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  • The Project Gutenberg eBook, Agnes Grey, by Anne Bronte
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  • Title: Agnes Grey
  • Author: Anne Bronte
  • Release Date: December 25, 2010 [eBook #767]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
  • ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AGNES GREY***
  • Transcribed from the 1910 John Murray edition by David Price, email
  • ccx074@pglaf.org
  • _Facsimile of the Title-Page of the First Edition_, _which was issued_,
  • _together with_ ‘_Wuthering Heights_,’ _in three volumes_, ‘_Wuthering
  • Heights_’ _forming Volumes_ 1 _and_ 2.
  • AGNES GREY.
  • A NOVEL,
  • BY
  • ACTON BELL.
  • VOL. III.
  • * * * * *
  • LONDON:
  • THOMAS CAUTLEY NEWBY, PUBLISHER,
  • 72, MORTIMER ST., CAVENDISH SQ.
  • * * * * *
  • 1847.
  • [Picture: Birthplace of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë, Thornton]
  • CHAPTER I—THE PARSONAGE
  • All true histories contain instruction; though, in some, the treasure may
  • be hard to find, and when found, so trivial in quantity, that the dry,
  • shrivelled kernel scarcely compensates for the trouble of cracking the
  • nut. Whether this be the case with my history or not, I am hardly
  • competent to judge. I sometimes think it might prove useful to some, and
  • entertaining to others; but the world may judge for itself. Shielded by
  • my own obscurity, and by the lapse of years, and a few fictitious names,
  • I do not fear to venture; and will candidly lay before the public what I
  • would not disclose to the most intimate friend.
  • My father was a clergyman of the north of England, who was deservedly
  • respected by all who knew him; and, in his younger days, lived pretty
  • comfortably on the joint income of a small incumbency and a snug little
  • property of his own. My mother, who married him against the wishes of
  • her friends, was a squire’s daughter, and a woman of spirit. In vain it
  • was represented to her, that if she became the poor parson’s wife, she
  • must relinquish her carriage and her lady’s-maid, and all the luxuries
  • and elegancies of affluence; which to her were little less than the
  • necessaries of life. A carriage and a lady’s-maid were great
  • conveniences; but, thank heaven, she had feet to carry her, and hands to
  • minister to her own necessities. An elegant house and spacious grounds
  • were not to be despised; but she would rather live in a cottage with
  • Richard Grey than in a palace with any other man in the world.
  • Finding arguments of no avail, her father, at length, told the lovers
  • they might marry if they pleased; but, in so doing, his daughter would
  • forfeit every fraction of her fortune. He expected this would cool the
  • ardour of both; but he was mistaken. My father knew too well my mother’s
  • superior worth not to be sensible that she was a valuable fortune in
  • herself: and if she would but consent to embellish his humble hearth he
  • should be happy to take her on any terms; while she, on her part, would
  • rather labour with her own hands than be divided from the man she loved,
  • whose happiness it would be her joy to make, and who was already one with
  • her in heart and soul. So her fortune went to swell the purse of a wiser
  • sister, who had married a rich nabob; and she, to the wonder and
  • compassionate regret of all who knew her, went to bury herself in the
  • homely village parsonage among the hills of ---. And yet, in spite of
  • all this, and in spite of my mother’s high spirit and my father’s whims,
  • I believe you might search all England through, and fail to find a
  • happier couple.
  • Of six children, my sister Mary and myself were the only two that
  • survived the perils of infancy and early childhood. I, being the younger
  • by five or six years, was always regarded as _the_ child, and the pet of
  • the family: father, mother, and sister, all combined to spoil me—not by
  • foolish indulgence, to render me fractious and ungovernable, but by
  • ceaseless kindness, to make me too helpless and dependent—too unfit for
  • buffeting with the cares and turmoils of life.
  • Mary and I were brought up in the strictest seclusion. My mother, being
  • at once highly accomplished, well informed, and fond of employment, took
  • the whole charge of our education on herself, with the exception of
  • Latin—which my father undertook to teach us—so that we never even went to
  • school; and, as there was no society in the neighbourhood, our only
  • intercourse with the world consisted in a stately tea-party, now and
  • then, with the principal farmers and tradespeople of the vicinity (just
  • to avoid being stigmatized as too proud to consort with our neighbours),
  • and an annual visit to our paternal grandfather’s; where himself, our
  • kind grandmamma, a maiden aunt, and two or three elderly ladies and
  • gentlemen, were the only persons we ever saw. Sometimes our mother would
  • amuse us with stories and anecdotes of her younger days, which, while
  • they entertained us amazingly, frequently awoke—in _me_, at least—a
  • secret wish to see a little more of the world.
  • I thought she must have been very happy: but she never seemed to regret
  • past times. My father, however, whose temper was neither tranquil nor
  • cheerful by nature, often unduly vexed himself with thinking of the
  • sacrifices his dear wife had made for him; and troubled his head with
  • revolving endless schemes for the augmentation of his little fortune, for
  • her sake and ours. In vain my mother assured him she was quite
  • satisfied; and if he would but lay by a little for the children, we
  • should all have plenty, both for time present and to come: but saving was
  • not my father’s forte. He would not run in debt (at least, my mother
  • took good care he should not), but while he had money he must spend it:
  • he liked to see his house comfortable, and his wife and daughters well
  • clothed, and well attended; and besides, he was charitably disposed, and
  • liked to give to the poor, according to his means: or, as some might
  • think, beyond them.
  • At length, however, a kind friend suggested to him a means of doubling
  • his private property at one stroke; and further increasing it, hereafter,
  • to an untold amount. This friend was a merchant, a man of enterprising
  • spirit and undoubted talent, who was somewhat straitened in his
  • mercantile pursuits for want of capital; but generously proposed to give
  • my father a fair share of his profits, if he would only entrust him with
  • what he could spare; and he thought he might safely promise that whatever
  • sum the latter chose to put into his hands, it should bring him in cent.
  • per cent. The small patrimony was speedily sold, and the whole of its
  • price was deposited in the hands of the friendly merchant; who as
  • promptly proceeded to ship his cargo, and prepare for his voyage.
  • My father was delighted, so were we all, with our brightening prospects.
  • For the present, it is true, we were reduced to the narrow income of the
  • curacy; but my father seemed to think there was no necessity for
  • scrupulously restricting our expenditure to that; so, with a standing
  • bill at Mr. Jackson’s, another at Smith’s, and a third at Hobson’s, we
  • got along even more comfortably than before: though my mother affirmed we
  • had better keep within bounds, for our prospects of wealth were but
  • precarious, after all; and if my father would only trust everything to
  • her management, he should never feel himself stinted: but he, for once,
  • was incorrigible.
  • What happy hours Mary and I have passed while sitting at our work by the
  • fire, or wandering on the heath-clad hills, or idling under the weeping
  • birch (the only considerable tree in the garden), talking of future
  • happiness to ourselves and our parents, of what we would do, and see, and
  • possess; with no firmer foundation for our goodly superstructure than the
  • riches that were expected to flow in upon us from the success of the
  • worthy merchant’s speculations. Our father was nearly as bad as
  • ourselves; only that he affected not to be so much in earnest: expressing
  • his bright hopes and sanguine expectations in jests and playful sallies,
  • that always struck me as being exceedingly witty and pleasant. Our
  • mother laughed with delight to see him so hopeful and happy: but still
  • she feared he was setting his heart too much upon the matter; and once I
  • heard her whisper as she left the room, ‘God grant he be not
  • disappointed! I know not how he would bear it.’
  • Disappointed he was; and bitterly, too. It came like a thunder-clap on
  • us all, that the vessel which contained our fortune had been wrecked, and
  • gone to the bottom with all its stores, together with several of the
  • crew, and the unfortunate merchant himself. I was grieved for him; I was
  • grieved for the overthrow of all our air-built castles: but, with the
  • elasticity of youth, I soon recovered the shock.
  • Though riches had charms, poverty had no terrors for an inexperienced
  • girl like me. Indeed, to say the truth, there was something exhilarating
  • in the idea of being driven to straits, and thrown upon our own
  • resources. I only wished papa, mamma, and Mary were all of the same mind
  • as myself; and then, instead of lamenting past calamities we might all
  • cheerfully set to work to remedy them; and the greater the difficulties,
  • the harder our present privations, the greater should be our cheerfulness
  • to endure the latter, and our vigour to contend against the former.
  • Mary did not lament, but she brooded continually over the misfortune, and
  • sank into a state of dejection from which no effort of mine could rouse
  • her. I could not possibly bring her to regard the matter on its bright
  • side as I did: and indeed I was so fearful of being charged with childish
  • frivolity, or stupid insensibility, that I carefully kept most of my
  • bright ideas and cheering notions to myself; well knowing they could not
  • be appreciated.
  • My mother thought only of consoling my father, and paying our debts and
  • retrenching our expenditure by every available means; but my father was
  • completely overwhelmed by the calamity: health, strength, and spirits
  • sank beneath the blow, and he never wholly recovered them. In vain my
  • mother strove to cheer him, by appealing to his piety, to his courage, to
  • his affection for herself and us. That very affection was his greatest
  • torment: it was for our sakes he had so ardently longed to increase his
  • fortune—it was our interest that had lent such brightness to his hopes,
  • and that imparted such bitterness to his present distress. He now
  • tormented himself with remorse at having neglected my mother’s advice;
  • which would at least have saved him from the additional burden of debt—he
  • vainly reproached himself for having brought her from the dignity, the
  • ease, the luxury of her former station to toil with him through the cares
  • and toils of poverty. It was gall and wormwood to his soul to see that
  • splendid, highly-accomplished woman, once so courted and admired,
  • transformed into an active managing housewife, with hands and head
  • continually occupied with household labours and household economy. The
  • very willingness with which she performed these duties, the cheerfulness
  • with which she bore her reverses, and the kindness which withheld her
  • from imputing the smallest blame to him, were all perverted by this
  • ingenious self-tormentor into further aggravations of his sufferings.
  • And thus the mind preyed upon the body, and disordered the system of the
  • nerves, and they in turn increased the troubles of the mind, till by
  • action and reaction his health was seriously impaired; and not one of us
  • could convince him that the aspect of our affairs was not half so gloomy,
  • so utterly hopeless, as his morbid imagination represented it to be.
  • The useful pony phaeton was sold, together with the stout, well-fed
  • pony—the old favourite that we had fully determined should end its days
  • in peace, and never pass from our hands; the little coach-house and
  • stable were let; the servant boy, and the more efficient (being the more
  • expensive) of the two maid-servants, were dismissed. Our clothes were
  • mended, turned, and darned to the utmost verge of decency; our food,
  • always plain, was now simplified to an unprecedented degree—except my
  • father’s favourite dishes; our coals and candles were painfully
  • economized—the pair of candles reduced to one, and that most sparingly
  • used; the coals carefully husbanded in the half-empty grate: especially
  • when my father was out on his parish duties, or confined to bed through
  • illness—then we sat with our feet on the fender, scraping the perishing
  • embers together from time to time, and occasionally adding a slight
  • scattering of the dust and fragments of coal, just to keep them alive.
  • As for our carpets, they in time were worn threadbare, and patched and
  • darned even to a greater extent than our garments. To save the expense
  • of a gardener, Mary and I undertook to keep the garden in order; and all
  • the cooking and household work that could not easily be managed by one
  • servant-girl, was done by my mother and sister, with a little occasional
  • help from me: only a little, because, though a woman in my own
  • estimation, I was still a child in theirs; and my mother, like most
  • active, managing women, was not gifted with very active daughters: for
  • this reason—that being so clever and diligent herself, she was never
  • tempted to trust her affairs to a deputy, but, on the contrary, was
  • willing to act and think for others as well as for number one; and
  • whatever was the business in hand, she was apt to think that no one could
  • do it so well as herself: so that whenever I offered to assist her, I
  • received such an answer as—‘No, love, you cannot indeed—there’s nothing
  • here you can do. Go and help your sister, or get her to take a walk with
  • you—tell her she must not sit so much, and stay so constantly in the
  • house as she does—she may well look thin and dejected.’
  • ‘Mary, mamma says I’m to help you; or get you to take a walk with me; she
  • says you may well look thin and dejected, if you sit so constantly in the
  • house.’
  • ‘Help me you cannot, Agnes; and I cannot go out with _you_—I have far too
  • much to do.’
  • ‘Then let me help you.’
  • ‘You cannot, indeed, dear child. Go and practise your music, or play
  • with the kitten.’
  • There was always plenty of sewing on hand; but I had not been taught to
  • cut out a single garment, and except plain hemming and seaming, there was
  • little I could do, even in that line; for they both asserted that it was
  • far easier to do the work themselves than to prepare it for me: and
  • besides, they liked better to see me prosecuting my studies, or amusing
  • myself—it was time enough for me to sit bending over my work, like a
  • grave matron, when my favourite little pussy was become a steady old cat.
  • Under such circumstances, although I was not many degrees more useful
  • than the kitten, my idleness was not entirely without excuse.
  • Through all our troubles, I never but once heard my mother complain of
  • our want of money. As summer was coming on she observed to Mary and me,
  • ‘What a desirable thing it would be for your papa to spend a few weeks at
  • a watering-place. I am convinced the sea-air and the change of scene
  • would be of incalculable service to him. But then, you see, there’s no
  • money,’ she added, with a sigh. We both wished exceedingly that the
  • thing might be done, and lamented greatly that it could not. ‘Well,
  • well!’ said she, ‘it’s no use complaining. Possibly something might be
  • done to further the project after all. Mary, you are a beautiful drawer.
  • What do you say to doing a few more pictures in your best style, and
  • getting them framed, with the water-coloured drawings you have already
  • done, and trying to dispose of them to some liberal picture-dealer, who
  • has the sense to discern their merits?’
  • ‘Mamma, I should be delighted if you think they _could_ be sold; and for
  • anything worth while.’
  • ‘It’s worth while trying, however, my dear: do you procure the drawings,
  • and I’ll endeavour to find a purchaser.’
  • ‘I wish _I_ could do something,’ said I.
  • ‘You, Agnes! well, who knows? You draw pretty well, too: if you choose
  • some simple piece for your subject, I daresay you will be able to produce
  • something we shall all be proud to exhibit.’
  • ‘But I have another scheme in my head, mamma, and have had long, only I
  • did not like to mention it.’
  • ‘Indeed! pray tell us what it is.’
  • ‘I should like to be a governess.’
  • My mother uttered an exclamation of surprise, and laughed. My sister
  • dropped her work in astonishment, exclaiming, ‘_You_ a governess, Agnes!
  • What can you be dreaming of?’
  • ‘Well! I don’t see anything so _very_ extraordinary in it. I do not
  • pretend to be able to instruct great girls; but surely I could teach
  • little ones: and I should like it so much: I am so fond of children. Do
  • let me, mamma!’
  • ‘But, my love, you have not learned to take care of _yourself _yet: and
  • young children require more judgment and experience to manage than elder
  • ones.’
  • ‘But, mamma, I am above eighteen, and quite able to take care of myself,
  • and others too. You do not know half the wisdom and prudence I possess,
  • because I have never been tried.’
  • ‘Only think,’ said Mary, ‘what would you do in a house full of strangers,
  • without me or mamma to speak and act for you—with a parcel of children,
  • besides yourself, to attend to; and no one to look to for advice? You
  • would not even know what clothes to put on.’
  • ‘You think, because I always do as you bid me, I have no judgment of my
  • own: but only try me—that is all I ask—and you shall see what I can do.’
  • At that moment my father entered and the subject of our discussion was
  • explained to him.
  • ‘What, my little Agnes a governess!’ cried he, and, in spite of his
  • dejection, he laughed at the idea.
  • ‘Yes, papa, don’t _you_ say anything against it: I should like it so
  • much; and I am sure I could manage delightfully.’
  • ‘But, my darling, we could not spare you.’ And a tear glistened in his
  • eye as he added—‘No, no! afflicted as we are, surely we are not brought
  • to that pass yet.’
  • ‘Oh, no!’ said my mother. ‘There is no necessity whatever for such a
  • step; it is merely a whim of her own. So you must hold your tongue, you
  • naughty girl; for, though you are so ready to leave us, you know very
  • well we cannot part with _you_.’
  • I was silenced for that day, and for many succeeding ones; but still I
  • did not wholly relinquish my darling scheme. Mary got her drawing
  • materials, and steadily set to work. I got mine too; but while I drew, I
  • thought of other things. How delightful it would be to be a governess!
  • To go out into the world; to enter upon a new life; to act for myself; to
  • exercise my unused faculties; to try my unknown powers; to earn my own
  • maintenance, and something to comfort and help my father, mother, and
  • sister, besides exonerating them from the provision of my food and
  • clothing; to show papa what his little Agnes could do; to convince mamma
  • and Mary that I was not quite the helpless, thoughtless being they
  • supposed. And then, how charming to be entrusted with the care and
  • education of children! Whatever others said, I felt I was fully
  • competent to the task: the clear remembrance of my own thoughts in early
  • childhood would be a surer guide than the instructions of the most mature
  • adviser. I had but to turn from my little pupils to myself at their age,
  • and I should know, at once, how to win their confidence and affections:
  • how to waken the contrition of the erring; how to embolden the timid and
  • console the afflicted; how to make Virtue practicable, Instruction
  • desirable, and Religion lovely and comprehensible.
  • —Delightful task!
  • To teach the young idea how to shoot!
  • To train the tender plants, and watch their buds unfolding day by day!
  • Influenced by so many inducements, I determined still to persevere;
  • though the fear of displeasing my mother, or distressing my father’s
  • feelings, prevented me from resuming the subject for several days. At
  • length, again, I mentioned it to my mother in private; and, with some
  • difficulty, got her to promise to assist me with her endeavours. My
  • father’s reluctant consent was next obtained, and then, though Mary still
  • sighed her disapproval, my dear, kind mother began to look out for a
  • situation for me. She wrote to my father’s relations, and consulted the
  • newspaper advertisements—her own relations she had long dropped all
  • communication with: a formal interchange of occasional letters was all
  • she had ever had since her marriage, and she would not at any time have
  • applied to them in a case of this nature. But so long and so entire had
  • been my parents’ seclusion from the world, that many weeks elapsed before
  • a suitable situation could be procured. At last, to my great joy, it was
  • decreed that I should take charge of the young family of a certain Mrs.
  • Bloomfield; whom my kind, prim aunt Grey had known in her youth, and
  • asserted to be a very nice woman. Her husband was a retired tradesman,
  • who had realized a very comfortable fortune; but could not be prevailed
  • upon to give a greater salary than twenty-five pounds to the instructress
  • of his children. I, however, was glad to accept this, rather than refuse
  • the situation—which my parents were inclined to think the better plan.
  • But some weeks more were yet to be devoted to preparation. How long, how
  • tedious those weeks appeared to me! Yet they were happy ones in the
  • main—full of bright hopes and ardent expectations. With what peculiar
  • pleasure I assisted at the making of my new clothes, and, subsequently,
  • the packing of my trunks! But there was a feeling of bitterness mingling
  • with the latter occupation too; and when it was done—when all was ready
  • for my departure on the morrow, and the last night at home approached—a
  • sudden anguish seemed to swell my heart. My dear friends looked so sad,
  • and spoke so very kindly, that I could scarcely keep my eyes from
  • overflowing: but I still affected to be gay. I had taken my last ramble
  • with Mary on the moors, my last walk in the garden, and round the house;
  • I had fed, with her, our pet pigeons for the last time—the pretty
  • creatures that we had tamed to peck their food from our hands: I had
  • given a farewell stroke to all their silky backs as they crowded in my
  • lap. I had tenderly kissed my own peculiar favourites, the pair of
  • snow-white fantails; I had played my last tune on the old familiar piano,
  • and sung my last song to papa: not the last, I hoped, but the last for
  • what appeared to me a very long time. And, perhaps, when I did these
  • things again it would be with different feelings: circumstances might be
  • changed, and this house might never be my settled home again. My dear
  • little friend, the kitten, would certainly be changed: she was already
  • growing a fine cat; and when I returned, even for a hasty visit at
  • Christmas, would, most likely, have forgotten both her playmate and her
  • merry pranks. I had romped with her for the last time; and when I
  • stroked her soft bright fur, while she lay purring herself to sleep in my
  • lap, it was with a feeling of sadness I could not easily disguise. Then
  • at bed-time, when I retired with Mary to our quiet little chamber, where
  • already my drawers were cleared out and my share of the bookcase was
  • empty—and where, hereafter, she would have to sleep alone, in dreary
  • solitude, as she expressed it—my heart sank more than ever: I felt as if
  • I had been selfish and wrong to persist in leaving her; and when I knelt
  • once more beside our little bed, I prayed for a blessing on her and on my
  • parents more fervently than ever I had done before. To conceal my
  • emotion, I buried my face in my hands, and they were presently bathed in
  • tears. I perceived, on rising, that she had been crying too: but neither
  • of us spoke; and in silence we betook ourselves to our repose, creeping
  • more closely together from the consciousness that we were to part so
  • soon.
  • But the morning brought a renewal of hope and spirits. I was to depart
  • early; that the conveyance which took me (a gig, hired from Mr. Smith,
  • the draper, grocer, and tea-dealer of the village) might return the same
  • day. I rose, washed, dressed, swallowed a hasty breakfast, received the
  • fond embraces of my father, mother, and sister, kissed the cat—to the
  • great scandal of Sally, the maid—shook hands with her, mounted the gig,
  • drew my veil over my face, and then, but not till then, burst into a
  • flood of tears. The gig rolled on; I looked back; my dear mother and
  • sister were still standing at the door, looking after me, and waving
  • their adieux. I returned their salute, and prayed God to bless them from
  • my heart: we descended the hill, and I could see them no more.
  • ‘It’s a coldish mornin’ for you, Miss Agnes,’ observed Smith; ‘and a
  • darksome ’un too; but we’s happen get to yon spot afore there come much
  • rain to signify.’
  • ‘Yes, I hope so,’ replied I, as calmly as I could.
  • ‘It’s comed a good sup last night too.’
  • ‘Yes.’
  • ‘But this cold wind will happen keep it off.’
  • ‘Perhaps it will.’
  • Here ended our colloquy. We crossed the valley, and began to ascend the
  • opposite hill. As we were toiling up, I looked back again; there was the
  • village spire, and the old grey parsonage beyond it, basking in a
  • slanting beam of sunshine—it was but a sickly ray, but the village and
  • surrounding hills were all in sombre shade, and I hailed the wandering
  • beam as a propitious omen to my home. With clasped hands I fervently
  • implored a blessing on its inhabitants, and hastily turned away; for I
  • saw the sunshine was departing; and I carefully avoided another glance,
  • lest I should see it in gloomy shadow, like the rest of the landscape.
  • CHAPTER II—FIRST LESSONS IN THE ART OF INSTRUCTION
  • As we drove along, my spirits revived again, and I turned, with pleasure,
  • to the contemplation of the new life upon which I was entering. But
  • though it was not far past the middle of September, the heavy clouds and
  • strong north-easterly wind combined to render the day extremely cold and
  • dreary; and the journey seemed a very long one, for, as Smith observed,
  • the roads were ‘very heavy’; and certainly, his horse was very heavy too:
  • it crawled up the hills, and crept down them, and only condescended to
  • shake its sides in a trot where the road was at a dead level or a very
  • gentle slope, which was rarely the case in those rugged regions; so that
  • it was nearly one o’clock before we reached the place of our destination.
  • Yet, after all, when we entered the lofty iron gateway, when we drove
  • softly up the smooth, well-rolled carriage-road, with the green lawn on
  • each side, studded with young trees, and approached the new but stately
  • mansion of Wellwood, rising above its mushroom poplar-groves, my heart
  • failed me, and I wished it were a mile or two farther off. For the first
  • time in my life I must stand alone: there was no retreating now. I must
  • enter that house, and introduce myself among its strange inhabitants.
  • But how was it to be done? True, I was near nineteen; but, thanks to my
  • retired life and the protecting care of my mother and sister, I well knew
  • that many a girl of fifteen, or under, was gifted with a more womanly
  • address, and greater ease and self-possession, than I was. Yet, if Mrs.
  • Bloomfield were a kind, motherly woman, I might do very well, after all;
  • and the children, of course, I should soon be at ease with them—and Mr.
  • Bloomfield, I hoped, I should have but little to do with.
  • ‘Be calm, be calm, whatever happens,’ I said within myself; and truly I
  • kept this resolution so well, and was so fully occupied in steadying my
  • nerves and stifling the rebellious flutter of my heart, that when I was
  • admitted into the hall and ushered into the presence of Mrs. Bloomfield,
  • I almost forgot to answer her polite salutation; and it afterwards struck
  • me, that the little I did say was spoken in the tone of one half-dead or
  • half-asleep. The lady, too, was somewhat chilly in her manner, as I
  • discovered when I had time to reflect. She was a tall, spare, stately
  • woman, with thick black hair, cold grey eyes, and extremely sallow
  • complexion.
  • With due politeness, however, she showed me my bedroom, and left me there
  • to take a little refreshment. I was somewhat dismayed at my appearance
  • on looking in the glass: the cold wind had swelled and reddened my hands,
  • uncurled and entangled my hair, and dyed my face of a pale purple; add to
  • this my collar was horridly crumpled, my frock splashed with mud, my feet
  • clad in stout new boots, and as the trunks were not brought up, there was
  • no remedy; so having smoothed my hair as well as I could, and repeatedly
  • twitched my obdurate collar, I proceeded to clomp down the two flights of
  • stairs, philosophizing as I went; and with some difficulty found my way
  • into the room where Mrs. Bloomfield awaited me.
  • She led me into the dining-room, where the family luncheon had been laid
  • out. Some beefsteaks and half-cold potatoes were set before me; and
  • while I dined upon these, she sat opposite, watching me (as I thought)
  • and endeavouring to sustain something like a conversation—consisting
  • chiefly of a succession of commonplace remarks, expressed with frigid
  • formality: but this might be more my fault than hers, for I really could
  • _not_ converse. In fact, my attention was almost wholly absorbed in my
  • dinner: not from ravenous appetite, but from distress at the toughness of
  • the beefsteaks, and the numbness of my hands, almost palsied by their
  • five-hours’ exposure to the bitter wind. I would gladly have eaten the
  • potatoes and let the meat alone, but having got a large piece of the
  • latter on to my plate, I could not be so impolite as to leave it; so,
  • after many awkward and unsuccessful attempts to cut it with the knife, or
  • tear it with the fork, or pull it asunder between them, sensible that the
  • awful lady was a spectator to the whole transaction, I at last
  • desperately grasped the knife and fork in my fists, like a child of two
  • years old, and fell to work with all the little strength I possessed.
  • But this needed some apology—with a feeble attempt at a laugh, I said,
  • ‘My hands are so benumbed with the cold that I can scarcely handle my
  • knife and fork.’
  • ‘I daresay you would find it cold,’ replied she with a cool, immutable
  • gravity that did not serve to reassure me.
  • When the ceremony was concluded, she led me into the sitting-room again,
  • where she rang and sent for the children.
  • ‘You will find them not very far advanced in their attainments,’ said
  • she, ‘for I have had so little time to attend to their education myself,
  • and we have thought them too young for a governess till now; but I think
  • they are clever children, and very apt to learn, especially the little
  • boy; he is, I think, the flower of the flock—a generous, noble-spirited
  • boy, one to be led, but not driven, and remarkable for always speaking
  • the truth. He seems to scorn deception’ (this was good news). ‘His
  • sister Mary Ann will require watching,’ continued she, ‘but she is a very
  • good girl upon the whole; though I wish her to be kept out of the nursery
  • as much as possible, as she is now almost six years old, and might
  • acquire bad habits from the nurses. I have ordered her crib to be placed
  • in your room, and if you will be so kind as to overlook her washing and
  • dressing, and take charge of her clothes, she need have nothing further
  • to do with the nursery maid.’
  • I replied I was quite willing to do so; and at that moment my young
  • pupils entered the apartment, with their two younger sisters. Master Tom
  • Bloomfield was a well-grown boy of seven, with a somewhat wiry frame,
  • flaxen hair, blue eyes, small turned-up nose, and fair complexion. Mary
  • Ann was a tall girl too, somewhat dark like her mother, but with a round
  • full face and a high colour in her cheeks. The second sister was Fanny,
  • a very pretty little girl; Mrs. Bloomfield assured me she was a
  • remarkably gentle child, and required encouragement: she had not learned
  • anything yet; but in a few days, she would be four years old, and then
  • she might take her first lesson in the alphabet, and be promoted to the
  • schoolroom. The remaining one was Harriet, a little broad, fat, merry,
  • playful thing of scarcely two, that I coveted more than all the rest—but
  • with her I had nothing to do.
  • I talked to my little pupils as well as I could, and tried to render
  • myself agreeable; but with little success I fear, for their mother’s
  • presence kept me under an unpleasant restraint. They, however, were
  • remarkably free from shyness. They seemed bold, lively children, and I
  • hoped I should soon be on friendly terms with them—the little boy
  • especially, of whom I had heard such a favourable character from his
  • mamma. In Mary Ann there was a certain affected simper, and a craving
  • for notice, that I was sorry to observe. But her brother claimed all my
  • attention to himself; he stood bolt upright between me and the fire, with
  • his hands behind his back, talking away like an orator, occasionally
  • interrupting his discourse with a sharp reproof to his sisters when they
  • made too much noise.
  • ‘Oh, Tom, what a darling you are!’ exclaimed his mother. ‘Come and kiss
  • dear mamma; and then won’t you show Miss Grey your schoolroom, and your
  • nice new books?’
  • ‘I won’t kiss _you_, mamma; but I _will_ show Miss Grey my schoolroom,
  • and my new books.’
  • ‘And _my_ schoolroom, and _my_ new books, Tom,’ said Mary Ann. ‘They’re
  • mine too.’
  • ‘They’re _mine_,’ replied he decisively. ‘Come along, Miss Grey—I’ll
  • escort you.’
  • When the room and books had been shown, with some bickerings between the
  • brother and sister that I did my utmost to appease or mitigate, Mary Ann
  • brought me her doll, and began to be very loquacious on the subject of
  • its fine clothes, its bed, its chest of drawers, and other appurtenances;
  • but Tom told her to hold her clamour, that Miss Grey might see his
  • rocking-horse, which, with a most important bustle, he dragged forth from
  • its corner into the middle of the room, loudly calling on me to attend to
  • it. Then, ordering his sister to hold the reins, he mounted, and made me
  • stand for ten minutes, watching how manfully he used his whip and spurs.
  • Meantime, however, I admired Mary Ann’s pretty doll, and all its
  • possessions; and then told Master Tom he was a capital rider, but I hoped
  • he would not use his whip and spurs so much when he rode a real pony.
  • ‘Oh, yes, I will!’ said he, laying on with redoubled ardour. ‘I’ll cut
  • into him like smoke! Eeh! my word! but he shall sweat for it.’
  • This was very shocking; but I hoped in time to be able to work a
  • reformation.
  • ‘Now you must put on your bonnet and shawl,’ said the little hero, ‘and
  • I’ll show you my garden.’
  • ‘And _mine_,’ said Mary Ann.
  • Tom lifted his fist with a menacing gesture; she uttered a loud, shrill
  • scream, ran to the other side of me, and made a face at him.
  • ‘Surely, Tom, you would not strike your sister! I hope I shall _never_
  • see you do that.’
  • ‘You will sometimes: I’m obliged to do it now and then to keep her in
  • order.’
  • ‘But it is not your business to keep her in order, you know—that is for—’
  • ‘Well, now go and put on your bonnet.’
  • ‘I don’t know—it is so very cloudy and cold, it seems likely to rain;—and
  • you know I have had a long drive.’
  • ‘No matter—you _must_ come; I shall allow of no excuses,’ replied the
  • consequential little gentleman. And, as it was the first day of our
  • acquaintance, I thought I might as well indulge him. It was too cold for
  • Mary Ann to venture, so she stayed with her mamma, to the great relief of
  • her brother, who liked to have me all to himself.
  • The garden was a large one, and tastefully laid out; besides several
  • splendid dahlias, there were some other fine flowers still in bloom: but
  • my companion would not give me time to examine them: I must go with him,
  • across the wet grass, to a remote sequestered corner, the most important
  • place in the grounds, because it contained _his_ garden. There were two
  • round beds, stocked with a variety of plants. In one there was a pretty
  • little rose-tree. I paused to admire its lovely blossoms.
  • ‘Oh, never mind that!’ said he, contemptuously. ‘That’s only _Mary
  • Ann’s_ garden; look, THIS is mine.’
  • After I had observed every flower, and listened to a disquisition on
  • every plant, I was permitted to depart; but first, with great pomp, he
  • plucked a polyanthus and presented it to me, as one conferring a
  • prodigious favour. I observed, on the grass about his garden, certain
  • apparatus of sticks and corn, and asked what they were.
  • ‘Traps for birds.’
  • ‘Why do you catch them?’
  • ‘Papa says they do harm.’
  • ‘And what do you do with them when you catch them?’
  • ‘Different things. Sometimes I give them to the cat; sometimes I cut
  • them in pieces with my penknife; but the next, I mean to roast alive.’
  • ‘And why do you mean to do such a horrible thing?’
  • ‘For two reasons: first, to see how long it will live—and then, to see
  • what it will taste like.’
  • ‘But don’t you know it is extremely wicked to do such things? Remember,
  • the birds can feel as well as you; and think, how would you like it
  • yourself?’
  • ‘Oh, that’s nothing! I’m not a bird, and I can’t feel what I do to
  • them.’
  • ‘But you will have to feel it some time, Tom: you have heard where wicked
  • people go to when they die; and if you don’t leave off torturing innocent
  • birds, remember, you will have to go there, and suffer just what you have
  • made them suffer.’
  • ‘Oh, pooh! I shan’t. Papa knows how I treat them, and he never blames
  • me for it: he says it is just what _he_ used to do when _he_ was a boy.
  • Last summer, he gave me a nest full of young sparrows, and he saw me
  • pulling off their legs and wings, and heads, and never said anything;
  • except that they were nasty things, and I must not let them soil my
  • trousers: and Uncle Robson was there too, and he laughed, and said I was
  • a fine boy.’
  • ‘But what would your mamma say?’
  • ‘Oh, she doesn’t care! she says it’s a pity to kill the pretty singing
  • birds, but the naughty sparrows, and mice, and rats, I may do what I like
  • with. So now, Miss Grey, you see it is _not_ wicked.’
  • ‘I still think it is, Tom; and perhaps your papa and mamma would think so
  • too, if they thought much about it. However,’ I internally added, ‘they
  • may say what they please, but I am determined you shall do nothing of the
  • kind, as long as I have power to prevent it.’
  • He next took me across the lawn to see his mole-traps, and then into the
  • stack-yard to see his weasel-traps: one of which, to his great joy,
  • contained a dead weasel; and then into the stable to see, not the fine
  • carriage-horses, but a little rough colt, which he informed me had been
  • bred on purpose for him, and he was to ride it as soon as it was properly
  • trained. I tried to amuse the little fellow, and listened to all his
  • chatter as complacently as I could; for I thought if he had any
  • affections at all, I would endeavour to win them; and then, in time, I
  • might be able to show him the error of his ways: but I looked in vain for
  • that generous, noble spirit his mother talked of; though I could see he
  • was not without a certain degree of quickness and penetration, when he
  • chose to exert it.
  • When we re-entered the house it was nearly tea-time. Master Tom told me
  • that, as papa was from home, he and I and Mary Ann were to have tea with
  • mamma, for a treat; for, on such occasions, she always dined at
  • luncheon-time with them, instead of at six o’clock. Soon after tea, Mary
  • Ann went to bed, but Tom favoured us with his company and conversation
  • till eight. After he was gone, Mrs. Bloomfield further enlightened me on
  • the subject of her children’s dispositions and acquirements, and on what
  • they were to learn, and how they were to be managed, and cautioned me to
  • mention their defects to no one but herself. My mother had warned me
  • before to mention them as little as possible to _her_, for people did not
  • like to be told of their children’s faults, and so I concluded I was to
  • keep silence on them altogether. About half-past nine, Mrs. Bloomfield
  • invited me to partake of a frugal supper of cold meat and bread. I was
  • glad when that was over, and she took her bedroom candlestick and retired
  • to rest; for though I wished to be pleased with her, her company was
  • extremely irksome to me; and I could not help feeling that she was cold,
  • grave, and forbidding—the very opposite of the kind, warm-hearted matron
  • my hopes had depicted her to be.
  • CHAPTER III—A FEW MORE LESSONS
  • I rose next morning with a feeling of hopeful exhilaration, in spite of
  • the disappointments already experienced; but I found the dressing of Mary
  • Ann was no light matter, as her abundant hair was to be smeared with
  • pomade, plaited in three long tails, and tied with bows of ribbon: a task
  • my unaccustomed fingers found great difficulty in performing. She told
  • me her nurse could do it in half the time, and, by keeping up a constant
  • fidget of impatience, contrived to render me still longer. When all was
  • done, we went into the schoolroom, where I met my other pupil, and
  • chatted with the two till it was time to go down to breakfast. That meal
  • being concluded, and a few civil words having been exchanged with Mrs.
  • Bloomfield, we repaired to the schoolroom again, and commenced the
  • business of the day. I found my pupils very backward, indeed; but Tom,
  • though averse to every species of mental exertion, was not without
  • abilities. Mary Ann could scarcely read a word, and was so careless and
  • inattentive that I could hardly get on with her at all. However, by dint
  • of great labour and patience, I managed to get something done in the
  • course of the morning, and then accompanied my young charge out into the
  • garden and adjacent grounds, for a little recreation before dinner.
  • There we got along tolerably together, except that I found they had no
  • notion of going with me: I must go with them, wherever they chose to lead
  • me. I must run, walk, or stand, exactly as it suited their fancy. This,
  • I thought, was reversing the order of things; and I found it doubly
  • disagreeable, as on this as well as subsequent occasions, they seemed to
  • prefer the dirtiest places and the most dismal occupations. But there
  • was no remedy; either I must follow them, or keep entirely apart from
  • them, and thus appear neglectful of my charge. To-day, they manifested a
  • particular attachment to a well at the bottom of the lawn, where they
  • persisted in dabbling with sticks and pebbles for above half an hour. I
  • was in constant fear that their mother would see them from the window,
  • and blame me for allowing them thus to draggle their clothes and wet
  • their feet and hands, instead of taking exercise; but no arguments,
  • commands, or entreaties could draw them away. If _she_ did not see them,
  • some one else did—a gentleman on horseback had entered the gate and was
  • proceeding up the road; at the distance of a few paces from us he paused,
  • and calling to the children in a waspish penetrating tone, bade them
  • ‘keep out of that water.’ ‘Miss Grey,’ said he, ‘(I suppose it _is_ Miss
  • Grey), I am surprised that you should allow them to dirty their clothes
  • in that manner! Don’t you see how Miss Bloomfield has soiled her frock?
  • and that Master Bloomfield’s socks are quite wet? and both of them
  • without gloves? Dear, dear! Let me _request_ that in future you will
  • keep them _decent_ at least!’ so saying, he turned away, and continued
  • his ride up to the house. This was Mr. Bloomfield. I was surprised that
  • he should nominate his children Master and Miss Bloomfield; and still
  • more so, that he should speak so uncivilly to me, their governess, and a
  • perfect stranger to himself. Presently the bell rang to summon us in. I
  • dined with the children at one, while he and his lady took their luncheon
  • at the same table. His conduct there did not greatly raise him in my
  • estimation. He was a man of ordinary stature—rather below than above—and
  • rather thin than stout, apparently between thirty and forty years of age:
  • he had a large mouth, pale, dingy complexion, milky blue eyes, and hair
  • the colour of a hempen cord. There was a roast leg of mutton before him:
  • he helped Mrs. Bloomfield, the children, and me, desiring me to cut up
  • the children’s meat; then, after twisting about the mutton in various
  • directions, and eyeing it from different points, he pronounced it not fit
  • to be eaten, and called for the cold beef.
  • ‘What is the matter with the mutton, my dear?’ asked his mate.
  • ‘It is quite overdone. Don’t you taste, Mrs. Bloomfield, that all the
  • goodness is roasted out of it? And can’t you see that all that nice, red
  • gravy is completely dried away?’
  • ‘Well, I think the _beef_ will suit you.’
  • The beef was set before him, and he began to carve, but with the most
  • rueful expressions of discontent.
  • ‘What is the matter with the _beef_, Mr. Bloomfield? I’m sure I thought
  • it was very nice.’
  • ‘And so it _was_ very nice. A nicer joint could not be; but it is
  • _quite_ spoiled,’ replied he, dolefully.
  • ‘How so?’
  • ‘How so! Why, don’t you see how it is cut? Dear—dear! it is quite
  • shocking!’
  • ‘They must have cut it wrong in the kitchen, then, for I’m sure I carved
  • it quite properly here, yesterday.’
  • ‘No _doubt_ they cut it wrong in the kitchen—the savages! Dear—dear!
  • Did ever any one see such a fine piece of beef so completely ruined? But
  • remember that, in future, when a decent dish leaves this table, they
  • shall not _touch_ it in the kitchen. Remember _that_, Mrs. Bloomfield!’
  • Notwithstanding the ruinous state of the beef, the gentleman managed to
  • out himself some delicate slices, part of which he ate in silence. When
  • he next spoke, it was, in a less querulous tone, to ask what there was
  • for dinner.
  • ‘Turkey and grouse,’ was the concise reply.
  • ‘And what besides?’
  • ‘Fish.’
  • ‘What kind of fish?’
  • ‘I don’t know.’
  • ‘_You don’t know_?’ cried he, looking solemnly up from his plate, and
  • suspending his knife and fork in astonishment.
  • ‘No. I told the cook to get some fish—I did not particularize what.’
  • ‘Well, that beats everything! A lady professes to keep house, and
  • doesn’t even know what fish is for dinner! professes to order fish, and
  • doesn’t specify what!’
  • ‘Perhaps, Mr. Bloomfield, you will order dinner yourself in future.’
  • Nothing more was said; and I was very glad to get out of the room with my
  • pupils; for I never felt so ashamed and uncomfortable in my life for
  • anything that was not my own fault.
  • In the afternoon we applied to lessons again: then went out again; then
  • had tea in the schoolroom; then I dressed Mary Ann for dessert; and when
  • she and her brother had gone down to the dining-room, I took the
  • opportunity of beginning a letter to my dear friends at home: but the
  • children came up before I had half completed it. At seven I had to put
  • Mary Ann to bed; then I played with Tom till eight, when he, too, went;
  • and I finished my letter and unpacked my clothes, which I had hitherto
  • found no opportunity for doing, and, finally, went to bed myself.
  • But this is a very favourable specimen of a day’s proceedings.
  • My task of instruction and surveillance, instead of becoming easier as my
  • charges and I got better accustomed to each other, became more arduous as
  • their characters unfolded. The name of governess, I soon found, was a
  • mere mockery as applied to me: my pupils had no more notion of obedience
  • than a wild, unbroken colt. The habitual fear of their father’s peevish
  • temper, and the dread of the punishments he was wont to inflict when
  • irritated, kept them generally within bounds in his immediate presence.
  • The girls, too, had some fear of their mother’s anger; and the boy might
  • occasionally be bribed to do as she bid him by the hope of reward; but I
  • had no rewards to offer; and as for punishments, I was given to
  • understand, the parents reserved that privilege to themselves; and yet
  • they expected me to keep my pupils in order. Other children might be
  • guided by the fear of anger and the desire of approbation; but neither
  • the one nor the other had any effect upon these.
  • Master Tom, not content with refusing to be ruled, must needs set up as a
  • ruler, and manifested a determination to keep, not only his sisters, but
  • his governess in order, by violent manual and pedal applications; and, as
  • he was a tall, strong boy of his years, this occasioned no trifling
  • inconvenience. A few sound boxes on the ear, on such occasions, might
  • have settled the matter easily enough: but as, in that case, he might
  • make up some story to his mother which she would be sure to believe, as
  • she had such unshaken faith in his veracity—though I had already
  • discovered it to be by no means unimpeachable—I determined to refrain
  • from striking him, even in self-defence; and, in his most violent moods,
  • my only resource was to throw him on his back and hold his hands and feet
  • till the frenzy was somewhat abated. To the difficulty of preventing him
  • from doing what he ought not, was added that of forcing him to do what he
  • ought. Often he would positively refuse to learn, or to repeat his
  • lessons, or even to look at his book. Here, again, a good birch rod
  • might have been serviceable; but, as my powers were so limited, I must
  • make the best use of what I had.
  • As there were no settled hours for study and play, I resolved to give my
  • pupils a certain task, which, with moderate attention, they could perform
  • in a short time; and till this was done, however weary I was, or however
  • perverse they might be, nothing short of parental interference should
  • induce me to suffer them to leave the schoolroom, even if I should sit
  • with my chair against the door to keep them in. Patience, Firmness, and
  • Perseverance were my only weapons; and these I resolved to use to the
  • utmost. I determined always strictly to fulfil the threats and promises
  • I made; and, to that end, I must be cautious to threaten and promise
  • nothing that I could not perform. Then, I would carefully refrain from
  • all useless irritability and indulgence of my own ill-temper: when they
  • behaved tolerably, I would be as kind and obliging as it was in my power
  • to be, in order to make the widest possible distinction between good and
  • bad conduct; I would reason with them, too, in the simplest and most
  • effective manner. When I reproved them, or refused to gratify their
  • wishes, after a glaring fault, it should be more in sorrow than in anger:
  • their little hymns and prayers I would make plain and clear to their
  • understanding; when they said their prayers at night and asked pardon for
  • their offences, I would remind them of the sins of the past day,
  • solemnly, but in perfect kindness, to avoid raising a spirit of
  • opposition; penitential hymns should be said by the naughty, cheerful
  • ones by the comparatively good; and every kind of instruction I would
  • convey to them, as much as possible, by entertaining discourse—apparently
  • with no other object than their present amusement in view.
  • By these means I hoped in time both to benefit the children and to gain
  • the approbation of their parents; and also to convince my friends at home
  • that I was not so wanting in skill and prudence as they supposed. I knew
  • the difficulties I had to contend with were great; but I knew (at least I
  • believed) unremitting patience and perseverance could overcome them; and
  • night and morning I implored Divine assistance to this end. But either
  • the children were so incorrigible, the parents so unreasonable, or myself
  • so mistaken in my views, or so unable to carry them out, that my best
  • intentions and most strenuous efforts seemed productive of no better
  • result than sport to the children, dissatisfaction to their parents, and
  • torment to myself.
  • The task of instruction was as arduous for the body as the mind. I had
  • to run after my pupils to catch them, to carry or drag them to the table,
  • and often forcibly to hold them there till the lesson was done. Tom I
  • frequently put into a corner, seating myself before him in a chair, with
  • a book which contained the little task that must be said or read, before
  • he was released, in my hand. He was not strong enough to push both me
  • and the chair away, so he would stand twisting his body and face into the
  • most grotesque and singular contortions—laughable, no doubt, to an
  • unconcerned spectator, but not to me—and uttering loud yells and doleful
  • outcries, intended to represent weeping but wholly without the
  • accompaniment of tears. I knew this was done solely for the purpose of
  • annoying me; and, therefore, however I might inwardly tremble with
  • impatience and irritation, I manfully strove to suppress all visible
  • signs of molestation, and affected to sit with calm indifference, waiting
  • till it should please him to cease this pastime, and prepare for a run in
  • the garden, by casting his eye on the book and reading or repeating the
  • few words he was required to say. Sometimes he was determined to do his
  • writing badly; and I had to hold his hand to prevent him from purposely
  • blotting or disfiguring the paper. Frequently I threatened that, if he
  • did not do better, he should have another line: then he would stubbornly
  • refuse to write this line; and I, to save my word, had finally to resort
  • to the expedient of holding his fingers upon the pen, and forcibly
  • drawing his hand up and down, till, in spite of his resistance, the line
  • was in some sort completed.
  • Yet Tom was by no means the most unmanageable of my pupils: sometimes, to
  • my great joy, he would have the sense to see that his wisest policy was
  • to finish his tasks, and go out and amuse himself till I and his sisters
  • came to join him; which frequently was not at all, for Mary Ann seldom
  • followed his example in this particular: she apparently preferred rolling
  • on the floor to any other amusement: down she would drop like a leaden
  • weight; and when I, with great difficulty, had succeeded in rooting her
  • thence, I had still to hold her up with one arm, while with the other I
  • held the book from which she was to read or spell her lesson. As the
  • dead weight of the big girl of six became too heavy for one arm to bear,
  • I transferred it to the other; or, if both were weary of the burden, I
  • carried her into a corner, and told her she might come out when she
  • should find the use of her feet, and stand up: but she generally
  • preferred lying there like a log till dinner or tea-time, when, as I
  • could not deprive her of her meals, she must be liberated, and would come
  • crawling out with a grin of triumph on her round, red face. Often she
  • would stubbornly refuse to pronounce some particular word in her lesson;
  • and now I regret the lost labour I have had in striving to conquer her
  • obstinacy. If I had passed it over as a matter of no consequence, it
  • would have been better for both parties, than vainly striving to overcome
  • it as I did; but I thought it my absolute duty to crush this vicious
  • tendency in the bud: and so it was, if I could have done it; and had my
  • powers been less limited, I might have enforced obedience; but, as it
  • was, it was a trial of strength between her and me, in which she
  • generally came off victorious; and every victory served to encourage and
  • strengthen her for a future contest. In vain I argued, coaxed,
  • entreated, threatened, scolded; in vain I kept her in from play, or, if
  • obliged to take her out, refused to play with her, or to speak kindly or
  • have anything to do with her; in vain I tried to set before her the
  • advantages of doing as she was bid, and being loved, and kindly treated
  • in consequence, and the disadvantages of persisting in her absurd
  • perversity. Sometimes, when she would ask me to do something for her, I
  • would answer,—‘Yes, I will, Mary Ann, if you will only say that word.
  • Come! you’d better say it at once, and have no more trouble about it.’
  • ‘No.’
  • ‘Then, of course, I can do nothing for you.’
  • With me, at her age, or under, neglect and disgrace were the most
  • dreadful of punishments; but on her they made no impression. Sometimes,
  • exasperated to the utmost pitch, I would shake her violently by the
  • shoulder, or pull her long hair, or put her in the corner; for which she
  • punished me with loud, shrill, piercing screams, that went through my
  • head like a knife. She knew I hated this, and when she had shrieked her
  • utmost, would look into my face with an air of vindictive satisfaction,
  • exclaiming,—‘_Now_, then! _that’s_ for you!’ and then shriek again and
  • again, till I was forced to stop my ears. Often these dreadful cries
  • would bring Mrs. Bloomfield up to inquire what was the matter?
  • ‘Mary Ann is a naughty girl, ma’am.’
  • ‘But what are these shocking screams?’
  • ‘She is screaming in a passion.’
  • ‘I never heard such a dreadful noise! You might be killing her. Why is
  • she not out with her brother?’
  • ‘I cannot get her to finish her lessons.’
  • ‘But Mary Ann must be a _good_ girl, and finish her lessons.’ This was
  • blandly spoken to the child. ‘And I hope I shall _never_ hear such
  • terrible cries again!’
  • And fixing her cold, stony eyes upon me with a look that could not be
  • mistaken, she would shut the door, and walk away. Sometimes I would try
  • to take the little obstinate creature by surprise, and casually ask her
  • the word while she was thinking of something else; frequently she would
  • begin to say it, and then suddenly check herself, with a provoking look
  • that seemed to say, ‘Ah! I’m too sharp for you; you shan’t trick it out
  • of me, either.’
  • On another occasion, I pretended to forget the whole affair; and talked
  • and played with her as usual, till night, when I put her to bed; then
  • bending over her, while she lay all smiles and good humour, just before
  • departing, I said, as cheerfully and kindly as before—‘Now, Mary Ann,
  • just tell me that word before I kiss you good-night. You are a good girl
  • now, and, of course, you will say it.’
  • ‘No, I won’t.’
  • ‘Then I can’t kiss you.’
  • ‘Well, I don’t care.’
  • In vain I expressed my sorrow; in vain I lingered for some symptom of
  • contrition; she really ‘didn’t care,’ and I left her alone, and in
  • darkness, wondering most of all at this last proof of insensate
  • stubbornness. In _my_ childhood I could not imagine a more afflictive
  • punishment than for my mother to refuse to kiss me at night: the very
  • idea was terrible. More than the idea I never felt, for, happily, I
  • never committed a fault that was deemed worthy of such penalty; but once
  • I remember, for some transgression of my sister’s, our mother thought
  • proper to inflict it upon her: what _she_ felt, I cannot tell; but my
  • sympathetic tears and suffering for her sake I shall not soon forget.
  • Another troublesome trait in Mary Ann was her incorrigible propensity to
  • keep running into the nursery, to play with her little sisters and the
  • nurse. This was natural enough, but, as it was against her mother’s
  • express desire, I, of course, forbade her to do so, and did my utmost to
  • keep her with me; but that only increased her relish for the nursery, and
  • the more I strove to keep her out of it, the oftener she went, and the
  • longer she stayed, to the great dissatisfaction of Mrs. Bloomfield, who,
  • I well knew, would impute all the blame of the matter to me. Another of
  • my trials was the dressing in the morning: at one time she would not be
  • washed; at another she would not be dressed, unless she might wear some
  • particular frock, that I knew her mother would not like her to have; at
  • another she would scream and run away if I attempted to touch her hair.
  • So that, frequently, when, after much trouble and toil, I had, at length,
  • succeeded in bringing her down, the breakfast was nearly half over; and
  • black looks from ‘mamma,’ and testy observations from ‘papa,’ spoken at
  • me, if not to me, were sure to be my meed: for few things irritated the
  • latter so much as want of punctuality at meal times. Then, among the
  • minor annoyances, was my inability to satisfy Mrs. Bloomfield with her
  • daughter’s dress; and the child’s hair ‘was never fit to be seen.’
  • Sometimes, as a powerful reproach to me, she would perform the office of
  • tire woman herself, and then complain bitterly of the trouble it gave
  • her.
  • When little Fanny came into the schoolroom, I hoped she would be mild and
  • inoffensive, at least; but a few days, if not a few hours, sufficed to
  • destroy the illusion: I found her a mischievous, intractable little
  • creature, given up to falsehood and deception, young as she was, and
  • alarmingly fond of exercising her two favourite weapons of offence and
  • defence: that of spitting in the faces of those who incurred her
  • displeasure, and bellowing like a bull when her unreasonable desires were
  • not gratified. As she, generally, was pretty quiet in her parents’
  • presence, and they were impressed with the notion of her being a
  • remarkably gentle child, her falsehoods were readily believed, and her
  • loud uproars led them to suspect harsh and injudicious treatment on my
  • part; and when, at length, her bad disposition became manifest even to
  • their prejudiced eyes, I felt that the whole was attributed to me.
  • ‘What a naughty girl Fanny is getting!’ Mrs. Bloomfield would say to her
  • spouse. ‘Don’t you observe, my dear, how she is altered since she
  • entered the schoolroom? She will soon be as bad as the other two; and, I
  • am sorry to say, they have quite deteriorated of late.’
  • ‘You may say that,’ was the answer. ‘I’ve been thinking that same
  • myself. I thought when we got them a governess they’d improve; but,
  • instead of that, they get worse and worse: I don’t know how it is with
  • their learning, but their habits, I know, make no sort of improvement;
  • they get rougher, and dirtier, and more unseemly every day.’
  • I knew this was all pointed at me; and these, and all similar innuendoes,
  • affected me far more deeply than any open accusations would have done;
  • for against the latter I should have been roused to speak in my own
  • defence: now I judged it my wisest plan to subdue every resentful
  • impulse, suppress every sensitive shrinking, and go on perseveringly,
  • doing my best; for, irksome as my situation was, I earnestly wished to
  • retain it. I thought, if I could struggle on with unremitting firmness
  • and integrity, the children would in time become more humanized: every
  • month would contribute to make them some little wiser, and, consequently,
  • more manageable; for a child of nine or ten as frantic and ungovernable
  • as these at six and seven would be a maniac.
  • I flattered myself I was benefiting my parents and sister by my
  • continuance here; for small as the salary was, I still was earning
  • something, and with strict economy I could easily manage to have
  • something to spare for them, if they would favour me by taking it. Then
  • it was by my own will that I had got the place: I had brought all this
  • tribulation on myself, and I was determined to bear it; nay, more than
  • that, I did not even regret the step I had taken. I longed to show my
  • friends that, even now, I was competent to undertake the charge, and able
  • to acquit myself honourably to the end; and if ever I felt it degrading
  • to submit so quietly, or intolerable to toil so constantly, I would turn
  • towards my home, and say within myself—
  • They may crush, but they shall not subdue me!
  • ’Tis of thee that I think, not of them.
  • About Christmas I was allowed to visit home; but my holiday was only of a
  • fortnight’s duration: ‘For,’ said Mrs. Bloomfield, ‘I thought, as you had
  • seen your friends so lately, you would not care for a longer stay.’ I
  • left her to think so still: but she little knew how long, how wearisome
  • those fourteen weeks of absence had been to me; how intensely I had
  • longed for my holidays, how greatly I was disappointed at their
  • curtailment. Yet she was not to blame in this. I had never told her my
  • feelings, and she could not be expected to divine them; I had not been
  • with her a full term, and she was justified in not allowing me a full
  • vacation.
  • CHAPTER IV—THE GRANDMAMMA
  • I spare my readers the account of my delight on coming home, my happiness
  • while there—enjoying a brief space of rest and liberty in that dear,
  • familiar place, among the loving and the loved—and my sorrow on being
  • obliged to bid them, once more, a long adieu.
  • I returned, however, with unabated vigour to my work—a more arduous task
  • than anyone can imagine, who has not felt something like the misery of
  • being charged with the care and direction of a set of mischievous,
  • turbulent rebels, whom his utmost exertions cannot bind to their duty;
  • while, at the same time, he is responsible for their conduct to a higher
  • power, who exacts from him what cannot be achieved without the aid of the
  • superior’s more potent authority; which, either from indolence, or the
  • fear of becoming unpopular with the said rebellious gang, the latter
  • refuses to give. I can conceive few situations more harassing than that
  • wherein, however you may long for success, however you may labour to
  • fulfil your duty, your efforts are baffled and set at nought by those
  • beneath you, and unjustly censured and misjudged by those above.
  • I have not enumerated half the vexatious propensities of my pupils, or
  • half the troubles resulting from my heavy responsibilities, for fear of
  • trespassing too much upon the reader’s patience; as, perhaps, I have
  • already done; but my design in writing the few last pages was not to
  • amuse, but to benefit those whom it might concern; he that has no
  • interest in such matters will doubtless have skipped them over with a
  • cursory glance, and, perhaps, a malediction against the prolixity of the
  • writer; but if a parent has, therefrom, gathered any useful hint, or an
  • unfortunate governess received thereby the slightest benefit, I am well
  • rewarded for my pains.
  • To avoid trouble and confusion, I have taken my pupils one by one, and
  • discussed their various qualities; but this can give no adequate idea of
  • being worried by the whole three together; when, as was often the case,
  • all were determined to ‘be naughty, and to tease Miss Grey, and put her
  • in a passion.’
  • Sometimes, on such occasions, the thought has suddenly occurred to me—‘If
  • they could see me now!’ meaning, of course, my friends at home; and the
  • idea of how they would pity me has made me pity myself—so greatly that I
  • have had the utmost difficulty to restrain my tears: but I have
  • restrained them, till my little tormentors were gone to dessert, or
  • cleared off to bed (my only prospects of deliverance), and then, in all
  • the bliss of solitude, I have given myself up to the luxury of an
  • unrestricted burst of weeping. But this was a weakness I did not often
  • indulge: my employments were too numerous, my leisure moments too
  • precious, to admit of much time being given to fruitless lamentations.
  • I particularly remember one wild, snowy afternoon, soon after my return
  • in January: the children had all come up from dinner, loudly declaring
  • that they meant ‘to be naughty;’ and they had well kept their resolution,
  • though I had talked myself hoarse, and wearied every muscle in my throat,
  • in the vain attempt to reason them out of it. I had got Tom pinned up in
  • a corner, whence, I told him, he should not escape till he had done his
  • appointed task. Meantime, Fanny had possessed herself of my work-bag,
  • and was rifling its contents—and spitting into it besides. I told her to
  • let it alone, but to no purpose, of course. ‘Burn it, Fanny!’ cried Tom:
  • and _this_ command she hastened to obey. I sprang to snatch it from the
  • fire, and Tom darted to the door. ‘Mary Ann, throw her desk out of the
  • window!’ cried he: and my precious desk, containing my letters and
  • papers, my small amount of cash, and all my valuables, was about to be
  • precipitated from the three-storey window. I flew to rescue it.
  • Meanwhile Tom had left the room, and was rushing down the stairs,
  • followed by Fanny. Having secured my desk, I ran to catch them, and Mary
  • Ann came scampering after. All three escaped me, and ran out of the
  • house into the garden, where they plunged about in the snow, shouting and
  • screaming in exultant glee.
  • What must I do? If I followed them, I should probably be unable to
  • capture one, and only drive them farther away; if I did not, how was I to
  • get them in? And what would their parents think of me, if they saw or
  • heard the children rioting, hatless, bonnetless, gloveless, and bootless,
  • in the deep soft snow? While I stood in this perplexity, just without
  • the door, trying, by grim looks and angry words, to awe them into
  • subjection, I heard a voice behind me, in harshly piercing tones,
  • exclaiming,—
  • ‘Miss Grey! Is it possible? What, in the devil’s name, can you be
  • thinking about?’
  • ‘I can’t get them in, sir,’ said I, turning round, and beholding Mr.
  • Bloomfield, with his hair on end, and his pale blue eyes bolting from
  • their sockets.
  • ‘But I INSIST upon their being got in!’ cried he, approaching nearer, and
  • looking perfectly ferocious.
  • ‘Then, sir, you must call them yourself, if you please, for they won’t
  • listen to me,’ I replied, stepping back.
  • ‘Come in with you, you filthy brats; or I’ll horsewhip you every one!’
  • roared he; and the children instantly obeyed. ‘There, you see!—they come
  • at the first word!’
  • ‘Yes, when _you_ speak.’
  • ‘And it’s very strange, that when you’ve the care of ’em you’ve no better
  • control over ’em than that!—Now, there they are—gone upstairs with their
  • nasty snowy feet! Do go after ’em and see them made decent, for heaven’s
  • sake!’
  • That gentleman’s mother was then staying in the house; and, as I ascended
  • the stairs and passed the drawing-room door, I had the satisfaction of
  • hearing the old lady declaiming aloud to her daughter-in-law to this
  • effect (for I could only distinguish the most emphatic words)—
  • ‘Gracious heavens!—never in all my life—!—get their death as sure as—!
  • Do you think, my dear, she’s a _proper person_? Take my word for it—’
  • I heard no more; but that sufficed.
  • The senior Mrs. Bloomfield had been very attentive and civil to me; and
  • till now I had thought her a nice, kind-hearted, chatty old body. She
  • would often come to me and talk in a confidential strain; nodding and
  • shaking her head, and gesticulating with hands and eyes, as a certain
  • class of old ladies are won’t to do; though I never knew one that carried
  • the peculiarity to so great an extent. She would even sympathise with me
  • for the trouble I had with the children, and express at times, by half
  • sentences, interspersed with nods and knowing winks, her sense of the
  • injudicious conduct of their mamma in so restricting my power, and
  • neglecting to support me with her authority. Such a mode of testifying
  • disapprobation was not much to my taste; and I generally refused to take
  • it in, or understand anything more than was openly spoken; at least, I
  • never went farther than an implied acknowledgment that, if matters were
  • otherwise ordered my task would be a less difficult one, and I should be
  • better able to guide and instruct my charge; but now I must be doubly
  • cautious. Hitherto, though I saw the old lady had her defects (of which
  • one was a proneness to proclaim her perfections), I had always been
  • wishful to excuse them, and to give her credit for all the virtues she
  • professed, and even imagine others yet untold. Kindness, which had been
  • the food of my life through so many years, had lately been so entirely
  • denied me, that I welcomed with grateful joy the slightest semblance of
  • it. No wonder, then, that my heart warmed to the old lady, and always
  • gladdened at her approach and regretted her departure.
  • But now, the few words luckily or unluckily heard in passing had wholly
  • revolutionized my ideas respecting her: now I looked upon her as
  • hypocritical and insincere, a flatterer, and a spy upon my words and
  • deeds. Doubtless it would have been my interest still to meet her with
  • the same cheerful smile and tone of respectful cordiality as before; but
  • I could not, if I would: my manner altered with my feelings, and became
  • so cold and shy that she could not fail to notice it. She soon did
  • notice it, and _her_ manner altered too: the familiar nod was changed to
  • a stiff bow, the gracious smile gave place to a glare of Gorgon ferocity;
  • her vivacious loquacity was entirely transferred from me to ‘the darling
  • boy and girls,’ whom she flattered and indulged more absurdly than ever
  • their mother had done.
  • I confess I was somewhat troubled at this change: I feared the
  • consequences of her displeasure, and even made some efforts to recover
  • the ground I had lost—and with better apparent success than I could have
  • anticipated. At one time, I, merely in common civility, asked after her
  • cough; immediately her long visage relaxed into a smile, and she favoured
  • me with a particular history of that and her other infirmities, followed
  • by an account of her pious resignation, delivered in the usual emphatic,
  • declamatory style, which no writing can portray.
  • ‘But there’s one remedy for all, my dear, and that’s resignation’ (a toss
  • of the head), ‘resignation to the will of heaven!’ (an uplifting of the
  • hands and eyes). ‘It has always supported me through all my trials, and
  • always will do’ (a succession of nods). ‘But then, it isn’t everybody
  • that can say that’ (a shake of the head); ‘but I’m one of the pious ones,
  • Miss Grey!’ (a very significant nod and toss). ‘And, thank heaven, I
  • always was’ (another nod), ‘and I glory in it!’ (an emphatic clasping of
  • the hands and shaking of the head). And with several texts of Scripture,
  • misquoted or misapplied, and religious exclamations so redolent of the
  • ludicrous in the style of delivery and manner of bringing in, if not in
  • the expressions themselves, that I decline repeating them, she withdrew;
  • tossing her large head in high good-humour—with herself at least—and left
  • me hoping that, after all, she was rather weak than wicked.
  • At her next visit to Wellwood House, I went so far as to say I was glad
  • to see her looking so well. The effect of this was magical: the words,
  • intended as a mark of civility, were received as a flattering compliment;
  • her countenance brightened up, and from that moment she became as
  • gracious and benign as heart could wish—in outward semblance at least.
  • From what I now saw of her, and what I heard from the children, I know
  • that, in order to gain her cordial friendship, I had but to utter a word
  • of flattery at each convenient opportunity: but this was against my
  • principles; and for lack of this, the capricious old dame soon deprived
  • me of her favour again, and I believe did me much secret injury.
  • She could not greatly influence her daughter-in-law against me, because,
  • between that lady and herself there was a mutual dislike—chiefly shown by
  • her in secret detractions and calumniations; by the other, in an excess
  • of frigid formality in her demeanour; and no fawning flattery of the
  • elder could thaw away the wall of ice which the younger interposed
  • between them. But with her son, the old lady had better success: he
  • would listen to all she had to say, provided she could soothe his fretful
  • temper, and refrain from irritating him by her own asperities; and I have
  • reason to believe that she considerably strengthened his prejudice
  • against me. She would tell him that I shamefully neglected the children,
  • and even his wife did not attend to them as she ought; and that he must
  • look after them himself, or they would all go to ruin.
  • Thus urged, he would frequently give himself the trouble of watching them
  • from the windows during their play; at times, he would follow them
  • through the grounds, and too often came suddenly upon them while they
  • were dabbling in the forbidden well, talking to the coachman in the
  • stables, or revelling in the filth of the farm-yard—and I, meanwhile,
  • wearily standing, by, having previously exhausted my energy in vain
  • attempts to get them away. Often, too, he would unexpectedly pop his
  • head into the schoolroom while the young people were at meals, and find
  • them spilling their milk over the table and themselves, plunging their
  • fingers into their own or each other’s mugs, or quarrelling over their
  • victuals like a set of tiger’s cubs. If I were quiet at the moment, I
  • was conniving at their disorderly conduct; if (as was frequently the
  • case) I happened to be exalting my voice to enforce order, I was using
  • undue violence, and setting the girls a bad example by such ungentleness
  • of tone and language.
  • I remember one afternoon in spring, when, owing to the rain, they could
  • not go out; but, by some amazing good fortune, they had all finished
  • their lessons, and yet abstained from running down to tease their
  • parents—a trick that annoyed me greatly, but which, on rainy days, I
  • seldom could prevent their doing; because, below, they found novelty and
  • amusement—especially when visitors were in the house; and their mother,
  • though she bid me keep them in the schoolroom, would never chide them for
  • leaving it, or trouble herself to send them back. But this day they
  • appeared satisfied with, their present abode, and what is more wonderful
  • still, seemed disposed to play together without depending on me for
  • amusement, and without quarrelling with each other. Their occupation was
  • a somewhat puzzling one: they were all squatted together on the floor by
  • the window, over a heap of broken toys and a quantity of birds’ eggs—or
  • rather egg-shells, for the contents had luckily been abstracted. These
  • shells they had broken up and were pounding into small fragments, to what
  • end I could not imagine; but so long as they were quiet and not in
  • positive mischief, I did not care; and, with a feeling of unusual repose,
  • I sat by the fire, putting the finishing stitches to a frock for Mary
  • Ann’s doll; intending, when that was done, to begin a letter to my
  • mother. Suddenly the door opened, and the dingy head of Mr. Bloomfield
  • looked in.
  • ‘All very quiet here! What are you doing?’ said he. ‘No harm _to-day_,
  • at least,’ thought I. But he was of a different opinion. Advancing to
  • the window, and seeing the children’s occupations, he testily
  • exclaimed—‘What in the world are you about?’
  • ‘We’re grinding egg-shells, papa!’ cried Tom.
  • ‘How _dare_ you make such a mess, you little devils? Don’t you see what
  • confounded work you’re making of the carpet?’ (the carpet was a plain
  • brown drugget). ‘Miss Grey, did you know what they were doing?’
  • ‘Yes, sir.’
  • ‘You knew it?’
  • ‘Yes.’
  • ‘You knew it! and you actually sat there and permitted them to go on
  • without a word of reproof!’
  • ‘I didn’t think they were doing any harm.’
  • ‘Any harm! Why, look there! Just look at that carpet, and see—was there
  • ever anything like it in a Christian house before? No wonder your room
  • is not fit for a pigsty—no wonder your pupils are worse than a litter of
  • pigs!—no wonder—oh! I declare, it puts me quite past my patience’ and he
  • departed, shutting the door after him with a bang that made the children
  • laugh.
  • ‘It puts me quite past my patience too!’ muttered I, getting up; and,
  • seizing the poker, I dashed it repeatedly into the cinders, and stirred
  • them up with unwonted energy; thus easing my irritation under pretence of
  • mending the fire.
  • After this, Mr. Bloomfield was continually looking in to see if the
  • schoolroom was in order; and, as the children were continually littering
  • the floor with fragments of toys, sticks, stones, stubble, leaves, and
  • other rubbish, which I could not prevent their bringing, or oblige them
  • to gather up, and which the servants refused to ‘clean after them,’ I had
  • to spend a considerable portion of my valuable leisure moments on my
  • knees upon the floor, in painsfully reducing things to order. Once I
  • told them that they should not taste their supper till they had picked up
  • everything from the carpet; Fanny might have hers when she had taken up a
  • certain quantity, Mary Ann when she had gathered twice as many, and Tom
  • was to clear away the rest. Wonderful to state, the girls did their
  • part; but Tom was in such a fury that he flew upon the table, scattered
  • the bread and milk about the floor, struck his sisters, kicked the coals
  • out of the coal-pan, attempted to overthrow the table and chairs, and
  • seemed inclined to make a Douglas-larder of the whole contents of the
  • room: but I seized upon him, and, sending Mary Ann to call her mamma,
  • held him, in spite of kicks, blows, yells, and execrations, till Mrs.
  • Bloomfield made her appearance.
  • ‘What is the matter with my boy?’ said she.
  • And when the matter was explained to her, all she did was to send for the
  • nursery-maid to put the room in order, and bring Master Bloomfield his
  • supper.
  • ‘There now,’ cried Tom, triumphantly, looking up from his viands with his
  • mouth almost too full for speech. ‘There now, Miss Grey! you see I’ve
  • got my supper in spite of you: and I haven’t picked up a single thing!’
  • The only person in the house who had any real sympathy for me was the
  • nurse; for she had suffered like afflictions, though in a smaller degree;
  • as she had not the task of teaching, nor was she so responsible for the
  • conduct of her charge.
  • ‘Oh, Miss Grey!’ she would say, ‘you have some trouble with them
  • childer!’
  • ‘I have, indeed, Betty; and I daresay you know what it is.’
  • ‘Ay, I do so! But I don’t vex myself o’er ’em as you do. And then, you
  • see, I hit ’em a slap sometimes: and them little ’uns—I gives ’em a good
  • whipping now and then: there’s nothing else will do for ’em, as what they
  • say. Howsoever, I’ve lost my place for it.’
  • ‘Have you, Betty? I heard you were going to leave.’
  • ‘Eh, bless you, yes! Missis gave me warning a three wik sin’. She told
  • me afore Christmas how it mud be, if I hit ’em again; but I couldn’t hold
  • my hand off ’em at nothing. I know not how _you_ do, for Miss Mary Ann’s
  • worse by the half nor her sisters!’
  • CHAPTER V—THE UNCLE
  • Besides the old lady, there was another relative of the family, whose
  • visits were a great annoyance to me—this was ‘Uncle Robson,’ Mrs.
  • Bloomfield’s brother; a tall, self-sufficient fellow, with dark hair and
  • sallow complexion like his sister, a nose that seemed to disdain the
  • earth, and little grey eyes, frequently half-closed, with a mixture of
  • real stupidity and affected contempt of all surrounding objects. He was
  • a thick-set, strongly-built man, but he had found some means of
  • compressing his waist into a remarkably small compass; and that, together
  • with the unnatural stillness of his form, showed that the lofty-minded,
  • manly Mr. Robson, the scorner of the female sex, was not above the
  • foppery of stays. He seldom deigned to notice me; and, when he did, it
  • was with a certain supercilious insolence of tone and manner that
  • convinced me he was no gentleman: though it was intended to have a
  • contrary effect. But it was not for that I disliked his coming, so much
  • as for the harm he did the children—encouraging all their evil
  • propensities, and undoing in a few minutes the little good it had taken
  • me months of labour to achieve.
  • Fanny and little Harriet he seldom condescended to notice; but Mary Ann
  • was something of a favourite. He was continually encouraging her
  • tendency to affectation (which I had done my utmost to crush), talking
  • about her pretty face, and filling her head with all manner of conceited
  • notions concerning her personal appearance (which I had instructed her to
  • regard as dust in the balance compared with the cultivation of her mind
  • and manners); and I never saw a child so susceptible of flattery as she
  • was. Whatever was wrong, in either her or her brother, he would
  • encourage by laughing at, if not by actually praising: people little know
  • the injury they do to children by laughing at their faults, and making a
  • pleasant jest of what their true friends have endeavoured to teach them
  • to hold in grave abhorrence.
  • Though not a positive drunkard, Mr. Robson habitually swallowed great
  • quantities of wine, and took with relish an occasional glass of brandy
  • and water. He taught his nephew to imitate him in this to the utmost of
  • his ability, and to believe that the more wine and spirits he could take,
  • and the better he liked them, the more he manifested his bold, and manly
  • spirit, and rose superior to his sisters. Mr. Bloomfield had not much to
  • say against it, for his favourite beverage was gin and water; of which he
  • took a considerable portion every day, by dint of constant sipping—and to
  • that I chiefly attributed his dingy complexion and waspish temper.
  • Mr. Robson likewise encouraged Tom’s propensity to persecute the lower
  • creation, both by precept and example. As he frequently came to course
  • or shoot over his brother-in-law’s grounds, he would bring his favourite
  • dogs with him; and he treated them so brutally that, poor as I was, I
  • would have given a sovereign any day to see one of them bite him,
  • provided the animal could have done it with impunity. Sometimes, when in
  • a very complacent mood, he would go a-birds’-nesting with the children, a
  • thing that irritated and annoyed me exceedingly; as, by frequent and
  • persevering attempts, I flattered myself I had partly shown them the evil
  • of this pastime, and hoped, in time, to bring them to some general sense
  • of justice and humanity; but ten minutes’ birds’-nesting with uncle
  • Robson, or even a laugh from him at some relation of their former
  • barbarities, was sufficient at once to destroy the effect of my whole
  • elaborate course of reasoning and persuasion. Happily, however, during
  • that spring, they never, but once, got anything but empty nests, or
  • eggs—being too impatient to leave them till the birds were hatched; that
  • once, Tom, who had been with his uncle into the neighbouring plantation,
  • came running in high glee into the garden, with a brood of little callow
  • nestlings in his hands. Mary Ann and Fanny, whom I was just bringing
  • out, ran to admire his spoils, and to beg each a bird for themselves.
  • ‘No, not one!’ cried Tom. ‘They’re all mine; uncle Robson gave them to
  • me—one, two, three, four, five—you shan’t touch one of them! no, not one,
  • for your lives!’ continued he, exultingly; laying the nest on the ground,
  • and standing over it with his legs wide apart, his hands thrust into his
  • breeches-pockets, his body bent forward, and his face twisted into all
  • manner of contortions in the ecstasy of his delight.
  • ‘But you shall see me fettle ’em off. My word, but I _will_ wallop ’em?
  • See if I don’t now. By gum! but there’s rare sport for me in that nest.’
  • ‘But, Tom,’ said I, ‘I shall not allow you to torture those birds. They
  • must either be killed at once or carried back to the place you took them
  • from, that the old birds may continue to feed them.’
  • ‘But you don’t know where that is, Madam: it’s only me and uncle Robson
  • that knows that.’
  • ‘But if you don’t tell me, I shall kill them myself—much as I hate it.’
  • ‘You daren’t. You daren’t touch them for your life! because you know
  • papa and mamma, and uncle Robson, would be angry. Ha, ha! I’ve caught
  • you there, Miss!’
  • ‘I shall do what I think right in a case of this sort without consulting
  • any one. If your papa and mamma don’t happen to approve of it, I shall
  • be sorry to offend them; but your uncle Robson’s opinions, of course, are
  • nothing to me.’
  • So saying—urged by a sense of duty—at the risk of both making myself sick
  • and incurring the wrath of my employers—I got a large flat stone, that
  • had been reared up for a mouse-trap by the gardener; then, having once
  • more vainly endeavoured to persuade the little tyrant to let the birds be
  • carried back, I asked what he intended to do with them. With fiendish
  • glee he commenced a list of torments; and while he was busied in the
  • relation, I dropped the stone upon his intended victims and crushed them
  • flat beneath it. Loud were the outcries, terrible the execrations,
  • consequent upon this daring outrage; uncle Robson had been coming up the
  • walk with his gun, and was just then pausing to kick his dog. Tom flew
  • towards him, vowing he would make him kick me instead of Juno. Mr.
  • Robson leant upon his gun, and laughed excessively at the violence of his
  • nephew’s passion, and the bitter maledictions and opprobrious epithets he
  • heaped upon me. ‘Well, you _are_ a good ’un!’ exclaimed he, at length,
  • taking up his weapon and proceeding towards the house. ‘Damme, but the
  • lad has some spunk in him, too. Curse me, if ever I saw a nobler little
  • scoundrel than that. He’s beyond petticoat government already: by God!
  • he defies mother, granny, governess, and all! Ha, ha, ha! Never mind,
  • Tom, I’ll get you another brood to-morrow.’
  • ‘If you do, Mr. Robson, I shall kill them too,’ said I.
  • ‘Humph!’ replied he, and having honoured me with a broad stare—which,
  • contrary to his expectations, I sustained without flinching—he turned
  • away with an air of supreme contempt, and stalked into the house. Tom
  • next went to tell his mamma. It was not her way to say much on any
  • subject; but, when she next saw me, her aspect and demeanour were doubly
  • dark and chilled. After some casual remark about the weather, she
  • observed—‘I am sorry, Miss Grey, you should think it necessary to
  • interfere with Master Bloomfield’s amusements; he was very much
  • distressed about your destroying the birds.’
  • ‘When Master Bloomfield’s amusements consist in injuring sentient
  • creatures,’ I answered, ‘I think it my duty to interfere.’
  • ‘You seemed to have forgotten,’ said she, calmly, ‘that the creatures
  • were all created for our convenience.’
  • I thought that doctrine admitted some doubt, but merely replied—‘If they
  • were, we have no right to torment them for our amusement.’
  • ‘I think,’ said she, ‘a child’s amusement is scarcely to be weighed
  • against the welfare of a soulless brute.’
  • ‘But, for the child’s own sake, it ought not to be encouraged to have
  • such amusements,’ answered I, as meekly as I could, to make up for such
  • unusual pertinacity. ‘“Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain
  • mercy.”’
  • ‘Oh! of course; but that refers to our conduct towards each other.’
  • ‘“The merciful man shows mercy to his beast,”’ I ventured to add.
  • ‘I think _you_ have not shown much mercy,’ replied she, with a short,
  • bitter laugh; ‘killing the poor birds by wholesale in that shocking
  • manner, and putting the dear boy to such misery for a mere whim.’
  • I judged it prudent to say no more. This was the nearest approach to a
  • quarrel I ever had with Mrs. Bloomfield; as well as the greatest number
  • of words I ever exchanged with her at one time, since the day of my first
  • arrival.
  • But Mr. Robson and old Mrs. Bloomfield were not the only guests whose
  • coming to Wellwood House annoyed me; every visitor disturbed me more or
  • less; not so much because they neglected me (though I did feel their
  • conduct strange and disagreeable in that respect), as because I found it
  • impossible to keep my pupils away from them, as I was repeatedly desired
  • to do: Tom must talk to them, and Mary Ann must be noticed by them.
  • Neither the one nor the other knew what it was to feel any degree of
  • shamefacedness, or even common modesty. They would indecently and
  • clamorously interrupt the conversation of their elders, tease them with
  • the most impertinent questions, roughly collar the gentlemen, climb their
  • knees uninvited, hang about their shoulders or rifle their pockets, pull
  • the ladies’ gowns, disorder their hair, tumble their collars, and
  • importunately beg for their trinkets.
  • Mrs. Bloomfield had the sense to be shocked and annoyed at all this, but
  • she had not sense to prevent it: she expected me to prevent it. But how
  • could I—when the guests, with their fine clothes and new faces,
  • continually flattered and indulged them, out of complaisance to their
  • parents—how could I, with my homely garments, every-day face, and honest
  • words, draw them away? I strained every nerve to do so: by striving to
  • amuse them, I endeavoured to attract them to my side; by the exertion of
  • such authority as I possessed, and by such severity as I dared to use, I
  • tried to deter them from tormenting the guests; and by reproaching their
  • unmannerly conduct, to make them ashamed to repeat it. But they knew no
  • shame; they scorned authority which had no terrors to back it; and as for
  • kindness and affection, either they had no hearts, or such as they had
  • were so strongly guarded, and so well concealed, that I, with all my
  • efforts, had not yet discovered how to reach them.
  • But soon my trials in this quarter came to a close—sooner than I either
  • expected or desired; for one sweet evening towards the close of May, as I
  • was rejoicing in the near approach of the holidays, and congratulating
  • myself upon having made some progress with my pupils (as far as their
  • learning went, at least, for I _had_ instilled _something_ into their
  • heads, and I had, at length, brought them to be a little—a very
  • little—more rational about getting their lessons done in time to leave
  • some space for recreation, instead of tormenting themselves and me all
  • day long to no purpose), Mrs. Bloomfield sent for me, and calmly told me
  • that after Midsummer my services would be no longer required. She
  • assured me that my character and general conduct were unexceptionable;
  • but the children had made so little improvement since my arrival that Mr.
  • Bloomfield and she felt it their duty to seek some other mode of
  • instruction. Though superior to most children of their years in
  • abilities, they were decidedly behind them in attainments; their manners
  • were uncultivated, and their tempers unruly. And this she attributed to
  • a want of sufficient firmness, and diligent, persevering care on my part.
  • Unshaken firmness, devoted diligence, unwearied perseverance, unceasing
  • care, were the very qualifications on which I had secretly prided myself;
  • and by which I had hoped in time to overcome all difficulties, and obtain
  • success at last. I wished to say something in my own justification; but
  • in attempting to speak, I felt my voice falter; and rather than testify
  • any emotion, or suffer the tears to overflow that were already gathering
  • in my eyes, I chose to keep silence, and bear all like a self-convicted
  • culprit.
  • Thus was I dismissed, and thus I sought my home. Alas! what would they
  • think of me? unable, after all my boasting, to keep my place, even for a
  • single year, as governess to three small children, whose mother was
  • asserted by my own aunt to be a ‘very nice woman.’ Having been thus
  • weighed in the balance and found wanting, I need not hope they would be
  • willing to try me again. And this was an unwelcome thought; for vexed,
  • harassed, disappointed as I had been, and greatly as I had learned to
  • love and value my home, I was not yet weary of adventure, nor willing to
  • relax my efforts. I knew that all parents were not like Mr. and Mrs.
  • Bloomfield, and I was certain all children were not like theirs. The
  • next family must be different, and any change must be for the better. I
  • had been seasoned by adversity, and tutored by experience, and I longed
  • to redeem my lost honour in the eyes of those whose opinion was more than
  • that of all the world to me.
  • CHAPTER VI—THE PARSONAGE AGAIN
  • For a few months I remained peaceably at home, in the quiet enjoyment of
  • liberty and rest, and genuine friendship, from all of which I had fasted
  • so long; and in the earnest prosecution of my studies, to recover what I
  • had lost during my stay at Wellwood House, and to lay in new stores for
  • future use. My father’s health was still very infirm, but not materially
  • worse than when I last saw him; and I was glad I had it in my power to
  • cheer him by my return, and to amuse him with singing his favourite
  • songs.
  • No one triumphed over my failure, or said I had better have taken his or
  • her advice, and quietly stayed at home. All were glad to have me back
  • again, and lavished more kindness than ever upon me, to make up for the
  • sufferings I had undergone; but not one would touch a shilling of what I
  • had so cheerfully earned and so carefully saved, in the hope of sharing
  • it with them. By dint of pinching here, and scraping there, our debts
  • were already nearly paid. Mary had had good success with her drawings;
  • but our father had insisted upon _her_ likewise keeping all the produce
  • of her industry to herself. All we could spare from the supply of our
  • humble wardrobe and our little casual expenses, he directed us to put
  • into the savings’-bank; saying, we knew not how soon we might be
  • dependent on that alone for support: for he felt he had not long to be
  • with us, and what would become of our mother and us when he was gone, God
  • only knew!
  • Dear papa! if he had troubled himself less about the afflictions that
  • threatened us in case of his death, I am convinced that dreaded event
  • would not have taken place so soon. My mother would never suffer him to
  • ponder on the subject if she could help it.
  • ‘Oh, Richard!’ exclaimed she, on one occasion, ‘if you would but dismiss
  • such gloomy subjects from your mind, you would live as long as any of us;
  • at least you would live to see the girls married, and yourself a happy
  • grandfather, with a canty old dame for your companion.’
  • My mother laughed, and so did my father: but his laugh soon perished in a
  • dreary sigh.
  • ‘_They_ married—poor penniless things!’ said he; ‘who will take them I
  • wonder!’
  • ‘Why, nobody shall that isn’t thankful for them. Wasn’t I penniless when
  • you took me? and you _pretended_, at least, to be vastly pleased with
  • your acquisition. But it’s no matter whether they get married or not: we
  • can devise a thousand honest ways of making a livelihood. And I wonder,
  • Richard, you can think of bothering your head about our _poverty_ in case
  • of your death; as if _that_ would be anything compared with the calamity
  • of losing you—an affliction that you well know would swallow up all
  • others, and which you ought to do your utmost to preserve us from: and
  • there is nothing like a cheerful mind for keeping the body in health.’
  • ‘I know, Alice, it is wrong to keep repining as I do, but I cannot help
  • it: you must bear with me.’
  • ‘I _won’t_ bear with you, if I can alter you,’ replied my mother: but the
  • harshness of her words was undone by the earnest affection of her tone
  • and pleasant smile, that made my father smile again, less sadly and less
  • transiently than was his wont.
  • ‘Mamma,’ said I, as soon as I could find an opportunity of speaking with
  • her alone, ‘my money is but little, and cannot last long; if I could
  • increase it, it would lessen papa’s anxiety, on one subject at least. I
  • cannot draw like Mary, and so the best thing I could do would be to look
  • out for another situation.’
  • ‘And so you would actually try again, Agnes?’
  • ‘Decidedly, I would.’
  • ‘Why, my dear, I should have thought you had had enough of it.’
  • ‘I know,’ said I, ‘everybody is not like Mr. and Mrs. Bloomfield—’
  • ‘Some are worse,’ interrupted my mother.
  • ‘But not many, I think,’ replied I, ‘and I’m sure all children are not
  • like theirs; for I and Mary were not: we always did as you bid us, didn’t
  • we?’
  • ‘Generally: but then, I did not spoil you; and you were not perfect
  • angels after all: Mary had a fund of quiet obstinacy, and you were
  • somewhat faulty in regard to temper; but you were very good children on
  • the whole.’
  • ‘I know I was sulky sometimes, and I should have been glad to see these
  • children sulky sometimes too; for then I could have understood them: but
  • they never were, for they _could_ not be offended, nor hurt, nor ashamed:
  • they could not be unhappy in any way, except when they were in a
  • passion.’
  • ‘Well, if they _could_ not, it was not their fault: you cannot expect
  • stone to be as pliable as clay.’
  • ‘No, but still it is very unpleasant to live with such unimpressible,
  • incomprehensible creatures. You cannot love them; and if you could, your
  • love would be utterly thrown away: they could neither return it, nor
  • value, nor understand it. But, however, even if I should stumble on such
  • a family again, which is quite unlikely, I have all this experience to
  • begin with, and I should manage better another time; and the end and aim
  • of this preamble is, let me try again.’
  • ‘Well, my girl, you are not easily discouraged, I see: I am glad of that.
  • But, let me tell you, you are a good deal paler and thinner than when you
  • first left home; and we cannot have you undermining your health to hoard
  • up money either for yourself or others.’
  • ‘Mary tells me I am changed too; and I don’t much wonder at it, for I was
  • in a constant state of agitation and anxiety all day long: but next time
  • I am determined to take things coolly.’
  • After some further discussion, my mother promised once more to assist me,
  • provided I would wait and be patient; and I left her to broach the matter
  • to my father, when and how she deemed it most advisable: never doubting
  • her ability to obtain his consent. Meantime, I searched, with great
  • interest, the advertising columns of the newspapers, and wrote answers to
  • every ‘Wanted a Governess’ that appeared at all eligible; but all my
  • letters, as well as the replies, when I got any, were dutifully shown to
  • my mother; and she, to my chagrin, made me reject the situations one
  • after another: these were low people, these were too exacting in their
  • demands, and these too niggardly in their remuneration.
  • ‘Your talents are not such as every poor clergyman’s daughter possesses,
  • Agnes,’ she would say, ‘and you must not throw them away. Remember, you
  • promised to be patient: there is no need of hurry: you have plenty of
  • time before you, and may have many chances yet.’
  • At length, she advised me to put an advertisement, myself, in the paper,
  • stating my qualifications, &c.
  • ‘Music, singing, drawing, French, Latin, and German,’ said she, ‘are no
  • mean assemblage: many will be glad to have so much in one instructor; and
  • this time, you shall try your fortune in a somewhat higher family in that
  • of some genuine, thoroughbred gentleman; for such are far more likely to
  • treat you with proper respect and consideration than those purse-proud
  • tradespeople and arrogant upstarts. I have known several among the
  • higher ranks who treated their governesses quite as one of the family;
  • though some, I allow, are as insolent and exacting as any one else can
  • be: for there are bad and good in all classes.’
  • The advertisement was quickly written and despatched. Of the two parties
  • who answered it, but one would consent to give me fifty pounds, the sum
  • my mother bade me name as the salary I should require; and here, I
  • hesitated about engaging myself, as I feared the children would be too
  • old, and their parents would require some one more showy, or more
  • experienced, if not more accomplished than I. But my mother dissuaded me
  • from declining it on that account: I should do vastly well, she said, if
  • I would only throw aside my diffidence, and acquire a little more
  • confidence in myself. I was just to give a plain, true statement of my
  • acquirements and qualifications, and name what stipulations I chose to
  • make, and then await the result. The only stipulation I ventured to
  • propose, was that I might be allowed two months’ holidays during the year
  • to visit my friends, at Midsummer and Christmas. The unknown lady, in
  • her reply, made no objection to this, and stated that, as to my
  • acquirements, she had no doubt I should be able to give satisfaction; but
  • in the engagement of governesses she considered those things as but
  • subordinate points; as being situated in the neighbourhood of O---, she
  • could get masters to supply any deficiencies in that respect: but, in her
  • opinion, next to unimpeachable morality, a mild and cheerful temper and
  • obliging disposition were the most essential requisities.
  • My mother did not relish this at all, and now made many objections to my
  • accepting the situation; in which my sister warmly supported her: but,
  • unwilling to be balked again, I overruled them all; and, having first
  • obtained the consent of my father (who had, a short time previously, been
  • apprised of these transactions), I wrote a most obliging epistle to my
  • unknown correspondent, and, finally, the bargain was concluded.
  • It was decreed that on the last day of January I was to enter upon my new
  • office as governess in the family of Mr. Murray, of Horton Lodge, near
  • O---, about seventy miles from our village: a formidable distance to me,
  • as I had never been above twenty miles from home in all the course of my
  • twenty years’ sojourn on earth; and as, moreover, every individual in
  • that family and in the neighbourhood was utterly unknown to myself and
  • all my acquaintances. But this rendered it only the more piquant to me.
  • I had now, in some measure, got rid of the _mauvaise honte_ that had
  • formerly oppressed me so much; there was a pleasing excitement in the
  • idea of entering these unknown regions, and making my way alone among its
  • strange inhabitants. I now flattered myself I was going to see something
  • in the world: Mr. Murray’s residence was near a large town, and not in a
  • manufacturing district, where the people had nothing to do but to make
  • money; his rank from what I could gather, appeared to be higher than that
  • of Mr. Bloomfield; and, doubtless, he was one of those genuine
  • thoroughbred gentry my mother spoke of, who would treat his governess
  • with due consideration as a respectable well-educated lady, the
  • instructor and guide of his children, and not a mere upper servant.
  • Then, my pupils being older, would be more rational, more teachable, and
  • less troublesome than the last; they would be less confined to the
  • schoolroom, and not require that constant labour and incessant watching;
  • and, finally, bright visions mingled with my hopes, with which the care
  • of children and the mere duties of a governess had little or nothing to
  • do. Thus, the reader will see that I had no claim to be regarded as a
  • martyr to filial piety, going forth to sacrifice peace and liberty for
  • the sole purpose of laying up stores for the comfort and support of my
  • parents: though certainly the comfort of my father, and the future
  • support of my mother, had a large share in my calculations; and fifty
  • pounds appeared to me no ordinary sum. I must have decent clothes
  • becoming my station; I must, it seemed, put out my washing, and also pay
  • for my four annual journeys between Horton Lodge and home; but with
  • strict attention to economy, surely twenty pounds, or little more, would
  • cover those expenses, and then there would be thirty for the bank, or
  • little less: what a valuable addition to our stock! Oh, I must struggle
  • to keep this situation, whatever it might be! both for my own honour
  • among my friends and for the solid services I might render them by my
  • continuance there.
  • CHAPTER VII—HORTON LODGE
  • The 31st of January was a wild, tempestuous day: there was a strong north
  • wind, with a continual storm of snow drifting on the ground and whirling
  • through the air. My friends would have had me delay my departure, but
  • fearful of prejudicing my employers against me by such want of
  • punctuality at the commencement of my undertaking, I persisted in keeping
  • the appointment.
  • I will not inflict upon my readers an account of my leaving home on that
  • dark winter morning: the fond farewells, the long, long journey to O---,
  • the solitary waitings in inns for coaches or trains—for there were some
  • railways then—and, finally, the meeting at O--- with Mr. Murray’s
  • servant, who had been sent with the phaeton to drive me from thence to
  • Horton Lodge. I will just state that the heavy snow had thrown such
  • impediments in the way of both horses and steam-engines, that it was dark
  • some hours before I reached my journey’s end, and that a most bewildering
  • storm came on at last, which made the few miles’ space between O--- and
  • Horton Lodge a long and formidable passage. I sat resigned, with the
  • cold, sharp snow drifting through my veil and filling my lap, seeing
  • nothing, and wondering how the unfortunate horse and driver could make
  • their way even as well as they did; and indeed it was but a toilsome,
  • creeping style of progression, to say the best of it. At length we
  • paused; and, at the call of the driver, someone unlatched and rolled back
  • upon their creaking hinges what appeared to be the park gates. Then we
  • proceeded along a smoother road, whence, occasionally, I perceived some
  • huge, hoary mass gleaming through the darkness, which I took to be a
  • portion of a snow-clad tree. After a considerable time we paused again,
  • before the stately portico of a large house with long windows descending
  • to the ground.
  • I rose with some difficulty from under the superincumbent snowdrift, and
  • alighted from the carriage, expecting that a kind and hospitable
  • reception would indemnify me for the toils and hardships of the day. A
  • gentleman person in black opened the door, and admitted me into a
  • spacious hall, lighted by an amber-coloured lamp suspended from the
  • ceiling; he led me through this, along a passage, and opening the door of
  • a back room, told me that was the schoolroom. I entered, and found two
  • young ladies and two young gentlemen—my future pupils, I supposed. After
  • a formal greeting, the elder girl, who was trifling over a piece of
  • canvas and a basket of German wools, asked if I should like to go
  • upstairs. I replied in the affirmative, of course.
  • ‘Matilda, take a candle, and show her her room,’ said she.
  • Miss Matilda, a strapping hoyden of about fourteen, with a short frock
  • and trousers, shrugged her shoulders and made a slight grimace, but took
  • a candle and proceeded before me up the back stairs (a long, steep,
  • double flight), and through a long, narrow passage, to a small but
  • tolerably comfortable room. She then asked me if I would take some tea
  • or coffee. I was about to answer No; but remembering that I had taken
  • nothing since seven o’clock that morning, and feeling faint in
  • consequence, I said I would take a cup of tea. Saying she would tell
  • ‘Brown,’ the young lady departed; and by the time I had divested myself
  • of my heavy, wet cloak, shawl, bonnet, &c., a mincing damsel came to say
  • the young ladies desired to know whether I would take my tea up there or
  • in the schoolroom. Under the plea of fatigue I chose to take it there.
  • She withdrew; and, after a while, returned again with a small tea-tray,
  • and placed it on the chest of drawers, which served as a dressing-table.
  • Having civilly thanked her, I asked at what time I should be expected to
  • rise in the morning.
  • ‘The young ladies and gentlemen breakfast at half-past eight, ma’am,’
  • said she; ‘they rise early; but, as they seldom do any lessons before
  • breakfast, I should think it will do if you rise soon after seven.’
  • I desired her to be so kind as to call me at seven, and, promising to do
  • so, she withdrew. Then, having broken my long fast on a cup of tea and a
  • little thin bread and butter, I sat down beside the small, smouldering
  • fire, and amused myself with a hearty fit of crying; after which, I said
  • my prayers, and then, feeling considerably relieved, began to prepare for
  • bed. Finding that none of my luggage was brought up, I instituted a
  • search for the bell; and failing to discover any signs of such a
  • convenience in any corner of the room, I took my candle and ventured
  • through the long passage, and down the steep stairs, on a voyage of
  • discovery. Meeting a well-dressed female on the way, I told her what I
  • wanted; but not without considerable hesitation, as I was not quite sure
  • whether it was one of the upper servants, or Mrs. Murray herself: it
  • happened, however, to be the lady’s-maid. With the air of one conferring
  • an unusual favour, she vouchsafed to undertake the sending up of my
  • things; and when I had re-entered my room, and waited and wondered a long
  • time (greatly fearing that she had forgotten or neglected to perform her
  • promise, and doubting whether to keep waiting or go to bed, or go down
  • again), my hopes, at length, were revived by the sound of voices and
  • laughter, accompanied by the tramp of feet along the passage; and
  • presently the luggage was brought in by a rough-looking maid and a man,
  • neither of them very respectful in their demeanour to me. Having shut
  • the door upon their retiring footsteps, and unpacked a few of my things,
  • I betook myself to rest; gladly enough, for I was weary in body and mind.
  • It was with a strange feeling of desolation, mingled with a strong sense
  • of the novelty of my situation, and a joyless kind of curiosity
  • concerning what was yet unknown, that I awoke the next morning; feeling
  • like one whirled away by enchantment, and suddenly dropped from the
  • clouds into a remote and unknown land, widely and completely isolated
  • from all he had ever seen or known before; or like a thistle-seed borne
  • on the wind to some strange nook of uncongenial soil, where it must lie
  • long enough before it can take root and germinate, extracting nourishment
  • from what appears so alien to its nature: if, indeed, it ever can. But
  • this gives no proper idea of my feelings at all; and no one that has not
  • lived such a retired, stationary life as mine, can possibly imagine what
  • they were: hardly even if he has known what it is to awake some morning,
  • and find himself in Port Nelson, in New Zealand, with a world of waters
  • between himself and all that knew him.
  • I shall not soon forget the peculiar feeling with which I raised my blind
  • and looked out upon the unknown world: a wide, white wilderness was all
  • that met my gaze; a waste of
  • Deserts tossed in snow,
  • And heavy laden groves.
  • I descended to the schoolroom with no remarkable eagerness to join my
  • pupils, though not without some feeling of curiosity respecting what a
  • further acquaintance would reveal. One thing, among others of more
  • obvious importance, I determined with myself—I must begin with calling
  • them Miss and Master. It seemed to me a chilling and unnatural piece of
  • punctilio between the children of a family and their instructor and daily
  • companion; especially where the former were in their early childhood, as
  • at Wellwood House; but even there, my calling the little Bloomfields by
  • their simple names had been regarded as an offensive liberty: as their
  • parents had taken care to show me, by carefully designating them _Master_
  • and _Miss_ Bloomfield, &c., in speaking to me. I had been very slow to
  • take the hint, because the whole affair struck me as so very absurd; but
  • now I determined to be wiser, and begin at once with as much form and
  • ceremony as any member of the family would be likely to require: and,
  • indeed, the children being so much older, there would be less difficulty;
  • though the little words Miss and Master seemed to have a surprising
  • effect in repressing all familiar, open-hearted kindness, and
  • extinguishing every gleam of cordiality that might arise between us.
  • As I cannot, like Dogberry, find it in my heart to bestow all my
  • tediousness upon the reader, I will not go on to bore him with a minute
  • detail of all the discoveries and proceedings of this and the following
  • day. No doubt he will be amply satisfied with a slight sketch of the
  • different members of the family, and a general view of the first year or
  • two of my sojourn among them.
  • To begin with the head: Mr. Murray was, by all accounts, a blustering,
  • roystering, country squire: a devoted fox-hunter, a skilful horse-jockey
  • and farrier, an active, practical farmer, and a hearty _bon vivant_. By
  • all accounts, I say; for, except on Sundays, when he went to church, I
  • never saw him from month to month: unless, in crossing the hall or
  • walking in the grounds, the figure of a tall, stout gentleman, with
  • scarlet cheeks and crimson nose, happened to come across me; on which
  • occasions, if he passed near enough to speak, an unceremonious nod,
  • accompanied by a ‘Morning, Miss Grey,’ or some such brief salutation, was
  • usually vouchsafed. Frequently, indeed, his loud laugh reached me from
  • afar; and oftener still I heard him swearing and blaspheming against the
  • footmen, groom, coachman, or some other hapless dependant.
  • Mrs. Murray was a handsome, dashing lady of forty, who certainly required
  • neither rouge nor padding to add to her charms; and whose chief
  • enjoyments were, or seemed to be, in giving or frequenting parties, and
  • in dressing at the very top of the fashion. I did not see her till
  • eleven o’clock on the morning after my arrival; when she honoured me with
  • a visit, just as my mother might step into the kitchen to see a new
  • servant-girl: yet not so, either, for my mother would have seen her
  • immediately after her arrival, and not waited till the next day; and,
  • moreover, she would have addressed her in a more kind and friendly
  • manner, and given her some words of comfort as well as a plain exposition
  • of her duties; but Mrs. Murray did neither the one nor the other. She
  • just stepped into the schoolroom on her return from ordering dinner in
  • the housekeeper’s room, bade me good-morning, stood for two minutes by
  • the fire, said a few words about the weather and the ‘rather rough’
  • journey I must have had yesterday; petted her youngest child—a boy of
  • ten—who had just been wiping his mouth and hands on her gown, after
  • indulging in some savoury morsel from the housekeeper’s store; told me
  • what a sweet, good boy he was; and then sailed out, with a
  • self-complacent smile upon her face: thinking, no doubt, that she had
  • done quite enough for the present, and had been delightfully
  • condescending into the bargain. Her children evidently held the same
  • opinion, and I alone thought otherwise.
  • After this she looked in upon me once or twice, during the absence of my
  • pupils, to enlighten me concerning my duties towards them. For the girls
  • she seemed anxious only to render them as superficially attractive and
  • showily accomplished as they could possibly be made, without present
  • trouble or discomfort to themselves; and I was to act accordingly—to
  • study and strive to amuse and oblige, instruct, refine, and polish, with
  • the least possible exertion on their part, and no exercise of authority
  • on mine. With regard to the two boys, it was much the same; only instead
  • of accomplishments, I was to get the greatest possible quantity of Latin
  • grammar and Valpy’s Delectus into their heads, in order to fit them for
  • school—the greatest possible quantity at least _without_ trouble to
  • themselves. John might be a ‘little high-spirited,’ and Charles might be
  • a little ‘nervous and tedious—’
  • ‘But at all events, Miss Grey,’ said she, ‘I hope _you_ will keep your
  • temper, and be mild and patient throughout; especially with the dear
  • little Charles; he is so extremely nervous and susceptible, and so
  • utterly unaccustomed to anything but the tenderest treatment. You will
  • excuse my naming these things to you; for the fact is, I have hitherto
  • found all the governesses, even the very best of them, faulty in this
  • particular. They wanted that meek and quiet spirit, which St. Matthew,
  • or some of them, says is better than the putting on of apparel—you will
  • know the passage to which I allude, for you are a clergyman’s daughter.
  • But I have no doubt you will give satisfaction in this respect as well as
  • the rest. And remember, on all occasions, when any of the young people
  • do anything improper, if persuasion and gentle remonstrance will not do,
  • let one of the others come and tell me; for I can speak to them more
  • plainly than it would be proper for you to do. And make them as happy as
  • you can, Miss Grey, and I dare say you will do very well.’
  • I observed that while Mrs. Murray was so extremely solicitous for the
  • comfort and happiness of her children, and continually talking about it,
  • she never once mentioned mine; though they were at home, surrounded by
  • friends, and I an alien among strangers; and I did not yet know enough of
  • the world, not to be considerably surprised at this anomaly.
  • Miss Murray, otherwise Rosalie, was about sixteen when I came, and
  • decidedly a very pretty girl; and in two years longer, as time more
  • completely developed her form and added grace to her carriage and
  • deportment, she became positively beautiful; and that in no common
  • degree. She was tall and slender, yet not thin; perfectly formed,
  • exquisitely fair, though not without a brilliant, healthy bloom; her
  • hair, which she wore in a profusion of long ringlets, was of a very light
  • brown inclining to yellow; her eyes were pale blue, but so clear and
  • bright that few would wish them darker; the rest of her features were
  • small, not quite regular, and not remarkably otherwise: but altogether
  • you could not hesitate to pronounce her a very lovely girl. I wish I
  • could say as much for mind and disposition as I can for her form and
  • face.
  • Yet think not I have any dreadful disclosures to make: she was lively,
  • light-hearted, and could be very agreeable, with those who did not cross
  • her will. Towards me, when I first came, she was cold and haughty, then
  • insolent and overbearing; but, on a further acquaintance, she gradually
  • laid aside her airs, and in time became as deeply attached to me as it
  • was possible for _her_ to be to one of my character and position: for she
  • seldom lost sight, for above half an hour at a time, of the fact of my
  • being a hireling and a poor curate’s daughter. And yet, upon the whole,
  • I believe she respected me more than she herself was aware of; because I
  • was the only person in the house who steadily professed good principles,
  • habitually spoke the truth, and generally endeavoured to make inclination
  • bow to duty; and this I say, not, of course, in commendation of myself,
  • but to show the unfortunate state of the family to which my services
  • were, for the present, devoted. There was no member of it in whom I
  • regretted this sad want of principle so much as Miss Murray herself; not
  • only because she had taken a fancy to me, but because there was so much
  • of what was pleasant and prepossessing in herself, that, in spite of her
  • failings, I really liked her—when she did not rouse my indignation, or
  • ruffle my temper by _too_ great a display of her faults. These, however,
  • I would fain persuade myself were rather the effect of her education than
  • her disposition: she had never been perfectly taught the distinction
  • between right and wrong; she had, like her brothers and sisters, been
  • suffered, from infancy, to tyrannize over nurses, governesses, and
  • servants; she had not been taught to moderate her desires, to control her
  • temper or bridle her will, or to sacrifice her own pleasure for the good
  • of others. Her temper being naturally good, she was never violent or
  • morose, but from constant indulgence, and habitual scorn of reason, she
  • was often testy and capricious; her mind had never been cultivated: her
  • intellect, at best, was somewhat shallow; she possessed considerable
  • vivacity, some quickness of perception, and some talent for music and the
  • acquisition of languages, but till fifteen she had troubled herself to
  • acquire nothing;—then the love of display had roused her faculties, and
  • induced her to apply herself, but only to the more showy accomplishments.
  • And when I came it was the same: everything was neglected but French,
  • German, music, singing, dancing, fancy-work, and a little drawing—such
  • drawing as might produce the greatest show with the smallest labour, and
  • the principal parts of which were generally done by me. For music and
  • singing, besides my occasional instructions, she had the attendance of
  • the best master the country afforded; and in these accomplishments, as
  • well as in dancing, she certainly attained great proficiency. To music,
  • indeed, she devoted too much of her time, as, governess though I was, I
  • frequently told her; but her mother thought that if _she_ liked it, she
  • _could_ not give too much time to the acquisition of so attractive an
  • art. Of fancy-work I knew nothing but what I gathered from my pupil and
  • my own observation; but no sooner was I initiated, than she made me
  • useful in twenty different ways: all the tedious parts of her work were
  • shifted on to my shoulders; such as stretching the frames, stitching in
  • the canvas, sorting the wools and silks, putting in the grounds, counting
  • the stitches, rectifying mistakes, and finishing the pieces she was tired
  • of.
  • At sixteen, Miss Murray was something of a romp, yet not more so than is
  • natural and allowable for a girl of that age, but at seventeen, that
  • propensity, like all other things, began to give way to the ruling
  • passion, and soon was swallowed up in the all-absorbing ambition to
  • attract and dazzle the other sex. But enough of her: now let us turn to
  • her sister.
  • Miss Matilda Murray was a veritable hoyden, of whom little need be said.
  • She was about two years and a half younger than her sister; her features
  • were larger, her complexion much darker. She might possibly make a
  • handsome woman; but she was far too big-boned and awkward ever to be
  • called a pretty girl, and at present she cared little about it. Rosalie
  • knew all her charms, and thought them even greater than they were, and
  • valued them more highly than she ought to have done, had they been three
  • times as great; Matilda thought she was well enough, but cared little
  • about the matter; still less did she care about the cultivation of her
  • mind, and the acquisition of ornamental accomplishments. The manner in
  • which she learnt her lessons and practised her music was calculated to
  • drive any governess to despair. Short and easy as her tasks were, if
  • done at all, they were slurred over, at any time and in any way; but
  • generally at the least convenient times, and in the way least beneficial
  • to herself, and least satisfactory to me: the short half-hour of
  • practising was horribly strummed through; she, meantime, unsparingly
  • abusing me, either for interrupting her with corrections, or for not
  • rectifying her mistakes before they were made, or something equally
  • unreasonable. Once or twice, I ventured to remonstrate with her
  • seriously for such irrational conduct; but on each of those occasions, I
  • received such reprehensive expostulations from her mother, as convinced
  • me that, if I wished to keep the situation, I must even let Miss Matilda
  • go on in her own way.
  • When her lessons were over, however, her ill-humour was generally over
  • too: while riding her spirited pony, or romping with the dogs or her
  • brothers and sister, but especially with her dear brother John, she was
  • as happy as a lark. As an animal, Matilda was all right, full of life,
  • vigour, and activity; as an intelligent being, she was barbarously
  • ignorant, indocile, careless and irrational; and, consequently, very
  • distressing to one who had the task of cultivating her understanding,
  • reforming her manners, and aiding her to acquire those ornamental
  • attainments which, unlike her sister, she despised as much as the rest.
  • Her mother was partly aware of her deficiencies, and gave me many a
  • lecture as to how I should try to form her tastes, and endeavour to rouse
  • and cherish her dormant vanity; and, by insinuating, skilful flattery, to
  • win her attention to the desired objects—which I would not do; and how I
  • should prepare and smooth the path of learning till she could glide along
  • it without the least exertion to herself: which I could not, for nothing
  • can be taught to any purpose without some little exertion on the part of
  • the learner.
  • As a moral agent, Matilda was reckless, headstrong, violent, and
  • unamenable to reason. One proof of the deplorable state of her mind was,
  • that from her father’s example she had learned to swear like a trooper.
  • Her mother was greatly shocked at the ‘unlady-like trick,’ and wondered
  • ‘how she had picked it up.’ ‘But you can soon break her of it, Miss
  • Grey,’ said she: ‘it is only a habit; and if you will just gently remind
  • her every time she does so, I am sure she will soon lay it aside.’ I not
  • only ‘gently reminded’ her, I tried to impress upon her how wrong it was,
  • and how distressing to the ears of decent people: but all in vain: I was
  • only answered by a careless laugh, and, ‘Oh, Miss Grey, how shocked you
  • are! I’m so glad!’ or, ‘Well! I can’t help it; papa shouldn’t have
  • taught me: I learned it all from him; and maybe a bit from the coachman.’
  • Her brother John, _alias_ Master Murray, was about eleven when I came: a
  • fine, stout, healthy boy, frank and good-natured in the main, and might
  • have been a decent lad had he been properly educated; but now he was as
  • rough as a young bear, boisterous, unruly, unprincipled, untaught,
  • unteachable—at least, for a governess under his mother’s eye. His
  • masters at school might be able to manage him better—for to school he was
  • sent, greatly to my relief, in the course of a year; in a state, it is
  • true, of scandalous ignorance as to Latin, as well as the more useful
  • though more neglected things: and this, doubtless, would all be laid to
  • the account of his education having been entrusted to an ignorant female
  • teacher, who had presumed to take in hand what she was wholly incompetent
  • to perform. I was not delivered from his brother till full twelve months
  • after, when he also was despatched in the same state of disgraceful
  • ignorance as the former.
  • Master Charles was his mother’s peculiar darling. He was little more
  • than a year younger than John, but much smaller, paler, and less active
  • and robust; a pettish, cowardly, capricious, selfish little fellow, only
  • active in doing mischief, and only clever in inventing falsehoods: not
  • simply to hide his faults, but, in mere malicious wantonness, to bring
  • odium upon others. In fact, Master Charles was a very great nuisance to
  • me: it was a trial of patience to live with him peaceably; to watch over
  • him was worse; and to teach him, or pretend to teach him, was
  • inconceivable. At ten years old, he could not read correctly the easiest
  • line in the simplest book; and as, according to his mother’s principle,
  • he was to be told every word, before he had time to hesitate or examine
  • its orthography, and never even to be informed, as a stimulant to
  • exertion, that other boys were more forward than he, it is not surprising
  • that he made but little progress during the two years I had charge of his
  • education. His minute portions of Latin grammar, &c., were to be
  • repeated over to him, till he chose to say he knew them, and then he was
  • to be helped to say them; if he made mistakes in his little easy sums in
  • arithmetic, they were to be shown him at once, and the sum done for him,
  • instead of his being left to exercise his faculties in finding them out
  • himself; so that, of course, he took no pains to avoid mistakes, but
  • frequently set down his figures at random, without any calculation at
  • all.
  • I did not invariably confine myself to these rules: it was against my
  • conscience to do so; but I seldom could venture to deviate from them in
  • the slightest degree, without incurring the wrath of my little pupil, and
  • subsequently of his mamma; to whom he would relate my transgressions
  • maliciously exaggerated, or adorned with embellishments of his own; and
  • often, in consequence, was I on the point of losing or resigning my
  • situation. But, for their sakes at home, I smothered my pride and
  • suppressed my indignation, and managed to struggle on till my little
  • tormentor was despatched to school; his father declaring that home
  • education was ‘no go; for him, it was plain; his mother spoiled him
  • outrageously, and his governess could make no hand of him at all.’
  • A few more observations about Horton Lodge and its ongoings, and I have
  • done with dry description for the present. The house was a very
  • respectable one; superior to Mr. Bloomfield’s, both in age, size, and
  • magnificence: the garden was not so tastefully laid out; but instead of
  • the smooth-shaven lawn, the young trees guarded by palings, the grove of
  • upstart poplars, and the plantation of firs, there was a wide park,
  • stocked with deer, and beautified by fine old trees. The surrounding
  • country itself was pleasant, as far as fertile fields, flourishing trees,
  • quiet green lanes, and smiling hedges with wild-flowers scattered along
  • their banks, could make it; but it was depressingly flat to one born and
  • nurtured among the rugged hills of ---.
  • We were situated nearly two miles from the village church, and,
  • consequently, the family carriage was put in requisition every Sunday
  • morning, and sometimes oftener. Mr. and Mrs. Murray generally thought it
  • sufficient to show themselves at church once in the course of the day;
  • but frequently the children preferred going a second time to wandering
  • about the grounds all the day with nothing to do. If some of my pupils
  • chose to walk and take me with them, it was well for me; for otherwise my
  • position in the carriage was to be crushed into the corner farthest from
  • the open window, and with my back to the horses: a position which
  • invariably made me sick; and if I were not actually obliged to leave the
  • church in the middle of the service, my devotions were disturbed with a
  • feeling of languor and sickliness, and the tormenting fear of its
  • becoming worse: and a depressing headache was generally my companion
  • throughout the day, which would otherwise have been one of welcome rest,
  • and holy, calm enjoyment.
  • ‘It’s very odd, Miss Grey, that the carriage should always make you sick:
  • it never makes _me_,’ remarked Miss Matilda,
  • ‘Nor me either,’ said her sister; ‘but I dare say it would, if I sat
  • where she does—such a nasty, horrid place, Miss Grey; I wonder how you
  • can bear it!’
  • ‘I am obliged to bear it, since no choice is left me,’—I might have
  • answered; but in tenderness for their feelings I only replied,—‘Oh! it is
  • but a short way, and if I am not sick in church, I don’t mind it.’
  • If I were called upon to give a description of the usual divisions and
  • arrangements of the day, I should find it a very difficult matter. I had
  • all my meals in the schoolroom with my pupils, at such times as suited
  • their fancy: sometimes they would ring for dinner before it was half
  • cooked; sometimes they would keep it waiting on the table for above an
  • hour, and then be out of humour because the potatoes were cold, and the
  • gravy covered with cakes of solid fat; sometimes they would have tea at
  • four; frequently, they would storm at the servants because it was not in
  • precisely at five; and when these orders were obeyed, by way of
  • encouragement to punctuality, they would keep it on the table till seven
  • or eight.
  • Their hours of study were managed in much the same way; my judgment or
  • convenience was never once consulted. Sometimes Matilda and John would
  • determine ‘to get all the plaguy business over before breakfast,’ and
  • send the maid to call me up at half-past five, without any scruple or
  • apology; sometimes, I was told to be ready precisely at six, and, having
  • dressed in a hurry, came down to an empty room, and after waiting a long
  • time in suspense, discovered that they had changed their minds, and were
  • still in bed; or, perhaps, if it were a fine summer morning, Brown would
  • come to tell me that the young ladies and gentlemen had taken a holiday,
  • and were gone out; and then I was kept waiting for breakfast till I was
  • almost ready to faint: they having fortified themselves with something
  • before they went.
  • Often they would do their lessons in the open air; which I had nothing to
  • say against: except that I frequently caught cold by sitting on the damp
  • grass, or from exposure to the evening dew, or some insidious draught,
  • which seemed to have no injurious effect on them. It was quite right
  • that they should be hardy; yet, surely, they might have been taught some
  • consideration for others who were less so. But I must not blame them for
  • what was, perhaps, my own fault; for I never made any particular
  • objections to sitting where they pleased; foolishly choosing to risk the
  • consequences, rather than trouble them for my convenience. Their
  • indecorous manner of doing their lessons was quite as remarkable as the
  • caprice displayed in their choice of time and place. While receiving my
  • instructions, or repeating what they had learned, they would lounge upon
  • the sofa, lie on the rug, stretch, yawn, talk to each other, or look out
  • of the window; whereas, I could not so much as stir the fire, or pick up
  • the handkerchief I had dropped, without being rebuked for inattention by
  • one of my pupils, or told that ‘mamma would not like me to be so
  • careless.’
  • The servants, seeing in what little estimation the governess was held by
  • both parents and children, regulated their behaviour by the same
  • standard. I have frequently stood up for them, at the risk of some
  • injury to myself, against the tyranny and injustice of their young
  • masters and mistresses; and I always endeavoured to give them as little
  • trouble as possible: but they entirely neglected my comfort, despised my
  • requests, and slighted my directions. All servants, I am convinced,
  • would not have done so; but domestics in general, being ignorant and
  • little accustomed to reason and reflection, are too easily corrupted by
  • the carelessness and bad example of those above them; and these, I think,
  • were not of the best order to begin with.
  • I sometimes felt myself degraded by the life I led, and ashamed of
  • submitting to so many indignities; and sometimes I thought myself a fool
  • for caring so much about them, and feared I must be sadly wanting in
  • Christian humility, or that charity which ‘suffereth long and is kind,
  • seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, beareth all things, endureth
  • all things.’
  • But, with time and patience, matters began to be slightly ameliorated:
  • slowly, it is true, and almost imperceptibly; but I got rid of my male
  • pupils (that was no trifling advantage), and the girls, as I intimated
  • before concerning one of them, became a little less insolent, and began
  • to show some symptoms of esteem. ‘Miss Grey was a queer creature: she
  • never flattered, and did not praise them half enough; but whenever she
  • did speak favourably of them, or anything belonging to them, they could
  • be quite sure her approbation was sincere. She was very obliging, quiet,
  • and peaceable in the main, but there were some things that put her out of
  • temper: they did not much care for that, to be sure, but still it was
  • better to keep her in tune; as when she was in a good humour she would
  • talk to them, and be very agreeable and amusing sometimes, in her way;
  • which was quite different to mamma’s, but still very well for a change.
  • She had her own opinions on every subject, and kept steadily to them—very
  • tiresome opinions they often were; as she was always thinking of what was
  • right and what was wrong, and had a strange reverence for matters
  • connected with religion, and an unaccountable liking to good people.’
  • CHAPTER VIII—THE ‘COMING OUT’
  • At eighteen, Miss Murray was to emerge from the quiet obscurity of the
  • schoolroom into the full blaze of the fashionable world—as much of it, at
  • least, as could be had out of London; for her papa could not be persuaded
  • to leave his rural pleasures and pursuits, even for a few weeks’
  • residence in town. She was to make her début on the third of January, at
  • a magnificent ball, which her mamma proposed to give to all the nobility
  • and choice gentry of O--- and its neighbourhood for twenty miles round.
  • Of course, she looked forward to it with the wildest impatience, and the
  • most extravagant anticipations of delight.
  • ‘Miss Grey,’ said she, one evening, a month before the all-important day,
  • as I was perusing a long and extremely interesting letter of my
  • sister’s—which I had just glanced at in the morning to see that it
  • contained no very bad news, and kept till now, unable before to find a
  • quiet moment for reading it,—‘Miss Grey, do put away that dull, stupid
  • letter, and listen to me! I’m sure my talk must be far more amusing than
  • that.’
  • She seated herself on the low stool at my feet; and I, suppressing a sigh
  • of vexation, began to fold up the epistle.
  • ‘You should tell the good people at home not to bore you with such long
  • letters,’ said she; ‘and, above all, do bid them write on proper
  • note-paper, and not on those great vulgar sheets. You should see the
  • charming little lady-like notes mamma writes to her friends.’
  • ‘The good people at home,’ replied I, ‘know very well that the longer
  • their letters are, the better I like them. I should be very sorry to
  • receive a charming little lady-like note from any of them; and I thought
  • you were too much of a lady yourself, Miss Murray, to talk about the
  • “vulgarity” of writing on a large sheet of paper.’
  • ‘Well, I only said it to tease you. But now I want to talk about the
  • ball; and to tell you that you positively must put off your holidays till
  • it is over.’
  • ‘Why so?—I shall not be present at the ball.’
  • ‘No, but you will see the rooms decked out before it begins, and hear the
  • music, and, above all, see me in my splendid new dress. I shall be so
  • charming, you’ll be ready to worship me—you really must stay.’
  • ‘I should like to see you very much; but I shall have many opportunities
  • of seeing you equally charming, on the occasion of some of the numberless
  • balls and parties that are to be, and I cannot disappoint my friends by
  • postponing my return so long.’
  • ‘Oh, never mind your friends! Tell them we won’t let you go.’
  • ‘But, to say the truth, it would be a disappointment to myself: I long to
  • see them as much as they to see me—perhaps more.’
  • ‘Well, but it is such a short time.’
  • ‘Nearly a fortnight by my computation; and, besides, I cannot bear the
  • thoughts of a Christmas spent from home: and, moreover, my sister is
  • going to be married.’
  • ‘Is she—when?’
  • ‘Not till next month; but I want to be there to assist her in making
  • preparations, and to make the best of her company while we have her.’
  • ‘Why didn’t you tell me before?’
  • ‘I’ve only got the news in this letter, which you stigmatize as dull and
  • stupid, and won’t let me read.’
  • ‘To whom is she to be married?’
  • ‘To Mr. Richardson, the vicar of a neighbouring parish.’
  • ‘Is he rich?’
  • ‘No; only comfortable.’
  • ‘Is he handsome?’
  • ‘No; only decent.’
  • ‘Young?’
  • ‘No; only middling.’
  • ‘Oh, mercy! what a wretch! What sort of a house is it?’
  • ‘A quiet little vicarage, with an ivy-clad porch, an old-fashioned
  • garden, and—’
  • ‘Oh, stop!—you’ll make me sick. How _can_ she bear it?’
  • ‘I expect she’ll not only be able to bear it, but to be very happy. You
  • did not ask me if Mr. Richardson were a good, wise, or amiable man; I
  • could have answered Yes, to all these questions—at least so Mary thinks,
  • and I hope she will not find herself mistaken.’
  • ‘But—miserable creature! how can she think of spending her life there,
  • cooped up with that nasty old man; and no hope of change?’
  • ‘He is not old: he’s only six or seven and thirty; and she herself is
  • twenty-eight, and as sober as if she were fifty.’
  • ‘Oh! that’s better then—they’re well matched; but do they call him the
  • “worthy vicar”?’
  • ‘I don’t know; but if they do, I believe he merits the epithet.’
  • ‘Mercy, how shocking! and will she wear a white apron and make pies and
  • puddings?’
  • ‘I don’t know about the white apron, but I dare say she will make pies
  • and puddings now and then; but that will be no great hardship, as she has
  • done it before.’
  • ‘And will she go about in a plain shawl, and a large straw bonnet,
  • carrying tracts and bone soup to her husband’s poor parishioners?’
  • ‘I’m not clear about that; but I dare say she will do her best to make
  • them comfortable in body and mind, in accordance with our mother’s
  • example.’
  • CHAPTER IX—THE BALL
  • ‘Now, Miss Grey,’ exclaimed Miss Murray, immediately I entered the
  • schoolroom, after having taken off my outdoor garments, upon returning
  • from my four weeks’ recreation, ‘Now—shut the door, and sit down, and
  • I’ll tell you all about the ball.’
  • ‘No—damn it, no!’ shouted Miss Matilda. ‘Hold your tongue, can’t ye? and
  • let me tell her about my new mare—_such_ a splendour, Miss Grey! a fine
  • blood mare—’
  • ‘Do be quiet, Matilda; and let me tell my news first.’
  • ‘No, no, Rosalie; you’ll be such a damned long time over it—she shall
  • hear me first—I’ll be hanged if she doesn’t!’
  • ‘I’m sorry to hear, Miss Matilda, that you’ve not got rid of that
  • shocking habit yet.’
  • ‘Well, I can’t help it: but I’ll never say a wicked word again, if you’ll
  • only listen to me, and tell Rosalie to hold her confounded tongue.’
  • Rosalie remonstrated, and I thought I should have been torn in pieces
  • between them; but Miss Matilda having the loudest voice, her sister at
  • length gave in, and suffered her to tell her story first: so I was doomed
  • to hear a long account of her splendid mare, its breeding and pedigree,
  • its paces, its action, its spirit, &c., and of her own amazing skill and
  • courage in riding it; concluding with an assertion that she could clear a
  • five-barred gate ‘like winking,’ that papa said she might hunt the next
  • time the hounds met, and mamma had ordered a bright scarlet hunting-habit
  • for her.
  • ‘Oh, Matilda! what stories you are telling!’ exclaimed her sister.
  • ‘Well,’ answered she, no whit abashed, ‘I know I _could_ clear a
  • five-barred gate, if I tried, and papa _will_ say I may hunt, and mamma
  • _will_ order the habit when I ask it.’
  • ‘Well, now get along,’ replied Miss Murray; ‘and do, dear Matilda, try to
  • be a little more lady-like. Miss Grey, I wish you would tell her not to
  • use such shocking words; she will call her horse a mare: it is so
  • inconceivably shocking! and then she uses such dreadful expressions in
  • describing it: she must have learned it from the grooms. It nearly puts
  • me into fits when she begins.’
  • ‘I learned it from papa, you ass! and his jolly friends,’ said the young
  • lady, vigorously cracking a hunting-whip, which she habitually carried in
  • her hand. ‘I’m as good judge of horseflesh as the best of ’m.’
  • ‘Well, now get along, you shocking girl! I really shall take a fit if
  • you go on in such a way. And now, Miss Grey, attend to me; I’m going to
  • tell you about the ball. You must be dying to hear about it, I know.
  • Oh, _such_ a ball! You never saw or heard, or read, or dreamt of
  • anything like it in all your life. The decorations, the entertainment,
  • the supper, the music were indescribable! and then the guests! There
  • were two noblemen, three baronets, and five titled ladies, and other
  • ladies and gentlemen innumerable. The ladies, of course, were of no
  • consequence to me, except to put me in a good humour with myself, by
  • showing how ugly and awkward most of them were; and the best, mamma told
  • me,—the most transcendent beauties among them, were nothing to me. As
  • for me, Miss Grey—I’m so _sorry_ you didn’t see me! I was
  • _charming_—wasn’t I, Matilda?’
  • ‘Middling.’
  • ‘No, but I really was—at least so mamma said—and Brown and Williamson.
  • Brown said she was sure no gentleman could set eyes on me without falling
  • in love that minute; and so I may be allowed to be a little vain. I know
  • you think me a shocking, conceited, frivolous girl; but then, you know, I
  • don’t attribute it _all_ to my personal attractions: I give some praise
  • to the hairdresser, and some to my exquisitely lovely dress—you must see
  • it to-morrow—white gauze over pink satin—and so _sweetly_ made! and a
  • necklace and bracelet of beautiful, large pearls!’
  • ‘I have no doubt you looked very charming: but should that delight you so
  • very much?’
  • ‘Oh, no!—not that alone: but, then, I was so much admired; and I made so
  • _many_ conquests in that one night—you’d be astonished to hear—’
  • ‘But what good will they do you?’
  • ‘What good! Think of any woman asking that!’
  • ‘Well, I should think one conquest would be enough; and too much, unless
  • the subjugation were mutual.’
  • ‘Oh, but you know I never agree with you on those points. Now, wait a
  • bit, and I’ll tell you my principal admirers—those who made themselves
  • very conspicuous that night and after: for I’ve been to two parties
  • since. Unfortunately the two noblemen, Lord G--- and Lord F---, were
  • married, or I might have condescended to be particularly gracious to
  • _them_; as it was, I did not: though Lord F---, who hates his wife, was
  • evidently much struck with me. He asked me to dance with him twice—he is
  • a charming dancer, by-the-by, and so am I: you can’t think how well I
  • did—I was astonished at myself. My lord was very complimentary
  • too—rather too much so in fact—and I thought proper to be a little
  • haughty and repellent; but I had the pleasure of seeing his nasty, cross
  • wife ready to perish with spite and vexation—’
  • ‘Oh, Miss Murray! you don’t mean to say that such a thing could really
  • give you pleasure? However cross or—’
  • ‘Well, I know it’s very wrong;—but never mind! I mean to be good some
  • time—only don’t preach now, there’s a good creature. I haven’t told you
  • half yet. Let me see. Oh! I was going to tell you how many
  • unmistakeable admirers I had:—Sir Thomas Ashby was one,—Sir Hugh Meltham
  • and Sir Broadley Wilson are old codgers, only fit companions for papa and
  • mamma. Sir Thomas is young, rich, and gay; but an ugly beast,
  • nevertheless: however, mamma says I should not mind that after a few
  • months’ acquaintance. Then, there was Henry Meltham, Sir Hugh’s younger
  • son; rather good-looking, and a pleasant fellow to flirt with: but
  • _being_ a younger son, that is all he is good for; then there was young
  • Mr. Green, rich enough, but of no family, and a great stupid fellow, a
  • mere country booby! and then, our good rector, Mr. Hatfield: an _humble_
  • admirer he ought to consider himself; but I fear he has forgotten to
  • number humility among his stock of Christian virtues.’
  • ‘Was Mr. Hatfield at the ball?’
  • ‘Yes, to be sure. Did you think he was too good to go?’
  • ‘I thought be might consider it unclerical.’
  • ‘By no means. He did not profane his cloth by dancing; but it was with
  • difficulty he could refrain, poor man: he looked as if he were dying to
  • ask my hand just for _one_ set; and—oh! by-the-by—he’s got a new curate:
  • that seedy old fellow Mr. Bligh has got his long-wished-for living at
  • last, and is gone.’
  • ‘And what is the new one like?’
  • ‘Oh, _such_ a beast! Weston his name is. I can give you his description
  • in three words—an insensate, ugly, stupid blockhead. That’s four, but no
  • matter—enough of _him_ now.’
  • Then she returned to the ball, and gave me a further account of her
  • deportment there, and at the several parties she had since attended; and
  • further particulars respecting Sir Thomas Ashby and Messrs. Meltham,
  • Green, and Hatfield, and the ineffaceable impression she had wrought upon
  • each of them.
  • ‘Well, which of the four do you like best?’ said I, suppressing my third
  • or fourth yawn.
  • ‘I detest them all!’ replied she, shaking her bright ringlets in
  • vivacious scorn.
  • ‘That means, I suppose, “I like them all”—but which most?’
  • ‘No, I really detest them all; but Harry Meltham is the handsomest and
  • most amusing, and Mr. Hatfield the cleverest, Sir Thomas the wickedest,
  • and Mr. Green the most stupid. But the one I’m to have, I suppose, if
  • I’m doomed to have any of them, is Sir Thomas Ashby.’
  • ‘Surely not, if he’s so wicked, and if you dislike him?’
  • ‘Oh, I don’t mind his being wicked: he’s all the better for that; and as
  • for disliking him—I shouldn’t greatly object to being Lady Ashby of Ashby
  • Park, if I must marry. But if I could be always young, I would be always
  • single. I should like to enjoy myself thoroughly, and coquet with all
  • the world, till I am on the verge of being called an old maid; and then,
  • to escape the infamy of that, after having made ten thousand conquests,
  • to break all their hearts save one, by marrying some high-born, rich,
  • indulgent husband, whom, on the other hand, fifty ladies were dying to
  • have.’
  • ‘Well, as long as you entertain these views, keep single by all means,
  • and never marry at all: not even to escape the infamy of old-maidenhood.’
  • CHAPTER X—THE CHURCH
  • ‘Well, Miss Grey, what do you think of the new curate?’ asked Miss
  • Murray, on our return from church the Sunday after the recommencement of
  • our duties.
  • ‘I can scarcely tell,’ was my reply: ‘I have not even heard him preach.’
  • ‘Well, but you saw him, didn’t you?’
  • ‘Yes, but I cannot pretend to judge of a man’s character by a single
  • cursory glance at his face.’
  • ‘But isn’t he ugly?’
  • ‘He did not strike me as being particularly so; I don’t dislike that cast
  • of countenance: but the only thing I particularly noticed about him was
  • his style of reading; which appeared to me good—infinitely better, at
  • least, than Mr. Hatfield’s. He read the Lessons as if he were bent on
  • giving full effect to every passage; it seemed as if the most careless
  • person could not have helped attending, nor the most ignorant have failed
  • to understand; and the prayers he read as if he were not reading at all,
  • but praying earnestly and sincerely from his own heart.’
  • ‘Oh, yes, that’s all he is good for: he can plod through the service well
  • enough; but he has not a single idea beyond it.’
  • ‘How do you know?’
  • ‘Oh! I know perfectly well; I am an excellent judge in such matters. Did
  • you see how he went out of church? stumping along—as if there were nobody
  • there but himself—never looking to the right hand or the left, and
  • evidently thinking of nothing but just getting out of the church, and,
  • perhaps, home to his dinner: his great stupid head could contain no other
  • idea.’
  • ‘I suppose you would have had him cast a glance into the squire’s pew,’
  • said I, laughing at the vehemence of her hostility.
  • ‘Indeed! I should have been highly indignant if he had dared to do such a
  • thing!’ replied she, haughtily tossing her head; then, after a moment’s
  • reflection, she added—‘Well, well! I suppose he’s good enough for his
  • place: but I’m glad I’m not dependent on _him_ for amusement—that’s all.
  • Did you see how Mr. Hatfield hurried out to get a bow from me, and be in
  • time to put us into the carriage?’
  • ‘Yes,’ answered I; internally adding, ‘and I thought it somewhat
  • derogatory to his dignity as a clergyman to come flying from the pulpit
  • in such eager haste to shake hands with the squire, and hand his wife and
  • daughters into their carriage: and, moreover, I owe him a grudge for
  • nearly shutting me out of it’; for, in fact, though I was standing before
  • his face, close beside the carriage steps, waiting to get in, he would
  • persist in putting them up and closing the door, till one of the family
  • stopped him by calling out that the governess was not in yet; then,
  • without a word of apology, he departed, wishing them good-morning, and
  • leaving the footman to finish the business.
  • _Nota bene_.—Mr. Hatfield never spoke to me, neither did Sir Hugh or Lady
  • Meltham, nor Mr. Harry or Miss Meltham, nor Mr. Green or his sisters, nor
  • any other lady or gentleman who frequented that church: nor, in fact, any
  • one that visited at Horton Lodge.
  • Miss Murray ordered the carriage again, in the afternoon, for herself and
  • her sister: she said it was too cold for them to enjoy themselves in the
  • garden; and besides, she believed Harry Meltham would be at church.
  • ‘For,’ said she, smiling slyly at her own fair image in the glass, ‘he
  • has been a most exemplary attendant at church these last few Sundays: you
  • would think he was quite a good Christian. And you may go with us, Miss
  • Grey: I want you to see him; he is so greatly improved since he returned
  • from abroad—you can’t think! And besides, then you will have an
  • opportunity of seeing the beautiful Mr. Weston again, and of hearing him
  • preach.’
  • I did hear him preach, and was decidedly pleased with the evangelical
  • truth of his doctrine, as well as the earnest simplicity of his manner,
  • and the clearness and force of his style. It was truly refreshing to
  • hear such a sermon, after being so long accustomed to the dry, prosy
  • discourses of the former curate, and the still less edifying harangues of
  • the rector. Mr. Hatfield would come sailing up the aisle, or rather
  • sweeping along like a whirlwind, with his rich silk gown flying behind
  • him and rustling against the pew doors, mount the pulpit like a conqueror
  • ascending his triumphal car; then, sinking on the velvet cushion in an
  • attitude of studied grace, remain in silent prostration for a certain
  • time; then mutter over a Collect, and gabble through the Lord’s Prayer,
  • rise, draw off one bright lavender glove, to give the congregation the
  • benefit of his sparkling rings, lightly pass his fingers through his
  • well-curled hair, flourish a cambric handkerchief, recite a very short
  • passage, or, perhaps, a mere phrase of Scripture, as a head-piece to his
  • discourse, and, finally, deliver a composition which, as a composition,
  • might be considered good, though far too studied and too artificial to be
  • pleasing to me: the propositions were well laid down, the arguments
  • logically conducted; and yet, it was sometimes hard to listen quietly
  • throughout, without some slight demonstrations of disapproval or
  • impatience.
  • His favourite subjects were church discipline, rites and ceremonies,
  • apostolical succession, the duty of reverence and obedience to the
  • clergy, the atrocious criminality of dissent, the absolute necessity of
  • observing all the forms of godliness, the reprehensible presumption of
  • individuals who attempted to think for themselves in matters connected
  • with religion, or to be guided by their own interpretations of Scripture,
  • and, occasionally (to please his wealthy parishioners) the necessity of
  • deferential obedience from the poor to the rich—supporting his maxims and
  • exhortations throughout with quotations from the Fathers: with whom he
  • appeared to be far better acquainted than with the Apostles and
  • Evangelists, and whose importance he seemed to consider at least equal to
  • theirs. But now and then he gave us a sermon of a different order—what
  • some would call a very good one; but sunless and severe: representing the
  • Deity as a terrible taskmaster rather than a benevolent father. Yet, as
  • I listened, I felt inclined to think the man was sincere in all he said:
  • he must have changed his views, and become decidedly religious, gloomy
  • and austere, yet still devout. But such illusions were usually
  • dissipated, on coming out of church, by hearing his voice in jocund
  • colloquy with some of the Melthams or Greens, or, perhaps, the Murrays
  • themselves; probably laughing at his own sermon, and hoping that he had
  • given the rascally people something to think about; perchance, exulting
  • in the thought that old Betty Holmes would now lay aside the sinful
  • indulgence of her pipe, which had been her daily solace for upwards of
  • thirty years: that George Higgins would be frightened out of his Sabbath
  • evening walks, and Thomas Jackson would be sorely troubled in his
  • conscience, and shaken in his sure and certain hope of a joyful
  • resurrection at the last day.
  • Thus, I could not but conclude that Mr. Hatfield was one of those who
  • ‘bind heavy burdens, and grievous to be borne, and lay them upon men’s
  • shoulders, while they themselves will not move them with one of their
  • fingers’; and who ‘make the word of God of none effect by their
  • traditions, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.’ I was well
  • pleased to observe that the new curate resembled him, as far as I could
  • see, in none of these particulars.
  • ‘Well, Miss Grey, what do you think of him now?’ said Miss Murray, as we
  • took our places in the carriage after service.
  • ‘No harm still,’ replied I.
  • ‘No harm!’ repeated she in amazement. ‘What do you mean?’
  • ‘I mean, I think no worse of him than I did before.’
  • ‘No worse! I should think not indeed—quite the contrary! Is he not
  • greatly improved?’
  • ‘Oh, yes; very much indeed,’ replied I; for I had now discovered that it
  • was Harry Meltham she meant, not Mr. Weston. That gentleman had eagerly
  • come forward to speak to the young ladies: a thing he would hardly have
  • ventured to do had their mother been present; he had likewise politely
  • handed them into the carriage. He had not attempted to shut me out, like
  • Mr. Hatfield; neither, of course, had he offered me his assistance (I
  • should not have accepted it, if he had), but as long as the door remained
  • open he had stood smirking and chatting with them, and then lifted his
  • hat and departed to his own abode: but I had scarcely noticed him all the
  • time. My companions, however, had been more observant; and, as we rolled
  • along, they discussed between them not only his looks, words, and
  • actions, but every feature of his face, and every article of his apparel.
  • ‘You shan’t have him all to yourself, Rosalie,’ said Miss Matilda at the
  • close of this discussion; ‘I like him: I know he’d make a nice, jolly
  • companion for me.’
  • ‘Well, you’re quite welcome to him, Matilda,’ replied her sister, in a
  • tone of affected indifference.
  • ‘And I’m sure,’ continued the other, ‘he admires me quite as much as he
  • does you; doesn’t he, Miss Grey?’
  • ‘I don’t know; I’m not acquainted with his sentiments.’
  • ‘Well, but he _does_ though.’
  • ‘My _dear_ Matilda! nobody will ever admire you till you get rid of your
  • rough, awkward manners.’
  • ‘Oh, stuff! Harry Meltham likes such manners; and so do papa’s friends.’
  • ‘Well, you _may_ captivate old men, and younger sons; but nobody else, I
  • am sure, will ever take a fancy to you.’
  • ‘I don’t care: I’m not always grabbing after money, like you and mamma.
  • If my husband is able to keep a few good horses and dogs, I shall be
  • quite satisfied; and all the rest may go to the devil!’
  • ‘Well, if you use such shocking expressions, I’m sure no real gentleman
  • will ever venture to come near you. Really, Miss Grey, you should not
  • let her do so.’
  • ‘I can’t possibly prevent it, Miss Murray.’
  • ‘And you’re quite mistaken, Matilda, in supposing that Harry Meltham
  • admires you: I assure you he does nothing of the kind.’
  • Matilda was beginning an angry reply; but, happily, our journey was now
  • at an end; and the contention was cut short by the footman opening the
  • carriage-door, and letting down the steps for our descent.
  • CHAPTER XI—THE COTTAGERS
  • As I had now only one regular pupil—though she contrived to give me as
  • much trouble as three or four ordinary ones, and though her sister still
  • took lessons in German and drawing—I had considerably more time at my own
  • disposal than I had ever been blessed with before, since I had taken upon
  • me the governess’s yoke; which time I devoted partly to correspondence
  • with my friends, partly to reading, study, and the practice of music,
  • singing, &c., partly to wandering in the grounds or adjacent fields, with
  • my pupils if they wanted me, alone if they did not.
  • Often, when they had no more agreeable occupation at hand, the Misses
  • Murray would amuse themselves with visiting the poor cottagers on their
  • father’s estate, to receive their flattering homage, or to hear the old
  • stories or gossiping news of the garrulous old women; or, perhaps, to
  • enjoy the purer pleasure of making the poor people happy with their
  • cheering presence and their occasional gifts, so easily bestowed, so
  • thankfully received. Sometimes, I was called upon to accompany one or
  • both of the sisters in these visits; and sometimes I was desired to go
  • alone, to fulfil some promise which they had been more ready to make than
  • to perform; to carry some small donation, or read to one who was sick or
  • seriously disposed: and thus I made a few acquaintances among the
  • cottagers; and, occasionally, I went to see them on my own account.
  • I generally had more satisfaction in going alone than with either of the
  • young ladies; for they, chiefly owing to their defective education,
  • comported themselves towards their inferiors in a manner that was highly
  • disagreeable for me to witness. They never, in thought, exchanged places
  • with them; and, consequently, had no consideration for their feelings,
  • regarding them as an order of beings entirely different from themselves.
  • They would watch the poor creatures at their meals, making uncivil
  • remarks about their food, and their manner of eating; they would laugh at
  • their simple notions and provincial expressions, till some of them
  • scarcely durst venture to speak; they would call the grave elderly men
  • and women old fools and silly old blockheads to their faces: and all this
  • without meaning to offend. I could see that the people were often hurt
  • and annoyed by such conduct, though their fear of the ‘grand ladies’
  • prevented them from testifying any resentment; but _they_ never perceived
  • it. They thought that, as these cottagers were poor and untaught, they
  • must be stupid and brutish; and as long as they, their superiors,
  • condescended to talk to them, and to give them shillings and half-crowns,
  • or articles of clothing, they had a right to amuse themselves, even at
  • their expense; and the people must adore them as angels of light,
  • condescending to minister to their necessities, and enlighten their
  • humble dwellings.
  • I made many and various attempts to deliver my pupils from these delusive
  • notions without alarming their pride—which was easily offended, and not
  • soon appeased—but with little apparent result; and I know not which was
  • the more reprehensible of the two: Matilda was more rude and boisterous;
  • but from Rosalie’s womanly age and lady-like exterior better things were
  • expected: yet she was as provokingly careless and inconsiderate as a
  • giddy child of twelve.
  • One bright day in the last week of February, I was walking in the park,
  • enjoying the threefold luxury of solitude, a book, and pleasant weather;
  • for Miss Matilda had set out on her daily ride, and Miss Murray was gone
  • in the carriage with her mamma to pay some morning calls. But it struck
  • me that I ought to leave these selfish pleasures, and the park with its
  • glorious canopy of bright blue sky, the west wind sounding through its
  • yet leafless branches, the snow-wreaths still lingering in its hollows,
  • but melting fast beneath the sun, and the graceful deer browsing on its
  • moist herbage already assuming the freshness and verdure of spring—and go
  • to the cottage of one Nancy Brown, a widow, whose son was at work all day
  • in the fields, and who was afflicted with an inflammation in the eyes;
  • which had for some time incapacitated her from reading: to her own great
  • grief, for she was a woman of a serious, thoughtful turn of mind. I
  • accordingly went, and found her alone, as usual, in her little, close,
  • dark cottage, redolent of smoke and confined air, but as tidy and clean
  • as she could make it. She was seated beside her little fire (consisting
  • of a few red cinders and a bit of stick), busily knitting, with a small
  • sackcloth cushion at her feet, placed for the accommodation of her gentle
  • friend the cat, who was seated thereon, with her long tail half
  • encircling her velvet paws, and her half-closed eyes dreamily gazing on
  • the low, crooked fender.
  • ‘Well, Nancy, how are you to-day?’
  • ‘Why, middling, Miss, i’ myseln—my eyes is no better, but I’m a deal
  • easier i’ my mind nor I have been,’ replied she, rising to welcome me
  • with a contented smile; which I was glad to see, for Nancy had been
  • somewhat afflicted with religious melancholy. I congratulated her upon
  • the change. She agreed that it was a great blessing, and expressed
  • herself ‘right down thankful for it’; adding, ‘If it please God to spare
  • my sight, and make me so as I can read my Bible again, I think I shall be
  • as happy as a queen.’
  • ‘I hope He will, Nancy,’ replied I; ‘and, meantime, I’ll come and read to
  • you now and then, when I have a little time to spare.’
  • With expressions of grateful pleasure, the poor woman moved to get me a
  • chair; but, as I saved her the trouble, she busied herself with stirring
  • the fire, and adding a few more sticks to the decaying embers; and then,
  • taking her well-used Bible from the shelf, dusted it carefully, and gave
  • it me. On my asking if there was any particular part she should like me
  • to read, she answered—
  • ‘Well, Miss Grey, if it’s all the same to you, I should like to hear that
  • chapter in the First Epistle of St. John, that says, “God is love, and he
  • that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.”’
  • With a little searching, I found these words in the fourth chapter. When
  • I came to the seventh verse she interrupted me, and, with needless
  • apologies for such a liberty, desired me to read it very slowly, that she
  • might take it all in, and dwell on every word; hoping I would excuse her,
  • as she was but a ‘simple body.’
  • ‘The wisest person,’ I replied, ‘might think over each of these verses
  • for an hour, and be all the better for it; and I would rather read them
  • slowly than not.’
  • Accordingly, I finished the chapter as slowly as need be, and at the same
  • time as impressively as I could; my auditor listened most attentively all
  • the while, and sincerely thanked me when I had done. I sat still about
  • half a minute to give her time to reflect upon it; when, somewhat to my
  • surprise, she broke the pause by asking me how I liked Mr. Weston?
  • ‘I don’t know,’ I replied, a little startled by the suddenness of the
  • question; ‘I think he preaches very well.’
  • ‘Ay, he does so; and talks well too.’
  • ‘Does he?’
  • ‘He does. Maybe, you haven’t seen him—not to talk to him much, yet?’
  • ‘No, I never see any one to talk to—except the young ladies of the Hall.’
  • ‘Ah; they’re nice, kind young ladies; but they can’t talk as he does.’
  • ‘Then he comes to see you, Nancy?’
  • ‘He does, Miss; and I’se thankful for it. He comes to see all us poor
  • bodies a deal ofter nor Maister Bligh, or th’ Rector ever did; an’ it’s
  • well he does, for he’s always welcome: we can’t say as much for th’
  • Rector—there is ‘at says they’re fair feared on him. When he comes into
  • a house, they say he’s sure to find summut wrong, and begin a-calling ’em
  • as soon as he crosses th’ doorstuns: but maybe he thinks it his duty like
  • to tell ’em what’s wrong. And very oft he comes o’ purpose to reprove
  • folk for not coming to church, or not kneeling an’ standing when other
  • folk does, or going to the Methody chapel, or summut o’ that sort: but I
  • can’t say ’at he ever fund much fault wi’ me. He came to see me once or
  • twice, afore Maister Weston come, when I was so ill troubled in my mind;
  • and as I had only very poor health besides, I made bold to send for
  • him—and he came right enough. I was sore distressed, Miss Grey—thank
  • God, it’s owered now—but when I took my Bible, I could get no comfort of
  • it at all. That very chapter ‘at you’ve just been reading troubled me as
  • much as aught—“He that loveth not, knoweth not God.” It seemed fearsome
  • to me; for I felt that I loved neither God nor man as I should do, and
  • could not, if I tried ever so. And th’ chapter afore, where it says,—“He
  • that is born of God cannot commit sin.” And another place where it
  • says,—“Love is the fulfilling of the Law.” And many, many others, Miss:
  • I should fair weary you out, if I was to tell them all. But all seemed
  • to condemn me, and to show me ‘at I was not in the right way; and as I
  • knew not how to get into it, I sent our Bill to beg Maister Hatfield to
  • be as kind as look in on me some day and when he came, I telled him all
  • my troubles.’
  • ‘And what did he say, Nancy?’
  • ‘Why, Miss, he seemed to scorn me. I might be mista’en—but he like gave
  • a sort of a whistle, and I saw a bit of a smile on his face; and he said,
  • “Oh, it’s all stuff! You’ve been among the Methodists, my good woman.”
  • But I telled him I’d never been near the Methodies. And then he
  • said,—“Well,” says he, “you must come to church, where you’ll hear the
  • Scriptures properly explained, instead of sitting poring over your Bible
  • at home.”
  • ‘But I telled him I always used coming to church when I had my health;
  • but this very cold winter weather I hardly durst venture so far—and me so
  • bad wi’ th’ rheumatic and all.
  • ‘But he says, “It’ll do your rheumatiz good to hobble to church: there’s
  • nothing like exercise for the rheumatiz. You can walk about the house
  • well enough; why can’t you walk to church? The fact is,” says he,
  • “you’re getting too fond of your ease. It’s always easy to find excuses
  • for shirking one’s duty.”
  • ‘But then, you know, Miss Grey, it wasn’t so. However, I telled him I’d
  • try. “But please, sir,” says I, “if I do go to church, what the better
  • shall I be? I want to have my sins blotted out, and to feel that they
  • are remembered no more against me, and that the love of God is shed
  • abroad in my heart; and if I can get no good by reading my Bible an’
  • saying my prayers at home, what good shall I get by going to church?”’
  • ‘“The church,” says he, “is the place appointed by God for His worship.
  • It’s your duty to go there as often as you can. If you want comfort, you
  • must seek it in the path of duty,”—an’ a deal more he said, but I cannot
  • remember all his fine words. However, it all came to this, that I was to
  • come to church as oft as ever I could, and bring my prayer-book with me,
  • an’ read up all the sponsers after the clerk, an’ stand, an’ kneel, an’
  • sit, an’ do all as I should, and take the Lord’s Supper at every
  • opportunity, an’ hearken his sermons, and Maister Bligh’s, an’ it ’ud be
  • all right: if I went on doing my duty, I should get a blessing at last.
  • ‘“But if you get no comfort that way,” says he, “it’s all up.”
  • ‘“Then, sir,” says I, “should you think I’m a reprobate?”
  • ‘“Why,” says he—he says, “if you do your best to get to heaven and can’t
  • manage it, you must be one of those that seek to enter in at the strait
  • gate and shall not be able.”
  • ‘An’ then he asked me if I’d seen any of the ladies o’ th’ Hall about
  • that mornin’; so I telled him where I had seen the young misses go on th’
  • Moss Lane;—an’ he kicked my poor cat right across th’ floor, an’ went
  • after ’em as gay as a lark: but I was very sad. That last word o’ his
  • fair sunk into my heart, an’ lay there like a lump o’ lead, till I was
  • weary to bear it.
  • ‘Howsever, I follered his advice: I thought he meant it all for th’ best,
  • though he _had_ a queer way with him. But you know, Miss, he’s rich an’
  • young, and such like cannot right understand the thoughts of a poor old
  • woman such as me. But, howsever, I did my best to do all as he bade
  • me—but maybe I’m plaguing you, Miss, wi’ my chatter.’
  • ‘Oh, no, Nancy! Go on, and tell me all.’
  • ‘Well, my rheumatiz got better—I know not whether wi’ going to church or
  • not, but one frosty Sunday I got this cold i’ my eyes. Th’ inflammation
  • didn’t come on all at once like, but bit by bit—but I wasn’t going to
  • tell you about my eyes, I was talking about my trouble o’ mind;—and to
  • tell the truth, Miss Grey, I don’t think it was anyways eased by coming
  • to church—nought to speak on, at least: I like got my health better; but
  • that didn’t mend my soul. I hearkened and hearkened the ministers, and
  • read an’ read at my prayer-book; but it was all like sounding brass and a
  • tinkling cymbal: the sermons I couldn’t understand, an’ th’ prayer-book
  • only served to show me how wicked I was, that I could read such good
  • words an’ never be no better for it, and oftens feel it a sore labour an’
  • a heavy task beside, instead of a blessing and a privilege as all good
  • Christians does. It seemed like as all were barren an’ dark to me. And
  • then, them dreadful words, “Many shall seek to enter in, and shall not be
  • able.” They like as they fair dried up my sperrit.
  • ‘But one Sunday, when Maister Hatfield gave out about the sacrament, I
  • noticed where he said, “If there be any of you that cannot quiet his own
  • conscience, but requireth further comfort or counsel, let him come to me,
  • or some other discreet and learned minister of God’s word, and open his
  • grief!” So next Sunday morning, afore service, I just looked into the
  • vestry, an’ began a-talking to th’ Rector again. I hardly could fashion
  • to take such a liberty, but I thought when my soul was at stake I
  • shouldn’t stick at a trifle. But he said he hadn’t time to attend to me
  • then.
  • ‘“And, indeed,” says he, “I’ve nothing to say to you but what I’ve said
  • before. Take the sacrament, of course, and go on doing your duty; and if
  • that won’t serve you, nothing will. So don’t bother me any more.”
  • ‘So then, I went away. But I heard Maister Weston—Maister Weston was
  • there, Miss—this was his first Sunday at Horton, you know, an’ he was i’
  • th’ vestry in his surplice, helping th’ Rector on with his gown—’
  • ‘Yes, Nancy.’
  • ‘And I heard him ask Maister Hatfield who I was, an’ he says, “Oh, she’s
  • a canting old fool.”
  • ‘And I was very ill grieved, Miss Grey; but I went to my seat, and I
  • tried to do my duty as aforetime: but I like got no peace. An’ I even
  • took the sacrament; but I felt as though I were eating and drinking to my
  • own damnation all th’ time. So I went home, sorely troubled.
  • ‘But next day, afore I’d gotten fettled up—for indeed, Miss, I’d no heart
  • to sweeping an’ fettling, an’ washing pots; so I sat me down i’ th’
  • muck—who should come in but Maister Weston! I started siding stuff then,
  • an’ sweeping an’ doing; and I expected he’d begin a-calling me for my
  • idle ways, as Maister Hatfield would a’ done; but I was mista’en: he only
  • bid me good-mornin’ like, in a quiet dacent way. So I dusted him a
  • chair, an’ fettled up th’ fireplace a bit; but I hadn’t forgotten th’
  • Rector’s words, so says I, “I wonder, sir, you should give yourself that
  • trouble, to come so far to see a ‘canting old fool,’ such as me.”
  • ‘He seemed taken aback at that; but he would fain persuade me ‘at the
  • Rector was only in jest; and when that wouldn’t do, he says, “Well,
  • Nancy, you shouldn’t think so much about it: Mr. Hatfield was a little
  • out of humour just then: you know we’re none of us perfect—even Moses
  • spoke unadvisedly with his lips. But now sit down a minute, if you can
  • spare the time, and tell me all your doubts and fears; and I’ll try to
  • remove them.”
  • ‘So I sat me down anent him. He was quite a stranger, you know, Miss
  • Grey, and even _younger_ nor Maister Hatfield, I believe; and I had
  • thought him not so pleasant-looking as him, and rather a bit crossish, at
  • first, to look at; but he spake so civil like—and when th’ cat, poor
  • thing, jumped on to his knee, he only stroked her, and gave a bit of a
  • smile: so I thought that was a good sign; for once, when she did so to
  • th’ Rector, he knocked her off, like as it might be in scorn and anger,
  • poor thing. But you can’t expect a cat to know manners like a Christian,
  • you know, Miss Grey.’
  • ‘No; of course not, Nancy. But what did Mr. Weston say then?’
  • ‘He said nought; but he listened to me as steady an’ patient as could be,
  • an’ never a bit o’ scorn about him; so I went on, an’ telled him all,
  • just as I’ve telled you—an’ more too.
  • ‘“Well,” says he, “Mr. Hatfield was quite right in telling you to
  • persevere in doing your duty; but in advising you to go to church and
  • attend to the service, and so on, he didn’t mean that was the whole of a
  • Christian’s duty: he only thought you might there learn what more was to
  • be done, and be led to take delight in those exercises, instead of
  • finding them a task and a burden. And if you had asked him to explain
  • those words that trouble you so much, I think he would have told you,
  • that if many shall seek to enter in at the strait gate and shall not be
  • able, it is their own sins that hinder them; just as a man with a large
  • sack on his back might wish to pass through a narrow doorway, and find it
  • impossible to do so unless he would leave his sack behind him. But you,
  • Nancy, I dare say, have no sins that you would not gladly throw aside, if
  • you knew how?”
  • ‘“Indeed, sir, you speak truth,” said I.
  • ‘“Well,” says he, “you know the first and great commandment—and the
  • second, which is like unto it—on which two commandments hang all the law
  • and the prophets? You say you cannot love God; but it strikes me that if
  • you rightly consider who and what He is, you cannot help it. He is your
  • father, your best friend: every blessing, everything good, pleasant, or
  • useful, comes from Him; and everything evil, everything you have reason
  • to hate, to shun, or to fear, comes from Satan—_His_ enemy as well as
  • ours. And for _this_ cause was God manifest in the flesh, that He might
  • destroy the works of the Devil: in one word, God is LOVE; and the more of
  • love we have within us, the nearer we are to Him and the more of His
  • spirit we possess.”
  • ‘“Well, sir,” I said, “if I can always think on these things, I think I
  • might well love God: but how can I love my neighbours, when they vex me,
  • and be so contrary and sinful as some on ’em is?”
  • ‘“It may seem a hard matter,” says he, “to love our neighbours, who have
  • so much of what is evil about them, and whose faults so often awaken the
  • evil that lingers within ourselves; but remember that _He_ made them, and
  • _He_ loves them; and whosoever loveth him that begat, loveth him that is
  • begotten also. And if God so loveth us, that He gave His only begotten
  • Son to die for us, we ought also to love one another. But if you cannot
  • feel positive affection for those who do not care for you, you can at
  • least try to do to them as you would they should do unto you: you can
  • endeavour to pity their failings and excuse their offences, and to do all
  • the good you can to those about you. And if you accustom yourself to
  • this, Nancy, the very effort itself will make you love them in some
  • degree—to say nothing of the goodwill your kindness would beget in them,
  • though they might have little else that is good about them. If we love
  • God and wish to serve Him, let us try to be like Him, to do His work, to
  • labour for His glory—which is the good of man—to hasten the coming of His
  • kingdom, which is the peace and happiness of all the world: however
  • powerless we may seem to be, in doing all the good we can through life,
  • the humblest of us may do much towards it: and let us dwell in love, that
  • He may dwell in us and we in Him. The more happiness we bestow, the more
  • we shall receive, even here; and the greater will be our reward in heaven
  • when we rest from our labours.” I believe, Miss, them is his very words,
  • for I’ve thought ’em ower many a time. An’ then he took that Bible, an’
  • read bits here and there, an’ explained ’em as clear as the day: and it
  • seemed like as a new light broke in on my soul; an’ I felt fair aglow
  • about my heart, an’ only wished poor Bill an’ all the world could ha’
  • been there, an’ heard it all, and rejoiced wi’ me.
  • ‘After he was gone, Hannah Rogers, one o’ th’ neighbours, came in and
  • wanted me to help her to wash. I telled her I couldn’t just then, for I
  • hadn’t set on th’ potaties for th’ dinner, nor washed up th’ breakfast
  • stuff yet. So then she began a-calling me for my nasty idle ways. I was
  • a little bit vexed at first, but I never said nothing wrong to her: I
  • only telled her like all in a quiet way, ’at I’d had th’ new parson to
  • see me; but I’d get done as quick as ever I could, an’ then come an’ help
  • her. So then she softened down; and my heart like as it warmed towards
  • her, an’ in a bit we was very good friends. An’ so it is, Miss Grey, “a
  • soft answer turneth away wrath; but grievous words stir up anger.” It
  • isn’t only in them you speak to, but in yourself.’
  • ‘Very true, Nancy, if we could always remember it.’
  • ‘Ay, if we could!’
  • ‘And did Mr. Weston ever come to see you again?’
  • ‘Yes, many a time; and since my eyes has been so bad, he’s sat an’ read
  • to me by the half-hour together: but you know, Miss, he has other folks
  • to see, and other things to do—God bless him! An’ that next Sunday he
  • preached _such_ a sermon! His text was, “Come unto me all ye that labour
  • and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest,” and them two blessed
  • verses that follows. You wasn’t there, Miss, you was with your friends
  • then—but it made me _so_ happy! And I _am_ happy now, thank God! an’ I
  • take a pleasure, now, in doing little bits o’ jobs for my neighbours—such
  • as a poor old body ’at’s half blind can do; and they take it kindly of
  • me, just as he said. You see, Miss, I’m knitting a pair o’ stockings
  • now;—they’re for Thomas Jackson: he’s a queerish old body, an’ we’ve had
  • many a bout at threaping, one anent t’other; an’ at times we’ve differed
  • sorely. So I thought I couldn’t do better nor knit him a pair o’ warm
  • stockings; an’ I’ve felt to like him a deal better, poor old man, sin’ I
  • began. It’s turned out just as Maister Weston said.’
  • ‘Well, I’m very glad to see you so happy, Nancy, and so wise: but I must
  • go now; I shall be wanted at the Hall,’ said I; and bidding her good-bye,
  • I departed, promising to come again when I had time, and feeling nearly
  • as happy as herself.
  • At another time I went to read to a poor labourer who was in the last
  • stage of consumption. The young ladies had been to see him, and somehow
  • a promise of reading had been extracted from them; but it was too much
  • trouble, so they begged me to do it instead. I went, willingly enough;
  • and there too I was gratified with the praises of Mr. Weston, both from
  • the sick man and his wife. The former told me that he derived great
  • comfort and benefit from the visits of the new parson, who frequently
  • came to see him, and was ‘another guess sort of man’ to Mr. Hatfield;
  • who, before the other’s arrival at Horton, had now and then paid him a
  • visit; on which occasions he would always insist upon having the
  • cottage-door kept open, to admit the fresh air for his own convenience,
  • without considering how it might injure the sufferer; and having opened
  • his prayer-book and hastily read over a part of the Service for the Sick,
  • would hurry away again: if he did not stay to administer some harsh
  • rebuke to the afflicted wife, or to make some thoughtless, not to say
  • heartless, observation, rather calculated to increase than diminish the
  • troubles of the suffering pair.
  • ‘Whereas,’ said the man, ‘Maister Weston ’ull pray with me quite in a
  • different fashion, an’ talk to me as kind as owt; an’ oft read to me too,
  • an’ sit beside me just like a brother.’
  • ‘Just for all the world!’ exclaimed his wife; ‘an’ about a three wik
  • sin’, when he seed how poor Jem shivered wi’ cold, an’ what pitiful fires
  • we kept, he axed if wer stock of coals was nearly done. I telled him it
  • was, an’ we was ill set to get more: but you know, mum, I didn’t think o’
  • him helping us; but, howsever, he sent us a sack o’ coals next day; an’
  • we’ve had good fires ever sin’: and a great blessing it is, this winter
  • time. But that’s his way, Miss Grey: when he comes into a poor body’s
  • house a-seein’ sick folk, he like notices what they most stand i’ need
  • on; an’ if he thinks they can’t readily get it therseln, he never says
  • nowt about it, but just gets it for ’em. An’ it isn’t everybody ’at ’ud
  • do that, ’at has as little as he has: for you know, mum, he’s nowt at all
  • to live on but what he gets fra’ th’ Rector, an’ that’s little enough
  • they say.’
  • I remembered then, with a species of exultation, that he had frequently
  • been styled a vulgar brute by the amiable Miss Murray, because he wore a
  • silver watch, and clothes not quite so bright and fresh as Mr.
  • Hatfield’s.
  • In returning to the Lodge I felt very happy, and thanked God that I had
  • now something to think about; something to dwell on as a relief from the
  • weary monotony, the lonely drudgery, of my present life: for I _was_
  • lonely. Never, from month to month, from year to year, except during my
  • brief intervals of rest at home, did I see one creature to whom I could
  • open my heart, or freely speak my thoughts with any hope of sympathy, or
  • even comprehension: never one, unless it were poor Nancy Brown, with whom
  • I could enjoy a single moment of real social intercourse, or whose
  • conversation was calculated to render me better, wiser, or happier than
  • before; or who, as far as I could see, could be greatly benefited by
  • mine. My only companions had been unamiable children, and ignorant,
  • wrong-headed girls; from whose fatiguing folly, unbroken solitude was
  • often a relief most earnestly desired and dearly prized. But to be
  • restricted to such associates was a serious evil, both in its immediate
  • effects and the consequences that were likely to ensue. Never a new idea
  • or stirring thought came to me from without; and such as rose within me
  • were, for the most part, miserably crushed at once, or doomed to sicken
  • or fade away, because they could not see the light.
  • Habitual associates are known to exercise a great influence over each
  • other’s minds and manners. Those whose actions are for ever before our
  • eyes, whose words are ever in our ears, will naturally lead us, albeit
  • against our will, slowly, gradually, imperceptibly, perhaps, to act and
  • speak as they do. I will not presume to say how far this irresistible
  • power of assimilation extends; but if one civilised man were doomed to
  • pass a dozen years amid a race of intractable savages, unless he had
  • power to improve them, I greatly question whether, at the close of that
  • period, he would not have become, at least, a barbarian himself. And I,
  • as I could not make my young companions better, feared exceedingly that
  • they would make me worse—would gradually bring my feelings, habits,
  • capacities, to the level of their own; without, however, imparting to me
  • their lightheartedness and cheerful vivacity.
  • Already, I seemed to feel my intellect deteriorating, my heart
  • petrifying, my soul contracting; and I trembled lest my very moral
  • perceptions should become deadened, my distinctions of right and wrong
  • confounded, and all my better faculties be sunk, at last, beneath the
  • baneful influence of such a mode of life. The gross vapours of earth
  • were gathering around me, and closing in upon my inward heaven; and thus
  • it was that Mr. Weston rose at length upon me, appearing like the morning
  • star in my horizon, to save me from the fear of utter darkness; and I
  • rejoiced that I had now a subject for contemplation that was above me,
  • not beneath. I was glad to see that all the world was not made up of
  • Bloomfields, Murrays, Hatfields, Ashbys, &c.; and that human excellence
  • was not a mere dream of the imagination. When we hear a little good and
  • no harm of a person, it is easy and pleasant to imagine more: in short,
  • it is needless to analyse all my thoughts; but Sunday was now become a
  • day of peculiar delight to me (I was now almost broken-in to the back
  • corner in the carriage), for I liked to hear him—and I liked to see him,
  • too; though I knew he was not handsome, or even what is called agreeable,
  • in outward aspect; but, certainly, he was not ugly.
  • In stature he was a little, a very little, above the middle size; the
  • outline of his face would be pronounced too square for beauty, but to me
  • it announced decision of character; his dark brown hair was not carefully
  • curled, like Mr. Hatfield’s, but simply brushed aside over a broad white
  • forehead; the eyebrows, I suppose, were too projecting, but from under
  • those dark brows there gleamed an eye of singular power, brown in colour,
  • not large, and somewhat deep-set, but strikingly brilliant, and full of
  • expression; there was character, too, in the mouth, something that
  • bespoke a man of firm purpose and an habitual thinker; and when he
  • smiled—but I will not speak of that yet, for, at the time I mention, I
  • had never seen him smile: and, indeed, his general appearance did not
  • impress me with the idea of a man given to such a relaxation, nor of such
  • an individual as the cottagers described him. I had early formed my
  • opinion of him; and, in spite of Miss Murray’s objurgations: was fully
  • convinced that he was a man of strong sense, firm faith, and ardent
  • piety, but thoughtful and stern: and when I found that, to his other good
  • qualities, was added that of true benevolence and gentle, considerate
  • kindness, the discovery, perhaps, delighted me the more, as I had not
  • been prepared to expect it.
  • CHAPTER XII—THE SHOWER
  • The next visit I paid to Nancy Brown was in the second week in March:
  • for, though I had many spare minutes during the day, I seldom could look
  • upon an hour as entirely my own; since, where everything was left to the
  • caprices of Miss Matilda and her sister, there could be no order or
  • regularity. Whatever occupation I chose, when not actually busied about
  • them or their concerns, I had, as it were, to keep my loins girded, my
  • shoes on my feet, and my staff in my hand; for not to be immediately
  • forthcoming when called for, was regarded as a grave and inexcusable
  • offence: not only by my pupils and their mother, but by the very servant,
  • who came in breathless haste to call me, exclaiming, ‘You’re to go to the
  • schoolroom _directly_, mum, the young ladies is WAITING!!’ Climax of
  • horror! actually waiting for their governess!!!
  • But this time I was pretty sure of an hour or two to myself; for Matilda
  • was preparing for a long ride, and Rosalie was dressing for a
  • dinner-party at Lady Ashby’s: so I took the opportunity of repairing to
  • the widow’s cottage, where I found her in some anxiety about her cat,
  • which had been absent all day. I comforted her with as many anecdotes of
  • that animal’s roving propensities as I could recollect. ‘I’m feared o’
  • th’ gamekeepers,’ said she: ‘that’s all ’at I think on. If th’ young
  • gentlemen had been at home, I should a’ thought they’d been setting their
  • dogs at her, an’ worried her, poor thing, as they did _many_ a poor
  • thing’s cat; but I haven’t that to be feared on now.’ Nancy’s eyes were
  • better, but still far from well: she had been trying to make a Sunday
  • shirt for her son, but told me she could only bear to do a little bit at
  • it now and then, so that it progressed but slowly, though the poor lad
  • wanted it sadly. So I proposed to help her a little, after I had read to
  • her, for I had plenty of time that evening, and need not return till
  • dusk. She thankfully accepted the offer. ‘An’ you’ll be a bit o’
  • company for me too, Miss,’ said she; ‘I like as I feel lonesome without
  • my cat.’ But when I had finished reading, and done the half of a seam,
  • with Nancy’s capacious brass thimble fitted on to my finger by means of a
  • roll of paper, I was disturbed by the entrance of Mr. Weston, with the
  • identical cat in his arms. I now saw that he could smile, and very
  • pleasantly too.
  • ‘I’ve done you a piece of good service, Nancy,’ he began: then seeing me,
  • he acknowledged my presence by a slight bow. I should have been
  • invisible to Hatfield, or any other gentleman of those parts. ‘I’ve
  • delivered your cat,’ he continued, ‘from the hands, or rather the gun, of
  • Mr. Murray’s gamekeeper.’
  • ‘God bless you, sir!’ cried the grateful old woman, ready to weep for joy
  • as she received her favourite from his arms.
  • ‘Take care of it,’ said he, ‘and don’t let it go near the rabbit-warren,
  • for the gamekeeper swears he’ll shoot it if he sees it there again: he
  • would have done so to-day, if I had not been in time to stop him. I
  • believe it is raining, Miss Grey,’ added he, more quietly, observing that
  • I had put aside my work, and was preparing to depart. ‘Don’t let me
  • disturb you—I shan’t stay two minutes.’
  • ‘You’ll _both_ stay while this shower gets owered,’ said Nancy, as she
  • stirred the fire, and placed another chair beside it; ‘what! there’s room
  • for all.’
  • ‘I can see better here, thank you, Nancy,’ replied I, taking my work to
  • the window, where she had the goodness to suffer me to remain unmolested,
  • while she got a brush to remove the cat’s hairs from Mr. Weston’s coat,
  • carefully wiped the rain from his hat, and gave the cat its supper,
  • busily talking all the time: now thanking her clerical friend for what he
  • had done; now wondering how the cat had found out the warren; and now
  • lamenting the probable consequences of such a discovery. He listened
  • with a quiet, good-natured smile, and at length took a seat in compliance
  • with her pressing invitations, but repeated that he did not mean to stay.
  • ‘I have another place to go to,’ said he, ‘and I see’ (glancing at the
  • book on the table) ‘someone else has been reading to you.’
  • ‘Yes, sir; Miss Grey has been as kind as read me a chapter; an’ now she’s
  • helping me with a shirt for our Bill—but I’m feared she’ll be cold there.
  • Won’t you come to th’ fire, Miss?’
  • ‘No, thank you, Nancy, I’m quite warm. I must go as soon as this shower
  • is over.’
  • ‘Oh, Miss! You said you could stop while dusk!’ cried the provoking old
  • woman, and Mr. Weston seized his hat.
  • ‘Nay, sir,’ exclaimed she, ‘pray don’t go now, while it rains so fast.’
  • ‘But it strikes me I’m keeping your visitor away from the fire.’
  • ‘No, you’re not, Mr. Weston,’ replied I, hoping there was no harm in a
  • falsehood of that description.
  • ‘No, sure!’ cried Nancy. ‘What, there’s lots o’ room!’
  • ‘Miss Grey,’ said he, half-jestingly, as if he felt it necessary to
  • change the present subject, whether he had anything particular to say or
  • not, ‘I wish you would make my peace with the squire, when you see him.
  • He was by when I rescued Nancy’s cat, and did not quite approve of the
  • deed. I told him I thought he might better spare all his rabbits than
  • she her cat, for which audacious assertion he treated me to some rather
  • ungentlemanly language; and I fear I retorted a trifle too warmly.’
  • ‘Oh, lawful sir! I hope you didn’t fall out wi’ th’ maister for sake o’
  • my cat! he cannot bide answering again—can th’ maister.’
  • ‘Oh! it’s no matter, Nancy: I don’t care about it, really; I said nothing
  • _very_ uncivil; and I suppose Mr. Murray is accustomed to use rather
  • strong language when he’s heated.’
  • ‘Ay, sir: it’s a pity.’
  • ‘And now, I really must go. I have to visit a place a mile beyond this;
  • and you would not have me to return in the dark: besides, it has nearly
  • done raining now—so good-evening, Nancy. Good-evening, Miss Grey.’
  • ‘Good-evening, Mr. Weston; but don’t depend upon me for making your peace
  • with Mr. Murray, for I never see him—to speak to.’
  • ‘Don’t you; it can’t be helped then,’ replied he, in dolorous
  • resignation: then, with a peculiar half-smile, he added, ‘But never mind;
  • I imagine the squire has more to apologise for than I;’ and left the
  • cottage.
  • I went on with my sewing as long as I could see, and then bade Nancy
  • good-evening; checking her too lively gratitude by the undeniable
  • assurance that I had only done for her what she would have done for me,
  • if she had been in my place and I in hers. I hastened back to Horton
  • Lodge, where, having entered the schoolroom, I found the tea-table all in
  • confusion, the tray flooded with slops, and Miss Matilda in a most
  • ferocious humour.
  • ‘Miss Grey, whatever have you been about? I’ve had tea half an hour ago,
  • and had to make it myself, and drink it all alone! I wish you would come
  • in sooner!’
  • ‘I’ve been to see Nancy Brown. I thought you would not be back from your
  • ride.’
  • ‘How could I ride in the rain, I should like to know. That damned
  • pelting shower was vexatious enough—coming on when I was just in full
  • swing: and then to come and find nobody in to tea! and you know I can’t
  • make the tea as I like it.’
  • ‘I didn’t think of the shower,’ replied I (and, indeed, the thought of
  • its driving her home had never entered my head).
  • ‘No, of course; you were under shelter yourself, and you never thought of
  • other people.’
  • I bore her coarse reproaches with astonishing equanimity, even with
  • cheerfulness; for I was sensible that I had done more good to Nancy Brown
  • than harm to her: and perhaps some other thoughts assisted to keep up my
  • spirits, and impart a relish to the cup of cold, overdrawn tea, and a
  • charm to the otherwise unsightly table; and—I had almost said—to Miss
  • Matilda’s unamiable face. But she soon betook herself to the stables,
  • and left me to the quiet enjoyment of my solitary meal.
  • CHAPTER XIII—THE PRIMROSES
  • Miss Murray now always went twice to church, for she so loved admiration
  • that she could not bear to lose a single opportunity of obtaining it; and
  • she was so sure of it wherever she showed herself, that, whether Harry
  • Meltham and Mr. Green were there or not, there was certain to be somebody
  • present who would not be insensible to her charms, besides the Rector,
  • whose official capacity generally obliged him to attend. Usually, also,
  • if the weather permitted, both she and her sister would walk home;
  • Matilda, because she hated the confinement of the carriage; she, because
  • she disliked the privacy of it, and enjoyed the company that generally
  • enlivened the first mile of the journey in walking from the church to Mr.
  • Green’s park-gates: near which commenced the private road to Horton
  • Lodge, which lay in the opposite direction, while the highway conducted
  • in a straightforward course to the still more distant mansion of Sir Hugh
  • Meltham. Thus there was always a chance of being accompanied, so far,
  • either by Harry Meltham, with or without Miss Meltham, or Mr. Green, with
  • perhaps one or both of his sisters, and any gentlemen visitors they might
  • have.
  • Whether I walked with the young ladies or rode with their parents,
  • depended upon their own capricious will: if they chose to ‘take’ me, I
  • went; if, for reasons best known to themselves, they chose to go alone, I
  • took my seat in the carriage. I liked walking better, but a sense of
  • reluctance to obtrude my presence on anyone who did not desire it, always
  • kept me passive on these and similar occasions; and I never inquired into
  • the causes of their varying whims. Indeed, this was the best policy—for
  • to submit and oblige was the governess’s part, to consult their own
  • pleasure was that of the pupils. But when I did walk, the first half of
  • journey was generally a great nuisance to me. As none of the
  • before-mentioned ladies and gentlemen ever noticed me, it was
  • disagreeable to walk beside them, as if listening to what they said, or
  • wishing to be thought one of them, while they talked over me, or across;
  • and if their eyes, in speaking, chanced to fall on me, it seemed as if
  • they looked on vacancy—as if they either did not see me, or were very
  • desirous to make it appear so. It was disagreeable, too, to walk behind,
  • and thus appear to acknowledge my own inferiority; for, in truth, I
  • considered myself pretty nearly as good as the best of them, and wished
  • them to know that I did so, and not to imagine that I looked upon myself
  • as a mere domestic, who knew her own place too well to walk beside such
  • fine ladies and gentlemen as they were—though her young ladies might
  • choose to have her with them, and even condescend to converse with her
  • when no better company were at hand. Thus—I am almost ashamed to confess
  • it—but indeed I gave myself no little trouble in my endeavours (if I did
  • keep up with them) to appear perfectly unconscious or regardless of their
  • presence, as if I were wholly absorbed in my own reflections, or the
  • contemplation of surrounding objects; or, if I lingered behind, it was
  • some bird or insect, some tree or flower, that attracted my attention,
  • and having duly examined that, I would pursue my walk alone, at a
  • leisurely pace, until my pupils had bidden adieu to their companions and
  • turned off into the quiet private road.
  • One such occasion I particularly well remember; it was a lovely afternoon
  • about the close of March; Mr. Green and his sisters had sent their
  • carriage back empty, in order to enjoy the bright sunshine and balmy air
  • in a sociable walk home along with their visitors, Captain Somebody and
  • Lieutenant Somebody-else (a couple of military fops), and the Misses
  • Murray, who, of course, contrived to join them. Such a party was highly
  • agreeable to Rosalie; but not finding it equally suitable to my taste, I
  • presently fell back, and began to botanise and entomologise along the
  • green banks and budding hedges, till the company was considerably in
  • advance of me, and I could hear the sweet song of the happy lark; then my
  • spirit of misanthropy began to melt away beneath the soft, pure air and
  • genial sunshine; but sad thoughts of early childhood, and yearnings for
  • departed joys, or for a brighter future lot, arose instead. As my eyes
  • wandered over the steep banks covered with young grass and green-leaved
  • plants, and surmounted by budding hedges, I longed intensely for some
  • familiar flower that might recall the woody dales or green hill-sides of
  • home: the brown moorlands, of course, were out of the question. Such a
  • discovery would make my eyes gush out with water, no doubt; but that was
  • one of my greatest enjoyments now. At length I descried, high up between
  • the twisted roots of an oak, three lovely primroses, peeping so sweetly
  • from their hiding-place that the tears already started at the sight; but
  • they grew so high above me, that I tried in vain to gather one or two, to
  • dream over and to carry with me: I could not reach them unless I climbed
  • the bank, which I was deterred from doing by hearing a footstep at that
  • moment behind me, and was, therefore, about to turn away, when I was
  • startled by the words, ‘Allow me to gather them for you, Miss Grey,’
  • spoken in the grave, low tones of a well-known voice. Immediately the
  • flowers were gathered, and in my hand. It was Mr. Weston, of course—who
  • else would trouble himself to do so much for _me_?
  • ‘I thanked him; whether warmly or coldly, I cannot tell: but certain I am
  • that I did not express half the gratitude I felt. It was foolish,
  • perhaps, to feel any gratitude at all; but it seemed to me, at that
  • moment, as if this were a remarkable instance of his good-nature: an act
  • of kindness, which I could not repay, but never should forget: so utterly
  • unaccustomed was I to receive such civilities, so little prepared to
  • expect them from anyone within fifty miles of Horton Lodge. Yet this did
  • not prevent me from feeling a little uncomfortable in his presence; and I
  • proceeded to follow my pupils at a much quicker pace than before; though,
  • perhaps, if Mr. Weston had taken the hint, and let me pass without
  • another word, I might have repeated it an hour after: but he did not. A
  • somewhat rapid walk for me was but an ordinary pace for him.
  • ‘Your young ladies have left you alone,’ said he.
  • ‘Yes, they are occupied with more agreeable company.’
  • ‘Then don’t trouble yourself to overtake them.’ I slackened my pace; but
  • next moment regretted having done so: my companion did not speak; and I
  • had nothing in the world to say, and feared he might be in the same
  • predicament. At length, however, he broke the pause by asking, with a
  • certain quiet abruptness peculiar to himself, if I liked flowers.
  • ‘Yes; very much,’ I answered, ‘wild-flowers especially.’
  • ‘_I_ like wild-flowers,’ said he; ‘others I don’t care about, because I
  • have no particular associations connected with them—except one or two.
  • What are your favourite flowers?’
  • ‘Primroses, bluebells, and heath-blossoms.’
  • ‘Not violets?’
  • ‘No; because, as you say, I have no particular associations connected
  • with them; for there are no sweet violets among the hills and valleys
  • round my home.’
  • ‘It must be a great consolation to you to have a home, Miss Grey,’
  • observed my companion after a short pause: ‘however remote, or however
  • seldom visited, still it is something to look to.’
  • ‘It is so much that I think I could not live without it,’ replied I, with
  • an enthusiasm of which I immediately repented; for I thought it must have
  • sounded essentially silly.
  • ‘Oh, yes, you could,’ said he, with a thoughtful smile. ‘The ties that
  • bind us to life are tougher than you imagine, or than anyone can who has
  • not felt how roughly they may be pulled without breaking. You might be
  • miserable without a home, but even _you_ could live; and not so miserably
  • as you suppose. The human heart is like india-rubber; a little swells
  • it, but a great deal will not burst it. If “little more than nothing
  • will disturb it, little less than all things will suffice” to break it.
  • As in the outer members of our frame, there is a vital power inherent in
  • itself that strengthens it against external violence. Every blow that
  • shakes it will serve to harden it against a future stroke; as constant
  • labour thickens the skin of the hand, and strengthens its muscles instead
  • of wasting them away: so that a day of arduous toil, that might excoriate
  • a lady’s palm, would make no sensible impression on that of a hardy
  • ploughman.
  • ‘I speak from experience—partly my own. There was a time when I thought
  • as you do—at least, I was fully persuaded that home and its affections
  • were the only things that made life tolerable: that, if deprived of
  • these, existence would become a burden hard to be endured; but now I have
  • no home—unless you would dignify my two hired rooms at Horton by such a
  • name;—and not twelve months ago I lost the last and dearest of my early
  • friends; and yet, not only I live, but I am not wholly destitute of hope
  • and comfort, even for this life: though I must acknowledge that I can
  • seldom enter even an humble cottage at the close of day, and see its
  • inhabitants peaceably gathered around their cheerful hearth, without a
  • feeling _almost_ of envy at their domestic enjoyment.’
  • ‘You don’t know what happiness lies before you yet,’ said I: ‘you are now
  • only in the commencement of your journey.’
  • ‘The best of happiness,’ replied he, ‘is mine already—the power and the
  • will to be useful.’
  • We now approached a stile communicating with a footpath that conducted to
  • a farm-house, where, I suppose, Mr. Weston purposed to make himself
  • ‘useful;’ for he presently took leave of me, crossed the stile, and
  • traversed the path with his usual firm, elastic tread, leaving me to
  • ponder his words as I continued my course alone. I had heard before that
  • he had lost his mother not many months before he came. She then was the
  • last and dearest of his early friends; and he had _no home_. I pitied
  • him from my heart: I almost wept for sympathy. And this, I thought,
  • accounted for the shade of premature thoughtfulness that so frequently
  • clouded his brow, and obtained for him the reputation of a morose and
  • sullen disposition with the charitable Miss Murray and all her kin.
  • ‘But,’ thought I, ‘he is not so miserable as I should be under such a
  • deprivation: he leads an active life; and a wide field for useful
  • exertion lies before him. He can _make_ friends; and he can make a home
  • too, if he pleases; and, doubtless, he will please some time. God grant
  • the partner of that home may be worthy of his choice, and make it a happy
  • one—such a home as he deserves to have! And how delightful it would be
  • to—’ But no matter what I thought.
  • I began this book with the intention of concealing nothing; that those
  • who liked might have the benefit of perusing a fellow-creature’s heart:
  • but we have some thoughts that all the angels in heaven are welcome to
  • behold, but not our brother-men—not even the best and kindest amongst
  • them.
  • By this time the Greens had taken themselves to their own abode, and the
  • Murrays had turned down the private road, whither I hastened to follow
  • them. I found the two girls warm in an animated discussion on the
  • respective merits of the two young officers; but on seeing me Rosalie
  • broke off in the middle of a sentence to exclaim, with malicious glee—
  • ‘Oh-ho, Miss Grey! you’re come at last, are you? No _wonder_ you
  • lingered so long behind; and no _wonder_ you always stand up so
  • vigorously for Mr. Weston when I abuse him. Ah-ha! I see it all now!’
  • ‘Now, come, Miss Murray, don’t be foolish,’ said I, attempting a
  • good-natured laugh; ‘you know such nonsense can make no impression on
  • me.’
  • But she still went on talking such intolerable stuff—her sister helping
  • her with appropriate fiction coined for the occasion—that I thought it
  • necessary to say something in my own justification.
  • ‘What folly all this is!’ I exclaimed. ‘If Mr. Weston’s road happened to
  • be the same as mine for a few yards, and if he chose to exchange a word
  • or two in passing, what is there so remarkable in that? I assure you, I
  • never spoke to him before: except once.’
  • ‘Where? where? and when?’ cried they eagerly.
  • ‘In Nancy’s cottage.’
  • ‘Ah-ha! you’ve met him there, have you?’ exclaimed Rosalie, with exultant
  • laughter. ‘Ah! now, Matilda, I’ve found out why she’s so fond of going
  • to Nancy Brown’s! She goes there to flirt with Mr. Weston.’
  • ‘Really, that is not worth contradicting—I only saw him there once, I
  • tell you—and how could I know he was coming?’
  • Irritated as I was at their foolish mirth and vexatious imputations, the
  • uneasiness did not continue long: when they had had their laugh out, they
  • returned again to the captain and lieutenant; and, while they disputed
  • and commented upon them, my indignation rapidly cooled; the cause of it
  • was quickly forgotten, and I turned my thoughts into a pleasanter
  • channel. Thus we proceeded up the park, and entered the hall; and as I
  • ascended the stairs to my own chamber, I had but one thought within me:
  • my heart was filled to overflowing with one single earnest wish. Having
  • entered the room, and shut the door, I fell upon my knees and offered up
  • a fervent but not impetuous prayer: ‘Thy will be done,’ I strove to say
  • throughout; but, ‘Father, all things are possible with Thee, and may it
  • be Thy will,’ was sure to follow. That wish—that prayer—both men and
  • women would have scorned me for—‘But, Father, _Thou_ wilt _not_ despise!’
  • I said, and felt that it was true. It seemed to me that another’s
  • welfare was at least as ardently implored for as my own; nay, even _that_
  • was the principal object of my heart’s desire. I might have been
  • deceiving myself; but that idea gave me confidence to ask, and power to
  • hope I did not ask in vain. As for the primroses, I kept two of them in
  • a glass in my room until they were completely withered, and the housemaid
  • threw them out; and the petals of the other I pressed between the leaves
  • of my Bible—I have them still, and mean to keep them always.
  • CHAPTER XIV—THE RECTOR
  • The following day was as fine as the preceding one. Soon after breakfast
  • Miss Matilda, having galloped and blundered through a few unprofitable
  • lessons, and vengeably thumped the piano for an hour, in a terrible
  • humour with both me and it, because her mamma would not give her a
  • holiday, had betaken herself to her favourite places of resort, the
  • yards, the stables, and the dog-kennels; and Miss Murray was gone forth
  • to enjoy a quiet ramble with a new fashionable novel for her companion,
  • leaving me in the schoolroom hard at work upon a water-colour drawing
  • which I had promised to do for her, and which she insisted upon my
  • finishing that day.
  • At my feet lay a little rough terrier. It was the property of Miss
  • Matilda; but she hated the animal, and intended to sell it, alleging that
  • it was quite spoiled. It was really an excellent dog of its kind; but
  • she affirmed it was fit for nothing, and had not even the sense to know
  • its own mistress.
  • The fact was she had purchased it when but a small puppy, insisting at
  • first that no one should touch it but herself; but soon becoming tired of
  • so helpless and troublesome a nursling, she had gladly yielded to my
  • entreaties to be allowed to take charge of it; and I, by carefully
  • nursing the little creature from infancy to adolescence, of course, had
  • obtained its affections: a reward I should have greatly valued, and
  • looked upon as far outweighing all the trouble I had had with it, had not
  • poor Snap’s grateful feelings exposed him to many a harsh word and many a
  • spiteful kick and pinch from his owner, and were he not now in danger of
  • being ‘put away’ in consequence, or transferred to some rough,
  • stony-hearted master. But how could I help it? I could not make the dog
  • hate me by cruel treatment, and she would not propitiate him by kindness.
  • However, while I thus sat, working away with my pencil, Mrs. Murray came,
  • half-sailing, half-bustling, into the room.
  • ‘Miss Grey,’ she began,—‘dear! how can you sit at your drawing such a day
  • as this?’ (She thought I was doing it for my own pleasure.) ‘I _wonder_
  • you don’t put on your bonnet and go out with the young ladies.’
  • ‘I think, ma’am, Miss Murray is reading; and Miss Matilda is amusing
  • herself with her dogs.’
  • ‘If you would try to amuse Miss Matilda yourself a little more, I think
  • she would not be driven to seek amusement in the companionship of dogs
  • and horses and grooms, so much as she is; and if you would be a little
  • more cheerful and conversable with Miss Murray, she would not so often go
  • wandering in the fields with a book in her hand. However, I don’t want
  • to vex you,’ added she, seeing, I suppose, that my cheeks burned and my
  • hand trembled with some unamiable emotion. ‘Do, pray, try not to be so
  • touchy—there’s no speaking to you else. And tell me if you know where
  • Rosalie is gone: and why she likes to be so much alone?’
  • ‘She says she likes to be alone when she has a new book to read.’
  • ‘But why can’t she read it in the park or the garden?—why should she go
  • into the fields and lanes? And how is it that that Mr. Hatfield so often
  • finds her out? She told me last week he’d walked his horse by her side
  • all up Moss Lane; and now I’m sure it was he I saw, from my dressing-room
  • window, walking so briskly past the park-gates, and on towards the field
  • where she so frequently goes. I wish you would go and see if she is
  • there; and just gently remind her that it is not proper for a young lady
  • of her rank and prospects to be wandering about by herself in that
  • manner, exposed to the attentions of anyone that presumes to address her;
  • like some poor neglected girl that has no park to walk in, and no friends
  • to take care of her: and tell her that her papa would be extremely angry
  • if he knew of her treating Mr. Hatfield in the familiar manner that I
  • fear she does; and—oh! if you—if _any_ governess had but half a mother’s
  • watchfulness—half a mother’s anxious care, I should be saved this
  • trouble; and you would see at once the necessity of keeping your eye upon
  • her, and making your company agreeable to— Well, go—go; there’s no time
  • to be lost,’ cried she, seeing that I had put away my drawing materials,
  • and was waiting in the doorway for the conclusion of her address.
  • According to her prognostications, I found Miss Murray in her favourite
  • field just without the park; and, unfortunately, not alone; for the tall,
  • stately figure of Mr. Hatfield was slowly sauntering by her side.
  • Here was a poser for me. It was my duty to interrupt the _tête-à-tête_:
  • but how was it to be done? Mr. Hatfield could not to be driven away by
  • so insignificant person as I; and to go and place myself on the other
  • side of Miss Murray, and intrude my unwelcome presence upon her without
  • noticing her companion, was a piece of rudeness I could not be guilty of:
  • neither had I the courage to cry aloud from the top of the field that she
  • was wanted elsewhere. So I took the intermediate course of walking
  • slowly but steadily towards them; resolving, if my approach failed to
  • scare away the beau, to pass by and tell Miss Murray her mamma wanted
  • her.
  • She certainly looked very charming as she strolled, lingering along under
  • the budding horse-chestnut trees that stretched their long arms over the
  • park-palings; with her closed book in one hand, and in the other a
  • graceful sprig of myrtle, which served her as a very pretty plaything;
  • her bright ringlets escaping profusely from her little bonnet, and gently
  • stirred by the breeze, her fair cheek flushed with gratified vanity, her
  • smiling blue eyes, now slyly glancing towards her admirer, now gazing
  • downward at her myrtle sprig. But Snap, running before me, interrupted
  • her in the midst of some half-pert, half-playful repartee, by catching
  • hold of her dress and vehemently tugging thereat; till Mr. Hatfield, with
  • his cane, administered a resounding thwack upon the animal’s skull, and
  • sent it yelping back to me with a clamorous outcry that afforded the
  • reverend gentleman great amusement: but seeing me so near, he thought, I
  • suppose, he might as well be taking his departure; and, as I stooped to
  • caress the dog, with ostentatious pity to show my disapproval of his
  • severity, I heard him say: ‘When shall I see you again, Miss Murray?’
  • ‘At church, I suppose,’ replied she, ‘unless your business chances to
  • bring you here again at the precise moment when I happen to be walking
  • by.’
  • ‘I could always manage to have business here, if I knew precisely when
  • and where to find you.’
  • ‘But if I would, I could not inform you, for I am so immethodical, I
  • never can tell to-day what I shall do to-morrow.’
  • ‘Then give me that, meantime, to comfort me,’ said he, half jestingly and
  • half in earnest, extending his hand for the sprig of myrtle.
  • ‘No, indeed, I shan’t.’
  • ‘Do! _pray_ do! I shall be the most miserable of men if you don’t. You
  • cannot be so cruel as to deny me a favour so easily granted and yet so
  • highly prized!’ pleaded he as ardently as if his life depended on it.
  • By this time I stood within a very few yards of them, impatiently waiting
  • his departure.
  • ‘There then! take it and go,’ said Rosalie.
  • He joyfully received the gift, murmured something that made her blush and
  • toss her head, but with a little laugh that showed her displeasure was
  • entirely affected; and then with a courteous salutation withdrew.
  • ‘Did you ever see such a man, Miss Grey?’ said she, turning to me; ‘I’m
  • so _glad_ you came! I thought I never _should_, get rid of him; and I
  • was so terribly afraid of papa seeing him.’
  • ‘Has he been with you long?’
  • ‘No, not long, but he’s so extremely impertinent: and he’s always hanging
  • about, pretending his business or his clerical duties require his
  • attendance in these parts, and really watching for poor me, and pouncing
  • upon me wherever he sees me.’
  • ‘Well, your mamma thinks you ought not to go beyond the park or garden
  • without some discreet, matronly person like me to accompany you, and keep
  • off all intruders. She descried Mr. Hatfield hurrying past the
  • park-gates, and forthwith despatched me with instructions to seek you up
  • and to take care of you, and likewise to warn—’
  • ‘Oh, mamma’s so tiresome! As if I couldn’t take care of myself. She
  • bothered me before about Mr. Hatfield; and I told her she might trust me:
  • I never should forget my rank and station for the most delightful man
  • that ever breathed. I wish he would go down on his knees to-morrow, and
  • implore me to be his wife, that I might just show her how mistaken she is
  • in supposing that I could ever—Oh, it provokes me so! To think that I
  • could be such a fool as to fall in _love_! It is quite beneath the
  • dignity of a woman to do such a thing. Love! I detest the word! As
  • applied to one of our sex, I think it a perfect insult. A preference I
  • _might_ acknowledge; but never for one like poor Mr. Hatfield, who has
  • not seven hundred a year to bless himself with. I like to talk to him,
  • because he’s so clever and amusing—I wish Sir Thomas Ashby were half as
  • nice; besides, I must have _somebody_ to flirt with, and no one else has
  • the sense to come here; and when we go out, mamma won’t let me flirt with
  • anybody but Sir Thomas—if he’s there; and if he’s _not_ there, I’m bound
  • hand and foot, for fear somebody should go and make up some exaggerated
  • story, and put it into his head that I’m engaged, or likely to be
  • engaged, to somebody else; or, what is more probable, for fear his nasty
  • old mother should see or hear of my ongoings, and conclude that I’m not a
  • fit wife for her excellent son: as if the said son were not the greatest
  • scamp in Christendom; and as if any woman of common decency were not a
  • world too good for him.’
  • ‘Is it really so, Miss Murray? and does your mamma know it, and yet wish
  • you to marry him?’
  • ‘To be sure, she does! She knows more against him than I do, I believe:
  • she keeps it from me lest I should be discouraged; not knowing how little
  • I care about such things. For it’s no great matter, really: he’ll be all
  • right when he’s married, as mamma says; and reformed rakes make the best
  • husbands, _everybody_ knows. I only wish he were not so ugly—_that’s_
  • all _I_ think about: but then there’s no choice here in the country; and
  • papa _will not_ let us go to London—’
  • ‘But I should think Mr. Hatfield would be far better.’
  • ‘And so he would, if he were lord of Ashby Park—there’s not a doubt of
  • it: but the fact is, I _must_ have Ashby Park, whoever shares it with
  • me.’
  • ‘But Mr. Hatfield thinks you like him all this time; you don’t consider
  • how bitterly he will be disappointed when he finds himself mistaken.’
  • ‘_No_, indeed! It will be a proper punishment for his presumption—for
  • ever _daring_ to think I could like him. I should enjoy nothing so much
  • as lifting the veil from his eyes.’
  • ‘The sooner you do it the better then.’
  • ‘No; I tell you, I like to amuse myself with him. Besides, he doesn’t
  • really think I like him. I take good care of that: you don’t know how
  • cleverly I manage. He may presume to think he can induce me to like him;
  • for which I shall punish him as he deserves.’
  • ‘Well, mind you don’t give too much reason for such presumption—that’s
  • all,’ replied I.
  • But all my exhortations were in vain: they only made her somewhat more
  • solicitous to disguise her wishes and her thoughts from me. She talked
  • no more to me about the Rector; but I could see that her mind, if not her
  • heart, was fixed upon him still, and that she was intent upon obtaining
  • another interview: for though, in compliance with her mother’s request, I
  • was now constituted the companion of her rambles for a time, she still
  • persisted in wandering in the fields and lanes that lay in the nearest
  • proximity to the road; and, whether she talked to me or read the book she
  • carried in her hand, she kept continually pausing to look round her, or
  • gaze up the road to see if anyone was coming; and if a horseman trotted
  • by, I could tell by her unqualified abuse of the poor equestrian, whoever
  • he might be, that she hated him _because_ he was not Mr. Hatfield.
  • ‘Surely,’ thought I, ‘she is not so indifferent to him as she believes
  • herself to be, or would have others to believe her; and her mother’s
  • anxiety is not so wholly causeless as she affirms.’
  • Three days passed away, and he did not make his appearance. On the
  • afternoon of the fourth, as we were walking beside the park-palings in
  • the memorable field, each furnished with a book (for I always took care
  • to provide myself with something to be doing when she did not require me
  • to talk), she suddenly interrupted my studies by exclaiming—
  • ‘Oh, Miss Grey! do be so kind as to go and see Mark Wood, and take his
  • wife half-a-crown from me—I should have given or sent it a week ago, but
  • quite forgot. There!’ said she, throwing me her purse, and speaking very
  • fast—‘Never mind getting it out now, but take the purse and give them
  • what you like; I would go with you, but I want to finish this volume.
  • I’ll come and meet you when I’ve done it. Be quick, will you—and—oh,
  • wait; hadn’t you better read to him a bit? Run to the house and get some
  • sort of a good book. Anything will do.’
  • I did as I was desired; but, suspecting something from her hurried manner
  • and the suddenness of the request, I just glanced back before I quitted
  • the field, and there was Mr. Hatfield about to enter at the gate below.
  • By sending me to the house for a book, she had just prevented my meeting
  • him on the road.
  • ‘Never mind!’ thought I, ‘there’ll be no great harm done. Poor Mark will
  • be glad of the half-crown, and perhaps of the good book too; and if the
  • Rector does steal Miss Rosalie’s heart, it will only humble her pride a
  • little; and if they do get married at last, it will only save her from a
  • worse fate; and she will be quite a good enough partner for him, and he
  • for her.’
  • Mark Wood was the consumptive labourer whom I mentioned before. He was
  • now rapidly wearing away. Miss Murray, by her liberality, obtained
  • literally the blessing of him that was ready to perish; for though the
  • half-crown could be of very little service to him, he was glad of it for
  • the sake of his wife and children, so soon to be widowed and fatherless.
  • After I had sat a few minutes, and read a little for the comfort and
  • edification of himself and his afflicted wife, I left them; but I had not
  • proceeded fifty yards before I encountered Mr. Weston, apparently on his
  • way to the same abode. He greeted me in his usual quiet, unaffected way,
  • stopped to inquire about the condition of the sick man and his family,
  • and with a sort of unconscious, brotherly disregard to ceremony took from
  • my hand the book out of which I had been reading, turned over its pages,
  • made a few brief but very sensible remarks, and restored it; then told me
  • about some poor sufferer he had just been visiting, talked a little about
  • Nancy Brown, made a few observations upon my little rough friend the
  • terrier, that was frisking at his feet, and finally upon the beauty of
  • the weather, and departed.
  • I have omitted to give a detail of his words, from a notion that they
  • would not interest the reader as they did me, and not because I have
  • forgotten them. No; I remember them well; for I thought them over and
  • over again in the course of that day and many succeeding ones, I know not
  • how often; and recalled every intonation of his deep, clear voice, every
  • flash of his quick, brown eye, and every gleam of his pleasant, but too
  • transient smile. Such a confession will look very absurd, I fear: but no
  • matter: I have written it: and they that read it will not know the
  • writer.
  • While I was walking along, happy within, and pleased with all around,
  • Miss Murray came hastening to meet me; her buoyant step, flushed cheek,
  • and radiant smiles showing that she, too, was happy, in her own way.
  • Running up to me, she put her arm through mine, and without waiting to
  • recover breath, began—‘Now, Miss Grey, think yourself highly honoured,
  • for I’m come to tell you my news before I’ve breathed a word of it to
  • anyone else.’
  • ‘Well, what is it?’
  • ‘Oh, _such_ news! In the first place, you must know that Mr. Hatfield
  • came upon me just after you were gone. I was in such a way for fear papa
  • or mamma should see him; but you know I couldn’t call you back again, and
  • so!—oh, dear! I can’t tell you all about it now, for there’s Matilda, I
  • see, in the park, and I must go and open my budget to her. But, however,
  • Hatfield was most uncommonly audacious, unspeakably complimentary, and
  • unprecedentedly tender—tried to be so, at least—he didn’t succeed very
  • well in _that_, because it’s not his vein. I’ll tell you all he said
  • another time.’
  • ‘But what did _you_ say—I’m more interested in that?’
  • ‘I’ll tell you that, too, at some future period. I happened to be in a
  • very good humour just then; but, though I was complaisant and gracious
  • enough, I took care not to compromise myself in any possible way. But,
  • however, the conceited wretch chose to interpret my amiability of temper
  • his own way, and at length presumed upon my indulgence so far—what do you
  • think?—he actually made me an offer!’
  • ‘And you—’
  • ‘I proudly drew myself up, and with the greatest coolness expressed my
  • astonishment at such an occurrence, and hoped he had seen nothing in my
  • conduct to justify his expectations. You should have _seen_ how his
  • countenance fell! He went perfectly white in the face. I assured him
  • that I esteemed him and all that, but could not possibly accede to his
  • proposals; and if I did, papa and mamma could never be brought to give
  • their consent.’
  • ‘“But if they could,” said he, “would yours be wanting?”
  • ‘“Certainly, Mr. Hatfield,” I replied, with a cool decision which quelled
  • all hope at once. Oh, if you had seen how dreadfully mortified he
  • was—how crushed to the earth by his disappointment! really, I almost
  • pitied him myself.
  • ‘One more desperate attempt, however, he made. After a silence of
  • considerable duration, during which he struggled to be calm, and I to be
  • grave—for I felt a strong propensity to laugh—which would have ruined
  • all—he said, with the ghost of a smile—“But tell me plainly, Miss Murray,
  • if I had the wealth of Sir Hugh Meltham, or the prospects of his eldest
  • son, would you still refuse me? Answer me truly, upon your honour.”
  • ‘“Certainly,” said I. “That would make no difference whatever.”
  • ‘It was a great lie, but he looked so confident in his own attractions
  • still, that I determined not to leave him one stone upon another. He
  • looked me full in the face; but I kept my countenance so well that he
  • could not imagine I was saying anything more than the actual truth.
  • ‘“Then it’s all over, I suppose,” he said, looking as if he could have
  • died on the spot with vexation and the intensity of his despair. But he
  • was angry as well as disappointed. There was he, suffering so
  • unspeakably, and there was I, the pitiless cause of it all, so utterly
  • impenetrable to all the artillery of his looks and words, so calmly cold
  • and proud, he could not but feel some resentment; and with singular
  • bitterness he began—“I certainly did not expect this, Miss Murray. I
  • might say something about your past conduct, and the hopes you have led
  • me to foster, but I forbear, on condition—”
  • ‘“No conditions, Mr. Hatfield!” said I, now truly indignant at his
  • insolence.
  • ‘“Then let me beg it as a favour,” he replied, lowering his voice at
  • once, and taking a humbler tone: “let me entreat that you will not
  • mention this affair to anyone whatever. If you will keep silence about
  • it, there need be no unpleasantness on either side—nothing, I mean,
  • beyond what is quite unavoidable: for my own feelings I will endeavour to
  • keep to myself, if I cannot annihilate them—I will try to forgive, if I
  • cannot forget the cause of my sufferings. I will not suppose, Miss
  • Murray, that you know how deeply you have injured me. I would not have
  • you aware of it; but if, in addition to the injury you have already done
  • me—pardon me, but, whether innocently or not, you _have_ done it—and if
  • you add to it by giving publicity to this unfortunate affair, or naming
  • it _at all_, you will find that I too can speak, and though you scorned
  • my love, you will hardly scorn my—”
  • ‘He stopped, but he bit his bloodless lip, and looked so terribly fierce
  • that I was quite frightened. However, my pride upheld me still, and I
  • answered disdainfully; “I do not know what motive you suppose I could
  • have for naming it to anyone, Mr. Hatfield; but if I were disposed to do
  • so, you would not deter me by threats; and it is scarcely the part of a
  • gentleman to attempt it.”
  • ‘“Pardon me, Miss Murray,” said he, “I have loved you so intensely—I do
  • still adore you so deeply, that I would not willingly offend you; but
  • though I never have loved, and never _can_ love any woman as I have loved
  • you, it is equally certain that I never was so ill-treated by any. On
  • the contrary, I have always found your sex the kindest and most tender
  • and obliging of God’s creation, till now.” (Think of the conceited
  • fellow saying that!) “And the novelty and harshness of the lesson you
  • have taught me to-day, and the bitterness of being disappointed in the
  • only quarter on which the happiness of my life depended, must excuse any
  • appearance of asperity. If my presence is disagreeable to you, Miss
  • Murray,” he said (for I was looking about me to show how little I cared
  • for him, so he thought I was tired of him, I suppose)—“if my presence is
  • disagreeable to you, Miss Murray, you have only to promise me the favour
  • I named, and I will relieve you at once. There are many ladies—some even
  • in this parish—who would be delighted to accept what you have so
  • scornfully trampled under your feet. They would be naturally inclined to
  • hate one whose surpassing loveliness has so completely estranged my heart
  • from them and blinded me to their attractions; and a single hint of the
  • truth from me to one of these would be sufficient to raise such a talk
  • against you as would seriously injure your prospects, and diminish your
  • chance of success with any other gentleman you or your mamma might design
  • to entangle.”
  • ‘“What do your mean, sir?” said I, ready to stamp with passion.
  • ‘“I mean that this affair from beginning to end appears to me like a case
  • of arrant flirtation, to say the least of it—such a case as you would
  • find it rather inconvenient to have blazoned through the world:
  • especially with the additions and exaggerations of your female rivals,
  • who would be too glad to publish the matter, if I only gave them a handle
  • to it. But I promise you, on the faith of a gentleman, that no word or
  • syllable that could tend to your prejudice shall ever escape my lips,
  • provided you will—”
  • ‘“Well, well, I won’t mention it,” said I. “You may rely upon my
  • silence, if that can afford you any consolation.”
  • ‘“You promise it?”
  • ‘“Yes,” I answered; for I wanted to get rid of him now.
  • ‘“Farewell, then!” said he, in a most doleful, heart-sick tone; and with
  • a look where pride vainly struggled against despair, he turned and went
  • away: longing, no doubt, to get home, that he might shut himself up in
  • his study and cry—if he doesn’t burst into tears before he gets there.’
  • ‘But you have broken your promise already,’ said I, truly horrified at
  • her perfidy.
  • ‘Oh! it’s only to you; I know you won’t repeat it.’
  • ‘Certainly, I shall not: but you say you are going to tell your sister;
  • and she will tell your brothers when they come home, and Brown
  • immediately, if you do not tell her yourself; and Brown will blazon it,
  • or be the means of blazoning it, throughout the country.’
  • ‘No, indeed, she won’t. We shall not tell her at all, unless it be under
  • the promise of the strictest secrecy.’
  • ‘But how can you expect her to keep her promises better than her more
  • enlightened mistress?’
  • ‘Well, well, she shan’t hear it then,’ said Miss Murray, somewhat
  • snappishly.
  • ‘But you will tell your mamma, of course,’ pursued I; ‘and she will tell
  • your papa.’
  • ‘Of course I shall tell mamma—that is the very thing that pleases me so
  • much. I shall now be able to convince her how mistaken she was in her
  • fears about me.’
  • ‘Oh, _that’s_ it, is it? I was wondering what it was that delighted you
  • so much.’
  • ‘Yes; and another thing is, that I’ve humbled Mr. Hatfield so charmingly;
  • and another—why, you must allow me some share of female vanity: I don’t
  • pretend to be without that most essential attribute of our sex—and if you
  • had seen poor Hatfield’s intense eagerness in making his ardent
  • declaration and his flattering proposal, and his agony of mind, that no
  • effort of pride could conceal, on being refused, you would have allowed I
  • had some cause to be gratified.’
  • ‘The greater his agony, I should think, the less your cause for
  • gratification.’
  • ‘Oh, nonsense!’ cried the young lady, shaking herself with vexation.
  • ‘You either can’t understand me, or you won’t. If I had not confidence
  • in your magnanimity, I should think you envied me. But you will,
  • perhaps, comprehend this cause of pleasure—which is as great as
  • any—namely, that I am delighted with myself for my prudence, my
  • self-command, my heartlessness, if you please. I was not a bit taken by
  • surprise, not a bit confused, or awkward, or foolish; I just acted and
  • spoke as I ought to have done, and was completely my own mistress
  • throughout. And here was a man, decidedly good-looking—Jane and Susan
  • Green call him bewitchingly handsome--I suppose they’re two of the ladies
  • he pretends would be so glad to have him; but, however, he was certainly
  • a very clever, witty, agreeable companion—not what you call clever, but
  • just enough to make him entertaining; and a man one needn’t be ashamed of
  • anywhere, and would not soon grow tired of; and to confess the truth, I
  • rather liked him—better even, of late, than Harry Meltham—and he
  • evidently idolised me; and yet, though he came upon me all alone and
  • unprepared, I had the wisdom, and the pride, and the strength to refuse
  • him—and so scornfully and coolly as I did: I have good reason to be proud
  • of that.’
  • ‘And are you equally proud of having told him that his having the wealth
  • of Sir Hugh Meltham would make no difference to you, when that was not
  • the case; and of having promised to tell no one of his misadventure,
  • apparently without the slightest intention of keeping your promise?’
  • ‘Of course! what else could I do? You would not have had me—but I see,
  • Miss Grey, you’re not in a good temper. Here’s Matilda; I’ll see what
  • she and mamma have to say about it.’
  • She left me, offended at my want of sympathy, and thinking, no doubt,
  • that I envied her. I did not—at least, I firmly believed I did not. I
  • was sorry for her; I was amazed, disgusted at her heartless vanity; I
  • wondered why so much beauty should be given to those who made so bad a
  • use of it, and denied to some who would make it a benefit to both
  • themselves and others.
  • But, God knows best, I concluded. There are, I suppose, some men as
  • vain, as selfish, and as heartless as she is, and, perhaps, such women
  • may be useful to punish them.
  • CHAPTER XV—THE WALK
  • ‘Oh, dear! I wish Hatfield had not been so precipitate!’ said Rosalie
  • next day at four P.M., as, with a portentous yawn, she laid down her
  • worsted-work and looked listlessly towards the window. ‘There’s no
  • inducement to go out now; and nothing to look forward to. The days will
  • be so long and dull when there are no parties to enliven them; and there
  • are none this week, or next either, that I know of.’
  • ‘Pity you were so cross to him,’ observed Matilda, to whom this
  • lamentation was addressed. ‘He’ll never come again: and I suspect you
  • liked him after all. I hoped you would have taken him for your beau, and
  • left dear Harry to me.’
  • ‘Humph! my beau must be an Adonis indeed, Matilda, the admired of all
  • beholders, if I am to be contented with him alone. I’m sorry to lose
  • Hatfield, I confess; but the first decent man, or number of men, that
  • come to supply his place, will be more than welcome. It’s Sunday
  • to-morrow—I do wonder how he’ll look, and whether he’ll be able to go
  • through the service. Most likely he’ll pretend he’s got a cold, and make
  • Mr. Weston do it all.’
  • ‘Not he!’ exclaimed Matilda, somewhat contemptuously. ‘Fool as he is,
  • he’s not so soft as that comes to.’
  • Her sister was slightly offended; but the event proved Matilda was right:
  • the disappointed lover performed his pastoral duties as usual. Rosalie,
  • indeed, affirmed he looked very pale and dejected: he might be a little
  • paler; but the difference, if any, was scarcely perceptible. As for his
  • dejection, I certainly did not hear his laugh ringing from the vestry as
  • usual, nor his voice loud in hilarious discourse; though I did hear it
  • uplifted in rating the sexton in a manner that made the congregation
  • stare; and, in his transits to and from the pulpit and the
  • communion-table, there was more of solemn pomp, and less of that
  • irreverent, self-confident, or rather self-delighted imperiousness with
  • which he usually swept along—that air that seemed to say, ‘You all
  • reverence and adore me, I know; but if anyone does not, I defy him to the
  • teeth!’ But the most remarkable change was, that he never once suffered
  • his eyes to wander in the direction of Mr. Murray’s pew, and did not
  • leave the church till we were gone.
  • Mr. Hatfield had doubtless received a very severe blow; but his pride
  • impelled him to use every effort to conceal the effects of it. He had
  • been disappointed in his certain hope of obtaining not only a beautiful,
  • and, to him, highly attractive wife, but one whose rank and fortune might
  • give brilliance to far inferior charms: he was likewise, no doubt,
  • intensely mortified by his repulse, and deeply offended at the conduct of
  • Miss Murray throughout. It would have given him no little consolation to
  • have known how disappointed she was to find him apparently so little
  • moved, and to see that he was able to refrain from casting a single
  • glance at her throughout both services; though, she declared, it showed
  • he was thinking of her all the time, or his eyes would have fallen upon
  • her, if it were only by chance: but if they had so chanced to fall, she
  • would have affirmed it was because they could not resist the attraction.
  • It might have pleased him, too, in some degree, to have seen how dull and
  • dissatisfied she was throughout that week (the greater part of it, at
  • least), for lack of her usual source of excitement; and how often she
  • regretted having ‘used him up so soon,’ like a child that, having
  • devoured its plumcake too hastily, sits sucking its fingers, and vainly
  • lamenting its greediness.
  • At length I was called upon, one fine morning, to accompany her in a walk
  • to the village. Ostensibly she went to get some shades of Berlin wool,
  • at a tolerably respectable shop that was chiefly supported by the ladies
  • of the vicinity: really—I trust there is no breach of charity in
  • supposing that she went with the idea of meeting either with the Rector
  • himself, or some other admirer by the way; for as we went along, she kept
  • wondering ‘what Hatfield would do or say, if we met him,’ &c. &c.; as we
  • passed Mr. Green’s park-gates, she ‘wondered whether he was at home—great
  • stupid blockhead’; as Lady Meltham’s carriage passed us, she ‘wondered
  • what Mr. Harry was doing this fine day’; and then began to abuse his
  • elder brother for being ‘such a fool as to get married and go and live in
  • London.’
  • ‘Why,’ said I, ‘I thought you wanted to live in London yourself.’
  • ‘Yes, because it’s so dull here: but then he makes it still duller by
  • taking himself off: and if he were not married I might have him instead
  • of that odious Sir Thomas.’
  • Then, observing the prints of a horse’s feet on the somewhat miry road,
  • she ‘wondered whether it was a gentleman’s horse,’ and finally concluded
  • it was, for the impressions were too small to have been made by a ‘great
  • clumsy cart-horse’; and then she ‘wondered who the rider could be,’ and
  • whether we should meet him coming back, for she was sure he had only
  • passed that morning; and lastly, when we entered the village and saw only
  • a few of its humble inhabitants moving about, she ‘wondered why the
  • stupid people couldn’t keep in their houses; she was sure she didn’t want
  • to see their ugly faces, and dirty, vulgar clothes—it wasn’t for that she
  • came to Horton!’
  • Amid all this, I confess, I wondered, too, in secret, whether we should
  • meet, or catch a glimpse of somebody else; and as we passed his lodgings,
  • I even went so far as to wonder whether he was at the window. On
  • entering the shop, Miss Murray desired me to stand in the doorway while
  • she transacted her business, and tell her if anyone passed. But alas!
  • there was no one visible besides the villagers, except Jane and Susan
  • Green coming down the single street, apparently returning from a walk.
  • ‘Stupid things!’ muttered she, as she came out after having concluded her
  • bargain. ‘Why couldn’t they have their dolt of a brother with them? even
  • he would be better than nothing.’
  • She greeted them, however, with a cheerful smile, and protestations of
  • pleasure at the happy meeting equal to their own. They placed themselves
  • one on each side of her, and all three walked away chatting and laughing
  • as young ladies do when they get together, if they be but on tolerably
  • intimate terms. But I, feeling myself to be one too many, left them to
  • their merriment and lagged behind, as usual on such occasions: I had no
  • relish for walking beside Miss Green or Miss Susan like one deaf and
  • dumb, who could neither speak nor be spoken to.
  • But this time I was not long alone. It struck me, first, as very odd,
  • that just as I was thinking about Mr. Weston he should come up and accost
  • me; but afterwards, on due reflection, I thought there was nothing odd
  • about it, unless it were the fact of his speaking to me; for on such a
  • morning and so near his own abode, it was natural enough that he should
  • be about; and as for my thinking of him, I had been doing that, with
  • little intermission, ever since we set out on our journey; so there was
  • nothing remarkable in that.
  • ‘You are alone again, Miss Grey,’ said he.
  • ‘Yes.’
  • ‘What kind of people are those ladies—the Misses Green?’
  • ‘I really don’t know.’
  • ‘That’s strange—when you live so near and see them so often!’
  • ‘Well, I suppose they are lively, good-tempered girls; but I imagine you
  • must know them better than I do, yourself, for I never exchanged a word
  • with either of them.’
  • ‘Indeed? They don’t strike me as being particularly reserved.’
  • ‘Very likely they are not so to people of their own class; but they
  • consider themselves as moving in quite a different sphere from me!’
  • He made no reply to this: but after a short pause, he said,—‘I suppose
  • it’s these things, Miss Grey, that make you think you could not live
  • without a home?’
  • ‘Not exactly. The fact is I am too socially disposed to be able to live
  • contentedly without a friend; and as the only friends I have, or am
  • likely to have, are at home, if it—or rather, if they were gone—I will
  • not say I could not live—but I would rather not live in such a desolate
  • world.’
  • ‘But why do you say the only friends you are likely to have? Are you so
  • unsociable that you cannot make friends?’
  • ‘No, but I never made one yet; and in my present position there is no
  • possibility of doing so, or even of forming a common acquaintance. The
  • fault may be partly in myself, but I hope not altogether.’
  • ‘The fault is partly in society, and partly, I should think, in your
  • immediate neighbours: and partly, too, in yourself; for many ladies, in
  • your position, would make themselves be noticed and accounted of. But
  • your pupils should be companions for you in some degree; they cannot be
  • many years younger than yourself.’
  • ‘Oh, yes, they are good company sometimes; but I cannot call them
  • friends, nor would they think of bestowing such a name on me—they have
  • other companions better suited to their tastes.’
  • ‘Perhaps you are too wise for them. How do you amuse yourself when
  • alone—do you read much?’
  • ‘Reading is my favourite occupation, when I have leisure for it and books
  • to read.’
  • From speaking of books in general, he passed to different books in
  • particular, and proceeded by rapid transitions from topic to topic, till
  • several matters, both of taste and opinion, had been discussed
  • considerably within the space of half an hour, but without the
  • embellishment of many observations from himself; he being evidently less
  • bent upon communicating his own thoughts and predilections, than on
  • discovering mine. He had not the tact, or the art, to effect such a
  • purpose by skilfully drawing out my sentiments or ideas through the real
  • or apparent statement of his own, or leading the conversation by
  • imperceptible gradations to such topics as he wished to advert to: but
  • such gentle abruptness, and such single-minded straightforwardness, could
  • not possibly offend me.
  • ‘And why should he interest himself at all in my moral and intellectual
  • capacities: what is it to him what I think or feel?’ I asked myself. And
  • my heart throbbed in answer to the question.
  • But Jane and Susan Green soon reached their home. As they stood
  • parleying at the park-gates, attempting to persuade Miss Murray to come
  • in, I wished Mr. Weston would go, that she might not see him with me when
  • she turned round; but, unfortunately, his business, which was to pay one
  • more visit to poor Mark Wood, led him to pursue the same path as we did,
  • till nearly the close of our journey. When, however, he saw that Rosalie
  • had taken leave of her friends and I was about to join her, he would have
  • left me and passed on at a quicker pace; but, as he civilly lifted his
  • hat in passing her, to my surprise, instead of returning the salute with
  • a stiff, ungracious bow, she accosted him with one of her sweetest
  • smiles, and, walking by his side, began to talk to him with all
  • imaginable cheerfulness and affability; and so we proceeded all three
  • together.
  • After a short pause in the conversation, Mr. Weston made some remark
  • addressed particularly to me, as referring to something we had been
  • talking of before; but before I could answer, Miss Murray replied to the
  • observation and enlarged upon it: he rejoined; and, from thence to the
  • close of the interview, she engrossed him entirely to herself. It might
  • be partly owing to my own stupidity, my want of tact and assurance: but I
  • felt myself wronged: I trembled with apprehension; and I listened with
  • envy to her easy, rapid flow of utterance, and saw with anxiety the
  • bright smile with which she looked into his face from time to time: for
  • she was walking a little in advance, for the purpose (as I judged) of
  • being seen as well as heard. If her conversation was light and trivial,
  • it was amusing, and she was never at a loss for something to say, or for
  • suitable words to express it in. There was nothing pert or flippant in
  • her manner now, as when she walked with Mr. Hatfield, there was only a
  • gentle, playful kind of vivacity, which I thought must be peculiarly
  • pleasing to a man of Mr. Weston’s disposition and temperament.
  • When he was gone she began to laugh, and muttered to herself, ‘I thought
  • I could do it!’
  • ‘Do what?’ I asked.
  • ‘Fix that man.’
  • ‘What in the world do you mean?’
  • ‘I mean that he will go home and dream of me. I have shot him through
  • the heart!’
  • ‘How do you know?’
  • ‘By many infallible proofs: more especially the look he gave me when he
  • went away. It was not an impudent look—I exonerate him from that—it was
  • a look of reverential, tender adoration. Ha, ha! he’s not quite such a
  • stupid blockhead as I thought him!’
  • I made no answer, for my heart was in my throat, or something like it,
  • and I could not trust myself to speak. ‘O God, avert it!’ I cried,
  • internally—‘for his sake, not for mine!’
  • Miss Murray made several trivial observations as we passed up the park,
  • to which (in spite of my reluctance to let one glimpse of my feelings
  • appear) I could only answer by monosyllables. Whether she intended to
  • torment me, or merely to amuse herself, I could not tell—and did not much
  • care; but I thought of the poor man and his one lamb, and the rich man
  • with his thousand flocks; and I dreaded I knew not what for Mr. Weston,
  • independently of my own blighted hopes.
  • Right glad was I to get into the house, and find myself alone once more
  • in my own room. My first impulse was to sink into the chair beside the
  • bed; and laying my head on the pillow, to seek relief in a passionate
  • burst of tears: there was an imperative craving for such an indulgence;
  • but, alas! I must restrain and swallow back my feelings still: there was
  • the bell—the odious bell for the schoolroom dinner; and I must go down
  • with a calm face, and smile, and laugh, and talk nonsense—yes, and eat,
  • too, if possible, as if all was right, and I was just returned from a
  • pleasant walk.
  • CHAPTER XVI—THE SUBSTITUTION
  • Next Sunday was one of the gloomiest of April days—a day of thick, dark
  • clouds, and heavy showers. None of the Murrays were disposed to attend
  • church in the afternoon, excepting Rosalie: she was bent upon going as
  • usual; so she ordered the carriage, and I went with her: nothing loth, of
  • course, for at church I might look without fear of scorn or censure upon
  • a form and face more pleasing to me than the most beautiful of God’s
  • creations; I might listen without disturbance to a voice more charming
  • than the sweetest music to my ears; I might seem to hold communion with
  • that soul in which I felt so deeply interested, and imbibe its purest
  • thoughts and holiest aspirations, with no alloy to such felicity except
  • the secret reproaches of my conscience, which would too often whisper
  • that I was deceiving my own self, and mocking God with the service of a
  • heart more bent upon the creature than the Creator.
  • Sometimes, such thoughts would give me trouble enough; but sometimes I
  • could quiet them with thinking—it is not the man, it is his goodness that
  • I love. ‘Whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely,
  • whatsoever things are honest and of good report, think on these things.’
  • We do well to worship God in His works; and I know none of them in which
  • so many of His attributes—so much of His own spirit shines, as in this
  • His faithful servant; whom to know and not to appreciate, were obtuse
  • insensibility in me, who have so little else to occupy my heart.
  • Almost immediately after the conclusion of the service, Miss Murray left
  • the church. We had to stand in the porch, for it was raining, and the
  • carriage was not yet come. I wondered at her coming forth so hastily,
  • for neither young Meltham nor Squire Green was there; but I soon found it
  • was to secure an interview with Mr. Weston as he came out, which he
  • presently did. Having saluted us both, he would have passed on, but she
  • detained him; first with observations upon the disagreeable weather, and
  • then with asking if he would be so kind as to come some time to-morrow to
  • see the granddaughter of the old woman who kept the porter’s lodge, for
  • the girl was ill of a fever, and wished to see him. He promised to do
  • so.
  • ‘And at what time will you be most likely to come, Mr. Weston? The old
  • woman will like to know when to expect you—you know such people think
  • more about having their cottages in order when decent people come to see
  • them than we are apt to suppose.’
  • Here was a wonderful instance of consideration from the thoughtless Miss
  • Murray. Mr. Weston named an hour in the morning at which he would
  • endeavour, to be there. By this time the carriage was ready, and the
  • footman was waiting, with an open umbrella, to escort Miss Murray through
  • the churchyard. I was about to follow; but Mr. Weston had an umbrella
  • too, and offered me the benefit of its shelter, for it was raining
  • heavily.
  • ‘No, thank you, I don’t mind the rain,’ I said. I always lacked common
  • sense when taken by surprise.
  • ‘But you don’t _like_ it, I suppose?—an umbrella will do you no harm at
  • any rate,’ he replied, with a smile that showed he was not offended; as a
  • man of worse temper or less penetration would have been at such a refusal
  • of his aid. I could not deny the truth of his assertion, and so went
  • with him to the carriage; he even offered me his hand on getting in: an
  • unnecessary piece of civility, but I accepted that too, for fear of
  • giving offence. One glance he gave, one little smile at parting—it was
  • but for a moment; but therein I read, or thought I read, a meaning that
  • kindled in my heart a brighter flame of hope than had ever yet arisen.
  • ‘I would have sent the footman back for you, Miss Grey, if you’d waited a
  • moment—you needn’t have taken Mr. Weston’s umbrella,’ observed Rosalie,
  • with a very unamiable cloud upon her pretty face.
  • ‘I would have come without an umbrella, but Mr. Weston offered me the
  • benefit of his, and I could not have refused it more than I did without
  • offending him,’ replied I, smiling placidly; for my inward happiness made
  • that amusing, which would have wounded me at another time.
  • The carriage was now in motion. Miss Murray bent forwards, and looked
  • out of the window as we were passing Mr. Weston. He was pacing homewards
  • along the causeway, and did not turn his head.
  • ‘Stupid ass!’ cried she, throwing herself back again in the seat. ‘You
  • don’t know what you’ve lost by not looking this way!’
  • ‘What has he lost?’
  • ‘A bow from me, that would have raised him to the seventh heaven!’
  • I made no answer. I saw she was out of humour, and I derived a secret
  • gratification from the fact, not that she was vexed, but that she thought
  • she had reason to be so. It made me think my hopes were not entirely the
  • offspring of my wishes and imagination.
  • ‘I mean to take up Mr. Weston instead of Mr. Hatfield,’ said my
  • companion, after a short pause, resuming something of her usual
  • cheerfulness. ‘The ball at Ashby Park takes place on Tuesday, you know;
  • and mamma thinks it very likely that Sir Thomas will propose to me then:
  • such things are often done in the privacy of the ball-room, when
  • gentlemen are most easily ensnared, and ladies most enchanting. But if I
  • am to be married so soon, I must make the best of the present time: I am
  • determined Hatfield shall not be the only man who shall lay his heart at
  • my feet, and implore me to accept the worthless gift in vain.’
  • ‘If you mean Mr. Weston to be one of your victims,’ said I, with affected
  • indifference, ‘you will have to make such overtures yourself that you
  • will find it difficult to draw back when he asks you to fulfil the
  • expectations you have raised.’
  • ‘I don’t suppose he will ask me to marry him, nor should I desire it:
  • that would be rather too much presumption! but I intend him to feel my
  • power. He has felt it already, indeed: but he shall _acknowledge_ it
  • too; and what visionary hopes he may have, he must keep to himself, and
  • only amuse me with the result of them—for a time.’
  • ‘Oh! that some kind spirit would whisper those words in his ear,’ I
  • inwardly exclaimed. I was far too indignant to hazard a reply to her
  • observation aloud; and nothing more was said about Mr. Weston that day,
  • by me or in my hearing. But next morning, soon after breakfast, Miss
  • Murray came into the schoolroom, where her sister was employed at her
  • studies, or rather her lessons, for studies they were not, and said,
  • ‘Matilda, I want you to take a walk with me about eleven o’clock.’
  • ‘Oh, I can’t, Rosalie! I have to give orders about my new bridle and
  • saddle-cloth, and speak to the rat-catcher about his dogs: Miss Grey must
  • go with you.’
  • ‘No, I want you,’ said Rosalie; and calling her sister to the window, she
  • whispered an explanation in her ear; upon which the latter consented to
  • go.
  • I remembered that eleven was the hour at which Mr. Weston proposed to
  • come to the porter’s lodge; and remembering that, I beheld the whole
  • contrivance. Accordingly, at dinner, I was entertained with a long
  • account of how Mr. Weston had overtaken them as they were walking along
  • the road; and how they had had a long walk and talk with him, and really
  • found him quite an agreeable companion; and how he must have been, and
  • evidently was, delighted with them and their amazing condescension, &c.
  • &c.
  • CHAPTER XVII—CONFESSIONS
  • As I am in the way of confessions I may as well acknowledge that, about
  • this time, I paid more attention to dress than ever I had done before.
  • This is not saying much—for hitherto I had been a little neglectful in
  • that particular; but now, also, it was no uncommon thing to spend as much
  • as two minutes in the contemplation of my own image in the glass; though
  • I never could derive any consolation from such a study. I could discover
  • no beauty in those marked features, that pale hollow cheek, and ordinary
  • dark brown hair; there might be intellect in the forehead, there might be
  • expression in the dark grey eyes, but what of that?—a low Grecian brow,
  • and large black eyes devoid of sentiment would be esteemed far
  • preferable. It is foolish to wish for beauty. Sensible people never
  • either desire it for themselves or care about it in others. If the mind
  • be but well cultivated, and the heart well disposed, no one ever cares
  • for the exterior. So said the teachers of our childhood; and so say we
  • to the children of the present day. All very judicious and proper, no
  • doubt; but are such assertions supported by actual experience?
  • We are naturally disposed to love what gives us pleasure, and what more
  • pleasing than a beautiful face—when we know no harm of the possessor at
  • least? A little girl loves her bird—Why? Because it lives and feels;
  • because it is helpless and harmless? A toad, likewise, lives and feels,
  • and is equally helpless and harmless; but though she would not hurt a
  • toad, she cannot love it like the bird, with its graceful form, soft
  • feathers, and bright, speaking eyes. If a woman is fair and amiable, she
  • is praised for both qualities, but especially the former, by the bulk of
  • mankind: if, on the other hand, she is disagreeable in person and
  • character, her plainness is commonly inveighed against as her greatest
  • crime, because, to common observers, it gives the greatest offence;
  • while, if she is plain and good, provided she is a person of retired
  • manners and secluded life, no one ever knows of her goodness, except her
  • immediate connections. Others, on the contrary, are disposed to form
  • unfavourable opinions of her mind, and disposition, if it be but to
  • excuse themselves for their instinctive dislike of one so unfavoured by
  • nature; and _visa versâ_ with her whose angel form conceals a vicious
  • heart, or sheds a false, deceitful charm over defects and foibles that
  • would not be tolerated in another. They that have beauty, let them be
  • thankful for it, and make a good use of it, like any other talent; they
  • that have it not, let them console themselves, and do the best they can
  • without it: certainly, though liable to be over-estimated, it is a gift
  • of God, and not to be despised. Many will feel this who have felt that
  • they could love, and whose hearts tell them that they are worthy to be
  • loved again; while yet they are debarred, by the lack of this or some
  • such seeming trifle, from giving and receiving that happiness they seem
  • almost made to feel and to impart. As well might the humble glowworm
  • despise that power of giving light without which the roving fly might
  • pass her and repass her a thousand times, and never rest beside her: she
  • might hear her winged darling buzzing over and around her; he vainly
  • seeking her, she longing to be found, but with no power to make her
  • presence known, no voice to call him, no wings to follow his flight;—the
  • fly must seek another mate, the worm must live and die alone.
  • Such were some of my reflections about this period. I might go on
  • prosing more and more, I might dive much deeper, and disclose other
  • thoughts, propose questions the reader might be puzzled to answer, and
  • deduce arguments that might startle his prejudices, or, perhaps, provoke
  • his ridicule, because he could not comprehend them; but I forbear.
  • Now, therefore, let us return to Miss Murray. She accompanied her mamma
  • to the ball on Tuesday; of course splendidly attired, and delighted with
  • her prospects and her charms. As Ashby Park was nearly ten miles distant
  • from Horton Lodge, they had to set out pretty early, and I intended to
  • have spent the evening with Nancy Brown, whom I had not seen for a long
  • time; but my kind pupil took care I should spend it neither there nor
  • anywhere else beyond the limits of the schoolroom, by giving me a piece
  • of music to copy, which kept me closely occupied till bed-time. About
  • eleven next morning, as soon as she had left her room, she came to tell
  • me her news. Sir Thomas had indeed proposed to her at the ball; an event
  • which reflected great credit on her mamma’s sagacity, if not upon her
  • skill in contrivance. I rather incline to the belief that she had first
  • laid her plans, and then predicted their success. The offer had been
  • accepted, of course, and the bridegroom elect was coming that day to
  • settle matters with Mr. Murray.
  • Rosalie was pleased with the thoughts of becoming mistress of Ashby Park;
  • she was elated with the prospect of the bridal ceremony and its attendant
  • splendour and éclat, the honeymoon spent abroad, and the subsequent
  • gaieties she expected to enjoy in London and elsewhere; she appeared
  • pretty well pleased too, for the time being, with Sir Thomas himself,
  • because she had so lately seen him, danced with him, and been flattered
  • by him; but, after all, she seemed to shrink from the idea of being so
  • soon united: she wished the ceremony to be delayed some months, at least;
  • and I wished it too. It seemed a horrible thing to hurry on the
  • inauspicious match, and not to give the poor creature time to think and
  • reason on the irrevocable step she was about to take. I made no
  • pretension to ‘a mother’s watchful, anxious care,’ but I was amazed and
  • horrified at Mrs. Murray’s heartlessness, or want of thought for the real
  • good of her child; and by my unheeded warnings and exhortations, I vainly
  • strove to remedy the evil. Miss Murray only laughed at what I said; and
  • I soon found that her reluctance to an immediate union arose chiefly from
  • a desire to do what execution she could among the young gentlemen of her
  • acquaintance, before she was incapacitated from further mischief of the
  • kind. It was for this cause that, before confiding to me the secret of
  • her engagement, she had extracted a promise that I would not mention a
  • word on the subject to any one. And when I saw this, and when I beheld
  • her plunge more recklessly than ever into the depths of heartless
  • coquetry, I had no more pity for her. ‘Come what will,’ I thought, ‘she
  • deserves it. Sir Thomas cannot be too bad for her; and the sooner she is
  • incapacitated from deceiving and injuring others the better.’
  • The wedding was fixed for the first of June. Between that and the
  • critical ball was little more than six weeks; but, with Rosalie’s
  • accomplished skill and resolute exertion, much might be done, even within
  • that period; especially as Sir Thomas spent most of the interim in
  • London; whither he went up, it was said, to settle affairs with his
  • lawyer, and make other preparations for the approaching nuptials. He
  • endeavoured to supply the want of his presence by a pretty constant fire
  • of billets-doux; but these did not attract the neighbours’ attention, and
  • open their eyes, as personal visits would have done; and old Lady Ashby’s
  • haughty, sour spirit of reserve withheld her from spreading the news,
  • while her indifferent health prevented her coming to visit her future
  • daughter-in-law; so that, altogether, this affair was kept far closer
  • than such things usually are.
  • Rosalie would sometimes show her lover’s epistles to me, to convince me
  • what a kind, devoted husband he would make. She showed me the letters of
  • another individual, too, the unfortunate Mr. Green, who had not the
  • courage, or, as she expressed it, the ‘spunk,’ to plead his cause in
  • person, but whom one denial would not satisfy: he must write again and
  • again. He would not have done so if he could have seen the grimaces his
  • fair idol made over his moving appeals to her feelings, and heard her
  • scornful laughter, and the opprobrious epithets she heaped upon him for
  • his perseverance.
  • ‘Why don’t you tell him, at once, that you are engaged?’ I asked.
  • ‘Oh, I don’t want him to know that,’ replied she. ‘If he knew it, his
  • sisters and everybody would know it, and then there would be an end of
  • my—ahem! And, besides, if I told him that, he would think my engagement
  • was the only obstacle, and that I would have him if I were free; which I
  • could not bear that any man should think, and he, of all others, at
  • least. Besides, I don’t care for his letters,’ she added,
  • contemptuously; ‘he may write as often as he pleases, and look as great a
  • calf as he likes when I meet him; it only amuses me.’
  • Meantime, young Meltham was pretty frequent in his visits to the house or
  • transits past it; and, judging by Matilda’s execrations and reproaches,
  • her sister paid more attention to him than civility required; in other
  • words, she carried on as animated a flirtation as the presence of her
  • parents would admit. She made some attempts to bring Mr. Hatfield once
  • more to her feet; but finding them unsuccessful, she repaid his haughty
  • indifference with still loftier scorn, and spoke of him with as much
  • disdain and detestation as she had formerly done of his curate. But,
  • amid all this, she never for a moment lost sight of Mr. Weston. She
  • embraced every opportunity of meeting him, tried every art to fascinate
  • him, and pursued him with as much perseverance as if she really loved him
  • and no other, and the happiness of her life depended upon eliciting a
  • return of affection. Such conduct was completely beyond my
  • comprehension. Had I seen it depicted in a novel, I should have thought
  • it unnatural; had I heard it described by others, I should have deemed it
  • a mistake or an exaggeration; but when I saw it with my own eyes, and
  • suffered from it too, I could only conclude that excessive vanity, like
  • drunkenness, hardens the heart, enslaves the faculties, and perverts the
  • feelings; and that dogs are not the only creatures which, when gorged to
  • the throat, will yet gloat over what they cannot devour, and grudge the
  • smallest morsel to a starving brother.
  • She now became extremely beneficent to the poor cottagers. Her
  • acquaintance among them was more widely extended, her visits to their
  • humble dwellings were more frequent and excursive than they had ever been
  • before. Hereby, she earned among them the reputation of a condescending
  • and very charitable young lady; and their encomiums were sure to be
  • repeated to Mr. Weston: whom also she had thus a daily chance of meeting
  • in one or other of their abodes, or in her transits to and fro; and
  • often, likewise, she could gather, through their gossip, to what places
  • he was likely to go at such and such a time, whether to baptize a child,
  • or to visit the aged, the sick, the sad, or the dying; and most skilfully
  • she laid her plans accordingly. In these excursions she would sometimes
  • go with her sister—whom, by some means, she had persuaded or bribed to
  • enter into her schemes—sometimes alone, never, now, with me; so that I
  • was debarred the pleasure of seeing Mr. Weston, or hearing his voice even
  • in conversation with another: which would certainly have been a very
  • great pleasure, however hurtful or however fraught with pain. I could
  • not even see him at church: for Miss Murray, under some trivial pretext,
  • chose to take possession of that corner in the family pew which had been
  • mine ever since I came; and, unless I had the presumption to station
  • myself between Mr. and Mrs. Murray, I must sit with my back to the
  • pulpit, which I accordingly did.
  • Now, also, I never walked home with my pupils: they said their mamma
  • thought it did not look well to see three people out of the family
  • walking, and only two going in the carriage; and, as they greatly
  • preferred walking in fine weather, I should be honoured by going with the
  • seniors. ‘And besides,’ said they, ‘you can’t walk as fast as we do; you
  • know you’re always lagging behind.’ I knew these were false excuses, but
  • I made no objections, and never contradicted such assertions, well
  • knowing the motives which dictated them. And in the afternoons, during
  • those six memorable weeks, I never went to church at all. If I had a
  • cold, or any slight indisposition, they took advantage of that to make me
  • stay at home; and often they would tell me they were not going again that
  • day, themselves, and then pretend to change their minds, and set off
  • without telling me: so managing their departure that I never discovered
  • the change of purpose till too late. Upon their return home, on one of
  • these occasions, they entertained me with an animated account of a
  • conversation they had had with Mr. Weston as they came along. ‘And he
  • asked if you were ill, Miss Grey,’ said Matilda; ‘but we told him you
  • were quite well, only you didn’t want to come to church—so he’ll think
  • you’re turned wicked.’
  • All chance meetings on week-days were likewise carefully prevented; for,
  • lest I should go to see poor Nancy Brown or any other person, Miss Murray
  • took good care to provide sufficient employment for all my leisure hours.
  • There was always some drawing to finish, some music to copy, or some work
  • to do, sufficient to incapacitate me from indulging in anything beyond a
  • short walk about the grounds, however she or her sister might be
  • occupied.
  • One morning, having sought and waylaid Mr. Weston, they returned in high
  • glee to give me an account of their interview. ‘And he asked after you
  • again,’ said Matilda, in spite of her sister’s silent but imperative
  • intimation that she should hold her tongue. ‘He wondered why you were
  • never with us, and thought you must have delicate health, as you came out
  • so seldom.’
  • ‘He didn’t Matilda—what nonsense you’re talking!’
  • ‘Oh, Rosalie, what a lie! He did, you know; and you said—Don’t,
  • Rosalie—hang it!—I won’t be pinched so! And, Miss Grey, Rosalie told him
  • you were quite well, but you were always so buried in your books that you
  • had no pleasure in anything else.’
  • ‘What an idea he must have of me!’ I thought.
  • ‘And,’ I asked, ‘does old Nancy ever inquire about me?’
  • ‘Yes; and we tell her you are so fond of reading and drawing that you can
  • do nothing else.’
  • ‘That is not the case though; if you had told her I was so busy I could
  • not come to see her, it would have been nearer the truth.’
  • ‘I don’t think it would,’ replied Miss Murray, suddenly kindling up; ‘I’m
  • sure you have plenty of time to yourself now, when you have so little
  • teaching to do.’
  • It was no use beginning to dispute with such indulged, unreasoning
  • creatures: so I held my peace. I was accustomed, now, to keeping silence
  • when things distasteful to my ear were uttered; and now, too, I was used
  • to wearing a placid smiling countenance when my heart was bitter within
  • me. Only those who have felt the like can imagine my feelings, as I sat
  • with an assumption of smiling indifference, listening to the accounts of
  • those meetings and interviews with Mr. Weston, which they seemed to find
  • such pleasure in describing to me; and hearing things asserted of him
  • which, from the character of the man, I knew to be exaggerations and
  • perversions of the truth, if not entirely false—things derogatory to him,
  • and flattering to them—especially to Miss Murray—which I burned to
  • contradict, or, at least, to show my doubts about, but dared not; lest,
  • in expressing my disbelief, I should display my interest too. Other
  • things I heard, which I felt or feared were indeed too true: but I must
  • still conceal my anxiety respecting him, my indignation against them,
  • beneath a careless aspect; others, again, mere hints of something said or
  • done, which I longed to hear more of, but could not venture to inquire.
  • So passed the weary time. I could not even comfort myself with saying,
  • ‘She will soon be married; and then there may be hope.’
  • Soon after her marriage the holidays would come; and when I returned from
  • home, most likely, Mr. Weston would be gone, for I was told that he and
  • the Rector could not agree (the Rector’s fault, of course), and he was
  • about to remove to another place.
  • No—besides my hope in God, my only consolation was in thinking that,
  • though he know it not, I was more worthy of his love than Rosalie Murray,
  • charming and engaging as she was; for I could appreciate his excellence,
  • which she could not: I would devote my life to the promotion of his
  • happiness; she would destroy his happiness for the momentary
  • gratification of her own vanity. ‘Oh, if he could but know the
  • difference!’ I would earnestly exclaim. ‘But no! I would not have him
  • see my heart: yet, if he could but know her hollowness, her worthless,
  • heartless frivolity, he would then be safe, and I should be—_almost_
  • happy, though I might never see him more!’
  • I fear, by this time, the reader is well nigh disgusted with the folly
  • and weakness I have so freely laid before him. I never disclosed it
  • then, and would not have done so had my own sister or my mother been with
  • me in the house. I was a close and resolute dissembler—in this one case
  • at least. My prayers, my tears, my wishes, fears, and lamentations, were
  • witnessed by myself and heaven alone.
  • When we are harassed by sorrows or anxieties, or long oppressed by any
  • powerful feelings which we must keep to ourselves, for which we can
  • obtain and seek no sympathy from any living creature, and which yet we
  • cannot, or will not wholly crush, we often naturally seek relief in
  • poetry—and often find it, too—whether in the effusions of others, which
  • seem to harmonize with our existing case, or in our own attempts to give
  • utterance to those thoughts and feelings in strains less musical,
  • perchance, but more appropriate, and therefore more penetrating and
  • sympathetic, and, for the time, more soothing, or more powerful to rouse
  • and to unburden the oppressed and swollen heart. Before this time, at
  • Wellwood House and here, when suffering from home-sick melancholy, I had
  • sought relief twice or thrice at this secret source of consolation; and
  • now I flew to it again, with greater avidity than ever, because I seemed
  • to need it more. I still preserve those relics of past sufferings and
  • experience, like pillars of witness set up in travelling through the vale
  • of life, to mark particular occurrences. The footsteps are obliterated
  • now; the face of the country may be changed; but the pillar is still
  • there, to remind me how all things were when it was reared. Lest the
  • reader should be curious to see any of these effusions, I will favour him
  • with one short specimen: cold and languid as the lines may seem, it was
  • almost a passion of grief to which they owed their being:—
  • Oh, they have robbed me of the hope
  • My spirit held so dear;
  • They will not let me hear that voice
  • My soul delights to hear.
  • They will not let me see that face
  • I so delight to see;
  • And they have taken all thy smiles,
  • And all thy love from me.
  • Well, let them seize on all they can;—
  • One treasure still is mine,—
  • A heart that loves to think on thee,
  • And feels the worth of thine.
  • Yes, at least, they could not deprive me of that: I could think of him
  • day and night; and I could feel that he was worthy to be thought of.
  • Nobody knew him as I did; nobody could appreciate him as I did; nobody
  • could love him as I—could, if I might: but there was the evil. What
  • business had I to think so much of one that never thought of me? Was it
  • not foolish? was it not wrong? Yet, if I found such deep delight in
  • thinking of him, and if I kept those thoughts to myself, and troubled no
  • one else with them, where was the harm of it? I would ask myself. And
  • such reasoning prevented me from making any sufficient effort to shake
  • off my fetters.
  • But, if those thoughts brought delight, it was a painful, troubled
  • pleasure, too near akin to anguish; and one that did me more injury than
  • I was aware of. It was an indulgence that a person of more wisdom or
  • more experience would doubtless have denied herself. And yet, how dreary
  • to turn my eyes from the contemplation of that bright object and force
  • them to dwell on the dull, grey, desolate prospect around: the joyless,
  • hopeless, solitary path that lay before me. It was wrong to be so
  • joyless, so desponding; I should have made God my friend, and to do His
  • will the pleasure and the business of my life; but faith was weak, and
  • passion was too strong.
  • In this time of trouble I had two other causes of affliction. The first
  • may seem a trifle, but it cost me many a tear: Snap, my little dumb,
  • rough-visaged, but bright-eyed, warm-hearted companion, the only thing I
  • had to love me, was taken away, and delivered over to the tender mercies
  • of the village rat-catcher, a man notorious for his brutal treatment of
  • his canine slaves. The other was serious enough; my letters from home
  • gave intimation that my father’s health was worse. No boding fears were
  • expressed, but I was grown timid and despondent, and could not help
  • fearing that some dreadful calamity awaited us there. I seemed to see
  • the black clouds gathering round my native hills, and to hear the angry
  • muttering of a storm that was about to burst, and desolate our hearth.
  • CHAPTER XVIII—MIRTH AND MOURNING
  • The 1st of June arrived at last: and Rosalie Murray was transmuted into
  • Lady Ashby. Most splendidly beautiful she looked in her bridal costume.
  • Upon her return from church, after the ceremony, she came flying into the
  • schoolroom, flushed with excitement, and laughing, half in mirth, and
  • half in reckless desperation, as it seemed to me.
  • ‘Now, Miss Grey, I’m Lady Ashby!’ she exclaimed. ‘It’s done, my fate is
  • sealed: there’s no drawing back now. I’m come to receive your
  • congratulations and bid you good-by; and then I’m off for Paris, Rome,
  • Naples, Switzerland, London—oh, dear! what a deal I shall see and hear
  • before I come back again. But don’t forget me: I shan’t forget you,
  • though I’ve been a naughty girl. Come, why don’t you congratulate me?’
  • ‘I cannot congratulate you,’ I replied, ‘till I know whether this change
  • is really for the better: but I sincerely hope it is; and I wish you true
  • happiness and the best of blessings.’
  • ‘Well, good-by, the carriage is waiting, and they’re calling me.’
  • She gave me a hasty kiss, and was hurrying away; but, suddenly returning,
  • embraced me with more affection than I thought her capable of evincing,
  • and departed with tears in her eyes. Poor girl! I really loved her
  • then; and forgave her from my heart all the injury she had done me—and
  • others also: she had not half known it, I was sure; and I prayed God to
  • pardon her too.
  • During the remainder of that day of festal sadness, I was left to my own
  • devices. Being too much unhinged for any steady occupation, I wandered
  • about with a book in my hand for several hours, more thinking than
  • reading, for I had many things to think about. In the evening, I made
  • use of my liberty to go and see my old friend Nancy once again; to
  • apologize for my long absence (which must have seemed so neglectful and
  • unkind) by telling her how busy I had been; and to talk, or read, or work
  • for her, whichever might be most acceptable, and also, of course, to tell
  • her the news of this important day: and perhaps to obtain a little
  • information from her in return, respecting Mr. Weston’s expected
  • departure. But of this she seemed to know nothing, and I hoped, as she
  • did, that it was all a false report. She was very glad to see me; but,
  • happily, her eyes were now so nearly well that she was almost independent
  • of my services. She was deeply interested in the wedding; but while I
  • amused her with the details of the festive day, the splendours of the
  • bridal party and of the bride herself, she often sighed and shook her
  • head, and wished good might come of it; she seemed, like me, to regard it
  • rather as a theme for sorrow than rejoicing. I sat a long time talking
  • to her about that and other things—but no one came.
  • Shall I confess that I sometimes looked towards the door with a
  • half-expectant wish to see it open and give entrance to Mr. Weston, as
  • had happened once before? and that, returning through the lanes and
  • fields, I often paused to look round me, and walked more slowly than was
  • at all necessary—for, though a fine evening, it was not a hot one—and,
  • finally, felt a sense of emptiness and disappointment at having reached
  • the house without meeting or even catching a distant glimpse of any one,
  • except a few labourers returning from their work?
  • Sunday, however, was approaching: I should see him then: for now that
  • Miss Murray was gone, I could have my old corner again. I should see
  • him, and by look, speech, and manner, I might judge whether the
  • circumstance of her marriage had very much afflicted him. Happily I
  • could perceive no shadow of a difference: he wore the same aspect as he
  • had worn two months ago—voice, look, manner, all alike unchanged: there
  • was the same keen-sighted, unclouded truthfulness in his discourse, the
  • same forcible clearness in his style, the same earnest simplicity in all
  • he said and did, that made itself, not marked by the eye and ear, but
  • felt upon the hearts of his audience.
  • I walked home with Miss Matilda; but _he did not join us_. Matilda was
  • now sadly at a loss for amusement, and wofully in want of a companion:
  • her brothers at school, her sister married and gone, she too young to be
  • admitted into society; for which, from Rosalie’s example, she was in some
  • degree beginning to acquire a taste—a taste at least for the company of
  • certain classes of gentlemen; at this dull time of year—no hunting going
  • on, no shooting even—for, though she might not join in that, it was
  • _something_ to see her father or the gamekeeper go out with the dogs, and
  • to talk with them on their return, about the different birds they had
  • bagged. Now, also, she was denied the solace which the companionship of
  • the coachman, grooms, horses, greyhounds, and pointers might have
  • afforded; for her mother having, notwithstanding the disadvantages of a
  • country life, so satisfactorily disposed of her elder daughter, the pride
  • of her heart had begun seriously to turn her attention to the younger;
  • and, being truly alarmed at the roughness of her manners, and thinking it
  • high time to work a reform, had been roused at length to exert her
  • authority, and prohibited entirely the yards, stables, kennels, and
  • coach-house. Of course, she was not implicitly obeyed; but, indulgent as
  • she had hitherto been, when once her spirit was roused, her temper was
  • not so gentle as she required that of her governesses to be, and her will
  • was not to be thwarted with impunity. After many a scene of contention
  • between mother and daughter, many a violent outbreak which I was ashamed
  • to witness, in which the father’s authority was often called in to
  • confirm with oaths and threats the mother’s slighted prohibitions—for
  • even _he_ could see that ‘Tilly, though she would have made a fine lad,
  • was not quite what a young lady ought to be’—Matilda at length found that
  • her easiest plan was to keep clear of the forbidden regions; unless she
  • could now and then steal a visit without her watchful mother’s knowledge.
  • Amid all this, let it not be imagined that I escaped without many a
  • reprimand, and many an implied reproach, that lost none of its sting from
  • not being openly worded; but rather wounded the more deeply, because,
  • from that very reason, it seemed to preclude self-defence. Frequently, I
  • was told to amuse Miss Matilda with other things, and to remind her of
  • her mother’s precepts and prohibitions. I did so to the best of my
  • power: but she would not be amused against her will, and could not
  • against her taste; and though I went beyond mere reminding, such gentle
  • remonstrances as I could use were utterly ineffectual.
  • ‘_Dear_ Miss Grey! it is the _strangest_ thing. I suppose you can’t help
  • it, if it’s not in your nature—but I _wonder_ you can’t win the
  • confidence of that girl, and make your society at _least_ as agreeable to
  • her as that of Robert or Joseph!’
  • ‘They can talk the best about the things in which she is most
  • interested,’ I replied.
  • ‘Well! that is a strange confession, _however_, to come from her
  • _governess_! Who is to form a young lady’s tastes, I wonder, if the
  • governess doesn’t do it? I have known governesses who have so completely
  • identified themselves with the reputation of their young ladies for
  • elegance and propriety in mind and manners, that they would blush to
  • speak a word against them; and to hear the slightest blame imputed to
  • their pupils was worse than to be censured in their own persons—and I
  • really think it very natural, for my part.’
  • ‘Do you, ma’am?’
  • ‘Yes, of course: the young lady’s proficiency and elegance is of more
  • consequence to the governess than her own, as well as to the world. If
  • she wishes to prosper in her vocation she must devote all her energies to
  • her business: all her ideas and all her ambition will tend to the
  • accomplishment of that one object. When we wish to decide upon the
  • merits of a governess, we naturally look at the young ladies she
  • professes to have educated, and judge accordingly. The _judicious_
  • governess knows this: she knows that, while she lives in obscurity
  • herself, her pupils’ virtues and defects will be open to every eye; and
  • that, unless she loses sight of herself in their cultivation, she need
  • not hope for success. You see, Miss Grey, it is just the same as any
  • other trade or profession: they that wish to prosper must devote
  • themselves body and soul to their calling; and if they begin to yield to
  • indolence or self-indulgence they are speedily distanced by wiser
  • competitors: there is little to choose between a person that ruins her
  • pupils by neglect, and one that corrupts them by her example. You will
  • excuse my dropping these little hints: you know it is all for your own
  • good. Many ladies would speak to you much more strongly; and many would
  • not trouble themselves to speak at all, but quietly look out for a
  • substitute. That, of course, would be the _easiest_ plan: but I know the
  • advantages of a place like this to a person in your situation; and I have
  • no desire to part with you, as I am sure you would do very well if you
  • will only think of these things and try to exert yourself a _little_
  • more: then, I am convinced, you would _soon_ acquire that delicate tact
  • which alone is wanting to give you a proper influence over the mind of
  • your pupil.’
  • I was about to give the lady some idea of the fallacy of her
  • expectations; but she sailed away as soon as she had concluded her
  • speech. Having said what she wished, it was no part of her plan to await
  • my answer: it was my business to hear, and not to speak.
  • However, as I have said, Matilda at length yielded in some degree to her
  • mother’s authority (pity it had not been exerted before); and being thus
  • deprived of almost every source of amusement, there was nothing for it
  • but to take long rides with the groom and long walks with the governess,
  • and to visit the cottages and farmhouses on her father’s estate, to kill
  • time in chatting with the old men and women that inhabited them. In one
  • of these walks, it was our chance to meet Mr. Weston. This was what I
  • had long desired; but now, for a moment, I wished either he or I were
  • away: I felt my heart throb so violently that I dreaded lest some outward
  • signs of emotion should appear; but I think he hardly glanced at me, and
  • I was soon calm enough. After a brief salutation to both, he asked
  • Matilda if she had lately heard from her sister.
  • ‘Yes,’ replied she. ‘She was at Paris when she wrote, and very well, and
  • very happy.’
  • She spoke the last word emphatically, and with a glance impertinently
  • sly. He did not seem to notice it, but replied, with equal emphasis, and
  • very seriously—
  • ‘I hope she will continue to be so.’
  • ‘Do you think it likely?’ I ventured to inquire: for Matilda had started
  • off in pursuit of her dog, that was chasing a leveret.
  • ‘I cannot tell,’ replied he. ‘Sir Thomas may be a better man than I
  • suppose; but, from all I have heard and seen, it seems a pity that one so
  • young and gay, and—and interesting, to express many things by one
  • word—whose greatest, if not her only fault, appears to be
  • thoughtlessness—no trifling fault to be sure, since it renders the
  • possessor liable to almost every other, and exposes him to so many
  • temptations—but it seems a pity that she should be thrown away on such a
  • man. It was her mother’s wish, I suppose?’
  • ‘Yes; and her own too, I think, for she always laughed at my attempts to
  • dissuade her from the step.’
  • ‘You did attempt it? Then, at least, you will have the satisfaction of
  • knowing that it is no fault of yours, if any harm should come of it. As
  • for Mrs. Murray, I don’t know how she can justify her conduct: if I had
  • sufficient acquaintance with her, I’d ask her.’
  • ‘It seems unnatural: but some people think rank and wealth the chief
  • good; and, if they can secure that for their children, they think they
  • have done their duty.’
  • ‘True: but is it not strange that persons of experience, who have been
  • married themselves, should judge so falsely?’ Matilda now came panting
  • back, with the lacerated body of the young hare in her hand.
  • ‘Was it your intention to kill that hare, or to save it, Miss Murray?’
  • asked Mr. Weston, apparently puzzled at her gleeful countenance.
  • ‘I pretended to want to save it,’ she answered, honestly enough, ‘as it
  • was so glaringly out of season; but I was better pleased to see it
  • lolled. However, you can both witness that I couldn’t help it: Prince
  • was determined to have her; and he clutched her by the back, and killed
  • her in a minute! Wasn’t it a noble chase?’
  • ‘Very! for a young lady after a leveret.’
  • There was a quiet sarcasm in the tone of his reply which was not lost
  • upon her; she shrugged her shoulders, and, turning away with a
  • significant ‘Humph!’ asked me how I had enjoyed the fun. I replied that
  • I saw no fun in the matter; but admitted that I had not observed the
  • transaction very narrowly.
  • ‘Didn’t you see how it doubled—just like an old hare? and didn’t you hear
  • it scream?’
  • ‘I’m happy to say I did not.’
  • ‘It cried out just like a child.’
  • ‘Poor little thing! What will you do with it?’
  • ‘Come along—I shall leave it in the first house we come to. I don’t want
  • to take it home, for fear papa should scold me for letting the dog kill
  • it.’
  • Mr. Weston was now gone, and we too went on our way; but as we returned,
  • after having deposited the hare in a farm-house, and demolished some
  • spice-cake and currant-wine in exchange, we met him returning also from
  • the execution of his mission, whatever it might be. He carried in his
  • hand a cluster of beautiful bluebells, which he offered to me; observing,
  • with a smile, that though he had seen so little of me for the last two
  • months, he had not forgotten that bluebells were numbered among my
  • favourite flowers. It was done as a simple act of goodwill, without
  • compliment or remarkable courtesy, or any look that could be construed
  • into ‘reverential, tender adoration’ (_vide_ Rosalie Murray); but still,
  • it was something to find my unimportant saying so well remembered: it was
  • something that he had noticed so accurately the time I had ceased to be
  • visible.
  • ‘I was told,’ said he, ‘that you were a perfect bookworm, Miss Grey: so
  • completely absorbed in your studies that you were lost to every other
  • pleasure.’
  • ‘Yes, and it’s quite true!’ cried Matilda.
  • ‘No, Mr. Weston: don’t believe it: it’s a scandalous libel. These young
  • ladies are too fond of making random assertions at the expense of their
  • friends; and you ought to be careful how you listen to them.’
  • ‘I hope _this_ assertion is groundless, at any rate.’
  • ‘Why? Do you particularly object to ladies studying?’
  • ‘No; but I object to anyone so devoting himself or herself to study, as
  • to lose sight of everything else. Except under peculiar circumstances, I
  • consider very close and constant study as a waste of time, and an injury
  • to the mind as well as the body.’
  • ‘Well, I have neither the time nor the inclination for such
  • transgressions.’
  • We parted again.
  • Well! what is there remarkable in all this? Why have I recorded it?
  • Because, reader, it was important enough to give me a cheerful evening, a
  • night of pleasing dreams, and a morning of felicitous hopes.
  • Shallow-brained cheerfulness, foolish dreams, unfounded hopes, you would
  • say; and I will not venture to deny it: suspicions to that effect arose
  • too frequently in my own mind. But our wishes are like tinder: the flint
  • and steel of circumstances are continually striking out sparks, which
  • vanish immediately, unless they chance to fall upon the tinder of our
  • wishes; then, they instantly ignite, and the flame of hope is kindled in
  • a moment.
  • But alas! that very morning, my flickering flame of hope was dismally
  • quenched by a letter from my mother, which spoke so seriously of my
  • father’s increasing illness, that I feared there was little or no chance
  • of his recovery; and, close at hand as the holidays were, I almost
  • trembled lest they should come too late for me to meet him in this world.
  • Two days after, a letter from Mary told me his life was despaired of, and
  • his end seemed fast approaching. Then, immediately, I sought permission
  • to anticipate the vacation, and go without delay. Mrs. Murray stared,
  • and wondered at the unwonted energy and boldness with which I urged the
  • request, and thought there was no occasion to hurry; but finally gave me
  • leave: stating, however, that there was ‘no need to be in such agitation
  • about the matter—it might prove a false alarm after all; and if not—why,
  • it was only in the common course of nature: we must all die some time;
  • and I was not to suppose myself the only afflicted person in the world;’
  • and concluding with saying I might have the phaeton to take me to O---.
  • ‘And instead of _repining_, Miss Grey, be thankful for the _privileges_
  • you enjoy. There’s many a poor clergyman whose family would be plunged
  • into ruin by the event of his death; but you, you see, have influential
  • friends ready to continue their patronage, and to show you every
  • consideration.’
  • I thanked her for her ‘consideration,’ and flew to my room to make some
  • hurried preparations for my departure. My bonnet and shawl being on, and
  • a few things hastily crammed into my largest trunk, I descended. But I
  • might have done the work more leisurely, for no one else was in a hurry;
  • and I had still a considerable time to wait for the phaeton. At length
  • it came to the door, and I was off: but, oh, what a dreary journey was
  • that! how utterly different from my former passages homewards! Being too
  • late for the last coach to ---, I had to hire a cab for ten miles, and
  • then a car to take me over the rugged hills.
  • It was half-past ten before I reached home. They were not in bed.
  • My mother and sister both met me in the passage—sad—silent—pale! I was
  • so much shocked and terror-stricken that I could not speak, to ask the
  • information I so much longed yet dreaded to obtain.
  • ‘Agnes!’ said my mother, struggling to repress some strong emotion.
  • ‘Oh, Agnes!’ cried Mary, and burst into tears.
  • ‘How is he?’ I asked, gasping for the answer.
  • ‘Dead!’
  • It was the reply I had anticipated: but the shock seemed none the less
  • tremendous.
  • CHAPTER XIX—THE LETTER
  • My father’s mortal remains had been consigned to the tomb; and we, with
  • sad faces and sombre garments, sat lingering over the frugal
  • breakfast-table, revolving plans for our future life. My mother’s strong
  • mind had not given way beneath even this affliction: her spirit, though
  • crushed, was not broken. Mary’s wish was that I should go back to Horton
  • Lodge, and that our mother should come and live with her and Mr.
  • Richardson at the vicarage: she affirmed that he wished it no less than
  • herself, and that such an arrangement could not fail to benefit all
  • parties; for my mother’s society and experience would be of inestimable
  • value to them, and they would do all they could to make her happy. But
  • no arguments or entreaties could prevail: my mother was determined not to
  • go. Not that she questioned, for a moment, the kind wishes and
  • intentions of her daughter; but she affirmed that so long as God spared
  • her health and strength, she would make use of them to earn her own
  • livelihood, and be chargeable to no one; whether her dependence would be
  • felt as a burden or not. If she could afford to reside as a lodger
  • in—vicarage, she would choose that house before all others as the place
  • of her abode; but not being so circumstanced, she would never come under
  • its roof, except as an occasional visitor: unless sickness or calamity
  • should render her assistance really needful, or until age or infirmity
  • made her incapable of maintaining herself.
  • ‘No, Mary,’ said she, ‘if Richardson and you have anything to spare, you
  • must lay it aside for your family; and Agnes and I must gather honey for
  • ourselves. Thanks to my having had daughters to educate, I have not
  • forgotten my accomplishments. God willing, I will check this vain
  • repining,’ she said, while the tears coursed one another down her cheeks
  • in spite of her efforts; but she wiped them away, and resolutely shaking
  • back her head, continued, ‘I will exert myself, and look out for a small
  • house, commodiously situated in some populous but healthy district, where
  • we will take a few young ladies to board and educate—if we can get
  • them—and as many day pupils as will come, or as we can manage to
  • instruct. Your father’s relations and old friends will be able to send
  • us some pupils, or to assist us with their recommendations, no doubt: I
  • shall not apply to my own. What say you to it, Agnes? will you be
  • willing to leave your present situation and try?’
  • ‘Quite willing, mamma; and the money I have saved will do to furnish the
  • house. It shall be taken from the bank directly.’
  • ‘When it is wanted: we must get the house, and settle on preliminaries
  • first.’
  • Mary offered to lend the little she possessed; but my mother declined it,
  • saying that we must begin on an economical plan; and she hoped that the
  • whole or part of mine, added to what we could get by the sale of the
  • furniture, and what little our dear papa had contrived to lay aside for
  • her since the debts were paid, would be sufficient to last us till
  • Christmas; when, it was hoped, something would accrue from our united
  • labours. It was finally settled that this should be our plan; and that
  • inquiries and preparations should immediately be set on foot; and while
  • my mother busied herself with these, I should return to Horton Lodge at
  • the close of my four weeks’ vacation, and give notice for my final
  • departure when things were in train for the speedy commencement of our
  • school.
  • We were discussing these affairs on the morning I have mentioned, about a
  • fortnight after my father’s death, when a letter was brought in for my
  • mother, on beholding which the colour mounted to her face—lately pale
  • enough with anxious watchings and excessive sorrow. ‘From my father!’
  • murmured she, as she hastily tore off the cover. It was many years since
  • she had heard from any of her own relations before. Naturally wondering
  • what the letter might contain, I watched her countenance while she read
  • it, and was somewhat surprised to see her bite her lip and knit her brows
  • as if in anger. When she had done, she somewhat irreverently cast it on
  • the table, saying with a scornful smile,—‘Your grandpapa has been so kind
  • as to write to me. He says he has no doubt I have long repented of my
  • “unfortunate marriage,” and if I will only acknowledge this, and confess
  • I was wrong in neglecting his advice, and that I have justly suffered for
  • it, he will make a lady of me once again—if that be possible after my
  • long degradation—and remember my girls in his will. Get my desk, Agnes,
  • and send these things away: I will answer the letter directly. But
  • first, as I may be depriving you both of a legacy, it is just that I
  • should tell you what I mean to say. I shall say that he is mistaken in
  • supposing that I can regret the birth of my daughters (who have been the
  • pride of my life, and are likely to be the comfort of my old age), or the
  • thirty years I have passed in the company of my best and dearest
  • friend;—that, had our misfortunes been three times as great as they were
  • (unless they had been of my bringing on), I should still the more rejoice
  • to have shared them with your father, and administered what consolation I
  • was able; and, had his sufferings in illness been ten times what they
  • wore, I could not regret having watched over and laboured to relieve
  • them;—that, if he had married a richer wife, misfortunes and trials would
  • no doubt have come upon him still; while I am egotist enough to imagine
  • that no other woman could have cheered him through them so well: not that
  • I am superior to the rest, but I was made for him, and he for me; and I
  • can no more repent the hours, days, years of happiness we have spent
  • together, and which neither could have had without the other, than I can
  • the privilege of having been his nurse in sickness, and his comfort in
  • affliction.
  • ‘Will this do, children?—or shall I say we are all very sorry for what
  • has happened during the last thirty years, and my daughters wish they had
  • never been born; but since they have had that misfortune, they will be
  • thankful for any trifle their grandpapa will be kind enough to bestow?’
  • Of course, we both applauded our mother’s resolution; Mary cleared away
  • the breakfast things; I brought the desk; the letter was quickly written
  • and despatched; and, from that day, we heard no more of our grandfather,
  • till we saw his death announced in the newspaper a considerable time
  • after—all his worldly possessions, of course, being left to our wealthy
  • unknown cousins.
  • CHAPTER XX—THE FAREWELL
  • A house in A---, the fashionable watering-place, was hired for our
  • seminary; and a promise of two or three pupils was obtained to commence
  • with. I returned to Horton Lodge about the middle of July, leaving my
  • mother to conclude the bargain for the house, to obtain more pupils, to
  • sell off the furniture of our old abode, and to fit out the new one.
  • We often pity the poor, because they have no leisure to mourn their
  • departed relatives, and necessity obliges them to labour through their
  • severest afflictions: but is not active employment the best remedy for
  • overwhelming sorrow—the surest antidote for despair? It may be a rough
  • comforter: it may seem hard to be harassed with the cares of life when we
  • have no relish for its enjoyments; to be goaded to labour when the heart
  • is ready to break, and the vexed spirit implores for rest only to weep in
  • silence: but is not labour better than the rest we covet? and are not
  • those petty, tormenting cares less hurtful than a continual brooding over
  • the great affliction that oppresses us? Besides, we cannot have cares,
  • and anxieties, and toil, without hope—if it be but the hope of fulfilling
  • our joyless task, accomplishing some needful project, or escaping some
  • further annoyance. At any rate, I was glad my mother had so much
  • employment for every faculty of her action-loving frame. Our kind
  • neighbours lamented that she, once so exalted in wealth and station,
  • should be reduced to such extremity in her time of sorrow; but I am
  • persuaded that she would have suffered thrice as much had she been left
  • in affluence, with liberty to remain in that house, the scene of her
  • early happiness and late affliction, and no stern necessity to prevent
  • her from incessantly brooding over and lamenting her bereavement.
  • I will not dilate upon the feelings with which I left the old house, the
  • well-known garden, the little village church—then doubly dear to me,
  • because my father, who, for thirty years, had taught and prayed within
  • its walls, lay slumbering now beneath its flags—and the old bare hills,
  • delightful in their very desolation, with the narrow vales between,
  • smiling in green wood and sparkling water—the house where I was born, the
  • scene of all my early associations, the place where throughout life my
  • earthly affections had been centred;—and left them to return no more!
  • True, I was going back to Horton Lodge, where, amid many evils, one
  • source of pleasure yet remained: but it was pleasure mingled with
  • excessive pain; and my stay, alas! was limited to six weeks. And even of
  • that precious time, day after day slipped by and I did not see him:
  • except at church, I never saw him for a fortnight after my return. It
  • seemed a long time to me: and, as I was often out with my rambling pupil,
  • of course hopes would keep rising, and disappointments would ensue; and
  • then, I would say to my own heart, ‘Here is a convincing proof—if you
  • would but have the sense to see it, or the candour to acknowledge it—that
  • he does not care for you. If he only thought _half_ as much about you as
  • you do about him, he would have contrived to meet you many times ere
  • this: you must know that, by consulting your own feelings. Therefore,
  • have done with this nonsense: you have no ground for hope: dismiss, at
  • once, these hurtful thoughts and foolish wishes from your mind, and turn
  • to your own duty, and the dull blank life that lies before you. You
  • might have known such happiness was not for you.’
  • But I saw him at last. He came suddenly upon me as I was crossing a
  • field in returning from a visit to Nancy Brown, which I had taken the
  • opportunity of paying while Matilda Murray was riding her matchless mare.
  • He must have heard of the heavy loss I had sustained: he expressed no
  • sympathy, offered no condolence: but almost the first words he uttered
  • were,—‘How is your mother?’ And this was no matter-of-course question,
  • for I never told him that I had a mother: he must have learned the fact
  • from others, if he knew it at all; and, besides, there was sincere
  • goodwill, and even deep, touching, unobtrusive sympathy in the tone and
  • manner of the inquiry. I thanked him with due civility, and told him she
  • was as well as could be expected. ‘What will she do?’ was the next
  • question. Many would have deemed it an impertinent one, and given an
  • evasive reply; but such an idea never entered my head, and I gave a brief
  • but plain statement of my mother’s plans and prospects.
  • ‘Then you will leave this place shortly?’ said he.
  • ‘Yes, in a month.’
  • He paused a minute, as if in thought. When he spoke again, I hoped it
  • would be to express his concern at my departure; but it was only to
  • say,—‘I should think you will be willing enough to go?’
  • ‘Yes—for some things,’ I replied.
  • ‘For _some_ things only—I wonder what should make you regret it?’
  • I was annoyed at this in some degree; because it embarrassed me: I had
  • only one reason for regretting it; and that was a profound secret, which
  • he had no business to trouble me about.
  • ‘Why,’ said I—‘why should you suppose that I dislike the place?’
  • ‘You told me so yourself,’ was the decisive reply. ‘You said, at least,
  • that you could not live contentedly, without a friend; and that you had
  • no friend here, and no possibility of making one—and, besides, I know you
  • _must_ dislike it.’
  • ‘But if you remember rightly, I said, or meant to say, I could not live
  • contentedly without a friend in the world: I was not so unreasonable as
  • to require one always near me. I think I could be happy in a house full
  • of enemies, if—’ but no; that sentence must not be continued—I paused,
  • and hastily added,—‘And, besides, we cannot well leave a place where we
  • have lived for two or three years, without some feeling of regret.’
  • ‘Will you regret to part with Miss Murray, your sole remaining pupil and
  • companion?’
  • ‘I dare say I shall in some degree: it was not without sorrow I parted
  • with her sister.’
  • ‘I can imagine that.’
  • ‘Well, Miss Matilda is quite as good—better in one respect.’
  • ‘What is that?’
  • ‘She’s honest.’
  • ‘And the other is not?’
  • ‘I should not call her _dis_honest; but it must be confessed she’s a
  • little artful.’
  • ‘_Artful_ is she?—I saw she was giddy and vain—and now,’ he added, after
  • a pause, ‘I can well believe she was artful too; but so excessively so as
  • to assume an aspect of extreme simplicity and unguarded openness. Yes,’
  • continued he, musingly, ‘that accounts for some little things that
  • puzzled me a trifle before.’
  • After that, he turned the conversation to more general subjects. He did
  • not leave me till we had nearly reached the park-gates: he had certainly
  • stepped a little out of his way to accompany me so far, for he now went
  • back and disappeared down Moss Lane, the entrance of which we had passed
  • some time before. Assuredly I did not regret this circumstance: if
  • sorrow had any place in my heart, it was that he was gone at last—that he
  • was no longer walking by my side, and that that short interval of
  • delightful intercourse was at an end. He had not breathed a word of
  • love, or dropped one hint of tenderness or affection, and yet I had been
  • supremely happy. To be near him, to hear him talk as he did talk, and to
  • feel that he thought me worthy to be so spoken to—capable of
  • understanding and duly appreciating such discourse—was enough.
  • ‘Yes, Edward Weston, I could indeed be happy in a house full of enemies,
  • if I had but one friend, who truly, deeply, and faithfully loved me; and
  • if that friend were you—though we might be far apart—seldom to hear from
  • each other, still more seldom to meet—though toil, and trouble, and
  • vexation might surround me, still—it would be too much happiness for me
  • to dream of! Yet who can tell,’ said I within myself, as I proceeded up
  • the park,—‘who can tell what this one month may bring forth? I have
  • lived nearly three-and-twenty years, and I have suffered much, and tasted
  • little pleasure yet; is it likely my life all through will be so clouded?
  • Is it not possible that God may hear my prayers, disperse these gloomy
  • shadows, and grant me some beams of heaven’s sunshine yet? Will He
  • entirely deny to me those blessings which are so freely given to others,
  • who neither ask them nor acknowledge them when received? May I not still
  • hope and trust? I did hope and trust for a while: but, alas, alas! the
  • time ebbed away: one week followed another, and, excepting one distant
  • glimpse and two transient meetings—during which scarcely anything was
  • said—while I was walking with Miss Matilda, I saw nothing of him: except,
  • of course, at church.
  • And now, the last Sunday was come, and the last service. I was often on
  • the point of melting into tears during the sermon—the last I was to hear
  • from him: the best I should hear from anyone, I was well assured. It was
  • over—the congregation were departing; and I must follow. I had then seen
  • him, and heard his voice, too, probably for the last time. In the
  • churchyard, Matilda was pounced upon by the two Misses Green. They had
  • many inquiries to make about her sister, and I know not what besides. I
  • only wished they would have done, that we might hasten back to Horton
  • Lodge: I longed to seek the retirement of my own room, or some
  • sequestered nook in the grounds, that I might deliver myself up to my
  • feelings—to weep my last farewell, and lament my false hopes and vain
  • delusions. Only this once, and then adieu to fruitless
  • dreaming—thenceforth, only sober, solid, sad reality should occupy my
  • mind. But while I thus resolved, a low voice close beside me said—‘I
  • suppose you are going this week, Miss Grey?’ ‘Yes,’ I replied. I was
  • very much startled; and had I been at all hysterically inclined, I
  • certainly should have committed myself in some way then. Thank God, I
  • was not.
  • ‘Well,’ said Mr. Weston, ‘I want to bid you good-bye—it is not likely I
  • shall see you again before you go.’
  • ‘Good-bye, Mr. Weston,’ I said. Oh, how I struggled to say it calmly! I
  • gave him my hand. He retained it a few seconds in his.
  • ‘It is possible we may meet again,’ said he; ‘will it be of any
  • consequence to you whether we do or not?’
  • ‘Yes, I should be very glad to see you again.’
  • I _could_ say no less. He kindly pressed my hand, and went. Now, I was
  • happy again—though more inclined to burst into tears than ever. If I had
  • been forced to speak at that moment, a succession of sobs would have
  • inevitably ensued; and as it was, I could not keep the water out of my
  • eyes. I walked along with Miss Murray, turning aside my face, and
  • neglecting to notice several successive remarks, till she bawled out that
  • I was either deaf or stupid; and then (having recovered my
  • self-possession), as one awakened from a fit of abstraction, I suddenly
  • looked up and asked what she had been saying.
  • CHAPTER XXI—THE SCHOOL
  • I left Horton Lodge, and went to join my mother in our new abode at A---.
  • I found her well in health, resigned in spirit, and even cheerful, though
  • subdued and sober, in her general demeanour. We had only three boarders
  • and half a dozen day-pupils to commence with; but by due care and
  • diligence we hoped ere long to increase the number of both.
  • I set myself with befitting energy to discharge the duties of this new
  • mode of life. I call it _new_, for there was, indeed, a considerable
  • difference between working with my mother in a school of our own, and
  • working as a hireling among strangers, despised and trampled upon by old
  • and young; and for the first few weeks I was by no means unhappy. ‘It is
  • possible we may meet again,’ and ‘will it be of any consequence to you
  • whether we do or not?’—Those words still rang in my ear and rested on my
  • heart: they were my secret solace and support. ‘I shall see him
  • again.—He will come; or he will write.’ No promise, in fact, was too
  • bright or too extravagant for Hope to whisper in my ear. I did not
  • believe half of what she told me: I pretended to laugh at it all; but I
  • was far more credulous than I myself supposed; otherwise, why did my
  • heart leap up when a knock was heard at the front door, and the maid, who
  • opened it, came to tell my mother a gentleman wished to see her? and why
  • was I out of humour for the rest of the day, because it proved to be a
  • music-master come to offer his services to our school? and what stopped
  • my breath for a moment, when the postman having brought a couple of
  • letters, my mother said, ‘Here, Agnes, this is for you,’ and threw one of
  • them to me? and what made the hot blood rush into my face when I saw it
  • was directed in a gentleman’s hand? and why—oh! why did that cold,
  • sickening sense of disappointment fall upon me, when I had torn open the
  • cover and found it was _only_ a letter from Mary, which, for some reason
  • or other, her husband had directed for her?
  • Was it then come to this—that I should be _disappointed_ to receive a
  • letter from my only sister: and because it was not written by a
  • comparative stranger? Dear Mary! and she had written it so kindly—and
  • thinking I should be so pleased to have it!—I was not worthy to read it!
  • And I believe, in my indignation against myself, I should have put it
  • aside till I had schooled myself into a better frame of mind, and was
  • become more deserving of the honour and privilege of its perusal: but
  • there was my mother looking on, and wishful to know what news it
  • contained; so I read it and delivered it to her, and then went into the
  • schoolroom to attend to the pupils: but amidst the cares of copies and
  • sums—in the intervals of correcting errors here, and reproving
  • derelictions of duty there, I was inwardly taking myself to task with far
  • sterner severity. ‘What a fool you must be,’ said my head to my heart,
  • or my sterner to my softer self;—‘how could you ever dream that he would
  • write to you? What grounds have you for such a hope—or that he will see
  • you, or give himself any trouble about you—or even think of you again?’
  • ‘What grounds?’—and then Hope set before me that last, short interview,
  • and repeated the words I had so faithfully treasured in my memory.
  • ‘Well, and what was there in that?—Who ever hung his hopes upon so frail
  • a twig? What was there in those words that any common acquaintance might
  • not say to another? Of course, it was possible you might meet again: he
  • might have said so if you had been going to New Zealand; but that did not
  • imply any _intention_ of seeing you—and then, as to the question that
  • followed, anyone might ask that: and how did you answer?—Merely with a
  • stupid, commonplace reply, such as you would have given to Master Murray,
  • or anyone else you had been on tolerably civil terms with.’ ‘But, then,’
  • persisted Hope, ‘the tone and manner in which he spoke.’ ‘Oh, that is
  • nonsense! he always speaks impressively; and at that moment there were
  • the Greens and Miss Matilda Murray just before, and other people passing
  • by, and he was obliged to stand close beside you, and to speak very low,
  • unless he wished everybody to hear what he said, which—though it was
  • nothing at all particular—of course, he would rather not.’ But then,
  • above all, that emphatic, yet gentle pressure of the hand, which seemed
  • to say, ‘_Trust_ me;’ and many other things besides—too delightful,
  • almost too flattering, to be repeated even to one’s self. ‘Egregious
  • folly—too absurd to require contradiction—mere inventions of the
  • imagination, which you ought to be ashamed of. If you would but consider
  • your own unattractive exterior, your unamiable reserve, your foolish
  • diffidence—which must make you appear cold, dull, awkward, and perhaps
  • ill-tempered too;—if you had but rightly considered these from the
  • beginning, you would never have harboured such presumptuous thoughts: and
  • now that you have been so foolish, pray repent and amend, and let us have
  • no more of it!’
  • I cannot say that I implicitly obeyed my own injunctions: but such
  • reasoning as this became more and more effective as time wore on, and
  • nothing was seen or heard of Mr. Weston; until, at last, I gave up
  • hoping, for even my heart acknowledged it was all in vain. But still, I
  • would think of him: I would cherish his image in my mind; and treasure
  • every word, look, and gesture that my memory could retain; and brood over
  • his excellences and his peculiarities, and, in fact, all I had seen,
  • heard, or imagined respecting him.
  • ‘Agnes, this sea air and change of scene do you no good, I think: I never
  • saw you look so wretched. It must be that you sit too much, and allow
  • the cares of the schoolroom to worry you. You must learn to take things
  • easy, and to be more active and cheerful; you must take exercise whenever
  • you can get it, and leave the most tiresome duties to me: they will only
  • serve to exercise my patience, and, perhaps, try my temper a little.’
  • So said my mother, as we sat at work one morning during the Easter
  • holidays. I assured her that my employments were not at all oppressive;
  • that I was well; or, if there was anything amiss, it would be gone as
  • soon as the trying months of spring were over: when summer came I should
  • be as strong and hearty as she could wish to see me: but inwardly her
  • observation startled me. I knew my strength was declining, my appetite
  • had failed, and I was grown listless and desponding;—and if, indeed, he
  • could never care for me, and I could never see him more—if I was
  • forbidden to minister to his happiness—forbidden, for ever, to taste the
  • joys of love, to bless, and to be blessed—then, life must be a burden,
  • and if my heavenly Father would call me away, I should be glad to rest.
  • But it would not do to die and leave my mother. Selfish, unworthy
  • daughter, to forget her for a moment! Was not her happiness committed in
  • a great measure to my charge?—and the welfare of our young pupils too?
  • Should I shrink from the work that God had set before me, because it was
  • not fitted to my taste? Did not He know best what I should do, and where
  • I ought to labour?—and should I long to quit His service before I had
  • finished my task, and expect to enter into His rest without having
  • laboured to earn it? ‘No; by His help I will arise and address myself
  • diligently to my appointed duty. If happiness in this world is not for
  • me, I will endeavour to promote the welfare of those around me, and my
  • reward shall be hereafter.’ So said I in my heart; and from that hour I
  • only permitted my thoughts to wander to Edward Weston—or at least to
  • dwell upon him now and then—as a treat for rare occasions: and, whether
  • it was really the approach of summer or the effect of these good
  • resolutions, or the lapse of time, or all together, tranquillity of mind
  • was soon restored; and bodily health and vigour began likewise, slowly,
  • but surely, to return.
  • Early in June, I received a letter from Lady Ashby, late Miss Murray.
  • She had written to me twice or thrice before, from the different stages
  • of her bridal tour, always in good spirits, and professing to be very
  • happy. I wondered every time that she had not forgotten me, in the midst
  • of so much gaiety and variety of scene. At length, however, there was a
  • pause; and it seemed she had forgotten me, for upwards of seven months
  • passed away and no letter. Of course, I did not break my heart about
  • _that_, though I often wondered how she was getting on; and when this
  • last epistle so unexpectedly arrived, I was glad enough to receive it.
  • It was dated from Ashby Park, where she was come to settle down at last,
  • having previously divided her time between the continent and the
  • metropolis. She made many apologies for having neglected me so long,
  • assured me she had not forgotten me, and had often intended to write, &c.
  • &c., but had always been prevented by something. She acknowledged that
  • she had been leading a very dissipated life, and I should think her very
  • wicked and very thoughtless; but, notwithstanding that, she thought a
  • great deal, and, among other things, that she should vastly like to see
  • me. ‘We have been several days here already,’ wrote she. ‘We have not a
  • single friend with us, and are likely to be very dull. You know I never
  • had a fancy for living with my husband like two turtles in a nest, were
  • he the most delightful creature that ever wore a coat; so do take pity
  • upon me and come. I suppose your Midsummer holidays commence in June,
  • the same as other people’s; therefore you cannot plead want of time; and
  • you must and shall come—in fact, I shall die if you don’t. I want you to
  • visit me as a friend, and stay a long time. There is nobody with me, as
  • I told you before, but Sir Thomas and old Lady Ashby: but you needn’t
  • mind them—they’ll trouble us but little with their company. And you
  • shall have a room to yourself, whenever you like to retire to it, and
  • plenty of books to read when my company is not sufficiently amusing. I
  • forget whether you like babies; if you do, you may have the pleasure of
  • seeing mine—the most charming child in the world, no doubt; and all the
  • more so, that I am not troubled with nursing it—I was determined I
  • wouldn’t be bothered with that. Unfortunately, it is a girl, and Sir
  • Thomas has never forgiven me: but, however, if you will only come, I
  • promise you shall be its governess as soon as it can speak; and you shall
  • bring it up in the way it should go, and make a better woman of it than
  • its mamma. And you shall see my poodle, too: a splendid little charmer
  • imported from Paris: and two fine Italian paintings of great value—I
  • forget the artist. Doubtless you will be able to discover prodigious
  • beauties in them, which you must point out to me, as I only admire by
  • hearsay; and many elegant curiosities besides, which I purchased at Rome
  • and elsewhere; and, finally, you shall see my new home—the splendid house
  • and grounds I used to covet so greatly. Alas! how far the promise of
  • anticipation exceeds the pleasure of possession! There’s a fine
  • sentiment! I assure you I am become quite a grave old matron: pray come,
  • if it be only to witness the wonderful change. Write by return of post,
  • and tell me when your vacation commences, and say that you will come the
  • day after, and stay till the day before it closes—in mercy to
  • ‘Yours affectionately,
  • ‘ROSALIE ASHBY.’
  • I showed this strange epistle to my mother, and consulted her on what I
  • ought to do. She advised me to go; and I went—willing enough to see Lady
  • Ashby, and her baby, too, and to do anything I could to benefit her, by
  • consolation or advice; for I imagined she must be unhappy, or she would
  • not have applied to me thus—but feeling, as may readily be conceived,
  • that, in accepting the invitation, I made a great sacrifice for her, and
  • did violence to my feelings in many ways, instead of being delighted with
  • the honourable distinction of being entreated by the baronet’s lady to
  • visit her as a friend. However, I determined my visit should be only for
  • a few days at most; and I will not deny that I derived some consolation
  • from the idea that, as Ashby Park was not very far from Horton, I might
  • possibly see Mr. Weston, or, at least, hear something about him.
  • CHAPTER XXII—THE VISIT
  • Ashby Park was certainly a very delightful residence. The mansion was
  • stately without, commodious and elegant within; the park was spacious and
  • beautiful, chiefly on account of its magnificent old trees, its stately
  • herds of deer, its broad sheet of water, and the ancient woods that
  • stretched beyond it: for there was no broken ground to give variety to
  • the landscape, and but very little of that undulating swell which adds so
  • greatly to the charm of park scenery. And so, this was the place Rosalie
  • Murray had so longed to call her own, that she must have a share of it,
  • on whatever terms it might be offered—whatever price was to be paid for
  • the title of mistress, and whoever was to be her partner in the honour
  • and bliss of such a possession! Well I am not disposed to censure her
  • now.
  • She received me very kindly; and, though I was a poor clergyman’s
  • daughter, a governess, and a schoolmistress, she welcomed me with
  • unaffected pleasure to her home; and—what surprised me rather—took some
  • pains to make my visit agreeable. I could see, it is true, that she
  • expected me to be greatly struck with the magnificence that surrounded
  • her; and, I confess, I was rather annoyed at her evident efforts to
  • reassure me, and prevent me from being overwhelmed by so much
  • grandeur—too much awed at the idea of encountering her husband and
  • mother-in-law, or too much ashamed of my own humble appearance. I was
  • not ashamed of it at all; for, though plain, I had taken good care not to
  • be shabby or mean, and should have been pretty considerably at my ease, if
  • my condescending hostess had not taken such manifest pains to make me so;
  • and, as for the magnificence that surrounded her, nothing that met my
  • eyes struck me or affected me half so much as her own altered appearance.
  • Whether from the influence of fashionable dissipation, or some other
  • evil, a space of little more than twelve months had had the effect that
  • might be expected from as many years, in reducing the plumpness of her
  • form, the freshness of her complexion, the vivacity of her movements, and
  • the exuberance of her spirits.
  • I wished to know if she was unhappy; but I felt it was not my province to
  • inquire: I might endeavour to win her confidence; but, if she chose to
  • conceal her matrimonial cares from me, I would trouble her with no
  • obtrusive questions. I, therefore, at first, confined myself to a few
  • general inquiries about her health and welfare, and a few commendations
  • on the beauty of the park, and of the little girl that should have been a
  • boy: a small delicate infant of seven or eight weeks old, whom its mother
  • seemed to regard with no remarkable degree of interest or affection,
  • though full as much as I expected her to show.
  • Shortly after my arrival, she commissioned her maid to conduct me to my
  • room and see that I had everything I wanted; it was a small,
  • unpretending, but sufficiently comfortable apartment. When I descended
  • thence—having divested myself of all travelling encumbrances, and
  • arranged my toilet with due consideration for the feelings of my lady
  • hostess, she conducted me herself to the room I was to occupy when I
  • chose to be alone, or when she was engaged with visitors, or obliged to
  • be with her mother-in-law, or otherwise prevented, as she said, from
  • enjoying the pleasure of my society. It was a quiet, tidy little
  • sitting-room; and I was not sorry to be provided with such a harbour of
  • refuge.
  • ‘And some time,’ said she, ‘I will show you the library: I never examined
  • its shelves, but, I daresay, it is full of wise books; and you may go and
  • burrow among them whenever you please. And now you shall have some
  • tea—it will soon be dinner-time, but I thought, as you were accustomed to
  • dine at one, you would perhaps like better to have a cup of tea about
  • this time, and to dine when we lunch: and then, you know, you can have
  • your tea in this room, and that will save you from having to dine with
  • Lady Ashby and Sir Thomas: which would be rather awkward—at least, not
  • awkward, but rather—a—you know what I mean. I thought you mightn’t like
  • it so well—especially as we may have other ladies and gentlemen to dine
  • with us occasionally.’
  • ‘Certainly,’ said I, ‘I would much rather have it as you say, and, if you
  • have no objection, I should prefer having all my meals in this room.’
  • ‘Why so?’
  • ‘Because, I imagine, it would be more agreeable to Lady Ashby and Sir
  • Thomas.’
  • ‘Nothing of the kind.’
  • ‘At any rate it would be more agreeable to me.’
  • She made some faint objections, but soon conceded; and I could see that
  • the proposal was a considerable relief to her.
  • ‘Now, come into the drawing-room,’ said she. ‘There’s the dressing bell;
  • but I won’t go yet: it’s no use dressing when there’s no one to see you;
  • and I want to have a little discourse.’
  • The drawing-room was certainly an imposing apartment, and very elegantly
  • furnished; but I saw its young mistress glance towards me as we entered,
  • as if to notice how I was impressed by the spectacle, and accordingly I
  • determined to preserve an aspect of stony indifference, as if I saw
  • nothing at all remarkable. But this was only for a moment: immediately
  • conscience whispered, ‘Why should I disappoint her to save my pride?
  • No—rather let me sacrifice my pride to give her a little innocent
  • gratification.’ And I honestly looked round, and told her it was a noble
  • room, and very tastefully furnished. She said little, but I saw she was
  • pleased.
  • She showed me her fat French poodle, that lay curled up on a silk
  • cushion, and the two fine Italian paintings: which, however, she would
  • not give me time to examine, but, saying I must look at them some other
  • day, insisted upon my admiring the little jewelled watch she had
  • purchased in Geneva; and then she took me round the room to point out
  • sundry articles of _vertu_ she had brought from Italy: an elegant little
  • timepiece, and several busts, small graceful figures, and vases, all
  • beautifully carved in white marble. She spoke of these with animation,
  • and heard my admiring comments with a smile of pleasure: that soon,
  • however, vanished, and was followed by a melancholy sigh; as if in
  • consideration of the insufficiency of all such baubles to the happiness
  • of the human heart, and their woeful inability to supply its insatiate
  • demands.
  • Then, stretching herself upon a couch, she motioned me to a capacious
  • easy-chair that stood opposite—not before the fire, but before a wide
  • open window; for it was summer, be it remembered; a sweet, warm evening
  • in the latter half of June. I sat for a moment in silence, enjoying the
  • still, pure air, and the delightful prospect of the park that lay before
  • me, rich in verdure and foliage, and basking in yellow sunshine, relieved
  • by the long shadows of declining day. But I must take advantage of this
  • pause: I had inquiries to make, and, like the substance of a lady’s
  • postscript, the most important must come last. So I began with asking
  • after Mr. and Mrs. Murray, and Miss Matilda and the young gentlemen.
  • I was told that papa had the gout, which made him very ferocious; and
  • that he would not give up his choice wines, and his substantial dinners
  • and suppers, and had quarrelled with his physician, because the latter
  • had dared to say that no medicine could cure him while he lived so
  • freely; that mamma and the rest were well. Matilda was still wild and
  • reckless, but she had got a fashionable governess, and was considerably
  • improved in her manners, and soon to be introduced to the world; and John
  • and Charles (now at home for the holidays) were, by all accounts, ‘fine,
  • bold, unruly, mischievous boys.’
  • ‘And how are the other people getting on?’ said I—‘the Greens, for
  • instance?’
  • ‘Ah! Mr. Green is heart-broken, you know,’ replied she, with a languid
  • smile: ‘he hasn’t got over his disappointment yet, and never will, I
  • suppose. He’s doomed to be an old bachelor; and his sisters are doing
  • their best to get married.’
  • ‘And the Melthams?’
  • ‘Oh, they’re jogging on as usual, I suppose: but I know very little about
  • any of them—except Harry,’ said she, blushing slightly, and smiling
  • again. ‘I saw a great deal of him while we were in London; for, as soon
  • as he heard we were there, he came up under pretence of visiting his
  • brother, and either followed me, like a shadow, wherever I went, or met
  • me, like a reflection, at every turn. You needn’t look so shocked, Miss
  • Grey; I was very discreet, I assure you, but, you know, one can’t help
  • being admired. Poor fellow! He was not my only worshipper; though he
  • was certainly the most conspicuous, and, I think, the most devoted among
  • them all. And that detestable—ahem—and Sir Thomas chose to take offence
  • at him—or my profuse expenditure, or something—I don’t exactly know
  • what—and hurried me down to the country at a moment’s notice; where I’m
  • to play the hermit, I suppose, for life.’
  • And she bit her lip, and frowned vindictively upon the fair domain she
  • had once so coveted to call her own.
  • ‘And Mr. Hatfield,’ said I, ‘what is become of him?’
  • Again she brightened up, and answered gaily—‘Oh! he made up to an elderly
  • spinster, and married her, not long since; weighing her heavy purse
  • against her faded charms, and expecting to find that solace in gold which
  • was denied him in love—ha, ha!’
  • ‘Well, and I think that’s all—except Mr. Weston: what is he doing?’
  • ‘I don’t know, I’m sure. He’s gone from Horton.’
  • ‘How long since? and where is he gone to?’
  • ‘I know nothing about him,’ replied she, yawning—‘except that he went
  • about a month ago—I never asked where’ (I would have asked whether it was
  • to a living or merely another curacy, but thought it better not); ‘and
  • the people made a great rout about his leaving,’ continued she, ‘much to
  • Mr. Hatfield’s displeasure; for Hatfield didn’t like him, because he had
  • too much influence with the common people, and because he was not
  • sufficiently tractable and submissive to him—and for some other
  • unpardonable sins, I don’t know what. But now I positively must go and
  • dress: the second bell will ring directly, and if I come to dinner in
  • this guise, I shall never hear the end of it from Lady Ashby. It’s a
  • strange thing one can’t be mistress in one’s own house! Just ring the
  • bell, and I’ll send for my maid, and tell them to get you some tea. Only
  • think of that intolerable woman—’
  • ‘Who—your maid?’
  • ‘No;—my mother-in-law—and my unfortunate mistake! Instead of letting her
  • take herself off to some other house, as she offered to do when I
  • married, I was fool enough to ask her to live here still, and direct the
  • affairs of the house for me; because, in the first place, I hoped we
  • should spend the greater part of the year, in town, and in the second
  • place, being so young and inexperienced, I was frightened at the idea of
  • having a houseful of servants to manage, and dinners to order, and
  • parties to entertain, and all the rest of it, and I thought she might
  • assist me with her experience; never dreaming she would prove a usurper,
  • a tyrant, an incubus, a spy, and everything else that’s detestable. I
  • wish she was dead!’
  • She then turned to give her orders to the footman, who had been standing
  • bolt upright within the door for the last half minute, and had heard the
  • latter part of her animadversions; and, of course, made his own
  • reflections upon them, notwithstanding the inflexible, wooden countenance
  • he thought proper to preserve in the drawing-room. On my remarking
  • afterwards that he must have heard her, she replied—‘Oh, no matter! I
  • never care about the footmen; they’re mere automatons: it’s nothing to
  • them what their superiors say or do; they won’t dare to repeat it; and as
  • to what they think—if they presume to think at all—of course, nobody
  • cares for that. It would be a pretty thing indeed, it we were to be
  • tongue-tied by our servants!’
  • So saying, she ran off to make her hasty toilet, leaving me to pilot my
  • way back to my sitting-room, where, in due time, I was served with a cup
  • of tea. After that, I sat musing on Lady Ashby’s past and present
  • condition; and on what little information I had obtained respecting Mr.
  • Weston, and the small chance there was of ever seeing or hearing anything
  • more of him throughout my quiet, drab-colour life: which, henceforth,
  • seemed to offer no alternative between positive rainy days, and days of
  • dull grey clouds without downfall. At length, however, I began to weary
  • of my thoughts, and to wish I knew where to find the library my hostess
  • had spoken of; and to wonder whether I was to remain there doing nothing
  • till bed-time.
  • As I was not rich enough to possess a watch, I could not tell how time
  • was passing, except by observing the slowly lengthening shadows from the
  • window; which presented a side view, including a corner of the park, a
  • clump of trees whose topmost branches had been colonized by an
  • innumerable company of noisy rooks, and a high wall with a massive wooden
  • gate: no doubt communicating with the stable-yard, as a broad
  • carriage-road swept up to it from the park. The shadow of this wall soon
  • took possession of the whole of the ground as far as I could see, forcing
  • the golden sunlight to retreat inch by inch, and at last take refuge in
  • the very tops of the trees. Ere long, even they were left in shadow—the
  • shadow of the distant hills, or of the earth itself; and, in sympathy for
  • the busy citizens of the rookery, I regretted to see their habitation, so
  • lately bathed in glorious light, reduced to the sombre, work-a-day hue of
  • the lower world, or of my own world within. For a moment, such birds as
  • soared above the rest might still receive the lustre on their wings,
  • which imparted to their sable plumage the hue and brilliance of deep red
  • gold; at last, that too departed. Twilight came stealing on; the rooks
  • became more quiet; I became more weary, and wished I were going home
  • to-morrow. At length it grew dark; and I was thinking of ringing for a
  • candle, and betaking myself to bed, when my hostess appeared, with many
  • apologies for having neglected me so long, and laying all the blame upon
  • that ‘nasty old woman,’ as she called her mother-in-law.
  • ‘If I didn’t sit with her in the drawing-room while Sir Thomas is taking
  • his wine,’ said she, ‘she would never forgive me; and then, if I leave
  • the room the instant he comes—as I have done once or twice—it is an
  • unpardonable offence against her dear Thomas. _She_ never showed such
  • disrespect to _her_ husband: and as for affection, wives never think of
  • that now-a-days, she supposes: but things were different in _her_ time—as
  • if there was any good to be done by staying in the room, when he does
  • nothing but grumble and scold when he’s in a bad humour, talk disgusting
  • nonsense when he’s in a good one, and go to sleep on the sofa when he’s
  • too stupid for either; which is most frequently the case now, when he has
  • nothing to do but to sot over his wine.’
  • ‘But could you not try to occupy his mind with something better; and
  • engage him to give up such habits? I’m sure you have powers of
  • persuasion, and qualifications for amusing a gentleman, which many ladies
  • would be glad to possess.’
  • ‘And so you think I would lay myself out for his amusement! No: that’s
  • not _my_ idea of a wife. It’s the husband’s part to please the wife, not
  • hers to please him; and if he isn’t satisfied with her as she is—and
  • thankful to possess her too—he isn’t worthy of her, that’s all. And as
  • for persuasion, I assure you I shan’t trouble myself with that: I’ve
  • enough to do to bear with him as he is, without attempting to work a
  • reform. But I’m sorry I left you so long alone, Miss Grey. How have you
  • passed the time?’
  • ‘Chiefly in watching the rooks.’
  • ‘Mercy, how dull you must have been! I really must show you the library;
  • and you must ring for everything you want, just as you would in an inn,
  • and make yourself comfortable. I have selfish reasons for wishing to
  • make you happy, because I want you to stay with me, and not fulfil your
  • horrid threat of running away in a day or two.’
  • ‘Well, don’t let me keep you out of the drawing-room any longer to-night,
  • for at present I am tired and wish to go to bed.’
  • CHAPTER XXIII—THE PARK
  • I came down a little before eight, next morning, as I knew by the
  • striking of a distant clock. There was no appearance of breakfast. I
  • waited above an hour before it came, still vainly longing for access to
  • the library; and, after that lonely repast was concluded, I waited again
  • about an hour and a half in great suspense and discomfort, uncertain what
  • to do. At length Lady Ashby came to bid me good-morning. She informed
  • me she had only just breakfasted, and now wanted me to take an early walk
  • with her in the park. She asked how long I had been up, and on receiving
  • my answer, expressed the deepest regret, and again promised to show me
  • the library. I suggested she had better do so at once, and then there
  • would be no further trouble either with remembering or forgetting. She
  • complied, on condition that I would not think of reading, or bothering
  • with the books now; for she wanted to show me the gardens, and take a
  • walk in the park with me, before it became too hot for enjoyment; which,
  • indeed, was nearly the case already. Of course I readily assented; and
  • we took our walk accordingly.
  • As we were strolling in the park, talking of what my companion had seen
  • and heard during her travelling experience, a gentleman on horseback rode
  • up and passed us. As he turned, in passing, and stared me full in the
  • face, I had a good opportunity of seeing what he was like. He was tall,
  • thin, and wasted, with a slight stoop in the shoulders, a pale face, but
  • somewhat blotchy, and disagreeably red about the eyelids, plain features,
  • and a general appearance of languor and flatness, relieved by a sinister
  • expression in the mouth and the dull, soulless eyes.
  • ‘I detest that man!’ whispered Lady Ashby, with bitter emphasis, as he
  • slowly trotted by.
  • ‘Who is it?’ I asked, unwilling to suppose that she should so speak of
  • her husband.
  • ‘Sir Thomas Ashby,’ she replied, with dreary composure.
  • ‘And do you _detest_ him, Miss Murray?’ said I, for I was too much
  • shocked to remember her name at the moment.
  • ‘Yes, I do, Miss Grey, and despise him too; and if you knew him you would
  • not blame me.’
  • ‘But you knew what he was before you married him.’
  • ‘No; I only thought so: I did not half know him really. I know you
  • warned me against it, and I wish I had listened to you: but it’s too late
  • to regret that now. And besides, mamma ought to have known better than
  • either of us, and she never said anything against it—quite the contrary.
  • And then I thought he adored me, and would let me have my own way: he did
  • pretend to do so at first, but now he does not care a bit about me. Yet
  • I should not care for that: he might do as he pleased, if I might only be
  • free to amuse myself and to stay in London, or have a few friends down
  • here: but _he will_ do as he pleases, and I must be a prisoner and a
  • slave. The moment he saw I could enjoy myself without him, and that
  • others knew my value better than himself, the selfish wretch began to
  • accuse me of coquetry and extravagance; and to abuse Harry Meltham, whose
  • shoes he was not worthy to clean. And then he must needs have me down in
  • the country, to lead the life of a nun, lest I should dishonour him or
  • bring him to ruin; as if he had not been ten times worse every way, with
  • his betting-book, and his gaming-table, and his opera-girls, and his Lady
  • This and Mrs. That—yes, and his bottles of wine, and glasses of
  • brandy-and-water too! Oh, I would give ten thousand worlds to be Miss
  • Murray again! It is _too_ bad to feel life, health, and beauty wasting
  • away, unfelt and unenjoyed, for such a brute as that!’ exclaimed she,
  • fairly bursting into tears in the bitterness of her vexation.
  • Of course, I pitied her exceedingly; as well for her false idea of
  • happiness and disregard of duty, as for the wretched partner with whom
  • her fate was linked. I said what I could to comfort her, and offered
  • such counsels as I thought she most required: advising her, first, by
  • gentle reasoning, by kindness, example, and persuasion, to try to
  • ameliorate her husband; and then, when she had done all she could, if she
  • still found him incorrigible, to endeavour to abstract herself from
  • him—to wrap herself up in her own integrity, and trouble herself as
  • little about him as possible. I exhorted her to seek consolation in
  • doing her duty to God and man, to put her trust in Heaven, and solace
  • herself with the care and nurture of her little daughter; assuring her
  • she would be amply rewarded by witnessing its progress in strength and
  • wisdom, and receiving its genuine affection.
  • ‘But I can’t devote myself entirely to a child,’ said she; ‘it may
  • die—which is not at all improbable.’
  • ‘But, with care, many a delicate infant has become a strong man or
  • woman.’
  • ‘But it may grow so intolerably like its father that I shall hate it.’
  • ‘That is not likely; it is a little girl, and strongly resembles its
  • mother.’
  • ‘No matter; I should like it better if it were a boy—only that its father
  • will leave it no inheritance that he can possibly squander away. What
  • pleasure can I have in seeing a girl grow up to eclipse me, and enjoy
  • those pleasures that I am for ever debarred from? But supposing I could
  • be so generous as to take delight in this, still it is _only_ a child;
  • and I can’t centre all my hopes in a child: that is only one degree
  • better than devoting oneself to a dog. And as for all the wisdom and
  • goodness you have been trying to instil into me—that is all very right
  • and proper, I daresay, and if I were some twenty years older, I might
  • fructify by it: but people must enjoy themselves when they are young; and
  • if others won’t let them—why, they must hate them for it!’
  • ‘The best way to enjoy yourself is to do what is right and hate nobody.
  • The end of Religion is not to teach us how to die, but how to live; and
  • the earlier you become wise and good, the more of happiness you secure.
  • And now, Lady Ashby, I have one more piece of advice to offer you, which
  • is, that you will not make an enemy of your mother-in-law. Don’t get
  • into the way of holding her at arms’ length, and regarding her with
  • jealous distrust. I never saw her, but I have heard good as well as evil
  • respecting her; and I imagine that, though cold and haughty in her
  • general demeanour, and even exacting in her requirements, she has strong
  • affections for those who can reach them; and, though so blindly attached
  • to her son, she is not without good principles, or incapable of hearing
  • reason. If you would but conciliate her a little, and adopt a friendly,
  • open manner—and even confide your grievances to her—real grievances, such
  • as you have a right to complain of—it is my firm belief that she would,
  • in time, become your faithful friend, and a comfort and support to you,
  • instead of the incubus you describe her.’ But I fear my advice had
  • little effect upon the unfortunate young lady; and, finding I could
  • render myself so little serviceable, my residence at Ashby Park became
  • doubly painful. But still, I must stay out that day and the following
  • one, as I had promised to do so: though, resisting all entreaties and
  • inducements to prolong my visit further, I insisted upon departing the
  • next morning; affirming that my mother would be lonely without me, and
  • that she impatiently expected my return. Nevertheless, it was with a
  • heavy heart that I bade adieu to poor Lady Ashby, and left her in her
  • princely home. It was no slight additional proof of her unhappiness,
  • that she should so cling to the consolation of my presence, and earnestly
  • desire the company of one whose general tastes and ideas were so little
  • congenial to her own—whom she had completely forgotten in her hour of
  • prosperity, and whose presence would be rather a nuisance than a
  • pleasure, if she could but have half her heart’s desire.
  • CHAPTER XXIV—THE SANDS
  • Our school was not situated in the heart of the town: on entering A---
  • from the north-west there is a row of respectable-looking houses, on each
  • side of the broad, white road, with narrow slips of garden-ground before
  • them, Venetian blinds to the windows, and a flight of steps leading to
  • each trim, brass-handled door. In one of the largest of these
  • habitations dwelt my mother and I, with such young ladies as our friends
  • and the public chose to commit to our charge. Consequently, we were a
  • considerable distance from the sea, and divided from it by a labyrinth of
  • streets and houses. But the sea was my delight; and I would often gladly
  • pierce the town to obtain the pleasure of a walk beside it, whether with
  • the pupils, or alone with my mother during the vacations. It was
  • delightful to me at all times and seasons, but especially in the wild
  • commotion of a rough sea-breeze, and in the brilliant freshness of a
  • summer morning.
  • I awoke early on the third morning after my return from Ashby Park—the
  • sun was shining through the blind, and I thought how pleasant it would be
  • to pass through the quiet town and take a solitary ramble on the sands
  • while half the world was in bed. I was not long in forming the
  • resolution, nor slow to act upon it. Of course I would not disturb my
  • mother, so I stole noiselessly downstairs, and quietly unfastened the
  • door. I was dressed and out, when the church clock struck a quarter to
  • six. There was a feeling of freshness and vigour in the very streets;
  • and when I got free of the town, when my foot was on the sands and my
  • face towards the broad, bright bay, no language can describe the effect
  • of the deep, clear azure of the sky and ocean, the bright morning
  • sunshine on the semicircular barrier of craggy cliffs surmounted by green
  • swelling hills, and on the smooth, wide sands, and the low rocks out at
  • sea—looking, with their clothing of weeds and moss, like little
  • grass-grown islands—and above all, on the brilliant, sparkling waves.
  • And then, the unspeakable purity—and freshness of the air! There was
  • just enough heat to enhance the value of the breeze, and just enough wind
  • to keep the whole sea in motion, to make the waves come bounding to the
  • shore, foaming and sparkling, as if wild with glee. Nothing else was
  • stirring—no living creature was visible besides myself. My footsteps
  • were the first to press the firm, unbroken sands;—nothing before had
  • trampled them since last night’s flowing tide had obliterated the deepest
  • marks of yesterday, and left them fair and even, except where the
  • subsiding water had left behind it the traces of dimpled pools and little
  • running streams.
  • Refreshed, delighted, invigorated, I walked along, forgetting all my
  • cares, feeling as if I had wings to my feet, and could go at least forty
  • miles without fatigue, and experiencing a sense of exhilaration to which
  • I had been an entire stranger since the days of early youth. About
  • half-past six, however, the grooms began to come down to air their
  • masters’ horses—first one, and then another, till there were some dozen
  • horses and five or six riders: but that need not trouble me, for they
  • would not come as far as the low rocks which I was now approaching. When
  • I had reached these, and walked over the moist, slippery sea-weed (at the
  • risk of floundering into one of the numerous pools of clear, salt water
  • that lay between them), to a little mossy promontory with the sea
  • splashing round it, I looked back again to see who next was stirring.
  • Still, there were only the early grooms with their horses, and one
  • gentleman with a little dark speck of a dog running before him, and one
  • water-cart coming out of the town to get water for the baths. In another
  • minute or two, the distant bathing machines would begin to move, and then
  • the elderly gentlemen of regular habits and sober quaker ladies would be
  • coming to take their salutary morning walks. But however interesting
  • such a scene might be, I could not wait to witness it, for the sun and
  • the sea so dazzled my eyes in that direction, that I could but afford one
  • glance; and then I turned again to delight myself with the sight and the
  • sound of the sea, dashing against my promontory—with no prodigious force,
  • for the swell was broken by the tangled sea-weed and the unseen rocks
  • beneath; otherwise I should soon have been deluged with spray. But the
  • tide was coming in; the water was rising; the gulfs and lakes were
  • filling; the straits were widening: it was time to seek some safer
  • footing; so I walked, skipped, and stumbled back to the smooth, wide
  • sands, and resolved to proceed to a certain bold projection in the
  • cliffs, and then return.
  • Presently, I heard a snuffling sound behind me and then a dog came
  • frisking and wriggling to my feet. It was my own Snap—the little dark,
  • wire-haired terrier! When I spoke his name, he leapt up in my face and
  • yelled for joy. Almost as much delighted as himself, I caught the little
  • creature in my arms, and kissed him repeatedly. But how came he to be
  • there? He could not have dropped from the sky, or come all that way
  • alone: it must be either his master, the rat-catcher, or somebody else
  • that had brought him; so, repressing my extravagant caresses, and
  • endeavouring to repress his likewise, I looked round, and beheld—Mr.
  • Weston!
  • ‘Your dog remembers you well, Miss Grey,’ said he, warmly grasping the
  • hand I offered him without clearly knowing what I was about. ‘You rise
  • early.’
  • ‘Not often so early as this,’ I replied, with amazing composure,
  • considering all the circumstances of the case.
  • ‘How far do you purpose to extend your walk?’
  • ‘I was thinking of returning—it must be almost time, I think.’
  • He consulted his watch—a gold one now—and told me it was only five
  • minutes past seven.
  • ‘But, doubtless, you have had a long enough walk,’ said he, turning
  • towards the town, to which I now proceeded leisurely to retrace my steps;
  • and he walked beside me.
  • ‘In what part of the town do you live?’ asked he. ‘I never could
  • discover.’
  • Never could discover? Had he endeavoured to do so then? I told him the
  • place of our abode. He asked how we prospered in our affairs. I told
  • him we were doing very well—that we had had a considerable addition to
  • our pupils after the Christmas vacation, and expected a still further
  • increase at the close of this.
  • ‘You must be an accomplished instructor,’ he observed.
  • ‘No, it is my mother,’ I replied; ‘she manages things so well, and is so
  • active, and clever, and kind.’
  • ‘I should like to know your mother. Will you introduce me to her some
  • time, if I call?’
  • ‘Yes, willingly.’
  • ‘And will you allow me the privilege of an old friend, of looking in upon
  • you now and then?’
  • ‘Yes, if—I suppose so.’
  • This was a very foolish answer, but the truth was, I considered that I
  • had no right to invite anyone to my mother’s house without her knowledge;
  • and if I had said, ‘Yes, if my mother does not object,’ it would appear
  • as if by his question I understood more than was expected; so,
  • _supposing_ she would not, I added, ‘I suppose so:’ but of course I
  • should have said something more sensible and more polite, if I had had my
  • wits about me. We continued our walk for a minute in silence; which,
  • however, was shortly relieved (no small relief to me) by Mr. Weston
  • commenting upon the brightness of the morning and the beauty of the bay,
  • and then upon the advantages A--- possessed over many other fashionable
  • places of resort.
  • ‘You don’t ask what brings me to A--- ’ said he. ‘You can’t suppose I’m
  • rich enough to come for my own pleasure.’
  • ‘I heard you had left Horton.’
  • ‘You didn’t hear, then, that I had got the living of F---?’
  • F--- was a village about two miles distant from A---.
  • ‘No,’ said I; ‘we live so completely out of the world, even here, that
  • news seldom reaches me through any quarter; except through the medium of
  • the—_Gazette_. But I hope you like your new parish; and that I may
  • congratulate you on the acquisition?’
  • ‘I expect to like my parish better a year or two hence, when I have
  • worked certain reforms I have set my heart upon—or, at least, progressed
  • some steps towards such an achievement. But you may congratulate me now;
  • for I find it very agreeable to _have_ a parish all to myself, with
  • nobody to interfere with me—to thwart my plans or cripple my exertions:
  • and besides, I have a respectable house in a rather pleasant
  • neighbourhood, and three hundred pounds a year; and, in fact, I have
  • nothing but solitude to complain of, and nothing but a companion to wish
  • for.’
  • He looked at me as he concluded: and the flash of his dark eyes seemed to
  • set my face on fire; greatly to my own discomfiture, for to evince
  • confusion at such a juncture was intolerable. I made an effort,
  • therefore, to remedy the evil, and disclaim all personal application of
  • the remark by a hasty, ill-expressed reply, to the effect that, if he
  • waited till he was well known in the neighbourhood, he might have
  • numerous opportunities for supplying his want among the residents of F---
  • and its vicinity, or the visitors of A---, if he required so ample a
  • choice: not considering the compliment implied by such an assertion, till
  • his answer made me aware of it.
  • ‘I am not so presumptuous as to believe that,’ said he, ‘though you tell
  • it me; but if it were so, I am rather particular in my notions of a
  • companion for life, and perhaps I might not find one to suit me among the
  • ladies you mention.’
  • ‘If you require perfection, you never will.’
  • ‘I do not—I have no right to require it, as being so far from perfect
  • myself.’
  • Here the conversation was interrupted by a water-cart lumbering past us,
  • for we were now come to the busy part of the sands; and, for the next
  • eight or ten minutes, between carts and horses, and asses, and men, there
  • was little room for social intercourse, till we had turned our backs upon
  • the sea, and begun to ascend the precipitous road leading into the town.
  • Here my companion offered me his arm, which I accepted, though not with
  • the intention of using it as a support.
  • ‘You don’t often come on to the sands, I think,’ said he, ‘for I have
  • walked there many times, both morning and evening, since I came, and
  • never seen you till now; and several times, in passing through the town,
  • too, I have looked about for your school—but I did not think of the—Road;
  • and once or twice I made inquiries, but without obtaining the requisite
  • information.’
  • When we had surmounted the acclivity, I was about to withdraw my arm from
  • his, but by a slight tightening of the elbow was tacitly informed that
  • such was not his will, and accordingly desisted. Discoursing on
  • different subjects, we entered the town, and passed through several
  • streets. I saw that he was going out of his way to accompany me,
  • notwithstanding the long walk that was yet before him; and, fearing that
  • he might be inconveniencing himself from motives of politeness, I
  • observed—‘I fear I am taking you out of your way, Mr. Weston—I believe
  • the road to F--- lies quite in another direction.’
  • ‘I’ll leave you at the end of the next street,’ said he.
  • ‘And when will you come to see mamma?’
  • ‘To-morrow—God willing.’
  • The end of the next street was nearly the conclusion of my journey. He
  • stopped there, however, bid me good-morning, and called Snap, who seemed
  • a little doubtful whether to follow his old mistress or his new master,
  • but trotted away upon being summoned by the latter.
  • ‘I won’t offer to restore him to you, Miss Grey,’ said Mr. Weston,
  • smiling, ‘because I like him.’
  • ‘Oh, I don’t want him,’ replied I, ‘now that he has a good master; I’m
  • quite satisfied.’
  • ‘You take it for granted that I am a good one, then?’
  • The man and the dog departed, and I returned home, full of gratitude to
  • heaven for so much bliss, and praying that my hopes might not again be
  • crushed.
  • CHAPTER XXV—CONCLUSION
  • ‘Well, Agnes, you must not take such long walks again before breakfast,’
  • said my mother, observing that I drank an extra cup of coffee and ate
  • nothing—pleading the heat of the weather, and the fatigue of my long walk
  • as an excuse. I certainly did feel feverish and tired too.
  • ‘You always do things by extremes: now, if you had taken a _short_ walk
  • every morning, and would continue to do so, it would do you good.’
  • ‘Well, mamma, I will.’
  • ‘But this is worse than lying in bed or bending over your books: you have
  • quite put yourself into a fever.’
  • ‘I won’t do it again,’ said I.
  • I was racking my brains with thinking how to tell her about Mr. Weston,
  • for she must know he was coming to-morrow. However, I waited till the
  • breakfast things were removed, and I was more calm and cool; and then,
  • having sat down to my drawing, I began—‘I met an old friend on the sands
  • to-day, mamma.’
  • ‘An old friend! Who could it be?’
  • ‘Two old friends, indeed. One was a dog;’ and then I reminded her of
  • Snap, whose history I had recounted before, and related the incident of
  • his sudden appearance and remarkable recognition; ‘and the other,’
  • continued I, ‘was Mr. Weston, the curate of Horton.’
  • ‘Mr. Weston! I never heard of him before.’
  • ‘Yes, you have: I’ve mentioned him several times, I believe: but you
  • don’t remember.’
  • ‘I’ve heard you speak of Mr. Hatfield.’
  • ‘Mr. Hatfield was the rector, and Mr. Weston the curate: I used to
  • mention him sometimes in contradistinction to Mr. Hatfield, as being a
  • more efficient clergyman. However, he was on the sands this morning with
  • the dog—he had bought it, I suppose, from the rat-catcher; and he knew me
  • as well as it did—probably through its means: and I had a little
  • conversation with him, in the course of which, as he asked about our
  • school, I was led to say something about you, and your good management;
  • and he said he should like to know you, and asked if I would introduce
  • him to you, if he should take the liberty of calling to-morrow; so I said
  • I would. Was I right?’
  • ‘Of course. What kind of a man is he?’
  • ‘A very _respectable_ man, I think: but you will see him to-morrow. He
  • is the new vicar of F---, and as he has only been there a few weeks, I
  • suppose he has made no friends yet, and wants a little society.’
  • The morrow came. What a fever of anxiety and expectation I was in from
  • breakfast till noon—at which time he made his appearance! Having
  • introduced him to my mother, I took my work to the window, and sat down
  • to await the result of the interview. They got on extremely well
  • together—greatly to my satisfaction, for I had felt very anxious about
  • what my mother would think of him. He did not stay long that time: but
  • when he rose to take leave, she said she should be happy to see him,
  • whenever he might find it convenient to call again; and when he was gone,
  • I was gratified by hearing her say,—‘Well! I think he’s a very sensible
  • man. But why did you sit back there, Agnes,’ she added, ‘and talk so
  • little?’
  • ‘Because you talked so well, mamma, I thought you required no assistance
  • from me: and, besides, he was your visitor, not mine.’
  • After that, he often called upon us—several times in the course of a
  • week. He generally addressed most of his conversation to my mother: and
  • no wonder, for she could converse. I almost envied the unfettered,
  • vigorous fluency of her discourse, and the strong sense evinced by
  • everything she said—and yet, I did not; for, though I occasionally
  • regretted my own deficiencies for his sake, it gave me very great
  • pleasure to sit and hear the two beings I loved and honoured above every
  • one else in the world, discoursing together so amicably, so wisely, and
  • so well. I was not always silent, however; nor was I at all neglected.
  • I was quite as much noticed as I would wish to be: there was no lack of
  • kind words and kinder looks, no end of delicate attentions, too fine and
  • subtle to be grasped by words, and therefore indescribable—but deeply
  • felt at heart.
  • Ceremony was quickly dropped between us: Mr. Weston came as an expected
  • guest, welcome at all times, and never deranging the economy of our
  • household affairs. He even called me ‘Agnes:’ the name had been timidly
  • spoken at first, but, finding it gave no offence in any quarter, he
  • seemed greatly to prefer that appellation to ‘Miss Grey;’ and so did I.
  • How tedious and gloomy were those days in which he did not come! And yet
  • not miserable; for I had still the remembrance of the last visit and the
  • hope of the next to cheer me. But when two or three days passed without
  • my seeing him, I certainly felt very anxious—absurdly, unreasonably so;
  • for, of course, he had his own business and the affairs of his parish to
  • attend to. And I dreaded the close of the holidays, when _my_ business
  • also would begin, and I should be sometimes unable to see him, and
  • sometimes—when my mother was in the schoolroom—obliged to be with him
  • alone: a position I did not at all desire, in the house; though to meet
  • him out of doors, and walk beside him, had proved by no means
  • disagreeable.
  • One evening, however, in the last week of the vacation, he
  • arrived—unexpectedly: for a heavy and protracted thunder-shower during
  • the afternoon had almost destroyed my hopes of seeing him that day; but
  • now the storm was over, and the sun was shining brightly.
  • ‘A beautiful evening, Mrs. Grey!’ said he, as he entered. ‘Agnes, I want
  • you to take a walk with me to ---’ (he named a certain part of the
  • coast—a bold hill on the land side, and towards the sea a steep
  • precipice, from the summit of which a glorious view is to be had). ‘The
  • rain has laid the dust, and cooled and cleared the air, and the prospect
  • will be magnificent. Will you come?’
  • ‘Can I go, mamma?’
  • ‘Yes; to be sure.’
  • I went to get ready, and was down again in a few minutes; though, of
  • course, I took a little more pains with my attire than if I had merely
  • been going out on some shopping expedition alone. The thunder-shower had
  • certainly had a most beneficial effect upon the weather, and the evening
  • was most delightful. Mr. Weston would have me to take his arm; he said
  • little during our passage through the crowded streets, but walked very
  • fast, and appeared grave and abstracted. I wondered what was the matter,
  • and felt an indefinite dread that something unpleasant was on his mind;
  • and vague surmises, concerning what it might be, troubled me not a
  • little, and made me grave and silent enough. But these fantasies
  • vanished upon reaching the quiet outskirts of the town; for as soon as we
  • came within sight of the venerable old church, and the—hill, with the
  • deep blue beyond it, I found my companion was cheerful enough.
  • ‘I’m afraid I’ve been walking too fast for you, Agnes,’ said he: ‘in my
  • impatience to be rid of the town, I forgot to consult your convenience;
  • but now we’ll walk as slowly as you please. I see, by those light clouds
  • in the west, there will be a brilliant sunset, and we shall be in time to
  • witness its effect upon the sea, at the most moderate rate of
  • progression.’
  • When we had got about half-way up the hill, we fell into silence again;
  • which, as usual, he was the first to break.
  • ‘My house is desolate yet, Miss Grey,’ he smilingly observed, ‘and I am
  • acquainted now with all the ladies in my parish, and several in this town
  • too; and many others I know by sight and by report; but not one of them
  • will suit me for a companion; in fact, there is only one person in the
  • world that will: and that is yourself; and I want to know your decision?’
  • ‘Are you in earnest, Mr. Weston?’
  • ‘In earnest! How could you think I should jest on such a subject?’
  • He laid his hand on mine, that rested on his arm: he must have felt it
  • tremble—but it was no great matter now.
  • ‘I hope I have not been too precipitate,’ he said, in a serious tone.
  • ‘You must have known that it was not my way to flatter and talk soft
  • nonsense, or even to speak the admiration that I felt; and that a single
  • word or glance of mine meant more than the honied phrases and fervent
  • protestations of most other men.’
  • I said something about not liking to leave my mother, and doing nothing
  • without her consent.
  • ‘I settled everything with Mrs. Grey, while you were putting on your
  • bonnet,’ replied he. ‘She said I might have her consent, if I could
  • obtain yours; and I asked her, in case I should be so happy, to come and
  • live with us—for I was sure you would like it better. But she refused,
  • saying she could now afford to employ an assistant, and would continue
  • the school till she could purchase an annuity sufficient to maintain her
  • in comfortable lodgings; and, meantime, she would spend her vacations
  • alternately with us and your sister, and should be quite contented if you
  • were happy. And so now I have overruled your objections on her account.
  • Have you any other?’
  • ‘No—none.’
  • ‘You love me then?’ said he, fervently pressing my hand.
  • ‘Yes.’
  • * * * * *
  • Here I pause. My Diary, from which I have compiled these pages, goes but
  • little further. I could go on for years, but I will content myself with
  • adding, that I shall never forget that glorious summer evening, and
  • always remember with delight that steep hill, and the edge of the
  • precipice where we stood together, watching the splendid sunset mirrored
  • in the restless world of waters at our feet—with hearts filled with
  • gratitude to heaven, and happiness, and love—almost too full for speech.
  • A few weeks after that, when my mother had supplied herself with an
  • assistant, I became the wife of Edward Weston; and never have found cause
  • to repent it, and am certain that I never shall. We have had trials, and
  • we know that we must have them again; but we bear them well together, and
  • endeavour to fortify ourselves and each other against the final
  • separation—that greatest of all afflictions to the survivor. But, if we
  • keep in mind the glorious heaven beyond, where both may meet again, and
  • sin and sorrow are unknown, surely that too may be borne; and, meantime,
  • we endeavour to live to the glory of Him who has scattered so many
  • blessings in our path.
  • Edward, by his strenuous exertions, has worked surprising reforms in his
  • parish, and is esteemed and loved by its inhabitants—as he deserves; for
  • whatever his faults may be as a man (and no one is entirely without), I
  • defy anybody to blame him as a pastor, a husband, or a father.
  • Our children, Edward, Agnes, and little Mary, promise well; their
  • education, for the time being, is chiefly committed to me; and they shall
  • want no good thing that a mother’s care can give. Our modest income is
  • amply sufficient for our requirements: and by practising the economy we
  • learnt in harder times, and never attempting to imitate our richer
  • neighbours, we manage not only to enjoy comfort and contentment
  • ourselves, but to have every year something to lay by for our children,
  • and something to give to those who need it.
  • And now I think I have said sufficient.
  • * * * * *
  • _Spottiswode & Co. Ltd._, _Printers_, _London_. _Colchester and Eton_.
  • ***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AGNES GREY***
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