross it."
  • They started; they ran. Many a wall checked but did not baffle them.
  • Shirley was surefooted and agile; she could spring like a deer when she
  • chose. Caroline, more timid and less dexterous, fell once or twice, and
  • bruised herself; but she rose again directly, saying she was not hurt. A
  • quickset hedge bounded the last field; they lost time in seeking a gap
  • in it. The aperture, when found, was narrow, but they worked their way
  • through. The long hair, the tender skin, the silks and the muslins
  • suffered; but what was chiefly regretted was the impediment this
  • difficulty had caused to speed. On the other side they met the beck,
  • flowing deep in a rough bed. At this point a narrow plank formed the
  • only bridge across it. Shirley had trodden the plank successfully and
  • fearlessly many a time before; Caroline had never yet dared to risk the
  • transit.
  • "I will carry you across," said Miss Keeldar. "You are light, and I am
  • not weak. Let me try."
  • "If I fall in, you may fish me out," was the answer, as a grateful
  • squeeze compressed her hand. Caroline, without pausing, trod forward on
  • the trembling plank as if it were a continuation of the firm turf.
  • Shirley, who followed, did not cross it more resolutely or safely. In
  • their present humour, on their present errand, a strong and foaming
  • channel would have been a barrier to neither. At the moment they were
  • above the control either of fire or water. All Stilbro' Moor, alight and
  • aglow with bonfires, would not have stopped them, nor would Calder or
  • Aire thundering in flood. Yet one sound made them pause. Scarce had
  • they set foot on the solid opposite bank when a shot split the air from
  • the north. One second elapsed. Further off burst a like note in the
  • south. Within the space of three minutes similar signals boomed in the
  • east and west.
  • "I thought we were dead at the first explosion," observed Shirley,
  • drawing a long breath. "I felt myself hit in the temples, and I
  • concluded your heart was pierced; but the reiterated voice was an
  • explanation. Those are signals--it is their way--the attack must be
  • near. We should have had wings. Our feet have not borne us swiftly
  • enough."
  • A portion of the copse was now to clear. When they emerged from it the
  • mill lay just below them. They could look down upon the buildings, the
  • yard; they could see the road beyond. And the first glance in that
  • direction told Shirley she was right in her conjecture. They were
  • already too late to give warning. It had taken more time than they
  • calculated on to overcome the various obstacles which embarrassed the
  • short cut across the fields.
  • The road, which should have been white, was dark with a moving mass. The
  • rioters were assembled in front of the closed yard gates, and a single
  • figure stood within, apparently addressing them. The mill itself was
  • perfectly black and still. There was neither life, light, nor motion
  • around it.
  • "Surely he is prepared. Surely that is not Moore meeting them alone?"
  • whispered Shirley.
  • "It is. We must go to him. I _will_ go to him."
  • "_That_ you will not."
  • "Why did I come, then? I came only for him. I shall join him."
  • "Fortunately it is out of your power. There is no entrance to the yard."
  • "There _is_ a small entrance at the back, besides the gates in front. It
  • opens by a secret method which I know. I will try it."
  • "Not with my leave."
  • Miss Keeldar clasped her round the waist with both arms and held her
  • back. "Not one step shall you stir," she went on authoritatively. "At
  • this moment Moore would be both shocked and embarrassed if he saw either
  • you or me. Men never want women near them in time of real danger."
  • "I would not trouble--I would help him," was the reply.
  • "How?--by inspiring him with heroism? Pooh! these are not the days of
  • chivalry. It is not a tilt at a tournament we are going to behold, but a
  • struggle about money, and food, and life."
  • "It is natural that I should be at his side."
  • "As queen of his heart? His mill is his lady-love, Cary! Backed by his
  • factory and his frames, he has all the encouragement he wants or can
  • know. It is not for love or beauty, but for ledger and broadcloth, he is
  • going to break a spear. Don't be sentimental; Robert is not so."
  • "I _could_ help him; I _will_ seek him."
  • "Off then--I let you go--seek Moore. You'll not find him."
  • She loosened her hold. Caroline sped like levelled shaft from bent bow;
  • after her rang a jesting, gibing laugh. "Look well there is no mistake!"
  • was the warning given.
  • But there _was_ a mistake. Miss Helstone paused, hesitated, gazed. The
  • figure had suddenly retreated from the gate, and was running back
  • hastily to the mill.
  • "Make haste, Lina!" cried Shirley; "meet him before he enters."
  • Caroline slowly returned. "It is not Robert," she said. "It has neither
  • his height, form, nor bearing."
  • "I saw it was not Robert when I let you go. How could you imagine it? It
  • is a shabby little figure of a private soldier; they had posted him as
  • sentinel. He is safe in the mill now. I saw the door open and admit him.
  • My mind grows easier. Robert is prepared. Our warning would have been
  • superfluous; and now I am thankful we came too late to give it. It has
  • saved us the trouble of a scene. How fine to have entered the
  • counting-house _toute éperdue_, and to have found oneself in presence of
  • Messrs. Armitage and Ramsden smoking, Malone swaggering, your uncle
  • sneering, Mr. Sykes sipping a cordial, and Moore himself in his cold
  • man-of-business vein! I am glad we missed it all."
  • "I wonder if there are many in the mill, Shirley!"
  • "Plenty to defend it. The soldiers we have twice seen to-day were going
  • there, no doubt, and the group we noticed surrounding your cousin in the
  • fields will be with him."
  • "What are they doing now, Shirley? What is that noise?"
  • "Hatchets and crowbars against the yard gates. They are forcing them.
  • Are you afraid?"
  • "No; but my heart throbs fast. I have a difficulty in standing. I will
  • sit down. Do you feel unmoved?"
  • "Hardly that; but I am glad I came. We shall see what transpires with
  • our own eyes. We are here on the spot, and none know it. Instead of
  • amazing the curate, the clothier, and the corn-dealer with a romantic
  • rush on the stage, we stand alone with the friendly night, its mute
  • stars, and these whispering trees, whose report our friends will not
  • come to gather."
  • "Shirley, Shirley, the gates are down! That crash was like the felling
  • of great trees. Now they are pouring through. They will break down the
  • mill doors as they have broken the gate. What can Robert do against so
  • many? Would to God I were a little nearer him--could hear him
  • speak--could speak to him! With my will--my longing to serve him--I
  • could not be a useless burden in his way; I could be turned to some
  • account."
  • "They come on!" cried Shirley. "How steadily they march in! There is
  • discipline in their ranks. I will not say there is courage--hundreds
  • against tens are no proof of that quality--but" (she dropped her voice)
  • "there is suffering and desperation enough amongst them. These goads
  • will urge them forwards."
  • "Forwards against Robert; and they hate him. Shirley, is there much
  • danger they will win the day?"
  • "We shall see. Moore and Helstone are of 'earth's first blood'--no
  • bunglers--no cravens----"
  • A crash--smash--shiver--stopped their whispers. A simultaneously hurled
  • volley of stones had saluted the broad front of the mill, with all its
  • windows; and now every pane of every lattice lay in shattered and
  • pounded fragments. A yell followed this demonstration--a rioters'
  • yell--a north-of-England, a Yorkshire, a West-Riding, a
  • West-Riding-clothing-district-of-Yorkshire rioters' yell.
  • You never heard that sound, perhaps, reader? So much the better for your
  • ears--perhaps for your heart, since, if it rends the air in hate to
  • yourself, or to the men or principles you approve, the interests to
  • which you wish well, wrath wakens to the cry of hate; the lion shakes
  • his mane, and rises to the howl of the hyena; caste stands up, ireful
  • against caste; and the indignant, wronged spirit of the middle rank
  • bears down in zeal and scorn on the famished and furious mass of the
  • operative class. It is difficult to be tolerant, difficult to be just,
  • in such moments.
  • Caroline rose; Shirley put her arm round her: they stood together as
  • still as the straight stems of two trees. That yell was a long one, and
  • when it ceased the night was yet full of the swaying and murmuring of a
  • crowd.
  • "What next?" was the question of the listeners. Nothing came yet. The
  • mill remained mute as a mausoleum.
  • "He _cannot_ be alone!" whispered Caroline.
  • "I would stake all I have that he is as little alone as he is alarmed,"
  • responded Shirley.
  • Shots were discharged by the rioters. Had the defenders waited for this
  • signal? It seemed so. The hitherto inert and passive mill woke; fire
  • flashed from its empty window-frames; a volley of musketry pealed sharp
  • through the Hollow.
  • "Moore speaks at last!" said Shirley, "and he seems to have the gift of
  • tongues. That was not a single voice."
  • "He has been forbearing. No one can accuse him of rashness," alleged
  • Caroline. "Their discharge preceded his. They broke his gates and his
  • windows. They fired at his garrison before he repelled them."
  • What was going on now? It seemed difficult, in the darkness, to
  • distinguish; but something terrible, a still-renewing tumult, was
  • obvious--fierce attacks, desperate repulses. The mill-yard, the mill
  • itself, was full of battle movement. There was scarcely any cessation
  • now of the discharge of firearms; and there was struggling, rushing,
  • trampling, and shouting between. The aim of the assailants seemed to be
  • to enter the mill, that of the defenders to beat them off. They heard
  • the rebel leader cry, "To the back, lads!" They heard a voice retort,
  • "Come round; we will meet you."
  • "To the counting-house!" was the order again.
  • "Welcome! we shall have you there!" was the response. And accordingly
  • the fiercest blaze that had yet glowed, the loudest rattle that had yet
  • been heard, burst from the counting-house front when the mass of rioters
  • rushed up to it.
  • The voice that had spoken was Moore's own voice. They could tell by its
  • tones that his soul was now warm with the conflict; they could guess
  • that the fighting animal was roused in every one of those men there
  • struggling together, and was for the time quite paramount above the
  • rational human being.
  • Both the girls felt their faces glow and their pulses throb; both knew
  • they would do no good by rushing down into the _mêlée_. They desired
  • neither to deal nor to receive blows; but they could not have run
  • away--Caroline no more than Shirley; they could not have fainted; they
  • could not have taken their eyes from the dim, terrible scene--from the
  • mass of cloud, of smoke, the musket-lightning--for the world.
  • "How and when would it end?" was the demand throbbing in their throbbing
  • pulses. "Would a juncture arise in which they could be useful?" was what
  • they waited to see; for though Shirley put off their too-late arrival
  • with a jest, and was ever ready to satirize her own or any other
  • person's enthusiasm, she would have given a farm of her best land for a
  • chance of rendering good service.
  • The chance was not vouchsafed her; the looked-for juncture never came.
  • It was not likely. Moore had expected this attack for days, perhaps
  • weeks; he was prepared for it at every point. He had fortified and
  • garrisoned his mill, which in itself was a strong building. He was a
  • cool, brave man; he stood to the defence with unflinching firmness.
  • Those who were with him caught his spirit, and copied his demeanour. The
  • rioters had never been so met before. At other mills they had attacked
  • they had found no resistance; an organized, resolute defence was what
  • they never dreamed of encountering. When their leaders saw the steady
  • fire kept up from the mill, witnessed the composure and determination of
  • its owner, heard themselves coolly defied and invited on to death, and
  • beheld their men falling wounded round them, they felt that nothing was
  • to be done here. In haste they mustered their forces, drew them away
  • from the building. A roll was called over, in which the men answered to
  • figures instead of names. They dispersed wide over the fields, leaving
  • silence and ruin behind them. The attack, from its commencement to its
  • termination, had not occupied an hour.
  • Day was by this time approaching; the west was dim, the east beginning
  • to gleam. It would have seemed that the girls who had watched this
  • conflict would now wish to hasten to the victors, on whose side all
  • their interest had been enlisted; but they only very cautiously
  • approached the now battered mill, and when suddenly a number of soldiers
  • and gentlemen appeared at the great door opening into the yard, they
  • quickly stepped aside into a shed, the deposit of old iron and timber,
  • whence they could see without being seen.
  • It was no cheering spectacle. These premises were now a mere blot of
  • desolation on the fresh front of the summer dawn. All the copse up the
  • Hollow was shady and dewy, the hill at its head was green; but just
  • here, in the centre of the sweet glen, Discord, broken loose in the
  • night from control, had beaten the ground with his stamping hoofs, and
  • left it waste and pulverized. The mill yawned all ruinous with unglazed
  • frames; the yard was thickly bestrewn with stones and brickbats; and
  • close under the mill, with the glittering fragments of the shattered
  • windows, muskets and other weapons lay here and there. More than one
  • deep crimson stain was visible on the gravel, a human body lay quiet on
  • its face near the gates, and five or six wounded men writhed and moaned
  • in the bloody dust.
  • Miss Keeldar's countenance changed at this view. It was the after-taste
  • of the battle, death and pain replacing excitement and exertion. It was
  • the blackness the bright fire leaves when its blaze is sunk, its warmth
  • failed, and its glow faded.
  • "This is what I wished to prevent," she said, in a voice whose cadence
  • betrayed the altered impulse of her heart.
  • "But you could not prevent it; you did your best--it was in vain," said
  • Caroline comfortingly. "Don't grieve, Shirley."
  • "I am sorry for those poor fellows," was the answer, while the spark in
  • her glance dissolved to dew. "Are any within the mill hurt, I wonder? Is
  • that your uncle?"
  • "It is, and there is Mr. Malone; and, O Shirley, there is Robert!"
  • "Well" (resuming her former tone), "don't squeeze your fingers quite
  • into my hand. I see. There is nothing wonderful in that. We knew he, at
  • least, was here, whoever might be absent."
  • "He is coming here towards us, Shirley!"
  • "Towards the pump, that is to say, for the purpose of washing his hands
  • and his forehead, which has got a scratch, I perceive."
  • "He bleeds, Shirley. Don't hold me. I must go."
  • "Not a step."
  • "He is hurt, Shirley!"
  • "Fiddlestick!"
  • "But I _must_ go to him. I wish to go so much. I cannot bear to be
  • restrained."
  • "What for?"
  • "To speak to him, to ask how he is, and what I can do for him."
  • "To tease and annoy him; to make a spectacle of yourself and him before
  • those soldiers, Mr. Malone, your uncle, et cetera. Would he like it,
  • think you? Would you like to remember it a week hence?"
  • "Am I always to be curbed and kept down?" demanded Caroline, a little
  • passionately.
  • "For his sake, yes; and still more for your own. I tell you, if you
  • showed yourself now you would repent it an hour hence, and so would
  • Robert."
  • "You think he would not like it, Shirley?"
  • "Far less than he would like our stopping him to say good-night, which
  • you were so sore about."
  • "But that was all play; there was no danger."
  • "And this is serious work; he must be unmolested."
  • "I only wish to go to him because he is my cousin--you understand?"
  • "I quite understand. But now, watch him. He has bathed his forehead, and
  • the blood has ceased trickling. His hurt is really a mere graze; I can
  • see it from hence. He is going to look after the wounded men."
  • Accordingly Mr. Moore and Mr. Helstone went round the yard, examining
  • each prostrate form. They then gave directions to have the wounded taken
  • up and carried into the mill. This duty being performed, Joe Scott was
  • ordered to saddle his master's horse and Mr. Helstone's pony, and the
  • two gentlemen rode away full gallop, to seek surgical aid in different
  • directions.
  • Caroline was not yet pacified.
  • "Shirley, Shirley, I should have liked to speak one word to him before
  • he went," she murmured, while the tears gathered glittering in her eyes.
  • "Why do you cry, Lina?" asked Miss Keeldar a little sternly. "You ought
  • to be glad instead of sorry. Robert has escaped any serious harm; he is
  • victorious; he has been cool and brave in combat; he is now considerate
  • in triumph. Is this a time--are these causes for weeping?"
  • "You do not know what I have in my heart," pleaded the other--"what
  • pain, what distraction--nor whence it arises. I can understand that you
  • should exult in Robert's greatness and goodness; so do I, in one sense,
  • but in another I feel _so_ miserable. I am too far removed from him. I
  • used to be nearer. Let me alone, Shirley. Do let me cry a few minutes;
  • it relieves me."
  • Miss Keeldar, feeling her tremble in every limb, ceased to expostulate
  • with her. She went out of the shed, and left her to weep in peace. It
  • was the best plan. In a few minutes Caroline rejoined her, much calmer.
  • She said, with her natural, docile, gentle manner, "Come, Shirley, we
  • will go home now. I promise not to try to see Robert again till he asks
  • for me. I never will try to push myself on him. I thank you for
  • restraining me just now."
  • "I did it with a good intention," returned Miss Keeldar.
  • "Now, dear Lina," she continued, "let us turn our faces to the cool
  • morning breeze, and walk very quietly back to the rectory. We will steal
  • in as we stole out. None shall know where we have been or what we have
  • seen to-night; neither taunt nor misconstruction can consequently molest
  • us. To-morrow we will see Robert, and be of good cheer; but I will say
  • no more, lest I should begin to cry too. I seem hard towards you, but I
  • am not so."
  • CHAPTER XX.
  • TO-MORROW.
  • The two girls met no living soul on their way back to the rectory. They
  • let themselves in noiselessly; they stole upstairs unheard--the breaking
  • morning gave them what light they needed. Shirley sought her couch
  • immediately; and though the room was strange--for she had never slept at
  • the rectory before--and though the recent scene was one unparalleled for
  • excitement and terror by any it had hitherto been her lot to witness,
  • yet scarce was her head laid on the pillow ere a deep, refreshing sleep
  • closed her eyes and calmed her senses.
  • Perfect health was Shirley's enviable portion. Though warm-hearted and
  • sympathetic, she was not nervous; powerful emotions could rouse and sway
  • without exhausting her spirit. The tempest troubled and shook her while
  • it lasted, but it left her elasticity unbent, and her freshness quite
  • unblighted. As every day brought her stimulating emotion, so every night
  • yielded her recreating rest. Caroline now watched her sleeping, and read
  • the serenity of her mind in the beauty of her happy countenance.
  • For herself, being of a different temperament, she could not sleep. The
  • commonplace excitement of the tea-drinking and school-gathering would
  • alone have sufficed to make her restless all night; the effect of the
  • terrible drama which had just been enacted before her eyes was not
  • likely to quit her for days. It was vain even to try to retain a
  • recumbent posture; she sat up by Shirley's side, counting the slow
  • minutes, and watching the June sun mount the heavens.
  • Life wastes fast in such vigils as Caroline had of late but too often
  • kept--vigils during which the mind, having no pleasant food to nourish
  • it, no manna of hope, no hived-honey of joyous memories, tries to live
  • on the meagre diet of wishes, and failing to derive thence either
  • delight or support, and feeling itself ready to perish with craving
  • want, turns to philosophy, to resolution, to resignation; calls on all
  • these gods for aid, calls vainly--is unheard, unhelped, and languishes.
  • Caroline was a Christian; therefore in trouble she framed many a prayer
  • after the Christian creed, preferred it with deep earnestness, begged
  • for patience, strength, relief. This world, however, we all know, is the
  • scene of trial and probation; and, for any favourable result her
  • petitions had yet wrought, it seemed to her that they were unheard and
  • unaccepted. She believed, sometimes, that God had turned His face from
  • her. At moments she was a Calvinist, and, sinking into the gulf of
  • religious despair, she saw darkening over her the doom of reprobation.
  • Most people have had a period or periods in their lives when they have
  • felt thus forsaken--when, having long hoped against hope, and still seen
  • the day of fruition deferred, their hearts have truly sickened within
  • them. This is a terrible hour, but it is often that darkest point which
  • precedes the rise of day--that turn of the year when the icy January
  • wind carries over the waste at once the dirge of departing winter and
  • the prophecy of coming spring. The perishing birds, however, cannot thus
  • understand the blast before which they shiver; and as little can the
  • suffering soul recognize, in the climax of its affliction, the dawn of
  • its deliverance. Yet, let whoever grieves still cling fast to love and
  • faith in God. God will never deceive, never finally desert him. "Whom He
  • loveth, He chasteneth." These words are true, and should not be
  • forgotten.
  • The household was astir at last; the servants were up; the shutters were
  • opened below. Caroline, as she quitted the couch, which had been but a
  • thorny one to her, felt that revival of spirits which the return of day,
  • of action, gives to all but the wholly despairing or actually dying. She
  • dressed herself, as usual, carefully, trying so to arrange her hair and
  • attire that nothing of the forlornness she felt at heart should be
  • visible externally. She looked as fresh as Shirley when both were
  • dressed, only that Miss Keeldar's eyes were lively, and Miss Helstone's
  • languid.
  • "To-day I shall have much to say to Moore," were Shirley's first words;
  • and you could see in her face that life was full of interest,
  • expectation, and occupation for her. "He will have to undergo
  • cross-examination," she added. "I dare say he thinks he has outwitted me
  • cleverly. And this is the way men deal with women--still concealing
  • danger from them--thinking, I suppose, to spare them pain. They
  • imagined we little knew where they were to-night. We _know_ they little
  • conjectured where we were. Men, I believe, fancy women's minds something
  • like those of children. Now, that is a mistake."
  • This was said as she stood at the glass, training her naturally waved
  • hair into curls, by twining it round her fingers. She took up the theme
  • again five minutes after, as Caroline fastened her dress and clasped her
  • girdle.
  • "If men could see us as we really are, they would be a little amazed;
  • but the cleverest, the acutest men are often under an illusion about
  • women. They do not read them in a true light; they misapprehend them,
  • both for good and evil. Their good woman is a queer thing, half doll,
  • half angel; their bad woman almost always a fiend. Then to hear them
  • fall into ecstasies with each other's creations--worshipping the heroine
  • of such a poem, novel, drama--thinking it fine, divine! Fine and divine
  • it may be, but often quite artificial--false as the rose in my best
  • bonnet there. If I spoke all I think on this point, if I gave my real
  • opinion of some first-rate female characters in first-rate works, where
  • should I be? Dead under a cairn of avenging stones in half an hour."
  • "Shirley, you chatter so, I can't fasten you. Be still. And, after all,
  • authors' heroines are almost as good as authoresses' heroes."
  • "Not at all. Women read men more truly than men read women. I'll prove
  • that in a magazine paper some day when I've time; only it will never be
  • inserted. It will be 'declined with thanks,' and left for me at the
  • publisher's."
  • "To be sure. You could not write cleverly enough. You don't know enough.
  • You are not learned, Shirley."
  • "God knows I can't contradict you, Cary; I'm as ignorant as a stone.
  • There's one comfort, however: you are not much better."
  • They descended to breakfast.
  • "I wonder how Mrs. Pryor and Hortense Moore have passed the night," said
  • Caroline, as she made the coffee. "Selfish being that I am, I never
  • thought of either of them till just now. They will have heard all the
  • tumult, Fieldhead and the cottage are so near; and Hortense is timid in
  • such matters--so, no doubt, is Mrs. Pryor."
  • "Take my word for it, Lina, Moore will have contrived to get his sister
  • out of the way. She went home with Miss Mann. He will have quartered
  • her there for the night. As to Mrs. Pryor, I own I am uneasy about her;
  • but in another half-hour we will be with her."
  • By this time the news of what had happened at the Hollow was spread all
  • over the neighbourhood. Fanny, who had been to Fieldhead to fetch the
  • milk, returned in panting haste with tidings that there had been a
  • battle in the night at Mr. Moore's mill, and that some said twenty men
  • were killed. Eliza, during Fanny's absence, had been apprised by the
  • butcher's boy that the mill was burnt to the ground. Both women rushed
  • into the parlour to announce these terrible facts to the ladies,
  • terminating their clear and accurate narrative by the assertion that
  • they were sure master must have been in it all. He and Thomas, the
  • clerk, they were confident, must have gone last night to join Mr. Moore
  • and the soldiers. Mr. Malone, too, had not been heard of at his lodgings
  • since yesterday afternoon; and Joe Scott's wife and family were in the
  • greatest distress, wondering what had become of their head.
  • Scarcely was this information imparted when a knock at the kitchen door
  • announced the Fieldhead errand-boy, arrived in hot haste, bearing a
  • billet from Mrs. Pryor. It was hurriedly written, and urged Miss Keeldar
  • to return directly, as the neighbourhood and the house seemed likely to
  • be all in confusion, and orders would have to be given which the
  • mistress of the hall alone could regulate. In a postscript it was
  • entreated that Miss Helstone might not be left alone at the rectory. She
  • had better, it was suggested, accompany Miss Keeldar.
  • "There are not two opinions on that head," said Shirley, as she tied on
  • her own bonnet, and then ran to fetch Caroline's.
  • "But what will Fanny and Eliza do? And if my uncle returns?"
  • "Your uncle will not return yet; he has other fish to fry. He will be
  • galloping backwards and forwards from Briarfield to Stilbro' all day,
  • rousing the magistrates in the court-house and the officers at the
  • barracks; and Fanny and Eliza can have in Joe Scott's and the clerk's
  • wives to bear them company. Besides, of course, there is no real danger
  • to be apprehended now. Weeks will elapse before the rioters can again
  • rally, or plan any other attempt; and I am much mistaken if Moore and
  • Mr. Helstone will not take advantage of last night's outbreak to quell
  • them altogether. They will frighten the authorities of Stilbro' into
  • energetic measures. I only hope they will not be too severe--not pursue
  • the discomfited too relentlessly."
  • "Robert will not be cruel. We saw that last night," said Caroline.
  • "But he will be hard," retorted Shirley; "and so will your uncle."
  • As they hurried along the meadow and plantation path to Fieldhead, they
  • saw the distant highway already alive with an unwonted flow of
  • equestrians and pedestrians, tending in the direction of the usually
  • solitary Hollow. On reaching the hall, they found the backyard gates
  • open, and the court and kitchen seemed crowded with excited
  • milk-fetchers--men, women, and children--whom Mrs. Gill, the
  • housekeeper, appeared vainly persuading to take their milk-cans and
  • depart. (It _is_, or _was_, by-the-bye, the custom in the north of
  • England for the cottagers on a country squire's estate to receive their
  • supplies of milk and butter from the dairy of the manor house, on whose
  • pastures a herd of milch kine was usually fed for the convenience of the
  • neighbourhood. Miss Keeldar owned such a herd--all deep-dewlapped,
  • Craven cows, reared on the sweet herbage and clear waters of bonny
  • Airedale; and very proud she was of their sleek aspect and high
  • condition.) Seeing now the state of matters, and that it was desirable
  • to effect a clearance of the premises, Shirley stepped in amongst the
  • gossiping groups. She bade them good-morning with a certain frank,
  • tranquil ease--the natural characteristic of her manner when she
  • addressed numbers, especially if those numbers belonged to the
  • working-class; she was cooler amongst her equals, and rather proud to
  • those above her. She then asked them if they had all got their milk
  • measured out; and understanding that they had, she further observed that
  • she "wondered what they were waiting for, then."
  • "We're just talking a bit over this battle there has been at your mill,
  • mistress," replied a man.
  • "Talking a bit! Just like you!" said Shirley. "It is a queer thing all
  • the world is so fond of _talking_ over events. You _talk_ if anybody
  • dies suddenly; you _talk_ if a fire breaks out; you _talk_ if a
  • mill-owner fails; you _talk_ if he's murdered. What good does your
  • talking do?"
  • There is nothing the lower orders like better than a little downright
  • good-humoured rating. Flattery they scorn very much; honest abuse they
  • enjoy. They call it speaking plainly, and take a sincere delight in
  • being the objects thereof. The homely harshness of Miss Keeldar's
  • salutation won her the ear of the whole throng in a second.
  • "We're no war nor some 'at is aboon us, are we?" asked a man, smiling.
  • "Nor a whit better. You that should be models of industry are just as
  • gossip-loving as the idle. Fine, rich people that have nothing to do may
  • be partly excused for trifling their time away; you who have to earn
  • your bread with the sweat of your brow are quite inexcusable."
  • "That's queer, mistress. Suld we never have a holiday because we work
  • hard?"
  • "_Never_," was the prompt answer; "unless," added the "mistress," with a
  • smile that half belied the severity of her speech--"unless you knew how
  • to make a better use of it than to get together over rum and tea if you
  • are women, or over beer and pipes if you are men, and _talk_ scandal at
  • your neighbours' expense. Come, friends," she added, changing at once
  • from bluntness to courtesy, "oblige me by taking your cans and going
  • home. I expect several persons to call to-day, and it will be
  • inconvenient to have the avenues to the house crowded."
  • Yorkshire people are as yielding to persuasion as they are stubborn
  • against compulsion. The yard was clear in five minutes.
  • "Thank you, and good-bye to you, friends," said Shirley, as she closed
  • the gates on a quiet court.
  • Now, let me hear the most refined of cockneys presume to find fault with
  • Yorkshire manners. Taken as they ought to be, the majority of the lads
  • and lasses of the West Riding are gentlemen and ladies, every inch of
  • them. It is only against the weak affectation and futile pomposity of a
  • would-be aristocrat they turn mutinous.
  • Entering by the back way, the young ladies passed through the kitchen
  • (or _house_, as the inner kitchen is called) to the hall. Mrs. Pryor
  • came running down the oak staircase to meet them. She was all unnerved;
  • her naturally sanguine complexion was pale; her usually placid, though
  • timid, blue eye was wandering, unsettled, alarmed. She did not, however,
  • break out into any exclamations, or hurried narrative of what had
  • happened. Her predominant feeling had been in the course of the night,
  • and was now this morning, a sense of dissatisfaction with herself that
  • she could not feel firmer, cooler, more equal to the demands of the
  • occasion.
  • "You are aware," she began with a trembling voice, and yet the most
  • conscientious anxiety to avoid exaggeration in what she was about to
  • say, "that a body of rioters has attacked Mr. Moore's mill to-night. We
  • heard the firing and confusion very plainly here; we none of us slept.
  • It was a sad night. The house has been in great bustle all the morning
  • with people coming and going. The servants have applied to me for orders
  • and directions, which I really did not feel warranted in giving. Mr.
  • Moore has, I believe, sent up for refreshments for the soldiers and
  • others engaged in the defence, for some conveniences also for the
  • wounded. I could not undertake the responsibility of giving orders or
  • taking measures. I fear delay may have been injurious in some instances;
  • but this is not my house. You were absent, my dear Miss Keeldar. What
  • could I do?"
  • "Were no refreshments sent?" asked Shirley, while her countenance,
  • hitherto so clear, propitious, and quiet, even while she was rating the
  • milk-fetchers, suddenly turned dark and warm.
  • "I think not, my dear."
  • "And nothing for the wounded--no linen, no wine, no bedding?"
  • "I think not. I cannot tell what Mrs. Gill did; but it seemed impossible
  • to me, at the moment, to venture to dispose of your property by sending
  • supplies to soldiers. Provisions for a company of soldiers sounds
  • formidable. How many there are I did not ask; but I could not think of
  • allowing them to pillage the house, as it were. I intended to do what
  • was right, yet I did not see the case quite clearly, I own."
  • "It lies in a nutshell, notwithstanding. These soldiers have risked
  • their lives in defence of my property: I suppose they have a right to my
  • gratitude. The wounded are our fellow-creatures: I suppose we should aid
  • them.--Mrs. Gill!"
  • She turned, and called in a voice more clear than soft. It rang through
  • the thick oak of the hall and kitchen doors more effectually than a
  • bell's summons. Mrs. Gill, who was deep in bread-making, came with hands
  • and apron in culinary case, not having dared to stop to rub the dough
  • from the one or to shake the flour from the other. Her mistress had
  • never called a servant in that voice save once before, and that was when
  • she had seen from the window Tartar in full tug with two carriers' dogs,
  • each of them a match for him in size, if not in courage, and their
  • masters standing by, encouraging their animals, while hers was
  • unbefriended. Then indeed she had summoned John as if the Day of
  • Judgment were at hand. Nor had she waited for the said John's coming,
  • but had walked out into the lane bonnetless, and after informing the
  • carriers that she held them far less of men than the three brutes
  • whirling and worrying in the dust before them, had put her hands round
  • the thick neck of the largest of the curs, and given her whole strength
  • to the essay of choking it from Tartar's torn and bleeding eye, just
  • above and below which organ the vengeful fangs were inserted. Five or
  • six men were presently on the spot to help her, but she never thanked
  • one of them. "They might have come before if their will had been good,"
  • she said. She had not a word for anybody during the rest of the day, but
  • sat near the hall fire till evening watching and tending Tartar, who lay
  • all gory, stiff, and swelled on a mat at her feet. She wept furtively
  • over him sometimes, and murmured the softest words of pity and
  • endearment, in tones whose music the old, scarred, canine warrior
  • acknowledged by licking her hand or her sandal alternately with his own
  • red wounds. As to John, his lady turned a cold shoulder on him for a
  • week afterwards.
  • Mrs. Gill, remembering this little episode, came "all of a tremble," as
  • she said herself. In a firm, brief voice Miss Keeldar proceeded to put
  • questions and give orders. That at such a time Fieldhead should have
  • evinced the inhospitality of a miser's hovel stung her haughty spirit to
  • the quick; and the revolt of its pride was seen in the heaving of her
  • heart, stirred stormily under the lace and silk which veiled it.
  • "How long is it since that message came from the mill?"
  • "Not an hour yet, ma'am," answered the housekeeper soothingly.
  • "Not an hour! You might almost as well have said not a day. They will
  • have applied elsewhere by this time. Send a man instantly down to tell
  • them that everything this house contains is at Mr. Moore's, Mr.
  • Helstone's, and the soldiers' service. Do that first."
  • While the order was being executed, Shirley moved away from her friends,
  • and stood at the hall-window, silent, unapproachable. When Mrs. Gill
  • came back, she turned. The purple flush which painful excitement kindles
  • on a pale cheek glowed on hers; the spark which displeasure lights in a
  • dark eye fired her glance.
  • "Let the contents of the larder and the wine-cellar be brought up, put
  • into the hay-carts, and driven down to the Hollow. If there does not
  • happen to be much bread or much meat in the house, go to the butcher and
  • baker, and desire them to send what they have. But I will see for
  • myself."
  • She moved off.
  • "All will be right soon; she will get over it in an hour," whispered
  • Caroline to Mrs. Pryor. "Go upstairs, dear madam," she added
  • affectionately, "and try to be as calm and easy as you can. The truth
  • is, Shirley will blame herself more than you before the day is over."
  • By dint of a few more gentle assurances and persuasions, Miss Helstone
  • contrived to soothe the agitated lady. Having accompanied her to her
  • apartment, and promised to rejoin her there when things were settled,
  • Caroline left her to see, as she said, "if she could be useful." She
  • presently found that she could be very useful; for the retinue of
  • servants at Fieldhead was by no means numerous, and just now their
  • mistress found plenty of occupation for all the hands at her command,
  • and for her own also. The delicate good-nature and dexterous activity
  • which Caroline brought to the aid of the housekeeper and maids--all
  • somewhat scared by their lady's unwonted mood--did a world of good at
  • once; it helped the assistants and appeased the directress. A chance
  • glance and smile from Caroline moved Shirley to an answering smile
  • directly. The former was carrying a heavy basket up the cellar stairs.
  • "This is a shame!" cried Shirley, running to her. "It will strain your
  • arm."
  • She took it from her, and herself bore it out into the yard. The cloud
  • of temper was dispelled when she came back; the flash in her eye was
  • melted; the shade on her forehead vanished. She resumed her usual
  • cheerful and cordial manner to those about her, tempering her revived
  • spirits with a little of the softness of shame at her previous unjust
  • anger.
  • She was still superintending the lading of the cart, when a gentleman
  • entered the yard and approached her ere she was aware of his presence.
  • "I hope I see Miss Keeldar well this morning?" he said, examining with
  • rather significant scrutiny her still flushed face.
  • She gave him a look, and then again bent to her employment without
  • reply. A pleasant enough smile played on her lips, but she hid it. The
  • gentleman repeated his salutation, stooping, that it might reach her ear
  • with more facility.
  • "Well enough, if she be good enough," was the answer; "and so is Mr.
  • Moore too, I dare say. To speak truth, I am not anxious about him; some
  • slight mischance would be only his just due. His conduct has been--we
  • will say _strange_ just now, till we have time to characterize it by a
  • more exact epithet. Meantime, may I ask what brings him here?"
  • "Mr. Helstone and I have just received your message that everything at
  • Fieldhead was at our service. We judged, by the unlimited wording of the
  • gracious intimation, that you would be giving yourself too much trouble.
  • I perceive our conjecture was correct. We are not a regiment,
  • remember--only about half a dozen soldiers and as many civilians. Allow
  • me to retrench something from these too abundant supplies."
  • Miss Keeldar blushed, while she laughed at her own over-eager generosity
  • and most disproportionate calculations. Moore laughed too, very quietly
  • though; and as quietly he ordered basket after basket to be taken from
  • the cart, and remanded vessel after vessel to the cellar.
  • "The rector must hear of this," he said; "he will make a good story of
  • it. What an excellent army contractor Miss Keeldar would have been!"
  • Again he laughed, adding, "It is precisely as I conjectured."
  • "You ought to be thankful," said Shirley, "and not mock me. What could I
  • do? How could I gauge your appetites or number your band? For aught I
  • knew, there might have been fifty of you at least to victual. You told
  • me nothing; and then an application to provision soldiers naturally
  • suggests large ideas."
  • "It appears so," remarked Moore, levelling another of his keen, quiet
  • glances at the discomfited Shirley.--"Now," he continued, addressing the
  • carter, "I think you may take what remains to the Hollow. Your load will
  • be somewhat lighter than the one Miss Keeldar destined you to carry."
  • As the vehicle rumbled out of the yard, Shirley, rallying her spirits,
  • demanded what had become of the wounded.
  • "There was not a single man hurt on our side," was the answer.
  • "You were hurt yourself, on the temples," interposed a quick, low
  • voice--that of Caroline, who, having withdrawn within the shade of the
  • door, and behind the large person of Mrs. Gill, had till now escaped
  • Moore's notice. When she spoke, his eye searched the obscurity of her
  • retreat.
  • "Are you much hurt?" she inquired.
  • "As you might scratch your finger with a needle in sewing."
  • "Lift your hair and let us see."
  • He took his hat off, and did as he was bid, disclosing only a narrow
  • slip of court-plaster. Caroline indicated, by a slight movement of the
  • head, that she was satisfied, and disappeared within the clear obscure
  • of the interior.
  • "How did she know I was hurt?" asked Moore.
  • "By rumour, no doubt. But it is too good in her to trouble herself about
  • you. For my part, it was of your victims I was thinking when I inquired
  • after the wounded. What damage have your opponents sustained?"
  • "One of the rioters, or victims as you call them, was killed, and six
  • were hurt."
  • "What have you done with them?"
  • "What you will perfectly approve. Medical aid was procured immediately;
  • and as soon as we can get a couple of covered wagons and some clean
  • straw, they will be removed to Stilbro'."
  • "Straw! You must have beds and bedding. I will send my wagon directly,
  • properly furnished; and Mr. Yorke, I am sure, will send his."
  • "You guess correctly; he has volunteered already. And Mrs. Yorke--who,
  • like you, seems disposed to regard the rioters as martyrs, and me, and
  • especially Mr. Helstone, as murderers--is at this moment, I believe,
  • most assiduously engaged in fitting it up with feather-beds, pillows,
  • bolsters, blankets, etc. The _victims_ lack no attentions, I promise
  • you. Mr. Hall, your favourite parson, has been with them ever since six
  • o'clock, exhorting them, praying with them, and even waiting on them
  • like any nurse; and Caroline's good friend, Miss Ainley, that _very_
  • plain old maid, sent in a stock of lint and linen, something in the
  • proportion of another lady's allowance of beef and wine."
  • "That will do. Where is your sister?"
  • "Well cared for. I had her securely domiciled with Miss Mann. This very
  • morning the two set out for Wormwood Wells [a noted watering-place],
  • and will stay there some weeks."
  • "So Mr. Helstone domiciled me at the rectory! Mighty clever you
  • gentlemen think you are! I make you heartily welcome to the idea, and
  • hope its savour, as you chew the cud of reflection upon it, gives you
  • pleasure. Acute and astute, why are you not also omniscient? How is it
  • that events transpire, under your very noses, of which you have no
  • suspicion? It should be so, otherwise the exquisite gratification of
  • outmanoeuvring you would be unknown. Ah, friend, you may search my
  • countenance, but you cannot read it."
  • Moore, indeed, looked as if he could not.
  • "You think me a dangerous specimen of my sex. Don't you now?"
  • "A peculiar one, at least."
  • "But Caroline--is she peculiar?"
  • "In her way--yes."
  • "Her way! What is her way?"
  • "You know her as well as I do."
  • "And knowing her, I assert that she is neither eccentric nor difficult
  • of control. Is she?"
  • "That depends----"
  • "However, there is nothing masculine about _her_?"
  • "Why lay such emphasis on _her_? Do you consider her a contrast, in that
  • respect, to yourself?"
  • "You do, no doubt; but that does not signify. Caroline is neither
  • masculine, nor of what they call the spirited order of women."
  • "I have seen her flash out."
  • "So have I, but not with manly fire. It was a short, vivid, trembling
  • glow, that shot up, shone, vanished----"
  • "And left her scared at her own daring. You describe others besides
  • Caroline."
  • "The point I wish to establish is, that Miss Helstone, though gentle,
  • tractable, and candid enough, is still perfectly capable of defying even
  • Mr. Moore's penetration."
  • "What have you and she been doing?" asked Moore suddenly.
  • "Have you had any breakfast?"
  • "What is your mutual mystery?"
  • "If you are hungry, Mrs. Gill will give you something to eat here. Step
  • into the oak parlour, and ring the bell. You will be served as if at an
  • inn; or, if you like better, go back to the Hollow."
  • "The alternative is not open to me; I _must_ go back. Good-morning. The
  • first leisure I have I will see you again."
  • CHAPTER XXI.
  • MRS. PRYOR.
  • While Shirley was talking with Moore, Caroline rejoined Mrs. Pryor
  • upstairs. She found that lady deeply depressed. She would not say that
  • Miss Keeldar's hastiness had hurt her feelings, but it was evident an
  • inward wound galled her. To any but a congenial nature she would have
  • seemed insensible to the quiet, tender attentions by which Miss Helstone
  • sought to impart solace; but Caroline knew that, unmoved or slightly
  • moved as she looked, she felt, valued, and was healed by them.
  • "I am deficient in self-confidence and decision," she said at last. "I
  • always have been deficient in those qualities. Yet I think Miss Keeldar
  • should have known my character well enough by this time to be aware that
  • I always feel an even painful solicitude to do right, to act for the
  • best. The unusual nature of the demand on my judgment puzzled me,
  • especially following the alarms of the night. I could not venture to act
  • promptly for another; but I trust no serious harm will result from my
  • lapse of firmness."
  • A gentle knock was here heard at the door. It was half opened.
  • "Caroline, come here," said a low voice.
  • Miss Helstone went out. There stood Shirley in the gallery, looking
  • contrite, ashamed, sorry as any repentant child.
  • "How is Mrs. Pryor?" she asked.
  • "Rather out of spirits," said Caroline.
  • "I have behaved very shamefully, very ungenerously, very ungratefully to
  • her," said Shirley. "How insolent in me to turn on her thus for what,
  • after all, was no fault--only an excess of conscientiousness on her
  • part. But I regret my error most sincerely. Tell her so, and ask if she
  • will forgive me."
  • Caroline discharged the errand with heartfelt pleasure. Mrs. Pryor rose,
  • came to the door. She did not like scenes; she dreaded them as all
  • timid people do. She said falteringly, "Come in, my dear."
  • Shirley did come in with some impetuosity. She threw her arms round her
  • governess, and while she kissed her heartily she said, "You know you
  • _must_ forgive me, Mrs. Pryor. I could not get on at all if there was a
  • misunderstanding between you and me."
  • "I have nothing to forgive," was the reply. "We will pass it over now,
  • if you please. The final result of the incident is that it proves more
  • plainly than ever how unequal I am to certain crises."
  • And that was the painful feeling which _would_ remain on Mrs. Pryor's
  • mind. No effort of Shirley's or Caroline's could efface it thence. She
  • could forgive her offending pupil, not her innocent self.
  • Miss Keeldar, doomed to be in constant request during the morning, was
  • presently summoned downstairs again. The rector called first. A lively
  • welcome and livelier reprimand were at his service. He expected both,
  • and, being in high spirits, took them in equally good part.
  • In the course of his brief visit he quite forgot to ask after his niece;
  • the riot, the rioters, the mill, the magistrates, the heiress, absorbed
  • all his thoughts to the exclusion of family ties. He alluded to the part
  • himself and curate had taken in the defence of the Hollow.
  • "The vials of pharisaical wrath will be emptied on our heads for our
  • share in this business," he said; "but I defy every calumniator. I was
  • there only to support the law, to play my part as a man and a Briton;
  • which characters I deem quite compatible with those of the priest and
  • Levite, in their highest sense. Your tenant Moore," he went on, "has won
  • my approbation. A cooler commander I would not wish to see, nor a more
  • determined. Besides, the man has shown sound judgment and good
  • sense--first, in being thoroughly prepared for the event which has taken
  • place; and subsequently, when his well-concerted plans had secured him
  • success, in knowing how to use without abusing his victory. Some of the
  • magistrates are now well frightened, and, like all cowards, show a
  • tendency to be cruel. Moore restrains them with admirable prudence. He
  • has hitherto been very unpopular in the neighbourhood; but, mark my
  • words, the tide of opinion will now take a turn in his favour. People
  • will find out that they have not appreciated him, and will hasten to
  • remedy their error; and he, when he perceives the public disposed to
  • acknowledge his merits, will show a more gracious mien than that with
  • which he has hitherto favoured us."
  • Mr. Helstone was about to add to this speech some half-jesting,
  • half-serious warnings to Miss Keeldar on the subject of her rumoured
  • partiality for her talented tenant, when a ring at the door, announcing
  • another caller, checked his raillery; and as that other caller appeared
  • in the form of a white-haired elderly gentleman, with a rather truculent
  • countenance and disdainful eye--in short, our old acquaintance, and the
  • rector's old enemy, Mr. Yorke--the priest and Levite seized his hat, and
  • with the briefest of adieus to Miss Keeldar and the sternest of nods to
  • her guest took an abrupt leave.
  • Mr. Yorke was in no mild mood, and in no measured terms did he express
  • his opinion on the transaction of the night. Moore, the magistrates, the
  • soldiers, the mob leaders, each and all came in for a share of his
  • invectives; but he reserved his strongest epithets--and real racy
  • Yorkshire Doric adjectives they were--for the benefit of the fighting
  • parsons, the "sanguinary, demoniac" rector and curate. According to him,
  • the cup of ecclesiastical guilt was now full indeed.
  • "The church," he said, "was in a bonny pickle now. It was time it came
  • down when parsons took to swaggering amang soldiers, blazing away wi'
  • bullet and gunpowder, taking the lives of far honester men than
  • themselves."
  • "What would Moore have done if nobody had helped him?" asked Shirley.
  • "Drunk as he'd brewed, eaten as he'd baked."
  • "Which means you would have left him by himself to face that mob. Good!
  • He has plenty of courage, but the greatest amount of gallantry that ever
  • garrisoned one human breast could scarce avail against two hundred."
  • "He had the soldiers, those poor slaves who hire out their own blood and
  • spill other folk's for money."
  • "You abuse soldiers almost as much as you abuse clergymen. All who wear
  • red coats are national refuse in your eyes, and all who wear black are
  • national swindlers. Mr. Moore, according to you, did wrong to get
  • military aid, and he did still worse to accept of any other aid. Your
  • way of talking amounts to this: he should have abandoned his mill and
  • his life to the rage of a set of misguided madmen, and Mr. Helstone and
  • every other gentleman in the parish should have looked on, and seen the
  • building razed and its owner slaughtered, and never stirred a finger to
  • save either."
  • "If Moore had behaved to his men from the beginning as a master ought to
  • behave, they never would have entertained their present feelings towards
  • him."
  • "Easy for you to talk," exclaimed Miss Keeldar, who was beginning to wax
  • warm in her tenant's cause--"you, whose family have lived at Briarmains
  • for six generations, to whose person the people have been accustomed for
  • fifty years, who know all their ways, prejudices, and preferences--easy,
  • indeed, for _you_ to act so as to avoid offending them. But Mr. Moore
  • came a stranger into the district; he came here poor and friendless,
  • with nothing but his own energies to back him, nothing but his honour,
  • his talent, and his industry to make his way for him. A monstrous crime
  • indeed that, under such circumstances, he could not popularize his
  • naturally grave, quiet manners all at once; could not be jocular, and
  • free, and cordial with a strange peasantry, as you are with your
  • fellow-townsmen! An unpardonable transgression that when he introduced
  • improvements he did not go about the business in quite the most politic
  • way, did not graduate his changes as delicately as a rich capitalist
  • might have done! For errors of this sort is he to be the victim of mob
  • outrage? Is he to be denied even the privilege of defending himself? Are
  • those who have the hearts of men in their breasts (and Mr. Helstone, say
  • what you will of him, has such a heart) to be reviled like malefactors
  • because they stand by him, because they venture to espouse the cause of
  • one against two hundred?"
  • "Come, come now, be cool," said Mr. Yorke, smiling at the earnestness
  • with which Shirley multiplied her rapid questions.
  • "Cool! Must I listen coolly to downright nonsense--to dangerous
  • nonsense? No. I like you very well, Mr. Yorke, as you know, but I
  • thoroughly dislike some of your principles. All that cant--excuse me,
  • but I repeat the word--all that _cant_ about soldiers and parsons is
  • most offensive in my ears. All ridiculous, irrational crying up of one
  • class, whether the same be aristocrat or democrat--all howling down of
  • another class, whether clerical or military--all exacting injustice to
  • individuals, whether monarch or mendicant--is really sickening to me;
  • all arraying of ranks against ranks, all party hatreds, all tyrannies
  • disguised as liberties, I reject and wash my hands of. _You_ think you
  • are a philanthropist; _you_ think you are an advocate of liberty; but I
  • will tell you this--Mr. Hall, the parson of Nunnely, is a better friend
  • both of man and freedom than Hiram Yorke, the reformer of Briarfield."
  • From a man Mr. Yorke would not have borne this language very patiently,
  • nor would he have endured it from some women; but he accounted Shirley
  • both honest and pretty, and her plain-spoken ire amused him. Besides, he
  • took a secret pleasure in hearing her defend her tenant, for we have
  • already intimated he had Robert Moore's interest very much at heart.
  • Moreover, if he wished to avenge himself for her severity, he knew the
  • means lay in his power: a word, he believed, would suffice to tame and
  • silence her, to cover her frank forehead with the rosy shadow of shame,
  • and veil the glow of her eye under down-drooped lid and lash.
  • "What more hast thou to say?" he inquired, as she paused, rather, it
  • appeared, to take breath than because her subject or her zeal was
  • exhausted.
  • "Say, Mr. Yorke!" was the answer, the speaker meantime walking fast from
  • wall to wall of the oak parlour--"say? I have a great deal to say, if I
  • could get it out in lucid order, which I never _can_ do. I have to say
  • that your views, and those of most extreme politicians, are such as none
  • but men in an irresponsible position _can_ advocate; that they are
  • purely opposition views, meant only to be talked about, and never
  • intended to be acted on. Make you Prime Minister of England to-morrow,
  • and you would have to abandon them. You abuse Moore for defending his
  • mill. Had you been in Moore's place you could not with honour or sense
  • have acted otherwise than he acted. You abuse Mr. Helstone for
  • everything he does. Mr. Helstone has his faults; he sometimes does
  • wrong, but oftener right. Were you ordained vicar of Briarfield, you
  • would find it no easy task to sustain all the active schemes for the
  • benefit of the parish planned and persevered in by your predecessor. I
  • wonder people cannot judge more fairly of each other and themselves.
  • When I hear Messrs. Malone and Donne chatter about the authority of the
  • church, the dignity and claims of the priesthood, the deference due to
  • them as clergymen; when I hear the outbreaks of their small spite
  • against Dissenters; when I witness their silly, narrow jealousies and
  • assumptions; when their palaver about forms, and traditions, and
  • superstitions is sounding in my ear; when I behold their insolent
  • carriage to the poor, their often base servility to the rich--I think
  • the Establishment is indeed in a poor way, and both she and her sons
  • appear in the utmost need of reformation. Turning away distressed from
  • minster tower and village spire--ay, as distressed as a churchwarden who
  • feels the exigence of white-wash and has not wherewithal to purchase
  • lime--I recall your senseless sarcasms on the 'fat bishops,' the
  • 'pampered parsons,' 'old mother church,' etc. I remember your strictures
  • on all who differ from you, your sweeping condemnation of classes and
  • individuals, without the slightest allowance made for circumstances or
  • temptations; and then, Mr. Yorke, doubt clutches my inmost heart as to
  • whether men exist clement, reasonable, and just enough to be entrusted
  • with the task of reform. I don't believe _you_ are of the number."
  • "You have an ill opinion of me, Miss Shirley. You never told me so much
  • of your mind before."
  • "I never had an opening. But I have sat on Jessy's stool by your chair
  • in the back-parlour at Briarmains, for evenings together, listening
  • excitedly to your talk, half admiring what you said, and half rebelling
  • against it. I think you a fine old Yorkshireman, sir. I am proud to have
  • been born in the same county and parish as yourself. Truthful, upright,
  • independent you are, as a rock based below seas; but also you are harsh,
  • rude, narrow, and merciless."
  • "Not to the poor, lass, nor to the meek of the earth; only to the proud
  • and high-minded."
  • "And what right have you, sir, to make such distinctions? A prouder, a
  • higher-minded man than yourself does not exist. You find it easy to
  • speak comfortably to your inferiors; you are too haughty, too ambitious,
  • too jealous to be civil to those above you. But you are all alike.
  • Helstone also is proud and prejudiced. Moore, though juster and more
  • considerate than either you or the rector, is still haughty, stern, and,
  • in a public sense, selfish. It is well there are such men as Mr. Hall to
  • be found occasionally--men of large and kind hearts, who can love their
  • whole race, who can forgive others for being richer, more prosperous, or
  • more powerful than they are. Such men may have less originality, less
  • force of character than you, but they are better friends to mankind."
  • "And when is it to be?" said Mr. Yorke, now rising.
  • "When is what to be?"
  • "The wedding."
  • "Whose wedding?"
  • "Only that of Robert Gérard Moore, Esq., of Hollow's Cottage, with Miss
  • Keeldar, daughter and heiress of the late Charles Cave Keeldar of
  • Fieldhead Hall."
  • Shirley gazed at the questioner with rising colour. But the light in her
  • eye was not faltering; it shone steadily--yes, it burned deeply.
  • "That is your revenge," she said slowly; then added, "Would it be a bad
  • match, unworthy of the late Charles Cave Keeldar's representative?"
  • "My lass, Moore is a gentleman; his blood is pure and ancient as mine or
  • thine."
  • "And we two set store by ancient blood? We have family pride, though one
  • of us at least is a republican?"
  • Yorke bowed as he stood before her. His lips were mute, but his eye
  • confessed the impeachment. Yes, he had family pride; you saw it in his
  • whole bearing.
  • "Moore _is_ a gentleman," echoed Shirley, lifting her head with glad
  • grace. She checked herself. Words seemed crowding to her tongue. She
  • would not give them utterance; but her look spoke much at the moment.
  • What, Yorke tried to read, but could not. The language was there,
  • visible, but untranslatable--a poem, a fervid lyric, in an unknown
  • tongue. It was not a plain story, however, no simple gush of feeling, no
  • ordinary love-confession--that was obvious. It was something other,
  • deeper, more intricate than he guessed at. He felt his revenge had not
  • struck home. He felt that Shirley triumphed. She held him at fault,
  • baffled, puzzled. _She_ enjoyed the moment, not _he_.
  • "And if Moore _is_ a gentleman, you _can_ be only a lady; therefore----"
  • "Therefore there would be no inequality in our union."
  • "None."
  • "Thank you for your approbation. Will you give me away when I relinquish
  • the name of Keeldar for that of Moore?"
  • Mr. Yorke, instead of replying, gazed at her much puzzled. He could not
  • divine what her look signified--whether she spoke in earnest or in jest.
  • There were purpose and feeling, banter and scoff, playing, mingled, on
  • her mobile lineaments.
  • "I don't understand thee," he said, turning away.
  • She laughed. "Take courage, sir; you are not singular in your ignorance.
  • But I suppose if Moore understands me that will do, will it not?"
  • "Moore may settle his own matters henceforward for me; I'll neither
  • meddle nor make with them further."
  • A new thought crossed her. Her countenance changed magically. With a
  • sudden darkening of the eye and austere fixing of the features she
  • demanded, "Have you been asked to interfere? Are you questioning me as
  • another's proxy?"
  • "The Lord save us! Whoever weds thee must look about him! Keep all your
  • questions for Robert; I'll answer no more on 'em. Good-day, lassie!"
  • * * * * *
  • The day being fine, or at least fair--for soft clouds curtained the sun,
  • and a dim but not chill or waterish haze slept blue on the
  • hills--Caroline, while Shirley was engaged with her callers, had
  • persuaded Mrs. Pryor to assume her bonnet and summer shawl, and to take
  • a walk with her up towards the narrow end of the Hollow.
  • Here the opposing sides of the glen, approaching each other and becoming
  • clothed with brushwood and stunted oaks, formed a wooded ravine, at the
  • bottom of which ran the mill-stream, in broken, unquiet course,
  • struggling with many stones, chafing against rugged banks, fretting with
  • gnarled tree-roots, foaming, gurgling, battling as it went. Here, when
  • you had wandered half a mile from the mill, you found a sense of deep
  • solitude--found it in the shade of unmolested trees, received it in the
  • singing of many birds, for which that shade made a home. This was no
  • trodden way. The freshness of the wood flowers attested that foot of man
  • seldom pressed them; the abounding wild roses looked as if they budded,
  • bloomed, and faded under the watch of solitude, as if in a sultan's
  • harem. Here you saw the sweet azure of blue-bells, and recognized in
  • pearl-white blossoms, spangling the grass, a humble type of some starlit
  • spot in space.
  • Mrs. Pryor liked a quiet walk. She ever shunned high-roads, and sought
  • byways and lonely lanes. One companion she preferred to total solitude,
  • for in solitude she was nervous; a vague fear of annoying encounters
  • broke the enjoyment of quite lonely rambles. But she feared nothing with
  • Caroline. When once she got away from human habitations, and entered
  • the still demesne of nature accompanied by this one youthful friend, a
  • propitious change seemed to steal over her mind and beam in her
  • countenance. When with Caroline--and Caroline only--her heart, you would
  • have said, shook off a burden, her brow put aside a veil, her spirits
  • too escaped from a restraint. With her she was cheerful; with her, at
  • times, she was tender; to her she would impart her knowledge, reveal
  • glimpses of her experience, give her opportunities for guessing what
  • life she had lived, what cultivation her mind had received, of what
  • calibre was her intelligence, how and where her feelings were
  • vulnerable.
  • To-day, for instance, as they walked along, Mrs. Pryor talked to her
  • companion about the various birds singing in the trees, discriminated
  • their species, and said something about their habits and peculiarities.
  • English natural history seemed familiar to her. All the wild flowers
  • round their path were recognized by her; tiny plants springing near
  • stones and peeping out of chinks in old walls--plants such as Caroline
  • had scarcely noticed before--received a name and an intimation of their
  • properties. It appeared that she had minutely studied the botany of
  • English fields and woods. Having reached the head of the ravine, they
  • sat down together on a ledge of gray and mossy rock jutting from the
  • base of a steep green hill which towered above them. She looked round
  • her, and spoke of the neighbourhood as she had once before seen it long
  • ago. She alluded to its changes, and compared its aspect with that of
  • other parts of England, revealing in quiet, unconscious touches of
  • description a sense of the picturesque, an appreciation of the beautiful
  • or commonplace, a power of comparing the wild with the cultured, the
  • grand with the tame, that gave to her discourse a graphic charm as
  • pleasant as it was unpretending.
  • The sort of reverent pleasure with which Caroline listened--so sincere,
  • so quiet, yet so evident--stirred the elder lady's faculties to gentle
  • animation. Rarely, probably, had she, with her chill, repellent outside,
  • her diffident mien, and incommunicative habits, known what it was to
  • excite in one whom she herself could love feelings of earnest affection
  • and admiring esteem. Delightful, doubtless, was the consciousness that a
  • young girl towards whom it seemed, judging by the moved expression of
  • her eyes and features, her heart turned with almost a fond impulse,
  • looked up to her as an instructor, and clung to her as a friend. With a
  • somewhat more marked accent of interest than she often permitted herself
  • to use, she said, as she bent towards her youthful companion, and put
  • aside from her forehead a pale brown curl which had strayed from the
  • confining comb, "I do hope this sweet air blowing from the hill will do
  • you good, my dear Caroline. I wish I could see something more of colour
  • in these cheeks; but perhaps you were never florid?"
  • "I had red cheeks once," returned Miss Helstone, smiling. "I remember a
  • year--two years ago--when I used to look in the glass, I saw a different
  • face there to what I see now--rounder and rosier. But when we are
  • young," added the girl of eighteen, "our minds are careless and our
  • lives easy."
  • "Do you," continued Mrs. Pryor, mastering by an effort that tyrant
  • timidity which made it difficult for her, even under present
  • circumstances, to attempt the scrutiny of another's heart--"do you, at
  • your age, fret yourself with cares for the future? Believe me, you had
  • better not. Let the morrow take thought for the things of itself."
  • "True, dear madam. It is not over the future I pine. The evil of the day
  • is sometimes oppressive--too oppressive--and I long to escape it."
  • "That is--the evil of the day--that is--your uncle perhaps is not--you
  • find it difficult to understand--he does not appreciate----"
  • Mrs. Pryor could not complete her broken sentences; she could not manage
  • to put the question whether Mr. Helstone was too harsh with his niece.
  • But Caroline comprehended.
  • "Oh, that is nothing," she replied. "My uncle and I get on very well. We
  • never quarrel--I don't call him harsh--he never scolds me. Sometimes I
  • wish somebody in the world loved me, but I cannot say that I
  • particularly wish him to have more affection for me than he has. As a
  • child, I should perhaps have felt the want of attention, only the
  • servants were very kind to me; but when people are long indifferent to
  • us, we grow indifferent to their indifference. It is my uncle's way not
  • to care for women and girls, unless they be ladies that he meets in
  • company. He could not alter, and I have no wish that he should alter, as
  • far as I am concerned. I believe it would merely annoy and frighten me
  • were he to be affectionate towards me now. But you know, Mrs. Pryor, it
  • is scarcely _living_ to measure time as I do at the rectory. The hours
  • pass, and I get them over somehow, but I do not _live_. I endure
  • existence, but I rarely enjoy it. Since Miss Keeldar and you came I have
  • been--I was going to say happier, but that would be untrue." She paused.
  • "How untrue? You are fond of Miss Keeldar, are you not, my dear?"
  • "Very fond of Shirley. I both like and admire her. But I am painfully
  • circumstanced. For a reason I cannot explain I want to go away from this
  • place, and to forget it."
  • "You told me before you wished to be a governess; but, my dear, if you
  • remember, I did not encourage the idea. I have been a governess myself
  • great part of my life. In Miss Keeldar's acquaintance I esteem myself
  • most fortunate. Her talents and her really sweet disposition have
  • rendered my office easy to me; but when I was young, before I married,
  • my trials were severe, poignant. I should not like a---- I should not
  • like you to endure similar ones. It was my lot to enter a family of
  • considerable pretensions to good birth and mental superiority, and the
  • members of which also believed that 'on them was perceptible' an unusual
  • endowment of the 'Christian graces;' that all their hearts were
  • regenerate, and their spirits in a peculiar state of discipline. I was
  • early given to understand that 'as I was not their equal,' so I could
  • not expect 'to have their sympathy.' It was in no sort concealed from me
  • that I was held a 'burden and a restraint in society.' The gentlemen, I
  • found, regarded me as a 'tabooed woman,' to whom 'they were interdicted
  • from granting the usual privileges of the sex,' and yet 'who annoyed
  • them by frequently crossing their path.' The ladies too made it plain
  • that they thought me 'a bore.' The servants, it was signified, 'detested
  • me;' _why_, I could never clearly comprehend. My pupils, I was told,
  • 'however much they might love me, and how deep soever the interest I
  • might take in them, could not be my friends.' It was intimated that I
  • must 'live alone, and never transgress the invisible but rigid line
  • which established the difference between me and my employers.' My life
  • in this house was sedentary, solitary, constrained, joyless, toilsome.
  • The dreadful crushing of the animal spirits, the ever-prevailing sense
  • of friendlessness and homelessness consequent on this state of things
  • began ere long to produce mortal effects on my constitution. I sickened.
  • The lady of the house told me coolly I was the victim of 'wounded
  • vanity.' She hinted that if I did not make an effort to quell my
  • 'ungodly discontent,' to cease 'murmuring against God's appointment,'
  • and to cultivate the profound humility befitting my station, my mind
  • would very likely 'go to pieces' on the rock that wrecked most of my
  • sisterhood--morbid self-esteem--and that I should die an inmate of a
  • lunatic asylum.
  • "I said nothing to Mrs. Hardman--it would have been useless; but to her
  • eldest daughter I one day dropped a few observations, which were
  • answered thus. There were hardships, she allowed, in the position of a
  • governess. 'Doubtless they had their trials; but,' she averred, with a
  • manner it makes me smile now to recall--'but it must be so. _She_' (Miss
  • H.) 'had neither view, hope, nor _wish_ to see these things remedied;
  • for in the inherent constitution of English habits, feelings, and
  • prejudices there was no possibility that they should be. Governesses,'
  • she observed, 'must ever be kept in a sort of isolation. It is the only
  • means of maintaining that distance which the reserve of English manners
  • and the decorum of English families exact.'
  • "I remember I sighed as Miss Hardman quitted my bedside. She caught the
  • sound, and turning, said severely, 'I fear, Miss Grey, you have
  • inherited in fullest measure the worst sin of our fallen nature--the sin
  • of pride. You are proud, and therefore you are ungrateful too. Mamma
  • pays you a handsome salary, and if you had average sense you would
  • thankfully put up with much that is fatiguing to do and irksome to bear,
  • since it is so well made worth your while.'
  • "Miss Hardman, my love, was a very strong-minded young lady, of most
  • distinguished talents. The aristocracy are decidedly a very superior
  • class, you know, both physically, and morally, and mentally; as a high
  • Tory I acknowledge that. I could not describe the dignity of her voice
  • and mien as she addressed me thus; still, I fear she was selfish, my
  • dear. I would never wish to speak ill of my superiors in rank, but I
  • think she was a little selfish."
  • "I remember," continued Mrs. Pryor, after a pause, "another of Miss H.'s
  • observations, which she would utter with quite a grand air. 'WE,' she
  • would say--'WE need the imprudences, extravagances, mistakes, and crimes
  • of a certain number of fathers to sow the seed from which WE reap the
  • harvest of governesses. The daughters of trades-people, however well
  • educated, must necessarily be underbred, and as such unfit to be
  • inmates of OUR dwellings, or guardians of OUR children's minds and
  • persons. WE shall ever prefer to place those about OUR offspring who
  • have been born and bred with somewhat of the same refinement as
  • OURSELVES.'"
  • "Miss Hardman must have thought herself something better than her
  • fellow-creatures, ma'am, since she held that their calamities, and even
  • crimes, were necessary to minister to her convenience. You say she was
  • religious. Her religion must have been that of the Pharisee who thanked
  • God that he was not as other men are, nor even as that publican."
  • "My dear, we will not discuss the point. I should be the last person to
  • wish to instil into your mind any feeling of dissatisfaction with your
  • lot in life, or any sentiment of envy or insubordination towards your
  • superiors. Implicit submission to authorities, scrupulous deference to
  • our betters (under which term I, of course, include the higher classes
  • of society), are, in my opinion, indispensable to the well-being of
  • every community. All I mean to say, my dear, is that you had better not
  • attempt to be a governess, as the duties of the position would be too
  • severe for your constitution. Not one word of disrespect would I breathe
  • towards either Mrs. or Miss Hardman; only, recalling my own experience,
  • I cannot but feel that, were you to fall under auspices such as theirs,
  • you would contend a while courageously with your doom, then you would
  • pine and grow too weak for your work; you would come home--if you still
  • had a home--broken down. Those languishing years would follow of which
  • none but the invalid and her immediate friends feel the heart-sickness
  • and know the burden. Consumption or decline would close the chapter.
  • Such is the history of many a life. I would not have it yours. My dear,
  • we will now walk about a little, if you please."
  • They both rose, and slowly paced a green natural terrace bordering the
  • chasm.
  • "My dear," ere long again began Mrs. Pryor, a sort of timid, embarrassed
  • abruptness marking her manner as she spoke, "the young, especially those
  • to whom nature has been favourable, often--frequently--anticipate--look
  • forward to--to marriage as the end, the goal of their hopes."
  • And she stopped. Caroline came to her relief with promptitude, showing a
  • great deal more self-possession and courage than herself on the
  • formidable topic now broached.
  • "They do, and naturally," she replied, with a calm emphasis that
  • startled Mrs. Pryor. "They look forward to marriage with some one they
  • love as the brightest, the only bright destiny that can await them. Are
  • they wrong?"
  • "Oh, my dear!" exclaimed Mrs. Pryor, clasping her hands; and again she
  • paused. Caroline turned a searching, an eager eye on the face of her
  • friend: that face was much agitated. "My dear," she murmured, "life is
  • an illusion."
  • "But not love! Love is real--the most real, the most lasting, the
  • sweetest and yet the bitterest thing we know."
  • "My dear, it is very bitter. It is said to be strong--strong as death!
  • Most of the cheats of existence are strong. As to their sweetness,
  • nothing is so transitory; its date is a moment, the twinkling of an eye.
  • The sting remains for ever. It may perish with the dawn of eternity, but
  • it tortures through time into its deepest night."
  • "Yes, it tortures through time," agreed Caroline, "except when it is
  • mutual love."
  • "Mutual love! My dear, romances are pernicious. You do not read them, I
  • hope?"
  • "Sometimes--whenever I can get them, indeed. But romance-writers might
  • know nothing of love, judging by the way in which they treat of it."
  • "Nothing whatever, my dear," assented Mrs. Pryor eagerly, "nor of
  • marriage; and the false pictures they give of those subjects cannot be
  • too strongly condemned. They are not like reality. They show you only
  • the green, tempting surface of the marsh, and give not one faithful or
  • truthful hint of the slough underneath."
  • "But it is not always slough," objected Caroline. "There are happy
  • marriages. Where affection is reciprocal and sincere, and minds are
  • harmonious, marriage _must_ be happy."
  • "It is never wholly happy. Two people can never literally be as one.
  • There is, perhaps, a possibility of content under peculiar
  • circumstances, such as are seldom combined; but it is as well not to run
  • the risk--you may make fatal mistakes. Be satisfied, my dear. Let all
  • the single be satisfied with their freedom."
  • "You echo my uncle's words!" exclaimed Caroline, in a tone of dismay.
  • "You speak like Mrs. Yorke in her most gloomy moments, like Miss Mann
  • when she is most sourly and hypochondriacally disposed. This is
  • terrible!"
  • "No, it is only true. O child, you have only lived the pleasant morning
  • time of life; the hot, weary noon, the sad evening, the sunless night,
  • are yet to come for you. Mr. Helstone, you say, talks as I talk; and I
  • wonder how Mrs. Matthewson Helstone would have talked had she been
  • living. She died! she died!"
  • "And, alas! my own mother and father----" exclaimed Caroline, struck by
  • a sombre recollection.
  • "What of them?"
  • "Did I never tell you that they were separated?"
  • "I have heard it."
  • "They must, then, have been very miserable."
  • "You see all _facts_ go to prove what I say."
  • "In this case there ought to be no such thing as marriage."
  • "There ought, my dear, were it only to prove that this life is a mere
  • state of probation, wherein neither rest nor recompense is to be
  • vouchsafed."
  • "But your own marriage, Mrs. Pryor?"
  • Mrs. Pryor shrank and shuddered as if a rude finger had pressed a naked
  • nerve. Caroline felt she had touched what would not bear the slightest
  • contact.
  • "My marriage was unhappy," said the lady, summoning courage at last;
  • "but yet----" She hesitated.
  • "But yet," suggested Caroline, "not immitigably wretched?"
  • "Not in its results, at least. No," she added, in a softer tone; "God
  • mingles something of the balm of mercy even in vials of the most
  • corrosive woe. He can so turn events that from the very same blind, rash
  • act whence sprang the curse of half our life may flow the blessing of
  • the remainder. Then I am of a peculiar disposition--I own that--far from
  • facile, without address, in some points eccentric. I ought never to have
  • married. Mine is not the nature easily to find a duplicate or likely to
  • assimilate with a contrast. I was quite aware of my own ineligibility;
  • and if I had not been so miserable as a governess, I never should have
  • married; and then----"
  • Caroline's eyes asked her to proceed. They entreated her to break the
  • thick cloud of despair which her previous words had seemed to spread
  • over life.
  • "And then, my dear, Mr.--that is, the gentleman I married--was, perhaps,
  • rather an exceptional than an average character. I hope, at least, the
  • experience of few has been such as mine was, or that few have felt their
  • sufferings as I felt mine. They nearly shook my mind; relief was so
  • hopeless, redress so unattainable. But, my dear, I do not wish to
  • dishearten; I only wish to warn you, and to prove that the single should
  • not be too anxious to change their state, as they may change for the
  • worse."
  • "Thank you, my dear madam. I quite understand your kind intentions, but
  • there is no fear of my falling into the error to which you allude. I, at
  • least, have no thoughts of marriage, and for that reason I want to make
  • myself a position by some other means."
  • "My dear, listen to me. On what I am going to say I have carefully
  • deliberated, having, indeed, revolved the subject in my thoughts ever
  • since you first mentioned your wish to obtain a situation. You know I at
  • present reside with Miss Keeldar in the capacity of companion. Should
  • she marry (and that she _will_ marry ere long many circumstances induce
  • me to conclude), I shall cease to be necessary to her in that capacity.
  • I must tell you that I possess a small independency, arising partly from
  • my own savings, and partly from a legacy left me some years since.
  • Whenever I leave Fieldhead I shall take a house of my own. I could not
  • endure to live in solitude. I have no relations whom I care to invite to
  • close intimacy; for, as you must have observed, and as I have already
  • avowed, my habits and tastes have their peculiarities. To you, my dear,
  • I need not say I am attached; with you I am happier than I have ever
  • been with any living thing" (this was said with marked emphasis). "Your
  • society I should esteem a very dear privilege--an inestimable privilege,
  • a comfort, a blessing. You shall come to me, then. Caroline, do you
  • refuse me? I hope you can love me?"
  • And with these two abrupt questions she stopped.
  • "Indeed, I _do_ love you," was the reply. "I should like to live with
  • you. But you are too kind."
  • "All I have," went on Mrs. Pryor, "I would leave to you. You should be
  • provided for. But never again say I am _too kind_. You pierce my heart,
  • child!"
  • "But, my dear madam--this generosity--I have no claim----"
  • "Hush! you must not talk about it. There are some things we cannot bear
  • to hear. Oh! it is late to begin, but I may yet live a few years. I can
  • never wipe out the past, but perhaps a brief space in the future may
  • yet be mine."
  • Mrs. Pryor seemed deeply agitated. Large tears trembled in her eyes and
  • rolled down her cheeks. Caroline kissed her, in her gentle, caressing
  • way, saying softly, "I love you dearly. Don't cry."
  • But the lady's whole frame seemed shaken. She sat down, bent her head to
  • her knee, and wept aloud. Nothing could console her till the inward
  • storm had had its way. At last the agony subsided of itself.
  • "Poor thing!" she murmured, returning Caroline's kiss, "poor lonely
  • lamb! But come," she added abruptly--"come; we must go home."
  • For a short distance Mrs. Pryor walked very fast. By degrees, however,
  • she calmed down to her wonted manner, fell into her usual characteristic
  • pace--a peculiar one, like all her movements--and by the time they
  • reached Fieldhead she had re-entered into herself. The outside was, as
  • usual, still and shy.
  • CHAPTER XXII.
  • TWO LIVES.
  • Only half of Moore's activity and resolution had been seen in his
  • defence of the mill; he showed the other half (and a terrible half it
  • was) in the indefatigable, the relentless assiduity with which he
  • pursued the leaders of the riot. The mob, the mere followers, he let
  • alone. Perhaps an innate sense of justice told him that men misled by
  • false counsel and goaded by privations are not fit objects of vengeance,
  • and that he who would visit an even violent act on the bent head of
  • suffering is a tyrant, not a judge. At all events, though he knew many
  • of the number, having recognized them during the latter part of the
  • attack when day began to dawn, he let them daily pass him on street and
  • road without notice or threat.
  • The leaders he did not know. They were strangers--emissaries from the
  • large towns. Most of these were not members of the operative class. They
  • were chiefly "down-draughts," bankrupts, men always in debt and often in
  • drink, men who had nothing to lose, and much, in the way of character,
  • cash, and cleanliness, to gain. These persons Moore hunted like any
  • sleuth-hound, and well he liked the occupation. Its excitement was of a
  • kind pleasant to his nature. He liked it better than making cloth.
  • His horse must have hated these times, for it was ridden both hard and
  • often. He almost lived on the road, and the fresh air was as welcome to
  • his lungs as the policeman's quest to his mood; he preferred it to the
  • steam of dye-houses. The magistrates of the district must have dreaded
  • him. They were slow, timid men; he liked both to frighten and to rouse
  • them. He liked to force them to betray a certain fear, which made them
  • alike falter in resolve and recoil in action--the fear, simply, of
  • assassination. This, indeed, was the dread which had hitherto hampered
  • every manufacturer and almost every public man in the district. Helstone
  • alone had ever repelled it. The old Cossack knew well he might be shot.
  • He knew there was risk; but such death had for his nerves no terrors. It
  • would have been his chosen, might he have had a choice.
  • Moore likewise knew his danger. The result was an unquenchable scorn of
  • the quarter whence such danger was to be apprehended. The consciousness
  • that he hunted assassins was the spur in his high-mettled temper's
  • flank. As for fear, he was too proud, too hard-natured (if you will),
  • too phlegmatic a man to fear. Many a time he rode belated over the
  • moors, moonlit or moonless as the case might be, with feelings far more
  • elate, faculties far better refreshed, than when safety and stagnation
  • environed him in the counting-house. Four was the number of the leaders
  • to be accounted for. Two, in the course of a fortnight, were brought to
  • bay near Stilbro'; the remaining two it was necessary to seek farther
  • off. Their haunts were supposed to lie near Birmingham.
  • Meantime the clothier did not neglect his battered mill. Its reparation
  • was esteemed a light task, carpenters' and glaziers' work alone being
  • needed. The rioters not having succeeded in effecting an entrance, his
  • grim metal darlings--the machines--had escaped damage.
  • Whether during this busy life--whether while stern justice and exacting
  • business claimed his energies and harassed his thoughts--he now and then
  • gave one moment, dedicated one effort, to keep alive gentler fires than
  • those which smoulder in the fane of Nemesis, it was not easy to
  • discover. He seldom went near Fieldhead; if he did, his visits were
  • brief. If he called at the rectory, it was only to hold conferences with
  • the rector in his study. He maintained his rigid course very steadily.
  • Meantime the history of the year continued troubled. There was no lull
  • in the tempest of war; her long hurricane still swept the Continent.
  • There was not the faintest sign of serene weather, no opening amid "the
  • clouds of battle-dust and smoke," no fall of pure dews genial to the
  • olive, no cessation of the red rain which nourishes the baleful and
  • glorious laurel. Meantime, Ruin had her sappers and miners at work under
  • Moore's feet, and whether he rode or walked, whether he only crossed his
  • counting-house hearth or galloped over sullen Rushedge, he was aware of
  • a hollow echo, and felt the ground shake to his tread.
  • While the summer thus passed with Moore, how did it lapse with Shirley
  • and Caroline? Let us first visit the heiress. How does she look? Like a
  • love-lorn maiden, pale and pining for a neglectful swain? Does she sit
  • the day long bent over some sedentary task? Has she for ever a book in
  • her hand, or sewing on her knee, and eyes only for that, and words for
  • nothing, and thoughts unspoken?
  • By no means. Shirley is all right. If her wistful cast of physiognomy is
  • not gone, no more is her careless smile. She keeps her dark old
  • manor-house light and bright with her cheery presence. The gallery and
  • the low-ceiled chambers that open into it have learned lively echoes
  • from her voice; the dim entrance-hall, with its one window, has grown
  • pleasantly accustomed to the frequent rustle of a silk dress, as its
  • wearer sweeps across from room to room, now carrying flowers to the
  • barbarous peach-bloom salon, now entering the dining-room to open its
  • casements and let in the scent of mignonette and sweet-briar, anon
  • bringing plants from the staircase window to place in the sun at the
  • open porch door.
  • She takes her sewing occasionally; but, by some fatality, she is doomed
  • never to sit steadily at it for above five minutes at a time. Her
  • thimble is scarcely fitted on, her needle scarce threaded, when a sudden
  • thought calls her upstairs. Perhaps she goes to seek some
  • just-then-remembered old ivory-backed needle-book or older china-topped
  • work-box, quite unneeded, but which seems at the moment indispensable;
  • perhaps to arrange her hair, or a drawer which she recollects to have
  • seen that morning in a state of curious confusion; perhaps only to take
  • a peep from a particular window at a particular view, whence Briarfield
  • church and rectory are visible, pleasantly bowered in trees. She has
  • scarcely returned, and again taken up the slip of cambric or square of
  • half-wrought canvas, when Tartar's bold scrape and strangled whistle are
  • heard at the porch door, and she must run to open it for him. It is a
  • hot day; he comes in panting; she must convoy him to the kitchen, and
  • see with her own eyes that his water-bowl is replenished. Through the
  • open kitchen door the court is visible, all sunny and gay, and peopled
  • with turkeys and their poults, peahens and their chicks, pearl-flecked
  • Guinea-fowls, and a bright variety of pure white, and purple-necked, and
  • blue and cinnamon plumed pigeons. Irresistible spectacle to Shirley! She
  • runs to the pantry for a roll, and she stands on the door step
  • scattering crumbs. Around her throng her eager, plump, happy feathered
  • vassals. John is about the stables, and John must be talked to, and her
  • mare looked at. She is still petting and patting it when the cows come
  • in to be milked. This is important; Shirley must stay and take a review
  • of them all. There are perhaps some little calves, some little
  • new-yeaned lambs--it may be twins, whose mothers have rejected them.
  • Miss Keeldar must be introduced to them by John, must permit herself the
  • treat of feeding them with her own hand, under the direction of her
  • careful foreman. Meantime John moots doubtful questions about the
  • farming of certain "crofts," and "ings," and "holmes," and his mistress
  • is necessitated to fetch her garden-hat--a gipsy straw--and accompany
  • him, over stile and along hedgerow, to hear the conclusion of the whole
  • agricultural matter on the spot, and with the said "crofts," "ings," and
  • "holms" under her eye. Bright afternoon thus wears into soft evening,
  • and she comes home to a late tea, and after tea she never sews.
  • After tea Shirley reads, and she is just about as tenacious of her book
  • as she is lax of her needle. Her study is the rug, her seat a footstool,
  • or perhaps only the carpet at Mrs. Pryor's feet: there she always
  • learned her lessons when a child, and old habits have a strong power
  • over her. The tawny and lionlike bulk of Tartar is ever stretched beside
  • her, his negro muzzle laid on his fore paws--straight, strong, and
  • shapely as the limbs of an Alpine wolf. One hand of the mistress
  • generally reposes on the loving serf's rude head, because if she takes
  • it away he groans and is discontented. Shirley's mind is given to her
  • book. She lifts not her eyes; she neither stirs nor speaks--unless,
  • indeed, it be to return a brief respectful answer to Mrs. Pryor, who
  • addresses deprecatory phrases to her now and then.
  • "My dear, you had better not have that great dog so near you; he is
  • crushing the border of your dress."
  • "Oh, it is only muslin. I can put a clean one on to-morrow."
  • "My dear, I wish you could acquire the habit of sitting to a table when
  • you read."
  • "I will try, ma'am, some time; but it is so comfortable to do as one has
  • always been accustomed to do."
  • "My dear, let me beg of you to put that book down. You are trying your
  • eyes by the doubtful firelight."
  • "No, ma'am, not at all; my eyes are never tired."
  • At last, however, a pale light falls on the page from the window. She
  • looks; the moon is up. She closes the volume, rises, and walks through
  • the room. Her book has perhaps been a good one; it has refreshed,
  • refilled, rewarmed her heart; it has set her brain astir, furnished her
  • mind with pictures. The still parlour, the clean hearth, the window
  • opening on the twilight sky, and showing its "sweet regent," new throned
  • and glorious, suffice to make earth an Eden, life a poem, for Shirley. A
  • still, deep, inborn delight glows in her young veins, unmingled,
  • untroubled, not to be reached or ravished by human agency, because by no
  • human agency bestowed--the pure gift of God to His creature, the free
  • dower of Nature to her child. This joy gives her experience of a
  • genii-life. Buoyant, by green steps, by glad hills, all verdure and
  • light, she reaches a station scarcely lower than that whence angels
  • looked down on the dreamer of Bethel, and her eye seeks, and her soul
  • possesses, the vision of life as she wishes it. No, not as she wishes
  • it; she has not time to wish. The swift glory spreads out, sweeping and
  • kindling, and multiplies its splendours faster than Thought can effect
  • his combinations, faster than Aspiration can utter her longings. Shirley
  • says nothing while the trance is upon her--she is quite mute; but if
  • Mrs. Pryor speaks to her now, she goes out quietly, and continues her
  • walk upstairs in the dim gallery.
  • If Shirley were not an indolent, a reckless, an ignorant being, she
  • would take a pen at such moments, or at least while the recollection of
  • such moments was yet fresh on her spirit. She would seize, she would fix
  • the apparition, tell the vision revealed. Had she a little more of the
  • organ of acquisitiveness in her head, a little more of the love of
  • property in her nature, she would take a good-sized sheet of paper and
  • write plainly out, in her own queer but clear and legible hand, the
  • story that has been narrated, the song that has been sung to her, and
  • thus possess what she was enabled to create. But indolent she is,
  • reckless she is, and most ignorant; for she does not know her dreams are
  • rare, her feelings peculiar. She does not know, has never known, and
  • will die without knowing, the full value of that spring whose bright
  • fresh bubbling in her heart keeps it green.
  • Shirley takes life easily. Is not that fact written in her eye? In her
  • good-tempered moments is it not as full of lazy softness as in her brief
  • fits of anger it is fulgent with quick-flashing fire? Her nature is in
  • her eye. So long as she is calm, indolence, indulgence, humour, and
  • tenderness possess that large gray sphere; incense her, a red ray
  • pierces the dew, it quickens instantly to flame.
  • Ere the month of July was past, Miss Keeldar would probably have started
  • with Caroline on that northern tour they had planned; but just at that
  • epoch an invasion befell Fieldhead. A genteel foraging party besieged
  • Shirley in her castle, and compelled her to surrender at discretion. An
  • uncle, an aunt, and two cousins from the south--a Mr., Mrs., and two
  • Misses Sympson, of Sympson Grove, ----shire--came down upon her in
  • state. The laws of hospitality obliged her to give in, which she did
  • with a facility which somewhat surprised Caroline, who knew her to be
  • prompt in action and fertile in expedient where a victory was to be
  • gained for her will. Miss Helstone even asked her how it was she
  • submitted so readily. She answered, old feelings had their power; she
  • had passed two years of her early youth at Sympson Grove.
  • "How did she like her relatives?"
  • She had nothing in common with them, she replied. Little Harry Sympson,
  • indeed, the sole son of the family, was very unlike his sisters, and of
  • him she had formerly been fond; but he was not coming to Yorkshire--at
  • least not yet.
  • The next Sunday the Fieldhead pew in Briarfield Church appeared peopled
  • with a prim, trim, fidgety, elderly gentleman, who shifted his
  • spectacles, and changed his position every three minutes; a patient,
  • placid-looking elderly lady in brown satin; and two pattern young
  • ladies, in pattern attire, with pattern deportment. Shirley had the air
  • of a black swan or a white crow in the midst of this party, and very
  • forlorn was her aspect. Having brought her into respectable society, we
  • will leave her there a while, and look after Miss Helstone.
  • Separated from Miss Keeldar for the present, as she could not seek her
  • in the midst of her fine relatives, scared away from Fieldhead by the
  • visiting commotion which the new arrivals occasioned in the
  • neighbourhood, Caroline was limited once more to the gray rectory, the
  • solitary morning walk in remote by-paths, the long, lonely afternoon
  • sitting in a quiet parlour which the sun forsook at noon, or in the
  • garden alcove where it shone bright, yet sad, on the ripening red
  • currants trained over the trellis, and on the fair monthly roses
  • entwined between, and through them fell chequered on Caroline sitting in
  • her white summer dress, still as a garden statue. There she read old
  • books, taken from her uncle's library. The Greek and Latin were of no
  • use to her, and its collection of light literature was chiefly contained
  • on a shelf which had belonged to her aunt Mary--some venerable Lady's
  • Magazines, that had once performed a sea-voyage with their owner, and
  • undergone a storm, and whose pages were stained with salt water; some
  • mad Methodist Magazines, full of miracles and apparitions, of
  • preternatural warnings, ominous dreams, and frenzied fanaticism; the
  • equally mad letters of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe from the Dead to the Living;
  • a few old English classics. From these faded flowers Caroline had in her
  • childhood extracted the honey; they were tasteless to her now. By way of
  • change, and also of doing good, she would sew--make garments for the
  • poor, according to good Miss Ainley's direction. Sometimes, as she felt
  • and saw her tears fall slowly on her work, she would wonder how the
  • excellent woman who had cut it out and arranged it for her managed to be
  • so equably serene in _her_ solitude.
  • "I never find Miss Ainley oppressed with despondency or lost in grief,"
  • she thought; "yet her cottage is a still, dim little place, and she is
  • without a bright hope or near friend in the world. I remember, though,
  • she told me once she had tutored her thoughts to tend upwards to heaven.
  • She allowed there was, and ever had been, little enjoyment in this world
  • for her, and she looks, I suppose, to the bliss of the world to come. So
  • do nuns, with their close cell, their iron lamp, their robe strait as a
  • shroud, their bed narrow as a coffin. She says often she has no fear of
  • death--no dread of the grave; no more, doubtless, had St. Simeon
  • Stylites, lifted up terrible on his wild column in the wilderness; no
  • more has the Hindu votary stretched on his couch of iron spikes. Both
  • these having violated nature, their natural likings and antipathies are
  • reversed; they grow altogether morbid. I do fear death as yet, but I
  • believe it is because I am young. Poor Miss Ainley would cling closer to
  • life if life had more charms for her. God surely did not create us and
  • cause us to live with the sole end of wishing always to die. I believe
  • in my heart we were intended to prize life and enjoy it so long as we
  • retain it. Existence never was originally meant to be that useless,
  • blank, pale, slow-trailing thing it often becomes to many, and is
  • becoming to me among the rest.
  • "Nobody," she went on--"nobody in particular is to blame, that I can
  • see, for the state in which things are; and I cannot tell, however much
  • I puzzle over it, how they are to be altered for the better; but I feel
  • there is something wrong somewhere. I believe single women should have
  • more to do--better chances of interesting and profitable occupation than
  • they possess now. And when I speak thus I have no impression that I
  • displease God by my words; that I am either impious or impatient,
  • irreligious or sacrilegious. My consolation is, indeed, that God hears
  • many a groan, and compassionates much grief which man stops his ears
  • against, or frowns on with impotent contempt. I say _impotent_, for I
  • observe that to such grievances as society cannot readily cure it
  • usually forbids utterance, on pain of its scorn, this scorn being only a
  • sort of tinselled cloak to its deformed weakness. People hate to be
  • reminded of ills they are unable or unwilling to remedy. Such reminder,
  • in forcing on them a sense of their own incapacity, or a more painful
  • sense of an obligation to make some unpleasant effort, troubles their
  • ease and shakes their self-complacency. Old maids, like the houseless
  • and unemployed poor, should not ask for a place and an occupation in the
  • world; the demand disturbs the happy and rich--it disturbs parents. Look
  • at the numerous families of girls in this neighbourhood--the Armitages,
  • the Birtwhistles, the Sykeses. The brothers of these girls are every one
  • in business or in professions; they have something to do. Their sisters
  • have no earthly employment but household work and sewing, no earthly
  • pleasure but an unprofitable visiting, and no hope, in all their life to
  • come, of anything better. This stagnant state of things makes them
  • decline in health. They are never well, and their minds and views shrink
  • to wondrous narrowness. The great wish, the sole aim of every one of
  • them is to be married, but the majority will never marry; they will die
  • as they now live. They scheme, they plot, they dress to ensnare
  • husbands. The gentlemen turn them into ridicule; they don't want them;
  • they hold them very cheap. They say--I have heard them say it with
  • sneering laughs many a time--the matrimonial market is overstocked.
  • Fathers say so likewise, and are angry with their daughters when they
  • observe their manœuvres--they order them to stay at home. What do they
  • expect them to do at home? If you ask, they would answer, sew and cook.
  • They expect them to do this, and this only, contentedly, regularly,
  • uncomplainingly, all their lives long, as if they had no germs of
  • faculties for anything else--a doctrine as reasonable to hold as it
  • would be that the fathers have no faculties but for eating what their
  • daughters cook or for wearing what they sew. Could men live so
  • themselves? Would they not be very weary? And when there came no relief
  • to their weariness, but only reproaches at its slightest manifestation,
  • would not their weariness ferment in time to frenzy? Lucretia, spinning
  • at midnight in the midst of her maidens, and Solomon's virtuous woman
  • are often quoted as patterns of what 'the sex,' as they say, ought to
  • be. I don't know. Lucretia, I dare say, was a most worthy sort of
  • person, much like my cousin Hortense Moore; but she kept her servants up
  • very late. I should not have liked to be amongst the number of the
  • maidens. Hortense would just work me and Sarah in that fashion, if she
  • could, and neither of us would bear it. The 'virtuous woman,' again, had
  • her household up in the very middle of the night; she 'got breakfast
  • over,' as Mrs. Sykes says, before one o'clock a.m.; but _she_ had
  • something more to do than spin and give out portions. She was a
  • manufacturer--she made fine linen and sold it; she was an
  • agriculturist--she bought estates and planted vineyards. _That_ woman
  • was a manager. She was what the matrons hereabouts call 'a clever
  • woman.' On the whole, I like her a good deal better than Lucretia; but I
  • don't believe either Mr. Armitage or Mr. Sykes could have got the
  • advantage of her in a bargain. Yet I like her. 'Strength and honour were
  • her clothing; the heart of her husband safely trusted in her. She opened
  • her mouth with wisdom; in her tongue was the law of kindness; her
  • children rose up and called her blessed; her husband also praised her.'
  • King of Israel! your model of a woman is a worthy model! But are we, in
  • these days, brought up to be like her? Men of Yorkshire! do your
  • daughters reach this royal standard? Can they reach it? Can you help
  • them to reach it? Can you give them a field in which their faculties may
  • be exercised and grow? Men of England! look at your poor girls, many of
  • them fading around you, dropping off in consumption or decline; or, what
  • is worse, degenerating to sour old maids--envious, back-biting,
  • wretched, because life is a desert to them; or, what is worst of all,
  • reduced to strive, by scarce modest coquetry and debasing artifice, to
  • gain that position and consideration by marriage which to celibacy is
  • denied. Fathers! cannot you alter these things? Perhaps not all at once;
  • but consider the matter well when it is brought before you, receive it
  • as a theme worthy of thought; do not dismiss it with an idle jest or an
  • unmanly insult. You would wish to be proud of your daughters, and not to
  • blush for them; then seek for them an interest and an occupation which
  • shall raise them above the flirt, the manœuvrer, the mischief-making
  • tale-bearer. Keep your girls' minds narrow and fettered; they will still
  • be a plague and a care, sometimes a disgrace to you. Cultivate
  • them--give them scope and work; they will be your gayest companions in
  • health, your tenderest nurses in sickness, your most faithful prop in
  • age."
  • CHAPTER XXIII.
  • AN EVENING OUT.
  • One fine summer day that Caroline had spent entirely alone (her uncle
  • being at Whinbury), and whose long, bright, noiseless, breezeless,
  • cloudless hours (how many they seemed since sunrise!) had been to her as
  • desolate as if they had gone over her head in the shadowless and
  • trackless wastes of Sahara, instead of in the blooming garden of an
  • English home, she was sitting in the alcove--her task of work on her
  • knee, her fingers assiduously plying the needle, her eyes following and
  • regulating their movements, her brain working restlessly--when Fanny
  • came to the door, looked round over the lawn and borders, and not seeing
  • her whom she sought, called out, "Miss Caroline!"
  • A low voice answered "Fanny!" It issued from the alcove, and thither
  • Fanny hastened, a note in her hand, which she delivered to fingers that
  • hardly seemed to have nerve to hold it. Miss Helstone did not ask whence
  • it came, and she did not look at it; she let it drop amongst the folds
  • of her work.
  • "Joe Scott's son, Harry, brought it," said Fanny.
  • The girl was no enchantress, and knew no magic spell; yet what she said
  • took almost magical effect on her young mistress. She lifted her head
  • with the quick motion of revived sensation; she shot, not a languid, but
  • a lifelike, questioning glance at Fanny.
  • "Harry Scott! who sent him?"
  • "He came from the Hollow."
  • The dropped note was snatched up eagerly, the seal was broken--it was
  • read in two seconds. An affectionate billet from Hortense, informing her
  • young cousin that she was returned from Wormwood Wells; that she was
  • alone to-day, as Robert was gone to Whinbury market; that nothing would
  • give her greater pleasure than to have Caroline's company to tea, and
  • the good lady added, she was quite sure such a change would be most
  • acceptable and beneficial to Caroline, who must be sadly at a loss both
  • for safe guidance and improving society since the misunderstanding
  • between Robert and Mr. Helstone had occasioned a separation from her
  • "meilleure amie, Hortense Gérard Moore." In a postscript she was urged
  • to put on her bonnet and run down directly.
  • Caroline did not need the injunction. Glad was she to lay by the brown
  • holland child's slip she was trimming with braid for the Jew's basket,
  • to hasten upstairs, cover her curls with her straw bonnet, and throw
  • round her shoulders the black silk scarf, whose simple drapery suited as
  • well her shape as its dark hue set off the purity of her dress and the
  • fairness of her face; glad was she to escape for a few hours the
  • solitude, the sadness, the nightmare of her life; glad to run down the
  • green lane sloping to the Hollow, to scent the fragrance of hedge
  • flowers sweeter than the perfume of moss-rose or lily. True, she knew
  • Robert was not at the cottage; but it was delight to go where he had
  • lately been. So long, so totally separated from him, merely to see his
  • home, to enter the room where he had that morning sat, felt like a
  • reunion. As such it revived her; and then Illusion was again following
  • her in Peri mask. The soft agitation of wings caressed her cheek, and
  • the air, breathing from the blue summer sky, bore a voice which
  • whispered, "Robert may come home while you are in his house, and then,
  • at least, you may look in his face--at least you may give him your hand;
  • perhaps, for a minute, you may sit beside him."
  • "Silence!" was her austere response; but she loved the comforter and the
  • consolation.
  • Miss Moore probably caught from the window the gleam and flutter of
  • Caroline's white attire through the branchy garden shrubs, for she
  • advanced from the cottage porch to meet her. Straight, unbending,
  • phlegmatic as usual, she came on. No haste or ecstasy was ever permitted
  • to disorder the dignity of _her_ movements; but she smiled, well pleased
  • to mark the delight of her pupil, to feel her kiss and the gentle,
  • genial strain of her embrace. She led her tenderly in, half deceived and
  • wholly flattered. Half deceived! had it not been so she would in all
  • probability have put her to the wicket, and shut her out. Had she known
  • clearly to whose account the chief share of this childlike joy was to be
  • placed, Hortense would most likely have felt both shocked and incensed.
  • Sisters do not like young ladies to fall in love with their brothers.
  • It seems, if not presumptuous, silly, weak, a delusion, an absurd
  • mistake. _They_ do not love these gentlemen--whatever sisterly affection
  • they may cherish towards them--and that others should, repels them with
  • a sense of crude romance. The first movement, in short, excited by such
  • discovery (as with many parents on finding their children to be in love)
  • is one of mixed impatience and contempt. Reason--if they be rational
  • people--corrects the false feeling in time; but if they be irrational,
  • it is never corrected, and the daughter or sister-in-law is disliked to
  • the end.
  • "You would expect to find me alone, from what I said in my note,"
  • observed Miss Moore, as she conducted Caroline towards the parlour; "but
  • it was written this morning: since dinner, company has come in."
  • And opening the door she made visible an ample spread of crimson skirts
  • overflowing the elbow-chair at the fireside, and above them, presiding
  • with dignity, a cap more awful than a crown. That cap had never come to
  • the cottage under a bonnet; no, it had been brought in a vast bag, or
  • rather a middle-sized balloon of black silk, held wide with whalebone.
  • The screed, or frill of the cap, stood a quarter of a yard broad round
  • the face of the wearer. The ribbon, flourishing in puffs and bows about
  • the head, was of the sort called love-ribbon. There was a good deal of
  • it, I may say, a very great deal. Mrs. Yorke wore the cap--it became
  • her; she wore the gown also--it suited her no less.
  • That great lady was come in a friendly way to take tea with Miss Moore.
  • It was almost as great and as rare a favour as if the queen were to go
  • uninvited to share pot-luck with one of her subjects. A higher mark of
  • distinction she could not show--she who in general scorned visiting and
  • tea-drinking, and held cheap and stigmatized as "gossips" every maid and
  • matron of the vicinage.
  • There was no mistake, however; Miss Moore _was_ a favourite with her.
  • She had evinced the fact more than once--evinced it by stopping to speak
  • to her in the churchyard on Sundays; by inviting her, almost hospitably,
  • to come to Briarmains; evinced it to-day by the grand condescension of a
  • personal visit. Her reasons for the preference, as assigned by herself,
  • were that Miss Moore was a woman of steady deportment, without the least
  • levity of conversation or carriage; also that, being a foreigner, she
  • must feel the want of a friend to countenance her. She might have added
  • that her plain aspect, homely, precise dress, and phlegmatic,
  • unattractive manner were to her so many additional recommendations. It
  • is certain, at least, that ladies remarkable for the opposite qualities
  • of beauty, lively bearing, and elegant taste in attire were not often
  • favoured with her approbation. Whatever gentlemen are apt to admire in
  • women, Mrs. Yorke condemned; and what they overlook or despise, she
  • patronized.
  • Caroline advanced to the mighty matron with some sense of diffidence.
  • She knew little of Mrs. Yorke, and, as a parson's niece, was doubtful
  • what sort of a reception she might get. She got a very cool one, and was
  • glad to hide her discomfiture by turning away to take off her bonnet.
  • Nor, upon sitting down, was she displeased to be immediately accosted by
  • a little personage in a blue frock and sash, who started up like some
  • fairy from the side of the great dame's chair, where she had been
  • sitting on a footstool, screened from view by the folds of the wide red
  • gown, and running to Miss Helstone, unceremoniously threw her arms round
  • her neck and demanded a kiss.
  • "My mother is not civil to you," said the petitioner, as she received
  • and repaid a smiling salute, "and Rose there takes no notice of you; it
  • is their way. If, instead of you, a white angel, with a crown of stars,
  • had come into the room, mother would nod stiffly, and Rose never lift
  • her head at all; but I will be your friend--I have always liked you."
  • "Jessie, curb that tongue of yours, and repress your forwardness!" said
  • Mrs. Yorke.
  • "But, mother, you are so frozen!" expostulated Jessie. "Miss Helstone
  • has never done you any harm; why can't you be kind to her? You sit so
  • stiff, and look so cold, and speak so dry--what for? That's just the
  • fashion in which you treat Miss Shirley Keeldar and every other young
  • lady who comes to our house. And Rose there is such an aut--aut--I have
  • forgotten the word, but it means a machine in the shape of a human
  • being. However, between you, you will drive every soul away from
  • Briarmains; Martin often says so."
  • "I am an automaton? Good! Let me alone, then," said Rose, speaking from
  • a corner where she was sitting on the carpet at the foot of a bookcase,
  • with a volume spread open on her knee.--"Miss Helstone, how do you do?"
  • she added, directing a brief glance to the person addressed, and then
  • again casting down her gray, remarkable eyes on the book and returning
  • to the study of its pages.
  • Caroline stole a quiet gaze towards her, dwelling on her young, absorbed
  • countenance, and observing a certain unconscious movement of the mouth
  • as she read--a movement full of character. Caroline had tact, and she
  • had fine instinct. She felt that Rose Yorke was a peculiar child--one of
  • the unique; she knew how to treat her. Approaching quietly, she knelt on
  • the carpet at her side, and looked over her little shoulder at her book.
  • It was a romance of Mrs. Radcliffe's--"The Italian."
  • Caroline read on with her, making no remark. Presently Rose showed her
  • the attention of asking, ere she turned the leaf, "Are you ready?"
  • Caroline only nodded.
  • "Do you like it?" inquired Rose ere long.
  • "Long since, when I read it as a child, I was wonderfully taken with
  • it."
  • "Why?"
  • "It seemed to open with such promise--such foreboding of a most strange
  • tale to be unfolded."
  • "And in reading it you feel as if you were far away from England--really
  • in Italy--under another sort of sky--that blue sky of the south which
  • travellers describe."
  • "You are sensible of that, Rose?"
  • "It makes me long to travel, Miss Helstone."
  • "When you are a woman, perhaps, you may be able to gratify your wish."
  • "I mean to make a way to do so, if one is not made for me. I cannot live
  • always in Briarfield. The whole world is not very large compared with
  • creation. I must see the outside of our own round planet, at least."
  • "How much of its outside?"
  • "First this hemisphere where we live; then the other. I am resolved that
  • my life shall be a life. Not a black trance like the toad's, buried in
  • marble; nor a long, slow death like yours in Briarfield rectory."
  • "Like mine! what can you mean, child?"
  • "Might you not as well be tediously dying as for ever shut up in that
  • glebe-house--a place that, when I pass it, always reminds me of a
  • windowed grave? I never see any movement about the door. I never hear a
  • sound from the wall. I believe smoke never issues from the chimneys.
  • What do you do there?"
  • "I sew, I read, I learn lessons."
  • "Are you happy?"
  • "Should I be happy wandering alone in strange countries as you wish to
  • do?"
  • "Much happier, even if you did nothing but wander. Remember, however,
  • that I shall have an object in view; but if you only went on and on,
  • like some enchanted lady in a fairy tale, you might be happier than now.
  • In a day's wandering you would pass many a hill, wood, and watercourse,
  • each perpetually altering in aspect as the sun shone out or was
  • overcast; as the weather was wet or fair, dark or bright. Nothing
  • changes in Briarfield rectory. The plaster of the parlour ceilings, the
  • paper on the walls, the curtains, carpets, chairs, are still the same."
  • "Is change necessary to happiness?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Is it synonymous with it?"
  • "I don't know; but I feel monotony and death to be almost the same."
  • Here Jessie spoke.
  • "Isn't she mad?" she asked.
  • "But, Rose," pursued Caroline, "I fear a wanderer's life, for me at
  • least, would end like that tale you are reading--in disappointment,
  • vanity, and vexation of spirit."
  • "Does 'The Italian' so end?"
  • "I thought so when I read it."
  • "Better to try all things and find all empty than to try nothing and
  • leave your life a blank. To do this is to commit the sin of him who
  • buried his talent in a napkin--despicable sluggard!"
  • "Rose," observed Mrs. Yorke, "solid satisfaction is only to be realized
  • by doing one's duty."
  • "Right, mother! And if my Master has given me ten talents, my duty is to
  • trade with them, and make them ten talents more. Not in the dust of
  • household drawers shall the coin be interred. I will _not_ deposit it in
  • a broken-spouted teapot, and shut it up in a china closet among
  • tea-things. I will _not_ commit it to your work-table to be smothered in
  • piles of woollen hose. I will _not_ prison it in the linen press to find
  • shrouds among the sheets. And least of all, mother" (she got up from the
  • floor)--"least of all will I hide it in a tureen of cold potatoes, to be
  • ranged with bread, butter, pastry, and ham on the shelves of the
  • larder."
  • She stopped, then went on, "Mother, the Lord who gave each of us our
  • talents will come home some day, and will demand from all an account.
  • The teapot, the old stocking-foot, the linen rag, the willow-pattern
  • tureen will yield up their barren deposit in many a house. Suffer your
  • daughters, at least, to put their money to the exchangers, that they may
  • be enabled at the Master's coming to pay Him His own with usury."
  • "Rose, did you bring your sampler with you, as I told you?"
  • "Yes, mother."
  • "Sit down, and do a line of marking."
  • Rose sat down promptly, and wrought according to orders. After a busy
  • pause of ten minutes, her mother asked, "Do you think yourself oppressed
  • now--a victim?"
  • "No, mother."
  • "Yet, as far as I understood your tirade, it was a protest against all
  • womanly and domestic employment."
  • "You misunderstood it, mother. I should be sorry not to learn to sew.
  • You do right to teach me, and to make me work."
  • "Even to the mending of your brothers' stockings and the making of
  • sheets?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Where is the use of ranting and spouting about it, then?"
  • "Am I to do nothing but that? I will do that, and then I will do more.
  • Now, mother, I have said my say. I am twelve years old at present, and
  • not till I am sixteen will I speak again about talents. For four years I
  • bind myself an industrious apprentice to all you can teach me."
  • "You see what my daughters are, Miss Helstone," observed Mrs. Yorke;
  • "how precociously wise in their own conceits! 'I would rather this, I
  • prefer that'--such is Jessie's cuckoo song; while Rose utters the bolder
  • cry, 'I _will_, and I will _not_!'"
  • "I render a reason, mother; besides, if my cry is bold, it is only heard
  • once in a twelvemonth. About each birthday the spirit moves me to
  • deliver one oracle respecting my own instruction and management. I utter
  • it and leave it; it is for you, mother, to listen or not."
  • "I would advise all young ladies," pursued Mrs. Yorke, "to study the
  • characters of such children as they chance to meet with before they
  • marry and have any of their own to consider well how they would like
  • the responsibility of guiding the careless, the labour of persuading the
  • stubborn, the constant burden and task of training the best."
  • "But with love it need not be so very difficult," interposed Caroline.
  • "Mothers love their children most dearly--almost better than they love
  • themselves."
  • "Fine talk! very sentimental! There is the rough, practical part of life
  • yet to come for you, young miss."
  • "But, Mrs. Yorke, if I take a little baby into my arms--any poor woman's
  • infant, for instance--I feel that I love that helpless thing quite
  • peculiarly, though I am not its mother. I could do almost anything for
  • it willingly, if it were delivered over entirely to my care--if it were
  • quite dependent on me."
  • "You _feel_! Yes, yes! I dare say, now. You are led a great deal by your
  • _feelings_, and you think yourself a very sensitive personage, no doubt.
  • Are you aware that, with all these romantic ideas, you have managed to
  • train your features into an habitually lackadaisical expression, better
  • suited to a novel-heroine than to a woman who is to make her way in the
  • real world by dint of common sense?"
  • "No; I am not at all aware of that, Mrs. Yorke."
  • "Look in the glass just behind you. Compare the face you see there with
  • that of any early-rising, hard-working milkmaid."
  • "My face is a pale one, but it is _not_ sentimental; and most milkmaids,
  • however red and robust they may be, are more stupid and less practically
  • fitted to make their way in the world than I am. I think more, and more
  • correctly, than milkmaids in general do; consequently, where they would
  • often, for want of reflection, act weakly, I, by dint of reflection,
  • should act judiciously."
  • "Oh no! you would be influenced by your feelings; you would be guided by
  • impulse."
  • "Of course I should often be influenced by my feelings. They were given
  • me to that end. Whom my feelings teach me to love I _must_ and _shall_
  • love; and I hope, if ever I have a husband and children, my feelings
  • will induce me to love them. I hope, in that case, all my impulses will
  • be strong in compelling me to love."
  • Caroline had a pleasure in saying this with emphasis; she had a pleasure
  • in daring to say it in Mrs. Yorke's presence. She did not care what
  • unjust sarcasm might be hurled at her in reply. She flushed, not with
  • anger but excitement, when the ungenial matron answered coolly, "Don't
  • waste your dramatic effects. That was well said--it was quite fine; but
  • it is lost on two women--an old wife and an old maid. There should have
  • been a disengaged gentleman present.--Is Mr. Robert nowhere hid behind
  • the curtains, do you think, Miss Moore?"
  • Hortense, who during the chief part of the conversation had been in the
  • kitchen superintending the preparations for tea, did not yet quite
  • comprehend the drift of the discourse. She answered, with a puzzled air,
  • that Robert was at Whinbury. Mrs. Yorke laughed her own peculiar short
  • laugh.
  • "Straightforward Miss Moore!" said she patronizingly. "It is like you to
  • understand my question so literally and answer it so simply. _Your_ mind
  • comprehends nothing of intrigue. Strange things might go on around you
  • without your being the wiser; you are not of the class the world calls
  • sharp-witted."
  • These equivocal compliments did not seem to please Hortense. She drew
  • herself up, puckered her black eyebrows, but still looked puzzled.
  • "I have ever been noted for sagacity and discernment from childhood,"
  • she returned; for, indeed, on the possession of these qualities she
  • peculiarly piqued herself.
  • "You never plotted to win a husband, I'll be bound," pursued Mrs. Yorke;
  • "and you have not the benefit of previous experience to aid you in
  • discovering when others plot."
  • Caroline felt this kind language where the benevolent speaker intended
  • she should feel it--in her very heart. She could not even parry the
  • shafts; she was defenceless for the present. To answer would have been
  • to avow that the cap fitted. Mrs. Yorke, looking at her as she sat with
  • troubled, downcast eyes, and cheek burning painfully, and figure
  • expressing in its bent attitude and unconscious tremor all the
  • humiliation and chagrin she experienced, felt the sufferer was fair
  • game. The strange woman had a natural antipathy to a shrinking,
  • sensitive character--a nervous temperament; nor was a pretty, delicate,
  • and youthful face a passport to her affections. It was seldom she met
  • with all these obnoxious qualities combined in one individual; still
  • more seldom she found that individual at her mercy, under circumstances
  • in which she could crush her well. She happened this afternoon to be
  • specially bilious and morose--as much disposed to gore as any vicious
  • "mother of the herd." Lowering her large head she made a new charge.
  • "Your cousin Hortense is an excellent sister, Miss Helstone. Such ladies
  • as come to try their life's luck here at Hollow's Cottage may, by a very
  • little clever female artifice, cajole the mistress of the house, and
  • have the game all in their own hands. You are fond of your cousin's
  • society, I dare say, miss?"
  • "Of which cousin's?"
  • "Oh, of the lady's, _of course_."
  • "Hortense is, and always has been, most kind to me."
  • "Every sister with an eligible single brother is considered most kind by
  • her spinster friends."
  • "Mrs. Yorke," said Caroline, lifting her eyes slowly, their blue orbs at
  • the same time clearing from trouble, and shining steady and full, while
  • the glow of shame left her cheek, and its hue turned pale and
  • settled--"Mrs. Yorke, may I ask what you mean?"
  • "To give you a lesson on the cultivation of rectitude, to disgust you
  • with craft and false sentiment."
  • "Do I need this lesson?"
  • "Most young ladies of the present day need it. You are quite a modern
  • young lady--morbid, delicate, professing to like retirement; which
  • implies, I suppose, that you find little worthy of your sympathies in
  • the ordinary world. The ordinary world--every-day honest folks--are
  • better than you think them, much better than any bookish, romancing chit
  • of a girl can be who hardly ever puts her nose over her uncle the
  • parson's garden wall."
  • "Consequently of whom you know nothing. Excuse me--indeed, it does not
  • matter whether you excuse me or not--you have attacked me without
  • provocation; I shall defend myself without apology. Of my relations with
  • my two cousins you are ignorant. In a fit of ill-humour you have
  • attempted to poison them by gratuitous insinuations, which are far more
  • crafty and false than anything with which you can justly charge me. That
  • I happen to be pale, and sometimes to look diffident, is no business of
  • yours; that I am fond of books, and indisposed for common gossip, is
  • still less your business; that I am a 'romancing chit of a girl' is a
  • mere conjecture on your part. I never romanced to you nor to anybody you
  • know. That I am the parson's niece is not a crime, though you may be
  • narrow-minded enough to think it so. You dislike me. You have no just
  • reason for disliking me; therefore keep the expression of your aversion
  • to yourself. If at any time in future you evince it annoyingly, I shall
  • answer even less scrupulously than I have done now."
  • She ceased, and sat in white and still excitement. She had spoken in the
  • clearest of tones, neither fast nor loud; but her silver accents
  • thrilled the ear. The speed of the current in her veins was just then as
  • swift as it was viewless.
  • Mrs. Yorke was not irritated at the reproof, worded with a severity so
  • simple, dictated by a pride so quiet. Turning coolly to Miss Moore, she
  • said, nodding her cap approvingly, "She has spirit in her, after
  • all.--Always speak as honestly as you have done just now," she
  • continued, "and you'll do."
  • "I repel a recommendation so offensive," was the answer, delivered in
  • the same pure key, with the same clear look. "I reject counsel poisoned
  • by insinuation. It is my right to speak as I think proper; nothing binds
  • me to converse as you dictate. So far from always speaking as I have
  • done just now, I shall never address any one in a tone so stern or in
  • language so harsh, unless in answer to unprovoked insult."
  • "Mother, you have found your match," pronounced little Jessie, whom the
  • scene appeared greatly to edify. Rose had heard the whole with an
  • unmoved face. She now said, "No; Miss Helstone is not my mother's match,
  • for she allows herself to be vexed. My mother would wear her out in a
  • few weeks. Shirley Keeldar manages better.--Mother, you have never hurt
  • Miss Keeldar's feelings yet. She wears armour under her silk dress that
  • you cannot penetrate."
  • Mrs. Yorke often complained that her children were mutinous. It was
  • strange that with all her strictness, with all her "strong-mindedness,"
  • she could gain no command over them. A look from their father had more
  • influence with them than a lecture from her.
  • Miss Moore--to whom the position of witness to an altercation in which
  • she took no part was highly displeasing, as being an unimportant
  • secondary post--now rallying her dignity, prepared to utter a discourse
  • which was to prove both parties in the wrong, and to make it clear to
  • each disputant that she had reason to be ashamed of herself, and ought
  • to submit humbly to the superior sense of the individual then addressing
  • her. Fortunately for her audience, she had not harangued above ten
  • minutes when Sarah's entrance with the tea-tray called her attention,
  • first to the fact of that damsel having a gilt comb in her hair and a
  • red necklace round her throat, and secondly, and subsequently to a
  • pointed remonstrance, to the duty of making tea. After the meal Rose
  • restored her to good-humour by bringing her guitar and asking for a
  • song, and afterwards engaging her in an intelligent and sharp
  • cross-examination about guitar-playing and music in general.
  • Jessie, meantime, directed her assiduities to Caroline. Sitting on a
  • stool at her feet, she talked to her, first about religion and then
  • about politics. Jessie was accustomed at home to drink in a great deal
  • of what her father said on these subjects, and afterwards in company to
  • retail, with more wit and fluency than consistency or discretion, his
  • opinions, antipathies, and preferences. She rated Caroline soundly for
  • being a member of the Established Church, and for having an uncle a
  • clergyman. She informed her that she lived on the country, and ought to
  • work for her living honestly, instead of passing a useless life, and
  • eating the bread of idleness in the shape of tithes. Thence Jessie
  • passed to a review of the ministry at that time in office, and a
  • consideration of its deserts. She made familiar mention of the names of
  • Lord Castlereagh and Mr. Perceval. Each of these personages she adorned
  • with a character that might have separately suited Moloch and Belial.
  • She denounced the war as wholesale murder, and Lord Wellington as a
  • "hired butcher."
  • Her auditress listened with exceeding edification. Jessie had something
  • of the genius of humour in her nature. It was inexpressibly comic to
  • hear her repeating her sire's denunciations in his nervous northern
  • Doric; as hearty a little Jacobin as ever pent a free mutinous spirit in
  • a muslin frock and sash. Not malignant by nature, her language was not
  • so bitter as it was racy, and the expressive little face gave a piquancy
  • to every phrase which held a beholder's interest captive.
  • Caroline chid her when she abused Lord Wellington; but she listened
  • delighted to a subsequent tirade against the Prince Regent. Jessie
  • quickly read, in the sparkle of her hearer's eye and the laughter
  • hovering round her lips, that at last she had hit on a topic that
  • pleased. Many a time had she heard the fat "Adonis of fifty" discussed
  • at her father's breakfast-table, and she now gave Mr. Yorke's comments
  • on the theme--genuine as uttered by his Yorkshire lips.
  • But, Jessie, I will write about you no more. This is an autumn evening,
  • wet and wild. There is only one cloud in the sky, but it curtains it
  • from pole to pole. The wind cannot rest; it hurries sobbing over hills
  • of sullen outline, colourless with twilight and mist. Rain has beat all
  • day on that church tower. It rises dark from the stony enclosure of its
  • graveyard. The nettles, the long grass, and the tombs all drip with wet.
  • This evening reminds me too forcibly of another evening some years
  • ago--a howling, rainy autumn evening too--when certain who had that day
  • performed a pilgrimage to a grave new-made in a heretic cemetery sat
  • near a wood fire on the hearth of a foreign dwelling. They were merry
  • and social, but they each knew that a gap, never to be filled, had been
  • made in their circle. They knew they had lost something whose absence
  • could never be quite atoned for so long as they lived; and they knew
  • that heavy falling rain was soaking into the wet earth which covered
  • their lost darling, and that the sad, sighing gale was mourning above
  • her buried head. The fire warmed them; life and friendship yet blessed
  • them; but Jessie lay cold, coffined, solitary--only the sod screening
  • her from the storm.
  • * * * * *
  • Mrs. Yorke folded up her knitting, cut short the music lesson and the
  • lecture on politics, and concluded her visit to the cottage, at an hour
  • early enough to ensure her return to Briarmains before the blush of
  • sunset should quite have faded in heaven, or the path up the fields have
  • become thoroughly moist with evening dew.
  • The lady and her daughters being gone, Caroline felt that she also ought
  • to resume her scarf, kiss her cousin's cheek, and trip away homeward. If
  • she lingered much later dusk would draw on, and Fanny would be put to
  • the trouble of coming to fetch her. It was both baking and ironing day
  • at the rectory, she remembered--Fanny would be busy. Still, she could
  • not quit her seat at the little parlour window. From no point of view
  • could the west look so lovely as from that lattice with the garland of
  • jessamine round it, whose white stars and green leaves seemed now but
  • gray pencil outlines--graceful in form, but colourless in tint--against
  • the gold incarnadined of a summer evening--against the fire-tinged blue
  • of an August sky at eight o'clock p.m.
  • Caroline looked at the wicket-gate, beside which holly-oaks spired up
  • tall. She looked at the close hedge of privet and laurel fencing in the
  • garden; her eyes longed to see something more than the shrubs before
  • they turned from that limited prospect. They longed to see a human
  • figure, of a certain mould and height, pass the hedge and enter the
  • gate. A human figure she at last saw--nay, two. Frederick Murgatroyd
  • went by, carrying a pail of water; Joe Scott followed, dangling on his
  • forefinger the keys of the mill. They were going to lock up mill and
  • stables for the night, and then betake themselves home.
  • "So must I," thought Caroline, as she half rose and sighed.
  • "This is all folly--heart-breaking folly," she added. "In the first
  • place, though I should stay till dark there will be no arrival; because
  • I feel in my heart, Fate has written it down in to-day's page of her
  • eternal book, that I am not to have the pleasure I long for. In the
  • second place, if he stepped in this moment, my presence here would be a
  • chagrin to him, and the consciousness that it must be so would turn half
  • my blood to ice. His hand would, perhaps, be loose and chill if I put
  • mine into it; his eye would be clouded if I sought its beam. I should
  • look up for that kindling, something I have seen in past days, when my
  • face, or my language, or my disposition had at some happy moment pleased
  • him; I should discover only darkness. I had better go home."
  • She took her bonnet from the table where it lay, and was just fastening
  • the ribbon, when Hortense, directing her attention to a splendid bouquet
  • of flowers in a glass on the same table, mentioned that Miss Keeldar had
  • sent them that morning from Fieldhead; and went on to comment on the
  • guests that lady was at present entertaining, on the bustling life she
  • had lately been leading; adding divers conjectures that she did not very
  • well like it, and much wonderment that a person who was so fond of her
  • own way as the heiress did not find some means of sooner getting rid of
  • this _cortége_ of relatives.
  • "But they say she actually will not let Mr. Sympson and his family go,"
  • she added. "They wanted much to return to the south last week, to be
  • ready for the reception of the only son, who is expected home from a
  • tour. She insists that her cousin Henry shall come and join his friends
  • here in Yorkshire. I dare say she partly does it to oblige Robert and
  • myself."
  • "How to oblige Robert and you?" inquired Caroline.
  • "Why, my child, you are dull. Don't you know--you must often have
  • heard----"
  • "Please, ma'am," said Sarah, opening the door, "the preserves that you
  • told me to boil in treacle--the congfiters, as you call them--is all
  • burnt to the pan."
  • "Les confitures! Elles sont brûlées? Ah, quelle négligence coupable!
  • Coquine de cuisinière, fille insupportable!"
  • And mademoiselle, hastily taking from a drawer a large linen apron, and
  • tying it over her black apron, rushed _éperdue_ into the kitchen,
  • whence, to speak truth, exhaled an odour of calcined sweets rather
  • strong than savoury.
  • The mistress and maid had been in full feud the whole day, on the
  • subject of preserving certain black cherries, hard as marbles, sour as
  • sloes. Sarah held that sugar was the only orthodox condiment to be used
  • in that process; mademoiselle maintained--and proved it by the practice
  • and experience of her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother--that
  • treacle, "mélasse," was infinitely preferable. She had committed an
  • imprudence in leaving Sarah in charge of the preserving-pan, for her
  • want of sympathy in the nature of its contents had induced a degree of
  • carelessness in watching their confection, whereof the result was--dark
  • and cindery ruin. Hubbub followed; high upbraiding, and sobs rather loud
  • than deep or real.
  • Caroline, once more turning to the little mirror, was shading her
  • ringlets from her cheek to smooth them under her cottage bonnet, certain
  • that it would not only be useless but unpleasant to stay longer, when,
  • on the sudden opening of the back-door, there fell an abrupt calm in the
  • kitchen. The tongues were checked, pulled up as with bit and bridle.
  • "Was it--was it--Robert?" He often--almost always--entered by the
  • kitchen way on his return from market. No; it was only Joe Scott, who,
  • having hemmed significantly thrice--every hem being meant as a lofty
  • rebuke to the squabbling womankind--said, "Now, I thowt I heerd a
  • crack?"
  • None answered.
  • "And," he continued pragmatically, "as t' maister's comed, and as he'll
  • enter through this hoyle, I _con_sidered it desirable to step in and let
  • ye know. A household o' women is nivver fit to be comed on wi'out
  • warning. Here he is.--Walk forrard, sir. They war playing up queerly,
  • but I think I've quietened 'em."
  • Another person, it was now audible, entered. Joe Scott proceeded with
  • his rebukes.
  • "What d'ye mean by being all i' darkness? Sarah, thou quean, canst t'
  • not light a candle? It war sundown an hour syne. He'll brak his shins
  • agean some o' yer pots, and tables, and stuff.--Tak tent o' this
  • baking-bowl, sir; they've set it i' yer way, fair as if they did it i'
  • malice."
  • To Joe's observations succeeded a confused sort of pause, which
  • Caroline, though she was listening with both her ears, could not
  • understand. It was very brief. A cry broke it--a sound of surprise,
  • followed by the sound of a kiss; ejaculations, but half articulate,
  • succeeded.
  • "Mon Dieu! mon Dieu! Est-ce que je m'y attendais?" were the words
  • chiefly to be distinguished.
  • "Et tu te portes toujours bien, bonne sœur?" inquired another
  • voice--Robert's, certainly.
  • Caroline was puzzled. Obeying an impulse the wisdom of which she had not
  • time to question, she escaped from the little parlour, by way of leaving
  • the coast clear, and running upstairs took up a position at the head of
  • the banisters, whence she could make further observations ere presenting
  • herself. It was considerably past sunset now; dusk filled the passage,
  • yet not such deep dusk but that she could presently see Robert and
  • Hortense traverse it.
  • "Caroline! Caroline!" called Hortense, a moment afterwards, "venez voir
  • mon frère!"
  • "Strange," commented Miss Helstone, "passing strange! What does this
  • unwonted excitement about such an every-day occurrence as a return from
  • market portend? She has not lost her senses, has she? Surely the burnt
  • treacle has not crazed her?"
  • She descended in a subdued flutter. Yet more was she fluttered when
  • Hortense seized her hand at the parlour door, and leading her to Robert,
  • who stood in bodily presence, tall and dark against the one window,
  • presented her with a mixture of agitation and formality, as though they
  • had been utter strangers, and this was their first mutual introduction.
  • Increasing puzzle! He bowed rather awkwardly, and turning from her with
  • a stranger's embarrassment, he met the doubtful light from the window.
  • It fell on his face, and the enigma of the dream (a dream it seemed)
  • was at its height. She saw a visage like and unlike--Robert, and no
  • Robert.
  • "What is the matter?" said Caroline. "Is my sight wrong? Is it my
  • cousin?"
  • "Certainly it is your cousin," asserted Hortense.
  • Then who was this now coming through the passage--now entering the room?
  • Caroline, looking round, met a new Robert--the real Robert, as she felt
  • at once.
  • "Well," said he, smiling at her questioning, astonished face, "which is
  • which?"
  • "Ah, this is _you_!" was the answer.
  • He laughed. "I believe it is _me_. And do you know who _he_ is? You
  • never saw him before, but you have heard of him."
  • She had gathered her senses now.
  • "It _can_ be only one person--your brother, since it is so like you; my
  • other cousin, Louis."
  • "Clever little Œdipus! you would have baffled the Sphinx! But now, see
  • us together.--Change places; change again, to confuse her, Louis.--Which
  • is the old love now, Lina?"
  • "As if it were possible to make a mistake when you speak! You should
  • have told Hortense to ask. But you are not so much alike. It is only
  • your height, your figure, and complexion that are so similar."
  • "And I am Robert, am I not?" asked the newcomer, making a first effort
  • to overcome what seemed his natural shyness.
  • Caroline shook her head gently. A soft, expressive ray from her eye
  • beamed on the real Robert. It said much.
  • She was not permitted to quit her cousins soon. Robert himself was
  • peremptory in obliging her to remain. Glad, simple, and affable in her
  • demeanour (glad for this night, at least), in light, bright spirits for
  • the time, she was too pleasant an addition to the cottage circle to be
  • willingly parted with by any of them. Louis seemed naturally rather a
  • grave, still, retiring man; but the Caroline of this evening, which was
  • not (as you know, reader) the Caroline of every day, thawed his reserve,
  • and cheered his gravity soon. He sat near her and talked to her. She
  • already knew his vocation was that of tuition. She learned now he had
  • for some years been the tutor of Mr. Sympson's son; that he had been
  • travelling with him, and had accompanied him to the north. She inquired
  • if he liked his post, but got a look in reply which did not invite or
  • license further question. The look woke Caroline's ready sympathy. She
  • thought it a very sad expression to pass over so sensible a face as
  • Louis's; for he _had_ a sensible face, though not handsome, she
  • considered, when seen near Robert's. She turned to make the comparison.
  • Robert was leaning against the wall, a little behind her, turning over
  • the leaves of a book of engravings, and probably listening, at the same
  • time, to the dialogue between her and Louis.
  • "How could I think them alike?" she asked herself. "I see now it is
  • Hortense Louis resembles, not Robert."
  • And this was in part true. He had the shorter nose and longer upper lip
  • of his sister rather than the fine traits of his brother. He had her
  • mould of mouth and chin--all less decisive, accurate, and clear than
  • those of the young mill-owner. His air, though deliberate and
  • reflective, could scarcely be called prompt and acute. You felt, in
  • sitting near and looking up at him, that a slower and probably a more
  • benignant nature than that of the elder Moore shed calm on your
  • impressions.
  • Robert--perhaps aware that Caroline's glance had wandered towards and
  • dwelt upon him, though he had neither met nor answered it--put down the
  • book of engravings, and approaching, took a seat at her side. She
  • resumed her conversation with Louis, but while she talked to him her
  • thoughts were elsewhere. Her heart beat on the side from which her face
  • was half averted. She acknowledged a steady, manly, kindly air in Louis;
  • but she bent before the secret power of Robert. To be so near
  • him--though he was silent, though he did not touch so much as her
  • scarf-fringe or the white hem of her dress--affected her like a spell.
  • Had she been obliged to speak to him _only_, it would have quelled, but,
  • at liberty to address another, it excited her. Her discourse flowed
  • freely; it was gay, playful, eloquent. The indulgent look and placid
  • manner of her auditor encouraged her to ease; the sober pleasure
  • expressed by his smile drew out all that was brilliant in her nature.
  • She felt that this evening she appeared to advantage, and as Robert was
  • a spectator, the consciousness contented her. Had he been called away,
  • collapse would at once have succeeded stimulus.
  • But her enjoyment was not long to shine full-orbed; a cloud soon crossed
  • it.
  • Hortense, who for some time had been on the move ordering supper, and
  • was now clearing the little table of some books, etc., to make room for
  • the tray, called Robert's attention to the glass of flowers, the carmine
  • and snow and gold of whose petals looked radiant indeed by candlelight.
  • "They came from Fieldhead," she said, "intended as a gift to you, no
  • doubt. We know who is the favourite there; not I, I'm sure."
  • It was a wonder to hear Hortense jest--a sign that her spirits were at
  • high-water mark indeed.
  • "We are to understand, then, that Robert is the favourite?" observed
  • Louis.
  • "Mon cher," replied Hortense, "Robert--c'est tout ce qu'il y a de plus
  • précieux au monde; à côté de lui le reste du genre humain n'est que du
  • rebut.--N'ai-je pas raison, mon enfant?" she added, appealing to
  • Caroline.
  • Caroline was obliged to reply, "Yes," and her beacon was quenched. Her
  • star withdrew as she spoke.
  • "Et toi, Robert?" inquired Louis.
  • "When you shall have an opportunity, ask herself," was the quiet answer.
  • Whether he reddened or paled Caroline did not examine. She discovered
  • that it was late, and she must go home. Home she would go; not even
  • Robert could detain her now.
  • CHAPTER XXIV.
  • THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH.
  • The future sometimes seems to sob a low warning of the events it is
  • bringing us, like some gathering though yet remote storm, which, in
  • tones of the wind, in flushings of the firmament, in clouds strangely
  • torn, announces a blast strong to strew the sea with wrecks; or
  • commissioned to bring in fog the yellow taint of pestilence covering
  • white Western isles with the poisoned exhalations of the East, dimming
  • the lattices of English homes with the breath of Indian plague. At other
  • times this future bursts suddenly, as if a rock had rent, and in it a
  • grave had opened, whence issues the body of one that slept. Ere you are
  • aware you stand face to face with a shrouded and unthought-of
  • calamity--a new Lazarus.
  • Caroline Helstone went home from Hollow's Cottage in good health, as she
  • imagined. On waking the next morning she felt oppressed with unwonted
  • languor. At breakfast, at each meal of the following day, she missed all
  • sense of appetite. Palatable food was as ashes and sawdust to her.
  • "Am I ill?" she asked, and looked at herself in the glass. Her eyes were
  • bright, their pupils dilated, her cheeks seemed rosier, and fuller than
  • usual. "I look well; why can I not eat?"
  • She felt a pulse beat fast in her temples; she felt, too, her brain in
  • strange activity. Her spirits were raised; hundreds of busy and broken
  • but brilliant thoughts engaged her mind. A glow rested on them, such as
  • tinged her complexion.
  • Now followed a hot, parched, thirsty, restless night. Towards morning
  • one terrible dream seized her like a tiger; when she woke, she felt and
  • knew she was ill.
  • How she had caught the fever (fever it was) she could not tell. Probably
  • in her late walk home, some sweet, poisoned breeze, redolent of
  • honey-dew and miasma, had passed into her lungs and veins, and finding
  • there already a fever of mental excitement, and a languor of long
  • conflict and habitual sadness, had fanned the spark to flame, and left a
  • well-lit fire behind it.
  • It seemed, however, but a gentle fire. After two hot days and worried
  • nights, there was no violence in the symptoms, and neither her uncle,
  • nor Fanny, nor the doctor, nor Miss Keeldar, when she called, had any
  • fear for her. A few days would restore her, every one believed.
  • The few days passed, and--though it was still thought it could not long
  • delay--the revival had not begun. Mrs. Pryor, who had visited her
  • daily--being present in her chamber one morning when she had been ill a
  • fortnight--watched her very narrowly for some minutes. She took her hand
  • and placed her finger on her wrist; then, quietly leaving the chamber,
  • she went to Mr. Helstone's study. With him she remained closeted a long
  • time--half the morning. On returning to her sick young friend, she laid
  • aside shawl and bonnet. She stood awhile at the bedside, one hand placed
  • in the other, gently rocking herself to and fro, in an attitude and with
  • a movement habitual to her. At last she said, "I have sent Fanny to
  • Fieldhead to fetch a few things for me, such as I shall want during a
  • short stay here. It is my wish to remain with you till you are better.
  • Your uncle kindly permits my attendance. Will it to yourself be
  • acceptable, Caroline?"
  • "I am sorry you should take such needless trouble. I do not feel very
  • ill, but I cannot refuse resolutely. It will be such comfort to know you
  • are in the house, to see you sometimes in the room; but don't confine
  • yourself on my account, dear Mrs. Pryor. Fanny nurses me very well."
  • Mrs. Pryor, bending over the pale little sufferer, was now smoothing the
  • hair under her cap, and gently raising her pillow. As she performed
  • these offices, Caroline, smiling, lifted her face to kiss her.
  • "Are you free from pain? Are you tolerably at ease?" was inquired in a
  • low, earnest voice, as the self-elected nurse yielded to the caress.
  • "I think I am almost happy."
  • "You wish to drink? Your lips are parched."
  • She held a glass filled with some cooling beverage to her mouth.
  • "Have you eaten anything to-day, Caroline?"
  • "I cannot eat."
  • "But soon your appetite will return; it _must_ return--that is, I pray
  • God it may."
  • In laying her again on the couch, she encircled her in her arms; and
  • while so doing, by a movement which seemed scarcely voluntary, she drew
  • her to her heart, and held her close gathered an instant.
  • "I shall hardly wish to get well, that I may keep you always," said
  • Caroline.
  • Mrs. Pryor did not smile at this speech. Over her features ran a tremor,
  • which for some minutes she was absorbed in repressing.
  • "You are more used to Fanny than to me," she remarked ere long. "I
  • should think my attendance must seem strange, officious?"
  • "No; quite natural, and very soothing. You must have been accustomed to
  • wait on sick people, ma'am. You move about the room so softly, and you
  • speak so quietly, and touch me so gently."
  • "I am dexterous in nothing, my dear. You will often find me awkward, but
  • never negligent."
  • Negligent, indeed, she was not. From that hour Fanny and Eliza became
  • ciphers in the sick-room. Mrs. Pryor made it her domain; she performed
  • all its duties; she lived in it day and night. The patient
  • remonstrated--faintly, however, from the first, and not at all ere long.
  • Loneliness and gloom were now banished from her bedside; protection and
  • solace sat there instead. She and her nurse coalesced in wondrous union.
  • Caroline was usually pained to require or receive much attendance. Mrs.
  • Pryor, under ordinary circumstances, had neither the habit nor the art
  • of performing little offices of service; but all now passed with such
  • ease, so naturally, that the patient was as willing to be cherished as
  • the nurse was bent on cherishing; no sign of weariness in the latter
  • ever reminded the former that she ought to be anxious. There was, in
  • fact, no very hard duty to perform; but a hireling might have found it
  • hard.
  • With all this care it seemed strange the sick girl did not get well; yet
  • such was the case. She wasted like any snow-wreath in thaw; she faded
  • like any flower in drought. Miss Keeldar, on whose thoughts danger or
  • death seldom intruded, had at first entertained no fears at all for her
  • friend; but seeing her change and sink from time to time when she paid
  • her visits, alarm clutched her heart. She went to Mr. Helstone and
  • expressed herself with so much energy that that gentleman was at last
  • obliged, however unwillingly, to admit the idea that his niece was ill
  • of something more than a migraine; and when Mrs. Pryor came and quietly
  • demanded a physician, he said she might send for two if she liked. One
  • came, but that one was an oracle. He delivered a dark saying of which
  • the future was to solve the mystery, wrote some prescriptions, gave some
  • directions--the whole with an air of crushing authority--pocketed his
  • fee, and went. Probably he knew well enough he could do no good, but
  • didn't like to say so.
  • Still, no rumour of serious illness got wind in the neighbourhood. At
  • Hollow's Cottage it was thought that Caroline had only a severe cold,
  • she having written a note to Hortense to that effect; and mademoiselle
  • contented herself with sending two pots of currant jam, a recipe for a
  • tisane, and a note of advice.
  • Mrs. Yorke being told that a physician had been summoned, sneered at the
  • hypochondriac fancies of the rich and idle, who, she said, having
  • nothing but themselves to think about, must needs send for a doctor if
  • only so much as their little finger ached.
  • The "rich and idle," represented in the person of Caroline, were
  • meantime falling fast into a condition of prostration, whose quickly
  • consummated debility puzzled all who witnessed it except one; for that
  • one alone reflected how liable is the undermined structure to sink in
  • sudden ruin.
  • Sick people often have fancies inscrutable to ordinary attendants, and
  • Caroline had one which even her tender nurse could not at first explain.
  • On a certain day in the week, at a certain hour, she would--whether
  • worse or better--entreat to be taken up and dressed, and suffered to sit
  • in her chair near the window. This station she would retain till noon
  • was past. Whatever degree of exhaustion or debility her wan aspect
  • betrayed, she still softly put off all persuasion to seek repose until
  • the church clock had duly tolled midday. The twelve strokes sounded, she
  • grew docile, and would meekly lie down. Returned to the couch, she
  • usually buried her face deep in the pillow, and drew the coverlets close
  • round her, as if to shut out the world and sun, of which she was tired.
  • More than once, as she thus lay, a slight convulsion shook the sick-bed,
  • and a faint sob broke the silence round it. These things were not
  • unnoted by Mrs. Pryor.
  • One Tuesday morning, as usual, she had asked leave to rise, and now she
  • sat wrapped in her white dressing-gown, leaning forward in the
  • easy-chair, gazing steadily and patiently from the lattice. Mrs. Pryor
  • was seated a little behind, knitting as it seemed, but, in truth,
  • watching her. A change crossed her pale, mournful brow, animating its
  • languor; a light shot into her faded eyes, reviving their lustre; she
  • half rose and looked earnestly out. Mrs. Pryor, drawing softly near,
  • glanced over her shoulder. From this window was visible the churchyard,
  • beyond it the road; and there, riding sharply by, appeared a horseman.
  • The figure was not yet too remote for recognition. Mrs. Pryor had long
  • sight; she knew Mr. Moore. Just as an intercepting rising ground
  • concealed him from view, the clock struck twelve.
  • "May I lie down again?" asked Caroline.
  • Her nurse assisted her to bed. Having laid her down and drawn the
  • curtain, she stood listening near. The little couch trembled, the
  • suppressed sob stirred the air. A contraction as of anguish altered Mrs.
  • Pryor's features; she wrung her hands; half a groan escaped her lips.
  • She now remembered that Tuesday was Whinbury market day. Mr. Moore must
  • always pass the rectory on his way thither, just ere noon of that day.
  • Caroline wore continually round her neck a slender braid of silk,
  • attached to which was some trinket. Mrs. Pryor had seen the bit of gold
  • glisten, but had not yet obtained a fair view of it. Her patient never
  • parted with it. When dressed it was hidden in her bosom; as she lay in
  • bed she always held it in her hand. That Tuesday afternoon the transient
  • doze--more like lethargy than sleep--which sometimes abridged the long
  • days, had stolen over her. The weather was hot. While turning in febrile
  • restlessness, she had pushed the coverlets a little aside. Mrs. Pryor
  • bent to replace them. The small, wasted hand, lying nerveless on the
  • sick girl's breast, clasped as usual her jealously-guarded treasure.
  • Those fingers whose attenuation it gave pain to see were now relaxed in
  • sleep. Mrs. Pryor gently disengaged the braid, drawing out a tiny
  • locket--a slight thing it was, such as it suited her small purse to
  • purchase. Under its crystal face appeared a curl of black hair, too
  • short and crisp to have been severed from a female head.
  • Some agitated movement occasioned a twitch of the silken chain. The
  • sleeper started and woke. Her thoughts were usually now somewhat
  • scattered on waking, her look generally wandering. Half rising, as if
  • in terror, she exclaimed, "Don't take it from me, Robert! Don't! It is
  • my last comfort; let me keep it. I never tell any one whose hair it is;
  • I never show it."
  • Mrs. Pryor had already disappeared behind the curtain. Reclining far
  • back in a deep arm-chair by the bedside, she was withdrawn from view.
  • Caroline looked abroad into the chamber; she thought it empty. As her
  • stray ideas returned slowly, each folding its weak wings on the mind's
  • sad shore, like birds exhausted, beholding void, and perceiving silence
  • round her, she believed herself alone. Collected she was not yet;
  • perhaps healthy self-possession and self-control were to be hers no
  • more; perhaps that world the strong and prosperous live in had already
  • rolled from beneath her feet for ever. So, at least, it often seemed to
  • herself. In health she had never been accustomed to think aloud, but now
  • words escaped her lips unawares.
  • "Oh, I _should_ see him once more before all is over! Heaven _might_
  • favour me thus far!" she cried. "God grant me a little comfort before I
  • die!" was her humble petition.
  • "But he will not know I am ill till I am gone, and he will come when
  • they have laid me out, and I am senseless, cold, and stiff.
  • "What can my departed soul feel then? Can it see or know what happens to
  • the clay? Can spirits, through any medium, communicate with living
  • flesh? Can the dead at all revisit those they leave? Can they come in
  • the elements? Will wind, water, fire, lend me a path to Moore?
  • "Is it for nothing the wind sounds almost articulately sometimes--sings
  • as I have lately heard it sing at night--or passes the casement sobbing,
  • as if for sorrow to come? Does nothing, then, haunt it, nothing inspire
  • it?
  • "Why, it suggested to me words one night; it poured a strain which I
  • could have written down, only I was appalled, and dared not rise to seek
  • pencil and paper by the dim watch-light.
  • "What is that electricity they speak of, whose changes make us well or
  • ill, whose lack or excess blasts, whose even balance revives? What are
  • all those influences that are about us in the atmosphere, that keep
  • playing over our nerves like fingers on stringed instruments, and call
  • forth now a sweet note, and now a wail--now an exultant swell, and anon
  • the saddest cadence?
  • "_Where is_ the other world? In _what_ will another life consist? Why do
  • I ask? Have I not cause to think that the hour is hasting but too fast
  • when the veil must be rent for me? Do I not know the Grand Mystery is
  • likely to burst prematurely on me? Great Spirit, in whose goodness I
  • confide, whom, as my Father, I have petitioned night and morning from
  • early infancy, help the weak creation of Thy hands! Sustain me through
  • the ordeal I dread and must undergo! Give me strength! Give me patience!
  • Give me--oh, _give me_ FAITH!"
  • She fell back on her pillow. Mrs. Pryor found means to steal quietly
  • from the room. She re-entered it soon after, apparently as composed as
  • if she had really not overheard this strange soliloquy.
  • The next day several callers came. It had become known that Miss
  • Helstone was worse. Mr. Hall and his sister Margaret arrived. Both,
  • after they had been in the sickroom, quitted it in tears; they had found
  • the patient more altered than they expected. Hortense Moore came.
  • Caroline seemed stimulated by her presence. She assured her, smiling,
  • she was not dangerously ill; she talked to her in a low voice, but
  • cheerfully. During her stay, excitement kept up the flush of her
  • complexion; she looked better.
  • "How is Mr. Robert?" asked Mrs. Pryor, as Hortense was preparing to take
  • leave.
  • "He was very well when he left."
  • "Left! Is he gone from home?"
  • It was then explained that some police intelligence about the rioters of
  • whom he was in pursuit had, that morning, called him away to Birmingham,
  • and probably a fortnight might elapse ere he returned.
  • "He is not aware that Miss Helstone is very ill?"
  • "Oh no! He thought, like me, that she had only a bad cold."
  • After this visit, Mrs. Pryor took care not to approach Caroline's couch
  • for above an hour. She heard her weep, and dared not look on her tears.
  • As evening closed in, she brought her some tea. Caroline, opening her
  • eyes from a moment's slumber, viewed her nurse with an unrecognizing
  • glance.
  • "I smelt the honeysuckles in the glen this summer morning," she said,
  • "as I stood at the counting-house window."
  • Strange words like these from pallid lips pierce a loving listener's
  • heart more poignantly than steel. They sound romantic, perhaps, in
  • books; in real life they are harrowing.
  • "My darling, do you know me?" said Mrs. Pryor.
  • "I went in to call Robert to breakfast. I have been with him in the
  • garden. He asked me to go. A heavy dew has refreshed the flowers. The
  • peaches are ripening."
  • "My darling! my darling!" again and again repeated the nurse.
  • "I thought it was daylight--long after sunrise. It looks dark. Is the
  • moon now set?"
  • That moon, lately risen, was gazing full and mild upon her. Floating in
  • deep blue space, it watched her unclouded.
  • "Then it is not morning? I am not at the cottage? Who is this? I see a
  • shape at my bedside."
  • "It is myself--it is your friend--your nurse--your---- Lean your head on
  • my shoulder. Collect yourself." In a lower tone--"O God, take pity! Give
  • _her_ life, and _me_ strength! Send me courage! Teach me words!"
  • Some minutes passed in silence. The patient lay mute and passive in the
  • trembling arms, on the throbbing bosom of the nurse.
  • "I am better now," whispered Caroline at last, "much better. I feel
  • where I am. This is Mrs. Pryor near me. I was dreaming. I talk when I
  • wake up from dreams; people often do in illness. How fast your heart
  • beats, ma'am! Do not be afraid."
  • "It is not fear, child--only a little anxiety, which will pass. I have
  • brought you some tea, Cary. Your uncle made it himself. You know he says
  • he can make a better cup of tea than any housewife can. Taste it. He is
  • concerned to hear that you eat so little; he would be glad if you had a
  • better appetite."
  • "I am thirsty. Let me drink."
  • She drank eagerly.
  • "What o'clock is it, ma'am?" she asked.
  • "Past nine."
  • "Not later? Oh! I have yet a long night before me. But the tea has made
  • me strong. I will sit up."
  • Mrs. Pryor raised her, and arranged her pillows.
  • "Thank Heaven! I am not always equally miserable, and ill, and hopeless.
  • The afternoon has been bad since Hortense went; perhaps the evening may
  • be better. It is a fine night, I think? The moon shines clear."
  • "Very fine--a perfect summer night. The old church-tower gleams white
  • almost as silver."
  • "And does the churchyard look peaceful?"
  • "Yes, and the garden also. Dew glistens on the foliage."
  • "Can you see many long weeds and nettles amongst the graves? or do they
  • look turfy and flowery?"
  • "I see closed daisy-heads gleaming like pearls on some mounds. Thomas
  • has mown down the dock-leaves and rank grass, and cleared all away."
  • "I always like that to be done; it soothes one's mind to see the place
  • in order. And, I dare say, within the church just now that moonlight
  • shines as softly as in my room. It will fall through the east window
  • full on the Helstone monument. When I close my eyes I seem to see poor
  • papa's epitaph in black letters on the white marble. There is plenty of
  • room for other inscriptions underneath."
  • "William Farren came to look after your flowers this morning. He was
  • afraid, now you cannot tend them yourself, they would be neglected. He
  • has taken two of your favourite plants home to nurse for you."
  • "If I were to make a will, I would leave William all my plants; Shirley
  • my trinkets--except one, which must not be taken off my neck; and you,
  • ma'am, my books." After a pause--"Mrs. Pryor, I feel a longing wish for
  • something."
  • "For what, Caroline?"
  • "You know I always delight to hear you sing. Sing me a hymn just now.
  • Sing that hymn which begins,--
  • 'Our God, our help in ages past,
  • Our hope for years to come,
  • Our shelter from the stormy blast,
  • Our refuge, haven, home!'"
  • Mrs. Pryor at once complied.
  • No wonder Caroline liked to hear her sing. Her voice, even in speaking,
  • was sweet and silver clear; in song it was almost divine. Neither flute
  • nor dulcimer has tones so pure. But the tone was secondary, compared to
  • the expression which trembled through--a tender vibration from a feeling
  • heart.
  • The servants in the kitchen, hearing the strain, stole to the stair-foot
  • to listen. Even old Helstone, as he walked in the garden, pondering over
  • the unaccountable and feeble nature of women, stood still amongst his
  • borders to catch the mournful melody more distinctly. Why it reminded
  • him of his forgotten dead wife, he could not tell; nor why it made him
  • more concerned than he had hitherto been for Caroline's fading girlhood.
  • He was glad to recollect that he had promised to pay Wynne, the
  • magistrate, a visit that evening. Low spirits and gloomy thoughts were
  • very much his aversion. When they attacked him he usually found means to
  • make them march in double-quick time. The hymn followed him faintly as
  • he crossed the fields. He hastened his customary sharp pace, that he
  • might get beyond its reach.
  • "Thy word commands our flesh to dust,--
  • 'Return, ye sons of men;'
  • All nations rose from earth at first,
  • And turn to earth again.
  • "A thousand ages in Thy sight
  • Are like an evening gone--
  • Short as the watch that ends the night
  • Before the rising sun.
  • "Time, like an ever-rolling stream,
  • Bears all its sons away;
  • They fly, forgotten, as a dream
  • Dies at the opening day.
  • "Like flowery fields, the nations stand,
  • Fresh in the morning light;
  • The flowers beneath the mower's hand
  • Lie withering ere 'tis night.
  • "Our God, our help in ages past,
  • Our hope for years to come,
  • Be Thou our guard while troubles last--
  • O Father, be our home!"
  • "Now sing a song--a Scottish song," suggested Caroline, when the hymn
  • was over--"'Ye banks and braes o' bonnie Doon.'"
  • Again Mrs. Pryor obeyed, or essayed to obey. At the close of the first
  • stanza she stopped. She could get no further. Her full heart flowed
  • over.
  • "You are weeping at the pathos of the air. Come here, and I will comfort
  • you," said Caroline, in a pitying accent. Mrs. Pryor came. She sat down
  • on the edge of her patient's bed, and allowed the wasted arms to
  • encircle her.
  • "You often soothe me; let me soothe you," murmured the young girl,
  • kissing her cheek. "I hope," she added, "it is not for me you weep?"
  • No answer followed.
  • "Do you think I shall not get better? I do not feel _very_ ill--only
  • weak."
  • "But your mind, Caroline--your mind is crushed. Your heart is almost
  • broken; you have been so neglected, so repulsed, left so desolate."
  • "I believe grief is, and always has been, my worst ailment. I sometimes
  • think if an abundant gush of happiness came on me I could revive yet."
  • "Do you wish to live?"
  • "I have no object in life."
  • "You love me, Caroline?"
  • "Very much--very truly--inexpressibly sometimes. Just now I feel as if I
  • could almost grow to your heart."
  • "I will return directly, dear," remarked Mrs. Pryor, as she laid
  • Caroline down.
  • Quitting her, she glided to the door, softly turned the key in the lock,
  • ascertained that it was fast, and came back. She bent over her. She
  • threw back the curtain to admit the moonlight more freely. She gazed
  • intently on her face.
  • "Then, if you love me," said she, speaking quickly, with an altered
  • voice; "if you feel as if, to use your own words, you could 'grow to my
  • heart,' it will be neither shock nor pain for you to know that _that_
  • heart is the source whence yours was filled; that from _my_ veins issued
  • the tide which flows in _yours_; that you are _mine_--my daughter--my
  • own child."
  • "Mrs. Pryor----"
  • "My own child!"
  • "That is--that means--you have adopted me?"
  • "It means that, if I have given you nothing else, I at least gave you
  • life; that I bore you, nursed you; that I am your true mother. No other
  • woman can claim the title; it is _mine_."
  • "But Mrs. James Helstone--but my father's wife, whom I do not remember
  • ever to have seen, she is my mother?"
  • "She _is_ your mother. James Helstone was _my_ husband. I say you are
  • _mine_. I have proved it. I thought perhaps you were all his, which
  • would have been a cruel dispensation for me. I find it is _not_ so. God
  • permitted me to be the parent of my child's mind. It belongs to me; it
  • is my property--my _right_. These features are James's own. He had a
  • fine face when he was young, and not altered by error. Papa, my darling,
  • gave you your blue eyes and soft brown hair; he gave you the oval of
  • your face and the regularity of your lineaments--the outside _he_
  • conferred; but the heart and the brain are _mine_. The germs are from
  • _me_, and they are improved, they are developed to excellence. I esteem
  • and approve my child as highly as I do most fondly love her."
  • "Is what I hear true? Is it no dream?"
  • "I wish it were as true that the substance and colour of health were
  • restored to your cheek."
  • "My own mother! is she one I can be so fond of as I can of you? People
  • generally did not like her--so I have been given to understand."
  • "They told you that? Well, your mother now tells you that, not having
  • the gift to please people generally, for their approbation she does not
  • care. Her thoughts are centred in her child. Does that child welcome or
  • reject her?"
  • "But if you _are_ my mother, the world is all changed to me. Surely I
  • can live. I should like to recover----"
  • "You _must_ recover. You drew life and strength from my breast when you
  • were a tiny, fair infant, over whose blue eyes I used to weep, fearing I
  • beheld in your very beauty the sign of qualities that had entered my
  • heart like iron, and pierced through my soul like a sword. Daughter! we
  • have been long parted; I return now to cherish you again."
  • She held her to her bosom; she cradled her in her arms; she rocked her
  • softly, as if lulling a young child to sleep.
  • "My mother--my own mother!"
  • The offspring nestled to the parent; that parent, feeling the endearment
  • and hearing the appeal, gathered her closer still. She covered her with
  • noiseless kisses; she murmured love over her, like a cushat fostering
  • its young.
  • There was silence in the room for a long while.
  • * * * * *
  • "Does my uncle know?"
  • "Your uncle knows. I told him when I first came to stay with you here."
  • "Did you recognize me when we first met at Fieldhead?"
  • "How could it be otherwise? Mr. and Miss Helstone being announced, I was
  • prepared to see my child."
  • "It was that, then, which moved you. I saw you disturbed."
  • "You saw nothing, Caroline; I can cover my feelings. You can never tell
  • what an age of strange sensation I lived, during the two minutes that
  • elapsed between the report of your name and your entrance. You can never
  • tell how your look, mien, carriage, shook me."
  • "Why? Were you disappointed?"
  • "What will she be like? I had asked myself; and when I saw what you were
  • like, I could have dropped."
  • "Mamma, why?"
  • "I trembled in your presence. I said, I will never own her; she shall
  • never know me."
  • "But I said and did nothing remarkable. I felt a little diffident at the
  • thought of an introduction to strangers--that was all."
  • "I soon saw you were diffident. That was the first thing which reassured
  • me. Had you been rustic, clownish, awkward, I should have been content."
  • "You puzzle me."
  • "I had reason to dread a fair outside, to mistrust a popular bearing, to
  • shudder before distinction, grace, and courtesy. Beauty and affability
  • had come in my way when I was recluse, desolate, young, and ignorant--a
  • toil-worn governess perishing of uncheered labour, breaking down before
  • her time. These, Caroline, when they smiled on me, I mistook for angels.
  • I followed them home; and when into their hands I had given without
  • reserve my whole chance of future happiness, it was my lot to witness a
  • transfiguration on the domestic hearth--to see the white mask lifted,
  • the bright disguise put away, and opposite me sat down---- O God, I
  • _have_ suffered!"
  • She sank on the pillow.
  • "I _have_ suffered! None saw--none knew. There was no sympathy, no
  • redemption, no redress!"
  • "Take comfort, mother. It is over now."
  • "It is over, and not fruitlessly. I tried to keep the word of His
  • patience. He kept me in the days of my anguish. I was afraid with
  • terror--I was troubled. Through great tribulation He brought me through
  • to a salvation revealed in this last time. My fear had torment; He has
  • cast it out. He has given me in its stead perfect love. But,
  • Caroline----"
  • Thus she invoked her daughter after a pause.
  • "Mother!"
  • "I charge you, when you next look on your father's monument, to respect
  • the name chiselled there. To you he did only good. On you he conferred
  • his whole treasure of beauties, nor added to them one dark defect. All
  • _you_ derived from him is excellent. You owe him gratitude. Leave,
  • between him and me, the settlement of our mutual account. Meddle not.
  • God is the arbiter. This world's laws never came near us--never! They
  • were powerless as a rotten bulrush to protect me--impotent as idiot
  • babblings to restrain him! As you said, it is all over now; the grave
  • lies between us. There he sleeps, in that church. To his dust I say this
  • night, what I have never said before, 'James, slumber peacefully! See!
  • your terrible debt is cancelled! Look! I wipe out the long, black
  • account with my own hand! James, your child atones. This living likeness
  • of you--this thing with your perfect features--this one good gift you
  • gave me has nestled affectionately to my heart, and tenderly called me
  • "mother." Husband, rest forgiven!'"
  • "Dearest mother, that is right! Can papa's spirit hear us? Is he
  • comforted to know that we still love him?"
  • "I said nothing of love. I spoke of forgiveness. Mind the truth, child;
  • I said nothing of love! On the threshold of eternity, should he be there
  • to see me enter, will I maintain that."
  • "O mother, you must have suffered!"
  • "O child, the human heart _can_ suffer! It can hold more tears than the
  • ocean holds waters. We never know how deep, how wide it is, till misery
  • begins to unbind her clouds, and fill it with rushing blackness."
  • "Mother, forget."
  • "Forget!" she said, with the strangest spectre of a laugh. "The north
  • pole will rush to the south, and the headlands of Europe be locked into
  • the bays of Australia ere I forget."
  • "Hush, mother! Rest! Be at peace!"
  • And the child lulled the parent, as the parent had erst lulled the
  • child. At last Mrs. Pryor wept. She then grew calmer. She resumed those
  • tender cares agitation had for a moment suspended. Replacing her
  • daughter on the couch, she smoothed the pillow and spread the sheet. The
  • soft hair whose locks were loosened she rearranged, the damp brow she
  • refreshed with a cool, fragrant essence.
  • "Mamma, let them bring a candle, that I may see you; and tell my uncle
  • to come into this room by-and-by. I want to hear him say that I am your
  • daughter. And, mamma, take your supper here. Don't leave me for one
  • minute to-night."
  • "O Caroline, it is well you are gentle! You will say to me, Go, and I
  • shall go; Come, and I shall come; Do this, and I shall do it. You
  • inherit a certain manner as well as certain features. It will always be
  • 'mamma' prefacing a mandate--softly spoken, though, from you, thank God!
  • Well," she added, under her breath, "he spoke softly too, once, like a
  • flute breathing tenderness; and then, when the world was not by to
  • listen, discords that split the nerves and curdled the blood--sounds to
  • inspire insanity."
  • "It seems so natural, mamma, to ask you for this and that. I shall want
  • nobody but you to be near me, or to do anything for me. But do not let
  • me be troublesome. Check me if I encroach."
  • "You must not depend on me to check you; you must keep guard over
  • yourself. I have little moral courage; the want of it is my bane. It is
  • that which has made me an unnatural parent--which has kept me apart from
  • my child during the ten years which have elapsed since my husband's
  • death left me at liberty to claim her. It was that which first unnerved
  • my arms and permitted the infant I might have retained a while longer to
  • be snatched prematurely from their embrace."
  • "How, mamma?"
  • "I let you go as a babe, because you were pretty, and I feared your
  • loveliness, deeming it the stamp of perversity. They sent me your
  • portrait, taken at eight years old; that portrait confirmed my fears.
  • Had it shown me a sunburnt little rustic--a heavy, blunt-featured,
  • commonplace child--I should have hastened to claim you; but there, under
  • the silver paper, I saw blooming the delicacy of an aristocratic
  • flower--'little lady' was written on every trait. I had too recently
  • crawled from under the yoke of the fine gentleman--escaped galled,
  • crushed, paralyzed, dying--to dare to encounter his still finer and most
  • fairy-like representative. My sweet little lady overwhelmed me with
  • dismay; her air of native elegance froze my very marrow. In my
  • experience I had not met with truth, modesty, good principle as the
  • concomitants of beauty. A form so straight and fine, I argued, must
  • conceal a mind warped and cruel. I had little faith in the power of
  • education to rectify such a mind; or rather, I entirely misdoubted my
  • own ability to influence it. Caroline, I dared not undertake to rear
  • you. I resolved to leave you in your uncle's hands. Matthewson Helstone
  • I knew, if an austere, was an upright man. He and all the world thought
  • hardly of me for my strange, unmotherly resolve, and I deserved to be
  • misjudged."
  • "Mamma, why did you call yourself Mrs. Pryor?"
  • "It was a name in my mother's family. I adopted it that I might live
  • unmolested. My married name recalled too vividly my married life; I
  • could not bear it. Besides, threats were uttered of forcing me to return
  • to bondage. It could not be. Rather a bier for a bed, the grave for a
  • home. My new name sheltered me. I resumed under its screen my old
  • occupation of teaching. At first it scarcely procured me the means of
  • sustaining life; but how savoury was hunger when I fasted in peace! How
  • safe seemed the darkness and chill of an unkindled hearth when no lurid
  • reflection from terror crimsoned its desolation! How serene was
  • solitude, when I feared not the irruption of violence and vice!"
  • "But, mamma, you have been in this neighbourhood before. How did it
  • happen that when you reappeared here with Miss Keeldar you were not
  • recognized?"
  • "I only paid a short visit, as a bride, twenty years ago, and then I was
  • very different to what I am now--slender, almost as slender as my
  • daughter is at this day. My complexion, my very features are changed; my
  • hair, my style of dress--everything is altered. You cannot fancy me a
  • slim young person, attired in scanty drapery of white muslin, with bare
  • arms, bracelets and necklace of beads, and hair disposed in round
  • Grecian curls above my forehead?"
  • "You must, indeed, have been different. Mamma, I heard the front door
  • open. If it is my uncle coming in, just ask him to step upstairs, and
  • let me hear his assurance that I am truly awake and collected, and not
  • dreaming or delirious."
  • The rector, of his own accord, was mounting the stairs, and Mrs. Pryor
  • summoned him to his niece's apartment.
  • "She's not worse, I hope?" he inquired hastily.
  • "I think her better. She is disposed to converse; she seems stronger."
  • "Good!" said he, brushing quickly into the room.--"Ha, Cary! how do? Did
  • you drink my cup of tea? I made it for you just as I like it myself."
  • "I drank it every drop, uncle. It did me good; it has made me quite
  • alive. I have a wish for company, so I begged Mrs. Pryor to call you
  • in."
  • The respected ecclesiastic looked pleased, and yet embarrassed. He was
  • willing enough to bestow his company on his sick niece for ten minutes,
  • since it was her whim to wish it; but what means to employ for her
  • entertainment he knew not. He hemmed--he fidgeted.
  • "You'll be up in a trice," he observed, by way of saying something. "The
  • little weakness will soon pass off; and then you must drink port wine--a
  • pipe, if you can--and eat game and oysters. I'll get them for you, if
  • they are to be had anywhere. Bless me! we'll make you as strong as
  • Samson before we're done with you."
  • "Who is that lady, uncle, standing beside you at the bed-foot?"
  • "Good God!" he ejaculated. "She's not wandering, is she, ma'am?"
  • Mrs. Pryor smiled.
  • "I am wandering in a pleasant world," said Caroline, in a soft, happy
  • voice, "and I want you to tell me whether it is real or visionary. What
  • lady is that? Give her a name, uncle."
  • "We must have Dr. Rile again, ma'am; or better still, MacTurk. He's less
  • of a humbug. Thomas must saddle the pony and go for him."
  • "No; I don't want a doctor. Mamma shall be my only physician. Now, do
  • you understand, uncle?"
  • Mr. Helstone pushed up his spectacles from his nose to his forehead,
  • handled his snuff-box, and administered to himself a portion of the
  • contents. Thus fortified, he answered briefly, "I see daylight. You've
  • told her then, ma'am?"
  • "And is it _true_?" demanded Caroline, rising on her pillow. "Is she
  • _really_ my mother?"
  • "You won't cry, or make any scene, or turn hysterical, if I answer Yes?"
  • "Cry! I'd cry if you said _No_. It would be terrible to be disappointed
  • now. But give her a name. How do you call her?"
  • "I call this stout lady in a quaint black dress, who looks young enough
  • to wear much smarter raiment, if she would--I call her Agnes Helstone.
  • She married my brother James, and is his widow."
  • "And my mother?"
  • "What a little sceptic it is! Look at her small face, Mrs. Pryor,
  • scarcely larger than the palm of my hand, alive with acuteness and
  • eagerness." To Caroline--"She had the trouble of bringing you into the
  • world at any rate. Mind you show your duty to her by quickly getting
  • well, and repairing the waste of these cheeks.--Heigh-ho! she used to be
  • plump. What she has done with it all I can't, for the life of me,
  • divine."
  • "If _wishing_ to get well will help me, I shall not be long sick. This
  • morning I had no reason and no strength to wish it."
  • Fanny here tapped at the door, and said that supper was ready.
  • "Uncle, if you please, you may send me a little bit of supper--anything
  • you like, from your own plate. That is wiser than going into hysterics,
  • is it not?"
  • "It is spoken like a sage, Cary. See if I don't cater for you
  • judiciously. When women are sensible, and, above all, intelligible, I
  • can get on with them. It is only the vague, superfine sensations, and
  • extremely wire-drawn notions, that put me about. Let a woman ask me to
  • give her an edible or a wearable--be the same a roc's egg or the
  • breastplate of Aaron, a share of St. John's locusts and honey or the
  • leathern girdle about his loins--I can, at least, understand the demand;
  • but when they pine for they know not what--sympathy, sentiment, some of
  • these indefinite abstractions--I can't do it; I don't know it; I haven't
  • got it.--Madam, accept my arm."
  • Mrs. Pryor signified that she should stay with her daughter that
  • evening. Helstone, accordingly, left them together. He soon returned,
  • bringing a plate in his own consecrated hand.
  • "This is chicken," he said, "but we'll have partridge to-morrow.--Lift
  • her up, and put a shawl over her. On my word, I understand
  • nursing.--Now, here is the very same little silver fork you used when
  • you first came to the rectory. That strikes me as being what you may
  • call a happy thought--a delicate attention. Take it, Cary, and munch
  • away cleverly."
  • Caroline did her best. Her uncle frowned to see that her powers were so
  • limited. He prophesied, however, great things for the future; and as she
  • praised the morsel he had brought, and smiled gratefully in his face, he
  • stooped over her pillow, kissed her, and said, with a broken, rugged
  • accent, "Good-night, bairnie! God bless thee!"
  • Caroline enjoyed such peaceful rest that night, circled by her mother's
  • arms, and pillowed on her breast, that she forgot to wish for any other
  • stay; and though more than one feverish dream came to her in slumber,
  • yet, when she woke up panting, so happy and contented a feeling returned
  • with returning consciousness that her agitation was soothed almost as
  • soon as felt.
  • As to the mother, she spent the night like Jacob at Peniel. Till break
  • of day she wrestled with God in earnest prayer.
  • CHAPTER XXV.
  • THE WEST WIND BLOWS.
  • Not always do those who dare such divine conflict prevail. Night after
  • night the sweat of agony may burst dark on the forehead; the supplicant
  • may cry for mercy with that soundless voice the soul utters when its
  • appeal is to the Invisible. "Spare my beloved," it may implore. "Heal my
  • life's life. Rend not from me what long affection entwines with my whole
  • nature. God of heaven, bend, hear, be clement!" And after this cry and
  • strife the sun may rise and see him worsted. That opening morn, which
  • used to salute him with the whisper of zephyrs, the carol of skylarks,
  • may breathe, as its first accents, from the dear lips which colour and
  • heat have quitted, "Oh! I have had a suffering night. This morning I am
  • worse. I have tried to rise. I cannot. Dreams I am unused to have
  • troubled me."
  • Then the watcher approaches the patient's pillow, and sees a new and
  • strange moulding of the familiar features, feels at once that the
  • insufferable moment draws nigh, knows that it is God's will his idol
  • shall be broken, and bends his head, and subdues his soul to the
  • sentence he cannot avert and scarce can bear.
  • Happy Mrs. Pryor! She was still praying, unconscious that the summer sun
  • hung above the hills, when her child softly woke in her arms. No
  • piteous, unconscious moaning--sound which so wastes our strength that,
  • even if we have sworn to be firm, a rush of unconquerable tears sweeps
  • away the oath--preceded her waking. No space of deaf apathy followed.
  • The first words spoken were not those of one becoming estranged from
  • this world, and already permitted to stray at times into realms foreign
  • to the living. Caroline evidently remembered with clearness what had
  • happened.
  • "Mamma, I have slept _so_ well. I only dreamed and woke twice."
  • Mrs. Pryor rose with a start, that her daughter might not see the joyful
  • tears called into her eyes by that affectionate word "mamma," and the
  • welcome assurance that followed it.
  • For many days the mother dared rejoice only with trembling. That first
  • revival seemed like the flicker of a dying lamp. If the flame streamed
  • up bright one moment, the next it sank dim in the socket. Exhaustion
  • followed close on excitement.
  • There was always a touching endeavour to _appear_ better, but too often
  • ability refused to second will; too often the attempt to bear up failed.
  • The effort to eat, to talk, to look cheerful, was unsuccessful. Many an
  • hour passed during which Mrs. Pryor feared that the chords of life could
  • never more be strengthened, though the time of their breaking might be
  • deferred.
  • During this space the mother and daughter seemed left almost alone in
  • the neighbourhood. It was the close of August; the weather was
  • fine--that is to say, it was very dry and very dusty, for an arid wind
  • had been blowing from the east this month past; very cloudless, too,
  • though a pale haze, stationary in the atmosphere, seemed to rob of all
  • depth of tone the blue of heaven, of all freshness the verdure of earth,
  • and of all glow the light of day. Almost every family in Briarfield was
  • absent on an excursion. Miss Keeldar and her friends were at the
  • seaside; so were Mrs. Yorke's household. Mr. Hall and Louis Moore,
  • between whom a spontaneous intimacy seemed to have arisen--the result,
  • probably, of harmony of views and temperament--were gone "up north" on a
  • pedestrian excursion to the Lakes. Even Hortense, who would fain have
  • stayed at home and aided Mrs. Pryor in nursing Caroline, had been so
  • earnestly entreated by Miss Mann to accompany her once more to Wormwood
  • Wells, in the hope of alleviating sufferings greatly aggravated by the
  • insalubrious weather, that she felt obliged to comply; indeed, it was
  • not in her nature to refuse a request that at once appealed to her
  • goodness of heart, and, by a confession of dependency, flattered her
  • _amour propre_. As for Robert, from Birmingham he had gone on to London,
  • where he still sojourned.
  • So long as the breath of Asiatic deserts parched Caroline's lips and
  • fevered her veins, her physical convalescence could not keep pace with
  • her returning mental tranquillity; but there came a day when the wind
  • ceased to sob at the eastern gable of the rectory, and at the oriel
  • window of the church. A little cloud like a man's hand arose in the
  • west; gusts from the same quarter drove it on and spread it wide; wet
  • and tempest prevailed a while. When that was over the sun broke out
  • genially, heaven regained its azure, and earth its green; the livid
  • cholera-tint had vanished from the face of nature; the hills rose clear
  • round the horizon, absolved from that pale malaria-haze.
  • Caroline's youth could now be of some avail to her, and so could her
  • mother's nurture. Both, crowned by God's blessing, sent in the pure west
  • wind blowing soft as fresh through the ever-open chamber lattice,
  • rekindled her long-languishing energies. At last Mrs. Pryor saw that it
  • was permitted to hope: a genuine, material convalescence had commenced.
  • It was not merely Caroline's smile which was brighter, or her spirits
  • which were cheered, but a certain look had passed from her face and
  • eye--a look dread and indescribable, but which will easily be recalled
  • by those who have watched the couch of dangerous disease. Long before
  • the emaciated outlines of her aspect began to fill, or its departed
  • colour to return, a more subtle change took place; all grew softer and
  • warmer. Instead of a marble mask and glassy eye, Mrs. Pryor saw laid on
  • the pillow a face pale and wasted enough, perhaps more haggard than the
  • other appearance, but less awful; for it was a sick, living girl, not a
  • mere white mould or rigid piece of statuary.
  • Now, too, she was not always petitioning to drink. The words, "I am _so_
  • thirsty," ceased to be her plaint. Sometimes, when she had swallowed a
  • morsel, she would say it had revived her. All descriptions of food were
  • no longer equally distasteful; she could be induced, sometimes, to
  • indicate a preference. With what trembling pleasure and anxious care did
  • not her nurse prepare what was selected! How she watched her as she
  • partook of it!
  • Nourishment brought strength. She could sit up. Then she longed to
  • breathe the fresh air, to revisit her flowers, to see how the fruit had
  • ripened. Her uncle, always liberal, had bought a garden-chair for her
  • express use. He carried her down in his own arms, and placed her in it
  • himself, and William Farren was there to wheel her round the walks, to
  • show her what he had done amongst her plants, to take her directions for
  • further work.
  • William and she found plenty to talk about. They had a dozen topics in
  • common--interesting to them, unimportant to the rest of the world. They
  • took a similar interest in animals, birds, insects, and plants; they
  • held similar doctrines about humanity to the lower creation, and had a
  • similar turn for minute observation on points of natural history. The
  • nest and proceedings of some ground-bees, which had burrowed in the turf
  • under an old cherry-tree, was one subject of interest; the haunts of
  • certain hedge-sparrows, and the welfare of certain pearly eggs and
  • callow fledglings, another.
  • Had _Chambers's Journal_ existed in those days, it would certainly have
  • formed Miss Helstone's and Farren's favourite periodical. She would have
  • subscribed for it, and to him each number would duly have been lent;
  • both would have put implicit faith and found great savour in its
  • marvellous anecdotes of animal sagacity.
  • This is a digression, but it suffices to explain why Caroline would have
  • no other hand than William's to guide her chair, and why his society and
  • conversation sufficed to give interest to her garden-airings.
  • Mrs. Pryor, walking near, wondered how her daughter could be so much at
  • ease with a "man of the people." _She_ found it impossible to speak to
  • him otherwise than stiffly. She felt as if a great gulf lay between her
  • caste and his, and that to cross it or meet him half-way would be to
  • degrade herself. She gently asked Caroline, "Are you not afraid, my
  • dear, to converse with that person so unreservedly? He may presume, and
  • become troublesomely garrulous."
  • "William presume, mamma? You don't know him. He never presumes. He is
  • altogether too proud and sensitive to do so. William has very fine
  • feelings."
  • And Mrs. Pryor smiled sceptically at the naïve notion of that
  • rough-handed, rough-headed, fustian-clad clown having "fine feelings."
  • Farren, for his part, showed Mrs. Pryor only a very sulky brow. He knew
  • when he was misjudged, and was apt to turn unmanageable with such as
  • failed to give him his due.
  • The evening restored Caroline entirely to her mother, and Mrs. Pryor
  • liked the evening; for then, alone with her daughter, no human shadow
  • came between her and what she loved. During the day she would have her
  • stiff demeanour and cool moments, as was her wont. Between her and Mr.
  • Helstone a very respectful but most rigidly ceremonious intercourse was
  • kept up. Anything like familiarity would have bred contempt at once in
  • one or both these personages; but by dint of strict civility and
  • well-maintained distance they got on very smoothly.
  • Towards the servants Mrs. Pryor's bearing was not uncourteous, but shy,
  • freezing, ungenial. Perhaps it was diffidence rather than pride which
  • made her appear so haughty; but, as was to be expected, Fanny and Eliza
  • failed to make the distinction, and she was unpopular with them
  • accordingly. She felt the effect produced; it rendered her at times
  • dissatisfied with herself for faults she could not help, and with all
  • else dejected, chill, and taciturn.
  • This mood changed to Caroline's influence, and to that influence alone.
  • The dependent fondness of her nursling, the natural affection of her
  • child, came over her suavely. Her frost fell away, her rigidity unbent;
  • she grew smiling and pliant. Not that Caroline made any wordy profession
  • of love--that would ill have suited Mrs. Pryor; she would have read
  • therein the proof of insincerity--but she hung on her with easy
  • dependence; she confided in her with fearless reliance. These things
  • contented the mother's heart.
  • She liked to hear her daughter say, "Mamma, do this;" "Please, mamma,
  • fetch me that;" "Mamma, read to me;" "Sing a little, mamma."
  • Nobody else--not one living thing--had ever so claimed her services, so
  • looked for help at her hand. Other people were always more or less
  • reserved and stiff with her, as she was reserved and stiff with them;
  • other people betrayed consciousness of and annoyance at her weak points.
  • Caroline no more showed such wounding sagacity or reproachful
  • sensitiveness now than she had done when a suckling of three months old.
  • Yet Caroline could find fault. Blind to the constitutional defects that
  • were incurable, she had her eyes wide open to the acquired habits that
  • were susceptible of remedy. On certain points she would quite artlessly
  • lecture her parent; and that parent, instead of being hurt, felt a
  • sensation of pleasure in discovering that the girl _dared_ lecture her,
  • that she was so much at home with her.
  • "Mamma, I am determined you shall not wear that old gown any more. Its
  • fashion is not becoming; it is too strait in the skirt. You shall put on
  • your black silk every afternoon. In that you look nice; it suits you.
  • And you shall have a black satin dress for Sundays--a real satin, not a
  • satinet or any of the shams. And, mamma, when you get the new one, mind
  • you must wear it."
  • "My dear, I thought of the black silk serving me as a best dress for
  • many years yet, and I wished to buy you several things."
  • "Nonsense, mamma. My uncle gives me cash to get what I want. You know he
  • is generous enough; and I have set my heart on seeing you in a black
  • satin. Get it soon, and let it be made by a dressmaker of my
  • recommending. Let me choose the pattern. You always want to disguise
  • yourself like a grandmother. You would persuade one that you are old and
  • ugly. Not at all! On the contrary, when well dressed and cheerful you
  • are very comely indeed; your smile is so pleasant, your teeth are so
  • white, your hair is still such a pretty light colour. And then you speak
  • like a young lady, with such a clear, fine tone, and you sing better
  • than any young lady I ever heard. Why do you wear such dresses and
  • bonnets, mamma, such as nobody else ever wears?"
  • "Does it annoy you, Caroline?"
  • "Very much; it vexes me even. People say you are miserly; and yet you
  • are not, for you give liberally to the poor and to religious
  • societies--though your gifts are conveyed so secretly and quietly that
  • they are known to few except the receivers. But I will be your
  • lady's-maid myself. When I get a little stronger I will set to work, and
  • you must be good, mamma, and do as I bid you."
  • And Caroline, sitting near her mother, rearranged her muslin
  • handkerchief and resmoothed her hair.
  • "My own mamma," then she went on, as if pleasing herself with the
  • thought of their relationship, "who belongs to me, and to whom I belong!
  • I am a rich girl now. I have something I can love well, and not be
  • afraid of loving. Mamma, who gave you this little brooch? Let me unpin
  • it and look at it."
  • Mrs. Pryor, who usually shrank from meddling fingers and near approach,
  • allowed the license complacently.
  • "Did papa give you this, mamma?"
  • "My sister gave it me--my only sister, Cary. Would that your Aunt
  • Caroline had lived to see her niece!"
  • "Have you nothing of papa's--no trinket, no gift of his?"
  • "I have one thing."
  • "That you prize?"
  • "That I prize."
  • "Valuable and pretty?"
  • "Invaluable and sweet to me."
  • "Show it, mamma. Is it here or at Fieldhead?"
  • "It is talking to me now, leaning on me. Its arms are round me."
  • "Ah, mamma, you mean your teasing daughter, who will never let you
  • alone; who, when you go into your room, cannot help running to seek for
  • you; who follows you upstairs and down, like a dog."
  • "Whose features still give me such a strange thrill sometimes. I half
  • fear your fair looks yet, child."
  • "You don't; you can't. Mamma, I am sorry papa was not good. I do so wish
  • he had been. Wickedness spoils and poisons all pleasant things. It kills
  • love. If you and I thought each other wicked, we could not love each
  • other, could we?"
  • "And if we could not trust each other, Cary?"
  • "How miserable we should be! Mother, before I knew you I had an
  • apprehension that you were not good--that I could not esteem you. That
  • dread damped my wish to see you. And now my heart is elate because I
  • find you perfect--almost; kind, clever, nice. Your sole fault is that
  • you are old-fashioned, and of that I shall cure you. Mamma, put your
  • work down; read to me. I like your southern accent; it is so pure, so
  • soft. It has no rugged burr, no nasal twang, such as almost every one's
  • voice here in the north has. My uncle and Mr. Hall say that you are a
  • fine reader, mamma. Mr. Hall said he never heard any lady read with such
  • propriety of expression or purity of accent."
  • "I wish I could reciprocate the compliment, Cary; but, really, the first
  • time I heard your truly excellent friend read and preach I could not
  • understand his broad northern tongue."
  • "Could you understand me, mamma? Did I seem to speak roughly?"
  • "No. I almost wished you had, as I wished you had looked unpolished.
  • Your father, Caroline, naturally spoke well, quite otherwise than your
  • worthy uncle--correctly, gently, smoothly. You inherit the gift."
  • "Poor papa! When he was so agreeable, why was he not good?"
  • "Why he was _as_ he was--and happily of that you, child, can form no
  • conception--I cannot tell. It is a deep mystery. The key is in the hands
  • of his Maker. There I leave it."
  • "Mamma, you will keep stitching, stitching away. Put down the sewing; I
  • am an enemy to it. It cumbers your lap, and I want it for my head; it
  • engages your eyes, and I want them for a book. Here is your
  • favourite--Cowper."
  • These importunities were the mother's pleasure. If ever she delayed
  • compliance, it was only to hear them repeated, and to enjoy her child's
  • soft, half-playful, half-petulant urgency. And then, when she yielded,
  • Caroline would say archly, "You will spoil me, mamma. I always thought I
  • should like to be spoiled, and I find it very sweet." So did Mrs.
  • Pryor.
  • CHAPTER XXVI.
  • OLD COPY-BOOKS.
  • By the time the Fieldhead party returned to Briarfield Caroline was
  • nearly well. Miss Keeldar, who had received news by post of her friend's
  • convalescence, hardly suffered an hour to elapse between her arrival at
  • home and her first call at the rectory.
  • A shower of rain was falling gently, yet fast, on the late flowers and
  • russet autumn shrubs, when the garden wicket was heard to swing open,
  • and Shirley's well-known form passed the window. On her entrance her
  • feelings were evinced in her own peculiar fashion. When deeply moved by
  • serious fears or joys she was not garrulous. The strong emotion was
  • rarely suffered to influence her tongue, and even her eye refused it
  • more than a furtive and fitful conquest. She took Caroline in her arms,
  • gave her one look, one kiss, then said, "You are better."
  • And a minute after, "I see you are safe now; but take care. God grant
  • your health may be called on to sustain no more shocks!"
  • She proceeded to talk fluently about the journey. In the midst of
  • vivacious discourse her eye still wandered to Caroline. There spoke in
  • its light a deep solicitude, some trouble, and some amaze.
  • "She may be better," it said, "but how weak she still is! What peril she
  • has come through!"
  • Suddenly her glance reverted to Mrs. Pryor. It pierced her through.
  • "When will my governess return to me?" she asked.
  • "May I tell her all?" demanded Caroline of her mother. Leave being
  • signified by a gesture, Shirley was presently enlightened on what had
  • happened in her absence.
  • "Very good," was the cool comment--"very good! But it is no news to me."
  • "What! did you know?"
  • "I guessed long since the whole business. I have heard somewhat of Mrs.
  • Pryor's history--not from herself, but from others. With every detail of
  • Mr. James Helstone's career and character I was acquainted. An
  • afternoon's sitting and conversation with Miss Mann had rendered me
  • familiar therewith; also he is one of Mrs. Yorke's warning examples--one
  • of the blood-red lights she hangs out to scare young ladies from
  • matrimony. I believe I should have been sceptical about the truth of the
  • portrait traced by such fingers--both these ladies take a dark pleasure
  • in offering to view the dark side of life--but I questioned Mr. Yorke on
  • the subject, and he said, 'Shirley, my woman, if you want to know aught
  • about yond' James Helstone, I can only say he was a man-tiger. He was
  • handsome, dissolute, soft, treacherous, courteous, cruel----' Don't cry,
  • Cary; we'll say no more about it."
  • "I am not crying, Shirley; or if I am, it is nothing. Go on; you are no
  • friend if you withhold from me the truth. I hate that false plan of
  • disguising, mutilating the truth."
  • "Fortunately I have said pretty nearly all that I have to say, except
  • that your uncle himself confirmed Mr. Yorke's words; for he too scorns a
  • lie, and deals in none of those conventional subterfuges that are
  • shabbier than lies."
  • "But papa is dead; they should let him alone now."
  • "They should; and we _will_ let him alone. Cry away, Cary; it will do
  • you good. It is wrong to check natural tears. Besides, I choose to
  • please myself by sharing an idea that at this moment beams in your
  • mother's eye while she looks at you. Every drop blots out a sin. Weep!
  • your tears have the virtue which the rivers of Damascus lacked. Like
  • Jordan, they can cleanse a leprous memory."
  • "Madam," she continued, addressing Mrs. Pryor, "did you think I could be
  • daily in the habit of seeing you and your daughter together--marking
  • your marvellous similarity in many points, observing (pardon me) your
  • irrepressible emotions in the presence and still more in the absence of
  • your child--and not form my own conjectures? I formed them, and they are
  • literally correct. I shall begin to think myself shrewd."
  • "And you said nothing?" observed Caroline, who soon regained the quiet
  • control of her feelings.
  • "Nothing. I had no warrant to breathe a word on the subject. _My_
  • business it was not; I abstained from making it such."
  • "You guessed so deep a secret, and did not hint that you guessed it?"
  • "Is that so difficult?"
  • "It is not like you."
  • "How do you know?"
  • "You are not reserved; you are frankly communicative."
  • "I may be communicative, yet know where to stop. In showing my treasure
  • I may withhold a gem or two--a curious, unbought graven stone--an amulet
  • of whose mystic glitter I rarely permit even myself a glimpse.
  • Good-day."
  • Caroline thus seemed to get a view of Shirley's character under a novel
  • aspect. Ere long the prospect was renewed; it opened upon her.
  • No sooner had she regained sufficient strength to bear a change of
  • scene--the excitement of a little society--than Miss Keeldar sued daily
  • for her presence at Fieldhead. Whether Shirley had become wearied of her
  • honoured relatives is not known. She did not say she was; but she
  • claimed and retained Caroline with an eagerness which proved that an
  • addition to that worshipful company was not unwelcome.
  • The Sympsons were church people. Of course the rector's niece was
  • received by them with courtesy. Mr. Sympson proved to be a man of
  • spotless respectability, worrying temper, pious principles, and worldly
  • views; his lady was a very good woman--patient, kind, well-bred. She had
  • been brought up on a narrow system of views, starved on a few
  • prejudices--a mere handful of bitter herbs; a few preferences, soaked
  • till their natural flavour was extracted, and with no seasoning added in
  • the cooking; some excellent principles, made up in a stiff raised crust
  • of bigotry difficult to digest. Far too submissive was she to complain
  • of this diet or to ask for a crumb beyond it.
  • The daughters were an example to their sex. They were tall, with a Roman
  • nose apiece. They had been educated faultlessly. All they did was well
  • done. History and the most solid books had cultivated their minds.
  • Principles and opinions they possessed which could not be mended. More
  • exactly-regulated lives, feelings, manners, habits, it would have been
  • difficult to find anywhere. They knew by heart a certain
  • young-ladies'-schoolroom code of laws on language, demeanour, etc.;
  • themselves never deviated from its curious little pragmatical
  • provisions, and they regarded with secret whispered horror all
  • deviations in others. The Abomination of Desolation was no mystery to
  • them; they had discovered that unutterable Thing in the characteristic
  • others call Originality. Quick were they to recognize the signs of this
  • evil; and wherever they saw its trace--whether in look, word, or deed;
  • whether they read it in the fresh, vigorous style of a book, or listened
  • to it in interesting, unhackneyed, pure, expressive language--they
  • shuddered, they recoiled. Danger was above their heads, peril about
  • their steps. What was this strange thing? Being unintelligible it must
  • be bad. Let it be denounced and chained up.
  • Henry Sympson, the only son and youngest child of the family, was a boy
  • of fifteen. He generally kept with his tutor. When he left him, he
  • sought his cousin Shirley. This boy differed from his sisters. He was
  • little, lame, and pale; his large eyes shone somewhat languidly in a wan
  • orbit. They were, indeed, usually rather dim, but they were capable of
  • illumination. At times they could not only shine, but blaze. Inward
  • emotion could likewise give colour to his cheek and decision to his
  • crippled movements. Henry's mother loved him; she thought his
  • peculiarities were a mark of election. He was not like other children,
  • she allowed. She believed him regenerate--a new Samuel--called of God
  • from his birth. He was to be a clergyman. Mr. and the Misses Sympson,
  • not understanding the youth, let him much alone. Shirley made him her
  • pet, and he made Shirley his playmate.
  • In the midst of this family circle, or rather outside it, moved the
  • tutor--the satellite.
  • Yes, Louis Moore was a satellite of the house of Sympson--connected, yet
  • apart; ever attendant, ever distant. Each member of that correct family
  • treated him with proper dignity. The father was austerely civil,
  • sometimes irritable; the mother, being a kind woman, was attentive, but
  • formal; the daughters saw in him an abstraction, not a man. It seemed,
  • by their manner, that their brother's tutor did not live for them. They
  • were learned; so was he--but not for them. They were accomplished; he
  • had talents too, imperceptible to their senses. The most spirited sketch
  • from his fingers was a blank to their eyes; the most original
  • observation from his lips fell unheard on their ears. Nothing could
  • exceed the propriety of their behaviour.
  • I should have said nothing could have equalled it; but I remember a fact
  • which strangely astonished Caroline Helstone. It was--to discover that
  • her cousin had absolutely _no_ sympathizing friend at Fieldhead; that to
  • Miss Keeldar he was as much a mere teacher, as little a gentleman, as
  • little a man, as to the estimable Misses Sympson.
  • What had befallen the kind-hearted Shirley that she should be so
  • indifferent to the dreary position of a fellow-creature thus isolated
  • under her roof? She was not, perhaps, haughty to him, but she never
  • noticed him--she let him alone. He came and went, spoke or was silent,
  • and she rarely recognized his existence.
  • As to Louis Moore himself, he had the air of a man used to this life,
  • and who had made up his mind to bear it for a time. His faculties seemed
  • walled up in him, and were unmurmuring in their captivity. He never
  • laughed; he seldom smiled; he was uncomplaining. He fulfilled the round
  • of his duties scrupulously. His pupil loved him; he asked nothing more
  • than civility from the rest of the world. It even appeared that he would
  • accept nothing more--in that abode at least; for when his cousin
  • Caroline made gentle overtures of friendship, he did not encourage
  • them--he rather avoided than sought her. One living thing alone, besides
  • his pale, crippled scholar, he fondled in the house, and that was the
  • ruffianly Tartar, who, sullen and impracticable to others, acquired a
  • singular partiality for him--a partiality so marked that sometimes, when
  • Moore, summoned to a meal, entered the room and sat down unwelcomed,
  • Tartar would rise from his lair at Shirley's feet and betake himself to
  • the taciturn tutor. Once--but once--she noticed the desertion, and
  • holding out her white hand, and speaking softly, tried to coax him back.
  • Tartar looked, slavered, and sighed, as his manner was, but yet
  • disregarded the invitation, and coolly settled himself on his haunches
  • at Louis Moore's side. That gentleman drew the dog's big, black-muzzled
  • head on to his knee, patted him, and smiled one little smile to himself.
  • An acute observer might have remarked, in the course of the same
  • evening, that after Tartar had resumed his allegiance to Shirley, and
  • was once more couched near her footstool, the audacious tutor by one
  • word and gesture fascinated him again. He pricked up his ears at the
  • word; he started erect at the gesture, and came, with head lovingly
  • depressed, to receive the expected caress. As it was given, the
  • significant smile again rippled across Moore's quiet face.
  • * * * * *
  • "Shirley," said Caroline one day, as they two were sitting alone in the
  • summer-house, "did you know that my cousin Louis was tutor in your
  • uncle's family before the Sympsons came down here?"
  • Shirley's reply was not so prompt as her responses usually were, but at
  • last she answered, "Yes--of course; I knew it well."
  • "I thought you must have been aware of the circumstance."
  • "Well! what then?"
  • "It puzzles me to guess how it chanced that you never mentioned it to
  • me."
  • "Why should it puzzle you?"
  • "It seems odd. I cannot account for it. You talk a great deal--you talk
  • freely. How was that circumstance never touched on?"
  • "Because it never was," and Shirley laughed.
  • "You are a singular being!" observed her friend. "I thought I knew you
  • quite well; I begin to find myself mistaken. You were silent as the
  • grave about Mrs. Pryor, and now again here is another secret. But why
  • you made it a secret is the mystery to me."
  • "I never made it a secret; I had no reason for so doing. If you had
  • asked me who Henry's tutor was, I would have told you. Besides, I
  • thought you knew."
  • "I am puzzled about more things than one in this matter. You don't like
  • poor Louis. Why? Are you impatient at what you perhaps consider his
  • _servile_ position? Do you wish that Robert's brother were more highly
  • placed?"
  • "Robert's brother, indeed!" was the exclamation, uttered in a tone like
  • the accents of scorn; and with a movement of proud impatience Shirley
  • snatched a rose from a branch peeping through the open lattice.
  • "Yes," repeated Caroline, with mild firmness, "Robert's brother. He _is_
  • thus closely related to Gérard Moore of the Hollow, though nature has
  • not given him features so handsome or an air so noble as his kinsman;
  • but his blood is as good, and he is as much a gentleman were he free."
  • "Wise, humble, pious Caroline!" exclaimed Shirley ironically. "Men and
  • angels, hear her! We should not despise plain features, nor a laborious
  • yet honest occupation, should we? Look at the subject of your panegyric.
  • He is there in the garden," she continued, pointing through an aperture
  • in the clustering creepers; and by that aperture Louis Moore was
  • visible, coming slowly down the walk.
  • "He is not ugly, Shirley," pleaded Caroline; "he is not ignoble. He is
  • sad; silence seals his mind. But I believe him to be intelligent; and be
  • certain, if he had not something very commendable in his disposition,
  • Mr. Hall would never seek his society as he does."
  • Shirley laughed; she laughed again, each time with a slightly sarcastic
  • sound. "Well, well," was her comment. "On the plea of the man being
  • Cyril Hall's friend and Robert Moore's brother, we'll just tolerate his
  • existence; won't we, Cary? You believe him to be intelligent, do you?
  • Not quite an idiot--eh? Something commendable in his disposition!--_id
  • est_, not an absolute ruffian. Good! Your representations have weight
  • with me; and to prove that they have, should he come this way I will
  • speak to him."
  • He approached the summer-house. Unconscious that it was tenanted, he sat
  • down on the step. Tartar, now his customary companion, had followed him,
  • and he couched across his feet.
  • "Old boy!" said Louis, pulling his tawny ear, or rather the mutilated
  • remains of that organ, torn and chewed in a hundred battles, "the autumn
  • sun shines as pleasantly on us as on the fairest and richest. This
  • garden is none of ours, but we enjoy its greenness and perfume, don't
  • we?"
  • He sat silent, still caressing Tartar, who slobbered with exceeding
  • affection. A faint twittering commenced among the trees round. Something
  • fluttered down as light as leaves. They were little birds, which,
  • lighting on the sward at shy distance, hopped as if expectant.
  • "The small brown elves actually remember that I fed them the other day,"
  • again soliloquized Louis. "They want some more biscuit. To-day I forgot
  • to save a fragment. Eager little sprites, I have not a crumb for you."
  • He put his hand in his pocket and drew it out empty.
  • "A want easily supplied," whispered the listening Miss Keeldar.
  • She took from her reticule a morsel of sweet-cake; for that repository
  • was never destitute of something available to throw to the chickens,
  • young ducks, or sparrows. She crumbled it, and bending over his
  • shoulder, put the crumbs into his hand.
  • "There," said she--"there is a providence for the improvident."
  • "This September afternoon is pleasant," observed Louis Moore, as, not at
  • all discomposed, he calmly cast the crumbs on to the grass.
  • "Even for you?"
  • "As pleasant for me as for any monarch."
  • "You take a sort of harsh, solitary triumph in drawing pleasure out of
  • the elements and the inanimate and lower animate creation."
  • "Solitary, but not harsh. With animals I feel I am Adam's son, the heir
  • of him to whom dominion was given over 'every living thing that moveth
  • upon the earth.' Your dog likes and follows me. When I go into that
  • yard, the pigeons from your dovecot flutter at my feet. Your mare in the
  • stable knows me as well as it knows you, and obeys me better."
  • "And my roses smell sweet to you, and my trees give you shade."
  • "And," continued Louis, "no caprice can withdraw these pleasures from
  • me; they are _mine_."
  • He walked off. Tartar followed him, as if in duty and affection bound,
  • and Shirley remained standing on the summer-house step. Caroline saw her
  • face as she looked after the rude tutor. It was pale, as if her pride
  • bled inwardly.
  • "You see," remarked Caroline apologetically, "his feelings are so often
  • hurt it makes him morose."
  • "You see," retorted Shirley, with ire, "he is a topic on which you and I
  • shall quarrel if we discuss it often; so drop it henceforward and for
  • ever."
  • "I suppose he has more than once behaved in this way," thought Caroline
  • to herself, "and that renders Shirley so distant to him. Yet I wonder
  • she cannot make allowance for character and circumstances. I wonder the
  • general modesty, manliness, sincerity of his nature do not plead with
  • her in his behalf. She is not often so inconsiderate, so irritable."
  • * * * * *
  • The verbal testimony of two friends of Caroline's to her cousin's
  • character augmented her favourable opinion of him. William Farren, whose
  • cottage he had visited in company with Mr. Hall, pronounced him a "real
  • gentleman;" there was not such another in Briarfield.
  • He--William--"could do aught for that man. And then to see how t' bairns
  • liked him, and how t' wife took to him first minute she saw him. He
  • never went into a house but t' childer wor about him directly. Them
  • little things wor like as if they'd a keener sense nor grown-up folks i'
  • finding our folk's natures."
  • Mr. Hall, in answer to a question of Miss Helstone's as to what he
  • thought of Louis Moore, replied promptly that he was the best fellow he
  • had met with since he left Cambridge.
  • "But he is so grave," objected Caroline.
  • "Grave! the finest company in the world! Full of odd, quiet,
  • out-of-the-way humour. Never enjoyed an excursion so much in my life as
  • the one I took with him to the Lakes. His understanding and tastes are
  • so superior, it does a man good to be within their influence; and as to
  • his temper and nature, I call them fine."
  • "At Fieldhead he looks gloomy, and, I believe, has the character of
  • being misanthropical."
  • "Oh! I fancy he is rather out of place there--in a false position. The
  • Sympsons are most estimable people, but not the folks to comprehend him.
  • They think a great deal about form and ceremony, which are quite out of
  • Louis's way."
  • "I don't think Miss Keeldar likes him."
  • "She doesn't know him--she doesn't know him; otherwise she has sense
  • enough to do justice to his merits."
  • "Well, I suppose she doesn't know him," mused Caroline to herself, and
  • by this hypothesis she endeavoured to account for what seemed else
  • unaccountable. But such simple solution of the difficulty was not left
  • her long. She was obliged to refuse Miss Keeldar even this negative
  • excuse for her prejudice.
  • One day she chanced to be in the schoolroom with Henry Sympson, whose
  • amiable and affectionate disposition had quickly recommended him to her
  • regard. The boy was busied about some mechanical contrivance; his
  • lameness made him fond of sedentary occupation. He began to ransack his
  • tutor's desk for a piece of wax or twine necessary to his work. Moore
  • happened to be absent. Mr. Hall, indeed, had called for him to take a
  • long walk. Henry could not immediately find the object of his search. He
  • rummaged compartment after compartment; and at last, opening an inner
  • drawer, he came upon--not a ball of cord or a lump of beeswax, but a
  • little bundle of small marble-coloured cahiers, tied with tape. Henry
  • looked at them. "What rubbish Mr. Moore stores up in his desk!" he
  • said. "I hope he won't keep my old exercises so carefully."
  • "What is it?"
  • "Old copy-books."
  • He threw the bundle to Caroline. The packet looked so neat externally
  • her curiosity was excited to see its contents.
  • "If they are only copy-books, I suppose I may open them?"
  • "Oh yes, quite freely. Mr. Moore's desk is half mine--for he lets me
  • keep all sorts of things in it--and I give you leave."
  • On scrutiny they proved to be French compositions, written in a hand
  • peculiar but compact, and exquisitely clean and clear. The writing was
  • recognizable. She scarcely needed the further evidence of the name
  • signed at the close of each theme to tell her whose they were. Yet that
  • name astonished her--"Shirley Keeldar, Sympson Grove, ----shire" (a
  • southern county), and a date four years back.
  • She tied up the packet, and held it in her hand, meditating over it. She
  • half felt as if, in opening it, she had violated a confidence.
  • "They are Shirley's, you see," said Henry carelessly.
  • "Did _you_ give them to Mr. Moore? She wrote them with Mrs. Pryor, I
  • suppose?"
  • "She wrote them in my schoolroom at Sympson Grove, when she lived with
  • us there. Mr. Moore taught her French; it is his native language."
  • "I know. Was she a good pupil, Henry?"
  • "She was a wild, laughing thing, but pleasant to have in the room. She
  • made lesson-time charming. She learned fast--you could hardly tell when
  • or how. French was nothing to her. She spoke it quick, quick--as quick
  • as Mr. Moore himself."
  • "Was she obedient? Did she give trouble?"
  • "She gave plenty of trouble, in a way. She was giddy, but I liked her.
  • I'm desperately fond of Shirley."
  • "_Desperately_ fond--you small simpleton! You don't know what you say."
  • "I _am desperately_ fond of her. She is the light of my eyes. I said so
  • to Mr. Moore last night."
  • "He would reprove you for speaking with exaggeration."
  • "He didn't. He never reproves and reproves, as girls' governesses do. He
  • was reading, and he only smiled into his book, and said that if Miss
  • Keeldar was no more than that, she was less than he took her to be; for
  • I was but a dim-eyed, short-sighted little chap. I'm afraid I am a poor
  • unfortunate, Miss Caroline Helstone. I am a cripple, you know."
  • "Never mind, Henry, you are a very nice little fellow; and if God has
  • not given you health and strength, He has given you a good disposition
  • and an excellent heart and brain."
  • "I shall be despised. I sometimes think both Shirley and you despise
  • me."
  • "Listen, Henry. Generally, I don't like schoolboys. I have a great
  • horror of them. They seem to me little ruffians, who take an unnatural
  • delight in killing and tormenting birds, and insects, and kittens, and
  • whatever is weaker than themselves. But you are so different I am quite
  • fond of you. You have almost as much sense as a man (far more, God wot,"
  • she muttered to herself, "than many men); you are fond of reading, and
  • you can talk sensibly about what you read."
  • "I _am_ fond of reading. I know I have sense, and I know I have
  • feeling."
  • Miss Keeldar here entered.
  • "Henry," she said, "I have brought your lunch here. I shall prepare it
  • for you myself."
  • She placed on the table a glass of new milk, a plate of something which
  • looked not unlike leather, and a utensil which resembled a
  • toasting-fork.
  • "What are you two about," she continued, "ransacking Mr. Moore's desk?"
  • "Looking at your old copy-books," returned Caroline.
  • "My old copy-books?"
  • "French exercise-books. Look here! They must be held precious; they are
  • kept carefully."
  • She showed the bundle. Shirley snatched it up. "Did not know one was in
  • existence," she said. "I thought the whole lot had long since lit the
  • kitchen fire, or curled the maid's hair at Sympson Grove.--What made you
  • keep them, Henry?"
  • "It is not my doing. I should not have thought of it. It never entered
  • my head to suppose copy-books of value. Mr. Moore put them by in the
  • inner drawer of his desk. Perhaps he forgot them."
  • "C'est cela. He forgot them, no doubt," echoed Shirley. "They are
  • extremely well written," she observed complacently.
  • "What a giddy girl you were, Shirley, in those days! I remember you so
  • well. A slim, light creature whom, though you were so tall, I could lift
  • off the floor. I see you with your long, countless curls on your
  • shoulders, and your streaming sash. You used to make Mr. Moore
  • lively--that is, at first. I believe you grieved him after a while."
  • Shirley turned the closely-written pages and said nothing. Presently she
  • observed, "That was written one winter afternoon. It was a description
  • of a snow scene."
  • "I remember," said Henry. "Mr. Moore, when he read it, cried, 'Voilà le
  • Français gagné!' He said it was well done. Afterwards you made him draw,
  • in sepia, the landscape you described."
  • "You have not forgotten, then, Hal?"
  • "Not at all. We were all scolded that day for not coming down to tea
  • when called. I can remember my tutor sitting at his easel, and you
  • standing behind him, holding the candle, and watching him draw the snowy
  • cliff, the pine, the deer couched under it, and the half-moon hung
  • above."
  • "Where are his drawings, Harry? Caroline should see them."
  • "In his portfolio. But it is padlocked; he has the key."
  • "Ask him for it when he comes in."
  • "You should ask him, Shirley. You are shy of him now. You are grown a
  • proud lady to him; I notice that."
  • "Shirley, you are a real enigma," whispered Caroline in her ear. "What
  • queer discoveries I make day by day now!--I who thought I had your
  • confidence. Inexplicable creature! even this boy reproves you."
  • "I have forgotten 'auld lang syne,' you see, Harry," said Miss Keeldar,
  • answering young Sympson, and not heeding Caroline.
  • "Which you never should have done. You don't deserve to be a man's
  • morning star if you have so short a memory."
  • "A man's morning star, indeed! and by 'a man' is meant your worshipful
  • self, I suppose? Come, drink your new milk while it is warm."
  • The young cripple rose and limped towards the fire; he had left his
  • crutch near the mantelpiece.
  • "My poor lame darling!" murmured Shirley, in her softest voice, aiding
  • him.
  • "Whether do you like me or Mr. Sam Wynne best, Shirley?" inquired the
  • boy, as she settled him in an arm-chair.
  • "O Harry, Sam Wynne is my aversion; you are my pet."
  • "Me or Mr. Malone?"
  • "You again, a thousand times."
  • "Yet they are great whiskered fellows, six feet high each."
  • "Whereas, as long as you live, Harry, you will never be anything more
  • than a little pale lameter."
  • "Yes, I know."
  • "You need not be sorrowful. Have I not often told you who was almost as
  • little, as pale, as suffering as you, and yet potent as a giant and
  • brave as a lion?"
  • "Admiral Horatio?"
  • "Admiral Horatio, Viscount Nelson, and Duke of Bronte; great at heart as
  • a Titan; gallant and heroic as all the world and age of chivalry; leader
  • of the might of England; commander of her strength on the deep; hurler
  • of her thunder over the flood."
  • "A great man. But I am not warlike, Shirley; and yet my mind is so
  • restless I burn day and night--for what I can hardly tell--to be--to
  • do--to suffer, I think."
  • "Harry, it is your mind, which is stronger and older than your frame,
  • that troubles you. It is a captive; it lies in physical bondage. But it
  • will work its own redemption yet. Study carefully not only books but the
  • world. You love nature; love her without fear. Be patient--wait the
  • course of time. You will not be a soldier or a sailor, Henry; but if you
  • live you will be--listen to my prophecy--you will be an author, perhaps
  • a poet."
  • "An author! It is a flash--a flash of light to me! I will--I _will_!
  • I'll write a book that I may dedicate it to you."
  • "You will write it that you may give your soul its natural release.
  • Bless me! what am I saying? more than I understand, I believe, or can
  • make good. Here, Hal--here is your toasted oatcake; eat and live!"
  • "Willingly!" here cried a voice outside the open window. "I know that
  • fragrance of meal bread. Miss Keeldar, may I come in and partake?"
  • "Mr. Hall"--it was Mr. Hall, and with him was Louis Moore, returned from
  • their walk--"there is a proper luncheon laid out in the dining-room and
  • there are proper people seated round it. You may join that society and
  • share that fare if you please; but if your ill-regulated tastes lead you
  • to prefer ill-regulated proceedings, step in here, and do as we do."
  • "I approve the perfume, and therefore shall suffer myself to be led by
  • the nose," returned Mr. Hall, who presently entered, accompanied by
  • Louis Moore. That gentleman's eye fell on his desk, pillaged.
  • "Burglars!" said he.--"Henry, you merit the ferule."
  • "Give it to Shirley and Caroline; they did it," was alleged, with more
  • attention to effect than truth.
  • "Traitor and false witness!" cried both the girls. "We never laid hands
  • on a thing, except in the spirit of laudable inquiry!"
  • "Exactly so," said Moore, with his rare smile. "And what have you
  • ferreted out, in your 'spirit of laudable inquiry'?"
  • He perceived the inner drawer open.
  • "This is empty," said he. "Who has taken----"
  • "Here, here!" Caroline hastened to say, and she restored the little
  • packet to its place. He shut it up; he locked it in with a small key
  • attached to his watch-guard; he restored the other papers to order,
  • closed the repository, and sat down without further remark.
  • "I thought you would have scolded much more, sir," said Henry. "The
  • girls deserve reprimand."
  • "I leave them to their own consciences."
  • "It accuses them of crimes intended as well as perpetrated, sir. If I
  • had not been here, they would have treated your portfolio as they have
  • done your desk; but I told them it was padlocked."
  • "And will you have lunch with us?" here interposed Shirley, addressing
  • Moore, and desirous, as it seemed, to turn the conversation.
  • "Certainly, if I may."
  • "You will be restricted to new milk and Yorkshire oatcake."
  • "Va--pour le lait frais!" said Louis. "But for your oatcake!" and he
  • made a grimace.
  • "He cannot eat it," said Henry. "He thinks it is like bran, raised with
  • sour yeast."
  • "Come, then; by special dispensation we will allow him a few cracknels,
  • but nothing less homely."
  • The hostess rang the bell and gave her frugal orders, which were
  • presently executed. She herself measured out the milk, and distributed
  • the bread round the cosy circle now enclosing the bright little
  • schoolroom fire. She then took the post of toaster-general; and kneeling
  • on the rug, fork in hand, fulfilled her office with dexterity. Mr. Hall,
  • who relished any homely innovation on ordinary usages, and to whom the
  • husky oatcake was from custom suave as manna, seemed in his best
  • spirits. He talked and laughed gleefully--now with Caroline, whom he had
  • fixed by his side, now with Shirley, and again with Louis Moore. And
  • Louis met him in congenial spirit. He did not laugh much, but he uttered
  • in the quietest tone the wittiest things. Gravely spoken sentences,
  • marked by unexpected turns and a quite fresh flavour and poignancy, fell
  • easily from his lips. He proved himself to be--what Mr. Hall had said he
  • was--excellent company. Caroline marvelled at his humour, but still more
  • at his entire self-possession. Nobody there present seemed to impose on
  • him a sensation of unpleasant restraint. Nobody seemed a bore--a
  • check--a chill to him; and yet there was the cool and lofty Miss Keeldar
  • kneeling before the fire, almost at his feet.
  • But Shirley was cool and lofty no longer, at least not at this moment.
  • She appeared unconscious of the humility of her present position; or if
  • conscious, it was only to taste a charm in its lowliness. It did not
  • revolt her pride that the group to whom she voluntarily officiated as
  • handmaid should include her cousin's tutor. It did not scare her that
  • while she handed the bread and milk to the rest, she had to offer it to
  • him also; and Moore took his portion from her hand as calmly as if he
  • had been her equal.
  • "You are overheated now," he said, when she had retained the fork for
  • some time; "let me relieve you."
  • And he took it from her with a sort of quiet authority, to which she
  • submitted passively, neither resisting him nor thanking him.
  • "I should like to see your pictures, Louis," said Caroline, when the
  • sumptuous luncheon was discussed.--"Would not you, Mr. Hall?"
  • "To please you, I should; but, for my own part, I have cut him as an
  • artist. I had enough of him in that capacity in Cumberland and
  • Westmoreland. Many a wetting we got amongst the mountains because he
  • would persist in sitting on a camp-stool, catching effects of
  • rain-clouds, gathering mists, fitful sunbeams, and what not."
  • "Here is the portfolio," said Henry, bringing it in one hand and leaning
  • on his crutch with the other.
  • Louis took it, but he still sat as if he wanted another to speak. It
  • seemed as if he would not open it unless the proud Shirley deigned to
  • show herself interested in the exhibition.
  • "He makes us wait to whet our curiosity," she said.
  • "You understand opening it," observed Louis, giving her the key. "You
  • spoiled the lock for me once; try now."
  • He held it. She opened it, and, monopolizing the contents, had the first
  • view of every sketch herself. She enjoyed the treat--if treat it
  • were--in silence, without a single comment. Moore stood behind her chair
  • and looked over her shoulder, and when she had done and the others were
  • still gazing, he left his post and paced through the room.
  • A carriage was heard in the lane--the gate-bell rang. Shirley started.
  • "There are callers," she said, "and I shall be summoned to the room. A
  • pretty figure--as they say--I am to receive company. I and Henry have
  • been in the garden gathering fruit half the morning. Oh for rest under
  • my own vine and my own fig-tree! Happy is the slave-wife of the Indian
  • chief, in that she has no drawing-room duty to perform, but can sit at
  • ease weaving mats, and stringing beads, and peacefully flattening her
  • pickaninny's head in an unmolested corner of her wigwam. I'll emigrate
  • to the western woods."
  • Louis Moore laughed.
  • "To marry a White Cloud or a Big Buffalo, and after wedlock to devote
  • yourself to the tender task of digging your lord's maize-field while he
  • smokes his pipe or drinks fire-water."
  • Shirley seemed about to reply, but here the schoolroom door unclosed,
  • admitting Mr. Sympson. That personage stood aghast when he saw the group
  • around the fire.
  • "I thought you alone, Miss Keeldar," he said. "I find quite a party."
  • And evidently from his shocked, scandalized air, had he not recognized
  • in one of the party a clergyman, he would have delivered an extempore
  • philippic on the extraordinary habits of his niece: respect for the
  • cloth arrested him.
  • "I merely wished to announce," he proceeded coldly, "that the family
  • from De Walden Hall, Mr., Mrs., the Misses, and Mr. Sam Wynne, are in
  • the drawing-room." And he bowed and withdrew.
  • "The family from De Walden Hall! Couldn't be a worse set," murmured
  • Shirley.
  • She sat still, looking a little contumacious, and very much indisposed
  • to stir. She was flushed with the fire. Her dark hair had been more than
  • once dishevelled by the morning wind that day. Her attire was a light,
  • neatly fitting, but amply flowing dress of muslin; the shawl she had
  • worn in the garden was still draped in a careless fold round her.
  • Indolent, wilful, picturesque, and singularly pretty was her
  • aspect--prettier than usual, as if some soft inward emotion, stirred who
  • knows how, had given new bloom and expression to her features.
  • "Shirley, Shirley, you ought to go," whispered Caroline.
  • "I wonder why?"
  • She lifted her eyes, and saw in the glass over the fireplace both Mr.
  • Hall and Louis Moore gazing at her gravely.
  • "If," she said, with a yielding smile--"if a majority of the present
  • company maintain that the De Walden Hall people have claims on my
  • civility, I will subdue my inclinations to my duty. Let those who think
  • I ought to go hold up their hands."
  • Again consulting the mirror, it reflected an unanimous vote against her.
  • "You must go," said Mr. Hall, "and behave courteously too. You owe many
  • duties to society. It is not permitted you to please only yourself."
  • Louis Moore assented with a low "Hear, hear!"
  • Caroline, approaching her, smoothed her wavy curls, gave to her attire a
  • less artistic and more domestic grace, and Shirley was put out of the
  • room, protesting still, by a pouting lip, against her dismissal.
  • "There is a curious charm about her," observed Mr. Hall, when she was
  • gone. "And now," he added, "I must away; for Sweeting is off to see his
  • mother, and there are two funerals."
  • "Henry, get your books; it is lesson-time," said Moore, sitting down to
  • his desk.
  • "A curious charm!" repeated the pupil, when he and his master were left
  • alone. "True. Is she not a kind of white witch?" he asked.
  • "Of whom are you speaking, sir?"
  • "Of my cousin Shirley."
  • "No irrelevant questions; study in silence."
  • Mr. Moore looked and spoke sternly--sourly. Henry knew this mood. It was
  • a rare one with his tutor; but when it came he had an awe of it. He
  • obeyed.
  • CHAPTER XXVII.
  • THE FIRST BLUESTOCKING.
  • Miss Keeldar and her uncle had characters that would not harmonize, that
  • never had harmonized. He was irritable, and she was spirited. He was
  • despotic, and she liked freedom. He was worldly, and she, perhaps,
  • romantic.
  • Not without purpose had he come down to Yorkshire. His mission was
  • clear, and he intended to discharge it conscientiously. He anxiously
  • desired to have his niece married, to make for her a suitable match,
  • give her in charge to a proper husband, and wash his hands of her for
  • ever.
  • The misfortune was, from infancy upwards, Shirley and he had disagreed
  • on the meaning of the words "suitable" and "proper." She never yet had
  • accepted his definition; and it was doubtful whether, in the most
  • important step of her life, she would consent to accept it.
  • The trial soon came.
  • Mr. Wynne proposed in form for his son, Samuel Fawthrop Wynne.
  • "Decidedly suitable! most proper!" pronounced Mr. Sympson. "A fine
  • unencumbered estate, real substance, good connections. _It must be
  • done!_"
  • He sent for his niece to the oak parlour; he shut himself up there with
  • her alone; he communicated the offer; he gave his opinion; he claimed
  • her consent.
  • It was withheld.
  • "No; I shall not marry Samuel Fawthrop Wynne."
  • "I ask why. I must have a reason. In all respects he is more than worthy
  • of you."
  • She stood on the hearth. She was pale as the white marble slab and
  • cornice behind her; her eyes flashed large, dilated, unsmiling.
  • "And _I_ ask in what sense that young man is worthy of _me_?"
  • "He has twice your money, twice your common sense, equal connections,
  • equal respectability."
  • "Had he my money counted fivescore times I would take no vow to love
  • him."
  • "Please to state your objections."
  • "He has run a course of despicable, commonplace profligacy. Accept that
  • as the first reason why I spurn him."
  • "Miss Keeldar, you shock me!"
  • "That conduct alone sinks him in a gulf of immeasurable inferiority. His
  • intellect reaches no standard I can esteem: there is a second
  • stumbling-block. His views are narrow, his feelings are blunt, his
  • tastes are coarse, his manners vulgar."
  • "The man is a respectable, wealthy man! To refuse him is presumption on
  • your part."
  • "I refuse point-blank! Cease to annoy me with the subject; I forbid it!"
  • "Is it your intention ever to marry; or do you prefer celibacy?"
  • "I deny your right to claim an answer to that question."
  • "May I ask if you expect some man of title--some peer of the realm--to
  • demand your hand?"
  • "I doubt if the peer breathes on whom I would confer it."
  • "Were there insanity in the family, I should believe you mad. Your
  • eccentricity and conceit touch the verge of frenzy."
  • "Perhaps, ere I have finished, you will see me over-leap it."
  • "I anticipate no less. Frantic and impracticable girl! Take warning! I
  • dare you to sully our name by a _mésalliance_!"
  • "_Our_ name! Am _I_ called Sympson?"
  • "God be thanked that you are not! But be on your guard; I will not be
  • trifled with!"
  • "What, in the name of common law and common sense, would you or could
  • you do if my pleasure led me to a choice you disapproved?"
  • "Take care! take care!" warning her with voice and hand that trembled
  • alike.
  • "Why? What shadow of power have _you_ over me? Why should I fear you?"
  • "Take care, madam!"
  • "Scrupulous care I will take, Mr. Sympson. Before I marry I am resolved
  • to esteem--to admire--to _love_."
  • "Preposterous stuff! indecorous, unwomanly!"
  • "To love with my whole heart. I know I speak in an unknown tongue; but I
  • feel indifferent whether I am comprehended or not."
  • "And if this love of yours should fall on a beggar?"
  • "On a beggar it will never fall. Mendicancy is not estimable."
  • "On a low clerk, a play-actor, a play-writer, or--or----"
  • "Take courage, Mr. Sympson! Or what?"
  • "Any literary scrub, or shabby, whining artist."
  • "For the scrubby, shabby, whining I have no taste; for literature and
  • the arts I have. And there I wonder how your Fawthrop Wynne would suit
  • me. He cannot write a note without orthographical errors; he reads only
  • a sporting paper; he was the booby of Stilbro' grammar school!"
  • "Unladylike language! Great God! to what will she come?" He lifted hands
  • and eyes.
  • "Never to the altar of Hymen with Sam Wynne."
  • "To what will she come? Why are not the laws more stringent, that I
  • might compel her to hear reason?"
  • "Console yourself, uncle. Were Britain a serfdom and you the Czar, you
  • could not _compel_ me to this step. _I_ will write to Mr. Wynne. Give
  • yourself no further trouble on the subject."
  • * * * * *
  • Fortune is proverbially called changeful, yet her caprice often takes
  • the form of repeating again and again a similar stroke of luck in the
  • same quarter. It appeared that Miss Keeldar--or her fortune--had by this
  • time made a sensation in the district, and produced an impression in
  • quarters by her unthought of. No less than three offers followed Mr.
  • Wynne's, all more or less eligible. All were in succession pressed on
  • her by her uncle, and all in succession she refused. Yet amongst them
  • was more than one gentleman of unexceptionable character as well as
  • ample wealth. Many besides her uncle asked what she meant, and whom she
  • expected to entrap, that she was so insolently fastidious.
  • At last the gossips thought they had found the key to her conduct, and
  • her uncle was sure of it; and what is more, the discovery showed his
  • niece to him in quite a new light, and he changed his whole deportment
  • to her accordingly.
  • Fieldhead had of late been fast growing too hot to hold them both. The
  • suave aunt could not reconcile them; the daughters froze at the view of
  • their quarrels. Gertrude and Isabella whispered by the hour together in
  • their dressing-room, and became chilled with decorous dread if they
  • chanced to be left alone with their audacious cousin. But, as I have
  • said, a change supervened. Mr. Sympson was appeased and his family
  • tranquillized.
  • The village of Nunnely has been alluded to--its old church, its forest,
  • its monastic ruins. It had also its hall, called the priory--an older, a
  • larger, a more lordly abode than any Briarfield or Whinbury owned; and
  • what is more, it had its man of title--its baronet, which neither
  • Briarfield nor Whinbury could boast. This possession--its proudest and
  • most prized--had for years been nominal only. The present baronet, a
  • young man hitherto resident in a distant province, was unknown on his
  • Yorkshire estate.
  • During Miss Keeldar's stay at the fashionable watering-place of
  • Cliffbridge, she and her friends had met with and been introduced to Sir
  • Philip Nunnely. They encountered him again and again on the sands, the
  • cliffs, in the various walks, sometimes at the public balls of the
  • place. He seemed solitary. His manner was very unpretending--too simple
  • to be termed affable; rather timid than proud. He did not _condescend_
  • to their society; he seemed _glad_ of it.
  • With any unaffected individual Shirley could easily and quickly cement
  • an acquaintance. She walked and talked with Sir Philip; she, her aunt,
  • and cousins sometimes took a sail in his yacht. She liked him because
  • she found him kind and modest, and was charmed to feel she had the power
  • to amuse him.
  • One slight drawback there was--where is the friendship without it?--Sir
  • Philip had a literary turn. He wrote poetry--sonnets, stanzas, ballads.
  • Perhaps Miss Keeldar thought him a little too fond of reading and
  • reciting these compositions; perhaps she wished the rhyme had possessed
  • more accuracy, the measure more music, the tropes more freshness, the
  • inspiration more fire. At any rate, she always winced when he recurred
  • to the subject of his poems, and usually did her best to divert the
  • conversation into another channel.
  • He would beguile her to take moonlight walks with him on the bridge, for
  • the sole purpose, as it seemed, of pouring into her ear the longest of
  • his ballads. He would lead her away to sequestered rustic seats, whence
  • the rush of the surf to the sands was heard soft and soothing; and when
  • he had her all to himself, and the sea lay before them, and the scented
  • shade of gardens spread round, and the tall shelter of cliffs rose
  • behind them, he would pull out his last batch of sonnets, and read them
  • in a voice tremulous with emotion. He did not seem to know that though
  • they might be rhyme they were not poetry. It appeared, by Shirley's
  • downcast eye and disturbed face, that she knew it, and felt heartily
  • mortified by the single foible of this good and amiable gentleman.
  • Often she tried, as gently as might be, to wean him from this fanatic
  • worship of the Muses. It was his monomania; on all ordinary subjects he
  • was sensible enough, and fain was she to engage him in ordinary topics.
  • He questioned her sometimes about his place at Nunnely; she was but too
  • happy to answer his interrogatories at length. She never wearied of
  • describing the antique priory, the wild silvan park, the hoary church
  • and hamlet; nor did she fail to counsel him to come down and gather his
  • tenantry about him in his ancestral halls.
  • Somewhat to her surprise, Sir Philip followed her advice to the letter,
  • and actually, towards the close of September, arrived at the priory.
  • He soon made a call at Fieldhead, and his first visit was not his last.
  • He said--when he had achieved the round of the neighbourhood--that under
  • no roof had he found such pleasant shelter as beneath the massive oak
  • beams of the gray manor-house of Briarfield; a cramped, modest dwelling
  • enough compared with his own, but he liked it.
  • Presently it did not suffice to sit with Shirley in her panelled
  • parlour, where others came and went, and where he could rarely find a
  • quiet moment to show her the latest production of his fertile muse; he
  • must have her out amongst the pleasant pastures, and lead her by the
  • still waters. _Tête-à-tête_ ramblings she shunned, so he made parties
  • for her to his own grounds, his glorious forest; to remoter
  • scenes--woods severed by the Wharfe, vales watered by the Aire.
  • Such assiduity covered Miss Keeldar with distinction. Her uncle's
  • prophetic soul anticipated a splendid future. He already scented the
  • time afar off when, with nonchalant air, and left foot nursed on his
  • right knee, he should be able to make dashingly-familiar allusion to his
  • "nephew the baronet." Now his niece dawned upon him no longer "a mad
  • girl," but a "most sensible woman." He termed her, in confidential
  • dialogues with Mrs. Sympson, "a truly superior person; peculiar, but
  • very clever." He treated her with exceeding deference; rose reverently
  • to open and shut doors for her; reddened his face and gave himself
  • headaches with stooping to pick up gloves, handkerchiefs, and other
  • loose property, whereof Shirley usually held but insecure tenure. He
  • would cut mysterious jokes about the superiority of woman's wit over
  • man's wisdom; commence obscure apologies for the blundering mistake he
  • had committed respecting the generalship, the tactics, of "a personage
  • not a hundred miles from Fieldhead." In short, he seemed elate as any
  • "midden-cock on pattens."
  • His niece viewed his manœuvres and received his innuendoes with phlegm;
  • apparently she did not above half comprehend to what aim they tended.
  • When plainly charged with being the preferred of the baronet, she said
  • she believed he did like her, and for her part she liked him. She had
  • never thought a man of rank--the only son of a proud, fond mother, the
  • only brother of doting sisters--could have so much goodness, and, on the
  • whole, so much sense.
  • Time proved, indeed, that Sir Philip liked her. Perhaps he had found in
  • her that "curious charm" noticed by Mr. Hall. He sought her presence
  • more and more, and at last with a frequency that attested it had become
  • to him an indispensable stimulus. About this time strange feelings
  • hovered round Fieldhead; restless hopes and haggard anxieties haunted
  • some of its rooms. There was an unquiet wandering of some of the inmates
  • among the still fields round the mansion; there was a sense of
  • expectancy that kept the nerves strained.
  • One thing seemed clear: Sir Philip was not a man to be despised. He was
  • amiable; if not highly intellectual, he was intelligent. Miss Keeldar
  • could not affirm of him, what she had so bitterly affirmed of Sam Wynne,
  • that his feelings were blunt, his tastes coarse, and his manners vulgar.
  • There was sensibility in his nature; there was a very real, if not a
  • very discriminating, love of the arts; there was the English gentleman
  • in all his deportment. As to his lineage and wealth, both were, of
  • course, far beyond her claims.
  • His appearance had at first elicited some laughing though not
  • ill-natured remarks from the merry Shirley. It was boyish. His features
  • were plain and slight, his hair sandy, his stature insignificant. But
  • she soon checked her sarcasm on this point; she would even fire up if
  • any one else made uncomplimentary allusion thereto. He had "a pleasing
  • countenance," she affirmed; "and there was that in his heart which was
  • better than three Roman noses, than the locks of Absalom or the
  • proportions of Saul." A spare and rare shaft she still reserved for his
  • unfortunate poetic propensity; but even here she would tolerate no irony
  • save her own.
  • In short, matters had reached a point which seemed fully to warrant an
  • observation made about this time by Mr. Yorke to the tutor, Louis.
  • "Yond' brother Robert of yours seems to me to be either a fool or a
  • madman. Two months ago I could have sworn he had the game all in his own
  • hands; and there he runs the country, and quarters himself up in London
  • for weeks together, and by the time he comes back he'll find himself
  • checkmated. Louis, 'there is a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken
  • at the flood, leads on to fortune, but, once let slip, never returns
  • again.' I'd write to Robert, if I were you, and remind him of that."
  • "Robert had views on Miss Keeldar?" inquired Louis, as if the idea was
  • new to him.
  • "Views I suggested to him myself, and views he might have realized, for
  • she liked him."
  • "As a neighbour?"
  • "As more than that. I have seen her change countenance and colour at the
  • mere mention of his name. Write to the lad, I say, and tell him to come
  • home. He is a finer gentleman than this bit of a baronet, after all."
  • "Does it not strike you, Mr. Yorke, that for a mere penniless adventurer
  • to aspire to a rich woman's hand is presumptuous--contemptible?"
  • "Oh, if you are for high notions and double-refined sentiment, I've
  • naught to say. I'm a plain, practical man myself, and if Robert is
  • willing to give up that royal prize to a lad-rival--a puling slip of
  • aristocracy--I am quite agreeable. At _his_ age, in _his_ place, with
  • _his_ inducements, I would have acted differently. Neither baronet, nor
  • duke, nor prince should have snatched my sweetheart from me without a
  • struggle. But you tutors are such solemn chaps; it is almost like
  • speaking to a parson to consult with you."
  • * * * * *
  • Flattered and fawned upon as Shirley was just now, it appeared she was
  • not absolutely spoiled--that her better nature did not quite leave her.
  • Universal report had indeed ceased to couple her name with that of
  • Moore, and this silence seemed sanctioned by her own apparent oblivion
  • of the absentee; but that she had not _quite_ forgotten him--that she
  • still regarded him, if not with love, yet with interest--seemed proved
  • by the increased attention which at this juncture of affairs a sudden
  • attack of illness induced her to show that tutor-brother of Robert's, to
  • whom she habitually bore herself with strange alternations of cool
  • reserve and docile respect--now sweeping past him in all the dignity of
  • the moneyed heiress and prospective Lady Nunnely, and anon accosting him
  • as abashed school-girls are wont to accost their stern professors;
  • bridling her neck of ivory and curling her lip of carmine, if he
  • encountered her glance, one minute, and the next submitting to the grave
  • rebuke of his eye with as much contrition as if he had the power to
  • inflict penalties in case of contumacy.
  • Louis Moore had perhaps caught the fever, which for a few days laid him
  • low, in one of the poor cottages of the district, which he, his lame
  • pupil, and Mr. Hall were in the habit of visiting together. At any rate
  • he sickened, and after opposing to the malady a taciturn resistance for
  • a day or two, was obliged to keep his chamber.
  • He lay tossing on his thorny bed one evening, Henry, who would not quit
  • him, watching faithfully beside him, when a tap--too light to be that of
  • Mrs. Gill or the housemaid--summoned young Sympson to the door.
  • "How is Mr. Moore to-night?" asked a low voice from the dark gallery.
  • "Come in and see him yourself."
  • "Is he asleep?"
  • "I wish he could sleep. Come and speak to him, Shirley."
  • "He would not like it."
  • But the speaker stepped in, and Henry, seeing her hesitate on the
  • threshold, took her hand and drew her to the couch.
  • The shaded light showed Miss Keeldar's form but imperfectly; yet it
  • revealed her in elegant attire. There was a party assembled below,
  • including Sir Philip Nunnely; the ladies were now in the drawing-room,
  • and their hostess had stolen from them to visit Henry's tutor. Her pure
  • white dress, her fair arms and neck, the trembling chainlet of gold
  • circling her throat and quivering on her breast, glistened strangely
  • amid the obscurity of the sickroom. Her mien was chastened and pensive.
  • She spoke gently.
  • "Mr. Moore, how are you to-night?"
  • "I have not been very ill, and am now better."
  • "I heard that you complained of thirst. I have brought you some grapes;
  • can you taste one?"
  • "No; but I thank you for remembering me."
  • "Just one."
  • From the rich cluster that filled a small basket held in her hand she
  • severed a berry and offered it to his lips. He shook his head, and
  • turned aside his flushed face.
  • "But what, then, can I bring you instead? You have no wish for fruit;
  • yet I see that your lips are parched. What beverage do you prefer?"
  • "Mrs. Gill supplies me with toast-and-water. I like it best."
  • Silence fell for some minutes.
  • "Do you suffer?--have you pain?"
  • "Very little."
  • "What made you ill?"
  • Silence.
  • "I wonder what caused this fever? To what do you attribute it?"
  • "Miasma, perhaps--malaria. This is autumn, a season fertile in fevers."
  • "I hear you often visit the sick in Briarfield, and Nunnely too, with
  • Mr. Hall. You should be on your guard; temerity is not wise."
  • "That reminds me, Miss Keeldar, that perhaps you had better not enter
  • this chamber or come near this couch. I do not believe my illness is
  • infectious. I scarcely fear"--with a sort of smile--"_you_ will take it;
  • but why should you run even the shadow of a risk? Leave me."
  • "Patience, I will go soon; but I should like to do something for you
  • before I depart--any little service----"
  • "They will miss you below."
  • "No; the gentlemen are still at table."
  • "They will not linger long. Sir Philip Nunnely is no wine-bibber, and I
  • hear him just now pass from the dining-room to the drawing-room."
  • "It is a servant."
  • "It is Sir Philip; I know his step."
  • "Your hearing is acute."
  • "It is never dull, and the sense seems sharpened at present. Sir Philip
  • was here to tea last night. I heard you sing to him some song which he
  • had brought you. I heard him, when he took his departure at eleven
  • o'clock, call you out on to the pavement, to look at the evening star."
  • "You must be nervously sensitive."
  • "I heard him kiss your hand."
  • "Impossible!"
  • "No: my chamber is over the hall, the window just above the front door;
  • the sash was a little raised, for I felt feverish. You stood ten minutes
  • with him on the steps. I heard your discourse, every word, and I heard
  • the salute.--Henry, give me some water."
  • "Let me give it him."
  • But he half rose to take the glass from young Sympson, and declined her
  • attendance.
  • "And can I do nothing?"
  • "Nothing; for you cannot guarantee me a night's peaceful rest, and it is
  • all I at present want."
  • "You do not sleep well?"
  • "Sleep has left me."
  • "Yet you said you were not very ill?"
  • "I am often sleepless when in high health."
  • "If I had power, I would lap you in the most placid slumber--quite deep
  • and hushed, without a dream."
  • "Blank annihilation! I do not ask that."
  • "With dreams of all you most desire."
  • "Monstrous delusions! The sleep would be delirium, the waking death."
  • "Your wishes are not so chimerical; you are no visionary."
  • "Miss Keeldar, I suppose you think so; but my character is not, perhaps,
  • quite as legible to you as a page of the last new novel might be."
  • "That is possible. But this sleep--I _should_ like to woo it to your
  • pillow, to win for you its favour. If I took a book and sat down and
  • read some pages? I can well spare half an hour."
  • "Thank you, but I will not detain you."
  • "I would read softly."
  • "It would not do. I am too feverish and excitable to bear a soft,
  • cooing, vibrating voice close at my ear. You had better leave me."
  • "Well, I will go."
  • "And no good-night?"
  • "Yes, sir, yes. Mr. Moore, good-night." (Exit Shirley.)
  • "Henry, my boy, go to bed now; it is time you had some repose."
  • "Sir, it would please me to watch at your bedside all night."
  • "Nothing less called for. I am getting better. There, go."
  • "Give me your blessing, sir."
  • "God bless you, my best pupil!"
  • "You never call me your dearest pupil!"
  • "No, nor ever shall."
  • * * * * *
  • Possibly Miss Keeldar resented her former teacher's rejection of her
  • courtesy. It is certain she did not repeat the offer of it. Often as her
  • light step traversed the gallery in the course of a day, it did not
  • again pause at his door; nor did her "cooing, vibrating voice" disturb a
  • second time the hush of the sickroom. A sickroom, indeed, it soon ceased
  • to be; Mr. Moore's good constitution quickly triumphed over his
  • indisposition. In a few days he shook it off, and resumed his duties as
  • tutor.
  • That "auld lang syne" had still its authority both with preceptor and
  • scholar was proved by the manner in which he sometimes promptly passed
  • the distance she usually maintained between them, and put down her high
  • reserve with a firm, quiet hand.
  • One afternoon the Sympson family were gone out to take a carriage
  • airing. Shirley, never sorry to snatch a reprieve from their society,
  • had remained behind, detained by business, as she said. The business--a
  • little letter-writing--was soon dispatched after the yard gates had
  • closed on the carriage; Miss Keeldar betook herself to the garden.
  • It was a peaceful autumn day. The gilding of the Indian summer mellowed
  • the pastures far and wide. The russet woods stood ripe to be stripped,
  • but were yet full of leaf. The purple of heath-bloom, faded but not
  • withered, tinged the hills. The beck wandered down to the Hollow,
  • through a silent district; no wind followed its course or haunted its
  • woody borders. Fieldhead gardens bore the seal of gentle decay. On the
  • walks, swept that morning, yellow leaves had fluttered down again. Its
  • time of flowers, and even of fruits, was over; but a scantling of
  • apples enriched the trees. Only a blossom here and there expanded pale
  • and delicate amidst a knot of faded leaves.
  • These single flowers--the last of their race--Shirley culled as she
  • wandered thoughtfully amongst the beds. She was fastening into her
  • girdle a hueless and scentless nosegay, when Henry Sympson called to her
  • as he came limping from the house.
  • "Shirley, Mr. Moore would be glad to see you in the schoolroom and to
  • hear you read a little French, if you have no more urgent occupation."
  • The messenger delivered his commission very simply, as if it were a mere
  • matter of course.
  • "Did Mr. Moore tell you to say that?"
  • "Certainly; why not? And now, do come, and let us once more be as we
  • were at Sympson Grove. We used to have pleasant school-hours in those
  • days."
  • Miss Keeldar perhaps thought that circumstances were changed since then;
  • however, she made no remark, but after a little reflection quietly
  • followed Henry.
  • Entering the schoolroom, she inclined her head with a decent obeisance,
  • as had been her wont in former times. She removed her bonnet, and hung
  • it up beside Henry's cap. Louis Moore sat at his desk, turning the
  • leaves of a book, open before him, and marking passages with his pencil.
  • He just moved, in acknowledgment of her curtsy, but did not rise.
  • "You proposed to read to me a few nights ago," said he. "I could not
  • hear you then. My attention is now at your service. A little renewed
  • practice in French may not be unprofitable. Your accent, I have
  • observed, begins to rust."
  • "What book shall I take?"
  • "Here are the posthumous works of St. Pierre. Read a few pages of the
  • 'Fragments de l'Amazone.'"
  • She accepted the chair which he had placed in readiness near his own;
  • the volume lay on his desk--there was but one between them; her sweeping
  • curls dropped so low as to hide the page from him.
  • "Put back your hair," he said.
  • For one moment Shirley looked not quite certain whether she would obey
  • the request or disregard it. A flicker of her eye beamed furtive on the
  • professor's face. Perhaps if he had been looking at her harshly or
  • timidly, or if one undecided line had marked his countenance, she would
  • have rebelled, and the lesson had ended there and then; but he was only
  • awaiting her compliance--as calm as marble, and as cool. She threw the
  • veil of tresses behind her ear. It was well her face owned an agreeable
  • outline, and that her cheek possessed the polish and the roundness of
  • early youth, or, thus robbed of a softening shade, the contours might
  • have lost their grace. But what mattered that in the present society?
  • Neither Calypso nor Eucharis cared to fascinate Mentor.
  • She began to read. The language had become strange to her tongue; it
  • faltered; the lecture flowed unevenly, impeded by hurried breath, broken
  • by Anglicized tones. She stopped.
  • "I can't do it. Read me a paragraph, if you please, Mr. Moore."
  • What _he_ read _she_ repeated. She caught his accent in three minutes.
  • "Très bien," was the approving comment at the close of the piece.
  • "C'est presque le Français rattrapé, n'est-ce pas?"
  • "You could not write French as you once could, I dare say?"
  • "Oh no! I should make strange work of my concords now."
  • "You could not compose the _devoir_ of 'La Première Femme Savante'?"
  • "Do you still remember that rubbish?"
  • "Every line."
  • "I doubt you."
  • "I will engage to repeat it word for word."
  • "You would stop short at the first line."
  • "Challenge me to the experiment."
  • "I challenge you."
  • He proceeded to recite the following. He gave it in French, but we must
  • translate, on pain of being unintelligible to some readers.
  • * * * * *
  • "And it came to pass, when men began to multiply on the face of
  • the earth, and daughters were born unto them, that the sons
  • of God saw the daughters of men that they were fair; and they
  • took them wives of all which they chose."
  • This was in the dawn of time, before the morning stars were set, and
  • while they yet sang together.
  • The epoch is so remote, the mists and dewy gray of matin twilight veil
  • it with so vague an obscurity, that all distinct feature of custom, all
  • clear line of locality, evade perception and baffle research. It must
  • suffice to know that the world then existed; that men peopled it; that
  • man's nature, with its passions, sympathies, pains, and pleasures,
  • informed the planet and gave it soul.
  • A certain tribe colonized a certain spot on the globe; of what race this
  • tribe--unknown; in what region that spot--untold. We usually think of
  • the East when we refer to transactions of that date; but who shall
  • declare that there was no life in the West, the South, the North? What
  • is to disprove that this tribe, instead of camping under palm groves in
  • Asia, wandered beneath island oak woods rooted in our own seas of
  • Europe?
  • It is no sandy plain, nor any circumscribed and scant oasis I seem to
  • realize. A forest valley, with rocky sides and brown profundity of
  • shade, formed by tree crowding on tree, descends deep before me. Here,
  • indeed, dwell human beings, but so few, and in alleys so thick branched
  • and overarched, they are neither heard nor seen. Are they savage?
  • Doubtless. They live by the crook and the bow; half shepherds, half
  • hunters, their flocks wander wild as their prey. Are they happy? No, not
  • more happy than we are at this day. Are they good? No, not better than
  • ourselves. Their nature is our nature--human both. There is one in this
  • tribe too often miserable--a child bereaved of both parents. None cares
  • for this child. She is fed sometimes, but oftener forgotten. A hut
  • rarely receives her; the hollow tree and chill cavern are her home.
  • Forsaken, lost, and wandering, she lives more with the wild beast and
  • bird than with her own kind. Hunger and cold are her comrades; sadness
  • hovers over, and solitude besets her round. Unheeded and unvalued, she
  • should die; but she both lives and grows. The green wilderness nurses
  • her, and becomes to her a mother; feeds her on juicy berry, on
  • saccharine root and nut.
  • There is something in the air of this clime which fosters life kindly.
  • There must be something, too, in its dews which heals with sovereign
  • balm. Its gentle seasons exaggerate no passion, no sense; its
  • temperature tends to harmony; its breezes, you would say, bring down
  • from heaven the germ of pure thought and purer feeling. Not grotesquely
  • fantastic are the forms of cliff and foliage, not violently vivid the
  • colouring of flower and bird. In all the grandeur of these forests
  • there is repose; in all their freshness there is tenderness.
  • The gentle charm vouchsafed to flower and tree, bestowed on deer and
  • dove, has not been denied to the human nursling. All solitary, she has
  • sprung up straight and graceful. Nature cast her features in a fine
  • mould; they have matured in their pure, accurate first lines, unaltered
  • by the shocks of disease. No fierce dry blast has dealt rudely with the
  • surface of her frame; no burning sun has crisped or withered her
  • tresses. Her form gleams ivory-white through the trees; her hair flows
  • plenteous, long, and glossy; her eyes, not dazzled by vertical fires,
  • beam in the shade large and open, and full and dewy. Above those eyes,
  • when the breeze bares her forehead, shines an expanse fair and ample--a
  • clear, candid page, whereon knowledge, should knowledge ever come, might
  • write a golden record. You see in the desolate young savage nothing
  • vicious or vacant. She haunts the wood harmless and thoughtful, though
  • of what one so untaught can think it is not easy to divine.
  • On the evening of one summer day, before the Flood, being utterly
  • alone--for she had lost all trace of her tribe, who had wandered leagues
  • away, she knew not where--she went up from the vale, to watch Day take
  • leave and Night arrive. A crag overspread by a tree was her station. The
  • oak roots, turfed and mossed, gave a seat; the oak boughs, thick-leaved,
  • wove a canopy.
  • Slow and grand the Day withdrew, passing in purple fire, and parting to
  • the farewell of a wild, low chorus from the woodlands. Then Night
  • entered, quiet as death. The wind fell, the birds ceased singing. Now
  • every nest held happy mates, and hart and hind slumbered blissfully safe
  • in their lair.
  • The girl sat, her body still, her soul astir; occupied, however, rather
  • in feeling than in thinking, in wishing than hoping, in imagining than
  • projecting. She felt the world, the sky, the night, boundlessly mighty.
  • Of all things herself seemed to herself the centre--a small, forgotten
  • atom of life, a spark of soul, emitted inadvertent from the great
  • creative source, and now burning unmarked to waste in the heart of a
  • black hollow. She asked, was she thus to burn out and perish, her living
  • light doing no good, never seen, never needed--a star in an else
  • starless firmament, which nor shepherd, nor wanderer, nor sage, nor
  • priest tracked as a guide or read as a prophecy? Could this be, she
  • demanded, when the flame of her intelligence burned so vivid; when her
  • life beat so true, and real, and potent; when something within her
  • stirred disquieted, and restlessly asserted a God-given strength, for
  • which it insisted she should find exercise?
  • She gazed abroad on Heaven and Evening. Heaven and Evening gazed back on
  • her. She bent down, searching bank, hill, river, spread dim below. All
  • she questioned responded by oracles. She heard--she was impressed; but
  • she could not understand. Above her head she raised her hands joined
  • together.
  • "Guidance--help--comfort--come!" was her cry.
  • There was no voice, nor any that answered.
  • She waited, kneeling, steadfastly looking up. Yonder sky was sealed; the
  • solemn stars shone alien and remote.
  • At last one overstretched chord of her agony slacked; she thought
  • Something above relented; she felt as if Something far round drew
  • nigher; she heard as if Silence spoke. There was no language, no word,
  • only a tone.
  • Again--a fine, full, lofty tone, a deep, soft sound, like a storm
  • whispering, made twilight undulate.
  • Once more, profounder, nearer, clearer, it rolled harmonious.
  • Yet again--a distinct voice passed between Heaven and Earth.
  • "Eva!"
  • If Eva were not this woman's name, she had none. She rose. "Here am I."
  • "Eva!"
  • "O Night (it can be but Night that speaks), I am here!"
  • The voice, descending, reached Earth.
  • "Eva!"
  • "Lord," she cried, "behold thine handmaid!"
  • She had her religion--all tribes held some creed.
  • "I come--a Comforter!"
  • "Lord, come quickly!"
  • The Evening flushed full of hope; the Air panted; the Moon--rising
  • before--ascended large, but her light showed no shape.
  • "Lean towards me, Eva. Enter my arms; repose thus."
  • "Thus I lean, O Invisible but felt! And what art thou?"
  • "Eva, I have brought a living draught from heaven. Daughter of Man,
  • drink of my cup!"
  • "I drink: it is as if sweetest dew visited my lips in a full current. My
  • arid heart revives; my affliction is lightened; my strait and struggle
  • are gone. And the night changes! the wood, the hill, the moon, the wide
  • sky--all change!"
  • "All change, and for ever. I take from thy vision darkness; I loosen
  • from thy faculties fetters! I level in thy path obstacles; I with my
  • presence fill vacancy. I claim as mine the lost atom of life. I take to
  • myself the spark of soul--burning heretofore forgotten!"
  • "O take me! O claim me! This is a god."
  • "This is a son of God--one who feels himself in the portion of life that
  • stirs you. He is suffered to reclaim his own, and so to foster and aid
  • that it shall not perish hopeless."
  • "A son of God! Am I indeed chosen?"
  • "Thou only in this land. I saw thee that thou wert fair; I knew thee
  • that thou wert mine. To me it is given to rescue, to sustain, to cherish
  • mine own. Acknowledge in me that Seraph on earth named Genius."
  • "My glorious Bridegroom! true Dayspring from on high! All I would have
  • at last I possess. I receive a revelation. The dark hint, the obscure
  • whisper, which have haunted me from childhood, are interpreted. Thou art
  • He I sought. Godborn, take me, thy bride!"
  • "Unhumbled, I can take what is mine. Did I not give from the altar the
  • very flame which lit Eva's being? Come again into the heaven whence thou
  • wert sent."
  • That Presence, invisible but mighty, gathered her in like a lamb to the
  • fold; that voice, soft but all-pervading, vibrated through her heart
  • like music. Her eye received no image; and yet a sense visited her
  • vision and her brain as of the serenity of stainless air, the power of
  • sovereign seas, the majesty of marching stars, the energy of colliding
  • elements, the rooted endurance of hills wide based, and, above all, as
  • of the lustre of heroic beauty rushing victorious on the Night,
  • vanquishing its shadows like a diviner sun.
  • Such was the bridal hour of Genius and Humanity. Who shall rehearse the
  • tale of their after-union? Who shall depict its bliss and bale? Who
  • shall tell how He between whom and the Woman God put enmity forged
  • deadly plots to break the bond or defile its purity? Who shall record
  • the long strife between Serpent and Seraph:--How still the Father of
  • Lies insinuated evil into good, pride into wisdom, grossness into glory,
  • pain into bliss, poison into passion? How the "dreadless Angel" defied,
  • resisted, and repelled? How again and again he refined the polluted cup,
  • exalted the debased emotion, rectified the perverted impulse, detected
  • the lurking venom, baffled the frontless temptation--purified,
  • justified, watched, and withstood? How, by his patience, by his
  • strength, by that unutterable excellence he held from God--his
  • Origin--this faithful Seraph fought for Humanity a good fight through
  • time; and, when Time's course closed, and Death was encountered at the
  • end, barring with fleshless arm the portals of Eternity, how Genius
  • still held close his dying bride, sustained her through the agony of the
  • passage, bore her triumphant into his own home, Heaven; restored her,
  • redeemed, to Jehovah, her Maker; and at last, before Angel and
  • Archangel, crowned her with the crown of Immortality?
  • Who shall of these things write the chronicle?
  • * * * * *
  • "I never could correct that composition," observed Shirley, as Moore
  • concluded. "Your censor-pencil scored it with condemnatory lines, whose
  • signification I strove vainly to fathom."
  • She had taken a crayon from the tutor's desk, and was drawing little
  • leaves, fragments of pillars, broken crosses, on the margin of the book.
  • "French may be half forgotten, but the habits of the French lesson are
  • retained, I see," said Louis. "My books would now, as erst, be unsafe
  • with you. My newly-bound St. Pierre would soon be like my Racine--Miss
  • Keeldar, her mark, traced on every page."
  • Shirley dropped her crayon as if it burned her fingers.
  • "Tell me what were the faults of that _devoir_?" she asked. "Were they
  • grammatical errors, or did you object to the substance?"
  • "I never said that the lines I drew were indications of faults at all.
  • You would have it that such was the case, and I refrained from
  • contradiction."
  • "What else did they denote?"
  • "No matter now."
  • "Mr. Moore," cried Henry, "make Shirley repeat some of the pieces she
  • used to say so well by heart."
  • "If I ask for any, it will be 'Le Cheval Dompté,'" said Moore, trimming
  • with his penknife the pencil Miss Keeldar had worn to a stump.
  • She turned aside her head; the neck, the clear cheek, forsaken by their
  • natural veil, were seen to flush warm.
  • "Ah! she has not forgotten, you see, sir," said Henry, exultant. "She
  • knows how naughty she was."
  • A smile, which Shirley would not permit to expand, made her lip tremble;
  • she bent her face, and hid it half with her arms, half in her curls,
  • which, as she stooped, fell loose again. "Certainly I was a rebel," she
  • answered.
  • "A rebel!" repeated Henry. "Yes; you and papa had quarrelled terribly,
  • and you set both him and mamma, and Mrs. Pryor, and everybody, at
  • defiance. You said he had insulted you----"
  • "He _had_ insulted me," interposed Shirley.
  • "And you wanted to leave Sympson Grove directly. You packed your things
  • up, and papa threw them out of your trunk; mamma cried, Mrs. Pryor
  • cried; they both stood wringing their hands begging you to be patient;
  • and you knelt on the floor with your things and your up-turned box
  • before you, looking, Shirley, looking--why, in one of _your_ passions.
  • Your features, in such passions, are not distorted; they are fixed, but
  • quite beautiful. You scarcely look angry, only resolute, and in a
  • certain haste; yet one feels that at such times an obstacle cast across
  • your path would be split as with lightning. Papa lost heart, and called
  • Mr. Moore."
  • "Enough, Henry."
  • "No, it is not enough. I hardly know how Mr. Moore managed, except that
  • I recollect he suggested to papa that agitation would bring on his gout;
  • and then he spoke quietly to the ladies, and got them away; and
  • afterwards he said to you, Miss Shirley, that it was of no use talking
  • or lecturing now, but that the tea-things were just brought into the
  • schoolroom, and he was very thirsty, and he would be glad if you would
  • leave your packing for the present and come and make a cup of tea for
  • him and me. You came; you would not talk at first, but soon you softened
  • and grew cheerful. Mr. Moore began to tell us about the Continent, the
  • war, and Bonaparte--subjects we were both fond of listening to. After
  • tea he said we should neither of us leave him that evening; he would not
  • let us stray out of his sight, lest we should again get into mischief.
  • We sat one on each side of him. We were so happy. I never passed so
  • pleasant an evening. The next day he gave you, missy, a lecture of an
  • hour, and wound it up by marking you a piece to learn in Bossuet as a
  • punishment-lesson--'Le Cheval Dompté.' You learned it instead of packing
  • up, Shirley. We heard no more of your running away. Mr. Moore used to
  • tease you on the subject for a year afterwards."
  • "She never said a lesson with greater spirit," subjoined Moore. "She
  • then, for the first time, gave me the treat of hearing my native tongue
  • spoken without accent by an English girl."
  • "She was as sweet as summer cherries for a month afterwards," struck in
  • Henry: "a good hearty quarrel always left Shirley's temper better than
  • it found it."
  • "You talk of me as if I were not present," observed Miss Keeldar, who
  • had not yet lifted her face.
  • "Are you sure you _are_ present?" asked Moore. "There have been moments
  • since my arrival here when I have been tempted to inquire of the lady of
  • Fieldhead if she knew what had become of my former pupil."
  • "She is here now."
  • "I see her, and humble enough; but I would neither advise Harry nor
  • others to believe too implicitly in the humility which one moment can
  • hide its blushing face like a modest little child, and the next lift it
  • pale and lofty as a marble Juno."
  • "One man in times of old, it is said, imparted vitality to the statue he
  • had chiselled; others may have the contrary gift of turning life to
  • stone."
  • Moore paused on this observation before he replied to it. His look, at
  • once struck and meditative, said, "A strange phrase; what may it mean?"
  • He turned it over in his mind, with thought deep and slow, as some
  • German pondering metaphysics.
  • "You mean," he said at last, "that some men inspire repugnance, and so
  • chill the kind heart."
  • "Ingenious!" responded Shirley. "If the interpretation pleases you, you
  • are welcome to hold it valid. _I_ don't care."
  • And with that she raised her head, lofty in look and statue-like in hue,
  • as Louis had described it.
  • "Behold the metamorphosis!" he said; "scarce imagined ere it is
  • realized: a lowly nymph develops to an inaccessible goddess. But Henry
  • must not be disappointed of his recitation, and Olympia will deign to
  • oblige him. Let us begin."
  • "I have forgotten the very first line."
  • "Which I have not. _My_ memory, if a slow, is a retentive one. I acquire
  • deliberately both knowledge and liking. The acquisition grows into my
  • brain, and the sentiment into my breast; and it is not as the
  • rapid-springing produce which, having no root in itself, flourishes
  • verdurous enough for a time, but too soon falls withered away.
  • Attention, Henry! Miss Keeldar consents to favour you. 'Voyez ce cheval
  • ardent et impétueux,' so it commences."
  • Miss Keeldar did consent to make the effort; but she soon stopped.
  • "Unless I heard the whole repeated I cannot continue it," she said.
  • "Yet it was quickly learned--'soon gained, soon gone,'" moralized the
  • tutor. He recited the passage deliberately, accurately, with slow,
  • impressive emphasis.
  • Shirley, by degrees, inclined her ear as he went on. Her face, before
  • turned from him, _re_turned towards him. When he ceased, she took the
  • word up as if from his lips; she took his very tone; she seized his very
  • accent; she delivered the periods as he had delivered them; she
  • reproduced his manner, his pronunciation, his expression.
  • It was now her turn to petition.
  • "Recall 'Le Songe d'Athalie,'" she entreated, "and say it."
  • He said it for her. She took it from him; she found lively excitement in
  • the pleasure of making his language her own. She asked for further
  • indulgence; all the old school pieces were revived, and with them
  • Shirley's old school days.
  • He had gone through some of the best passages of Racine and Corneille,
  • and then had heard the echo of his own deep tones in the girl's voice,
  • that modulated itself faithfully on his. "Le chêne et le Roseau," that
  • most beautiful of La Fontaine's fables, had been recited, well recited,
  • by the tutor, and the pupil had animatedly availed herself of the
  • lesson. Perhaps a simultaneous feeling seized them now, that their
  • enthusiasm had kindled to a glow, which the slight fuel of French poetry
  • no longer sufficed to feed; perhaps they longed for a trunk of English
  • oak to be thrown as a Yule log to the devouring flame. Moore observed,
  • "And these are our best pieces! And we have nothing more dramatic,
  • nervous, natural!"
  • And then he smiled and was silent. His whole nature seemed serenely
  • alight. He stood on the hearth, leaning his elbow on the mantelpiece,
  • musing not unblissfully.
  • Twilight was closing on the diminished autumn day. The schoolroom
  • windows--darkened with creeping plants, from which no high October winds
  • had as yet swept the sere foliage--admitted scarce a gleam of sky; but
  • the fire gave light enough to talk by.
  • And now Louis Moore addressed his pupil in French, and she answered at
  • first with laughing hesitation and in broken phrase. Moore encouraged
  • while he corrected her. Henry joined in the lesson; the two scholars
  • stood opposite the master, their arms round each other's waists. Tartar,
  • who long since had craved and obtained admission, sat sagely in the
  • centre of the rug, staring at the blaze which burst fitful from morsels
  • of coal among the red cinders. The group were happy enough, but--
  • "Pleasures are like poppies spread;
  • You seize the flower--its bloom is shed."
  • The dull, rumbling sound of wheels was heard on the pavement in the
  • yard.
  • "It is the carriage returned," said Shirley; "and dinner must be just
  • ready, and I am not dressed."
  • A servant came in with Mr. Moore's candle and tea; for the tutor and his
  • pupil usually dined at luncheon time.
  • "Mr. Sympson and the ladies are returned," she said, "and Sir Philip
  • Nunnely is with them."
  • "How you did start, and how your hand trembled, Shirley!" said Henry,
  • when the maid had closed the shutter and was gone. "But I know
  • why--don't you, Mr. Moore? I know what papa intends. He is a little ugly
  • man, that Sir Philip. I wish he had not come. I wish sisters and all of
  • them had stayed at De Walden Hall to dine.--Shirley should once more
  • have made tea for you and me, Mr. Moore, and we would have had a happy
  • evening of it."
  • Moore was locking up his desk and putting away his St. Pierre. "That was
  • _your_ plan, was it, my boy?"
  • "Don't you approve it, sir?"
  • "I approve nothing utopian. Look Life in its iron face; stare Reality
  • out of its brassy countenance. Make the tea, Henry; I shall be back in a
  • minute."
  • He left the room; so did Shirley, by another door.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII.
  • PHŒBE.
  • Shirley probably got on pleasantly with Sir Philip that evening, for the
  • next morning she came down in one of her best moods.
  • "Who will take a walk with me?" she asked, after breakfast. "Isabella
  • and Gertrude, will you?"
  • So rare was such an invitation from Miss Keeldar to her female cousins
  • that they hesitated before they accepted it. Their mamma, however,
  • signifying acquiescence in the project, they fetched their bonnets, and
  • the trio set out.
  • It did not suit these three young persons to be thrown much together.
  • Miss Keeldar liked the society of few ladies; indeed, she had a cordial
  • pleasure in that of none except Mrs. Pryor and Caroline Helstone. She
  • was civil, kind, attentive even to her cousins; but still she usually
  • had little to say to them. In the sunny mood of this particular morning,
  • she contrived to entertain even the Misses Sympson. Without deviating
  • from her wonted rule of discussing with them only ordinary themes, she
  • imparted to these themes an extraordinary interest; the sparkle of her
  • spirit glanced along her phrases.
  • What made her so joyous? All the cause must have been in herself. The
  • day was not bright. It was dim--a pale, waning autumn day. The walks
  • through the dun woods were damp; the atmosphere was heavy, the sky
  • overcast; and yet it seemed that in Shirley's heart lived all the light
  • and azure of Italy, as all its fervour laughed in her gray English eye.
  • Some directions necessary to be given to her foreman, John, delayed her
  • behind her cousins as they neared Fieldhead on their return. Perhaps an
  • interval of twenty minutes elapsed between her separation from them and
  • her re-entrance into the house. In the meantime she had spoken to John,
  • and then she had lingered in the lane at the gate. A summons to
  • luncheon called her in. She excused herself from the meal, and went
  • upstairs.
  • "Is not Shirley coming to luncheon?" asked Isabella. "She said she was
  • hungry."
  • An hour after, as she did not quit her chamber, one of her cousins went
  • to seek her there. She was found sitting at the foot of the bed, her
  • head resting on her hand; she looked quite pale, very thoughtful, almost
  • sad.
  • "You are not ill?" was the question put.
  • "A little sick," replied Miss Keeldar.
  • Certainly she was not a little changed from what she had been two hours
  • before.
  • This change, accounted for only by those three words, explained no
  • otherwise; this change--whencesoever springing, effected in a brief ten
  • minutes--passed like no light summer cloud. She talked when she joined
  • her friends at dinner, talked as usual. She remained with them during
  • the evening. When again questioned respecting her health, she declared
  • herself perfectly recovered. It had been a mere passing faintness, a
  • momentary sensation, not worth a thought; yet it was felt there was a
  • difference in Shirley.
  • The next day--the day, the week, the fortnight after--this new and
  • peculiar shadow lingered on the countenance, in the manner of Miss
  • Keeldar. A strange quietude settled over her look, her movements, her
  • very voice. The alteration was not so marked as to court or permit
  • frequent questioning, yet it _was_ there, and it would not pass away. It
  • hung over her like a cloud which no breeze could stir or disperse. Soon
  • it became evident that to notice this change was to annoy her. First she
  • shrank from remark; and, if persisted in, she, with her own peculiar
  • _hauteur_, repelled it. "Was she ill?" The reply came with decision.
  • "I _am not_."
  • "Did anything weigh on her mind? Had anything happened to affect her
  • spirits?"
  • She scornfully ridiculed the idea. "What did they mean by spirits? She
  • had no spirits, black or white, blue or gray, to affect."
  • "Something must be the matter--she was so altered."
  • "She supposed she had a right to alter at her ease. She knew she was
  • plainer. If it suited her to grow ugly, why need others fret themselves
  • on the subject?"
  • "There must be a cause for the change. What was it?"
  • She peremptorily requested to be let alone.
  • Then she would make every effort to appear quite gay, and she seemed
  • indignant at herself that she could not perfectly succeed. Brief
  • self-spurning epithets burst from her lips when alone. "Fool! coward!"
  • she would term herself. "Poltroon!" she would say, "if you must tremble,
  • tremble in secret! Quail where no eye sees you!"
  • "How dare you," she would ask herself--"how dare you show your weakness
  • and betray your imbecile anxieties? Shake them off; rise above them. If
  • you cannot do this, hide them."
  • And to hide them she did her best. She once more became resolutely
  • lively in company. When weary of effort and forced to relax, she sought
  • solitude--not the solitude of her chamber (she refused to mope, shut up
  • between four walls), but that wilder solitude which lies out of doors,
  • and which she could chase, mounted on Zoë, her mare. She took long rides
  • of half a day. Her uncle disapproved, but he dared not remonstrate. It
  • was never pleasant to face Shirley's anger, even when she was healthy
  • and gay; but now that her face showed thin, and her large eye looked
  • hollow, there was something in the darkening of that face and kindling
  • of that eye which touched as well as alarmed.
  • To all comparative strangers who, unconscious of the alterations in her
  • spirits, commented on the alteration in her looks, she had one reply,--
  • "I am perfectly well; I have not an ailment."
  • And health, indeed, she must have had, to be able to bear the exposure
  • to the weather she now encountered. Wet or fair, calm or storm, she took
  • her daily ride over Stilbro' Moor, Tartar keeping up at her side, with
  • his wolf-like gallop, long and untiring.
  • Twice, three times, the eyes of gossips--those eyes which are
  • everywhere, in the closet and on the hill-top--noticed that instead of
  • turning on Rushedge, the top ridge of Stilbro' Moor, she rode forwards
  • all the way to the town. Scouts were not wanting to mark her destination
  • there. It was ascertained that she alighted at the door of one Mr.
  • Pearson Hall, a solicitor, related to the vicar of Nunnely. This
  • gentleman and his ancestors had been the agents of the Keeldar family
  • for generations back. Some people affirmed that Miss Keeldar was become
  • involved in business speculations connected with Hollow's Mill--that she
  • had lost money, and was constrained to mortgage her land. Others
  • conjectured that she was going to be married, and that the settlements
  • were preparing.
  • * * * * *
  • Mr. Moore and Henry Sympson were together in the schoolroom. The tutor
  • was waiting for a lesson which the pupil seemed busy in preparing.
  • "Henry, make haste. The afternoon is getting on."
  • "Is it, sir?"
  • "Certainly. Are you nearly ready with that lesson?"
  • "No."
  • "Not _nearly_ ready?"
  • "I have not construed a line."
  • Mr. Moore looked up. The boy's tone was rather peculiar.
  • "The task presents no difficulties, Henry; or, if it does, bring them to
  • me. We will work together."
  • "Mr. Moore, I can do no work."
  • "My boy, you are ill."
  • "Sir, I am not worse in bodily health than usual, but my heart is full."
  • "Shut the book. Come hither, Harry. Come to the fireside."
  • Harry limped forward. His tutor placed him in a chair; his lips were
  • quivering, his eyes brimming. He laid his crutch on the floor, bent down
  • his head, and wept.
  • "This distress is not occasioned by physical pain, you say, Harry? You
  • have a grief; tell it me."
  • "Sir, I have such a grief as I never had before. I wish it could be
  • relieved in some way; I can hardly bear it."
  • "Who knows but, if we talk it over, we may relieve it? What is the
  • cause? Whom does it concern?"
  • "The cause, sir, is Shirley; it concerns Shirley."
  • "Does it? You think her changed?"
  • "All who know her think her changed--you too, Mr. Moore."
  • "Not seriously--no. I see no alteration but such as a favourable turn
  • might repair in a few weeks; besides, her own word must go for
  • something: she says she is well."
  • "There it is, sir. As long as she maintained she was well, I believed
  • her. When I was sad out of her sight, I soon recovered spirits in her
  • presence. Now----"
  • "Well, Harry, now. Has she said anything to you? You and she were
  • together in the garden two hours this morning. I saw her talking, and
  • you listening. Now, my dear Harry, if Miss Keeldar has said she is ill,
  • and enjoined you to keep her secret, do not obey her. For her life's
  • sake, avow everything. Speak, my boy."
  • "_She_ say she is ill! I believe, sir, if she were dying, she would
  • smile, and aver, 'Nothing ails me.'"
  • "What have you learned then? What new circumstance?"
  • "I have learned that she has just made her will."
  • "Made her will?"
  • The tutor and pupil were silent.
  • "She told you that?" asked Moore, when some minutes had elapsed.
  • "She told me quite cheerfully, not as an ominous circumstance, which I
  • felt it to be. She said I was the only person besides her solicitor,
  • Pearson Hall, and Mr. Helstone and Mr. Yorke, who knew anything about
  • it; and to me, she intimated, she wished specially to explain its
  • provisions."
  • "Go on, Harry."
  • "'Because,' she said, looking down on me with her beautiful eyes--oh!
  • they _are_ beautiful, Mr. Moore! I love them! I love her! She is my
  • star! Heaven must not claim her! She is lovely in this world, and fitted
  • for this world. Shirley is not an angel; she is a woman, and she shall
  • live with men. Seraphs shall not have her! Mr. Moore, if one of the
  • 'sons of God,' with wings wide and bright as the sky, blue and sounding
  • as the sea, having seen that she was fair, descended to claim her, his
  • claim should be withstood--withstood by me--boy and cripple as I am."
  • "Henry Sympson, go on, when I tell you."
  • "'Because,' she said, 'if I made no will, and died before you, Harry,
  • all my property would go to you; and I do not intend that it should be
  • so, though your father would like it. But you,' she said, 'will have his
  • whole estate, which is large--larger than Fieldhead. Your sisters will
  • have nothing; so I have left them some money, though I do not love them,
  • both together, half so much as I love one lock of your fair hair.' She
  • said these words, and she called me her 'darling,' and let me kiss her.
  • She went on to tell me that she had left Caroline Helstone some money
  • too; that this manor house, with its furniture and books, she had
  • bequeathed to me, as she did not choose to take the old family place
  • from her own blood; and that all the rest of her property, amounting to
  • about twelve thousand pounds, exclusive of the legacies to my sisters
  • and Miss Helstone, she had willed, not to me, seeing I was already rich,
  • but to a good man, who would make the best use of it that any human
  • being could do--a man, she said, that was both gentle and brave, strong
  • and merciful--a man that might not profess to be pious, but she knew he
  • had the secret of religion pure and undefiled before God. The spirit of
  • love and peace was with him. He visited the fatherless and widows in
  • their affliction, and kept himself unspotted from the world. Then she
  • asked, 'Do you approve what I have done, Harry?' I could not answer. My
  • tears choked me, as they do now."
  • Mr. Moore allowed his pupil a moment to contend with and master his
  • emotion. He then demanded, "What else did she say?"
  • "When I had signified my full consent to the conditions of her will, she
  • told me I was a generous boy, and she was proud of me. 'And now,' she
  • added, 'in case anything should happen, you will know what to say to
  • Malice when she comes whispering hard things in your ear, insinuating
  • that Shirley has wronged you, that she did not love you. You will know
  • that I _did_ love you, Harry; that no sister could have loved you
  • better--my own treasure.' Mr. Moore, sir, when I remember her voice, and
  • recall her look, my heart beats as if it would break its strings. She
  • _may_ go to heaven before me--if God commands it, she _must_; but the
  • rest of my life--and my life will not be long, I am glad of that
  • now--shall be a straight, quick, thoughtful journey in the path her step
  • has pressed. I thought to enter the vault of the Keeldars before her.
  • Should it be otherwise, lay my coffin by Shirley's side."
  • Moore answered him with a weighty calm, that offered a strange contrast
  • to the boy's perturbed enthusiasm.
  • "You are wrong, both of you--you harm each other. If youth once falls
  • under the influence of a shadowy terror, it imagines there will never be
  • full sunlight again; its first calamity it fancies will last a lifetime.
  • What more did she say? Anything more?"
  • "We settled one or two family points between ourselves."
  • "I should rather like to know what----"
  • "But, Mr. Moore, you smile. _I_ could not smile to see Shirley in such a
  • mood."
  • "My boy, I am neither nervous, nor poetic, nor inexperienced. I see
  • things as they are; you don't as yet. Tell me these family points."
  • "Only, sir, she asked me whether I considered myself most of a Keeldar
  • or a Sympson; and I answered I was Keeldar to the core of the heart and
  • to the marrow of the bones. She said she was glad of it; for, besides
  • her, I was the only Keeldar left in England. And then we agreed on some
  • matters."
  • "Well?"
  • "Well, sir, that if I lived to inherit my father's estate, and her
  • house, I was to take the name of Keeldar, and to make Fieldhead my
  • residence. Henry Shirley Keeldar I said I would be called; and I will.
  • Her name and her manor house are ages old, and Sympson and Sympson Grove
  • are of yesterday."
  • "Come, you are neither of you going to heaven yet. I have the best hopes
  • of you both, with your proud distinctions--a pair of half-fledged
  • eaglets. Now, what is your inference from all you have told me? Put it
  • into words."
  • "That Shirley thinks she is going to die."
  • "She referred to her health?"
  • "Not once; but I assure you she is wasting. Her hands are grown quite
  • thin, and so is her cheek."
  • "Does she ever complain to your mother or sisters?"
  • "Never. She laughs at them when they question her. Mr. Moore, she is a
  • strange being, so fair and girlish--not a man-like woman at all, not an
  • Amazon, and yet lifting her head above both help and sympathy."
  • "Do you know where she is now, Henry? Is she in the house, or riding
  • out?"
  • "Surely not out, sir. It rains fast."
  • "True; which, however, is no guarantee that she is not at this moment
  • cantering over Rushedge. Of late she has never permitted weather to be a
  • hindrance to her rides."
  • "You remember, Mr. Moore, how wet and stormy it was last Wednesday--so
  • wild, indeed, that she would not permit Zoë to be saddled? Yet the blast
  • she thought too tempestuous for her mare she herself faced on foot; that
  • afternoon she walked nearly as far as Nunnely. I asked her, when she
  • came in, if she was not afraid of taking cold. 'Not I,' she said. 'It
  • would be too much good luck for me. I don't know, Harry, but the best
  • thing that could happen to me would be to take a good cold and fever,
  • and so pass off like other Christians.' She is reckless, you see, sir."
  • "Reckless indeed! Go and find out where she is, and if you can get an
  • opportunity of speaking to her without attracting attention, request her
  • to come here a minute."
  • "Yes, sir."
  • He snatched his crutch, and started up to go.
  • "Harry!"
  • He returned.
  • "Do not deliver the message formally. Word it as, in former days, you
  • would have worded an ordinary summons to the schoolroom."
  • "I see, sir. She will be more likely to obey."
  • "And, Harry----"
  • "Sir?"
  • "I will call you when I want you. Till then, you are dispensed from
  • lessons."
  • He departed. Mr. Moore, left alone, rose from his desk.
  • "I can be very cool and very supercilious with Henry," he said. "I can
  • seem to make light of his apprehensions, and look down _du haut de ma
  • grandeur_ on his youthful ardour. To _him_ I can speak as if, in my
  • eyes, they were both children. Let me see if I can keep up the same rôle
  • with her. I have known the moment when I seemed about to forget it, when
  • Confusion and Submission seemed about to crush me with their soft
  • tyranny, when my tongue faltered, and I have almost let the mantle drop,
  • and stood in her presence, not master--no--but something else. I trust I
  • shall never so play the fool. It is well for a Sir Philip Nunnely to
  • redden when he meets her eye. He may permit himself the indulgence of
  • submission. He may even, without disgrace, suffer his hand to tremble
  • when it touches hers; but if one of her farmers were to show himself
  • susceptible and sentimental, he would merely prove his need of a strait
  • waistcoat. So far I have always done very well. She has sat near me, and
  • I have not shaken--more than my desk. I have encountered her looks and
  • smiles like--why, like a tutor, as I am. Her hand I never yet
  • touched--never underwent that test. Her farmer or her footman I am
  • not--no serf nor servant of hers have I ever been; but I am poor, and it
  • behoves me to look to my self-respect--not to compromise an inch of it.
  • What did she mean by that allusion to the cold people who petrify flesh
  • to marble? It pleased me--I hardly know why; I would not permit myself
  • to inquire. I never do indulge in scrutiny either of her language or
  • countenance; for if I did, I should sometimes forget common sense and
  • believe in romance. A strange, secret ecstasy steals through my veins at
  • moments. I'll not encourage--I'll not remember it. I am resolved, as
  • long as may be, to retain the right to say with Paul, 'I am not mad, but
  • speak forth the words of truth and soberness.'"
  • He paused, listening.
  • "Will she come, or will she not come?" he inquired. "How will she take
  • the message? Naïvely or disdainfully? Like a child or like a queen? Both
  • characters are in her nature.
  • "If she comes, what shall I say to her? How account, firstly, for the
  • freedom of the request? Shall I apologize to her? I could in all
  • humility; but would an apology tend to place us in the positions we
  • ought relatively to occupy in this matter? I _must_ keep up the
  • professor, otherwise---- I hear a door."
  • He waited. Many minutes passed.
  • "She will refuse me. Henry is entreating her to come; she declines. My
  • petition is presumption in her eyes. Let her _only_ come, I can teach
  • her to the contrary. I would rather she were a little perverse; it will
  • steel me. I prefer her cuirassed in pride, armed with a taunt. Her scorn
  • startles me from my dreams; I stand up myself. A sarcasm from her eyes
  • or lips puts strength into every nerve and sinew I have. Some step
  • approaches, and not Henry's."
  • The door unclosed; Miss Keeldar came in. The message, it appeared, had
  • found her at her needle; she brought her work in her hand. That day she
  • had not been riding out; she had evidently passed it quietly. She wore
  • her neat indoor dress and silk apron. This was no Thalestris from the
  • fields, but a quiet domestic character from the fireside. Mr. Moore had
  • her at advantage. He should have addressed her at once in solemn
  • accents, and with rigid mien. Perhaps he would, had she looked saucy;
  • but her air never showed less of _crânerie_. A soft kind of youthful
  • shyness depressed her eyelid and mantled on her cheek. The tutor stood
  • silent.
  • She made a full stop between the door and his desk.
  • "Did you want me, sir?" she asked.
  • "I ventured, Miss Keeldar, to send for you--that is, to ask an interview
  • of a few minutes."
  • She waited; she plied her needle.
  • "Well, sir" (not lifting her eyes), "what about?"
  • "Be seated first. The subject I would broach is one of some moment.
  • Perhaps I have hardly a right to approach it. It is possible I ought to
  • frame an apology; it is possible no apology can excuse me. The liberty I
  • have taken arises from a conversation with Henry. The boy is unhappy
  • about your health; all your friends are unhappy on that subject. It is
  • of your health I would speak."
  • "I am quite well," she said briefly.
  • "Yet changed."
  • "That matters to none but myself. We all change."
  • "Will you sit down? Formerly, Miss Keeldar, I had some influence with
  • you: have I any now? May I feel that what I am saying is not accounted
  • positive presumption?"
  • "Let me read some French, Mr. Moore, or I will even take a spell at the
  • Latin grammar, and let us proclaim a truce to all sanitary discussions."
  • "No, no. It is time there were discussions."
  • "Discuss away, then, but do not choose me for your text. I am a healthy
  • subject."
  • "Do you not think it wrong to affirm and reaffirm what is substantially
  • untrue?"
  • "I say I am well. I have neither cough, pain, nor fever."
  • "Is there no equivocation in that assertion? Is it the direct truth?"
  • "The direct truth."
  • Louis Moore looked at her earnestly.
  • "I can myself," he said, "trace no indications of actual disease. But
  • why, then, are you altered?"
  • "_Am_ I altered?"
  • "We will try. We will seek a proof."
  • "How?"
  • "I ask, in the first place, do you sleep as you used to?"
  • "I do not; but it is not because I am ill."
  • "Have you the appetite you once had?"
  • "No; but it is not because I am ill."
  • "You remember this little ring fastened to my watch-chain? It was my
  • mother's, and is too small to pass the joint of my little finger. You
  • have many a time sportively purloined it. It fitted your fore-finger.
  • Try now."
  • She permitted the test. The ring dropped from the wasted little hand.
  • Louis picked it up, and reattached it to the chain. An uneasy flush
  • coloured his brow. Shirley again said, "It is not because I am ill."
  • "Not only have you lost sleep, appetite, and flesh," proceeded Moore,
  • "but your spirits are always at ebb. Besides, there is a nervous alarm
  • in your eye, a nervous disquiet in your manner. These peculiarities were
  • not formerly yours."
  • "Mr. Moore, we will pause here. You have exactly hit it. I am nervous.
  • Now, talk of something else. What wet weather we have--steady, pouring
  • rain!"
  • "_You_ nervous? Yes; and if Miss Keeldar is nervous, it is not without a
  • cause. Let me reach it. Let me look nearer. The ailment is not physical.
  • I have suspected that. It came in one moment. I know the day. I noticed
  • the change. Your pain is mental."
  • "Not at all. It is nothing so dignified--merely nervous. Oh! dismiss the
  • topic."
  • "When it is exhausted; not till then. Nervous alarms should always be
  • communicated, that they may be dissipated. I wish I had the gift of
  • persuasion, and could incline you to speak willingly. I believe
  • confession, in your case, would be half equivalent to cure."
  • "No," said Shirley abruptly. "I wish that were at all probable; but I am
  • afraid it is not."
  • She suspended her work a moment. She was now seated. Resting her elbow
  • on the table, she leaned her head on her hand. Mr. Moore looked as if he
  • felt he had at last gained some footing in this difficult path. She was
  • serious, and in her wish was implied an important admission; after that
  • she could no longer affirm that _nothing_ ailed her.
  • The tutor allowed her some minutes for repose and reflection ere he
  • returned to the charge. Once his lips moved to speak, but he thought
  • better of it, and prolonged the pause. Shirley lifted her eye to his.
  • Had he betrayed injudicious emotion, perhaps obstinate persistence in
  • silence would have been the result; but he looked calm, strong,
  • trustworthy.
  • "I had better tell _you_ than my aunt," she said, "or than my cousins,
  • or my uncle. They would all make such a bustle, and it is that very
  • bustle I dread--the alarm, the flurry, the _éclat_. In short, I never
  • liked to be the centre of a small domestic whirlpool. You can bear a
  • little shock--eh?"
  • "A great one, if necessary."
  • Not a muscle of the man's frame moved, and yet his large heart beat fast
  • in his deep chest. What was she going to tell him? Was irremediable
  • mischief done?
  • "Had I thought it right to go to you, I would never have made a secret
  • of the matter one moment," she continued. "I would have told you at
  • once, and asked advice."
  • "Why was it not right to come to me?"
  • "It might be _right_--I do not mean that; but I could not do it. I
  • seemed to have no title to trouble you. The mishap concerned me only. I
  • wanted to keep it to myself, and people will not let me. I tell you, I
  • hate to be an object of worrying attention, or a theme for village
  • gossip. Besides, it may pass away without result--God knows!"
  • Moore, though tortured with suspense, did not demand a quick
  • explanation. He suffered neither gesture, glance, nor word to betray
  • impatience. His tranquillity tranquillized Shirley; his confidence
  • reassured her.
  • "Great effects may spring from trivial causes," she remarked, as she
  • loosened a bracelet from her wrist. Then, unfastening her sleeve, and
  • partially turning it up, "Look here, Mr. Moore."
  • She showed a mark in her white arm--rather a deep though healed-up
  • indentation--something between a burn and a cut.
  • "I would not show that to any one in Briarfield but you, because you can
  • take it quietly."
  • "Certainly there is nothing in the little mark to shock. Its history
  • will explain."
  • "Small as it is, it has taken my sleep away, and made me nervous, thin,
  • and foolish; because, on account of that little mark, I am obliged to
  • look forward to a possibility that has its terrors."
  • The sleeve was readjusted, the bracelet replaced.
  • "Do you know that you try me?" he said, smiling. "I am a patient sort of
  • man, but my pulse is quickening."
  • "Whatever happens, you will befriend me, Mr. Moore? You will give me the
  • benefit of your self-possession, and not leave me at the mercy of
  • agitated cowards?"
  • "I make no promise now. Tell me the tale, and then exact what pledge you
  • will."
  • "It is a very short tale. I took a walk with Isabella and Gertrude one
  • day, about three weeks ago. They reached home before me; I stayed behind
  • to speak to John. After leaving him, I pleased myself with lingering in
  • the lane, where all was very still and shady. I was tired of chattering
  • to the girls, and in no hurry to rejoin them. As I stood leaning against
  • the gate-pillar, thinking some very happy thoughts about my future
  • life--for that morning I imagined that events were beginning to turn as
  • I had long wished them to turn----"
  • "Ah! Nunnely had been with her the evening before!" thought Moore
  • parenthetically.
  • "I heard a panting sound; a dog came running up the lane. I know most of
  • the dogs in this neighbourhood. It was Phœbe, one of Mr. Sam Wynne's
  • pointers. The poor creature ran with her head down, her tongue hanging
  • out; she looked as if bruised and beaten all over. I called her. I meant
  • to coax her into the house and give her some water and dinner. I felt
  • sure she had been ill-used. Mr. Sam often flogs his pointers cruelly.
  • She was too flurried to know me; and when I attempted to pat her head,
  • she turned and snatched at my arm. She bit it so as to draw blood, then
  • ran panting on. Directly after, Mr. Wynne's keeper came up, carrying a
  • gun. He asked if I had seen a dog. I told him I had seen Phœbe.
  • "'You had better chain up Tartar, ma'am,' he said, 'and tell your people
  • to keep within the house. I am after Phœbe to shoot her, and the groom
  • is gone another way. She is raging mad.'"
  • Mr. Moore leaned back in his chair and folded his arms across his chest.
  • Miss Keeldar resumed her square of silk canvas, and continued the
  • creation of a wreath of Parmese violets.
  • "And you told no one, sought no help, no cure? You would not come to
  • me?"
  • "I got as far as the schoolroom door; there my courage failed. I
  • preferred to cushion the matter."
  • "Why? What can I demand better in this world than to be of use to you?"
  • "I had no claim."
  • "Monstrous! And you did nothing?"
  • "Yes. I walked straight into the laundry, where they are ironing most of
  • the week, now that I have so many guests in the house. While the maid
  • was busy crimping or starching, I took an Italian iron from the fire,
  • and applied the light scarlet glowing tip to my arm. I bored it well
  • in. It cauterized the little wound. Then I went upstairs."
  • "I dare say you never once groaned?"
  • "I am sure I don't know. I was very miserable--not firm or tranquil at
  • all, I think. There was no calm in my mind."
  • "There was calm in your person. I remember listening the whole time we
  • sat at luncheon, to hear if you moved in the room above. All was quiet."
  • "I was sitting at the foot of the bed, wishing Phœbe had not bitten
  • me."
  • "And alone. You like solitude."
  • "Pardon me."
  • "You disdain sympathy."
  • "Do I, Mr. Moore?"
  • "With your powerful mind you must feel independent of help, of advice,
  • of society."
  • "So be it, since it pleases you."
  • She smiled. She pursued her embroidery carefully and quickly, but her
  • eyelash twinkled, and then it glittered, and then a drop fell.
  • Mr. Moore leaned forward on his desk, moved his chair, altered his
  • attitude.
  • "If it is not so," he asked, with a peculiar, mellow change in his
  • voice, "how is it, then?"
  • "I don't know."
  • "You do know, but you won't speak. All must be locked up in yourself."
  • "Because it is not worth sharing."
  • "Because nobody can give the high price you require for your confidence.
  • Nobody is rich enough to purchase it. Nobody has the honour, the
  • intellect, the power you demand in your adviser. There is not a shoulder
  • in England on which you would rest your hand for support, far less a
  • bosom which you would permit to pillow your head. Of course you must
  • live alone."
  • "I _can_ live alone, if need be. But the question is not how to live,
  • but how to die alone. That strikes me in a more grisly light."
  • "You apprehend the effects of the virus? You anticipate an indefinitely
  • threatening, dreadful doom?"
  • She bowed.
  • "You are very nervous and womanish."
  • "You complimented me two minutes since on my powerful mind."
  • "You are very womanish. If the whole affair were coolly examined and
  • discussed, I feel assured it would turn out that there is no danger of
  • your dying at all."
  • "Amen! I am very willing to live, if it please God. I have felt life
  • sweet."
  • "How can it be otherwise than sweet with your endowments and nature? Do
  • you truly expect that you will be seized with hydrophobia, and die
  • raving mad?"
  • "I _expect_ it, and have _feared_ it. Just now I fear nothing."
  • "Nor do I, on your account. I doubt whether the smallest particle of
  • virus mingled with your blood; and if it did, let me assure you that,
  • young, healthy, faultlessly sound as you are, no harm will ensue. For
  • the rest, I shall inquire whether the dog was really mad. I hold she was
  • not mad."
  • "Tell nobody that she bit me."
  • "Why should I, when I believe the bite innocuous as a cut of this
  • penknife? Make yourself easy. _I_ am easy, though I value your life as
  • much as I do my own chance of happiness in eternity. Look up."
  • "Why, Mr. Moore?"
  • "I wish to see if you are cheered. Put your work down; raise your head."
  • "There----"
  • "Look at me. Thank you. And is the cloud broken?"
  • "I fear nothing."
  • "Is your mind restored to its own natural sunny clime?"
  • "I am very content; but I want your promise."
  • "Dictate."
  • "You know, in case the worst I _have_ feared should happen, they will
  • smother me. You need not smile. They will; they always do. My uncle will
  • be full of horror, weakness, precipitation; and that is the only
  • expedient which will suggest itself to him. Nobody in the house will be
  • self-possessed but you. Now promise to befriend me--to keep Mr. Sympson
  • away from me, not to let Henry come near, lest I should hurt him.
  • Mind--_mind_ that you take care of yourself too. But I shall not injure
  • you; I know I shall not. Lock the chamber door against the surgeons;
  • turn them out if they get in. Let neither the young nor the old MacTurk
  • lay a finger on me; nor Mr. Greaves, their colleague; and lastly, if I
  • give trouble, with your own hand administer to me a strong
  • narcotic--such a sure dose of laudanum as shall leave no mistake.
  • _Promise to do this._"
  • Moore left his desk, and permitted himself the recreation of one or two
  • turns through the room. Stopping behind Shirley's chair, he bent over
  • her, and said, in a low, emphatic voice, "I promise all you ask--without
  • comment, without reservation."
  • "If female help is needed, call in my housekeeper, Mrs. Gill. Let her
  • lay me out if I die. She is attached to me. She wronged me again and
  • again, and again and again I forgave her. She now loves me, and would
  • not defraud me of a pin. Confidence has made her honest; forbearance has
  • made her kind-hearted. At this day I can trust both her integrity, her
  • courage, and her affection. Call her; but keep my good aunt and my timid
  • cousins away. Once more, promise."
  • "I promise."
  • "That is good in you," she said, looking up at him as he bent over her,
  • and smiling.
  • "Is it good? Does it comfort?"
  • "Very much."
  • "I will be with you--I and Mrs. Gill only--in any, in every extremity
  • where calm and fidelity are needed. No rash or coward hand shall
  • meddle."
  • "Yet you think me childish?"
  • "I do."
  • "Ah! you despise me."
  • "Do we despise children?"
  • "In fact, I am neither so strong, nor have I such pride in my strength,
  • as people think, Mr. Moore; nor am I so regardless of sympathy. But when
  • I have any grief, I fear to impart it to those I love, lest it should
  • pain them; and to those whom I view with indifference I cannot
  • condescend to complain. After all, you should not taunt me with being
  • childish, for if you were as unhappy as I have been for the last three
  • weeks, you too would want some friend."
  • "We all want a friend, do we not?"
  • "All of us that have anything good in our natures."
  • "Well, you have Caroline Helstone."
  • "Yes. And you have Mr. Hall."
  • "Yes. Mrs. Pryor is a wise, good woman. She can counsel you when you
  • need counsel."
  • "For your part, you have your brother Robert."
  • "For any right-hand defections, there is the Rev. Matthewson Helstone,
  • M.A., to lean upon; for any left-hand fallings-off there is Hiram Yorke,
  • Esq. Both elders pay you homage."
  • "I never saw Mrs. Yorke so motherly to any young man as she is to you. I
  • don't know how you have won her heart, but she is more tender to you
  • than she is to her own sons. You have, besides, your sister Hortense."
  • "It appears we are both well provided."
  • "It appears so."
  • "How thankful we ought to be!"
  • "Yes."
  • "How contented!"
  • "Yes."
  • "For my part, I am almost contented just now, and very thankful.
  • Gratitude is a divine emotion. It fills the heart, but not to bursting;
  • it warms it, but not to fever. I like to taste leisurely of bliss.
  • Devoured in haste, I do not know its flavour."
  • Still leaning on the back of Miss Keeldar's chair, Moore watched the
  • rapid motion of her fingers, as the green and purple garland grew
  • beneath them. After a prolonged pause, he again asked, "Is the shadow
  • _quite_ gone?"
  • "Wholly. As I _was_ two hours since, and as I _am_ now, are two
  • different states of existence. I believe, Mr. Moore, griefs and fears
  • nursed in silence grow like Titan infants."
  • "You will cherish such feelings no more in silence?"
  • "Not if I dare speak."
  • "In using the word '_dare_,' to whom do you allude?"
  • "To you."
  • "How is it applicable to me?"
  • "On account of your austerity and shyness."
  • "Why am I austere and shy?"
  • "Because you are proud."
  • "Why am I proud?"
  • "I should like to know. Will you be good enough to tell me?"
  • "Perhaps, because I am poor, for one reason. Poverty and pride often go
  • together."
  • "That is such a nice reason. I should be charmed to discover another
  • that would pair with it. Mate that turtle, Mr. Moore."
  • "Immediately. What do you think of marrying to sober Poverty many-tinted
  • Caprice?"
  • "Are you capricious?"
  • "_You_ are."
  • "A libel. I am steady as a rock, fixed as the polar star."
  • "I look out at some early hour of the day, and see a fine, perfect
  • rainbow, bright with promise, gloriously spanning the beclouded welkin
  • of life. An hour afterwards I look again: half the arch is gone, and the
  • rest is faded. Still later, the stern sky denies that it ever wore so
  • benign a symbol of hope."
  • "Well, Mr. Moore, you should contend against these changeful humours.
  • They are your besetting sin. One never knows where to have you."
  • "Miss Keeldar, I had once, for two years, a pupil who grew very dear to
  • me. Henry is dear, but she was dearer. Henry never gives me trouble;
  • she--well, she did. I think she vexed me twenty-three hours out of the
  • twenty-four----"
  • "She was never with you above three hours, or at the most six at a
  • time."
  • "She sometimes spilled the draught from my cup, and stole the food from
  • my plate; and when she had kept me unfed for a day (and that did not
  • suit me, for I am a man accustomed to take my meals with reasonable
  • relish, and to ascribe due importance to the rational enjoyment of
  • creature comforts)----"
  • "I know you do. I can tell what sort of dinners you like best--perfectly
  • well. I know precisely the dishes you prefer----"
  • "She robbed these dishes of flavour, and made a fool of me besides. I
  • like to sleep well. In my quiet days, when I was my own man, I never
  • quarrelled with the night for being long, nor cursed my bed for its
  • thorns. She changed all this."
  • "Mr. Moore----"
  • "And having taken from me peace of mind and ease of life, she took from
  • me herself--quite coolly, just as if, when she was gone, the world would
  • be all the same to me. I knew I should see her again at some time. At
  • the end of two years, it fell out that we encountered again under her
  • own roof, where she was mistress. How do you think she bore herself
  • towards me, Miss Keeldar?"
  • "Like one who had profited well by lessons learned from yourself."
  • "She received me haughtily. She meted out a wide space between us, and
  • kept me aloof by the reserved gesture, the rare and alienated glance,
  • the word calmly civil."
  • "She was an excellent pupil! Having seen you distant, she at once
  • learned to withdraw. Pray, sir, admire in her _hauteur_ a careful
  • improvement on your own coolness."
  • "Conscience, and honour, and the most despotic necessity dragged me
  • apart from her, and kept me sundered with ponderous fetters. She was
  • free: she might have been clement."
  • "Never free to compromise her self-respect, to seek where she had been
  • shunned."
  • "Then she was inconsistent; she tantalized as before. When I thought I
  • had made up my mind to seeing in her only a lofty stranger, she would
  • suddenly show me such a glimpse of loving simplicity--she would warm me
  • with such a beam of reviving sympathy, she would gladden an hour with
  • converse so gentle, gay, and kindly--that I could no more shut my heart
  • on her image than I could close that door against her presence. Explain
  • why she distressed me so."
  • "She could not bear to be quite outcast; and then she would sometimes
  • get a notion into her head, on a cold, wet day, that the schoolroom was
  • no cheerful place, and feel it incumbent on her to go and see if you and
  • Henry kept up a good fire; and once there, she liked to stay."
  • "But she should not be changeful. If she came at all, she should come
  • oftener."
  • "There is such a thing as intrusion."
  • "To-morrow you will not be as you are to-day."
  • "I don't know. Will you?"
  • "I am not mad, most noble Berenice! We may give one day to dreaming, but
  • the next we must awake; and I shall awake to purpose the morning you are
  • married to Sir Philip Nunnely. The fire shines on you and me, and shows
  • us very clearly in the glass, Miss Keeldar; and I have been gazing on
  • the picture all the time I have been talking. Look up! What a difference
  • between your head and mine! I look old for thirty!"
  • "You are so grave; you have such a square brow; and your face is sallow.
  • I never regard you as a young man, nor as Robert's junior."
  • "Don't you? I thought not. Imagine Robert's clear-cut, handsome face
  • looking over my shoulder. Does not the apparition make vividly manifest
  • the obtuse mould of my heavy traits? There!" (he started), "I have been
  • expecting that wire to vibrate this last half-hour."
  • The dinner-bell rang, and Shirley rose.
  • "Mr. Moore," she said, as she gathered up her silks, "have you heard
  • from your brother lately? Do you know what he means by staying in town
  • so long? Does he talk of returning?"
  • "He talks of returning; but what has caused his long absence I cannot
  • tell. To speak the truth, I thought none in Yorkshire knew better than
  • yourself why he was reluctant to come home."
  • A crimson shadow passed across Miss Keeldar's cheek.
  • "Write to him and urge him to come," she said. "I know there has been no
  • impolicy in protracting his absence thus far. It is good to let the mill
  • stand, while trade is so bad; but he must not abandon the county."
  • "I am aware," said Louis, "that he had an interview with you the evening
  • before he left, and I saw him quit Fieldhead afterwards. I read his
  • countenance, or _tried_ to read it. He turned from me. I divined that he
  • would be long away. Some fine, slight fingers have a wondrous knack at
  • pulverizing a man's brittle pride. I suppose Robert put too much trust
  • in his manly beauty and native gentlemanhood. Those are better off who,
  • being destitute of advantage, cannot cherish delusion. But I will write,
  • and say you advise his return."
  • "Do not say _I_ advise his return, but that his return is advisable."
  • The second bell rang, and Miss Keeldar obeyed its call.
  • CHAPTER XXIX.
  • LOUIS MOORE.
  • Louis Moore was used to a quiet life. Being a quiet man, he endured it
  • better than most men would. Having a large world of his own in his own
  • head and heart, he tolerated confinement to a small, still corner of the
  • real world very patiently.
  • How hushed is Fieldhead this evening! All but Moore--Miss Keeldar, the
  • whole family of the Sympsons, even Henry--are gone to Nunnely. Sir
  • Philip would have them come; he wished to make them acquainted with his
  • mother and sisters, who are now at the priory. Kind gentleman as the
  • baronet is, he asked the tutor too; but the tutor would much sooner have
  • made an appointment with the ghost of the Earl of Huntingdon to meet
  • him, and a shadowy ring of his merry men, under the canopy of the
  • thickest, blackest, oldest oak in Nunnely Forest. Yes, he would rather
  • have appointed tryst with a phantom abbess, or mist-pale nun, among the
  • wet and weedy relics of that ruined sanctuary of theirs, mouldering in
  • the core of the wood. Louis Moore longs to have something near him
  • to-night; but not the boy-baronet, nor his benevolent but stern mother,
  • nor his patrician sisters, nor one soul of the Sympsons.
  • This night is not calm; the equinox still struggles in its storms. The
  • wild rains of the day are abated; the great single cloud disparts and
  • rolls away from heaven, not passing and leaving a sea all sapphire, but
  • tossed buoyant before a continued, long-sounding, high-rushing moonlight
  • tempest. The moon reigns glorious, glad of the gale, as glad as if she
  • gave herself to his fierce caress with love. No Endymion will watch for
  • his goddess to-night. There are no flocks out on the mountains; and it
  • is well, for to-night she welcomes Æolus.
  • Moore, sitting in the schoolroom, heard the storm roar round the other
  • gable and along the hall-front. This end was sheltered. He wanted no
  • shelter; he desired no subdued sounds or screened position.
  • "All the parlours are empty," said he. "I am sick at heart of this
  • cell."
  • He left it, and went where the casements, larger and freer than the
  • branch-screened lattice of his own apartment, admitted unimpeded the
  • dark-blue, the silver-fleeced, the stirring and sweeping vision of the
  • autumn night-sky. He carried no candle; unneeded was lamp or fire. The
  • broad and clear though cloud-crossed and fluctuating beam of the moon
  • shone on every floor and wall.
  • Moore wanders through all the rooms. He seems following a phantom from
  • parlour to parlour. In the oak room he stops. This is not chill, and
  • polished, and fireless like the _salon_. The hearth is hot and ruddy;
  • the cinders tinkle in the intense heat of their clear glow; near the rug
  • is a little work-table, a desk upon it, a chair near it.
  • Does the vision Moore has tracked occupy that chair? You would think so,
  • could you see him standing before it. There is as much interest now in
  • his eye, and as much significance in his face, as if in this household
  • solitude he had found a living companion, and was going to speak to it.
  • He makes discoveries. A bag--a small satin bag--hangs on the chair-back.
  • The desk is open, the keys are in the lock. A pretty seal, a silver pen,
  • a crimson berry or two of ripe fruit on a green leaf, a small, clean,
  • delicate glove--these trifles at once decorate and disarrange the stand
  • they strew. Order forbids details in a picture--she puts them tidily
  • away; but details give charm.
  • Moore spoke.
  • "Her mark," he said. "Here she has been--careless, attractive
  • thing!--called away in haste, doubtless, and forgetting to return and
  • put all to rights. Why does she leave fascination in her footprints?
  • Whence did she acquire the gift to be heedless and never offend? There
  • is always something to chide in her, and the reprimand never settles in
  • displeasure on the heart, but, for her lover or her husband, when it had
  • trickled a while in words, would naturally melt from his lips in a kiss.
  • Better pass half an hour in remonstrating with her than a day in
  • admiring or praising any other woman alive. Am I muttering?
  • soliloquizing? Stop that."
  • He did stop it. He stood thinking, and then he made an arrangement for
  • his evening's comfort.
  • He dropped the curtains over the broad window and regal moon. He shut
  • out sovereign and court and starry armies; he added fuel to the hot but
  • fast-wasting fire; he lit a candle, of which there were a pair on the
  • table; he placed another chair opposite that near the workstand; and
  • then he sat down. His next movement was to take from his pocket a small,
  • thick book of blank paper, to produce a pencil, and to begin to write in
  • a cramp, compact hand. Come near, by all means, reader. Do not be shy.
  • Stoop over his shoulder fearlessly, and read as he scribbles.
  • "It is nine o'clock; the carriage will not return before eleven, I am
  • certain. Freedom is mine till then; till then I may occupy her room, sit
  • opposite her chair, rest my elbow on her table, have her little
  • mementoes about me.
  • "I used rather to like Solitude--to fancy her a somewhat quiet and
  • serious, yet fair nymph; an Oread, descending to me from lone
  • mountain-passes, something of the blue mist of hills in her array and of
  • their chill breeze in her breath, but much also of their solemn beauty
  • in her mien. I once could court her serenely, and imagine my heart
  • easier when I held her to it--all mute, but majestic.
  • "Since that day I called S. to me in the schoolroom, and she came and
  • sat so near my side; since she opened the trouble of her mind to me,
  • asked my protection, appealed to my strength--since that hour I abhor
  • Solitude. Cold abstraction, fleshless skeleton, daughter, mother, and
  • mate of Death!
  • "It is pleasant to write about what is near and dear as the core of my
  • heart. None can deprive me of this little book, and through this pencil
  • I can say to it what I will--say what I dare utter to nothing
  • living--say what I dare not _think_ aloud.
  • "We have scarcely encountered each other since that evening. Once, when
  • I was alone in the drawing-room, seeking a book of Henry's, she entered,
  • dressed for a concert at Stilbro'. Shyness--_her_ shyness, not
  • mine--drew a silver veil between us. Much cant have I heard and read
  • about 'maiden modesty,' but, properly used, and not hackneyed, the words
  • are good and appropriate words. As she passed to the window, after
  • tacitly but gracefully recognizing me, I could call her nothing in my
  • own mind save 'stainless virgin.' To my perception, a delicate
  • splendour robed her, and the modesty of girlhood was her halo. I may be
  • the most fatuous, as I am one of the plainest, of men, but in truth that
  • shyness of hers touched me exquisitely; it flattered my finest
  • sensations. I looked a stupid block, I dare say. I was alive with a life
  • of Paradise, as she turned _her_ glance from _my_ glance, and softly
  • averted her head to hide the suffusion of her cheek.
  • "I know this is the talk of a dreamer--of a rapt, romantic lunatic. I
  • _do_ dream. I _will_ dream now and then; and if she has inspired romance
  • into my prosaic composition, how can I help it?
  • "What a child she is sometimes! What an unsophisticated, untaught thing!
  • I see her now looking up into my face, and entreating me to prevent them
  • from smothering her, and to be sure and give her a strong narcotic. I
  • see her confessing that she was not so self-sufficing, so independent of
  • sympathy, as people thought. I see the secret tear drop quietly from her
  • eyelash. She said I thought her childish, and I did. She imagined I
  • despised her. Despised her! It was unutterably sweet to feel myself at
  • once near her and above her--to be conscious of a natural right and
  • power to sustain her, as a husband should sustain his wife.
  • "I worship her perfections; but it is her faults, or at least her
  • foibles, that bring her near to me, that nestle her to my heart, that
  • fold her about with my love, and that for a most selfish but
  • deeply-natural reason. These faults are the steps by which I mount to
  • ascendency over her. If she rose a trimmed, artificial mound, without
  • inequality, what vantage would she offer the foot? It is the natural
  • hill, with its mossy breaks and hollows, whose slope invites ascent,
  • whose summit it is pleasure to gain.
  • "To leave metaphor. It delights my eye to look on her. She suits me. If
  • I were a king and she the housemaid that swept my palace-stairs, across
  • all that space between us my eye would recognize her qualities; a true
  • pulse would beat for her in my heart, though an unspanned gulf made
  • acquaintance impossible. If I were a gentleman, and she waited on me as
  • a servant, I could not help liking that Shirley. Take from her her
  • education; take her ornaments, her sumptuous dress, all extrinsic
  • advantages; take all grace, but such as the symmetry of her form renders
  • inevitable; present her to me at a cottage door, in a stuff gown; let
  • her offer me there a draught of water, with that smile, with that warm
  • good-will with which she now dispenses manorial hospitality--I should
  • like her. I should wish to stay an hour; I should linger to talk with
  • that rustic. I should not feel as I _now_ do; I should find in her
  • nothing divine; but whenever I met the young peasant, it would be with
  • pleasure; whenever I left her, it would be with regret.
  • "How culpably careless in her to leave her desk open, where I know she
  • has money! In the lock hang the keys of all her repositories, of her
  • very jewel-casket. There is a purse in that little satin bag; I see the
  • tassel of silver beads hanging out. That spectacle would provoke my
  • brother Robert. All her little failings would, I know, be a source of
  • irritation to him. If they vex me it is a most pleasurable vexation. I
  • delight to find her at fault; and were I always resident with her, I am
  • aware she would be no niggard in thus ministering to my enjoyment. She
  • would just give me something to do, to rectify--a theme for my tutor
  • lectures. I never lecture Henry, never feel disposed to do so. If he
  • does wrong--and that is very seldom, dear, excellent lad!--a word
  • suffices. Often I do no more than shake my head. But the moment her
  • _minois mutin_ meets my eye, expostulatory words crowd to my lips. From
  • a taciturn man I believe she would transform me into a talker. Whence
  • comes the delight I take in that talk? It puzzles myself sometimes. The
  • more _crâne, malin, taquin_ is her mood, consequently the clearer
  • occasion she gives me for disapprobation, the more I seek her, the
  • better I like her. She is never wilder than when equipped in her habit
  • and hat, never less manageable than when she and Zoë come in fiery from
  • a race with the wind on the hills; and I confess it--to this mute page I
  • may confess it--I have waited an hour in the court for the chance of
  • witnessing her return, and for the dearer chance of receiving her in my
  • arms from the saddle. I have noticed (again it is to this page only I
  • would make the remark) that she will never permit any man but myself to
  • render her that assistance. I have seen her politely decline Sir Philip
  • Nunnely's aid. She is always mighty gentle with her young baronet,
  • mighty tender for his feelings, forsooth, and of his very thin-skinned
  • _amour propre_. I have marked her haughtily reject Sam Wynne's. Now I
  • know--my heart knows it, for it has felt it--that she resigns herself to
  • me unreluctantly. Is she conscious how my strength rejoices to serve
  • her? I myself am not her slave--I declare it--but my faculties gather
  • to her beauty, like the genii to the glisten of the lamp. All my
  • knowledge, all my prudence, all my calm, and all my power stand in her
  • presence humbly waiting a task. How glad they are when a mandate comes!
  • What joy they take in the toils she assigns! Does she know it?
  • "I have called her careless. It is remarkable that her carelessness
  • never compromises her refinement. Indeed, through this very loophole of
  • character, the reality, depth, genuineness of that refinement may be
  • ascertained. A whole garment sometimes covers meagreness and
  • malformation; through a rent sleeve a fair round arm may be revealed. I
  • have seen and handled many of her possessions, because they are
  • frequently astray. I never saw anything that did not proclaim the
  • lady--nothing sordid, nothing soiled. In one sense she is as scrupulous
  • as, in another, she is unthinking. As a peasant girl, she would go ever
  • trim and cleanly. Look at the pure kid of this little glove, at the
  • fresh, unsullied satin of the bag.
  • "What a difference there is between S. and that pearl C. H.! Caroline, I
  • fancy, is the soul of conscientious punctuality and nice exactitude. She
  • would precisely suit the domestic habits of a certain fastidious kinsman
  • of mine--so delicate, dexterous, quaint, quick, quiet--all done to a
  • minute, all arranged to a strawbreadth. She would suit Robert. But what
  • could _I_ do with anything so nearly faultless? _She_ is my equal, poor
  • as myself. She is certainly pretty: a little Raffaelle head
  • hers--Raffaelle in feature, quite English in expression, all insular
  • grace and purity; but where is there anything to alter, anything to
  • endure, anything to reprimand, to be anxious about? There she is, a lily
  • of the valley, untinted, needing no tint. What change could improve her?
  • What pencil dare to paint? _My_ sweetheart, if I ever have one, must
  • bear nearer affinity to the rose--a sweet, lively delight guarded with
  • prickly peril. _My_ wife, if I ever marry, must stir my great frame with
  • a sting now and then; she must furnish use to her husband's vast mass of
  • patience. I was not made so enduring to be mated with a lamb; I should
  • find more congenial responsibility in the charge of a young lioness or
  • leopardess. I like few things sweet but what are likewise pungent--few
  • things bright but what are likewise hot. I like the summer day, whose
  • sun makes fruit blush and corn blanch. Beauty is never so beautiful as
  • when, if I tease it, it wreathes back on me with spirit. Fascination is
  • never so imperial as when, roused and half ireful, she threatens
  • transformation to fierceness. I fear I should tire of the mute,
  • monotonous innocence of the lamb; I should ere long feel as burdensome
  • the nestling dove which never stirred in my bosom; but my patience would
  • exult in stilling the flutterings and training the energies of the
  • restless merlin. In managing the wild instincts of the scarce manageable
  • _bête fauve_ my powers would revel.
  • "O my pupil! O Peri! too mutinous for heaven, too innocent for hell,
  • never shall I do more than see, and worship, and wish for thee. Alas!
  • knowing I could make thee happy, will it be my doom to see thee
  • possessed by those who have not that power?
  • "However kindly the hand, if it is feeble, it cannot bend Shirley; and
  • she must be bent. It cannot curb her; and she must be curbed.
  • "Beware, Sir Philip Nunnely! I never see you walking or sitting at her
  • side, and observe her lips compressed, or her brow knit, in resolute
  • endurance of some trait of your character which she neither admires nor
  • likes, in determined toleration of some weakness she believes atoned for
  • by a virtue, but which annoys her despite that belief; I never mark the
  • grave glow of her face, the unsmiling sparkle of her eye, the slight
  • recoil of her whole frame when you draw a little too near, and gaze a
  • little too expressively, and whisper a little too warmly--I never
  • witness these things but I think of the fable of Semele reversed.
  • "It is not the daughter of Cadmus I see, nor do I realize her fatal
  • longing to look on Jove in the majesty of his god-head. It is a priest
  • of Juno that stands before me, watching late and lone at a shrine in an
  • Argive temple. For years of solitary ministry he has lived on dreams.
  • There is divine madness upon him. He loves the idol he serves, and prays
  • day and night that his frenzy may be fed, and that the Ox-eyed may smile
  • on her votary. She has heard; she will be propitious. All Argos
  • slumbers. The doors of the temple are shut; the priest waits at the
  • altar.
  • "A shock of heaven and earth is felt--not by the slumbering city, only
  • by that lonely watcher, brave and unshaken in his fanaticism. In the
  • midst of silence, with no preluding sound, he is wrapped in sudden
  • light. Through the roof, through the rent, wide-yawning, vast,
  • white-blazing blue of heaven above, pours a wondrous descent, dread as
  • the downrushing of stars. He has what he asked. Withdraw--forbear to
  • look--I am blinded. I hear in that fane an unspeakable sound. Would that
  • I could not hear it! I see an insufferable glory burning terribly
  • between the pillars. Gods be merciful and quench it!
  • "A pious Argive enters to make an early offering in the cool dawn of
  • morning. There was thunder in the night; the bolt fell here. The shrine
  • is shivered, the marble pavement round split and blackened. Saturnia's
  • statue rises chaste, grand, untouched; at her feet piled ashes lie pale.
  • No priest remains; he who watched will be seen no more.
  • * * * * *
  • "There is the carriage! Let me lock up the desk and pocket the keys. She
  • will be seeking them to-morrow; she will have to come to me. I hear her:
  • 'Mr. Moore, have you seen my keys?'
  • "So she will say, in her clear voice, speaking with reluctance, looking
  • ashamed, conscious that this is the twentieth time of asking. I will
  • tantalize her, keep her with me, expecting, doubting; and when I _do_
  • restore them, it shall not be without a lecture. Here is the bag, too,
  • and the purse; the glove--pen--seal. She shall wring them all out of me
  • slowly and separately--only by confession, penitence, entreaty. I never
  • can touch her hand, or a ringlet of her head, or a ribbon of her dress,
  • but I will make privileges for myself. Every feature of her face, her
  • bright eyes, her lips, shall go through each change they know, for my
  • pleasure--display each exquisite variety of glance and curve, to
  • delight, thrill, perhaps more hopelessly to enchain me. If I must be her
  • slave, I will not lose my freedom for nothing."
  • He locked the desk, pocketed all the property, and went.
  • CHAPTER XXX.
  • RUSHEDGE--A CONFESSIONAL.
  • Everybody said it was high time for Mr. Moore to return home. All
  • Briarfield wondered at his strange absence, and Whinbury and Nunnely
  • brought each its separate contribution of amazement.
  • Was it known why he stayed away? Yes. It was known twenty--forty times
  • over, there being at least forty plausible reasons adduced to account
  • for the unaccountable circumstance. Business it was not--_that_ the
  • gossips agreed. He had achieved the business on which he departed long
  • ago. His four ringleaders he had soon scented out and run down. He had
  • attended their trial, heard their conviction and sentence, and seen them
  • safely shipped prior to transportation.
  • This was known at Briarfield. The newspapers had reported it. The
  • _Stilbro' Courier_ had given every particular, with amplifications. None
  • applauded his perseverance or hailed his success, though the mill-owners
  • were glad of it, trusting that the terrors of law vindicated would
  • henceforward paralyze the sinister valour of disaffection. Disaffection,
  • however, was still heard muttering to himself. He swore ominous oaths
  • over the drugged beer of alehouses, and drank strange toasts in fiery
  • British gin.
  • One report affirmed that Moore _dared_ not come to Yorkshire; he knew
  • his life was not worth an hour's purchase if he did.
  • "I'll tell him that," said Mr. Yorke, when his foreman mentioned the
  • rumour; "and if _that_ does not bring him home full gallop, nothing
  • will."
  • Either that or some other motive prevailed at last to recall him. He
  • announced to Joe Scott the day he should arrive at Stilbro', desiring
  • his hackney to be sent to the George for his accommodation; and Joe
  • Scott having informed Mr. Yorke, that gentleman made it in his way to
  • meet him.
  • It was market-day. Moore arrived in time to take his usual place at the
  • market dinner. As something of a stranger, and as a man of note and
  • action, the assembled manufacturers received him with a certain
  • distinction. Some, who in public would scarcely have dared to
  • acknowledge his acquaintance, lest a little of the hate and vengeance
  • laid up in store for him should perchance have fallen on them, in
  • private hailed him as in some sort their champion. When the wine had
  • circulated, their respect would have kindled to enthusiasm had not
  • Moore's unshaken nonchalance held it in a damp, low, smouldering state.
  • Mr. Yorke, the permanent president of these dinners, witnessed his young
  • friend's bearing with exceeding complacency. If one thing could stir his
  • temper or excite his contempt more than another, it was to see a man
  • befooled by flattery or elate with popularity. If one thing smoothed,
  • soothed, and charmed him especially, it was the spectacle of a public
  • character incapable of relishing his publicity--_incapable_, I say.
  • Disdain would but have incensed; it was indifference that appeased his
  • rough spirit.
  • Robert, leaning back in his chair, quiet and almost surly, while the
  • clothiers and blanket-makers vaunted his prowess and rehearsed his
  • deeds--many of them interspersing their flatteries with coarse
  • invectives against the operative class--was a delectable sight for Mr.
  • Yorke. His heart tingled with the pleasing conviction that these gross
  • eulogiums shamed Moore deeply, and made him half scorn himself and his
  • work. On abuse, on reproach, on calumny, it is easy to smile; but
  • painful indeed is the panegyric of those we contemn. Often had Moore
  • gazed with a brilliant countenance over howling crowds from a hostile
  • hustings. He had breasted the storm of unpopularity with gallant bearing
  • and soul elate; but he drooped his head under the half-bred tradesmen's
  • praise, and shrank chagrined before their congratulations.
  • Yorke could not help asking him how he liked his supporters, and whether
  • he did not think they did honour to his cause. "But it is a pity, lad,"
  • he added, "that you did not hang these four samples of the unwashed. If
  • you had managed _that_ feat, the gentry here would have riven the horses
  • out of the coach, yoked to a score of asses, and drawn you into Stilbro'
  • like a conquering general."
  • Moore soon forsook the wine, broke from the party, and took the road.
  • In less than five minutes Mr. Yorke followed him. They rode out of
  • Stilbro' together.
  • It was early to go home, but yet it was late in the day. The last ray of
  • the sun had already faded from the cloud-edges, and the October night
  • was casting over the moorlands the shadow of her approach.
  • Mr. Yorke, moderately exhilarated with his moderate libations, and not
  • displeased to see young Moore again in Yorkshire, and to have him for
  • his comrade during the long ride home, took the discourse much to
  • himself. He touched briefly, but scoffingly, on the trials and the
  • conviction; he passed thence to the gossip of the neighbourhood, and ere
  • long he attacked Moore on his own personal concerns.
  • "Bob, I believe you are worsted, and you deserve it. All was smooth.
  • Fortune had fallen in love with you. She had decreed you the first prize
  • in her wheel--twenty thousand pounds; she only required that you should
  • hold your hand out and take it. And what did you do? You called for a
  • horse and rode a-hunting to Warwickshire. Your sweetheart--Fortune, I
  • mean--was perfectly indulgent. She said, 'I'll excuse him; he's young.'
  • She waited, like 'Patience on a monument,' till the chase was over and
  • the vermin-prey run down. She expected you would come back then, and be
  • a good lad. You might still have had her first prize.
  • "It capped her beyond expression, and me too, to find that, instead of
  • thundering home in a breakneck gallop and laying your assize laurels at
  • her feet, you coolly took coach up to London. What you have done there
  • Satan knows; nothing in this world, I believe, but sat and sulked. Your
  • face was never lily fair, but it is olive green now. You're not as bonny
  • as you were, man."
  • "And who is to have this prize you talk so much about?"
  • "Only a baronet; that is all. I have not a doubt in my own mind you've
  • lost her. She will be Lady Nunnely before Christmas."
  • "Hem! Quite probable."
  • "But she need not to have been. Fool of a lad! I swear you might have
  • had her."
  • "By what token, Mr. Yorke?"
  • "By every token--by the light of her eyes, the red of her cheeks. Red
  • they grew when your name was mentioned, though of custom they are pale."
  • "My chance is quite over, I suppose?"
  • "It ought to be. But try; it is worth trying. I call this Sir Philip
  • milk and water. And then he writes verses, they say--tags rhymes. _You_
  • are above that, Bob, at all events."
  • "Would you advise me to propose, late as it is, Mr. Yorke--at the
  • eleventh hour?"
  • "You can but make the experiment, Robert. If she has a fancy for
  • you--and, on my conscience, I believe she has or had--she will forgive
  • much. But, my lad, you are laughing. Is it at me? You had better grin at
  • your own perverseness. I see, however, you laugh at the wrong side of
  • your mouth. You have as sour a look at this moment as one need wish to
  • see."
  • "I have so quarrelled with myself, Yorke. I have so kicked against the
  • pricks, and struggled in a strait waistcoat, and dislocated my wrists
  • with wrenching them in handcuffs, and battered my hard head by driving
  • it against a harder wall."
  • "Ha! I'm glad to hear that. Sharp exercise yon! I hope it has done you
  • good--ta'en some of the self-conceit out of you?"
  • "Self-conceit? What is it? Self-respect, self-tolerance even, what are
  • they? Do you sell the articles? Do you know anybody who does? Give an
  • indication. They would find in me a liberal chapman. I would part with
  • my last guinea this minute to buy."
  • "Is it so with you, Robert? I find that spicy. I like a man to speak his
  • mind. What has gone wrong?"
  • "The machinery of all my nature; the whole enginery of this human mill;
  • the boiler, which I take to be the heart, is fit to burst."
  • "That suld be putten i' print; it's striking. It's almost blank verse.
  • Ye'll be jingling into poetry just e'now. If the afflatus comes, give
  • way, Robert. Never heed me; I'll bear it this whet [time]."
  • "Hideous, abhorrent, base blunder! You may commit in a moment what you
  • will rue for years--what life cannot cancel."
  • "Lad, go on. I call it pie, nuts, sugar-candy. I like the taste
  • uncommonly. Go on. It will do you good to talk. The moor is before us
  • now, and there is no life for many a mile round."
  • "I _will_ talk. I am not ashamed to tell. There is a sort of wild cat in
  • my breast, and I choose that you shall hear how it can yell."
  • "To me it is music. What grand voices you and Louis have! When Louis
  • sings--tones off like a soft, deep bell--I've felt myself tremble again.
  • The night is still. It listens. It is just leaning down to you, like a
  • black priest to a blacker penitent. Confess, lad. Smooth naught down. Be
  • candid as a convicted, justified, sanctified Methody at an experience
  • meeting. Make yourself as wicked as Beelzebub. It will ease your mind."
  • "As mean as Mammon, you would say. Yorke, if I got off horseback and
  • laid myself down across the road, would you have the goodness to gallop
  • over me, backwards and forwards, about twenty times?"
  • "Wi' all the pleasure in life, if there were no such thing as a
  • coroner's inquest."
  • "Hiram Yorke, I certainly believed she loved me. I have seen her eyes
  • sparkle radiantly when she has found me out in a crowd; she has flushed
  • up crimson when she has offered me her hand, and said, 'How do you do,
  • Mr. Moore?'
  • "My name had a magical influence over her. When others uttered it she
  • changed countenance--I know she did. She pronounced it herself in the
  • most musical of her many musical tones. She was cordial to me; she took
  • an interest in me; she was anxious about me; she wished me well; she
  • sought, she seized every opportunity to benefit me. I considered,
  • paused, watched, weighed, wondered. I could come to but one
  • conclusion--this is love.
  • "I looked at her, Yorke. I saw in her youth and a species of beauty. I
  • saw power in her. Her wealth offered me the redemption of my honour and
  • my standing. I owed her gratitude. She had aided me substantially and
  • effectually by a loan of five thousand pounds. Could I remember these
  • things? Could I believe she loved me? Could I hear wisdom urge me to
  • marry her, and disregard every dear advantage, disbelieve every
  • flattering suggestion, disdain every well-weighed counsel, turn and
  • leave her? Young, graceful, gracious--my benefactress, attached to me,
  • enamoured of me. I used to say so to myself; dwell on the word; mouth it
  • over and over again; swell over it with a pleasant, pompous complacency,
  • with an admiration dedicated entirely to myself, and unimpaired even by
  • esteem for her; indeed I smiled in deep secrecy at her _naïveté_ and
  • simplicity in being the first to love, and to show it. That whip of
  • yours seems to have a good heavy handle, Yorke; you can swing it about
  • your head and knock me out of the saddle, if you choose. I should rather
  • relish a loundering whack."
  • "Tak patience, Robert, till the moon rises and I can see you. Speak
  • plain out--did you love her or not? I could like to know. I feel
  • curious."
  • "Sir--sir--I say--she is very pretty, in her own style, and very
  • attractive. She has a look, at times, of a thing made out of fire and
  • air, at which I stand and marvel, without a thought of clasping and
  • kissing it. I felt in her a powerful magnet to my interest and vanity. I
  • never felt as if nature meant her to be my other and better self. When a
  • question on that head rushed upon me, I flung it off, saying brutally I
  • should be rich with her and ruined without her--vowing I would be
  • practical, and not romantic."
  • "A very sensible resolve. What mischief came of it, Bob?"
  • "With this sensible resolve I walked up to Fieldhead one night last
  • August. It was the very eve of my departure for Birmingham; for, you
  • see, I wanted to secure Fortune's splendid prize. I had previously
  • dispatched a note requesting a private interview. I found her at home,
  • and alone.
  • "She received me without embarrassment, for she thought I came on
  • business. _I_ was embarrassed enough, but determined. I hardly know how
  • I got the operation over; but I went to work in a hard, firm
  • fashion--frightful enough, I dare say. I sternly offered myself--my fine
  • person--with my debts, of course, as a settlement.
  • "It vexed me, it kindled my ire, to find that she neither blushed,
  • trembled, nor looked down. She responded, 'I doubt whether I have
  • understood you, Mr. Moore.'
  • "And I had to go over the whole proposal twice, and word it as plainly
  • as A B C, before she would fully take it in. And then, what did she do?
  • Instead of faltering a sweet Yes, or maintaining a soft, confused
  • silence (which would have been as good), she started up, walked twice
  • fast through the room, in the way that _she_ only does, and no other
  • woman, and ejaculated, 'God bless me!'
  • "Yorke, I stood on the hearth, backed by the mantelpiece; against it I
  • leaned, and prepared for anything--everything. I knew my doom, and I
  • knew myself. There was no misunderstanding her aspect and voice. She
  • stopped and looked at me.
  • "'God bless me!' she piteously repeated, in that shocked, indignant, yet
  • saddened accent. 'You have made a strange proposal--strange from _you_;
  • and if you knew how strangely you worded it and looked it, you would be
  • startled at yourself. You spoke like a brigand who demanded my purse
  • rather than like a lover who asked my heart.'
  • "A queer sentence, was it not, Yorke? And I knew, as she uttered it, it
  • was true as queer. Her words were a mirror in which I saw myself.
  • "I looked at her, dumb and wolfish. She at once enraged and shamed me.
  • "'Gérard Moore, you know you don't love Shirley Keeldar.' I might have
  • broken out into false swearing--vowed that I did love her; but I could
  • not lie in her pure face. I could not perjure myself in her truthful
  • presence. Besides, such hollow oaths would have been vain as void. She
  • would no more have believed me than she would have believed the ghost of
  • Judas, had he broken from the night and stood before her. Her female
  • heart had finer perceptions than to be cheated into mistaking my
  • half-coarse, half-cold admiration for true-throbbing, manly love.
  • "What next happened? you will say, Mr. Yorke.
  • "Why, she sat down in the window-seat and cried. She cried passionately.
  • Her eyes not only rained but lightened. They flashed, open, large, dark,
  • haughty, upon me. They said, 'You have pained me; you have outraged me;
  • you have deceived me.'
  • "She added words soon to looks.
  • "'I _did_ respect--I _did_ admire--I _did_ like you,' she said--'yes, as
  • much as if you were my brother; and _you--you_ want to make a
  • speculation of me. You would immolate me to that mill, your Moloch!'
  • "I had the common sense to abstain from any word of excuse, any attempt
  • at palliation. I stood to be scorned.
  • "Sold to the devil for the time being, I was certainly infatuated. When
  • I did speak, what do you think I said?
  • "'Whatever my own feelings were, I was persuaded _you_ loved _me_, Miss
  • Keeldar.'
  • "Beautiful, was it not? She sat quite confounded. 'Is it Robert Moore
  • that speaks?' I heard her mutter. 'Is it a man--or something lower?'
  • "'Do you mean,' she asked aloud--'do you mean you thought I loved you as
  • we love those we wish to marry?'
  • "It _was_ my meaning, and I said so.
  • "'You conceived an idea obnoxious to a woman's feelings,' was her
  • answer. 'You have announced it in a fashion revolting to a woman's soul.
  • You insinuate that all the frank kindness I have shown you has been a
  • complicated, a bold, and an immodest manœuvre to ensnare a husband. You
  • imply that at last you come here out of pity to offer me your hand,
  • because I have courted you. Let me say this: Your sight is jaundiced;
  • you have seen wrong. Your mind is warped; you have judged wrong. Your
  • tongue betrays you; you now speak wrong. I never loved you. Be at rest
  • there. My heart is as pure of passion for you as yours is barren of
  • affection for me.'
  • "I hope I was answered, Yorke?
  • "'I seem to be a blind, besotted sort of person,' was my remark.
  • "'_Loved_ you!' she cried. 'Why, I have been as frank with you as a
  • sister--never shunned you, never feared you. You cannot,' she affirmed
  • triumphantly--'you cannot make me tremble with your coming, nor
  • accelerate my pulse by your influence.'
  • "I alleged that often, when she spoke to me, she blushed, and that the
  • sound of my name moved her.
  • "'Not for _your_ sake!' she declared briefly. I urged explanation, but
  • could get none.
  • "'When I sat beside you at the school feast, did you think I loved you
  • then? When I stopped you in Maythorn Lane, did you think I loved you
  • then? When I called on you in the counting-house, when I walked with you
  • on the pavement, did you think I loved you then?'
  • "So she questioned me; and I said I did.
  • "By the Lord! Yorke, she rose, she grew tall, she expanded and refined
  • almost to flame. There was a trembling all through her, as in live coal
  • when its vivid vermilion is hottest.
  • "'That is to say that you have the worst opinion of me; that you deny me
  • the possession of all I value most. That is to say that I am a traitor
  • to all my sisters; that I have acted as no woman can act without
  • degrading herself and her sex; that I have sought where the incorrupt of
  • my kind naturally scorn and abhor to seek.' She and I were silent for
  • many a minute. 'Lucifer, Star of the Morning,' she went on, 'thou art
  • fallen! You, once high in my esteem, are hurled down; you, once intimate
  • in my friendship, are cast out. Go!'
  • "I went not. I had heard her voice tremble, seen her lip quiver. I knew
  • another storm of tears would fall, and then I believed some calm and
  • some sunshine must come, and I would wait for it.
  • "As fast, but more quietly than before, the warm rain streamed down.
  • There was another sound in her weeping--a softer, more regretful sound.
  • While I watched, her eyes lifted to me a gaze more reproachful than
  • haughty, more mournful than incensed.
  • "'O Moore!' said she. It was worse than 'Et tu, Brute!'
  • "I relieved myself by what should have been a sigh, but it became a
  • groan. A sense of Cain-like desolation made my breast ache.
  • "'There has been error in what I have done,' I said, 'and it has won me
  • bitter wages, which I will go and spend far from her who gave them.'
  • "I took my hat. All the time I could not have borne to depart so, and I
  • believed she would not let me. Nor would she but for the mortal pang I
  • had given her pride, that cowed her compassion and kept her silent.
  • "I was obliged to turn back of my own accord when I reached the door, to
  • approach her, and to say, 'Forgive me.'
  • "'I could, if there was not myself to forgive too,' was her reply; 'but
  • to mislead a sagacious man so far I must have done wrong.'
  • "I broke out suddenly with some declamation I do not remember. I know
  • that it was sincere, and that my wish and aim were to absolve her to
  • herself. In fact, in her case self-accusation was a chimera.
  • "At last she extended her hand. For the first time I wished to take her
  • in my arms and kiss her. I _did_ kiss her hand many times.
  • "'Some day we shall be friends again,' she said, 'when you have had time
  • to read my actions and motives in a true light, and not so horribly to
  • misinterpret them. Time may give you the right key to all. Then,
  • perhaps, you will comprehend me, and then we shall be reconciled.'
  • "Farewell drops rolled slow down her cheeks. She wiped them away.
  • "'I am sorry for what has happened--deeply sorry,' she sobbed. So was I,
  • God knows! Thus were we severed."
  • "A queer tale!" commented Mr. Yorke.
  • "I'll do it no more," vowed his companion; "never more will I mention
  • marriage to a woman unless I feel love. Henceforth credit and commerce
  • may take care of themselves. Bankruptcy may come when it lists. I have
  • done with slavish fear of disaster. I mean to work diligently, wait
  • patiently, bear steadily. Let the worst come, I will take my axe and an
  • emigrant's berth, and go out with Louis to the West; he and I have
  • settled it. No woman shall ever again look at me as Miss Keeldar looked,
  • ever again feel towards me as Miss Keeldar felt. In no woman's presence
  • will I ever again stand at once such a fool and such a knave, such a
  • brute and such a puppy."
  • "Tut!" said the imperturbable Yorke, "you make too much of it; but
  • still, I say, I am capped. Firstly, that she did not love you; and
  • secondly, that you did not love her. You are both young; you are both
  • handsome; you are both well enough for wit and even for temper--take you
  • on the right side. What ailed you that you could not agree?"
  • "We never _have_ been, never _could_ be _at home_ with each other,
  • Yorke. Admire each other as we might at a distance, still we jarred when
  • we came very near. I have sat at one side of a room and observed her at
  • the other, perhaps in an excited, genial moment, when she had some of
  • her favourites round her--her old beaux, for instance, yourself and
  • Helstone, with whom she is so playful, pleasant, and eloquent. I have
  • watched her when she was most natural, most lively, and most lovely; my
  • judgment has pronounced her beautiful. Beautiful she is at times, when
  • her mood and her array partake of the splendid. I have drawn a little
  • nearer, feeling that our terms of acquaintance gave me the right of
  • approach. I have joined the circle round her seat, caught her eye, and
  • mastered her attention; then we have conversed; and others, thinking me,
  • perhaps, peculiarly privileged, have withdrawn by degrees, and left us
  • alone. Were we happy thus left? For myself, I must say No. Always a
  • feeling of constraint came over me; always I was disposed to be stern
  • and strange. We talked politics and business. No soft sense of domestic
  • intimacy ever opened our hearts, or thawed our language and made it flow
  • easy and limpid. If we had confidences, they were confidences of the
  • counting-house, not of the heart. Nothing in her cherished affection in
  • me, made me better, gentler; she only stirred my brain and whetted my
  • acuteness. She never crept into my heart or influenced its pulse; and
  • for this good reason, no doubt, because I had not the secret of making
  • her love me."
  • "Well, lad, it is a queer thing. I might laugh at thee, and reckon to
  • despise thy refinements; but as it is dark night and we are by
  • ourselves, I don't mind telling thee that thy talk brings back a glimpse
  • of my own past life. Twenty-five years ago I tried to persuade a
  • beautiful woman to love me, and she would not. I had not the key to her
  • nature; she was a stone wall to me, doorless and windowless."
  • "But you loved _her_, Yorke; you worshipped Mary Cave. Your conduct,
  • after all, was that of a man--never of a fortune-hunter."
  • "Ay, I _did_ love her; but then she was beautiful as the moon we do
  • _not_ see to-night. There is naught like her in these days. Miss
  • Helstone, maybe, has a look of her, but nobody else."
  • "Who has a look of her?"
  • "That black-coated tyrant's niece--that quiet, delicate Miss Helstone.
  • Many a time I have put on my spectacles to look at the lassie in church,
  • because she has gentle blue een, wi' long lashes; and when she sits in
  • shadow, and is very still and very pale, and is, happen, about to fall
  • asleep wi' the length of the sermon and the heat of the biggin', she is
  • as like one of Canova's marbles as aught else."
  • "Was Mary Cave in that style?"
  • "Far grander!--less lass-like and flesh-like. You wondered why she
  • hadn't wings and a crown. She was a stately, peaceful angel was my
  • Mary."
  • "And you could not persuade her to love you?"
  • "Not with all I could do, though I prayed Heaven many a time, on my
  • bended knees, to help me."
  • "Mary Cave was not what you think her, Yorke. I have seen her picture at
  • the rectory. She is no angel, but a fair, regular-featured,
  • taciturn-looking woman--rather too white and lifeless for my taste. But,
  • supposing she had been something better than she was----"
  • "Robert," interrupted Yorke, "I could fell you off your horse at this
  • moment. However, I'll hold my hand. Reason tells me you are right and I
  • am wrong. I know well enough that the passion I still have is only the
  • remnant of an illusion. If Miss Cave had possessed either feeling or
  • sense, she could not have been so perfectly impassible to my regard as
  • she showed herself; she must have preferred me to that copper-faced
  • despot."
  • "Supposing, Yorke, she had been educated (no women were educated in
  • those days); supposing she had possessed a thoughtful, original mind, a
  • love of knowledge, a wish for information, which she took an artless
  • delight in receiving from your lips, and having measured out to her by
  • your hand; supposing her conversation, when she sat at your side, was
  • fertile, varied, imbued with a picturesque grace and genial interest,
  • quiet flowing but clear and bounteous; supposing that when you stood
  • near her by chance, or when you sat near her by design, comfort at once
  • became your atmosphere, and content your element; supposing that
  • whenever her face was under your gaze, or her idea filled your thoughts,
  • you gradually ceased to be hard and anxious, and pure affection, love of
  • home, thirst for sweet discourse, unselfish longing to protect and
  • cherish, replaced the sordid, cankering calculations of your trade;
  • supposing, with all this, that many a time, when you had been so happy
  • as to possess your Mary's little hand, you had felt it tremble as you
  • held it, just as a warm little bird trembles when you take it from its
  • nest; supposing you had noticed her shrink into the background on your
  • entrance into a room, yet if you sought her in her retreat she welcomed
  • you with the sweetest smile that ever lit a fair virgin face, and only
  • turned her eyes from the encounter of your own lest their clearness
  • should reveal too much; supposing, in short, your Mary had been not
  • cold, but modest; not vacant, but reflective; not obtuse, but sensitive;
  • not inane, but innocent; not prudish, but pure,--would you have left her
  • to court another woman for her wealth?"
  • Mr. Yorke raised his hat, wiped his forehead with his handkerchief.
  • "The moon is up," was his first not quite relevant remark, pointing with
  • his whip across the moor. "There she is, rising into the haze, staring
  • at us wi' a strange red glower. She is no more silver than old
  • Helstone's brow is ivory. What does she mean by leaning her cheek on
  • Rushedge i' that way, and looking at us wi' a scowl and a menace?"
  • "Yorke, if Mary had loved you silently yet faithfully, chastely yet
  • fervently, as you would wish your wife to love, would you have left
  • her?"
  • "Robert!"--he lifted his arm, he held it suspended, and paused--"Robert!
  • this is a queer world, and men are made of the queerest dregs that
  • Chaos churned up in her ferment. I might swear sounding oaths--oaths
  • that would make the poachers think there was a bittern booming in
  • Bilberry Moss--that, in the case you put, death only should have parted
  • me from Mary. But I have lived in the world fifty-five years; I have
  • been forced to study human nature; and, to speak a dark truth, the odds
  • are, if Mary had loved and not scorned me, if I had been secure of her
  • affection, certain of her constancy, been irritated by no doubts, stung
  • by no humiliations--the odds are" (he let his hand fall heavy on the
  • saddle)--"the odds are I should have left her!"
  • They rode side by side in silence. Ere either spoke again they were on
  • the other side of Rushedge. Briarfield lights starred the purple skirt
  • of the moor. Robert, being the youngest, and having less of the past to
  • absorb him than his comrade, recommenced first.
  • "I believe--I daily find it proved--that we can get nothing in this
  • world worth keeping, not so much as a principle or a conviction, except
  • out of purifying flame or through strengthening peril. We err, we fall,
  • we are humbled; then we walk more carefully. We greedily eat and drink
  • poison out of the gilded cup of vice or from the beggar's wallet of
  • avarice. We are sickened, degraded; everything good in us rebels against
  • us; our souls rise bitterly indignant against our bodies; there is a
  • period of civil war; if the soul has strength, it conquers and rules
  • thereafter."
  • "What art thou going to do now, Robert? What are thy plans?"
  • "For my private plans, I'll keep them to myself--which is very easy, as
  • at present I have none. No private life is permitted a man in my
  • position--a man in debt. For my public plans, my views are a little
  • altered. While I was in Birmingham I looked a little into reality,
  • considered closely and at their source the causes of the present
  • troubles of this country. I did the same in London. Unknown, I could go
  • where I pleased, mix with whom I would. I went where there was want of
  • food, of fuel, of clothing; where there was no occupation and no hope. I
  • saw some, with naturally elevated tendencies and good feelings, kept
  • down amongst sordid privations and harassing griefs. I saw many
  • originally low, and to whom lack of education left scarcely anything but
  • animal wants, disappointed in those wants, ahungered, athirst, and
  • desperate as famished animals. I saw what taught my brain a new lesson,
  • and filled my breast with fresh feelings. I have no intention to profess
  • more softness or sentiment than I have hitherto professed; mutiny and
  • ambition I regard as I have always regarded them. I should resist a
  • riotous mob just as heretofore; I should open on the scent of a runaway
  • ringleader as eagerly as ever, and run him down as relentlessly, and
  • follow him up to condign punishment as rigorously; but I should do it
  • now chiefly for the sake and the security of those he misled. Something
  • there is to look to, Yorke, beyond a man's personal interest, beyond the
  • advancement of well-laid schemes, beyond even the discharge of
  • dishonouring debts. To respect himself, a man must believe he renders
  • justice to his fellow-men. Unless I am more considerate to ignorance,
  • more forbearing to suffering, than I have hitherto been, I shall scorn
  • myself as grossly unjust.--What now?" he said, addressing his horse,
  • which, hearing the ripple of water, and feeling thirsty, turned to a
  • wayside trough, where the moonbeam was playing in a crystal eddy.
  • "Yorke," pursued Moore, "ride on; I must let him drink."
  • Yorke accordingly rode slowly forwards, occupying himself as he advanced
  • in discriminating, amongst the many lights now spangling the distance,
  • those of Briarmains. Stilbro' Moor was left behind; plantations rose
  • dusk on either hand; they were descending the hill; below them lay the
  • valley with its populous parish: they felt already at home.
  • Surrounded no longer by heath, it was not startling to Mr. Yorke to see
  • a hat rise, and to hear a voice speak behind the wall. The words,
  • however, were peculiar.
  • "When the wicked perisheth there is shouting," it said; and added, "As
  • the whirlwind passeth, so is the wicked no more" (with a deeper growl):
  • "terrors take hold of him as waters; hell is naked before him. He shall
  • die without knowledge."
  • A fierce flash and sharp crack violated the calm of night. Yorke, ere he
  • turned, knew the four convicts of Birmingham were avenged.
  • CHAPTER XXXI.
  • UNCLE AND NIECE.
  • The die was cast. Sir Philip Nunnely knew it; Shirley knew it; Mr.
  • Sympson knew it. That evening, when all the Fieldhead family dined at
  • Nunnely Priory, decided the business.
  • Two or three things conduced to bring the baronet to a point. He had
  • observed that Miss Keeldar looked pensive and delicate. This new phase
  • in her demeanour smote him on his weak or poetic side. A spontaneous
  • sonnet brewed in his brain; and while it was still working there, one of
  • his sisters persuaded his lady-love to sit down to the piano and sing a
  • ballad--one of Sir Philip's own ballads. It was the least elaborate, the
  • least affected--out of all comparison the best of his numerous efforts.
  • It chanced that Shirley, the moment before, had been gazing from a
  • window down on the park. She had seen that stormy moonlight which "le
  • Professeur Louis" was perhaps at the same instant contemplating from her
  • own oak-parlour lattice; she had seen the isolated trees of the
  • domain--broad, strong, spreading oaks, and high-towering heroic
  • beeches--wrestling with the gale. Her ear had caught the full roar of
  • the forest lower down; the swift rushing of clouds, the moon, to the
  • eye, hasting swifter still, had crossed her vision. She turned from
  • sight and sound--touched, if not rapt; wakened, if not inspired.
  • She sang, as requested. There was much about love in the
  • ballad--faithful love that refused to abandon its object; love that
  • disaster could not shake; love that in calamity waxed fonder, in poverty
  • clung closer. The words were set to a fine old air; in themselves they
  • were simple and sweet. Perhaps, when read, they wanted force; when
  • _well_ sung, they wanted nothing. Shirley sang them well. She breathed
  • into the feeling softness; she poured round the passion force. Her voice
  • was fine that evening, its expression dramatic. She impressed all, and
  • charmed one.
  • On leaving the instrument she went to the fire, and sat down on a
  • seat--semi-stool, semi-cushion. The ladies were round her; none of them
  • spoke. The Misses Sympson and the Misses Nunnely looked upon her as
  • quiet poultry might look on an egret, an ibis, or any other strange
  • fowl. What made her sing so? _They_ never sang so. Was it _proper_ to
  • sing with such expression, with such originality--so unlike a
  • school-girl? Decidedly not. It was strange, it was unusual. What was
  • _strange_ must be _wrong_; what was _unusual_ must be _improper_.
  • Shirley was judged.
  • Moreover, old Lady Nunnely eyed her stonily from her great chair by the
  • fireside. Her gaze said, "This woman is not of mine or my daughters'
  • kind. I object to her as my son's wife."
  • Her son, catching the look, read its meaning. He grew alarmed. What he
  • so wished to win there was danger he might lose. He must make haste.
  • The room they were in had once been a picture-gallery. Sir Philip's
  • father--Sir Monckton--had converted it into a saloon; but still it had a
  • shadowy, long-withdrawing look. A deep recess with a window--a recess
  • that held one couch, one table, and a fairy cabinet--formed a room
  • within a room. Two persons standing there might interchange a dialogue,
  • and, so it were neither long nor loud, none be the wiser.
  • Sir Philip induced two of his sisters to perpetrate a duet. He gave
  • occupation to the Misses Sympson. The elder ladies were conversing
  • together. He was pleased to remark that meantime Shirley rose to look at
  • the pictures. He had a tale to tell about one ancestress, whose dark
  • beauty seemed as that of a flower of the south. He joined her, and began
  • to tell it.
  • There were mementoes of the same lady in the cabinet adorning the
  • recess; and while Shirley was stooping to examine the missal and the
  • rosary on the inlaid shelf, and while the Misses Nunnely indulged in a
  • prolonged screech, guiltless of expression, pure of originality,
  • perfectly conventional and absolutely unmeaning, Sir Philip stooped too,
  • and whispered a few hurried sentences. At first Miss Keeldar was struck
  • so still you might have fancied that whisper a charm which had changed
  • her to a statue; but she presently looked up and answered. They parted.
  • Miss Keeldar returned to the fire, and resumed her seat. The baronet
  • gazed after her, then went and stood behind his sisters. Mr.
  • Sympson--Mr. Sympson only--had marked the pantomime.
  • That gentleman drew his own conclusions. Had he been as acute as he was
  • meddling, as profound as he was prying, he might have found that in Sir
  • Philip's face whereby to correct his inference. Ever shallow, hasty, and
  • positive, he went home quite cock-a-hoop.
  • He was not a man that kept secrets well. When elate on a subject, he
  • could not avoid talking about it. The next morning, having occasion to
  • employ his son's tutor as his secretary, he must needs announce to him,
  • in mouthing accents, and with much flimsy pomp of manner, that he had
  • better hold himself prepared for a return to the south at an early day,
  • as the important business which had detained him (Mr. Sympson) so long
  • in Yorkshire was now on the eve of fortunate completion. His anxious and
  • laborious efforts were likely, at last, to be crowned with the happiest
  • success. A truly eligible addition was about to be made to the family
  • connections.
  • "In Sir Philip Nunnely?" Louis Moore conjectured.
  • Whereupon Mr. Sympson treated himself simultaneously to a pinch of snuff
  • and a chuckling laugh, checked only by a sudden choke of dignity, and an
  • order to the tutor to proceed with business.
  • For a day or two Mr. Sympson continued as bland as oil, but also he
  • seemed to sit on pins, and his gait, when he walked, emulated that of a
  • hen treading a hot girdle. He was for ever looking out of the window and
  • listening for chariot-wheels. Bluebeard's wife--Sisera's mother--were
  • nothing to him. He waited when the matter should be opened in form, when
  • himself should be consulted, when lawyers should be summoned, when
  • settlement discussions and all the delicious worldly fuss should
  • pompously begin.
  • At last there came a letter. He himself handed it to Miss Keeldar out of
  • the bag. He knew the handwriting; he knew the crest on the seal. He did
  • not see it opened and read, for Shirley took it to her own room; nor did
  • he see it answered, for she wrote her reply shut up, and was very long
  • about it--the best part of a day. He questioned her whether it was
  • answered; she responded, "Yes."
  • Again he waited--waited in silence, absolutely not daring to speak, kept
  • mute by something in Shirley's face--a very awful something--inscrutable
  • to him as the writing on the wall to Belshazzar. He was moved more than
  • once to call Daniel, in the person of Louis Moore, and to ask an
  • interpretation; but his dignity forbade the familiarity. Daniel himself,
  • perhaps, had his own private difficulties connected with that baffling
  • bit of translation; he looked like a student for whom grammars are blank
  • and dictionaries dumb.
  • * * * * *
  • Mr. Sympson had been out, to while away an anxious hour in the society
  • of his friends at De Walden Hall. He returned a little sooner than was
  • expected. His family and Miss Keeldar were assembled in the oak parlour.
  • Addressing the latter, he requested her to step with him into another
  • room. He wished to have with her a "_strictly_ private interview."
  • She rose, asking no questions and professing no surprise.
  • "Very well, sir," she said, in the tone of a determined person who is
  • informed that the dentist is come to extract that large double tooth of
  • his, from which he has suffered such a purgatory this month past. She
  • left her sewing and her thimble in the window-seat, and followed her
  • uncle where he led.
  • Shut into the drawing-room, the pair took seats, each in an arm-chair,
  • placed opposite, a few yards between them.
  • "I have been to De Walden Hall," said Mr. Sympson. He paused. Miss
  • Keeldar's eyes were on the pretty white-and-green carpet. _That_
  • information required no response. She gave none.
  • "I have learned," he went on slowly--"I have learned a circumstance
  • which surprises me."
  • Resting her cheek on her forefinger, she waited to be told _what_
  • circumstance.
  • "It seems that Nunnely Priory is shut up--that the family are gone back
  • to their place in ----shire. It seems that the baronet--that the
  • baronet--that Sir Philip himself has accompanied his mother and
  • sisters."
  • "Indeed!" said Shirley.
  • "May I ask if you share the amazement with which I received this news?"
  • "No, sir."
  • "_Is_ it news to you?"
  • "Yes, sir."
  • "I mean--I mean," pursued Mr. Sympson, now fidgeting in his chair,
  • quitting his hitherto brief and tolerably clear phraseology, and
  • returning to his customary wordy, confused, irritable style--"I mean to
  • have a _thorough_ explanation. I will _not_ be put off. I--I--shall
  • _insist_ on being heard, and on--on having my own way. My questions
  • _must_ be answered. I will have clear, satisfactory replies. I am not to
  • be trifled with. (Silence.)
  • "It is a strange and an extraordinary thing--a very singular--a most odd
  • thing! I thought all was right, knew no other; and there--the family are
  • gone!"
  • "I suppose, sir, they had a right to go."
  • "_Sir Philip is gone!_" (with emphasis).
  • Shirley raised her brows. "_Bon voyage!_" said she.
  • "This will not do; this must be altered, ma'am."
  • He drew his chair forward; he pushed it back; he looked perfectly
  • incensed, and perfectly helpless.
  • "Come, come now, uncle," expostulated Shirley, "do not begin to fret and
  • fume, or we shall make no sense of the business. Ask me what you want to
  • know. I am as willing to come to an explanation as you. I promise you
  • truthful replies."
  • "I want--I demand to know, Miss Keeldar, whether Sir Philip has made you
  • an offer?"
  • "He has."
  • "You avow it?"
  • "I avow it. But now, go on. Consider that point settled."
  • "He made you an offer that night we dined at the priory?"
  • "It is enough to say that he made it. Go on."
  • "He proposed in the recess--in the room that used to be a
  • picture-gallery--that Sir Monckton converted into it saloon?"
  • No answer.
  • "You were both examining a cabinet. I saw it all. My sagacity was not at
  • fault--it never is. Subsequently you received a letter from him. On what
  • subject--of what nature were the contents?"
  • "No matter."
  • "Ma'am, is that the way in which you speak to me?"
  • Shirley's foot tapped quick on the carpet.
  • "There you sit, silent and sullen--_you_ who promised truthful replies."
  • "Sir, I have answered you thus far. Proceed."
  • "I should like to see that letter."
  • "You _cannot_ see it."
  • "I _must_ and _shall_, ma'am; I am your guardian."
  • "Having ceased to be a ward, I have no guardian."
  • "Ungrateful being! Reared by me as my own daughter----"
  • "Once more, uncle, have the kindness to keep to the point. Let us both
  • remain cool. For my part, I do not wish to get into a passion; but, you
  • know, once drive me beyond certain bounds, I care little what I say--I
  • am not then soon checked. Listen! You have asked me whether Sir Philip
  • made me an offer. That question is answered. What do you wish to know
  • next?"
  • "I desire to know whether you accepted or refused him, and know it I
  • will."
  • "Certainly, you ought to know it. I refused him."
  • "Refused him! You--_you_, Shirley Keeldar, _refused_ Sir Philip
  • Nunnely?"
  • "I did."
  • The poor gentleman bounced from his chair, and first rushed and then
  • trotted through the room.
  • "There it is! There it is! There it is!"
  • "Sincerely speaking, I am sorry, uncle, you are so disappointed."
  • Concession, contrition, never do any good with some people. Instead of
  • softening and conciliating, they but embolden and harden them. Of that
  • number was Mr. Sympson.
  • "_I_ disappointed? What is it to me? Have _I_ an interest in it? You
  • would insinuate, perhaps, that I have motives?"
  • "Most people have motives of some sort for their actions."
  • "She accuses me to my face! I, that have been a parent to her, she
  • charges with bad motives!"
  • "_Bad_ motives I did not say."
  • "And now you prevaricate; you have no principles!"
  • "Uncle, you tire me. I want to go away."
  • "Go you shall not! I will be answered. What are your intentions, Miss
  • Keeldar?"
  • "In what respect?"
  • "In respect of matrimony?"
  • "To be quiet, and to do just as I please."
  • "Just as you please! The words are to the last degree indecorous."
  • "Mr. Sympson, I advise you not to become insulting. You know I will not
  • bear that."
  • "You read French. Your mind is poisoned with French novels. You have
  • imbibed French principles."
  • "The ground you are treading now returns a mighty hollow sound under
  • your feet. Beware!"
  • "It will end in infamy, sooner or later. I have foreseen it all along."
  • "Do you assert, sir, that something in which _I_ am concerned will end
  • in infamy?"
  • "That it will--that it will. You said just now you would act as you
  • please. You acknowledge no rules--no limitations."
  • "Silly stuff, and vulgar as silly!"
  • "Regardless of decorum, you are prepared to fly in the face of
  • propriety."
  • "You tire me, uncle."
  • "What, madam--_what_ could be your reasons for refusing Sir Philip?"
  • "At last there is another sensible question; I shall be glad to reply to
  • it. Sir Philip is too young for me. I regard him as a boy. All his
  • relations--his mother especially--would be annoyed if he married me.
  • Such a step would embroil him with them. I am not his equal in the
  • world's estimation."
  • "Is that all?"
  • "Our dispositions are not compatible."
  • "Why, a more amiable gentleman never breathed."
  • "He is very amiable--very excellent--truly estimable; but _not my
  • master_--not in one point. I could not trust myself with his happiness.
  • I would not undertake the keeping of it for thousands. I will accept no
  • hand which cannot hold me in check."
  • "I thought you liked to do as you please. You are vastly inconsistent."
  • "When I promise to obey, it shall be under the conviction that I can
  • keep that promise. I could not obey a youth like Sir Philip. Besides, he
  • would never command me. He would expect me always to rule--to guide--and
  • I have no taste whatever for the office."
  • "_You_ no taste for swaggering, and subduing, and ordering, and ruling?"
  • "Not my husband; only my uncle."
  • "Where is the difference?"
  • "There _is_ a slight difference--that is certain. And I know full well
  • any man who wishes to live in decent comfort with me as a husband must
  • be able to control me."
  • "I wish you had a real tyrant."
  • "A tyrant would not hold me for a day, not for an hour. I would
  • rebel--break from him--defy him."
  • "Are you not enough to bewilder one's brain with your
  • self-contradiction?"
  • "It is evident I bewilder your brain."
  • "You talk of Sir Philip being young. He is two-and-twenty."
  • "My husband must be thirty, with the sense of forty."
  • "You had better pick out some old man--some white-headed or bald-headed
  • swain."
  • "No, thank you."
  • "You could lead some doting fool; you might pin him to your apron."
  • "I might do that with a boy; but it is not my vocation. Did I not say I
  • prefer a _master_--one in whose presence I shall feel obliged and
  • disposed to be good; one whose control my impatient temper must
  • acknowledge; a man whose approbation can reward, whose displeasure
  • punish me; a man I shall feel it impossible not to love, and very
  • possible to fear?"
  • "What is there to hinder you from doing all this with Sir Philip? He is
  • a baronet--a man of rank, property, connections far above yours. If you
  • talk of intellect, he is a poet--he writes verses; which you, I take it,
  • cannot do, with all your cleverness."
  • "Neither his title, wealth, pedigree, nor poetry avail to invest him
  • with the power I describe. These are feather-weights; they want ballast.
  • A measure of sound, solid, practical sense would have stood him in
  • better stead with me."
  • "You and Henry rave about poetry! You used to catch fire like tinder on
  • the subject when you were a girl."
  • "O uncle, there is nothing really valuable in this world, there is
  • nothing glorious in the world to come that is not poetry!"
  • "Marry a poet, then, in God's name!"
  • "Show him me, and I will."
  • "Sir Philip."
  • "Not at all. You are almost as good a poet as he."
  • "Madam, you are wandering from the point."
  • "Indeed, uncle, I wanted to do so, and I shall be glad to lead you away
  • with me. Do not let us get out of temper with each other; it is not
  • worth while."
  • "Out of temper, Miss Keeldar! I should be glad to know who is out of
  • temper."
  • "_I_ am not, yet."
  • "If you mean to insinuate that _I_ am, I consider that you are guilty of
  • impertinence."
  • "You will be soon, if you go on at that rate."
  • "There it is! With your pert tongue you would try the patience of a
  • Job."
  • "I know I should."
  • "No levity, miss! This is not a laughing matter. It is an affair I am
  • resolved to probe thoroughly, convinced that there is mischief at the
  • bottom. You described just now, with far too much freedom for your years
  • and sex, the sort of individual you would prefer as a husband. Pray, did
  • you paint from the life?"
  • Shirley opened her lips, but instead of speaking she only glowed
  • rose-red.
  • "I shall have an answer to that question," affirmed Mr. Sympson,
  • assuming vast courage and consequence on the strength of this symptom of
  • confusion.
  • "It was an historical picture, uncle, from several originals."
  • "Several originals! Bless my heart!"
  • "I have been in love several times."
  • "This is cynical."
  • "With heroes of many nations."
  • "What next----"
  • "And philosophers."
  • "She is mad----"
  • "Don't ring the bell, uncle; you will alarm my aunt."
  • "Your poor dear aunt, what a niece has she!"
  • "Once I loved Socrates."
  • "Pooh! no trifling, ma'am."
  • "I admired Themistocles, Leonidas, Epaminondas."
  • "Miss Keeldar----"
  • "To pass over a few centuries, Washington was a plain man, but I liked
  • him; but to speak of the actual present----"
  • "Ah! the actual present."
  • "To quit crude schoolgirl fancies, and come to realities."
  • "Realities! That is the test to which you shall be brought, ma'am."
  • "To avow before what altar I now kneel--to reveal the present idol of my
  • soul----"
  • "You will make haste about it, if you please. It is near luncheon time,
  • and confess _you shall_."
  • "Confess I must. My heart is full of the secret. It must be spoken. I
  • only wish you were Mr. Helstone instead of Mr. Sympson; you would
  • sympathize with me better."
  • "Madam, it is a question of common sense and common prudence, not of
  • sympathy and sentiment, and so on. Did you say it was Mr. Helstone?"
  • "Not precisely, but as near as may be; they are rather alike."
  • "I will know the name; I will have particulars."
  • "They positively _are_ rather alike. Their very faces are not
  • dissimilar--a pair of human falcons--and dry, direct, decided both. But
  • my hero is the mightier of the two. His mind has the clearness of the
  • deep sea, the patience of its rocks, the force of its billows."
  • "Rant and fustian!"
  • "I dare say he can be harsh as a saw-edge and gruff as a hungry raven."
  • "Miss Keeldar, does the person reside in Briarfield? Answer me that."
  • "Uncle, I am going to tell you; his name is trembling on my tongue."
  • "Speak, girl!"
  • "That was well said, uncle. 'Speak, girl!' It is quite tragic. England
  • has howled savagely against this man, uncle, and she will one day roar
  • exultingly over him. He has been unscared by the howl, and he will be
  • unelated by the shout."
  • "I said she was mad. She is."
  • "This country will change and change again in her demeanour to him; he
  • will never change in his duty to her. Come, cease to chafe, uncle, I'll
  • tell you his name."
  • "You shall tell me, or----"
  • "Listen! Arthur Wellesley, Lord Wellington."
  • Mr. Sympson rose up furious. He bounced out of the room, but immediately
  • bounced back again, shut the door, and resumed his seat.
  • "Ma'am, you _shall_ tell me _this_. Will your principles permit you to
  • marry a man without money--a man below you?"
  • "Never a man below me."
  • (In a high voice.) "Will you, Miss Keeldar, marry a poor man?"
  • "What right have you, Mr. Sympson, to ask me?"
  • "I insist upon knowing."
  • "You don't go the way to know."
  • "My family respectability shall not be compromised."
  • "A good resolution; keep it."
  • "Madam, it is _you_ who shall keep it."
  • "Impossible, sir, since I form no part of your family."
  • "Do you disown us?"
  • "I disdain your dictatorship."
  • "Whom _will_ you marry, Miss Keeldar?"
  • "Not Mr. Sam Wynne, because I scorn him; not Sir Philip Nunnely, because
  • I _only_ esteem him."
  • "Whom have you in your eye?"
  • "Four rejected candidates."
  • "Such obstinacy could not be unless you were under improper influence."
  • "What do you mean? There are certain phrases potent to make my blood
  • boil. Improper influence! What old woman's cackle is that?"
  • "Are you a young lady?"
  • "I am a thousand times better: I am an honest woman, and as such I will
  • be treated."
  • "Do you know" (leaning mysteriously forward, and speaking with ghastly
  • solemnity)--"do you know the whole neighbourhood teems with rumours
  • respecting you and a bankrupt tenant of yours, the foreigner Moore?"
  • "Does it?"
  • "It does. Your name is in every mouth."
  • "It honours the lips it crosses, and I wish to the gods it may purify
  • them."
  • "Is it _that_ person who has power to influence you?"
  • "Beyond any whose cause you have advocated."
  • "Is it he you will marry?"
  • "He is handsome, and manly, and commanding."
  • "You declare it to my face! The Flemish knave! the low trader!"
  • "He is talented, and venturous, and resolute. Prince is on his brow, and
  • ruler in his bearing."
  • "She glories in it! She conceals nothing! No shame, no fear!"
  • "When we speak the name of Moore, shame should be forgotten and fear
  • discarded. The Moores know only honour and courage."
  • "I say she is mad."
  • "You have taunted me till my blood is up; you have worried me till I
  • turn again."
  • "That Moore is the brother of my son's tutor. Would you let the usher
  • call you sister?"
  • Bright and broad shone Shirley's eye as she fixed it on her questioner
  • now.
  • "No, no; not for a province of possession, not for a century of life."
  • "You cannot separate the husband from his family."
  • "What then?"
  • "Mr. Louis Moore's sister you will be."
  • "Mr. Sympson, I am sick at heart with all this weak trash; I will bear
  • no more. Your thoughts are not my thoughts, your aims are not my aims,
  • your gods are not my gods. We do not view things in the same light; we
  • do not measure them by the same standard; we hardly speak in the same
  • tongue. Let us part."
  • "It is not," she resumed, much excited--"it is not that I hate you; you
  • are a good sort of man. Perhaps you mean well in your way. But we cannot
  • suit; we are ever at variance. You annoy me with small meddling, with
  • petty tyranny; you exasperate my temper, and make and keep me
  • passionate. As to your small maxims, your narrow rules, your little
  • prejudices, aversions, dogmas, bundle them off. Mr. Sympson, go, offer
  • them a sacrifice to the deity you worship; I'll none of them. I wash my
  • hands of the lot. I walk by another creed, light, faith, and hope than
  • you."
  • "Another creed! I believe she is an infidel."
  • "An infidel to _your_ religion, an atheist to _your_ god."
  • "_An--atheist!!!_"
  • "Your god, sir, is the world. In my eyes you too, if not an infidel, are
  • an idolater. I conceive that you ignorantly worship; in all things you
  • appear to me too superstitious. Sir, your god, your great Bel, your
  • fish-tailed Dagon, rises before me as a demon. You, and such as you,
  • have raised him to a throne, put on him a crown, given him a sceptre.
  • Behold how hideously he governs! See him busied at the work he likes
  • best--making marriages. He binds the young to the old, the strong to the
  • imbecile. He stretches out the arm of Mezentius, and fetters the dead to
  • the living. In his realm there is hatred--secret hatred; there is
  • disgust--unspoken disgust; there is treachery--family treachery; there
  • is vice--deep, deadly domestic vice. In his dominions children grow
  • unloving between parents who have never loved; infants are nursed on
  • deception from their very birth; they are reared in an atmosphere
  • corrupt with lies. Your god rules at the bridal of kings; look at your
  • royal dynasties! Your deity is the deity of foreign aristocracies;
  • analyze the blue blood of Spain! Your god is the Hymen of France; what
  • is French domestic life? All that surrounds him hastens to decay; all
  • declines and degenerates under his sceptre. _Your_ god is a masked
  • Death."
  • "This language is terrible! My daughters and you must associate no
  • longer, Miss Keeldar; there is danger in such companionship. Had I known
  • you a little earlier--but, extraordinary as I thought you, I could not
  • have believed----"
  • "Now, sir, do you begin to be aware that it is useless to scheme for me;
  • that in doing so you but sow the wind to reap the whirlwind? I sweep
  • your cobweb projects from my path, that I may pass on unsullied. I am
  • anchored on a resolve you cannot shake. My heart, my conscience shall
  • dispose of my hand--_they only_. Know this at last."
  • Mr. Sympson was becoming a little bewildered.
  • "Never heard such language!" he muttered again and again; "never was so
  • addressed in my life--never was so used!"
  • "You are quite confused, sir. You had better withdraw, or I will."
  • He rose hastily. "We must leave this place; they must pack up at once."
  • "Do not hurry my aunt and cousins; give them time."
  • "No more intercourse; she's not proper."
  • He made his way to the door. He came back for his handkerchief. He
  • dropped his snuff-box, leaving the contents scattered on the carpet; he
  • stumbled out. Tartar lay outside across the mat; Mr. Sympson almost fell
  • over him. In the climax of his exasperation he hurled an oath at the dog
  • and a coarse epithet at his mistress.
  • "Poor Mr. Sympson! he is both feeble and vulgar," said Shirley to
  • herself. "My head aches, and I am tired," she added; and leaning her
  • head upon a cushion, she softly subsided from excitement to repose. One,
  • entering the room a quarter of an hour afterwards, found her asleep.
  • When Shirley had been agitated, she generally took this natural
  • refreshment; it would come at her call.
  • The intruder paused in her unconscious presence, and said, "Miss
  • Keeldar."
  • Perhaps his voice harmonized with some dream into which she was passing.
  • It did not startle, it hardly roused her. Without opening her eyes, she
  • but turned her head a little, so that her cheek and profile, before
  • hidden by her arm, became visible. She looked rosy, happy, half smiling,
  • but her eyelashes were wet. She had wept in slumber; or perhaps, before
  • dropping asleep, a few natural tears had fallen after she had heard that
  • epithet. No man--no woman--is always strong, always able to bear up
  • against the unjust opinion, the vilifying word. Calumny, even from the
  • mouth of a fool, will sometimes cut into unguarded feelings. Shirley
  • looked like a child that had been naughty and punished, but was now
  • forgiven and at rest.
  • "Miss Keeldar," again said the voice. This time it woke her. She looked
  • up, and saw at her side Louis Moore--not close at her side, but
  • standing, with arrested step, two or three yards from her.
  • "O Mr. Moore!" she said. "I was afraid it was my uncle again: he and I
  • have quarrelled."
  • "Mr. Sympson should let you alone," was the reply. "Can he not see that
  • you are as yet far from strong?"
  • "I assure you he did not find me weak. I did not cry when he was here."
  • "He is about to evacuate Fieldhead--so he says. He is now giving orders
  • to his family. He has been in the schoolroom issuing commands in a
  • manner which, I suppose, was a continuation of that with which he has
  • harassed you."
  • "Are you and Henry to go?"
  • "I believe, as far as Henry is concerned, that was the tenor of his
  • scarcely intelligible directions; but he may change all to-morrow. He is
  • just in that mood when you cannot depend on his consistency for two
  • consecutive hours. I doubt whether he will leave you for weeks yet. To
  • myself he addressed some words which will require a little attention and
  • comment by-and-by, when I have time to bestow on them. At the moment he
  • came in I was busied with a note I had got from Mr. Yorke--so fully
  • busied that I cut short the interview with him somewhat abruptly. I left
  • him raving. Here is the note. I wish you to see it. It refers to my
  • brother Robert." And he looked at Shirley.
  • "I shall be glad to hear news of him. Is he coming home?"
  • "He is come. He is in Yorkshire. Mr. Yorke went yesterday to Stilbro' to
  • meet him."
  • "Mr. Moore, something is wrong----"
  • "Did my voice tremble? He is now at Briarmains, and I am going to see
  • him."
  • "What has occurred?"
  • "If you turn so pale I shall be sorry I have spoken. It might have been
  • worse. Robert is not dead, but much hurt."
  • "O sir, it is you who are pale. Sit down near me."
  • "Read the note. Let me open it."
  • Miss Keeldar read the note. It briefly signified that last night Robert
  • Moore had been shot at from behind the wall of Milldean plantation, at
  • the foot of the Brow; that he was wounded severely, but it was hoped not
  • fatally. Of the assassin, or assassins, nothing was known; they had
  • escaped. "No doubt," Mr. Yorke observed, "it was done in revenge. It was
  • a pity ill-will had ever been raised; but that could not be helped now."
  • "He is my only brother," said Louis, as Shirley returned the note. "I
  • cannot hear unmoved that ruffians have laid in wait for him, and shot
  • him down, like some wild beast from behind a wall."
  • "Be comforted; be hopeful. He will get better--I know he will."
  • Shirley, solicitous to soothe, held her hand over Mr. Moore's as it lay
  • on the arm of the chair. She just touched it lightly, scarce palpably.
  • "Well, give me your hand," he said. "It will be for the first time; it
  • is in a moment of calamity. Give it me."
  • Awaiting neither consent nor refusal, he took what he asked.
  • "I am going to Briarmains now," he went on. "I want you to step over to
  • the rectory and tell Caroline Helstone what has happened. Will you do
  • this? She will hear it best from you."
  • "Immediately," said Shirley, with docile promptitude. "Ought I to say
  • that there is no danger?"
  • "Say so."
  • "You will come back soon, and let me know more?"
  • "I will either come or write."
  • "Trust me for watching over Caroline. I will communicate with your
  • sister too; but doubtless she is already with Robert?"
  • "Doubtless, or will be soon. Good-morning now."
  • "You will bear up, come what may."
  • "We shall see that."
  • Shirley's fingers were obliged to withdraw from the tutor's. Louis was
  • obliged to relinquish that hand folded, clasped, hidden in his own.
  • "I thought I should have had to support her," he said, as he walked
  • towards Briarmains, "and it is she who has made me strong. That look of
  • pity, that gentle touch! No down was ever softer, no elixir more potent!
  • It lay like a snowflake; it thrilled like lightning. A thousand times I
  • have longed to possess that hand--to have it in mine. I _have_ possessed
  • it; for five minutes I held it. Her fingers and mine can never be
  • strangers more. Having met once they must meet again."
  • CHAPTER XXXII.
  • THE SCHOOLBOY AND THE WOOD-NYMPH.
  • Briarmains being nearer than the Hollow, Mr. Yorke had conveyed his
  • young comrade there. He had seen him laid in the best bed of the house,
  • as carefully as if he had been one of his own sons. The sight of his
  • blood, welling from the treacherously inflicted wound, made him indeed
  • the son of the Yorkshire gentleman's heart. The spectacle of the sudden
  • event, of the tall, straight shape prostrated in its pride across the
  • road, of the fine southern head laid low in the dust, of that youth in
  • prime flung at once before him pallid, lifeless, helpless--this was the
  • very combination of circumstances to win for the victim Mr. Yorke's
  • liveliest interest.
  • No other hand was there to raise--to aid, no other voice to question
  • kindly, no other brain to concert measures; he had to do it all himself.
  • This utter dependence of the speechless, bleeding youth (as a youth he
  • regarded him) on his benevolence secured that benevolence most
  • effectually. Well did Mr. Yorke like to have power, and to use it. He
  • had now between his hands power over a fellow-creature's life. It suited
  • him.
  • No less perfectly did it suit his saturnine better half. The incident
  • was quite in her way and to her taste. Some women would have been
  • terror-struck to see a gory man brought in over their threshold, and
  • laid down in their hall in the "howe of the night." There, you would
  • suppose, was subject-matter for hysterics. No. Mrs. Yorke went into
  • hysterics when Jessie would not leave the garden to come to her
  • knitting, or when Martin proposed starting for Australia, with a view to
  • realize freedom and escape the tyranny of Matthew; but an attempted
  • murder near her door--a half-murdered man in her best bed--set her
  • straight, cheered her spirits, gave her cap the dash of a turban.
  • Mrs. Yorke was just the woman who, while rendering miserable the
  • drudging life of a simple maid-servant, would nurse like a heroine a
  • hospital full of plague patients. She almost loved Moore. Her tough
  • heart almost yearned towards him when she found him committed to her
  • charge--left in her arms, as dependent on her as her youngest-born in
  • the cradle. Had she seen a domestic or one of her daughters give him a
  • draught of water or smooth his pillow, she would have boxed the
  • intruder's ears. She chased Jessie and Rose from the upper realm of the
  • house; she forbade the housemaids to set their foot in it.
  • Now, if the accident had happened at the rectory gates, and old Helstone
  • had taken in the martyr, neither Yorke nor his wife would have pitied
  • him. They would have adjudged him right served for his tyranny and
  • meddling. As it was, he became, for the present, the apple of their eye.
  • Strange! Louis Moore was permitted to come--to sit down on the edge of
  • the bed and lean over the pillow; to hold his brother's hand, and press
  • his pale forehead with his fraternal lips; and Mrs. Yorke bore it well.
  • She suffered him to stay half the day there; she once suffered him to
  • sit up all night in the chamber; she rose herself at five o'clock of a
  • wet November morning, and with her own hands lit the kitchen fire, and
  • made the brothers a breakfast, and served it to them herself.
  • Majestically arrayed in a boundless flannel wrapper, a shawl, and her
  • nightcap, she sat and watched them eat, as complacently as a hen beholds
  • her chickens feed. Yet she gave the cook warning that day for venturing
  • to make and carry up to Mr. Moore a basin of sago-gruel; and the
  • housemaid lost her favour because, when Mr. Louis was departing, she
  • brought him his surtout aired from the kitchen, and, like a "forward
  • piece" as she was, helped him on with it, and accepted in return a
  • smile, a "Thank you, my girl," and a shilling. Two ladies called one
  • day, pale and anxious, and begged earnestly, humbly, to be allowed to
  • see Mr. Moore one instant. Mrs. Yorke hardened her heart, and sent them
  • packing--not without opprobrium.
  • But how was it when Hortense Moore came? Not so bad as might have been
  • expected. The whole family of the Moores really seemed to suit Mrs.
  • Yorke so as no other family had ever suited her. Hortense and she
  • possessed an exhaustless mutual theme of conversation in the corrupt
  • propensities of servants. Their views of this class were similar; they
  • watched them with the same suspicion, and judged them with the same
  • severity. Hortense, too, from the very first showed no manner of
  • jealousy of Mrs. Yorke's attentions to Robert--she let her keep the post
  • of nurse with little interference; and, for herself, found ceaseless
  • occupation in fidgeting about the house, holding the kitchen under
  • surveillance, reporting what passed there, and, in short, making herself
  • generally useful. Visitors they both of them agreed in excluding
  • sedulously from the sickroom. They held the young mill-owner captive,
  • and hardly let the air breathe or the sun shine on him.
  • Mr. MacTurk, the surgeon to whom Moore's case had been committed,
  • pronounced his wound of a dangerous, but, he trusted, not of a hopeless
  • character. At first he wished to place with him a nurse of his own
  • selection; but this neither Mrs. Yorke nor Hortense would hear of. They
  • promised faithful observance of directions. He was left, therefore, for
  • the present in their hands.
  • Doubtless they executed the trust to the best of their ability; but
  • something got wrong. The bandages were displaced or tampered with; great
  • loss of blood followed. MacTurk, being summoned, came with steed afoam.
  • He was one of those surgeons whom it is dangerous to vex--abrupt in his
  • best moods, in his worst savage. On seeing Moore's state he relieved his
  • feelings by a little flowery language, with which it is not necessary to
  • strew the present page. A bouquet or two of the choicest blossoms fell
  • on the unperturbed head of one Mr. Graves, a stony young assistant he
  • usually carried about with him; with a second nosegay he gifted another
  • young gentleman in his train--an interesting fac-simile of himself,
  • being indeed his own son; but the full _corbeille_ of blushing bloom
  • fell to the lot of meddling womankind, _en masse_.
  • For the best part of one winter night himself and satellites were busied
  • about Moore. There at his bedside, shut up alone with him in his
  • chamber, they wrought and wrangled over his exhausted frame. They three
  • were on one side of the bed, and Death on the other. The conflict was
  • sharp; it lasted till day broke, when the balance between the
  • belligerents seemed so equal that both parties might have claimed the
  • victory.
  • At dawn Graves and young MacTurk were left in charge of the patient,
  • while the senior went himself in search of additional strength, and
  • secured it in the person of Mrs. Horsfall, the best nurse on his staff.
  • To this woman he gave Moore in charge, with the sternest injunctions
  • respecting the responsibility laid on her shoulders. She took this
  • responsibility stolidly, as she did also the easy-chair at the bedhead.
  • That moment she began her reign.
  • Mrs. Horsfall had one virtue--orders received from MacTurk she obeyed to
  • the letter. The ten commandments were less binding in her eyes than her
  • surgeon's dictum. In other respects she was no woman, but a dragon.
  • Hortense Moore fell effaced before her; Mrs. Yorke withdrew--crushed;
  • yet both these women were personages of some dignity in their own
  • estimation, and of some bulk in the estimation of others. Perfectly
  • cowed by the breadth, the height, the bone, and the brawn of Mrs.
  • Horsfall, they retreated to the back parlour. She, for her part, sat
  • upstairs when she liked, and downstairs when she preferred it. She took
  • her dram three times a day, and her pipe of tobacco four times.
  • As to Moore, no one now ventured to inquire about him. Mrs. Horsfall had
  • him at dry-nurse. It was she who was to do for him, and the general
  • conjecture now ran that she did for him accordingly.
  • Morning and evening MacTurk came to see him. His case, thus complicated
  • by a new mischance, was become one of interest in the surgeon's eyes. He
  • regarded him as a damaged piece of clockwork, which it would be
  • creditable to his skill to set agoing again. Graves and young
  • MacTurk--Moore's sole other visitors--contemplated him in the light in
  • which they were wont to contemplate the occupant for the time being of
  • the dissecting-room at Stilbro' Infirmary.
  • Robert Moore had a pleasant time of it--in pain, in danger, too weak to
  • move, almost too weak to speak, a sort of giantess his keeper, the three
  • surgeons his sole society. Thus he lay through the diminishing days and
  • lengthening nights of the whole drear month of November.
  • In the commencement of his captivity Moore used feebly to resist Mrs.
  • Horsfall. He hated the sight of her rough bulk, and dreaded the contact
  • of her hard hands; but she taught him docility in a trice. She made no
  • account whatever of his six feet, his manly thews and sinews; she turned
  • him in his bed as another woman would have turned a babe in its cradle.
  • When he was good she addressed him as "my dear" and "honey," and when he
  • was bad she sometimes shook him. Did he attempt to speak when MacTurk
  • was there, she lifted her hand and bade him "Hush!" like a nurse
  • checking a forward child. If she had not smoked, if she had not taken
  • gin, it would have been better, he thought; but she did both. Once, in
  • her absence, he intimated to MacTurk that "that woman was a
  • dram-drinker."
  • "Pooh! my dear sir, they are all so," was the reply he got for his
  • pains. "But Horsfall has this virtue," added the surgeon--"drunk or
  • sober, she always remembers to obey _me_."
  • * * * * *
  • At length the latter autumn passed; its fogs, its rains withdrew from
  • England their mourning and their tears; its winds swept on to sigh over
  • lands far away. Behind November came deep winter--clearness, stillness,
  • frost accompanying.
  • A calm day had settled into a crystalline evening. The world wore a
  • North Pole colouring; all its lights and tints looked like the
  • _reflets_[A] of white, or violet, or pale green gems. The hills wore a
  • lilac blue; the setting sun had purple in its red; the sky was ice, all
  • silvered azure; when the stars rose, they were of white crystal, not
  • gold; gray, or cerulean, or faint emerald hues--cool, pure, and
  • transparent--tinged the mass of the landscape.
  • [A] Find me an English word as good, reader, and I will gladly
  • dispense with the French word. "Reflections" won't do.
  • What is this by itself in a wood no longer green, no longer even russet,
  • a wood neutral tint--this dark blue moving object? Why, it is a
  • schoolboy--a Briarfield grammar-school boy--who has left his companions,
  • now trudging home by the highroad, and is seeking a certain tree, with a
  • certain mossy mound at its root, convenient as a seat. Why is he
  • lingering here? The air is cold and the time wears late. He sits down.
  • What is he thinking about? Does he feel the chaste charm Nature wears
  • to-night? A pearl-white moon smiles through the gray trees; does he care
  • for her smile?
  • Impossible to say; for he is silent, and his countenance does not speak.
  • As yet it is no mirror to reflect sensation, but rather a mask to
  • conceal it. This boy is a stripling of fifteen--slight, and tall of his
  • years. In his face there is as little of amenity as of servility, his
  • eye seems prepared to note any incipient attempt to control or overreach
  • him, and the rest of his features indicate faculties alert for
  • resistance. Wise ushers avoid unnecessary interference with that lad.
  • To break him in by severity would be a useless attempt; to win him by
  • flattery would be an effort worse than useless. He is best let alone.
  • Time will educate and experience train him.
  • Professedly Martin Yorke (it is a young Yorke, of course) tramples on
  • the name of poetry. Talk sentiment to him, and you would be answered by
  • sarcasm. Here he is, wandering alone, waiting duteously on Nature, while
  • she unfolds a page of stern, of silent, and of solemn poetry beneath his
  • attentive gaze.
  • Being seated, he takes from his satchel a book--not the Latin grammar,
  • but a contraband volume of fairy tales. There will be light enough yet
  • for an hour to serve his keen young vision. Besides, the moon waits on
  • him; her beam, dim and vague as yet, fills the glade where he sits.
  • He reads. He is led into a solitary mountain region; all round him is
  • rude and desolate, shapeless, and almost colourless. He hears bells
  • tinkle on the wind. Forth-riding from the formless folds of the mist
  • dawns on him the brightest vision--a green-robed lady, on a snow-white
  • palfrey. He sees her dress, her gems, and her steed. She arrests him
  • with some mysterious question. He is spell-bound, and must follow her
  • into fairyland.
  • A second legend bears him to the sea-shore. There tumbles in a strong
  • tide, boiling at the base of dizzy cliffs. It rains and blows. A reef of
  • rocks, black and rough, stretches far into the sea. All along, and
  • among, and above these crags dash and flash, sweep and leap, swells,
  • wreaths, drifts of snowy spray. Some lone wanderer is out on these
  • rocks, treading with cautious step the wet, wild seaweed; glancing down
  • into hollows where the brine lies fathoms deep and emerald clear, and
  • seeing there wilder and stranger and huger vegetation than is found on
  • land, with treasure of shells--some green, some purple, some
  • pearly--clustered in the curls of the snaky plants. He hears a cry.
  • Looking up and forward, he sees, at the bleak point of the reef, a tall,
  • pale thing--shaped like man, but made of spray--transparent, tremulous,
  • awful. It stands not alone. They are all human figures that wanton in
  • the rocks--a crowd of foam-women--a band of white, evanescent Nereids.
  • Hush! Shut the book; hide it in the satchel. Martin hears a tread. He
  • listens. No--yes. Once more the dead leaves, lightly crushed, rustle on
  • the wood path. Martin watches; the trees part, and a woman issues
  • forth.
  • She is a lady dressed in dark silk, a veil covering her face. Martin
  • never met a lady in this wood before--nor any female, save, now and
  • then, a village girl come to gather nuts. To-night the apparition does
  • not displease him. He observes, as she approaches, that she is neither
  • old nor plain, but, on the contrary, very youthful; and, but that he now
  • recognizes her for one whom he has often wilfully pronounced ugly, he
  • would deem that he discovered traits of beauty behind the thin gauze of
  • that veil.
  • She passes him and says nothing. He knew she would. All women are proud
  • monkeys, and he knows no more conceited doll than that Caroline
  • Helstone. The thought is hardly hatched in his mind when the lady
  • retraces those two steps she had got beyond him, and raising her veil,
  • reposes her glance on his face, while she softly asks, "Are you one of
  • Mr. Yorke's sons?"
  • No human evidence would ever have been able to persuade Martin Yorke
  • that he blushed when thus addressed; yet blush he did, to the ears.
  • "I am," he said bluntly, and encouraged himself to wonder,
  • superciliously, what would come next.
  • "You are Martin, I think?" was the observation that followed.
  • It could not have been more felicitous. It was a simple sentence--very
  • artlessly, a little timidly, pronounced; but it chimed in harmony to the
  • youth's nature. It stilled him like a note of music.
  • Martin had a keen sense of his personality; he felt it right and
  • sensible that the girl should discriminate him from his brothers. Like
  • his father, he hated ceremony. It was acceptable to hear a lady address
  • him as "Martin," and not Mr. Martin or Master Martin, which form would
  • have lost her his good graces for ever. Worse, if possible, than
  • ceremony was the other extreme of slipshod familiarity. The slight tone
  • of bashfulness, the scarcely perceptible hesitation, was considered
  • perfectly in place.
  • "I am Martin," he said.
  • "Are your father and mother well?" (it was lucky she did not say _papa_
  • and _mamma_; that would have undone all); "and Rose and Jessie?"
  • "I suppose so."
  • "My cousin Hortense is still at Briarmains?"
  • "Oh yes."
  • Martin gave a comic half-smile and demi-groan. The half-smile was
  • responded to by the lady, who could guess in what sort of odour Hortense
  • was likely to be held by the young Yorkes.
  • "Does your mother like her?"
  • "They suit so well about the servants they can't help liking each
  • other."
  • "It is cold to-night."
  • "Why are you out so late?"
  • "I lost my way in this wood."
  • Now, indeed, Martin allowed himself a refreshing laugh of scorn.
  • "Lost your way in the mighty forest of Briarmains! You deserve never
  • more to find it."
  • "I never was here before, and I believe I am trespassing now. You might
  • inform against me if you chose, Martin, and have me fined. It is your
  • father's wood."
  • "I should think I knew that. But since you are so simple as to lose your
  • way, I will guide you out."
  • "You need not. I have got into the track now. I shall be right. Martin"
  • (a little quickly), "how is Mr. Moore?"
  • Martin had heard certain rumours; it struck him that it might be amusing
  • to make an experiment.
  • "Going to die. Nothing can save him. All hope flung overboard!"
  • She put her veil aside. She looked into his eyes, and said, "To die!"
  • "To die. All along of the women, my mother and the rest. They did
  • something about his bandages that finished everything. He would have got
  • better but for them. I am sure they should be arrested, cribbed, tried,
  • and brought in for Botany Bay, at the very least."
  • The questioner, perhaps, did nor hear this judgment. She stood
  • motionless. In two minutes, without another word, she moved forwards; no
  • good-night, no further inquiry. This was not amusing, nor what Martin
  • had calculated on. He expected something dramatic and demonstrative. It
  • was hardly worth while to frighten the girl if she would not entertain
  • him in return. He called, "Miss Helstone!"
  • She did not hear or turn. He hastened after and overtook her.
  • "Come; are you uneasy about what I said?"
  • "You know nothing about death, Martin; you are too young for me to talk
  • to concerning such a thing."
  • "Did you believe me? It's all flummery! Moore eats like three men. They
  • are always making sago or tapioca or something good for him. I never go
  • into the kitchen but there is a saucepan on the fire, cooking him some
  • dainty. I think I will play the old soldier, and be fed on the fat of
  • the land like him."
  • "Martin! Martin!" Here her voice trembled, and she stopped.
  • "It is exceedingly wrong of you, Martin. You have almost killed me."
  • Again she stopped. She leaned against a tree, trembling, shuddering, and
  • as pale as death.
  • Martin contemplated her with inexpressible curiosity. In one sense it
  • was, as he would have expressed it, "nuts" to him to see this. It told
  • him so much, and he was beginning to have a great relish for discovering
  • secrets. In another sense it reminded him of what he had once felt when
  • he had heard a blackbird lamenting for her nestlings, which Matthew had
  • crushed with a stone, and that was not a pleasant feeling. Unable to
  • find anything very appropriate to _say_ in order to comfort her, he
  • began to cast about in his mind what he could _do_. He smiled. The lad's
  • smile gave wondrous transparency to his physiognomy.
  • "Eureka!" he cried. "I'll set all straight by-and-by. You are better
  • now, Miss Caroline. Walk forward," he urged.
  • Not reflecting that it would be more difficult for Miss Helstone than
  • for himself to climb a wall or penetrate a hedge, he piloted her by a
  • short cut which led to no gate. The consequence was he had to help her
  • over some formidable obstacles, and while he railed at her for
  • helplessness, he perfectly liked to feel himself of use.
  • "Martin, before we separate, assure me seriously, and on your word of
  • honour, that Mr. Moore is better."
  • "How very much you think of that Moore!"
  • "No--but--many of his friends may ask me, and I wish to be able to give
  • an authentic answer."
  • "You may tell them he is well enough, only idle. You may tell them that
  • he takes mutton chops for dinner, and the best of arrowroot for supper.
  • I intercepted a basin myself one night on its way upstairs, and ate half
  • of it."
  • "And who waits on him, Martin? who nurses him?"
  • "Nurses him? The great baby! Why, a woman as round and big as our
  • largest water-butt--a rough, hard-favoured old girl. I make no doubt
  • she leads him a rich life. Nobody else is let near him. He is chiefly in
  • the dark. It is my belief she knocks him about terribly in that chamber.
  • I listen at the wall sometimes when I am in bed, and I think I hear her
  • thumping him. You should see her fist. She could hold half a dozen hands
  • like yours in her one palm. After all, notwithstanding the chops and
  • jellies he gets, I would not be in his shoes. In fact, it is my private
  • opinion that she eats most of what goes up on the tray to Mr. Moore. I
  • wish she may not be starving him."
  • Profound silence and meditation on Caroline's part, and a sly
  • watchfulness on Martin's.
  • "You never see him, I suppose, Martin?"
  • "I? No. I don't care to see him, for my own part."
  • Silence again.
  • "Did not you come to our house once with Mrs. Pryor, about five weeks
  • since, to ask after him?" again inquired Martin.
  • "Yes."
  • "I dare say you wished to be shown upstairs?"
  • "We _did_ wish it. We entreated it; but your mother declined."
  • "Ay! she declined. I heard it all. She treated you as it is her pleasure
  • to treat visitors now and then. She behaved to you rudely and harshly."
  • "She was not kind; for you know, Martin, we are relations, and it is
  • natural we should take an interest in Mr. Moore. But here we must part;
  • we are at your father's gate."
  • "Very well, what of that? I shall walk home with you."
  • "They will miss you, and wonder where you are."
  • "Let them. I can take care of myself, I suppose."
  • Martin knew that he had already incurred the penalty of a lecture, and
  • dry bread for his tea. No matter; the evening had furnished him with an
  • adventure. It was better than muffins and toast.
  • He walked home with Caroline. On the way he promised to see Mr. Moore,
  • in spite of the dragon who guarded his chamber, and appointed an hour on
  • the next day when Caroline was to come to Briarmains Wood and get
  • tidings of him. He would meet her at a certain tree. The scheme led to
  • nothing; still he liked it.
  • Having reached home, the dry bread and the lecture were duly
  • administered to him, and he was dismissed to bed at an early hour. He
  • accepted his punishment with the toughest stoicism.
  • Ere ascending to his chamber he paid a secret visit to the dining-room,
  • a still, cold, stately apartment, seldom used, for the family
  • customarily dined in the back parlour. He stood before the mantelpiece,
  • and lifted his candle to two pictures hung above--female heads: one, a
  • type of serene beauty, happy and innocent; the other, more lovely, but
  • forlorn and desperate.
  • "She looked like _that_," he said, gazing on the latter sketch, "when
  • she sobbed, turned white, and leaned against the tree."
  • "I suppose," he pursued, when he was in his room, and seated on the edge
  • of his pallet-bed--"I suppose she is what they call '_in love_'--yes,
  • _in love_ with that long thing in the next chamber. Whisht! is that
  • Horsfall clattering him? I wonder he does not yell out. It really sounds
  • as if she had fallen on him tooth and nail; but I suppose she is making
  • the bed. I saw her at it once. She hit into the mattresses as if she was
  • boxing. It is queer, Zillah (they call her Zillah)--Zillah Horsfall is a
  • woman, and Caroline Helstone is a woman; they are two individuals of the
  • same species--not much alike though. Is she a pretty girl, that
  • Caroline? I suspect she is; very nice to look at--something so clear in
  • her face, so soft in her eyes. I approve of her looking at me; it does
  • me good. She has long eyelashes. Their shadow seems to rest where she
  • gazes, and to instil peace and thought. If she behaves well, and
  • continues to suit me as she has suited me to-day, I may do her a good
  • turn. I rather relish the notion of circumventing my mother and that
  • ogress old Horsfall. Not that I like humouring Moore; but whatever I do
  • I'll be paid for, and in coin of my own choosing. I know what reward I
  • will claim--one displeasing to Moore, and agreeable to myself."
  • He turned into bed.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII.
  • MARTIN'S TACTICS.
  • It was necessary to the arrangement of Martin's plan that he should stay
  • at home that day. Accordingly, he found no appetite for breakfast, and
  • just about school-time took a severe pain about his heart, which
  • rendered it advisable that, instead of setting out to the grammar school
  • with Mark, he should succeed to his father's arm-chair by the fireside,
  • and also to his morning paper. This point being satisfactorily settled,
  • and Mark being gone to Mr. Summer's class, and Matthew and Mr. Yorke
  • withdrawn to the counting-house, three other exploits--nay,
  • four--remained to be achieved.
  • The first of these was to realize the breakfast he had not yet tasted,
  • and with which his appetite of fifteen could ill afford to dispense; the
  • second, third, fourth, to get his mother, Miss Moore, and Mrs. Horsfall
  • successfully out of the way before four o'clock that afternoon.
  • The first was, for the present, the most pressing, since the work before
  • him demanded an amount of energy which the present empty condition of
  • his youthful stomach did not seem likely to supply.
  • Martin knew the way to the larder, and knowing this way he took it. The
  • servants were in the kitchen, breakfasting solemnly with closed doors;
  • his mother and Miss Moore were airing themselves on the lawn, and
  • discussing the closed doors aforesaid. Martin, safe in the larder, made
  • fastidious selection from its stores. His breakfast had been delayed; he
  • was determined it should be _recherché_. It appeared to him that a
  • variety on his usual somewhat insipid fare of bread and milk was both
  • desirable and advisable; the savoury and the salutary he thought might
  • be combined. There was store of rosy apples laid in straw upon a shelf;
  • he picked out three. There was pastry upon a dish; he selected an
  • apricot puff and a damson tart. On the plain household bread his eye
  • did not dwell; but he surveyed with favour some currant tea-cakes, and
  • condescended to make choice of one. Thanks to his clasp-knife, he was
  • able to appropriate a wing of fowl and a slice of ham; a cantlet of cold
  • custard-pudding he thought would harmonize with these articles; and
  • having made this final addition to his booty, he at length sallied forth
  • into the hall.
  • He was already half-way across--three steps more would have anchored him
  • in the harbour of the back parlour--when the front door opened, and
  • there stood Matthew. Better far had it been the Old Gentleman, in full
  • equipage of horns, hoofs, and tail.
  • Matthew, sceptic and scoffer, had already failed to subscribe a prompt
  • belief in that pain about the heart. He had muttered some words, amongst
  • which the phrase "shamming Abraham" had been very distinctly audible,
  • and the succession to the armchair and newspaper had appeared to affect
  • him with mental spasms. The spectacle now before him--the apples, the
  • tarts, the tea-cakes, the fowl, ham, and pudding--offered evidence but
  • too well calculated to inflate his opinion of his own sagacity.
  • Martin paused _interdit_ one minute, one instant; the next he knew his
  • ground, and pronounced all well. With the true perspicacity _des âmes
  • élites_, he at once saw how this at first sight untoward event might be
  • turned to excellent account. He saw how it might be so handled as to
  • secure the accomplishment of his second task--namely, the disposal of
  • his mother. He knew that a collision between him and Matthew always
  • suggested to Mrs. Yorke the propriety of a fit of hysterics. He further
  • knew that, on the principle of calm succeeding to storm, after a morning
  • of hysterics his mother was sure to indulge in an afternoon of bed. This
  • would accommodate him perfectly.
  • The collision duly took place in the hall. A dry laugh, an insulting
  • sneer, a contemptuous taunt, met by a nonchalant but most cutting reply,
  • were the signals. They rushed at it. Martin, who usually made little
  • noise on these occasions, made a great deal now. In flew the servants,
  • Mrs. Yorke, Miss Moore. No female hand could separate them. Mr. Yorke
  • was summoned.
  • "Sons," said he, "one of you must leave my roof if this occurs again. I
  • will have no Cain and Abel strife here."
  • Martin now allowed himself to be taken off. He had been hurt; he was the
  • youngest and slightest. He was quite cool, in no passion; he even
  • smiled, content that the most difficult part of the labour he had set
  • himself was over.
  • Once he seemed to flag in the course of the morning.
  • "It is not worth while to bother myself for that Caroline," he remarked.
  • But a quarter of an hour afterwards he was again in the dining-room,
  • looking at the head with dishevelled tresses, and eyes turbid with
  • despair.
  • "Yes," he said, "I made her sob, shudder, almost faint. I'll see her
  • smile before I've done with her; besides, I want to outwit all these
  • womenites."
  • Directly after dinner Mrs. Yorke fulfilled her son's calculation by
  • withdrawing to her chamber. Now for Hortense.
  • That lady was just comfortably settled to stocking-mending in the back
  • parlour, when Martin--laying down a book which, stretched on the sofa
  • (he was still indisposed, according to his own account), he had been
  • perusing in all the voluptuous ease of a yet callow pacha--lazily
  • introduced some discourse about Sarah, the maid at the Hollow. In the
  • course of much verbal meandering he insinuated information that this
  • damsel was said to have three suitors--Frederic Murgatroyd, Jeremiah
  • Pighills, and John-of-Mally's-of-Hannah's-of-Deb's; and that Miss Mann
  • had affirmed she knew for a fact that, now the girl was left in sole
  • charge of the cottage, she often had her swains to meals, and
  • entertained them with the best the house afforded.
  • It needed no more. Hortense could not have lived another hour without
  • betaking herself to the scene of these nefarious transactions, and
  • inspecting the state of matters in person. Mrs. Horsfall remained.
  • Martin, master of the field now, extracted from his mother's work-basket
  • a bunch of keys; with these he opened the sideboard cupboard, produced
  • thence a black bottle and a small glass, placed them on the table,
  • nimbly mounted the stairs, made for Mr. Moore's door, tapped; the nurse
  • opened.
  • "If you please, ma'am, you are invited to step into the back parlour and
  • take some refreshment. You will not be disturbed; the family are out."
  • He watched her down; he watched her in; himself shut the door. He knew
  • she was safe.
  • The hard work was done; now for the pleasure. He snatched his cap, and
  • away for the wood.
  • It was yet but half-past three. It had been a fine morning, but the sky
  • looked dark now. It was beginning to snow; the wind blew cold; the wood
  • looked dismal, the old tree grim. Yet Martin approved the shadow on his
  • path. He found a charm in the spectral aspect of the doddered oak.
  • He had to wait. To and fro he walked, while the flakes fell faster; and
  • the wind, which at first had but moaned, pitifully howled.
  • "She is long in coming," he muttered, as he glanced along the narrow
  • track. "I wonder," he subjoined, "what I wish to see her so much for?
  • She is not coming for me. But I have power over her, and I want her to
  • come that I may use that power."
  • He continued his walk.
  • "Now," he resumed, when a further period had elapsed, "if she fails to
  • come, I shall hate and scorn her."
  • It struck four. He heard the church clock far away. A step so quick, so
  • light, that, but for the rustling of leaves, it would scarcely have
  • sounded on the wood-walk, checked his impatience. The wind blew fiercely
  • now, and the thickening white storm waxed bewildering; but on she came,
  • and not dismayed.
  • "Well, Martin," she said eagerly, "how is he?"
  • "It is queer how she thinks of _him_," reflected Martin. "The blinding
  • snow and bitter cold are nothing to her, I believe; yet she is but a
  • 'chitty-faced creature,' as my mother would say. I could find in my
  • heart to wish I had a cloak to wrap her in."
  • Thus meditating to himself, he neglected to answer Miss Helstone.
  • "You have seen him?"
  • "No."
  • "Oh! you promised you would."
  • "I mean to do better by you than that. Didn't I say _I_ don't care to
  • see him?"
  • "But now it will be so long before I get to know any thing certain about
  • him, and I am sick of waiting. Martin, _do_ see him, and give him
  • Caroline Helstone's regards, and say she wished to know how he was, and
  • if anything could be done for his comfort."
  • "I won't."
  • "You are changed. You were so friendly last night."
  • "Come, we must not stand in this wood; it is too cold."
  • "But before I go promise me to come again to-morrow with news."
  • "No such thing. I am much too delicate to make and keep such
  • appointments in the winter season. If you knew what a pain I had in my
  • chest this morning, and how I went without breakfast, and was knocked
  • down besides, you'd feel the impropriety of bringing me here in the
  • snow. Come, I say."
  • "Are you really delicate, Martin?"
  • "Don't I look so?"
  • "You have rosy cheeks."
  • "That's hectic. Will you come--or you won't?"
  • "Where?"
  • "With me. I was a fool not to bring a cloak. I would have made you
  • cosy."
  • "You are going home; my nearest road lies in the opposite direction."
  • "Put your arm through mine; I'll take care of you."
  • "But the wall--the hedge--it is such hard work climbing, and you are too
  • slender and young to help me without hurting yourself."
  • "You shall go through the gate."
  • "But----"
  • "But, but--will you trust me or not?"
  • She looked into his face.
  • "I think I will. Anything rather than return as anxious as I came."
  • "I can't answer for that. This, however, I promise you: be ruled by me,
  • and you shall see Moore yourself."
  • "See him myself?"
  • "Yourself."
  • "But, dear Martin, does he know?"
  • "Ah! I'm dear now. No, he doesn't know."
  • "And your mother and the others?"
  • "All is right."
  • Caroline fell into a long, silent fit of musing, but still she walked on
  • with her guide. They came in sight of Briarmains.
  • "Have you made up your mind?" he asked.
  • She was silent.
  • "Decide; we are just on the spot. I _won't_ see him--that I tell
  • you--except to announce your arrival."
  • "Martin, you are a strange boy, and this is a strange step; but all I
  • feel _is_ and _has_ been, for a long time, strange. I will see him."
  • "Having said that, you will neither hesitate nor retract?"
  • "No."
  • "Here we are, then. Do not be afraid of passing the parlour window; no
  • one will see you. My father and Matthew are at the mill, Mark is at
  • school, the servants are in the back kitchen, Miss Moore is at the
  • cottage, my mother in her bed, and Mrs. Horsfall in paradise. Observe--I
  • need not ring. I open the door; the hall is empty, the staircase quiet;
  • so is the gallery. The whole house and all its inhabitants are under a
  • spell, which I will not break till you are gone."
  • "Martin, I trust you."
  • "You never said a better word. Let me take your shawl. I will shake off
  • the snow and dry it for you. You are cold and wet. Never mind; there is
  • a fire upstairs. Are you ready?"
  • "Yes."
  • "Follow me."
  • He left his shoes on the mat, mounted the stair unshod. Caroline stole
  • after, with noiseless step. There was a gallery, and there was a
  • passage; at the end of that passage Martin paused before a door and
  • tapped. He had to tap twice--thrice. A voice, known to one listener, at
  • last said, "Come in."
  • The boy entered briskly.
  • "Mr. Moore, a lady called to inquire after you. None of the women were
  • about. It is washing-day, and the maids are over the crown of the head
  • in soap-suds in the back kitchen, so I asked her to step up."
  • "Up here, sir?"
  • "Up here, sir; but if you object, she shall go down again."
  • "Is this a place or am I a person to bring a lady to, you absurd lad?"
  • "No; so I'll take her off."
  • "Martin, you will stay here. Who is she?"
  • "Your grandmother from that château on the Scheldt Miss Moore talks
  • about."
  • "Martin," said the softest whisper at the door, "don't be foolish."
  • "Is she there?" inquired Moore hastily. He had caught an imperfect
  • sound.
  • "She is there, fit to faint. She is standing on the mat, shocked at your
  • want of filial affection."
  • "Martin, you are an evil cross between an imp and a page. What is she
  • like?"
  • "More like me than you; for she is young and beautiful."
  • "You are to show her forward. Do you hear?"
  • "Come, Miss Caroline."
  • "Miss Caroline!" repeated Moore.
  • And when Miss Caroline entered she was encountered in the middle of the
  • chamber by a tall, thin, wasted figure, who took both her hands.
  • "I give you a quarter of an hour," said Martin, as he withdrew, "no
  • more. Say what you have to say in that time. Till it is past I will wait
  • in the gallery; nothing shall approach; I'll see you safe away. Should
  • you persist in staying longer, I leave you to your fate."
  • He shut the door. In the gallery he was as elate as a king. He had never
  • been engaged in an adventure he liked so well, for no adventure had ever
  • invested him with so much importance or inspired him with so much
  • interest.
  • "You are come at last," said the meagre man, gazing on his visitress
  • with hollow eyes.
  • "Did you expect me before?"
  • "For a month, near two months, we have been very near; and I have been
  • in sad pain, and danger, and misery, Cary."
  • "I could not come."
  • "Couldn't you? But the rectory and Briarmains are very near--not two
  • miles apart."
  • There was pain and there was pleasure in the girl's face as she listened
  • to these implied reproaches. It was sweet, it was bitter to defend
  • herself.
  • "When I say I could not come, I mean I could not see you; for I came
  • with mamma the very day we heard what had happened. Mr. MacTurk then
  • told us it was impossible to admit any stranger."
  • "But afterwards--every fine afternoon these many weeks past I have
  • waited and listened. Something here, Cary"--laying his hand on his
  • breast--"told me it was impossible but that you should think of me. Not
  • that I merit thought; but we are old acquaintance--we are cousins."
  • "I came again, Robert; mamma and I came again."
  • "Did you? Come, that is worth hearing. Since you came again, we will sit
  • down and talk about it."
  • They sat down. Caroline drew her chair up to his. The air was now dark
  • with snow; an Iceland blast was driving it wildly. This pair neither
  • heard the long "wuthering" rush, nor saw the white burden it drifted.
  • Each seemed conscious but of one thing--the presence of the other.
  • "So mamma and you came again?"
  • "And Mrs. Yorke did treat us strangely. We asked to see you. 'No,' said
  • she, 'not in my house. I am at present responsible for his life; it
  • shall not be forfeited for half an hour's idle gossip.' But I must not
  • tell you all she said; it was very disagreeable. However, we came yet
  • again--mamma, Miss Keeldar, and I. This time we thought we should
  • conquer, as we were three against one, and Shirley was on our side. But
  • Mrs. Yorke opened such a battery."
  • Moore smiled. "What did she say?"
  • "Things that astonished us. Shirley laughed at last; I cried; mamma was
  • seriously annoyed. We were all three driven from the field. Since that
  • time I have only walked once a day past the house, just for the
  • satisfaction of looking up at your window, which I could distinguish by
  • the drawn curtains. I really dared not come in."
  • "I _have_ wished for you, Caroline."
  • "I did not know that; I never dreamt one instant that you thought of me.
  • If I had but most distantly imagined such a possibility----"
  • "Mrs. Yorke would still have beaten you."
  • "She would not. Stratagem should have been tried, if persuasion failed.
  • I would have come to the kitchen door; the servants should have let me
  • in, and I would have walked straight upstairs. In fact, it was far more
  • the fear of intrusion--the fear of yourself--that baffled me than the
  • fear of Mrs. Yorke."
  • "Only last night I despaired of ever seeing you again. Weakness has
  • wrought terrible depression in me--terrible depression."
  • "And you sit alone?"
  • "Worse than alone."
  • "But you must be getting better, since you can leave your bed?"
  • "I doubt whether I shall live. I see nothing for it, after such
  • exhaustion, but decline."
  • "You--you shall go home to the Hollow."
  • "Dreariness would accompany, nothing cheerful come near me."
  • "I _will_ alter this. This _shall_ be altered, were there ten Mrs.
  • Yorkes to do battle with."
  • "Cary, you make me smile."
  • "Do smile; smile again. Shall I tell you what I should like?"
  • "Tell me anything--only keep talking. I am Saul; but for music I should
  • perish."
  • "I should like you to be brought to the rectory, and given to me and
  • mamma."
  • "A precious gift! I have not laughed since they shot me till now."
  • "Do you suffer pain, Robert?"
  • "Not so much pain now; but I am hopelessly weak, and the state of my
  • mind is inexpressible--dark, barren, impotent. Do you not read it all in
  • my face? I look a mere ghost."
  • "Altered; yet I should have known you anywhere. But I understand your
  • feelings; I experienced something like it. Since we met, I too have been
  • very ill."
  • "_Very_ ill?"
  • "I thought I should die. The tale of my life seemed told. Every night,
  • just at midnight, I used to wake from awful dreams; and the book lay
  • open before me at the last page, where was written 'Finis.' I had
  • strange feelings."
  • "You speak my experience."
  • "I believed I should never see you again; and I grew so thin--as thin as
  • you are now. I could do nothing for myself--neither rise nor lie down;
  • and I could not eat. Yet you see I am better."
  • "Comforter--sad as sweet. I am too feeble to say what I feel; but while
  • you speak I _do_ feel."
  • "Here I am at your side, where I thought never more to be. Here I speak
  • to you. I see you listen to me willingly--look at me kindly. Did I count
  • on that? I despaired."
  • Moore sighed--a sigh so deep it was nearly a groan. He covered his eyes
  • with his hand.
  • "May I be spared to make some atonement."
  • Such was his prayer.
  • "And for what?"
  • "We will not touch on it now, Cary; unmanned as I am, I have not the
  • power to cope with such a topic. Was Mrs. Pryor with you during your
  • illness?"
  • "Yes"--Caroline smiled brightly--"you know she is mamma?"
  • "I have heard--Hortense told me; but that tale too I will receive from
  • yourself. Does she add to your happiness?"
  • "What! mamma? She is _dear_ to me; _how_ dear I cannot say. I was
  • altogether weary, and she held me up."
  • "I deserve to hear that in a moment when I can scarce lift my hand to my
  • head. I deserve it."
  • "It is no reproach against you."
  • "It is a coal of fire heaped on my head; and so is every word you
  • address to me, and every look that lights your sweet face. Come still
  • nearer, Lina; and give me your hand--if my thin fingers do not scare
  • you."
  • She took those thin fingers between her two little hands; she bent her
  • head _et les effleura de ses lèvres_. (I put that in French because the
  • word _effleurer_ is an exquisite word.) Moore was much moved. A large
  • tear or two coursed down his hollow cheek.
  • "I'll keep these things in my heart, Cary; that kiss I will put by, and
  • you shall hear of it again one day."
  • "Come out!" cried Martin, opening the door--"come away; you have had
  • twenty minutes instead of a quarter of an hour."
  • "She will not stir yet, you hempseed."
  • "I dare not stay longer, Robert."
  • "Can you promise to return?"
  • "No, she can't," responded Martin. "The thing mustn't become customary.
  • I can't be troubled. It's very well for once; I'll not have it
  • repeated."
  • "_You_'ll not have it repeated."
  • "Hush! don't vex him; we could not have met to-day but for him. But I
  • will come again, if it is your wish that I should come."
  • "It _is_ my wish--my _one_ wish--almost the only wish I can feel."
  • "Come this minute. My mother has coughed, got up, set her feet on the
  • floor. Let her only catch you on the stairs, Miss Caroline. You're not
  • to bid him good-bye"--stepping between her and Moore--"you are to
  • march."
  • "My shawl, Martin."
  • "I have it. I'll put it on for you when you are in the hall."
  • He made them part. He would suffer no farewell but what could be
  • expressed in looks. He half carried Caroline down the stairs. In the
  • hall he wrapped her shawl round her, and, but that his mother's tread
  • then creaked in the gallery, and but that a sentiment of diffidence--the
  • proper, natural, therefore the noble impulse of his boy's heart--held
  • him back, he would have claimed his reward; he would have said, "Now,
  • Miss Caroline, for all this give me one kiss." But ere the words had
  • passed his lips she was across the snowy road, rather skimming than
  • wading the drifts.
  • "She is my debtor, and I _will_ be paid."
  • He flattered himself that it was opportunity, not audacity, which had
  • failed him. He misjudged the quality of his own nature, and held it for
  • something lower than it was.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV.
  • CASE OF DOMESTIC PERSECUTION--REMARKABLE INSTANCE OF PIOUS PERSEVERANCE
  • IN THE DISCHARGE OF RELIGIOUS DUTIES.
  • Martin, having known the taste of excitement, wanted a second draught;
  • having felt the dignity of power, he loathed to relinquish it. Miss
  • Helstone--that girl he had always called ugly, and whose face was now
  • perpetually before his eyes, by day and by night, in dark and in
  • sunshine--had once come within his sphere. It fretted him to think the
  • visit might never be repeated.
  • Though a schoolboy he was no ordinary schoolboy; he was destined to grow
  • up an original. At a few years' later date he took great pains to pare
  • and polish himself down to the pattern of the rest of the world, but he
  • never succeeded; an unique stamp marked him always. He now sat idle at
  • his desk in the grammar school, casting about in his mind for the means
  • of adding another chapter to his commenced romance. He did not yet know
  • how many commenced life-romances are doomed never to get beyond the
  • first, or at most the second chapter. His Saturday half-holiday he spent
  • in the wood with his book of fairy legends, and that other unwritten
  • book of his imagination.
  • Martin harboured an irreligious reluctance to see the approach of
  • Sunday. His father and mother, while disclaiming community with the
  • Establishment, failed not duly, once on the sacred day, to fill their
  • large pew in Briarfield Church with the whole of their blooming family.
  • Theoretically, Mr. Yorke placed all sects and churches on a level. Mrs.
  • Yorke awarded the palm to Moravians and Quakers, on account of that
  • crown of humility by these worthies worn. Neither of them were ever
  • known, however, to set foot in a conventicle.
  • Martin, I say, disliked Sunday, because the morning service was long,
  • and the sermon usually little to his taste. This Saturday afternoon,
  • however, his woodland musings disclosed to him a new-found charm in the
  • coming day.
  • It proved a day of deep snow--so deep that Mrs. Yorke during breakfast
  • announced her conviction that the children, both boys and girls, would
  • be better at home; and her decision that, instead of going to church,
  • they should sit silent for two hours in the back parlour, while Rose and
  • Martin alternately read a succession of sermons--John Wesley's
  • "Sermons." John Wesley, being a reformer and an agitator, had a place
  • both in her own and her husband's favour.
  • "Rose will do as she pleases," said Martin, not looking up from the book
  • which, according to his custom then and in after-life, he was studying
  • over his bread and milk.
  • "Rose will do as she is told, and Martin too," observed the mother.
  • "I am going to church."
  • So her son replied, with the ineffable quietude of a true Yorke, who
  • knows his will and means to have it, and who, if pushed to the wall,
  • will let himself be crushed to death, provided no way of escape can be
  • found, but will never capitulate.
  • "It is not fit weather," said the father.
  • No answer. The youth read studiously; he slowly broke his bread and
  • sipped his milk.
  • "Martin hates to go to church, but he hates still more to obey," said
  • Mrs. Yorke.
  • "I suppose I am influenced by pure perverseness?"
  • "Yes, you are."
  • "Mother, _I am not_."
  • "By what, then, are you influenced?"
  • "By a complication of motives, the intricacies of which I should as soon
  • think of explaining to you as I should of turning myself inside out to
  • exhibit the internal machinery of my frame."
  • "Hear Martin! hear him!" cried Mr. Yorke. "I must see and have this lad
  • of mine brought up to the bar. Nature meant him to live by his tongue.
  • Hesther, your third son must certainly be a lawyer; he has the
  • stock-in-trade--brass, self-conceit, and words--words--words."
  • "Some bread, Rose, if you please," requested Martin, with intense
  • gravity, serenity, phlegm. The boy had naturally a low, plaintive voice,
  • which in his "dour moods" rose scarcely above a lady's whisper. The more
  • inflexibly stubborn the humour, the softer, the sadder the tone. He
  • rang the bell, and gently asked for his walking-shoes.
  • "But, Martin," urged his sire, "there is drift all the way; a man could
  • hardly wade through it. However, lad," he continued, seeing that the boy
  • rose as the church bell began to toll, "this is a case wherein I would
  • by no means balk the obdurate chap of his will. Go to church by all
  • means. There is a pitiless wind, and a sharp, frozen sleet, besides the
  • depth under foot. Go out into it, since thou prefers it to a warm
  • fireside."
  • Martin quietly assumed his cloak, comforter, and cap, and deliberately
  • went out.
  • "My father has more sense than my mother," he pronounced. "How women
  • miss it! They drive the nail into the flesh, thinking they are hammering
  • away at insensate stone."
  • He reached church early.
  • "Now, if the weather frightens her (and it is a real December tempest),
  • or if that Mrs. Pryor objects to her going out, and I should miss her
  • after all, it will vex me; but, tempest or tornado, hail or ice, she
  • _ought_ to come, and if she has a mind worthy of her eyes and features
  • she _will_ come. She will be here for the chance of seeing me, as I am
  • here for the chance of seeing her. She will want to get a word
  • respecting her confounded sweetheart, as I want to get another flavour
  • of what I think the essence of life--a taste of existence, with the
  • spirit preserved in it, and not evaporated. Adventure is to stagnation
  • what champagne is to flat porter."
  • He looked round. The church was cold, silent, empty, but for one old
  • woman. As the chimes subsided and the single bell tolled slowly, another
  • and another elderly parishioner came dropping in, and took a humble
  • station in the free sittings. It is always the frailest, the oldest, and
  • the poorest that brave the worst weather, to prove and maintain their
  • constancy to dear old mother church. This wild morning not one affluent
  • family attended, not one carriage party appeared--all the lined and
  • cushioned pews were empty; only on the bare oaken seats sat ranged the
  • gray-haired elders and feeble paupers.
  • "I'll scorn her if she doesn't come," muttered Martin, shortly and
  • savagely, to himself. The rector's shovel-hat had passed the porch. Mr.
  • Helstone and his clerk were in the vestry.
  • The bells ceased--the reading-desk was filled--the doors were
  • closed--the service commenced. Void stood the rectory pew--she was not
  • there. Martin scorned her.
  • "Worthless thing! vapid thing! commonplace humbug! Like all other
  • girls--weakly, selfish, shallow!"
  • Such was Martin's liturgy.
  • "She is not like our picture. Her eyes are not large and expressive; her
  • nose is not straight, delicate, Hellenic; her mouth has not that charm I
  • thought it had, which I imagined could beguile me of sullenness in my
  • worst moods. What is she? A thread-paper, a doll, a toy, a _girl_, in
  • short."
  • So absorbed was the young cynic he forgot to rise from his knees at the
  • proper place, and was still in an exemplary attitude of devotion when,
  • the litany over, the first hymn was given out. To be so caught did not
  • contribute to soothe him. He started up red (for he was as sensitive to
  • ridicule as any girl). To make the matter worse, the church door had
  • reopened, and the aisles were filling: patter, patter, patter, a hundred
  • little feet trotted in. It was the Sunday scholars. According to
  • Briarfield winter custom, these children had till now been kept where
  • there was a warm stove, and only led into church just before the
  • communion and sermon.
  • The little ones were settled first, and at last, when the boys and the
  • younger girls were all arranged--when the organ was swelling high, and
  • the choir and congregation were rising to uplift a spiritual song--a
  • tall class of young women came quietly in, closing the procession. Their
  • teacher, having seen them seated, passed into the rectory pew. The
  • French-gray cloak and small beaver bonnet were known to Martin; it was
  • the very costume his eyes had ached to catch. Miss Helstone had not
  • suffered the storm to prove an impediment. After all, she was come to
  • church. Martin probably whispered his satisfaction to his hymn book; at
  • any rate, he therewith hid his face two minutes.
  • Satisfied or not, he had time to get very angry with her again before
  • the sermon was over. She had never once looked his way; at least he had
  • not been so lucky as to encounter a glance.
  • "If," he said--"if she takes no notice of me, if she shows I am not in
  • her thoughts, I shall have a worse, a meaner opinion of her than ever.
  • Most despicable would it be to come for the sake of those sheep-faced
  • Sunday scholars, and not for my sake or that long skeleton Moore's."
  • The sermon found an end; the benediction was pronounced; the
  • congregation dispersed. She had not been near him.
  • Now, indeed, as Martin set his face homeward, he felt that the sleet was
  • sharp and the east wind cold.
  • His nearest way lay through some fields. It was a dangerous, because an
  • untrodden way. He did not care; he would take it. Near the second stile
  • rose a clump of trees. Was that an umbrella waiting there? Yes, an
  • umbrella, held with evident difficulty against the blast; behind it
  • fluttered a French-gray cloak. Martin grinned as he toiled up the steep,
  • encumbered field, difficult to the foot as a slope in the upper realms
  • of Etna. There was an inimitable look in his face when, having gained
  • the stile, he seated himself coolly thereupon, and thus opened a
  • conference which, for his own part, he was willing to prolong
  • indefinitely.
  • "I think you had better strike a bargain. Exchange me for Mrs. Pryor."
  • "I was not sure whether you would come this way, Martin, but I thought I
  • would run the chance. There is no such thing as getting a quiet word
  • spoken in the church or churchyard."
  • "Will you agree?--make over Mrs. Pryor to my mother, and put me in her
  • skirts?"
  • "As if I could understand you! What puts Mrs. Pryor into your head?"
  • "You call her 'mamma,' don't you?"
  • "She _is_ my mamma."
  • "Not possible--or so inefficient, so careless a mamma; I should make a
  • five times better one. You _may_ laugh. I have no objection to see you
  • laugh. Your teeth--I hate ugly teeth; but yours are as pretty as a pearl
  • necklace, and a necklace of which the pearls are very fair, even, and
  • well matched too."
  • "Martin, what now? I thought the Yorkes never paid compliments?"
  • "They have not done till this generation; but I feel as if it were my
  • vocation to turn out a new variety of the Yorke species. I am rather
  • tired of my own ancestors. We have traditions going back for four
  • ages--tales of Hiram, which was the son of Hiram, which was the son of
  • Samuel, which was the son of John, which was the son of Zerubbabel
  • Yorke. All, from Zerubbabel down to the last Hiram, were such as you see
  • my father. Before that there was a Godfrey. We have his picture; it
  • hangs in Moore's bedroom; it is like me. Of his character we know
  • nothing; but I am sure it was different to his descendants. He has long,
  • curling dark hair; he is carefully and cavalierly dressed. Having said
  • that he is like me, I need not add that he is handsome."
  • "You are not handsome, Martin."
  • "No; but wait awhile--just let me take my time. I mean to begin from
  • this day to cultivate, to polish, and we shall see."
  • "You are a very strange, a very unaccountable boy, Martin. But don't
  • imagine you ever will be handsome; you cannot."
  • "I mean to try. But we were talking about Mrs. Pryor. She must be the
  • most unnatural mamma in existence, coolly to let her daughter come out
  • in this weather. Mine was in such a rage because I would go to church;
  • she was fit to fling the kitchen brush after me."
  • "Mamma was very much concerned about me; but I am afraid I was
  • obstinate. I _would_ go."
  • "To see me?"
  • "Exactly; I thought of nothing else. I greatly feared the snow would
  • hinder you from coming. You don't know how pleased I was to see you all
  • by yourself in the pew."
  • "_I_ came to fulfil my duty, and set the parish a good example. And so
  • you were obstinate, were you? I should like to see you obstinate, I
  • should. Wouldn't I have you in good discipline if I owned you? Let me
  • take the umbrella."
  • "I can't stay two minutes; our dinner will be ready."
  • "And so will ours; and we have always a hot dinner on Sundays. Roast
  • goose to-day, with apple-pie and rice-pudding. I always contrive to know
  • the bill of fare. Well, I like these things uncommonly; but I'll make
  • the sacrifice, if you will."
  • "We have a cold dinner. My uncle will allow no unnecessary cooking on
  • the Sabbath. But I must return; the house would be in commotion if I
  • failed to appear."
  • "So will Briarmains, bless you! I think I hear my father sending out the
  • overlooker and five of the dyers, to look in six directions for the body
  • of his prodigal son in the snow; and my mother repenting her of her
  • many misdeeds towards me, now I am gone."
  • "Martin, how is Mr. Moore?"
  • "_That_ is what you came for, just to say that word."
  • "Come, tell me quickly."
  • "Hang him! he is no worse; but as ill-used as ever--mewed up, kept in
  • solitary confinement. They mean to make either an idiot or a maniac of
  • him, and take out a commission of lunacy. Horsfall starves him; you saw
  • how thin he was."
  • "You were very good the other day, Martin."
  • "What day? I am always good--a model."
  • "When will you be so good again?"
  • "I see what you are after; but you'll not wheedle me--I am no
  • cat's-paw."
  • "But it must be done. It is quite a right thing, and a necessary thing."
  • "How you encroach! Remember, I managed the matter of my own free will
  • before."
  • "And you will again."
  • "I won't. The business gave me far too much trouble. I like my ease."
  • "Mr. Moore wishes to see me, Martin, and I wish to see him."
  • "I dare say" (coolly).
  • "It is too bad of your mother to exclude his friends."
  • "Tell her so."
  • "His own relations."
  • "Come and blow her up."
  • "You know that would advance nothing. Well, I shall stick to my point.
  • See him I will. If you won't help me, I'll manage without help."
  • "Do; there is nothing like self-reliance, self-dependence."
  • "I have no time to reason with you now; but I consider you provoking.
  • Good-morning."
  • Away she went, the umbrella shut, for she could not carry it against the
  • wind.
  • "She is not vapid; she is not shallow," said Martin. "I shall like to
  • watch, and mark how she will work her way without help. If the storm
  • were not of snow, but of fire--such as came refreshingly down on the
  • cities of the plain--she would go through it to procure five minutes'
  • speech of that Moore. Now, I consider I have had a pleasant morning.
  • The disappointments got time on; the fears and fits of anger only made
  • that short discourse pleasanter, when it came at last. She expected to
  • coax me at once. She'll not manage that in one effort. She shall come
  • again, again, and yet again. It would please me to put her in a
  • passion--to make her cry. I want to discover how far she will go--what
  • she will do and dare--to get her will. It seems strange and new to find
  • one human being thinking so much about another as she thinks about
  • Moore. But it is time to go home; my appetite tells me the hour. Won't I
  • walk into that goose? and we'll try whether Matthew or I shall get the
  • largest cut of the apple-pie to-day."
  • CHAPTER XXXV.
  • WHEREIN MATTERS MAKE SOME PROGRESS, BUT NOT MUCH.
  • Martin had planned well. He had laid out a dexterously concerted scheme
  • for his private amusement. But older and wiser schemers than he are
  • often doomed to see their finest-spun projects swept to annihilation by
  • the sudden broom of Fate, that fell housewife whose red arm none can
  • control. In the present instance this broom was manufactured out of the
  • tough fibres of Moore's own stubborn purpose, bound tight with his will.
  • He was now resuming his strength, and making strange head against Mrs.
  • Horsfall. Each morning he amazed that matron with a fresh astonishment.
  • First he discharged her from her valet duties; he would dress himself.
  • Then he refused the coffee she brought him; he would breakfast with the
  • family. Lastly, he forbade her his chamber. On the same day, amidst the
  • outcries of all the women in the place, he put his head out of doors.
  • The morning after, he followed Mr. Yorke to his counting-house, and
  • requested an envoy to fetch a chaise from the Red House Inn. He was
  • resolved, he said, to return home to the Hollow that very afternoon. Mr.
  • Yorke, instead of opposing, aided and abetted him. The chaise was sent
  • for, though Mrs. Yorke declared the step would be his death. It came.
  • Moore, little disposed to speak, made his purse do duty for his tongue.
  • He expressed his gratitude to the servants and to Mrs. Horsfall by the
  • chink of his coin. The latter personage approved and understood this
  • language perfectly; it made amends for all previous contumacy. She and
  • her patient parted the best friends in the world.
  • The kitchen visited and soothed, Moore betook himself to the parlour. He
  • had Mrs. Yorke to appease; not quite so easy a task as the pacification
  • of her housemaids. There she sat plunged in sullen dudgeon, the
  • gloomiest speculations on the depths of man's ingratitude absorbing her
  • thoughts. He drew near and bent over her; she was obliged to look up,
  • if it were only to bid him "avaunt." There was beauty still in his pale,
  • wasted features; there was earnestness and a sort of sweetness--for he
  • was smiling--in his hollow eyes.
  • "Good-bye!" he said, and as he spoke the smile glittered and melted. He
  • had no iron mastery of his sensations now; a trifling emotion made
  • itself apparent in his present weak state.
  • "And what are you going to leave us for?" she asked. "We will keep you,
  • and do anything in the world for you, if you will only stay till you are
  • stronger."
  • "Good-bye!" he again said; and added, "You have been a mother to me;
  • give your wilful son one embrace."
  • Like a foreigner, as he was, he offered her first one cheek, then the
  • other. She kissed him.
  • "What a trouble--what a burden I have been to you!" he muttered.
  • "You are the worst trouble now, headstrong youth!" was the answer. "I
  • wonder who is to nurse you at Hollow's Cottage? Your sister Hortense
  • knows no more about such matters than a child."
  • "Thank God! for I have had nursing enough to last me my life."
  • Here the little girls came in--Jessie crying, Rose quiet but grave.
  • Moore took them out into the hall to soothe, pet, and kiss them. He knew
  • it was not in their mother's nature to bear to see any living thing
  • caressed but herself. She would have felt annoyed had he fondled a
  • kitten in her presence.
  • The boys were standing about the chaise as Moore entered it; but for
  • them he had no farewell. To Mr. Yorke he only said, "You have a good
  • riddance of me. That was an unlucky shot for you, Yorke; it turned
  • Briarmains into an hospital. Come and see me at the cottage soon."
  • He drew up the glass; the chaise rolled away. In half an hour he
  • alighted at his own garden wicket. Having paid the driver and dismissed
  • the vehicle, he leaned on that wicket an instant, at once to rest and to
  • muse.
  • "Six months ago I passed out at this gate," said he, "a proud, angry,
  • disappointed man. I come back sadder and wiser; weakly enough, but not
  • worried. A cold, gray, yet quiet world lies round--a world where, if I
  • hope little, I fear nothing. All slavish terrors of embarrassment have
  • left me. Let the worst come, I can work, as Joe Scott does, for an
  • honourable living; in such doom I yet see some hardship but no
  • degradation. Formerly, pecuniary ruin was equivalent in my eyes to
  • personal dishonour. It is not so now; I know the difference. Ruin _is_
  • an evil, but one for which I am prepared; the day of whose coming I
  • know, for I have calculated. I can yet put it off six months--not an
  • hour longer. If things by that time alter, which is not probable; if
  • fetters, which now seem indissoluble, should be loosened from our trade
  • (of all things the most unlikely to happen), I might conquer in this
  • long struggle yet--I might--good God! what might I not do? But the
  • thought is a brief madness; let me see things with sane eyes. Ruin will
  • come, lay her axe to my fortune's roots, and hew them down. I shall
  • snatch a sapling, I shall cross the sea, and plant it in American woods.
  • Louis will go with me. Will none but Louis go? I cannot tell--I have no
  • right to ask."
  • He entered the house.
  • It was afternoon, twilight yet out of doors--starless and moonless
  • twilight; for though keenly freezing with a dry, black frost, heaven
  • wore a mask of clouds congealed and fast locked. The mill-dam too was
  • frozen. The Hollow was very still. Indoors it was already dark. Sarah
  • had lit a good fire in the parlour; she was preparing tea in the
  • kitchen.
  • "Hortense," said Moore, as his sister bustled up to help him off with
  • his cloak, "I am pleased to come home."
  • Hortense did not feel the peculiar novelty of this expression coming
  • from her brother, who had never before called the cottage his home, and
  • to whom its narrow limits had always heretofore seemed rather
  • restrictive than protective. Still, whatever contributed to his
  • happiness pleased her, and she expressed herself to that effect.
  • He sat down, but soon rose again. He went to the window; he came back to
  • the fire.
  • "Hortense!"
  • "Mon frère?"
  • "This little parlour looks very clean and pleasant--unusually bright,
  • somehow."
  • "It is true, brother; I have had the whole house thoroughly and
  • scrupulously cleaned in your absence."
  • "Sister, I think on this first day of your return home you ought to have
  • a friend or so to tea, if it were only to see how fresh and spruce you
  • have made the little place."
  • "True, brother. If it were not late I might send for Miss Mann."
  • "So you might; but it really is too late to disturb that good lady, and
  • the evening is much too cold for her to come out."
  • "How thoughtful in you, dear Gérard! We must put it off till another
  • day."
  • "I want some one to-day, dear sister--some quiet guest, who would tire
  • neither of us."
  • "Miss Ainley?"
  • "An excellent person, they say; but she lives too far off. Tell Harry
  • Scott to step up to the rectory with a request from you that Caroline
  • Helstone should come and spend the evening with you."
  • "Would it not be better to-morrow, dear brother?"
  • "I should like her to see the place as it is just now; its brilliant
  • cleanliness and perfect neatness are so much to your credit."
  • "It might benefit her in the way of example."
  • "It might and must; she ought to come."
  • He went into the kitchen.
  • "Sarah, delay tea half an hour." He then commissioned her to dispatch
  • Harry Scott to the rectory, giving her a twisted note hastily scribbled
  • in pencil by himself, and addressed "Miss Helstone."
  • Scarcely had Sarah time to get impatient under the fear of damage to her
  • toast already prepared when the messenger returned, and with him the
  • invited guest.
  • She entered through the kitchen, quietly tripped up Sarah's stairs to
  • take off her bonnet and furs, and came down as quietly, with her
  • beautiful curls nicely smoothed, her graceful merino dress and delicate
  • collar all trim and spotless, her gay little work-bag in her hand. She
  • lingered to exchange a few kindly words with Sarah, and to look at the
  • new tortoise-shell kitten basking on the kitchen hearth, and to speak to
  • the canary-bird, which a sudden blaze from the fire had startled on its
  • perch; and then she betook herself to the parlour.
  • The gentle salutation, the friendly welcome, were interchanged in such
  • tranquil sort as befitted cousins meeting; a sense of pleasure, subtle
  • and quiet as a perfume, diffused itself through the room; the
  • newly-kindled lamp burnt up bright; the tray and the singing urn were
  • brought in.
  • "I am pleased to come home," repeated Mr. Moore.
  • They assembled round the table. Hortense chiefly talked. She
  • congratulated Caroline on the evident improvement in her health. Her
  • colour and her plump cheeks were returning, she remarked. It was true.
  • There was an obvious change in Miss Helstone. All about her seemed
  • elastic; depression, fear, forlornness, were withdrawn. No longer
  • crushed, and saddened, and slow, and drooping, she looked like one who
  • had tasted the cordial of heart's ease, and been lifted on the wing of
  • hope.
  • After tea Hortense went upstairs. She had not rummaged her drawers for a
  • month past, and the impulse to perform that operation was now become
  • resistless. During her absence the talk passed into Caroline's hands.
  • She took it up with ease; she fell into her best tone of conversation. A
  • pleasing facility and elegance of language gave fresh charm to familiar
  • topics; a new music in the always soft voice gently surprised and
  • pleasingly captivated the listener; unwonted shades and lights of
  • expression elevated the young countenance with character, and kindled it
  • with animation.
  • "Caroline, you look as if you had heard good tidings," said Moore, after
  • earnestly gazing at her for some minutes.
  • "Do I?"
  • "I sent for you this evening that I might be cheered; but you cheer me
  • more than I had calculated."
  • "I am glad of that. And I _really_ cheer you?"
  • "You look brightly, move buoyantly, speak musically."
  • "It is pleasant to be here again."
  • "Truly it is pleasant; I feel it so. And to see health on your cheek and
  • hope in your eye is pleasant, Cary; but what is this hope, and what is
  • the source of this sunshine I perceive about you?"
  • "For one thing, I am happy in mamma. I love her so much, and she loves
  • me. Long and tenderly she nursed me. Now, when her care has made me
  • well, I can occupy myself for and with her all the day. I say it is my
  • turn to attend to her; and I _do_ attend to her. I am her waiting-woman
  • as well as her child. I like--you would laugh if you knew what pleasure
  • I have in making dresses and sewing for her. She looks so nice now,
  • Robert; I will not let her be old-fashioned. And then, she is charming
  • to talk to--full of wisdom, ripe in judgment, rich in information,
  • exhaustless in stores her observant faculties have quietly amassed.
  • Every day that I live with her I like her better, I esteem her more
  • highly, I love her more tenderly."
  • "_That_ for one thing, then, Cary. You talk in such a way about 'mamma'
  • it is enough to make one jealous of the old lady."
  • "She is not old, Robert."
  • "Of the young lady, then."
  • "She does not pretend to be young."
  • "Well, of the matron. But you said 'mamma's' affection was _one_ thing
  • that made you happy; now for the other thing."
  • "I am glad you are better."
  • "What besides?"
  • "I am glad we are friends."
  • "You and I?"
  • "Yes. I once thought we never should be."
  • "Cary, some day I mean to tell you a thing about myself that is not to
  • my credit, and consequently will not please you."
  • "Ah, don't! I cannot bear to think ill of you."
  • "And I cannot bear that you should think better of me than I deserve."
  • "Well, but I half know your 'thing;' indeed, I believe I know all about
  • it."
  • "You do not."
  • "I believe I do."
  • "Whom does it concern besides me?"
  • She coloured; she hesitated; she was silent.
  • "Speak, Cary! Whom does it concern?"
  • She tried to utter a name, and could not.
  • "Tell me; there is none present but ourselves. Be frank."
  • "But if I guess wrong?"
  • "I will forgive. Whisper, Cary."
  • He bent his ear to her lips. Still she would not, or could not, speak
  • clearly to the point. Seeing that Moore waited and was resolved to hear
  • something, she at last said, "Miss Keeldar spent a day at the rectory
  • about a week since. The evening came on very wintry, and we persuaded
  • her to stay all night."
  • "And you and she curled your hair together?"
  • "How do you know that?"
  • "And then you chattered, and she told you----"
  • "It was not at curling-hair time, so you are not as wise as you think;
  • and, besides, she didn't tell me."
  • "You slept together afterwards?"
  • "We occupied the same room and bed. We did not sleep much; we talked the
  • whole night through."
  • "I'll be sworn you did! And then it all came out--_tant pis_. I would
  • rather you had heard it from myself."
  • "You are quite wrong. She did not tell me what you suspect--she is not
  • the person to proclaim such things; but yet I inferred something from
  • parts of her discourse. I gathered more from rumour, and I made out the
  • rest by instinct."
  • "But if she did not tell you that I wanted to marry her for the sake of
  • her money, and that she refused me indignantly and scornfully (you need
  • neither start nor blush; nor yet need you prick your trembling fingers
  • with your needle. That is the plain truth, whether you like it or
  • not)--if such was not the subject of her august confidences, on what
  • point did they turn? You say you talked the whole night through; what
  • about?"
  • "About things we never thoroughly discussed before, intimate friends as
  • we have been; but you hardly expect I should tell you?"
  • "Yes, yes, Cary; you will tell me. You said we were friends, and friends
  • should always confide in each other."
  • "But you are sure you won't repeat it?"
  • "Quite sure."
  • "Not to Louis?"
  • "Not even to Louis. What does Louis care for young ladies' secrets?"
  • "Robert, Shirley is a curious, magnanimous being."
  • "I dare say. I can imagine there are both odd points and grand points
  • about her."
  • "I have found her chary in showing her feelings; but when they rush out,
  • river-like, and pass full and powerful before you--almost without leave
  • from her--you gaze, wonder; you admire, and--I think--love her."
  • "You saw this spectacle?"
  • "Yes; at dead of night, when all the house was silent, and starlight and
  • the cold reflection from the snow glimmered in our chamber, then I saw
  • Shirley's heart."
  • "Her heart's core? Do you think she showed you that?"
  • "Her heart's core."
  • "And how was it?"
  • "Like a shrine, for it was holy; like snow, for it was pure; like
  • flame, for it was warm; like death, for it was strong."
  • "Can she love? tell me that."
  • "What think you?"
  • "She has loved none that have loved her yet."
  • "Who are those that have loved her?"
  • He named a list of gentlemen, closing with Sir Philip Nunnely.
  • "She has loved none of these."
  • "Yet some of them were worthy of a woman's affection."
  • "Of some women's, but not of Shirley's."
  • "Is she better than others of her sex?"
  • "She is peculiar, and more dangerous to take as a wife--rashly."
  • "I can imagine that."
  • "She spoke of you----"
  • "Oh, she did! I thought you denied it."
  • "She did not speak in the way you fancy; but I asked her, and I would
  • make her tell me what she thought of you, or rather how she felt towards
  • you. I wanted to know; I had long wanted to know."
  • "So had I; but let us hear. She thinks meanly, she feels contemptuously,
  • doubtless?"
  • "She thinks of you almost as highly as a woman can think of a man. You
  • know she can be eloquent. I yet feel in fancy the glow of the language
  • in which her opinion was conveyed."
  • "But how does she feel?"
  • "Till you shocked her (she said you had shocked her, but she would not
  • tell me how) she felt as a sister feels towards a brother of whom she is
  • at once fond and proud."
  • "I'll shock her no more, Cary, for the shock rebounded on myself till I
  • staggered again. But that comparison about sister and brother is all
  • nonsense. She is too rich and proud to entertain fraternal sentiments
  • for me."
  • "You don't know her, Robert; and, somehow, I fancy now (I had other
  • ideas formerly) that you cannot know her. You and she are not so
  • constructed as to be able thoroughly to understand each other."
  • "It may be so. I esteem her, I admire her; and yet my impressions
  • concerning her are harsh--perhaps uncharitable. I believe, for instance,
  • that she is incapable of love----"
  • "Shirley incapable of love!"
  • "That she will never marry. I imagine her jealous of compromising her
  • pride, of relinquishing her power, of sharing her property."
  • "Shirley has hurt your _amour propre_."
  • "She did hurt it; though I had not an emotion of tenderness, nor a spark
  • of passion for her."
  • "Then, Robert, it was very wicked in you to want to marry her."
  • "And very mean, my little pastor, my pretty priestess. I never wanted to
  • kiss Miss Keeldar in my life, though she has fine lips, scarlet and
  • round as ripe cherries; or, if I did wish it, it was the mere desire of
  • the eye."
  • "I doubt, now, whether you are speaking the truth. The grapes or the
  • cherries are sour--'hung too high.'"
  • "She has a pretty figure, a pretty face, beautiful hair. I acknowledge
  • all her charms and feel none of them, or only feel them in a way she
  • would disdain. I suppose I was truly tempted by the mere gilding of the
  • bait. Caroline, what a noble fellow your Robert is--great, good,
  • disinterested, and then so pure!"
  • "But not perfect. He made a great blunder once, and we will hear no more
  • about it."
  • "And shall we think no more about it, Cary? Shall we not despise him in
  • our heart--gentle but just, compassionate but upright?"
  • "Never! We will remember that with what measure we mete it shall be
  • measured unto us, and so we will give no scorn, only affection."
  • "Which won't satisfy, I warn you of that. Something besides
  • affection--something far stronger, sweeter, warmer--will be demanded one
  • day. Is it there to give?"
  • Caroline was moved, much moved.
  • "Be calm, Lina," said Moore soothingly. "I have no intention, because I
  • have no right, to perturb your mind now, nor for months to come. Don't
  • look as if you would leave me. We will make no more agitating allusions;
  • we will resume our gossip. Do not tremble; look me in the face. See what
  • a poor, pale, grim phantom I am--more pitiable than formidable."
  • She looked shyly. "There is something formidable still, pale as you
  • are," she said, as her eye fell under his.
  • "To return to Shirley," pursued Moore: "is it your opinion that she is
  • ever likely to marry?"
  • "She loves."
  • "Platonically--theoretically--all humbug!"
  • "She loves what I call sincerely."
  • "Did she say so?"
  • "I cannot affirm that she said so. No such confession as 'I love this
  • man or that' passed her lips."
  • "I thought not."
  • "But the feeling made its way in spite of her, and I saw it. She spoke
  • of one man in a strain not to be misunderstood. Her voice alone was
  • sufficient testimony. Having wrung from her an opinion on your
  • character, I demanded a second opinion of--another person about whom I
  • had my conjectures, though they were the most tangled and puzzled
  • conjectures in the world. I would _make_ her speak. I shook her, I chid
  • her, I pinched her fingers when she tried to put me off with gibes and
  • jests in her queer provoking way, and at last out it came. The voice, I
  • say, was enough; hardly raised above a whisper, and yet such a soft
  • vehemence in its tones. There was no confession, no confidence, in the
  • matter. To these things she cannot condescend; but I am sure that man's
  • happiness is dear to her as her own life."
  • "Who is it?"
  • "I charged her with the fact. She did not deny, she did not avow, but
  • looked at me. I saw her eyes by the snow-gleam. It was quite enough. I
  • triumphed over her mercilessly."
  • "What right had _you_ to triumph? Do you mean to say _you_ are fancy
  • free?"
  • "Whatever _I_ am, Shirley is a bondswoman. Lioness, she has found her
  • captor. Mistress she may be of all round her, but her own mistress she
  • is not."
  • "So you exulted at recognizing a fellow-slave in one so fair and
  • imperial?"
  • "I did; Robert, you say right, in one so fair and imperial."
  • "You confess it--a _fellow_-slave?"
  • "I confess nothing; but I say that haughty Shirley is no more free than
  • was Hagar."
  • "And who, pray, is the Abraham, the hero of a patriarch who has achieved
  • such a conquest?"
  • "You still speak scornfully, and cynically, and sorely; but I will make
  • you change your note before I have done with you."
  • "We will see that. Can she marry this Cupidon?"
  • "Cupidon! he is just about as much a Cupidon as you are a Cyclops."
  • "Can she marry him?"
  • "You will see."
  • "I want to know his name, Cary."
  • "Guess it."
  • "Is it any one in this neighbourhood?"
  • "Yes, in Briarfield parish."
  • "Then it is some person unworthy of her. I don't know a soul in
  • Briarfield parish her equal."
  • "Guess."
  • "Impossible. I suppose she is under a delusion, and will plunge into
  • some absurdity, after all."
  • Caroline smiled.
  • "Do _you_ approve the choice?" asked Moore.
  • "Quite, _quite_."
  • "Then I _am_ puzzled; for the head which owns this bounteous fall of
  • hazel curls is an excellent little thinking machine, most accurate in
  • its working. It boasts a correct, steady judgment, inherited from
  • 'mamma,' I suppose."
  • "And I _quite_ approve, and mamma was charmed."
  • "'Mamma' charmed--Mrs. Pryor! It can't be romantic, then?"
  • "It _is_ romantic, but it is also right."
  • "Tell me, Cary--tell me out of pity; I am too weak to be tantalized."
  • "You shall be tantalized--it will do you no harm; you are not so weak as
  • you pretend."
  • "I have twice this evening had some thoughts of falling on the floor at
  • your feet."
  • "You had better not. I shall decline to help you up."
  • "And worshipping you downright. My mother was a Roman Catholic. You look
  • like the loveliest of her pictures of the Virgin. I think I will embrace
  • her faith and kneel and adore."
  • "Robert, Robert, sit still; don't be absurd. I will go to Hortense if
  • you commit extravagances."
  • "You have stolen my senses. Just now nothing will come into my mind but
  • _les litanies de la sainte Vièrge. Rose céleste, reine des anges_!"
  • "_Tour d'ivoire, maison d'or_--is not that the jargon? Well, sit down
  • quietly, and guess your riddle."
  • "But 'mamma' charmed--there's the puzzle."
  • "I'll tell you what mamma said when I told her. 'Depend upon it, my
  • dear, such a choice will make the happiness of Miss Keeldar's life.'"
  • "I'll guess once, and no more. It is old Helstone. She is going to be
  • your aunt."
  • "I'll tell my uncle; I'll tell Shirley!" cried Caroline, laughing
  • gleefully. "Guess again, Robert; your blunders are charming."
  • "It is the parson--Hall."
  • "Indeed, no; he is mine, if you please."
  • "Yours! Ay, the whole generation of women in Briarfield seem to have
  • made an idol of that priest. I wonder why; he is bald, sand-blind,
  • gray-haired."
  • "Fanny will be here to fetch me before you have solved the riddle, if
  • you don't make haste."
  • "I'll guess no more--I am tired; and then I don't care. Miss Keeldar may
  • marry _le grand Turc_ for me."
  • "Must I whisper?"
  • "That you must, and quickly. Here comes Hortense; come near, a little
  • nearer, my own Lina. I care for the whisper more than the words."
  • She whispered. Robert gave a start, a flash of the eye, a brief laugh.
  • Miss Moore entered, and Sarah followed behind, with information that
  • Fanny was come. The hour of converse was over.
  • Robert found a moment to exchange a few more whispered sentences. He was
  • waiting at the foot of the staircase as Caroline descended after putting
  • on her shawl.
  • "Must I call Shirley a noble creature now?" he asked.
  • "If you wish to speak the truth, certainly."
  • "Must I forgive her?"
  • "Forgive her? Naughty Robert! Was she in the wrong, or were you?"
  • "Must I at length love her downright, Cary?"
  • Caroline looked keenly up, and made a movement towards him, something
  • between the loving and the petulant.
  • "Only give the word, and I'll try to obey you."
  • "Indeed, you must not love her; the bare idea is perverse."
  • "But then she is handsome, peculiarly handsome. Hers is a beauty that
  • grows on you. You think her but graceful when you first see her; you
  • discover her to be beautiful when you have known her for a year."
  • "It is not you who are to say these things. Now, Robert, be good."
  • "O Cary, I have no love to give. Were the goddess of beauty to woo me, I
  • could not meet her advances. There is no heart which I can call mine in
  • this breast."
  • "So much the better; you are a great deal safer without. Good-night."
  • "Why must you always go, Lina, at the very instant when I most want you
  • to stay?"
  • "Because you most wish to retain when you are most certain to lose."
  • "Listen; one other word. Take care of your own heart--do you hear me?"
  • "There is no danger."
  • "I am not convinced of that. The Platonic parson, for instance."
  • "Who--Malone?"
  • "Cyril Hall. I owe more than one twinge of jealousy to that quarter."
  • "As to you, you have been flirting with Miss Mann. She showed me the
  • other day a plant you had given her.--Fanny, I am ready."
  • CHAPTER XXXVI.
  • WRITTEN IN THE SCHOOLROOM.
  • Louis Moore's doubts respecting the immediate evacuation of Fieldhead by
  • Mr. Sympson turned out to be perfectly well founded. The very next day
  • after the grand quarrel about Sir Philip Nunnely a sort of
  • reconciliation was patched up between uncle and niece. Shirley, who
  • could never find it in her heart to be or to seem inhospitable (except
  • in the single instance of Mr. Donne), begged the whole party to stay a
  • little longer. She begged in such earnest it was evident she wished it
  • for some reason. They took her at her word. Indeed, the uncle could not
  • bring himself to leave her quite unwatched--at full liberty to marry
  • Robert Moore as soon as that gentleman should be able (Mr. Sympson
  • piously prayed this might never be the case) to reassert his supposed
  • pretensions to her hand. They all stayed.
  • In his first rage against all the house of Moore, Mr. Sympson had so
  • conducted himself towards Mr. Louis that that gentleman--patient of
  • labour or suffering, but intolerant of coarse insolence--had promptly
  • resigned his post, and could now be induced to resume and retain it only
  • till such time as the family should quit Yorkshire. Mrs. Sympson's
  • entreaties prevailed with him thus far; his own attachment to his pupil
  • constituted an additional motive for concession; and probably he had a
  • third motive, stronger than either of the other two. Probably he would
  • have found it very hard indeed to leave Fieldhead just now.
  • Things went on for some time pretty smoothly. Miss Keeldar's health was
  • re-established; her spirits resumed their flow. Moore had found means to
  • relieve her from every nervous apprehension; and, indeed, from the
  • moment of giving him her confidence, every fear seemed to have taken
  • wing. Her heart became as lightsome, her manner as careless, as those of
  • a little child, that, thoughtless of its own life or death, trusts all
  • responsibility to its parents. He and William Farren--through whose
  • medium he made inquiries concerning the state of Phœbe--agreed in
  • asserting that the dog was not mad, that it was only ill-usage which had
  • driven her from home; for it was proved that her master was in the
  • frequent habit of chastising her violently. Their assertion might or
  • might not be true. The groom and gamekeeper affirmed to the
  • contrary--both asserting that, if hers was not a clear case of
  • hydrophobia, there was no such disease. But to this evidence Louis Moore
  • turned an incredulous ear. He reported to Shirley only what was
  • encouraging. She believed him; and, right or wrong, it is certain that
  • in her case the bite proved innocuous.
  • November passed; December came. The Sympsons were now really departing.
  • It was incumbent on them to be at home by Christmas. Their packages were
  • preparing; they were to leave in a few days. One winter evening, during
  • the last week of their stay, Louis Moore again took out his little blank
  • book, and discoursed with it as follows:--
  • * * * * *
  • "She is lovelier than ever. Since that little cloud was dispelled all
  • the temporary waste and wanness have vanished. It was marvellous to see
  • how soon the magical energy of youth raised her elastic and revived her
  • blooming.
  • "After breakfast this morning, when I had seen her, and listened to her,
  • and, so to speak, felt her, in every sentient atom of my frame, I passed
  • from her sunny presence into the chill drawing-room. Taking up a little
  • gilt volume, I found it to contain a selection of lyrics. I read a poem
  • or two; whether the spell was in me or in the verse I know not, but my
  • heart filled genially, my pulse rose. I glowed, notwithstanding the
  • frost air. I, too, am young as yet. Though she said she never considered
  • me young, I am barely thirty. There are moments when life, for no other
  • reason than my own youth, beams with sweet hues upon me.
  • "It was time to go to the schoolroom. I went. That same schoolroom is
  • rather pleasant in a morning. The sun then shines through the low
  • lattice; the books are in order; there are no papers strewn about; the
  • fire is clear and clean; no cinders have fallen, no ashes accumulated. I
  • found Henry there, and he had brought with him Miss Keeldar. They were
  • together.
  • "I said she was lovelier than ever. She is. A fine rose, not deep but
  • delicate, opens on her cheek. Her eye, always dark, clear, and speaking,
  • utters now a language I cannot render; it is the utterance, seen not
  • heard, through which angels must have communed when there was 'silence
  • in heaven.' Her hair was always dusk as night and fine as silk, her neck
  • was always fair, flexible, polished; but both have now a new charm. The
  • tresses are soft as shadow, the shoulders they fall on wear a goddess
  • grace. Once I only _saw_ her beauty, now I _feel_ it.
  • "Henry was repeating his lesson to her before bringing it to me. One of
  • her hands was occupied with the book; he held the other. That boy gets
  • more than his share of privileges; he dares caress and is caressed. What
  • indulgence and compassion she shows him! Too much. If this went on,
  • Henry in a few years, when his soul was formed, would offer it on her
  • altar, as I have offered mine.
  • "I saw her eyelid flitter when I came in, but she did not look up; _now_
  • she hardly ever gives me a glance. She seems to grow silent too; to _me_
  • she rarely speaks, and when I am present, she says little to others. In
  • my gloomy moments I attribute this change to indifference, aversion,
  • what not? In my sunny intervals I give it another meaning. I say, were I
  • her equal, I could find in this shyness coyness, and in that coyness
  • love. As it is, dare I look for it? What could I do with it if found?
  • "This morning I dared at least contrive an hour's communion for her and
  • me; I dared not only _wish_ but _will_ an interview with her. I dared
  • summon solitude to guard us. Very decidedly I called Henry to the door.
  • Without hesitation I said, 'Go where you will, my boy; but, till I call
  • you, return not here.'
  • "Henry, I could see, did not like his dismissal. That boy is young, but
  • a thinker; his meditative eye shines on me strangely sometimes. He half
  • feels what links me to Shirley; he half guesses that there is a dearer
  • delight in the reserve with which I am treated than in all the
  • endearments he is allowed. The young, lame, half-grown lion would growl
  • at me now and then, because I have tamed his lioness and am her keeper,
  • did not the habit of discipline and the instinct of affection hold him
  • subdued. Go, Henry; you must learn to take your share of the bitter of
  • life with all of Adam's race that have gone before or will come after
  • you. Your destiny can be no exception to the common lot; be grateful
  • that your love is overlooked thus early, before it can claim any
  • affinity to passion. An hour's fret, a pang of envy, suffice to express
  • what you feel. Jealousy hot as the sun above the line, rage destructive
  • as the tropic storm, the clime of your sensations ignores--as yet.
  • "I took my usual seat at the desk, quite in my usual way. I am blessed
  • in that power to cover all inward ebullition with outward calm. No one
  • who looks at my slow face can guess the vortex sometimes whirling in my
  • heart, and engulfing thought and wrecking prudence. Pleasant is it to
  • have the gift to proceed peacefully and powerfully in your course
  • without alarming by one eccentric movement. It was not my present
  • intention to utter one word of love to her, or to reveal one glimpse of
  • the fire in which I wasted. Presumptuous I never have been; presumptuous
  • I never will be. Rather than even _seem_ selfish and interested, I would
  • resolutely rise, gird my loins, part and leave her, and seek, on the
  • other side of the globe, a new life, cold and barren as the rock the
  • salt tide daily washes. My design this morning was to take of her a near
  • scrutiny--to read a line in the page of her heart. Before I left I
  • determined to know _what_ I was leaving.
  • "I had some quills to make into pens. Most men's hands would have
  • trembled when their hearts were so stirred; mine went to work steadily,
  • and my voice, when I called it into exercise, was firm.
  • "'This day week you will be alone at Fieldhead, Miss Keeldar.'
  • "'Yes: I rather think my uncle's intention to go is a settled one now.'
  • "'He leaves you dissatisfied.'
  • "'He is not pleased with me.'
  • "'He departs as he came--no better for his journey. This is mortifying.'
  • "'I trust the failure of his plans will take from him all inclination to
  • lay new ones.'
  • "'In his way Mr. Sympson honestly wished you well. All he has done or
  • intended to do he believed to be for the best.'
  • "'You are kind to undertake the defence of a man who has permitted
  • himself to treat you with so much insolence.'
  • "'I never feel shocked at, or bear malice for, what is spoken in
  • character; and most perfectly in character was that vulgar and violent
  • onset against me, when he had quitted you worsted.'
  • "'You cease now to be Henry's tutor?'
  • "'I shall be parted from Henry for a while (if he and I live we shall
  • meet again somehow, for we love each other) and be ousted from the bosom
  • of the Sympson family for ever. Happily this change does not leave me
  • stranded; it but hurries into premature execution designs long formed.'
  • "'No change finds you off your guard. I was sure, in your calm way, you
  • would be prepared for sudden mutation. I always think you stand in the
  • world like a solitary but watchful, thoughtful archer in a wood. And the
  • quiver on your shoulder holds more arrows than one; your bow is provided
  • with a second string. Such too is your brother's wont. You two might go
  • forth homeless hunters to the loneliest western wilds; all would be well
  • with you. The hewn tree would make you a hut, the cleared forest yield
  • you fields from its stripped bosom, the buffalo would feel your
  • rifle-shot, and with lowered horns and hump pay homage at your feet.'
  • "'And any Indian tribe of Blackfeet or Flatheads would afford us a
  • bride, perhaps?'
  • "'No' (hesitating), 'I think not. The savage is sordid. I think--that
  • is, I _hope_--you would neither of you share your hearth with that to
  • which you could not give your heart.'
  • "'What suggested the wild West to your mind, Miss Keeldar? Have you been
  • with me in spirit when I did not see you? Have you entered into my
  • day-dreams, and beheld my brain labouring at its scheme of a future?'
  • "She had separated a slip of paper for lighting tapers--a spill, as it
  • is called--into fragments. She threw morsel by morsel into the fire, and
  • stood pensively watching them consume. She did not speak.
  • "'How did you learn what you seem to know about my intentions?'
  • "'I know nothing. I am only discovering them now. I spoke at hazard.'
  • "'Your hazard sounds like divination. A tutor I will never be again;
  • never take a pupil after Henry and yourself; not again will I sit
  • habitually at another man's table--no more be the appendage of a family.
  • I am now a man of thirty; I have never been free since I was a boy of
  • ten. I have such a thirst for freedom, such a deep passion to know her
  • and call her mine, such a day-desire and night-longing to win her and
  • possess her, I will not refuse to cross the Atlantic for her sake; her I
  • will follow deep into virgin woods. Mine it shall not be to accept a
  • savage girl as a slave--she could not be a wife. I know no white woman
  • whom I love that would accompany me; but I am certain Liberty will await
  • me, sitting under a pine. When I call her she will come to my loghouse,
  • and she shall fill my arms.'
  • "She could not hear me speak so unmoved, and she _was_ moved. It was
  • right--I meant to move her. She could not answer me, nor could she look
  • at me. I should have been sorry if she could have done either. Her cheek
  • glowed as if a crimson flower through whose petals the sun shone had
  • cast its light upon it. On the white lid and dark lashes of her downcast
  • eye trembled all that is graceful in the sense of half-painful,
  • half-pleasing shame.
  • "Soon she controlled her emotion, and took all her feelings under
  • command. I saw she had felt insurrection, and was waking to empire. She
  • sat down. There was that in her face which I could read. It said, I see
  • the line which is my limit; nothing shall make me pass it. I feel--I
  • know how far I may reveal my feelings, and when I must clasp the volume.
  • I have advanced to a certain distance, as far as the true and sovereign
  • and undegraded nature of my kind permits; now here I stand rooted. My
  • heart may break if it is baffled; let it break. It shall never dishonour
  • me; it shall never dishonour my sisterhood in me. Suffering before
  • degradation! death before treachery!
  • "I, for my part, said, 'If she were poor, I would be at her feet; if she
  • were lowly, I would take her in my arms. Her gold and her station are
  • two griffins that guard her on each side. Love looks and longs, and
  • dares not; Passion hovers round, and is kept at bay; Truth and Devotion
  • are scared. There is nothing to lose in winning her, no sacrifice to
  • make. It is all clear gain, and therefore unimaginably difficult.'
  • "Difficult or not, something must be done, something must be said. I
  • could not, and would not, sit silent with all that beauty modestly mute
  • in my presence. I spoke thus, and still I spoke with calm. Quiet as my
  • words were, I could hear they fell in a tone distinct, round, and deep.
  • "'Still, I know I shall be strangely placed with that mountain nymph
  • Liberty. She is, I suspect, akin to that Solitude which I once wooed,
  • and from which I now seek a divorce. These Oreads are peculiar. They
  • come upon you with an unearthly charm, like some starlight evening; they
  • inspire a wild but not warm delight; their beauty is the beauty of
  • spirits; their grace is not the grace of life, but of seasons or scenes
  • in nature. Theirs is the dewy bloom of morning, the languid flush of
  • evening, the peace of the moon, the changefulness of clouds. I want and
  • will have something different. This elfish splendour looks chill to my
  • vision, and feels frozen to my touch. I am not a poet; I cannot live
  • with abstractions. You, Miss Keeldar, have sometimes, in your laughing
  • satire, called me a material philosopher, and implied that I live
  • sufficiently for the substantial. Certainly I feel material from head to
  • foot; and glorious as Nature is, and deeply as I worship her with the
  • solid powers of a solid heart, I would rather behold her through the
  • soft human eyes of a loved and lovely wife than through the wild orbs of
  • the highest goddess of Olympus.'
  • "'Juno could not cook a buffalo steak as you like it,' said she.
  • "'She could not; but I will tell you who could--some young, penniless,
  • friendless orphan girl. I wish I could find such a one--pretty enough
  • for me to love, with something of the mind and heart suited to my taste;
  • not uneducated--honest and modest. I care nothing for attainments, but I
  • would fain have the germ of those sweet natural powers which nothing
  • acquired can rival; any temper Fate wills--I can manage the hottest. To
  • such a creature as this I should like to be first tutor and then
  • husband. I would teach her my language, my habits and my principles, and
  • then I would reward her with my love.'
  • "'_Reward_ her, lord of the creation--_reward_ her!'" ejaculated she,
  • with a curled lip.
  • "'And be repaid a thousandfold.'
  • "'If she willed it, monseigneur.'
  • "'And she _should_ will it.'
  • "'You have stipulated for any temper Fate wills. Compulsion is flint and
  • a blow to the metal of some souls.'
  • "'And love the spark it elicits.'
  • "'Who cares for the love that is but a spark--seen, flown upward, and
  • gone?'
  • "'I must find my orphan girl. Tell me how, Miss Keeldar.'
  • "'Advertise; and be sure you add, when you describe the qualifications,
  • she must be a good plain cook.'
  • "'I must find her; and when I do find her I shall marry her.'
  • "'Not you!' and her voice took a sudden accent of peculiar scorn.
  • "I liked this. I had roused her from the pensive mood in which I had
  • first found her. I would stir her further.
  • "'Why doubt it?'
  • "'_You_ marry!'
  • "'Yes, of course; nothing more evident than that I can and shall.'
  • "'The contrary is evident, Mr. Moore.'
  • "She charmed me in this mood--waxing disdainful, half insulting; pride,
  • temper, derision, blent in her large fine eye, that had just now the
  • look of a merlin's.
  • "'Favour me with your reasons for such an opinion, Miss Keeldar.'
  • "'How will _you_ manage to marry, I wonder?'
  • "'I shall manage it with ease and speed when I find the proper person.'
  • "'Accept celibacy!' (and she made a gesture with her hand as if she gave
  • me something) 'take it as your doom!'
  • "'No; you cannot give what I already have. Celibacy has been mine for
  • thirty years. If you wish to offer me a gift, a parting present, a
  • keepsake, you must change the boon.'
  • "'Take worse, then!'
  • "'How--what?'
  • "I now felt, and looked, and spoke eagerly. I was unwise to quit my
  • sheet-anchor of calm even for an instant; it deprived me of an advantage
  • and transferred it to her. The little spark of temper dissolved in
  • sarcasm, and eddied over her countenance in the ripples of a mocking
  • smile.
  • "'Take a wife that has paid you court to save your modesty, and thrust
  • herself upon you to spare your scruples.'
  • "'Only show me where.'
  • "'Any stout widow that has had a few husbands already, and can manage
  • these things.'
  • "'She must not be rich, then. Oh these riches!'
  • "'Never would you have gathered the produce of the gold-bearing garden.
  • You have not courage to confront the sleepless dragon; you have not
  • craft to borrow the aid of Atlas.'
  • "'You look hot and haughty.'
  • "'And you far haughtier. Yours is the monstrous pride which counterfeits
  • humility.'
  • "'I am a dependant; I know my place.'
  • "'I am a woman; I know mine.'
  • "'I am poor; I must be proud.'
  • "'I have received ordinances, and own obligations stringent as yours.'
  • "We had reached a critical point now, and we halted and looked at each
  • other. _She_ would not give in, I felt. Beyond this I neither felt nor
  • saw. A few moments yet were mine. The end was coming--I heard its
  • rush--but not come. I would dally, wait, talk, and when impulse urged I
  • would act. I am never in a hurry; I never was in a hurry in my whole
  • life. Hasty people drink the nectar of existence scalding hot; I taste
  • it cool as dew. I proceeded: 'Apparently, Miss Keeldar, you are as
  • little likely to marry as myself. I know you have refused three--nay,
  • four--advantageous offers, and, I believe, a fifth. Have you rejected
  • Sir Philip Nunnely?'
  • "I put this question suddenly and promptly.
  • "'Did you think I should take him?'
  • "'I thought you might.'
  • "'On what grounds, may I ask?'
  • "'Conformity of rank, age, pleasing contrast of temper--for _he_ is mild
  • and amiable--harmony of intellectual tastes.'
  • "'A beautiful sentence! Let us take it to pieces. "Conformity of rank."
  • He is quite above me. Compare my grange with his palace, if you please.
  • I am disdained by his kith and kin. "Suitability of age." We were born
  • in the same year; consequently he is still a boy, while I am a
  • woman--ten years his senior to all intents and purposes. "Contrast of
  • temper." Mild and amiable, is he; I--what? Tell me.'
  • "'Sister of the spotted, bright, quick, fiery leopard.'
  • "'And you would mate me with a kid--the millennium being yet millions of
  • centuries from mankind; being yet, indeed, an archangel high in the
  • seventh heaven, uncommissioned to descend? Unjust barbarian! "Harmony of
  • intellectual tastes." He is fond of poetry, and I hate it----'
  • "'Do you? That is news.'
  • "'I absolutely shudder at the sight of metre or at the sound of rhyme
  • whenever I am at the priory or Sir Philip at Fieldhead. Harmony,
  • indeed! When did I whip up syllabub sonnets or string stanzas fragile as
  • fragments of glass? and when did I betray a belief that those
  • penny-beads were genuine brilliants?'
  • "'You might have the satisfaction of leading him to a higher standard,
  • of improving his tastes.'
  • "'Leading and improving! teaching and tutoring! bearing and forbearing!
  • Pah! my husband is not to be my baby. I am not to set him his daily
  • lesson and see that he learns it, and give him a sugar-plum if he is
  • good, and a patient, pensive, pathetic lecture if he is bad. But it is
  • like a tutor to talk of the "satisfaction of teaching." I suppose _you_
  • think it the finest employment in the world. I don't. I reject it.
  • Improving a husband! No. I shall insist upon my husband improving me, or
  • else we part.'
  • "'God knows it is needed!'
  • "'What do you mean by that, Mr. Moore?'
  • "'What I say. Improvement is imperatively needed.'
  • "'If you were a woman you would school _monsieur, votre mari_,
  • charmingly. It would just suit you; schooling is your vocation.'
  • "'May I ask whether, in your present just and gentle mood, you mean to
  • taunt me with being a tutor?'
  • "'Yes, bitterly; and with anything else you please--any defect of which
  • you are painfully conscious.'
  • "'With being poor, for instance?'
  • "'Of course; that will sting you. You are sore about your poverty; you
  • brood over that.'
  • "'With having nothing but a very plain person to offer the woman who may
  • master my heart?'
  • "'Exactly. You have a habit of calling yourself plain. You are sensitive
  • about the cut of your features because they are not quite on an Apollo
  • pattern. You abase them more than is needful, in the faint hope that
  • others may say a word in their behalf--which won't happen. Your face is
  • nothing to boast of, certainly--not a pretty line nor a pretty tint to
  • be found therein.'
  • "'Compare it with your own.'
  • "'It looks like a god of Egypt--a great sand-buried stone head; or
  • rather I will compare it to nothing so lofty. It looks like Tartar. You
  • are my mastiff's cousin. I think you as much like him as a man can be
  • like a dog.'
  • "'Tartar is your dear companion. In summer, when you rise early, and
  • run out into the fields to wet your feet with the dew, and freshen your
  • cheek and uncurl your hair with the breeze, you always call him to
  • follow you. You call him sometimes with a whistle that you learned from
  • me. In the solitude of your wood, when you think nobody but Tartar is
  • listening, you whistle the very tunes you imitated from my lips, or sing
  • the very songs you have caught up by ear from my voice. I do not ask
  • whence flows the feeling which you pour into these songs, for I know it
  • flows out of your heart, Miss Keeldar. In the winter evenings Tartar
  • lies at your feet. You suffer him to rest his head on your perfumed lap;
  • you let him couch on the borders of your satin raiment. His rough hide
  • is familiar with the contact of your hand. I once saw you kiss him on
  • that snow-white beauty spot which stars his broad forehead. It is
  • dangerous to say I am like Tartar; it suggests to me a claim to be
  • treated like Tartar.'
  • "'Perhaps, sir, you can extort as much from your penniless and
  • friendless young orphan girl, when you find her.'
  • "'Oh could I find her such as I image her! Something to tame first, and
  • teach afterwards; to break in, and then to fondle. To lift the destitute
  • proud thing out of poverty; to establish power over and then to be
  • indulgent to the capricious moods that never were influenced and never
  • indulged before; to see her alternately irritated and subdued about
  • twelve times in the twenty-four hours; and perhaps, eventually, when her
  • training was accomplished, to behold her the exemplary and patient
  • mother of about a dozen children, only now and then lending little Louis
  • a cordial cuff by way of paying the interest of the vast debt she owes
  • his father. Oh' (I went on), 'my orphan girl would give me many a kiss;
  • she would watch on the threshold for my coming home of an evening; she
  • would run into my arms; she would keep my hearth as bright as she would
  • make it warm. God bless the sweet idea! Find her I must.'
  • "Her eyes emitted an eager flash, her lips opened; but she reclosed
  • them, and impetuously turned away.
  • "'Tell me, tell me where she is, Miss Keeldar!'
  • "Another movement, all haughtiness and fire and impulse.
  • "'I must know. You _can_ tell me; you _shall_ tell me.'
  • "'I _never will_.'
  • "She turned to leave me. Could I now let her part as she had always
  • parted from me? No. I had gone too far not to finish; I had come too
  • near the end not to drive home to it. All the encumbrance of doubt, all
  • the rubbish of indecision, must be removed at once, and the plain truth
  • must be ascertained. She must take her part, and tell me what it was; I
  • must take mine and adhere to it.
  • "'A minute, madam,' I said, keeping my hand on the door-handle before I
  • opened it. 'We have had a long conversation this morning, but the last
  • word has not been spoken yet. It is yours to speak it.'
  • "'May I pass?'
  • "'No; I guard the door. I would almost rather die than let you leave me
  • just now, without speaking the word I demand.'
  • "'What dare you expect me to say?'
  • "'What I am dying and perishing to hear; what I _must_ and _will_ hear;
  • what you dare not now suppress.'
  • "'Mr. Moore, I hardly know what you mean. You are not like yourself.'
  • "I suppose I hardly was like my usual self, for I scared her--that I
  • could see. It was right: she must be scared to be won.
  • "'You _do_ know what I mean, and for the first time I stand before you
  • _myself_. I have flung off the tutor, and beg to introduce you to the
  • man. And remember, he is a gentleman.'
  • "She trembled. She put her hand to mine as if to remove it from the
  • lock. She might as well have tried to loosen, by her soft touch, metal
  • welded to metal. She felt she was powerless, and receded; and again she
  • trembled.
  • "What change I underwent I cannot explain, but out of her emotion passed
  • into me a new spirit. I neither was crushed nor elated by her lands and
  • gold; I thought not of them, cared not for them. They were
  • nothing--dross that could not dismay me. I saw only herself--her young
  • beautiful form, the grace, the majesty, the modesty of her girlhood.
  • "'My pupil,' I said.
  • "'My master,' was the low answer.
  • "'I have a thing to tell you.'
  • "She waited with declined brow and ringlets drooped.
  • "'I have to tell you that for four years you have been growing into
  • your tutor's heart, and that you are rooted there now. I have to declare
  • that you have bewitched me, in spite of sense, and experience, and
  • difference of station and estate. You have so looked, and spoken, and
  • moved; so shown me your faults and your virtues--beauties rather, they
  • are hardly so stern as virtues--that I love you--love you with my life
  • and strength. It is out now.'
  • "She sought what to say, but could not find a word. She tried to rally,
  • but vainly. I passionately repeated that I loved her.
  • "'Well, Mr. Moore, what then?' was the answer I got, uttered in a tone
  • that would have been petulant if it had not faltered.
  • "'Have you nothing to say to me? Have you no love for me?'
  • "'A little bit.'
  • "'I am not to be tortured. I will not even play at present.'
  • "'I don't want to play; I want to go.'
  • "'I wonder you dare speak of going at this moment. _You_ go! What! with
  • my heart in your hand, to lay it on your toilet and pierce it with your
  • pins? From my presence you do not stir, out of my reach you do not
  • stray, till I receive a hostage--pledge for pledge--your heart for
  • mine.'
  • "'The thing you want is mislaid--lost some time since. Let me go and
  • seek it.'
  • "'Declare that it is where your keys often are--in my possession.'
  • "'You ought to know. And where are my keys, Mr. Moore? Indeed and truly
  • I have lost them again; and Mrs. Gill wants some money, and I have none,
  • except this sixpence.'
  • "She took the coin out of her apron pocket, and showed it in her palm. I
  • could have trifled with her, but it would not do; life and death were at
  • stake. Mastering at once the sixpence and the hand that held it, I
  • demanded, 'Am I to die without you, or am I to live for you?'
  • "'Do as you please. Far be it from me to dictate your choice.'
  • "'You shall tell me with your own lips whether you doom me to exile or
  • call me to hope.'
  • "'Go; I can bear to be left.'
  • "'Perhaps I too _can_ bear to leave you. But reply, Shirley, my pupil,
  • my sovereign--reply.'
  • "'Die without me if you will; live for me if you dare.'
  • "'I am not afraid of you, my leopardess. I _dare_ live for and with you,
  • from this hour till my death. Now, then, I have you. You are mine. I
  • will never let you go. Wherever my home be, I have chosen my wife. If I
  • stay in England, in England you will stay; if I cross the Atlantic, you
  • will cross it also. Our lives are riveted, our lots intertwined.'
  • "'And are we equal, then, sir? are we equal at last?'
  • "'You are younger, frailer, feebler, more ignorant than I.'
  • "'Will you be good to me, and never tyrannize?'
  • "'Will you let me breathe, and not bewilder me? You must not smile at
  • present. The world swims and changes round me. The sun is a dizzying
  • scarlet blaze, the sky a violet vortex whirling over me.'
  • "I am a strong man, but I staggered as I spoke. All creation was
  • exaggerated. Colour grew more vivid, motion more rapid, life itself more
  • vital. I hardly saw her for a moment, but I heard her voice--pitilessly
  • sweet. She would not subdue one of her charms in compassion. Perhaps she
  • did not know what I felt.
  • "'You name me leopardess. Remember, the leopardess is tameless,' said
  • she.
  • "'Tame or fierce, wild or subdued, you are _mine_.'
  • "'I am glad I know my keeper and am used to him. Only his voice will I
  • follow; only his hand shall manage me; only at his feet will I repose.'
  • "I took her back to her seat, and sat down by her side. I wanted to hear
  • her speak again. I could never have enough of her voice and her words.
  • "'How much do you love me?' I asked.
  • "'Ah! you know. I will not gratify you--I will not flatter.'
  • "'I don't know half enough; my heart craves to be fed. If you knew how
  • hungry and ferocious it is, you would hasten to stay it with a kind word
  • or two.'
  • "'Poor Tartar!' said she, touching and patting my hand--'poor fellow,
  • stalwart friend, Shirley's pet and favourite, lie down!'
  • "'But I will not lie down till I am fed with one sweet word.'
  • "And at last she gave it.
  • "'Dear Louis, be faithful to me; never leave me. I don't care for life
  • unless I may pass it at your side.'
  • "'Something more.'
  • "She gave me a change; it was not her way to offer the same dish twice.
  • "'Sir,' she said, starting up, 'at your peril you ever again name such
  • sordid things as money, or poverty, or inequality. It will be absolutely
  • dangerous to torment me with these maddening scruples. I defy you to do
  • it.'
  • "My face grew hot. I did once more wish I were not so poor or she were
  • not so rich. She saw the transient misery; and then, indeed, she
  • caressed me. Blent with torment, I experienced rapture.
  • "'Mr. Moore,' said she, looking up with a sweet, open, earnest
  • countenance, 'teach me and help me to be good. I do not ask you to take
  • off my shoulders all the cares and duties of property, but I ask you to
  • share the burden, and to show me how to sustain my part well. Your
  • judgment is well balanced, your heart is kind, your principles are
  • sound. I know you are wise; I feel you are benevolent; I believe you are
  • conscientious. Be my companion through life; be my guide where I am
  • ignorant; be my master where I am faulty; be my friend always!'
  • "'So help me God, I will!'"
  • * * * * *
  • Yet again a passage from the blank book if you like, reader; if you
  • don't like it, pass it over:--
  • "The Sympsons are gone, but not before discovery and explanation. My
  • manner must have betrayed something, or my looks. I was quiet, but I
  • forgot to be guarded sometimes. I stayed longer in the room than usual;
  • I could not bear to be out of her presence; I returned to it, and basked
  • in it, like Tartar in the sun. If she left the oak parlour,
  • instinctively I rose and left it too. She chid me for this procedure
  • more than once. I did it with a vague, blundering idea of getting a word
  • with her in the hall or elsewhere. Yesterday towards dusk I had her to
  • myself for five minutes by the hall fire. We stood side by side; she was
  • railing at me, and I was enjoying the sound of her voice. The young
  • ladies passed, and looked at us; we did not separate. Ere long they
  • repassed, and again looked. Mrs. Sympson came; we did not move. Mr.
  • Sympson opened the dining-room door. Shirley flashed him back full
  • payment for his spying gaze. She curled her lip and tossed her tresses.
  • The glance she gave was at once explanatory and defiant. It said: 'I
  • like Mr. Moore's society, and I dare you to find fault with my taste.'
  • "I asked, 'Do you mean him to understand how matters are?'
  • "'I do,' said she; 'but I leave the development to chance. There will be
  • a scene. I neither invite it nor fear it; only, you must be present, for
  • I am inexpressibly tired of facing him solus. I don't like to see him in
  • a rage. He then puts off all his fine proprieties and conventional
  • disguises, and the real human being below is what you would call
  • _commun, plat, bas--vilain et un peu méchant_. His ideas are not clean,
  • Mr. Moore; they want scouring with soft soap and fuller's earth. I
  • think, if he could add his imagination to the contents of Mrs. Gill's
  • bucking-basket, and let her boil it in her copper, with rain-water and
  • bleaching-powder (I hope you think me a tolerable laundress), it would
  • do him incalculable good.'
  • "This morning, fancying I heard her descend somewhat early, I was down
  • instantly. I had not been deceived. There she was, busy at work in the
  • breakfast-parlour, of which the housemaid was completing the arrangement
  • and dusting. She had risen betimes to finish some little keepsake she
  • intended for Henry. I got only a cool reception, which I accepted till
  • the girl was gone, taking my book to the window-seat very quietly. Even
  • when we were alone I was slow to disturb her. To sit with her in sight
  • was happiness, and the proper happiness, for early morning--serene,
  • incomplete, but progressive. Had I been obtrusive, I knew I should have
  • encountered rebuff. 'Not at home to suitors' was written on her brow.
  • Therefore I read on, stole now and then a look, watched her countenance
  • soften and open as she felt I respected her mood, and enjoyed the gentle
  • content of the moment.
  • "The distance between us shrank, and the light hoar-frost thawed
  • insensibly. Ere an hour elapsed I was at her side, watching her sew,
  • gathering her sweet smiles and her merry words, which fell for me
  • abundantly. We sat, as we had a right to sit, side by side; my arm
  • rested on her chair; I was near enough to count the stitches of her
  • work, and to discern the eye of her needle. The door suddenly opened.
  • "I believe, if I had just then started from her, she would have
  • despised me. Thanks to the phlegm of my nature, I rarely start. When I
  • am well-off, _bien_, comfortable, I am not soon stirred. _Bien_ I
  • was--_très bien_--consequently immutable. No muscle moved. I hardly
  • looked to the door.
  • "'Good-morning, uncle,' said she, addressing that personage, who paused
  • on the threshold in a state of petrifaction.
  • "'Have you been long downstairs, Miss Keeldar, and alone with Mr.
  • Moore?'
  • "'Yes, a very long time. We both came down early; it was scarcely
  • light.'
  • "'The proceeding is improper----'
  • "'It was at first, I was rather cross, and not civil; but you will
  • perceive that we are now friends.'
  • "'I perceive more than you would wish me to perceive.'
  • "'Hardly, sir,' said I; 'we have no disguises. Will you permit me to
  • intimate that any further observations you have to make may as well be
  • addressed to me? Henceforward I stand between Miss Keeldar and all
  • annoyance.'
  • "'_You!_ What have _you_ to do with Miss Keeldar?'
  • "'To protect, watch over, serve her.'
  • "'You, sir--you, the tutor?'
  • "'Not one word of insult, sir,' interposed she; 'not one syllable of
  • disrespect to Mr. Moore in this house.'
  • "'Do you take his part?'
  • "'_His_ part? oh yes!'
  • "She turned to me with a sudden fond movement, which I met by circling
  • her with my arm. She and I both rose.
  • "'Good Ged!' was the cry from the morning-gown standing quivering at the
  • door. _Ged_, I think, must be the cognomen of Mr. Sympson's Lares. When
  • hard pressed he always invokes this idol.
  • "'Come forward, uncle; you shall hear all.--Tell him all, Louis.'
  • "'I dare him to speak--the beggar! the knave! the specious hypocrite!
  • the vile, insinuating, infamous menial!--Stand apart from my niece, sir.
  • Let her go!'
  • "She clung to me with energy. 'I am near my future husband,' she said.
  • 'Who dares touch him or me?'
  • "'Her husband!' He raised and spread his hands. He dropped into a seat.
  • "'A while ago you wanted much to know whom I meant to marry. My
  • intention was then formed, but not mature for communication. Now it is
  • ripe, sun-mellowed, perfect. Take the crimson peach--take Louis Moore!'
  • "'But' (savagely) 'you _shall not_ have him; he _shall not_ have you.'
  • "'I would die before I would have another. I would die if I might not
  • have him.'
  • "He uttered words with which this page shall never be polluted.
  • "She turned white as death; she shook all over; she lost her strength. I
  • laid her down on the sofa; just looked to ascertain that she had not
  • fainted--of which, with a divine smile, she assured me. I kissed her;
  • and then, if I were to perish, I cannot give a clear account of what
  • happened in the course of the next five minutes. She has since--through
  • tears, laughter, and trembling--told me that I turned terrible, and gave
  • myself to the demon. She says I left her, made one bound across the
  • room; that Mr. Sympson vanished through the door as if shot from a
  • cannon. I also vanished, and she heard Mrs. Gill scream.
  • "Mrs. Gill was still screaming when I came to my senses. I was then in
  • another apartment--the oak parlour, I think. I held Sympson before me
  • crushed into a chair, and my hand was on his cravat. His eyes rolled in
  • his head; I was strangling him, I think. The housekeeper stood wringing
  • her hands, entreating me to desist. I desisted that moment, and felt at
  • once as cool as stone. But I told Mrs. Gill to fetch the Red-House Inn
  • chaise instantly, and informed Mr. Sympson he must depart from Fieldhead
  • the instant it came. Though half frightened out of his wits, he declared
  • he would not. Repeating the former order, I added a commission to fetch
  • a constable. I said, 'You _shall_ go, by fair means or foul.'
  • "He threatened prosecution; I cared for nothing. I had stood over him
  • once before, not quite so fiercely as now, but full as austerely. It was
  • one night when burglars attempted the house at Sympson Grove, and in his
  • wretched cowardice he would have given a vain alarm, without daring to
  • offer defence. I had then been obliged to protect his family and his
  • abode by mastering himself--and I had succeeded. I now remained with him
  • till the chaise came. I marshalled him to it, he scolding all the way.
  • He was terribly bewildered, as well as enraged. He would have resisted
  • me, but knew not how. He called for his wife and daughters to come. I
  • said they should follow him as soon as they could prepare. The smoke,
  • the fume, the fret of his demeanour was inexpressible, but it was a fury
  • incapable of producing a deed. That man, properly handled, must ever
  • remain impotent. I know he will never touch me with the law. I know his
  • wife, over whom he tyrannizes in trifles, guides him in matters of
  • importance. I have long since earned her undying mother's gratitude by
  • my devotion to her boy. In some of Henry's ailments I have nursed
  • him--better, she said, than any woman could nurse. She will never forget
  • that. She and her daughters quitted me to-day, in mute wrath and
  • consternation; but she respects me. When Henry clung to my neck as I
  • lifted him into the carriage and placed him by her side, when I arranged
  • her own wrapping to make her warm, though she turned her head from me, I
  • saw the tears start to her eyes. She will but the more zealously
  • advocate my cause because she has left me in anger. I am glad of
  • this--not for my own sake, but for that of my life and idol--my
  • Shirley."
  • Once again he writes, a week after:--"I am now at Stilbro'. I have taken
  • up my temporary abode with a friend--a professional man, in whose
  • business I can be useful. Every day I ride over to Fieldhead. How long
  • will it be before I can call that place my home, and its mistress mine?
  • I am not easy, not tranquil; I am tantalized, sometimes tortured. To see
  • her now, one would think she had never pressed her cheek to my shoulder,
  • or clung to me with tenderness or trust. I feel unsafe; she renders me
  • miserable. I am shunned when I visit her; she withdraws from my reach.
  • Once this day I lifted her face, resolved to get a full look down her
  • deep, dark eyes. Difficult to describe what I read there! Pantheress!
  • beautiful forest-born! wily, tameless, peerless nature! She gnaws her
  • chain; I see the white teeth working at the steel! She has dreams of her
  • wild woods and pinings after virgin freedom. I wish Sympson would come
  • again, and oblige her again to entwine her arms about me. I wish there
  • was danger she should lose me, as there is risk I shall lose her. No;
  • final loss I do not fear, but long delay----
  • "It is now night--midnight. I have spent the afternoon and evening at
  • Fieldhead. Some hours ago she passed me, coming down the oak staircase
  • to the hall. She did not know I was standing in the twilight, near the
  • staircase window, looking at the frost-bright constellations. How
  • closely she glided against the banisters! How shyly shone her large eyes
  • upon me! How evanescent, fugitive, fitful she looked--slim and swift as
  • a northern streamer!
  • "I followed her into the drawing-room. Mrs. Pryor and Caroline Helstone
  • were both there; she has summoned them to bear her company awhile. In
  • her white evening dress, with her long hair flowing full and wavy, with
  • her noiseless step, her pale cheek, her eye full of night and lightning,
  • she looked, I thought, spirit-like--a thing made of an element, the
  • child of a breeze and a flame, the daughter of ray and raindrop--a thing
  • never to be overtaken, arrested, fixed. I wished I could avoid following
  • her with my gaze as she moved here and there, but it was impossible. I
  • talked with the other ladies as well as I could, but still I looked at
  • her. She was very silent; I think she never spoke to me--not even when
  • she offered me tea. It happened that she was called out a minute by Mrs.
  • Gill. I passed into the moonlit hall, with the design of getting a word
  • as she returned; nor in this did I fail.
  • "'Miss Keeldar, stay one instant,' said I, meeting her.
  • "'Why? the hall is too cold.'
  • "'It is not cold for me; at my side it should not be cold for you.'
  • "'But I shiver.'
  • "'With fear, I believe. What makes you fear me? You are quiet and
  • distant. Why?'
  • "'I may well fear what looks like a great dark goblin meeting me in the
  • moonlight.'
  • "'_Do not--do not_ pass! Stay with me awhile. Let us exchange a few
  • quiet words. It is three days since I spoke to you alone. Such changes
  • are cruel.'
  • "'I have no wish to be cruel,' she responded, softly enough. Indeed
  • there was softness in her whole deportment--in her face, in her voice;
  • but there was also reserve, and an air fleeting, evanishing, intangible.
  • "'You certainly give me pain,' said I. 'It is hardly a week since you
  • called me your future husband and treated me as such. Now I am once more
  • the tutor for you. I am addressed as Mr. Moore and sir. Your lips have
  • forgotten Louis.'
  • "'No, Louis, no. It is an easy, liquid name--not soon forgotten.'
  • "'Be cordial to Louis, then; approach him--let him approach.'
  • "'I _am_ cordial,' said she, hovering aloof like a white shadow.
  • "'Your voice is very sweet and very low,' I answered, quietly advancing.
  • 'You seem subdued, but still startled.'
  • "'No--quite calm, and afraid of nothing,' she assured me.
  • "'Of nothing but your votary.'
  • "I bent a knee to the flags at her feet.
  • "'You see I am in a new world, Mr. Moore. I don't know myself; I don't
  • know you. But rise. When you do so I feel troubled and disturbed.'
  • "I obeyed. It would not have suited me to retain that attitude long. I
  • courted serenity and confidence for her, and not vainly. She trusted and
  • clung to me again.
  • "'Now, Shirley,' I said, 'you can conceive I am far from happy in my
  • present uncertain, unsettled state.'
  • "'Oh yes, you _are_ happy!' she cried hastily. 'You don't know how happy
  • you are. Any change will be for the worse.'
  • "'Happy or not, I cannot bear to go on so much longer. You are too
  • generous to require it.'
  • "'Be reasonable, Louis; be patient! I like you because you are patient.'
  • "'Like me no longer, then; love me instead. Fix our marriage day; think
  • of it to-night, and decide.'
  • "She breathed a murmur, inarticulate yet expressive; darted, or melted,
  • from my arms--and I lost her."
  • CHAPTER XXXVII.
  • THE WINDING-UP.
  • Yes, reader, we must settle accounts now. I have only briefly to narrate
  • the final fates of some of the personages whose acquaintance we have
  • made in this narrative, and then you and I must shake hands, and for the
  • present separate.
  • Let us turn to the curates--to the much-loved, though long-neglected.
  • Come forward, modest merit! Malone, I see, promptly answers the
  • invocation. He knows his own description when he hears it.
  • No, Peter Augustus; we can have nothing to say to you. It won't do.
  • Impossible to trust ourselves with the touching tale of your deeds and
  • destinies. Are you not aware, Peter, that a discriminating public has
  • its crotchets; that the unvarnished truth does not answer; that plain
  • facts will not digest? Do you not know that the squeak of the real pig
  • is no more relished now than it was in days of yore? Were I to give the
  • catastrophe of your life and conversation, the public would sweep off in
  • shrieking hysterics, and there would be a wild cry for sal-volatile and
  • burnt feathers. "Impossible!" would be pronounced here; "untrue!" would
  • be responded there; "inartistic!" would be solemnly decided. Note well.
  • Whenever you present the actual, simple truth, it is, somehow, always
  • denounced as a lie--they disown it, cast it off, throw it on the parish;
  • whereas the product of your own imagination, the mere figment, the sheer
  • fiction, is adopted, petted, termed pretty, proper, sweetly natural--the
  • little, spurious wretch gets all the comfits, the honest, lawful
  • bantling all the cuffs. Such is the way of the world, Peter; and as you
  • are the legitimate urchin, rude, unwashed, and naughty, you must stand
  • down.
  • Make way for Mr. Sweeting.
  • Here he comes, with his lady on his arm--the most splendid and the
  • weightiest woman in Yorkshire--Mrs. Sweeting, formerly Miss Dora Sykes.
  • They were married under the happiest auspices, Mr. Sweeting having been
  • just inducted to a comfortable living, and Mr. Sykes being in
  • circumstances to give Dora a handsome portion. They lived long and
  • happily together, beloved by their parishioners and by a numerous circle
  • of friends.
  • There! I think the varnish has been put on very nicely.
  • Advance, Mr. Donne.
  • This gentleman turned out admirably--far better than either you or I
  • could possibly have expected, reader. He, too, married a most sensible,
  • quiet, lady-like little woman. The match was the making of him. He
  • became an exemplary domestic character, and a truly active parish priest
  • (as a pastor he, to his dying day, conscientiously refused to act). The
  • outside of the cup and platter he burnished up with the best
  • polishing-powder; the furniture of the altar and temple he looked after
  • with the zeal of an upholsterer, the care of a cabinet-maker. His little
  • school, his little church, his little parsonage, all owed their erection
  • to him; and they did him credit. Each was a model in its way. If
  • uniformity and taste in architecture had been the same thing as
  • consistency and earnestness in religion, what a shepherd of a Christian
  • flock Mr. Donne would have made! There was one art in the mastery of
  • which nothing mortal ever surpassed Mr. Donne: it was that of begging.
  • By his own unassisted efforts he begged all the money for all his
  • erections. In this matter he had a grasp of plan, a scope of action
  • quite unique. He begged of high and low--of the shoeless cottage brat
  • and the coroneted duke. He sent out begging-letters far and wide--to old
  • Queen Charlotte, to the princesses her daughters, to her sons the royal
  • dukes, to the Prince Regent, to Lord Castlereagh, to every member of the
  • ministry then in office; and, what is more remarkable, he screwed
  • something out of every one of these personages. It is on record that he
  • got five pounds from the close-fisted old lady Queen Charlotte, and two
  • guineas from the royal profligate her eldest son. When Mr. Donne set out
  • on begging expeditions, he armed himself in a complete suit of brazen
  • mail. That you had given a hundred pounds yesterday was with him no
  • reason why you should not give two hundred to-day. He would tell you so
  • to your face, and, ten to one, get the money out of you. People gave to
  • get rid of him. After all, he did some good with the cash. He was
  • useful in his day and generation.
  • Perhaps I ought to remark that on the premature and sudden vanishing of
  • Mr. Malone from the stage of Briarfield parish (you cannot know how it
  • happened, reader; your curiosity must be robbed to pay your elegant love
  • of the pretty and pleasing), there came as his successor another Irish
  • curate, Mr. Macarthey. I am happy to be able to inform you, _with
  • truth_, that this gentleman did as much credit to his country as Malone
  • had done it discredit. He proved himself as decent, decorous, and
  • conscientious as Peter was rampant, boisterous, and---- This last
  • epithet I choose to suppress, because it would let the cat out of the
  • bag. He laboured faithfully in the parish. The schools, both Sunday and
  • day schools, flourished under his sway like green bay trees. Being
  • human, of course he had his faults. These, however, were proper,
  • steady-going, clerical faults--what many would call virtues. The
  • circumstance of finding himself invited to tea with a Dissenter would
  • unhinge him for a week. The spectacle of a Quaker wearing his hat in the
  • church, the thought of an unbaptized fellow-creature being interred with
  • Christian rites--these things could make strange havoc in Mr.
  • Macarthey's physical and mental economy. Otherwise he was sane and
  • rational, diligent and charitable.
  • I doubt not a justice-loving public will have remarked, ere this, that I
  • have thus far shown a criminal remissness in pursuing, catching, and
  • bringing to condign punishment the would-be assassin of Mr. Robert
  • Moore. Here was a fine opening to lead my willing readers a dance, at
  • once decorous and exciting--a dance of law and gospel, of the dungeon,
  • the dock, and the "dead-thraw." You might have liked it, reader, but _I_
  • should not. I and my subject would presently have quarrelled, and then I
  • should have broken down. I was happy to find that facts perfectly
  • exonerated me from the attempt. The murderer was never punished, for the
  • good reason that he was never caught--the result of the further
  • circumstance that he was never pursued. The magistrates made a
  • shuffling, as if they were going to rise and do valiant things; but
  • since Moore himself, instead of urging and leading them as heretofore,
  • lay still on his little cottage-couch, laughing in his sleeve, and
  • sneering with every feature of his pale, foreign face, they considered
  • better of it, and after fulfilling certain indispensable forms,
  • prudently resolved to let the matter quietly drop, which they did.
  • Mr. Moore knew who had shot him, and all Briarfield knew. It was no
  • other than Michael Hartley, the half-crazed weaver once before alluded
  • to, a frantic Antinomian in religion, and a mad leveller in politics.
  • The poor soul died of delirium tremens a year after the attempt on
  • Moore, and Robert gave his wretched widow a guinea to bury him.
  • * * * * *
  • The winter is over and gone; spring has followed with beamy and shadowy,
  • with flowery and showery flight. We are now in the heart of summer--in
  • mid-June--the June of 1812.
  • It is burning weather. The air is deep azure and red gold. It fits the
  • time; it fits the age; it fits the present spirit of the nations. The
  • nineteenth century wantons in its giant adolescence; the Titan boy
  • uproots mountains in his game, and hurls rocks in his wild sport. This
  • summer Bonaparte is in the saddle; he and his host scour Russian
  • deserts. He has with him Frenchmen and Poles, Italians and children of
  • the Rhine, six hundred thousand strong. He marches on old Moscow. Under
  • old Moscow's walls the rude Cossack waits him. Barbarian stoic! he waits
  • without fear of the boundless ruin rolling on. He puts his trust in a
  • snow-cloud; the wilderness, the wind, and the hail-storm are his refuge;
  • his allies are the elements--air, fire, water. And what are these? Three
  • terrible archangels ever stationed before the throne of Jehovah. They
  • stand clothed in white, girdled with golden girdles; they uplift vials,
  • brimming with the wrath of God. Their time is the day of vengeance;
  • their signal, the word of the Lord of hosts, "thundering with the voice
  • of His excellency."
  • "Hast thou entered into the treasures of the snow? or hast thou seen the
  • treasures of the hail, which I have reserved against the time of
  • trouble, against the day of battle and war?
  • "Go your ways. Pour out the vials of the wrath of God upon the earth."
  • It is done. The earth is scorched with fire; the sea becomes "as the
  • blood of a dead man;" the islands flee away; the mountains are not
  • found.
  • In this year, Lord Wellington assumed the reins in Spain. They made him
  • generalissimo, for their own salvation's sake. In this year he took
  • Badajos, he fought the field of Vittoria, he captured Pampeluna, he
  • stormed San Sebastian; in this year he won Salamanca.
  • Men of Manchester, I beg your pardon for this slight _résumé_ of warlike
  • facts, but it is of no consequence. Lord Wellington is, for you, only a
  • decayed old gentleman now. I rather think some of you have called him a
  • "dotard;" you have taunted him with his age and the loss of his physical
  • vigour. What fine heroes you are yourselves! Men like you have a right
  • to trample on what is mortal in a demigod. Scoff at your ease; your
  • scorn can never break his grand old heart.
  • But come, friends, whether Quakers or cotton-printers, let us hold a
  • peace-congress, and let out our venom quietly. We have been talking with
  • unseemly zeal about bloody battles and butchering generals; we arrive
  • now at a triumph in your line. On the 18th of June 1812 the Orders in
  • Council were repealed, and the blockaded ports thrown open. You know
  • very well--such of you as are old enough to remember--you made Yorkshire
  • and Lancashire shake with your shout on that occasion. The ringers
  • cracked a bell in Briarfield belfry; it is dissonant to this day. The
  • Association of Merchants and Manufacturers dined together at Stilbro',
  • and one and all went home in such a plight as their wives would never
  • wish to witness more. Liverpool started and snorted like a river-horse
  • roused amongst his reeds by thunder. Some of the American merchants felt
  • threatenings of apoplexy, and had themselves bled--all, like wise men,
  • at this first moment of prosperity, prepared to rush into the bowels of
  • speculation, and to delve new difficulties, in whose depths they might
  • lose themselves at some future day. Stocks which had been accumulating
  • for years now went off in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye.
  • Warehouses were lightened, ships were laden; work abounded, wages rose;
  • the good time seemed come. These prospects might be delusive, but they
  • were brilliant--to some they were even true. At that epoch, in that
  • single month of June, many a solid fortune was realized.
  • * * * * *
  • When a whole province rejoices, the humblest of its inhabitants tastes a
  • festal feeling; the sound of public bells rouses the most secluded
  • abode, as if with a call to be gay. And so Caroline Helstone thought,
  • when she dressed herself more carefully than usual on the day of this
  • trading triumph, and went, attired in her neatest muslin, to spend the
  • afternoon at Fieldhead, there to superintend certain millinery
  • preparations for a great event, the last appeal in these matters being
  • reserved for her unimpeachable taste. She decided on the wreath, the
  • veil, the dress to be worn at the altar. She chose various robes and
  • fashions for more ordinary occasions, without much reference to the
  • bride's opinion--that lady, indeed, being in a somewhat impracticable
  • mood.
  • Louis had presaged difficulties, and he had found them--in fact, his
  • mistress had shown herself exquisitely provoking, putting off her
  • marriage day by day, week by week, month by month, at first coaxing him
  • with soft pretences of procrastination, and in the end rousing his whole
  • deliberate but determined nature to revolt against her tyranny, at once
  • so sweet and so intolerable.
  • It had needed a sort of tempest-shock to bring her to the point; but
  • there she was at last, fettered to a fixed day. There she lay, conquered
  • by love, and bound with a vow.
  • Thus vanquished and restricted, she pined, like any other chained
  • denizen of deserts. Her captor alone could cheer her; his society only
  • could make amends for the lost privilege of liberty. In his absence she
  • sat or wandered alone, spoke little, and ate less.
  • She furthered no preparations for her nuptials; Louis was himself
  • obliged to direct all arrangements. He was virtually master of Fieldhead
  • weeks before he became so nominally--the least presumptuous, the kindest
  • master that ever was, but with his lady absolute. She abdicated without
  • a word or a struggle. "Go to Mr. Moore, ask Mr. Moore," was her answer
  • when applied to for orders. Never was wooer of wealthy bride so
  • thoroughly absolved from the subaltern part, so inevitably compelled to
  • assume a paramount character.
  • In all this Miss Keeldar partly yielded to her disposition; but a remark
  • she made a year afterwards proved that she partly also acted on system.
  • "Louis," she said, "would never have learned to rule if she had not
  • ceased to govern. The incapacity of the sovereign had developed the
  • powers of the premier."
  • It had been intended that Miss Helstone should act as bridesmaid at the
  • approaching nuptials, but Fortune had destined her another part.
  • She came home in time to water her plants. She had performed this little
  • task. The last flower attended to was a rose-tree, which bloomed in a
  • quiet green nook at the back of the house. This plant had received the
  • refreshing shower; she was now resting a minute. Near the wall stood a
  • fragment of sculptured stone--a monkish relic--once, perhaps, the base
  • of a cross. She mounted it, that she might better command the view. She
  • had still the watering pot in one hand; with the other her pretty dress
  • was held lightly aside, to avoid trickling drops. She gazed over the
  • wall, along some lonely fields; beyond three dusk trees, rising side by
  • side against the sky; beyond a solitary thorn at the head of a solitary
  • lane far off. She surveyed the dusk moors, where bonfires were kindling.
  • The summer evening was warm; the bell-music was joyous; the blue smoke
  • of the fires looked soft, their red flame bright. Above them, in the sky
  • whence the sun had vanished, twinkled a silver point--the star of love.
  • Caroline was not unhappy that evening--far otherwise; but as she gazed
  • she sighed, and as she sighed a hand circled her, and rested quietly on
  • her waist. Caroline thought she knew who had drawn near; she received
  • the touch unstartled.
  • "I am looking at Venus, mamma. See, she is beautiful. How white her
  • lustre is, compared with the deep red of the bonfires!"
  • The answer was a closer caress; and Caroline turned, and looked, not
  • into Mrs. Pryor's matron face, but up at a dark manly visage. She
  • dropped her watering-pot and stepped down from the pedestal.
  • "I have been sitting with 'mamma' an hour," said the intruder. "I have
  • had a long conversation with her. Where, meantime, have you been?"
  • "To Fieldhead. Shirley is as naughty as ever, Robert. She will neither
  • say Yes nor No to any question put. She sits alone. I cannot tell
  • whether she is melancholy or nonchalant. If you rouse her or scold her,
  • she gives you a look, half wistful, half reckless, which sends you away
  • as queer and crazed as herself. What Louis will make of her, I cannot
  • tell. For my part, if I were a gentleman, I think I would not dare
  • undertake her."
  • "Never mind them. They were cut out for each other. Louis, strange to
  • say, likes her all the better for these freaks. He will manage her, if
  • any one can. She tries him, however. He has had a stormy courtship for
  • such a calm character; but you see it all ends in victory for him.
  • Caroline, I have sought you to ask an audience. Why are those bells
  • ringing?"
  • "For the repeal of your terrible law--the Orders you hate so much. You
  • are pleased, are you not?"
  • "Yesterday evening at this time I was packing some books for a
  • sea-voyage. They were the only possessions, except some clothes, seeds,
  • roots, and tools, which I felt free to take with me to Canada. I was
  • going to leave you."
  • "To leave me? To leave _me_?"
  • Her little fingers fastened on his arm; she spoke and looked affrighted.
  • "Not now--not now. Examine my face--yes, look at me well. Is the despair
  • of parting legible thereon?"
  • She looked into an illuminated countenance, whose characters were all
  • beaming, though the page itself was dusk. This face, potent in the
  • majesty of its traits, shed down on her hope, fondness, delight.
  • "Will the repeal do you good--_much_ good, _immediate_ good?" she
  • inquired.
  • "The repeal of the Orders in Council saves me. Now I shall not turn
  • bankrupt; now I shall not give up business; now I shall not leave
  • England; now I shall be no longer poor; now I can pay my debts; now all
  • the cloth I have in my warehouses will be taken off my hands, and
  • commissions given me for much more. This day lays for my fortunes a
  • broad, firm foundation, on which, for the first time in my life, I can
  • securely build."
  • Caroline devoured his words; she held his hand in hers; she drew a long
  • breath.
  • "You are saved? Your heavy difficulties are lifted?"
  • "They are lifted. I breathe. I can act."
  • "At last! Oh, Providence is kind! Thank Him, Robert."
  • "I do thank Providence."
  • "And I also, for your sake!" She looked up devoutly.
  • "Now I can take more workmen, give better wages, lay wiser and more
  • liberal plans, do some good, be less selfish. _Now_, Caroline, I can
  • have a house--a home which I can truly call mine--and _now_----"
  • He paused, for his deep voice was checked.
  • "And _now_," he resumed--"now I can think of marriage, _now_ I can seek
  • a wife."
  • This was no moment for her to speak. She did not speak.
  • "Will Caroline, who meekly hopes to be forgiven as she forgives--will
  • she pardon all I have made her suffer, all that long pain I have
  • wickedly caused her, all that sickness of body and mind she owed to me?
  • Will she forget what she knows of my poor ambition, my sordid schemes?
  • Will she let me expiate these things? Will she suffer me to prove that,
  • as I once deserted cruelly, trifled wantonly, injured basely, I can now
  • love faithfully, cherish fondly, treasure tenderly?"
  • His hand was in Caroline's still; a gentle pressure answered him.
  • "Is Caroline mine?"
  • "Caroline is yours."
  • "I will prize her. The sense of her value is here, in my heart; the
  • necessity for her society is blended with my life. Not more jealous
  • shall I be of the blood whose flow moves my pulses than of her happiness
  • and well-being."
  • "I love you, too, Robert, and will take faithful care of you."
  • "Will you take faithful care of me? Faithful care! As if that rose
  • should promise to shelter from tempest this hard gray stone! But she
  • _will_ care for me, in her way. These hands will be the gentle
  • ministrants of every comfort I can taste. I know the being I seek to
  • entwine with my own will bring me a solace, a charity, a purity, to
  • which, of myself, I am a stranger."
  • Suddenly Caroline was troubled; her lip quivered.
  • "What flutters my dove?" asked Moore, as she nestled to and then
  • uneasily shrank from him.
  • "Poor mamma! I am all mamma has. Must I leave her?"
  • "Do you know, I thought of that difficulty. I and 'mamma' have discussed
  • it."
  • "Tell me what you wish, what you would like, and I will consider if it
  • is possible to consent. But I cannot desert her, even for you. I cannot
  • break her heart, even for your sake."
  • "She was faithful when I was false--was she not? I never came near your
  • sick-bed, and she watched it ceaselessly."
  • "What must I do? Anything but leave her."
  • "At my wish you never shall leave her."
  • "She may live very near us?"
  • "With us--only she will have her own rooms and servant. For this she
  • stipulates herself."
  • "You know she has an income, that, with her habits, makes her quite
  • independent?"
  • "She told me that, with a gentle pride that reminded me of somebody
  • else."
  • "She is not at all interfering, and incapable of gossip."
  • "I know her, Cary. But if, instead of being the personification of
  • reserve and discretion, she were something quite opposite, I should not
  • fear her."
  • "Yet she will be your mother-in-law?" The speaker gave an arch little
  • nod. Moore smiled.
  • "Louis and I are not of the order of men who fear their mothers-in-law,
  • Cary. Our foes never have been, nor will be, those of our own household.
  • I doubt not my mother-in-law will make much of me."
  • "That she will--in her quiet way, you know. She is not demonstrative;
  • and when you see her silent, or even cool, you must not fancy her
  • displeased; it is only a manner she has. Be sure to let me interpret for
  • her whenever she puzzles you; always believe my account of the matter,
  • Robert."
  • "Oh, implicitly! Jesting apart, I feel that she and I will suit--_on ne
  • peut mieux_. Hortense, you know, is exquisitely susceptible--in our
  • French sense of the word--and not, perhaps, always reasonable in her
  • requirements; yet, dear, honest girl, I never painfully wounded her
  • feelings or had a serious quarrel with her in my life."
  • "No; you are most generously considerate, indeed, most tenderly
  • indulgent to her; and you will be considerate with mamma. You are a
  • gentleman all through, Robert, to the bone, and nowhere so perfect a
  • gentleman as at your own fireside."
  • "A eulogium I like; it is very sweet. I am well pleased my Caroline
  • should view me in this light."
  • "Mamma just thinks of you as I do."
  • "Not quite, I hope?"
  • "She does not want to marry you--don't be vain; but she said to me the
  • other day, 'My dear, Mr. Moore has pleasing manners; he is one of the
  • few gentlemen I have seen who combine politeness with an air of
  • sincerity.'"
  • "'Mamma' is rather a misanthropist, is she not? Not the best opinion of
  • the sterner sex?"
  • "She forbears to judge them as a whole, but she has her exceptions whom
  • she admires--Louis and Mr. Hall, and, of late, yourself. She did not
  • like you once; I knew that, because she would never speak of you. But,
  • Robert----"
  • "Well, what now? What is the new thought?"
  • "You have not seen my uncle yet?"
  • "I have. 'Mamma' called him into the room. He consents conditionally. If
  • I prove that I can keep a wife, I may have her; and I _can_ keep her
  • better than he thinks--better than I choose to boast."
  • "If you get rich you will do good with your money, Robert?"
  • "I _will_ do good; you shall tell me how. Indeed, I have some schemes of
  • my own, which you and I will talk about on our own hearth one day. I
  • have seen the necessity of doing good; I have learned the downright
  • folly of being selfish. Caroline, I foresee what I will now foretell.
  • This war _must_ ere long draw to a close. Trade is likely to prosper for
  • some years to come. There may be a brief misunderstanding between
  • England and America, but that will not last. What would you think if,
  • one day--perhaps ere another ten years elapse--Louis and I divide
  • Briarfield parish betwixt us? Louis, at any rate, is certain of power
  • and property. He will not bury his talents. He is a benevolent fellow,
  • and has, besides, an intellect of his own of no trifling calibre. His
  • mind is slow but strong. It must work. It may work deliberately, but it
  • will work well. He will be made magistrate of the district--Shirley says
  • he shall. She would proceed impetuously and prematurely to obtain for
  • him this dignity, if he would let her, but he will not. As usual, he
  • will be in no haste. Ere he has been master of Fieldhead a year all the
  • district will feel his quiet influence, and acknowledge his unassuming
  • superiority. A magistrate is wanted; they will, in time, invest him with
  • the office voluntarily and unreluctantly. Everybody admires his future
  • wife, and everybody will, in time, like him. He is of the _pâte_
  • generally approved, _bon comme le pain_--daily bread for the most
  • fastidious, good for the infant and the aged, nourishing for the poor,
  • wholesome for the rich. Shirley, in spite of her whims and oddities, her
  • dodges and delays, has an infatuated fondness for him. She will one day
  • see him as universally beloved as even _she_ could wish. He will also be
  • universally esteemed, considered, consulted, depended on--too much so.
  • His advice will be always judicious, his help always good-natured. Ere
  • long both will be in inconvenient request. He will have to impose
  • restrictions. As for me, if I succeed as I intend to do, my success will
  • add to his and Shirley's income. I can double the value of their mill
  • property. I can line yonder barren Hollow with lines of cottages and
  • rows of cottage-gardens----"
  • "Robert! And root up the copse?"
  • "The copse shall be firewood ere five years elapse. The beautiful wild
  • ravine shall be a smooth descent; the green natural terrace shall be a
  • paved street. There shall be cottages in the dark ravine, and cottages
  • on the lonely slopes. The rough pebbled track shall be an even, firm,
  • broad, black, sooty road, bedded with the cinders from my mill; and my
  • mill, Caroline--my mill shall fill its present yard."
  • "Horrible! You will change our blue hill-country air into the Stilbro'
  • smoke atmosphere."
  • "I will pour the waters of Pactolus through the valley of Briarfield."
  • "I like the beck a thousand times better."
  • "I will get an Act for enclosing Nunnely Common, and parcelling it out
  • into farms."
  • "Stilbro' Moor, however, defies you, thank Heaven! What can you grow in
  • Bilberry Moss? What will flourish on Rushedge?"
  • "Caroline, the houseless, the starving, the unemployed shall come to
  • Hollow's Mill from far and near; and Joe Scott shall give them work, and
  • Louis Moore, Esq., shall let them a tenement, and Mrs. Gill shall mete
  • them a portion till the first pay-day."
  • She smiled up in his face.
  • "Such a Sunday school as you will have, Cary! such collections as you
  • will get! such a day school as you and Shirley and Miss Ainley will have
  • to manage between you! The mill shall find salaries for a master and
  • mistress, and the squire or the clothier shall give a treat once a
  • quarter."
  • She mutely offered a kiss--an offer taken unfair advantage of, to the
  • extortion of about a hundred kisses.
  • "Extravagant day-dreams," said Moore, with a sigh and smile, "yet
  • perhaps we may realize some of them. Meantime, the dew is falling. Mrs.
  • Moore, I shall take you in."
  • * * * * *
  • It is August. The bells clash out again, not only through Yorkshire, but
  • through England. From Spain the voice of a trumpet has sounded long; it
  • now waxes louder and louder; it proclaims Salamanca won. This night is
  • Briarfield to be illuminated. On this day the Fieldhead tenantry dine
  • together; the Hollow's Mill workpeople will be assembled for a like
  • festal purpose; the schools have a grand treat. This morning there were
  • two marriages solemnized in Briarfield church--Louis Gérard Moore, Esq.,
  • late of Antwerp, to Shirley, daughter of the late Charles Cave Keeldar,
  • Esq., of Fieldhead; Robert Gérard Moore, Esq., of Hollow's Mill, to
  • Caroline, niece of the Rev. Matthewson Helstone, M.A., rector of
  • Briarfield.
  • The ceremony, in the first instance, was performed by Mr. Helstone,
  • Hiram Yorke, Esq., of Briarmains, giving the bride away. In the second
  • instance, Mr. Hall, vicar of Nunnely, officiated. Amongst the bridal
  • train the two most noticeable personages were the youthful bridesmen,
  • Henry Sympson and Martin Yorke.
  • I suppose Robert Moore's prophecies were, partially at least, fulfilled.
  • The other day I passed up the Hollow, which tradition says was once
  • green, and lone, and wild; and there I saw the manufacturer's day-dreams
  • embodied in substantial stone and brick and ashes--the cinder-black
  • highway, the cottages, and the cottage gardens; there I saw a mighty
  • mill, and a chimney ambitious as the tower of Babel. I told my old
  • housekeeper when I came home where I had been.
  • "Ay," said she, "this world has queer changes. I can remember the old
  • mill being built--the very first it was in all the district; and then I
  • can remember it being pulled down, and going with my lake-lasses
  • [companions] to see the foundation-stone of the new one laid. The two
  • Mr. Moores made a great stir about it. They were there, and a deal of
  • fine folk besides, and both their ladies; very bonny and grand they
  • looked. But Mrs. Louis was the grandest; she always wore such handsome
  • dresses. Mrs. Robert was quieter like. Mrs. Louis smiled when she
  • talked. She had a real, happy, glad, good-natured look; but she had een
  • that pierced a body through. There is no such ladies nowadays."
  • "What was the Hollow like then, Martha?"
  • "Different to what it is now; but I can tell of it clean different
  • again, when there was neither mill, nor cot, nor hall, except Fieldhead,
  • within two miles of it. I can tell, one summer evening, fifty years
  • syne, my mother coming running in just at the edge of dark, almost
  • fleyed out of her wits, saying she had seen a fairish [fairy] in
  • Fieldhead Hollow; and that was the last fairish that ever was seen on
  • this countryside (though they've been heard within these forty years). A
  • lonesome spot it was, and a bonny spot, full of oak trees and nut trees.
  • It is altered now."
  • The story is told. I think I now see the judicious reader putting on his
  • spectacles to look for the moral. It would be an insult to his sagacity
  • to offer directions. I only say, God speed him in the quest!
  • THE END.
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  • This is a reprint of Miss Yonge's most famous tale. It has been said of
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  • "Lavengro" and "The Romany Rye." He tramped on foot throughout the
  • country, and the work is a classic of description, both of the scenery
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  • There are many who think this the greatest of all historical novels, and
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  • This is the only novel of George Eliot's in which the scene is laid
  • outside her own country. It is a story of Florence during the time of
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  • which were then moving rural and industrial England.
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  • One of the Waverley novels which has always been deservedly popular.
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  • CONDENSED LIST.
  • 1. A Tale of Two Cities.
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  • 55. The Bride of Lammermoor.
  • 56. The Abbot.
  • 57. Tom Cringle's Log.
  • 58. Lamb's Tales from Shakespeare.
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  • 70. Parables from Nature.
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  • 75. Pickwick Papers.--I.
  • 76. Pickwick Papers.--II.
  • 77. Verdant Green.
  • 78. The Heir of Redclyffe.
  • 79. Wild Wales.
  • 80. Two Years Before the Mast.
  • 81. Jane Eyre.
  • 82. David Copperfield.--I.
  • 83. David Copperfield.--II.
  • 84. Hereward the Wake.
  • 85. Wide Wide World.
  • 86. Michael Strogoff.
  • THOMAS NELSON AND SONS.
  • Transcriber's Note:
  • Variations in hyphenated words have been retained as
  • they appear in the original publication.
  • Changes have been made as follows:
  • Page 30
  • with some inpatience _changed to_
  • with some impatience
  • Page 48
  • very bravely mantained _changed to_
  • very bravely maintained
  • Page 120
  • Sudgen, his staff; and Sudgen arrest him _changed to_
  • Sugden, his staff; and Sugden arrest him
  • Page 166
  • The old atticed _changed to_
  • The old latticed
  • Page 175
  • Let as have _changed to_
  • Let us have
  • Page 185
  • Mrs. Gill, my houskeeper _changed to_
  • Mrs. Gill, my housekeeper
  • Page 224
  • by a downward gave _changed to_
  • by a downward gaze
  • Page 242
  • gently invired him _changed to_
  • gently invited him
  • Page 245
  • a smiling Melancthon _changed to_
  • a smiling Melanchthon
  • Page 255
  • Sentinels of Nunwood _changed to_
  • Sentinels of Nunnwood
  • Page 260
  • only the profiters _changed to_
  • only the profiteers
  • Page 274
  • dark gray irids _changed to_
  • dark gray irides
  • Page 297
  • alight and alow _changed to_
  • alight and aglow
  • Page 380
  • my old accupation _changed to_
  • my old occupation
  • Page 492
  • not without approbrium _changed to_
  • not without opprobrium
  • Punctuation has been changed as follows:
  • Page 119
  • Mr Moore, we lived _changed to_
  • Mr. Moore, we lived
  • Page 145
  • stones on the road? _changed to_
  • stones on the road.
  • Page 393
  • "Shirley, my woman _changed to_
  • 'Shirley, my woman
  • Page 540
  • _reward_ her!" _changed to_
  • _reward_ her!'"
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