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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Battle of Life, by Charles Dickens
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  • Title: The Battle of Life
  • A Love Story
  • Author: Charles Dickens
  • Release Date: September 10, 2012 [EBook #40723]
  • Language: English
  • *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BATTLE OF LIFE ***
  • Produced by Chris Curnow, eagkw and the Online Distributed
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  • THE BATTLE OF LIFE.
  • A LOVE STORY.
  • [Illustration]
  • [Illustration: THE BATTLE OF LIFE
  • A LOVE STORY]
  • THE
  • BATTLE OF LIFE.
  • A Love Story.
  • BY
  • CHARLES DICKENS.
  • London:
  • BRADBURY & EVANS, WHITEFRIARS.
  • MDCCCXLVI.
  • LONDON:
  • BRADBURY AND EVANS, PRINTERS, WHITEFRIARS.
  • THIS
  • Christmas Book
  • IS CORDIALLY INSCRIBED TO MY ENGLISH FRIENDS
  • IN SWITZERLAND
  • ILLUSTRATIONS.
  • _Title._ _Artist._ _Engraver._
  • FRONTISPIECE D. MACLISE, R.A. _Thompson._
  • TITLE D. MACLISE, R.A. _Thompson._
  • PART THE FIRST R. DOYLE. _Dalziel._
  • WAR C. STANFIELD, R.A. _Williams._
  • PEACE C. STANFIELD, R.A. _Williams._
  • THE PARTING BREAKFAST J. LEECH. _Dalziel._
  • PART THE SECOND R. DOYLE. _Green._
  • SNITCHEY AND CRAGGS J. LEECH. _Dalziel._
  • THE SECRET INTERVIEW D. MACLISE, R.A. _Williams._
  • THE NIGHT OF THE RETURN J. LEECH. _Dalziel._
  • PART THE THIRD R. DOYLE. _Dalziel._
  • THE NUTMEG GRATER C. STANFIELD, R.A. _Williams._
  • THE SISTERS D. MACLISE, R.A. _Williams._
  • THE BATTLE OF LIFE.
  • A Love Story.
  • PART THE FIRST.
  • [Illustration]
  • PART THE FIRST
  • [Illustration]
  • Once upon a time, it matters little when, and in stalwart England, it
  • matters little where, a fierce battle was fought. It was fought upon a
  • long summer day when the waving grass was green. Many a wild flower
  • formed by the Almighty Hand to be a perfumed goblet for the dew, felt
  • its enamelled cup fill high with blood that day, and shrinking dropped.
  • Many an insect deriving its delicate color from harmless leaves and
  • herbs, was stained anew that day by dying men, and marked its frightened
  • way with an unnatural track. The painted butterfly took blood into the
  • air upon the edges of its wings. The stream ran red. The trodden ground
  • became a quagmire, whence, from sullen pools collected in the prints of
  • human feet and horses' hoofs, the one prevailing hue still lowered and
  • glimmered at the sun.
  • [Illustration]
  • Heaven keep us from a knowledge of the sights the moon beheld
  • upon that field, when, coming up above the black line of distant
  • rising-ground, softened and blurred at the edge by trees, she rose
  • into the sky and looked upon the plain, strewn with upturned faces
  • that had once at mothers' breasts sought mothers' eyes, or slumbered
  • happily. Heaven keep us from a knowledge of the secrets whispered
  • afterwards upon the tainted wind that blew across the scene of that
  • day's work and that night's death and suffering! Many a lonely moon
  • was bright upon the battle-ground, and many a star kept mournful watch
  • upon it, and many a wind from every quarter of the earth blew over it,
  • before the traces of the fight were worn away.
  • They lurked and lingered for a long time, but survived in little things,
  • for Nature, far above the evil passions of men, soon recovered Her
  • serenity, and smiled upon the guilty battle-ground as she had done
  • before, when it was innocent. The larks sang high above it, the swallows
  • skimmed and dipped and flitted to and fro, the shadows of the flying
  • clouds pursued each other swiftly, over grass and corn and turnip-field
  • and wood, and over roof and church-spire in the nestling town among
  • the trees, away into the bright distance on the borders of the sky
  • and earth, where the red sunsets faded. Crops were sown, and grew up,
  • and were gathered in; the stream that had been crimsoned, turned a
  • watermill; men whistled at the plough; gleaners and haymakers were seen
  • in quiet groups at work; sheep and oxen pastured; boys whooped and
  • called, in fields, to scare away the birds; smoke rose from cottage
  • chimneys; sabbath bells rang peacefully; old people lived and died; the
  • timid creatures of the field, and simple flowers of the bush and garden,
  • grew and withered in their destined terms: and all upon the fierce and
  • bloody battle-ground, where thousands upon thousands had been killed in
  • the great fight.
  • But there were deep green patches in the growing corn at first, that
  • people looked at awfully. Year after year they re-appeared; and it was
  • known that underneath those fertile spots, heaps of men and horses lay
  • buried, indiscriminately, enriching the ground. The husbandmen who
  • ploughed those places, shrunk from the great worms abounding there; and
  • the sheaves they yielded, were, for many a long year, called the Battle
  • Sheaves, and set apart; and no one ever knew a Battle Sheaf to be among
  • the last load at a Harvest Home. For a long time, every furrow that was
  • turned, revealed some fragments of the fight. For a long time, there
  • were wounded trees upon the battle-ground; and scraps of hacked and
  • broken fence and wall, where deadly struggles had been made; and
  • trampled parts where not a leaf or blade would grow. For a long time,
  • no village-girl would dress her hair or bosom with the sweetest flower
  • from that field of death: and after many a year had come and gone, the
  • berries growing there, were still believed to leave too deep a stain
  • upon the hand that plucked them.
  • [Illustration]
  • The Seasons in their course, however, though they passed as lightly as
  • the summer clouds themselves, obliterated, in the lapse of time, even
  • these remains of the old conflict; and wore away such legendary traces
  • of it as the neighbouring people carried in their minds, until they
  • dwindled into old wives' tales, dimly remembered round the winter fire,
  • and waning every year. Where the wild flowers and berries had so long
  • remained upon the stem untouched, gardens arose, and houses were built,
  • and children played at battles on the turf. The wounded trees had long
  • ago made Christmas logs, and blazed and roared away. The deep green
  • patches were no greener now than the memory of those who lay in dust
  • below. The ploughshare still turned up from time to time some rusty bits
  • of metal, but it was hard to say what use they had ever served, and
  • those who found them wondered and disputed. An old dinted corslet,
  • and a helmet, had been hanging in the church so long, that the same
  • weak half-blind old man who tried in vain to make them out above the
  • whitewashed arch, had marvelled at them as a baby. If the host slain
  • upon the field, could have been for a moment reanimated in the forms in
  • which they fell, each upon the spot that was the bed of his untimely
  • death, gashed and ghastly soldiers would have stared in, hundreds deep,
  • at household door and window; and would have risen on the hearths
  • of quiet homes; and would have been the garnered store of barns and
  • granaries; and would have started up between the cradled infant and its
  • nurse; and would have floated with the stream, and whirled round on the
  • mill, and crowded the orchard, and burdened the meadow, and piled the
  • rickyard high with dying men. So altered was the battle-ground, where
  • thousands upon thousands had been killed in the great fight.
  • Nowhere more altered, perhaps, about a hundred years ago, than in one
  • little orchard attached to an old stone house with a honeysuckle porch:
  • where, on a bright autumn morning, there were sounds of music and
  • laughter, and where two girls danced merrily together on the grass,
  • while some half-dozen peasant women standing on ladders, gathering the
  • apples from the trees, stopped in their work to look down, and share
  • their enjoyment. It was a pleasant, lively, natural scene; a beautiful
  • day, a retired spot; and the two girls, quite unconstrained and
  • careless, danced in the very freedom and gaiety of their hearts.
  • If there were no such thing as display in the world, my private opinion
  • is, and I hope you agree with me, that we might get on a great deal
  • better than we do, and might be infinitely more agreeable company than
  • we are. It was charming to see how these girls danced. They had no
  • spectators but the apple-pickers on the ladders. They were very glad to
  • please them, but they danced to please themselves (or at least you would
  • have supposed so); and you could no more help admiring, than they could
  • help dancing. How they did dance!
  • Not like opera dancers. Not at all. And not like Madame Anybody's
  • finished pupils. Not the least. It was not quadrille dancing, nor minuet
  • dancing, nor even country-dance dancing. It was neither in the old
  • style, nor the new style, nor the French style, nor the English style;
  • though it may have been, by accident, a trifle in the Spanish style,
  • which is a free and joyous one, I am told, deriving a delightful air of
  • off-hand inspiration, from the chirping little castanets. As they danced
  • among the orchard trees, and down the groves of stems and back again,
  • and twirled each other lightly round and round, the influence of their
  • airy motion seemed to spread and spread, in the sun-lighted scene, like
  • an expanding circle in the water. Their streaming hair and fluttering
  • skirts, the elastic grass beneath their feet, the boughs that rustled in
  • the morning air--the flashing leaves, their speckled shadows on the soft
  • green ground--the balmy wind that swept along the landscape, glad to
  • turn the distant windmill, cheerily--everything between the two girls,
  • and the man and team at plough upon the ridge of land, where they showed
  • against the sky as if they were the last things in the world--seemed
  • dancing too.
  • At last the younger of the dancing sisters, out of breath, and laughing
  • gaily, threw herself upon a bench to rest. The other leaned against
  • a tree hard by. The music, a wandering harp and fiddle, left off
  • with a flourish, as if it boasted of its freshness; though, the truth
  • is, it had gone at such a pace, and worked itself to such a pitch of
  • competition with the dancing, that it never could have held on half a
  • minute longer. The apple-pickers on the ladders raised a hum and murmur
  • of applause, and then, in keeping with the sound, bestirred themselves
  • to work again, like bees.
  • The more actively, perhaps, because an elderly gentleman, who was
  • no other than Doctor Jeddler himself--it was Doctor Jeddler's house
  • and orchard, you should know, and these were Doctor Jeddler's
  • daughters--came bustling out to see what was the matter, and who the
  • deuce played music on his property, before breakfast. For he was a great
  • philosopher, Doctor Jeddler, and not very musical.
  • "Music and dancing _to-day_!" said the Doctor, stopping short, and
  • speaking to himself, "I thought they dreaded to-day. But it's a world of
  • contradictions. Why, Grace; why, Marion!" he added, aloud, "is the world
  • more mad than usual this morning?"
  • "Make some allowance for it, father, if it be," replied his younger
  • daughter, Marion, going close to him, and looking into his face, "for
  • it's somebody's birth-day."
  • "Somebody's birth-day, Puss," replied the Doctor. "Don't you know it's
  • always somebody's birth-day? Did you never hear how many new performers
  • enter on this--ha! ha! ha!--it's impossible to speak gravely of it--on
  • this preposterous and ridiculous business called Life, every minute?"
  • "No, father!"
  • "No, not you, of course; you're a woman--almost," said the Doctor. "By
  • the bye," and he looked into the pretty face, still close to his, "I
  • suppose it's _your_ birth-day."
  • "No! Do you really, father?" cried his pet daughter, pursing up her red
  • lips to be kissed.
  • "There! Take my love with it," said the Doctor, imprinting his upon
  • them; "and many happy returns of the--the idea!--of the day. The notion
  • of wishing happy returns in such a farce as this," said the Doctor to
  • himself, "is good! Ha! ha! ha!"
  • Doctor Jeddler was, as I have said, a great philosopher; and the heart
  • and mystery of his philosophy was, to look upon the world as a gigantic
  • practical joke: as something too absurd to be considered seriously, by
  • any rational man. His system of belief had been, in the beginning, part
  • and parcel of the battle-ground on which he lived; as you shall
  • presently understand.
  • "Well! But how did you get the music?" asked the Doctor.
  • "Poultry-stealers, of course. Where did the minstrels come from?"
  • "Alfred sent the music," said his daughter Grace, adjusting a few
  • simple flowers in her sister's hair, with which, in her admiration of
  • that youthful beauty, she had herself adorned it half-an-hour before,
  • and which the dancing had disarranged.
  • "Oh! Alfred sent the music, did he?" returned the Doctor.
  • "Yes. He met it coming out of the town as he was entering early. The
  • men are travelling on foot, and rested there last night; and as it was
  • Marion's birth-day, and he thought it would please her, he sent them on,
  • with a pencilled note to me, saying that if I thought so too, they had
  • come to serenade her."
  • "Ay, ay," said the Doctor, carelessly, "he always takes your opinion."
  • "And my opinion being favorable," said Grace, good-humouredly; and
  • pausing for a moment to admire the pretty head she decorated, with her
  • own thrown back; "and Marion being in high spirits, and beginning to
  • dance, I joined her: and so we danced to Alfred's music till we were out
  • of breath. And we thought the music all the gayer for being sent by
  • Alfred. Didn't we, dear Marion?"
  • "Oh, I don't know, Grace. How you teaze me about Alfred."
  • "Teaze you by mentioning your lover!" said her sister.
  • "I am sure I don't much care to have him mentioned," said the wilful
  • beauty, stripping the petals from some flowers she held, and scattering
  • them on the ground. "I am almost tired of hearing of him; and as to his
  • being my lover"----
  • "Hush! Don't speak lightly of a true heart, which is all your own,
  • Marion," cried her sister, "even in jest. There is not a truer heart
  • than Alfred's in the world!"
  • "No--no," said Marion, raising her eyebrows with a pleasant air of
  • careless consideration, "perhaps not. But I don't know that there's any
  • great merit in that. I--I don't want him to be so very true. I never
  • asked him. If he expects that I----. But, dear Grace, why need we talk
  • of him at all, just now!"
  • It was agreeable to see the graceful figures of the blooming sisters,
  • twined together, lingering among the trees, conversing thus, with
  • earnestness opposed to lightness, yet with love responding tenderly to
  • love. And it was very curious indeed to see the younger sister's eyes
  • suffused with tears; and something fervently and deeply felt, breaking
  • through the wilfulness of what she said, and striving with it painfully.
  • The difference between them, in respect of age, could not exceed four
  • years at most: but Grace, as often happens in such cases, when no mother
  • watches over both (the Doctor's wife was dead), seemed, in her gentle
  • care of her young sister, and in the steadiness of her devotion to her,
  • older than she was; and more removed, in course of nature, from all
  • competition with her, or participation, otherwise than through her
  • sympathy and true affection, in her wayward fancies, than their ages
  • seemed to warrant. Great character of mother, that, even in this shadow,
  • and faint reflection of it, purifies the heart, and raises the exalted
  • nature nearer to the angels!
  • The Doctor's reflections, as he looked after them, and heard the purport
  • of their discourse, were limited, at first, to certain merry meditations
  • on the folly of all loves and likings, and the idle imposition
  • practised on themselves by young people, who believed, for a moment,
  • that there could be anything serious in such bubbles, and were always
  • undeceived--always!
  • But the home-adorning, self-denying qualities of Grace, and her sweet
  • temper, so gentle and retiring, yet including so much constancy and
  • bravery of spirit, seemed all expressed to him in the contrast between
  • her quiet household figure and that of his younger and more beautiful
  • child; and he was sorry for her sake--sorry for them both--that life
  • should be such a very ridiculous business as it was.
  • The Doctor never dreamed of inquiring whether his children, or either of
  • them, helped in any way to make the scheme a serious one. But then he
  • was a Philosopher.
  • A kind and generous man by nature, he had stumbled, by chance, over that
  • common Philosopher's stone (much more easily discovered than the object
  • of the alchemist's researches), which sometimes trips up kind and
  • generous men, and has the fatal property of turning gold to dross, and
  • every precious thing to poor account.
  • "Britain!" cried the Doctor. "Britain! Halloa!"
  • A small man, with an uncommonly sour and discontented face, emerged from
  • the house, and returned to this call the unceremonious acknowledgment of
  • "Now then!"
  • "Where's the breakfast table?" said the Doctor.
  • "In the house," returned Britain.
  • "Are you going to spread it out here, as you were told last night?"
  • said the Doctor. "Don't you know that there are gentlemen coming? That
  • there's business to be done this morning, before the coach comes by?
  • That this is a very particular occasion?"
  • "I couldn't do anything, Doctor Jeddler, till the women had done getting
  • in the apples, could I?" said Britain, his voice rising with his
  • reasoning, so that it was very loud at last.
  • "Well, have they done now?" returned the Doctor, looking at his watch,
  • and clapping his hands. "Come! make haste! where's Clemency?"
  • "Here am I, Mister," said a voice from one of the ladders, which a pair
  • of clumsy feet descended briskly. "It's all done now. Clear away, gals.
  • Everything shall be ready for you in half a minute, Mister."
  • With that she began to bustle about most vigorously; presenting, as she
  • did so, an appearance sufficiently peculiar to justify a word of
  • introduction.
  • She was about thirty years old; and had a sufficiently plump and
  • cheerful face, though it was twisted up into an odd expression of
  • tightness that made it comical. But the extraordinary homeliness of her
  • gait and manner, would have superseded any face in the world. To say
  • that she had two left legs, and somebody else's arms; and that all four
  • limbs seemed to be out of joint, and to start from perfectly wrong
  • places when they were set in motion; is to offer the mildest outline of
  • the reality. To say that she was perfectly content and satisfied with
  • these arrangements, and regarded them as being no business of hers, and
  • took her arms and legs as they came, and allowed them to dispose of
  • themselves just as it happened, is to render faint justice to her
  • equanimity. Her dress was a prodigious pair of self-willed shoes, that
  • never wanted to go where her feet went; blue stockings; a printed gown
  • of many colours, and the most hideous pattern procurable for money; and
  • a white apron. She always wore short sleeves, and always had, by some
  • accident, grazed elbows, in which she took so lively an interest that
  • she was continually trying to turn them round and get impossible views
  • of them. In general, a little cap perched somewhere on her head; though
  • it was rarely to be met with in the place usually occupied in other
  • subjects, by that article of dress; but from head to foot she was
  • scrupulously clean, and maintained a kind of dislocated tidiness. Indeed
  • her laudable anxiety to be tidy and compact in her own conscience as
  • well as in the public eye, gave rise to one of her most startling
  • evolutions, which was to grasp herself sometimes by a sort of wooden
  • handle (part of her clothing, and familiarly called a busk), and wrestle
  • as it were with her garments, until they fell into a symmetrical
  • arrangement.
  • Such, in outward form and garb, was Clemency Newcome; who was supposed
  • to have unconsciously originated a corruption of her own christian
  • name, from Clementina (but nobody knew, for the deaf old mother, a very
  • phenomenon of age, whom she had supported almost from a child, was dead,
  • and she had no other relation); who now busied herself in preparing the
  • table; and who stood, at intervals, with her bare red arms crossed,
  • rubbing her grazed elbows with opposite hands, and staring at it very
  • composedly, until she suddenly remembered something else it wanted, and
  • jogged off to fetch it.
  • "Here are them two lawyers a-coming, Mister!" said Clemency, in a tone
  • of no very great good-will.
  • "Aha!" cried the Doctor, advancing to the gate to meet them. "Good
  • morning, good morning! Grace, my dear! Marion! Here are Messrs. Snitchey
  • and Craggs. Where's Alfred?"
  • "He'll be back directly, father, no doubt," said Grace. "He had so much
  • to do this morning in his preparations for departure, that he was up and
  • out by daybreak. Good morning, gentlemen."
  • "Ladies!" said Mr. Snitchey, "For Self and Craggs," who bowed, "good
  • morning. Miss," to Marion, "I kiss your hand." Which he did. "And I wish
  • you"--which he might or might not, for he didn't look, at first sight,
  • like a gentleman troubled with many warm outpourings of soul, in behalf
  • of other people, "a hundred happy returns of this auspicious day."
  • "Ha ha ha!" laughed the Doctor thoughtfully, with his hands in his
  • pockets. "The great farce in a hundred acts!"
  • "You wouldn't, I am sure," said Mr. Snitchey, standing a small
  • professional blue bag against one leg of the table, "cut the great
  • farce short for this actress, at all events, Doctor Jeddler."
  • "No," returned the Doctor. "God forbid! May she live to laugh at it, as
  • long as she _can_ laugh, and then say, with the French wit, 'The farce
  • is ended; draw the curtain.'"
  • "The French wit," said Mr. Snitchey, peeping sharply into his blue bag,
  • "was wrong, Doctor Jeddler; and your philosophy is altogether wrong,
  • depend upon it, as I have often told you. Nothing serious in life! What
  • do you call law?"
  • "A joke," replied the Doctor.
  • "Did you ever go to law?" asked Mr. Snitchey, looking out of the blue
  • bag.
  • "Never," returned the Doctor.
  • "If you ever do," said Mr. Snitchey, "perhaps you'll alter that
  • opinion."
  • Craggs, who seemed to be represented by Snitchey, and to be conscious
  • of little or no separate existence or personal individuality, offered a
  • remark of his own in this place. It involved the only idea of which he
  • did not stand seised and possessed in equal moieties with Snitchey; but
  • he had some partners in it among the wise men of the world.
  • "It's made a great deal too easy," said Mr. Craggs.
  • "Law is?" asked the Doctor.
  • "Yes," said Mr. Craggs, "everything is. Everything appears to me to be
  • made too easy, now-a-days. It's the vice of these times. If the world is
  • a joke (I am not prepared to say it isn't), it ought to be made a very
  • difficult joke to crack. It ought to be as hard a struggle, Sir, as
  • possible. That's the intention. But it's being made far too easy. We are
  • oiling the gates of life. They ought to be rusty. We shall have them
  • beginning to turn, soon, with a smooth sound. Whereas they ought to
  • grate upon their hinges, Sir."
  • Mr. Craggs seemed positively to grate upon his own hinges, as he
  • delivered this opinion; to which he communicated immense effect--being
  • a cold, hard, dry man, dressed in grey and white, like a flint; with
  • small twinkles in his eyes, as if something struck sparks out of them.
  • The three natural kingdoms, indeed, had each a fanciful representative
  • among this brotherhood of disputants: for Snitchey was like a magpie or
  • a raven (only not so sleek), and the Doctor had a streaked face like a
  • winter-pippin, with here and there a dimple to express the peckings of
  • the birds, and a very little bit of pigtail behind, that stood for the
  • stalk.
  • As the active figure of a handsome young man, dressed for a journey,
  • and followed by a porter, bearing several packages and baskets,
  • entered the orchard at a brisk pace, and with an air of gaiety and
  • hope that accorded well with the morning,--these three drew together,
  • like the brothers of the sister Fates, or like the Graces most
  • effectually disguised, or like the three weird prophets on the heath,
  • and greeted him.
  • "Happy returns, Alf," said the Doctor, lightly.
  • "A hundred happy returns of this auspicious day, Mr. Heathfield," said
  • Snitchey, bowing low.
  • "Returns!" Craggs murmured in a deep voice, all alone.
  • "Why, what a battery!" exclaimed Alfred, stopping short, "and
  • one--two--three--all foreboders of no good, in the great sea before me.
  • I am glad you are not the first I have met this morning: I should have
  • taken it for a bad omen. But Grace was the first--sweet, pleasant
  • Grace--so I defy you all!"
  • "If you please, Mister, _I_ was the first you know," said Clemency
  • Newcome. "She was a walking out here, before sunrise, you remember. I
  • was in the house."
  • "That's true! Clemency was the first," said Alfred. "So I defy you with
  • Clemency."
  • "Ha, ha, ha!--for Self and Craggs," said Snitchey. "What a defiance!"
  • "Not so bad a one as it appears, may be," said Alfred, shaking hands
  • heartily with the Doctor, and also with Snitchey and Craggs, and then
  • looking round. "Where are the--Good Heavens!"
  • With a start, productive for the moment of a closer partnership between
  • Jonathan Snitchey and Thomas Craggs than the subsisting articles of
  • agreement in that wise contemplated, he hastily betook himself to where
  • the sisters stood together, and--however, I needn't more particularly
  • explain his manner of saluting Marion first, and Grace afterwards, than
  • by hinting that Mr. Craggs may possibly have considered it "too easy."
  • Perhaps to change the subject, Doctor Jeddler made a hasty move towards
  • the breakfast, and they all sat down at table. Grace presided; but so
  • discreetly stationed herself, as to cut off her sister and Alfred from
  • the rest of the company. Snitchey and Craggs sat at opposite corners,
  • with the blue bag between them for safety; and the Doctor took his usual
  • position, opposite to Grace. Clemency hovered galvanically about the
  • table, as waitress; and the melancholy Britain, at another and a smaller
  • board, acted as Grand Carver of a round of beef, and a ham.
  • "Meat?" said Britain, approaching Mr. Snitchey, with the carving knife
  • and fork in his hands, and throwing the question at him like a missile.
  • "Certainly," returned the lawyer.
  • "Do _you_ want any?" to Craggs.
  • "Lean, and well done," replied that gentleman.
  • [Illustration]
  • Having executed these orders, and moderately supplied the Doctor (he
  • seemed to know that nobody else wanted anything to eat), he lingered as
  • near the Firm as he decently could, watching, with an austere eye, their
  • disposition of the viands, and but once relaxing the severe expression
  • of his face. This was on the occasion of Mr. Craggs, whose teeth were
  • not of the best, partially choking, when he cried out with great
  • animation, "I thought he was gone!"
  • "Now Alfred," said the Doctor, "for a word or two of business, while we
  • are yet at breakfast."
  • "While we are yet at breakfast," said Snitchey and Craggs, who seemed to
  • have no present idea of leaving off.
  • Although Alfred had not been breakfasting, and seemed to have quite
  • enough business on his hands as it was, he respectfully answered:
  • "If you please, Sir."
  • "If anything could be serious," the Doctor began, "in such a--"
  • "Farce as this, Sir," hinted Alfred.
  • "In such a farce as this," observed the Doctor, "it might be this
  • recurrence, on the eve of separation, of a double birth-day, which is
  • connected with many associations pleasant to us four, and with the
  • recollection of a long and amicable intercourse. That's not to the
  • purpose."
  • "Ah! yes, yes, Doctor Jeddler," said the young man. "It is to the
  • purpose. Much to the purpose, as my heart bears witness this morning;
  • and as yours does too, I know, if you would let it speak. I leave your
  • house to-day; I cease to be your ward to-day; we part with tender
  • relations stretching far behind us, that never can be exactly renewed,
  • and with others dawning yet before us," he looked down at Marion beside
  • him, "fraught with such considerations as I must not trust myself to
  • speak of now. Come, come!" he added, rallying his spirits and the Doctor
  • at once, "there's a serious grain in this large foolish dust-heap,
  • Doctor. Let us allow to-day, that there is One."
  • "To-day!" cried the Doctor. "Hear him! Ha, ha, ha! Of all days in the
  • foolish year. Why on this day, the great battle was fought on this
  • ground. On this ground where we now sit, where I saw my two girls dance
  • this morning, where the fruit has just been gathered for our eating from
  • these trees, the roots of which are struck in Men, not earth,--so many
  • lives were lost, that within my recollection, generations afterwards, a
  • churchyard full of bones, and dust of bones, and chips of cloven skulls,
  • has been dug up from underneath our feet here. Yet not a hundred people
  • in that battle, knew for what they fought, or why; not a hundred of the
  • inconsiderate rejoicers in the victory, why they rejoiced. Not half a
  • hundred people were the better, for the gain or loss. Not half-a-dozen
  • men agree to this hour on the cause or merits; and nobody, in short,
  • ever knew anything distinct about it, but the mourners of the slain.
  • Serious, too!" said the Doctor, laughing. "Such a system!"
  • "But all this seems to me," said Alfred, "to be very serious."
  • "Serious!" cried the Doctor. "If you allowed such things to be serious,
  • you must go mad, or die, or climb up to the top of a mountain, and turn
  • hermit."
  • "Besides--so long ago," said Alfred.
  • "Long ago!" returned the Doctor. "Do you know what the world has been
  • doing, ever since? Do you know what else it has been doing? _I_ don't!"
  • "It has gone to law a little," observed Mr. Snitchey, stirring his tea.
  • "Although the way out has been always made too easy," said his partner.
  • "And you'll excuse my saying, Doctor," pursued Mr. Snitchey, "having
  • been already put a thousand times in possession of my opinion, in the
  • course of our discussions, that, in its having gone to law, and in its
  • legal system altogether, I do observe a serious side--now, really, a
  • something tangible, and with a purpose and intention in it--"
  • Clemency Newcome made an angular tumble against the table, occasioning
  • a sounding clatter among the cups and saucers.
  • "Heyday! what's the matter there?" exclaimed the Doctor.
  • "It's this evil-inclined blue bag," said Clemency, "always tripping up
  • somebody!"
  • "With a purpose and intention in it, I was saying," resumed Snitchey,
  • "that commands respect. Life a farce, Doctor Jeddler? With law in it?"
  • The Doctor laughed, and looked at Alfred.
  • "Granted, if you please, that war is foolish," said Snitchey. "There
  • we agree. For example. Here's a smiling country," pointing it out with
  • his fork, "once overrun by soldiers--trespassers every man of 'em--and
  • laid waste by fire and sword. He, he, he! The idea of any man exposing
  • himself, voluntarily, to fire and sword! Stupid, wasteful, positively
  • ridiculous; you laugh at your fellow-creatures, you know, when you
  • think of it! But take this smiling country as it stands. Think of the
  • laws appertaining to real property; to the bequest and devise of real
  • property; to the mortgage and redemption of real property; to leasehold,
  • freehold, and copyhold estate; think," said Mr. Snitchey, with such
  • great emotion that he actually smacked his lips, "of the complicated
  • laws relating to title and proof of title, with all the contradictory
  • precedents and numerous acts of parliament connected with them; think of
  • the infinite number of ingenious and interminable chancery suits, to
  • which this pleasant prospect may give rise;--and acknowledge, Doctor
  • Jeddler, that there is a green spot in the scheme about us! I believe,"
  • said Mr. Snitchey, looking at his partner, "that I speak for Self and
  • Craggs?"
  • Mr. Craggs having signified assent, Mr. Snitchey, somewhat freshened by
  • his recent eloquence, observed that he would take a little more beef,
  • and another cup of tea.
  • "I don't stand up for life in general," he added, rubbing his hands and
  • chuckling, "it's full of folly; full of something worse. Professions of
  • trust, and confidence, and unselfishness, and all that. Bah, bah, bah!
  • We see what they're worth. But you mustn't laugh at life; you've got a
  • game to play; a very serious game indeed! Everybody's playing against
  • you, you know; and you're playing against them. Oh! it's a very
  • interesting thing. There are deep moves upon the board. You must only
  • laugh, Doctor Jeddler, when you win; and then not much. He, he, he! And
  • then not much," repeated Snitchey, rolling his head and winking his eye;
  • as if he would have added, 'you may do this instead!'
  • "Well, Alfred!" cried the Doctor, "what do you say now?"
  • "I say, Sir," replied Alfred, "that the greatest favor you could do me,
  • and yourself too I am inclined to think, would be to try sometimes to
  • forget this battle-field, and others like it, in that broader
  • battle-field of Life, on which the sun looks every day."
  • "Really, I'm afraid that wouldn't soften his opinions, Mr. Alfred," said
  • Snitchey. "The combatants are very eager and very bitter in that same
  • battle of Life. There's a great deal of cutting and slashing, and firing
  • into people's heads from behind; terrible treading down, and trampling
  • on; it's rather a bad business."
  • "I believe, Mr. Snitchey," said Alfred, "there are quiet victories and
  • struggles, great sacrifices of self, and noble acts of heroism, in
  • it--even in many of its apparent lightnesses and contradictions--not the
  • less difficult to achieve, because they have no earthly chronicle or
  • audience; done every day in nooks and corners, and in little households,
  • and in men's and women's hearts--any one of which might reconcile the
  • sternest man to such a world, and fill him with belief and hope in it,
  • though two-fourths of its people were at war, and another fourth at law;
  • and that's a bold word."
  • Both the sisters listened keenly.
  • "Well, well!" said the Doctor, "I am too old to be converted, even by
  • my friend Snitchey here, or my good spinster sister, Martha Jeddler;
  • who had what she calls her domestic trials ages ago, and has led a
  • sympathising life with all sorts of people ever since; and who is so
  • much of your opinion (only she's less reasonable and more obstinate,
  • being a woman), that we can't agree, and seldom meet. I was born upon
  • this battle-field. I began, as a boy, to have my thoughts directed to
  • the real history of a battle-field. Sixty years have gone over my head;
  • and I have never seen the Christian world, including Heaven knows how
  • many loving mothers and good enough girls, like mine here, anything but
  • mad for a battle-field. The same contradictions prevail in everything.
  • One must either laugh or cry at such stupendous inconsistencies; and I
  • prefer to laugh."
  • Britain, who had been paying the profoundest and most melancholy
  • attention to each speaker in his turn, seemed suddenly to decide in
  • favor of the same preference, if a deep sepulchral sound that escaped
  • him might be construed into a demonstration of risibility. His face,
  • however, was so perfectly unaffected by it, both before and afterwards,
  • that although one or two of the breakfast party looked round as being
  • startled by a mysterious noise, nobody connected the offender with it.
  • Except his partner in attendance, Clemency Newcome; who, rousing him
  • with one of those favorite joints, her elbows, inquired, in a
  • reproachful whisper, what he laughed at.
  • "Not you!" said Britain.
  • "Who then?"
  • "Humanity," said Britain. "That's the joke."
  • "What between master and them lawyers, he's getting more and more
  • addle-headed every day!" cried Clemency, giving him a lunge with the
  • other elbow, as a mental stimulant. "Do you know where you are? Do you
  • want to get warning?"
  • "I don't know anything," said Britain, with a leaden eye and an
  • immovable visage. "I don't care for anything. I don't make out anything.
  • I don't believe anything. And I don't want anything."
  • Although this forlorn summary of his general condition, may have been
  • overcharged in an access of despondency, Benjamin Britain--sometimes
  • called Little Britain, to distinguish him from Great; as we might say
  • Young England, to express Old England with a difference--had defined his
  • real state more accurately than might be supposed. For serving as a sort
  • of man Miles, to the Doctor's Friar Bacon; and listening day after day
  • to innumerable orations addressed by the Doctor to various people, all
  • tending to shew that his very existence was at best a mistake and an
  • absurdity; this unfortunate servitor had fallen, by degrees, into such
  • an abyss of confused and contradictory suggestions from within and
  • without, that Truth at the bottom of her well, was on the level surface
  • as compared with Britain in the depths of his mystification. The only
  • point he clearly comprehended, was, that the new element usually brought
  • into these discussions by Snitchey and Craggs, never served to make them
  • clearer, and always seemed to give the Doctor a species of advantage and
  • confirmation. Therefore he looked upon the Firm as one of the proximate
  • causes of his state of mind, and held them in abhorrence accordingly.
  • "But this is not our business, Alfred," said the Doctor. "Ceasing to be
  • my ward (as you have said) to-day; and leaving us full to the brim of
  • such learning as the Grammar School down here was able to give you, and
  • your studies in London could add to that, and such practical knowledge
  • as a dull old country Doctor like myself could graft upon both; you are
  • away, now, into the world. The first term of probation appointed by your
  • poor father, being over, away you go now, your own master, to fulfil his
  • second desire: and long before your three years' tour among the foreign
  • schools of medicine is finished, you'll have forgotten us. Lord, you'll
  • forget us easily in six months!"
  • "If I do--But you know better; why should I speak to you!" said Alfred,
  • laughing.
  • "I don't know anything of the sort," returned the Doctor. "What do you
  • say, Marion?"
  • Marion, trifling with her teacup, seemed to say--but she didn't say
  • it--that he was welcome to forget them, if he could. Grace pressed the
  • blooming face against her cheek, and smiled.
  • "I haven't been, I hope, a very unjust steward in the execution of my
  • trust," pursued the Doctor; "but I am to be, at any rate, formally
  • discharged, and released, and what not, this morning; and here are our
  • good friends Snitchey and Craggs, with a bagful of papers, and accounts,
  • and documents, for the transfer of the balance of the trust fund to you
  • (I wish it was a more difficult one to dispose of, Alfred, but you must
  • get to be a great man and make it so), and other drolleries of that
  • sort, which are to be signed, sealed, and delivered."
  • "And duly witnessed, as by law required," said Snitchey, pushing away
  • his plate, and taking out the papers, which his partner proceeded to
  • spread upon the table; "and Self and Craggs having been co-trustees with
  • you, Doctor, in so far as the fund was concerned, we shall want your two
  • servants to attest the signatures--can you read, Mrs. Newcome?"
  • "I a'n't married, Mister," said Clemency.
  • "Oh, I beg your pardon. I should think not," chuckled Snitchey, casting
  • his eyes over her extraordinary figure. "You _can_ read?"
  • "A little," answered Clemency.
  • "The marriage service, night and morning, eh?" observed the lawyer,
  • jocosely.
  • "No," said Clemency. "Too hard. I only reads a thimble."
  • "Read a thimble!" echoed Snitchey. "What are you talking about, young
  • woman?"
  • Clemency nodded. "And a nutmeg-grater."
  • "Why, this is a lunatic! a subject for the Lord High Chancellor!" said
  • Snitchey, staring at her.
  • "If possessed of any property," stipulated Craggs.
  • Grace, however, interposing, explained that each of the articles in
  • question bore an engraved motto, and so formed the pocket library of
  • Clemency Newcome, who was not much given to the study of books.
  • "Oh, that's it, is it, Miss Grace!" said Snitchey. "Yes, yes. Ha, ha,
  • ha! I thought our friend was an idiot. She looks uncommonly like it," he
  • muttered, with a supercilious glance. "And what does the thimble say,
  • Mrs. Newcome?"
  • "I a'n't married, Mister," observed Clemency.
  • "Well, Newcome. Will that do?" said the lawyer. "What does the thimble
  • say, Newcome?"
  • How Clemency, before replying to this question, held one pocket open,
  • and looked down into its yawning depths for the thimble which wasn't
  • there,--and how she then held an opposite pocket open, and seeming to
  • descry it, like a pearl of great price, at the bottom, cleared away such
  • intervening obstacles as a handkerchief, an end of wax candle, a flushed
  • apple, an orange, a lucky penny, a cramp bone, a padlock, a pair of
  • scissors in a sheath, more expressively describable as promising young
  • shears, a handful or so of loose beads, several balls of cotton, a
  • needle-case, a cabinet collection of curl-papers, and a biscuit, all of
  • which articles she entrusted individually and severally to Britain to
  • hold,--is of no consequence. Nor how, in her determination to grasp this
  • pocket by the throat and keep it prisoner (for it had a tendency to
  • swing and twist itself round the nearest corner), she assumed, and
  • calmly maintained, an attitude apparently inconsistent with the
  • human anatomy and the laws of gravity. It is enough that at last she
  • triumphantly produced the thimble on her finger, and rattled the
  • nutmeg-grater; the literature of both those trinkets being obviously in
  • course of wearing out and wasting away, through excessive friction.
  • "That's the thimble, is it, young woman?" said Mr. Snitchey, diverting
  • himself at her expense. "And what does the thimble say?"
  • "It says," replied Clemency, reading slowly round it as if it were a
  • tower, "For-get and for-give."
  • Snitchey and Craggs laughed heartily. "So new!" said Snitchey. "So
  • easy!" said Craggs. "Such a knowledge of human nature in it," said
  • Snitchey. "So applicable to the affairs of life," said Craggs.
  • "And the nutmeg-grater?" inquired the head of the Firm.
  • "The grater says," returned Clemency, "Do as you--wold--be--done by."
  • "'Do, or you'll be done brown,' you mean," said Mr. Snitchey.
  • "I don't understand," retorted Clemency, shaking her head vaguely. "I
  • a'n't no lawyer."
  • "I am afraid that if she was, Doctor," said Mr. Snitchey, turning to
  • him suddenly, as if to anticipate any effect that might otherwise be
  • consequent on this retort, "she'd find it to be the golden rule of half
  • her clients. They are serious enough in that--whimsical as your world
  • is--and lay the blame on us afterwards. We, in our profession, are
  • little else than mirrors after all, Mr. Alfred; but we are generally
  • consulted by angry and quarrelsome people, who are not in their best
  • looks; and it's rather hard to quarrel with us if we reflect unpleasant
  • aspects. I think," said Mr. Snitchey, "that I speak for Self and
  • Craggs?"
  • "Decidedly," said Craggs.
  • "And so, if Mr. Britain will oblige us with a mouthful of ink," said Mr.
  • Snitchey, returning to the papers, "we'll sign, seal, and deliver as
  • soon as possible, or the coach will be coming past before we know where
  • we are."
  • If one might judge from his appearance, there was every probability of
  • the coach coming past before Mr. Britain knew where _he_ was; for he
  • stood in a state of abstraction, mentally balancing the Doctor against
  • the lawyers, and the lawyers against the Doctor, and their clients
  • against both; and engaged in feeble attempts to make the thimble and
  • nutmeg-grater (a new idea to him) square with anybody's system of
  • philosophy; and, in short, bewildering himself as much as ever his
  • great namesake has done with theories and schools. But Clemency, who
  • was his good Genius--though he had the meanest possible opinion of her
  • understanding, by reason of her seldom troubling herself with abstract
  • speculations, and being always at hand to do the right thing at the
  • right time--having produced the ink in a twinkling, tendered him the
  • further service of recalling him to himself by the application of her
  • elbows; with which gentle flappers she so jogged his memory, in a more
  • literal construction of that phrase than usual, that he soon became
  • quite fresh and brisk.
  • How he labored under an apprehension not uncommon to persons in his
  • degree, to whom the use of pen and ink is an event, that he couldn't
  • append his name to a document, not of his own writing, without
  • committing himself in some shadowy manner, or somehow signing away
  • vague and enormous sums of money; and how he approached the deeds under
  • protest, and by dint of the Doctor's coercion, and insisted on pausing
  • to look at them before writing (the cramped hand, to say nothing of the
  • phraseology, being so much Chinese to him), and also on turning them
  • round to see whether there was anything fraudulent, underneath; and how,
  • having signed his name, he became desolate as one who had parted with
  • his property and rights; I want the time to tell. Also, how the blue bag
  • containing his signature, afterwards had a mysterious interest for him,
  • and he couldn't leave it; also, how Clemency Newcome, in an ecstasy of
  • laughter at the idea of her own importance and dignity, brooded over the
  • whole table with her two elbows like a spread eagle, and reposed her
  • head upon her left arm as a preliminary to the formation of certain
  • cabalistic characters, which required a deal of ink, and imaginary
  • counterparts whereof she executed at the same time with her tongue.
  • Also how, having once tasted ink, she became thirsty in that regard, as
  • tigers are said to be after tasting another sort of fluid, and wanted to
  • sign everything, and put her name in all kinds of places. In brief, the
  • Doctor was discharged of his trust and all its responsibilities; and
  • Alfred, taking it on himself, was fairly started on the journey of life.
  • "Britain!" said the Doctor. "Run to the gate, and watch for the coach.
  • Time flies, Alfred!"
  • "Yes, Sir, yes," returned the young man, hurriedly. "Dear Grace! a
  • moment! Marion--so young and beautiful, so winning and so much admired,
  • dear to my heart as nothing else in life is--remember! I leave Marion to
  • you!"
  • "She has always been a sacred charge to me, Alfred. She is doubly so
  • now. I will be faithful to my trust, believe me."
  • "I do believe it, Grace. I know it well. Who could look upon your face,
  • and hear your earnest voice, and not know it! Ah, good Grace! If I had
  • your well-governed heart, and tranquil mind, how bravely I would leave
  • this place to-day!"
  • "Would you?" she answered, with a quiet smile.
  • "And yet, Grace--Sister, seems the natural word."
  • "Use it!" she said quickly, "I am glad to hear it, call me nothing
  • else."
  • "And yet, Sister, then," said Alfred, "Marion and I had better have your
  • true and stedfast qualities serving us here, and making us both happier
  • and better. I wouldn't carry them away, to sustain myself, if I could!"
  • "Coach upon the hill-top!" exclaimed Britain.
  • "Time flies, Alfred," said the Doctor.
  • Marion had stood apart, with her eyes fixed upon the ground; but this
  • warning being given, her young lover brought her tenderly to where her
  • sister stood, and gave her into her embrace.
  • "I have been telling Grace, dear Marion," he said, "that you are her
  • charge; my precious trust at parting. And when I come back and reclaim
  • you, dearest, and the bright prospect of our married life lies stretched
  • before us, it shall be one of our chief pleasures to consult how we can
  • make Grace happy; how we can anticipate her wishes; how we can show our
  • gratitude and love to her; how we can return her something of the debt
  • she will have heaped upon us."
  • The younger sister had one hand in his; the other rested on her sister's
  • neck. She looked into that sister's eyes, so calm, serene, and cheerful,
  • with a gaze in which affection, admiration, sorrow, wonder, almost
  • veneration, were blended. She looked into that sister's face, as if it
  • were the face of some bright angel. Calm, serene, and cheerful, it
  • looked back on her and on her lover.
  • "And when the time comes, as it must one day," said Alfred,--"I wonder
  • it has never come yet: but Grace knows best, for Grace is always
  • right,--when _she_ will want a friend to open her whole heart to, and
  • to be to her something of what she has been to us,--then, Marion, how
  • faithful we will prove, and what delight to us to know that she, our
  • dear good sister, loves and is loved again, as we would have her!"
  • Still the younger sister looked into her eyes, and turned not--even
  • towards him. And still those honest eyes looked back, so calm, serene,
  • and cheerful, on herself and on her lover.
  • "And when all that is past, and we are old, and living (as we
  • must!) together--close together; talking often of old times," said
  • Alfred--"these shall be our favorite times among them--this day most
  • of all; and telling each other what we thought and felt, and hoped and
  • feared, at parting; and how we couldn't bear to say good bye"----
  • "Coach coming through the wood," cried Britain.
  • "Yes! I am ready--and how we met again, so happily, in spite of all;
  • we'll make this day the happiest in all the year, and keep it as a
  • treble birth-day. Shall we, dear?"
  • "Yes!" interposed the elder sister, eagerly, and with a radiant smile.
  • "Yes! Alfred, don't linger. There's no time. Say good bye to Marion. And
  • Heaven be with you!"
  • He pressed the younger sister to his heart. Released from his embrace,
  • she again clung to her sister; and her eyes, with the same blended look,
  • again sought those so calm, serene, and cheerful.
  • "Farewell my boy!" said the Doctor. "To talk about any serious
  • correspondence or serious affections, and engagements, and so forth, in
  • such a--ha ha ha!--you know what I mean--why that, of course, would be
  • sheer nonsense. All I can say is, that if you and Marion should continue
  • in the same foolish minds, I shall not object to have you for a
  • son-in-law one of these days."
  • "Over the bridge!" cried Britain.
  • "Let it come!" said Alfred, wringing the Doctor's hand stoutly. "Think
  • of me sometimes, my old friend and guardian, as seriously as you can!
  • Adieu, Mr. Snitchey! Farewell, Mr. Craggs!"
  • "Coming down the road!" cried Britain.
  • "A kiss of Clemency Newcome for long acquaintance' sake--shake hands,
  • Britain--Marion, dearest heart, good bye! Sister Grace! remember!"
  • The quiet household figure, and the face so beautiful in its serenity,
  • were turned towards him in reply; but Marion's look and attitude
  • remained unchanged.
  • The coach was at the gate. There was a bustle with the luggage. The
  • coach drove away. Marion never moved.
  • "He waves his hat to you, my love," said Grace. "Your chosen husband,
  • darling. Look!"
  • The younger sister raised her head, and, for a moment, turned it. Then
  • turning back again, and fully meeting, for the first time, those calm
  • eyes, fell sobbing on her neck.
  • "Oh, Grace. God bless you! But I cannot bear to see it, Grace! It breaks
  • my heart."
  • PART THE SECOND.
  • [Illustration]
  • PART THE SECOND.
  • [Illustration]
  • SNITCHEY AND CRAGGS had a snug little office on the old Battle Ground,
  • where they drove a snug little business, and fought a great many small
  • pitched battles for a great many contending parties. Though it could
  • hardly be said of these conflicts that they were running fights--for in
  • truth they generally proceeded at a snail's pace--the part the Firm had
  • in them came so far within that general denomination, that now they took
  • a shot at this Plaintiff, and now aimed a chop at that Defendant, now
  • made a heavy charge at an estate in Chancery, and now had some light
  • skirmishing among an irregular body of small debtors, just as the
  • occasion served, and the enemy happened to present himself. The Gazette
  • was an important and profitable feature in some of their fields, as well
  • as in fields of greater renown; and in most of the Actions wherein they
  • shewed their generalship, it was afterwards observed by the combatants
  • that they had had great difficulty in making each other out, or in
  • knowing with any degree of distinctness what they were about, in
  • consequence of the vast amount of smoke by which they were surrounded.
  • The offices of Messrs. Snitchey and Craggs stood convenient with an open
  • door, down two smooth steps in the market-place: so that any angry
  • farmer inclining towards hot water, might tumble into it at once. Their
  • special council-chamber and hall of conference was an old back room up
  • stairs, with a low dark ceiling, which seemed to be knitting its brows
  • gloomily in the consideration of tangled points of law. It was furnished
  • with some high-backed leathern chairs, garnished with great goggle-eyed
  • brass nails, of which, every here and there, two or three had fallen
  • out; or had been picked out, perhaps, by the wandering thumbs and
  • forefingers of bewildered clients. There was a framed print of a great
  • judge in it, every curl in whose dreadful wig had made a man's hair
  • stand on end. Bales of papers filled the dusty closets, shelves, and
  • tables; and round the wainscoat there were tiers of boxes, padlocked and
  • fireproof, with people's names painted outside, which anxious visitors
  • felt themselves, by a cruel enchantment, obliged to spell backwards and
  • forwards, and to make anagrams of, while they sat, seeming to listen to
  • Snitchey and Craggs, without comprehending one word of what they said.
  • Snitchey and Craggs had each, in private life as in professional
  • existence, a partner of his own. Snitchey and Craggs were the best
  • friends in the world, and had a real confidence in one another; but
  • Mrs. Snitchey, by a dispensation not uncommon in the affairs of life,
  • was, on principle, suspicious of Mr. Craggs, and Mrs. Craggs was, on
  • principle, suspicious of Mr. Snitchey. "Your Snitcheys indeed," the
  • latter lady would observe, sometimes, to Mr. Craggs; using that
  • imaginative plural as if in disparagement of an objectionable pair of
  • pantaloons, or other articles not possessed of a singular number; "I
  • don't see what you want with your Snitcheys, for my part. You trust a
  • great deal too much to your Snitcheys, _I_ think, and I hope you may
  • never find my words come true." While Mrs. Snitchey would observe to Mr.
  • Snitchey, of Craggs, "that if ever he was led away by man he was led
  • away by that man; and that if ever she read a double purpose in a mortal
  • eye, she read that purpose in Craggs's eye." Notwithstanding this,
  • however, they were all very good friends in general: and Mrs. Snitchey
  • and Mrs. Craggs maintained a close bond of alliance against "the
  • office," which they both considered a Blue chamber, and common enemy,
  • full of dangerous (because unknown) machinations.
  • In this office, nevertheless, Snitchey and Craggs made honey for their
  • several hives. Here sometimes they would linger, of a fine evening, at
  • the window of their council-chamber, overlooking the old battle-ground,
  • and wonder (but that was generally at assize time, when much business
  • had made them sentimental) at the folly of mankind, who couldn't always
  • be at peace with one another, and go to law comfortably. Here days, and
  • weeks, and months, and years, passed over them; their calendar, the
  • gradually diminishing number of brass nails in the leathern chairs, and
  • the increasing bulk of papers on the tables. Here nearly three years'
  • flight had thinned the one and swelled the other, since the breakfast in
  • the orchard; when they sat together in consultation, at night.
  • [Illustration]
  • Not alone; but with a man of thirty, or about that time of life,
  • negligently dressed, and somewhat haggard in the face, but well-made,
  • well-attired, and well-looking, who sat in the arm-chair of state, with
  • one hand in his breast, and the other in his dishevelled hair, pondering
  • moodily. Messrs. Snitchey and Craggs sat opposite each other at a
  • neighbouring desk. One of the fire-proof boxes, unpadlocked and opened,
  • was upon it; a part of its contents lay strewn upon the table, and the
  • rest was then in course of passing through the hands of Mr. Snitchey,
  • who brought it to the candle, document by document, looked at every
  • paper singly, as he produced it, shook his head, and handed it to Mr.
  • Craggs, who looked it over also, shook his head, and laid it down.
  • Sometimes they would stop, and shaking their heads in concert, look
  • towards the abstracted client; and the name on the box being Michael
  • Warden, Esquire, we may conclude from these premises that the name and
  • the box were both his, and that the affairs of Michael Warden, Esquire,
  • were in a bad way.
  • "That's all," said Mr. Snitchey, turning up the last paper. "Really
  • there's no other resource. No other resource."
  • "All lost, spent, wasted, pawned, borrowed and sold, eh?" said the
  • client, looking up.
  • "All," returned Mr. Snitchey.
  • "Nothing else to be done, you say?"
  • "Nothing at all."
  • The client bit his nails, and pondered again.
  • "And I am not even personally safe in England? You hold to that; do
  • you?"
  • "In no part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland," replied
  • Mr. Snitchey.
  • "A mere prodigal son with no father to go back to, no swine to keep, and
  • no husks to share with them? Eh?" pursued the client, rocking one leg
  • over the other, and searching the ground with his eyes.
  • Mr. Snitchey coughed, as if to deprecate the being supposed to
  • participate in any figurative illustration of a legal position. Mr.
  • Craggs, as if to express that it was a partnership view of the subject,
  • also coughed.
  • "Ruined at thirty!" said the client. "Humph!"
  • "Not ruined, Mr. Warden," returned Snitchey. "Not so bad as that. You
  • have done a good deal towards it, I must say, but you are not ruined.
  • A little nursing--"
  • "A little Devil," said the client.
  • "Mr. Craggs," said Snitchey, "will you oblige me with a pinch of snuff?
  • Thank you, Sir."
  • As the imperturbable lawyer applied it to his nose, with great apparent
  • relish and a perfect absorption of his attention in the proceeding, the
  • client gradually broke into a smile, and, looking up, said:
  • "You talk of nursing. How long nursing?"
  • "How long nursing?" repeated Snitchey, dusting the snuff from his
  • fingers, and making a slow calculation in his mind. "For your involved
  • estate, Sir? In good hands? S. and C.'s, say? Six or seven years."
  • "To starve for six or seven years!" said the client with a fretful
  • laugh, and an impatient change of his position.
  • "To starve for six or seven years, Mr. Warden," said Snitchey, "would be
  • very uncommon indeed. You might get another estate by shewing yourself,
  • the while. But we don't think you could do it--speaking for Self and
  • Craggs--and consequently don't advise it."
  • "What _do_ you advise?"
  • "Nursing, I say," repeated Snitchey. "Some few years of nursing by Self
  • and Craggs would bring it round. But to enable us to make terms, and
  • hold terms, and you to keep terms, you must go away, you must live
  • abroad. As to starvation, we could ensure you some hundreds a year to
  • starve upon, even in the beginning, I dare say, Mr. Warden."
  • "Hundreds," said the client. "And I have spent thousands!"
  • "That," retorted Mr. Snitchey, putting the papers slowly back into the
  • cast-iron box, "there is no doubt about. No doubt a--bout," he repeated
  • to himself, as he thoughtfully pursued his occupation.
  • The lawyer very likely knew his man; at any rate his dry, shrewd,
  • whimsical manner, had a favourable influence upon the client's moody
  • state, and disposed him to be more free and unreserved. Or perhaps the
  • client knew _his_ man; and had elicited such encouragement as he had
  • received, to render some purpose he was about to disclose the more
  • defensible in appearance. Gradually raising his head, he sat looking at
  • his immovable adviser with a smile, which presently broke into a laugh.
  • "After all," he said, "my iron-headed friend--"
  • Mr. Snitchey pointed out his partner. "Self and--excuse me--Craggs."
  • "I beg Mr. Craggs's pardon," said the client. "After all, my iron-headed
  • friends," he leaned forward in his chair, and dropped his voice a
  • little, "you don't know half my ruin yet."
  • Mr. Snitchey stopped and stared at him. Mr. Craggs also stared.
  • "I am not only deep in debt," said the client "but I am deep in--"
  • "Not in love!" cried Snitchey.
  • "Yes!" said the client, falling back in his chair, and surveying the
  • Firm with his hands in his pockets. "Deep in love."
  • "And not with an heiress, Sir?" said Snitchey.
  • "Not with an heiress."
  • "Nor a rich lady?"
  • "Nor a rich lady that I know of--except in beauty and merit."
  • "A single lady, I trust?" said Mr. Snitchey, with great expression.
  • "Certainly."
  • "It's not one of Doctor Jeddler's daughters?" said Snitchey, suddenly
  • squaring his elbows on his knees, and advancing his face at least a
  • yard.
  • "Yes!" returned the client.
  • "Not his younger daughter?" said Snitchey.
  • "Yes!" returned the client.
  • "Mr. Craggs," said Snitchey, much relieved, "will you oblige me with
  • another pinch of snuff? Thank you. I am happy to say it don't signify,
  • Mr. Warden; she's engaged, Sir, she's bespoke. My partner can
  • corroborate me. We know the fact."
  • "We know the fact," repeated Craggs.
  • "Why, so do I perhaps," returned the client quietly. "What of that? Are
  • you men of the world, and did you never hear of a woman changing her
  • mind?"
  • "There certainly have been actions for breach," said Mr. Snitchey,
  • "brought against both spinsters and widows, but in the majority of
  • cases--"
  • "Cases!" interposed the client, impatiently. "Don't talk to me of cases.
  • The general precedent is in a much larger volume than any of your law
  • books. Besides, do you think I have lived six weeks in the Doctor's
  • house for nothing?"
  • "I think, Sir," observed Mr. Snitchey, gravely addressing himself to his
  • partner, "that of all the scrapes Mr. Warden's horses have brought him
  • into at one time and another--and they have been pretty numerous, and
  • pretty expensive, as none know better than himself and you and I--the
  • worst scrape may turn out to be, if he talks in this way, his having
  • been ever left by one of them at the Doctor's garden wall, with three
  • broken ribs, a snapped collar-bone, and the Lord knows how many bruises.
  • We didn't think so much of it, at the time when we knew he was going on
  • well under the Doctor's hands and roof; but it looks bad now, Sir. Bad!
  • It looks very bad. Doctor Jeddler too--our client, Mr. Craggs."
  • "Mr. Alfred Heathfield too--a sort of client, Mr. Snitchey," said
  • Craggs.
  • "Mr. Michael Warden too, a kind of client," said the careless visitor,
  • "and no bad one either: having played the fool for ten or twelve years.
  • However Mr. Michael Warden has sown his wild oats now; there's their
  • crop, in that box; and means to repent and be wise. And in proof of it,
  • Mr. Michael Warden means, if he can, to marry Marion, the Doctor's
  • lovely daughter, and to carry her away with him."
  • "Really, Mr. Craggs," Snitchey began.
  • "Really Mr. Snitchey, and Mr. Craggs, partners both," said the client,
  • interrupting him; "you know your duty to your clients, and you know well
  • enough, I am sure, that it is no part of it to interfere in a mere love
  • affair, which I am obliged to confide to you. I am not going to carry
  • the young lady off, without her own consent. There's nothing illegal in
  • it. I never was Mr. Heathfield's bosom friend. I violate no confidence
  • of his. I love where he loves, and I mean to win where he would win, if
  • I can."
  • "He can't, Mr. Craggs," said Snitchey, evidently anxious and
  • discomfited. "He can't do it, Sir. She dotes on Mr. Alfred."
  • "Does she?" returned the client.
  • "Mr. Craggs, she dotes on him, Sir," persisted Snitchey.
  • "I didn't live six weeks, some few months ago, in the Doctor's house for
  • nothing; and I doubted that soon," observed the client. "She would have
  • doted on him, if her sister could have brought it about; but I watched
  • them. Marion avoided his name, avoided the subject: shrunk from the
  • least allusion to it, with evident distress."
  • "Why should she, Mr. Craggs, you know? Why should she, Sir?" inquired
  • Snitchey.
  • "I don't know why she should, though there are many likely reasons,"
  • said the client, smiling at the attention and perplexity expressed in
  • Mr. Snitchey's shining eye, and at his cautious way of carrying on the
  • conversation, and making himself informed upon the subject; "but I know
  • she does. She was very young when she made the engagement--if it may be
  • called one, I am not even sure of that--and has repented of it, perhaps.
  • Perhaps--it seems a foppish thing to say, but upon my soul I don't mean
  • it in that light--she may have fallen in love with me, as I have fallen
  • in love with her."
  • "He, he! Mr. Alfred, her old playfellow too, you remember, Mr. Craggs,"
  • said Snitchey, with a disconcerted laugh; "knew her almost from a baby!"
  • "Which makes it the more probable that she may be tired of his idea,"
  • calmly pursued the client, "and not indisposed to exchange it for the
  • newer one of another lover, who presents himself (or is presented
  • by his horse) under romantic circumstances; has the not unfavorable
  • reputation--with a country girl--of having lived thoughtlessly and
  • gaily, without doing much harm to anybody; and who, for his youth and
  • figure, and so forth--this may seem foppish again, but upon my soul I
  • don't mean it in that light--might perhaps pass muster in a crowd with
  • Mr. Alfred himself."
  • There was no gainsaying the last clause, certainly; and Mr. Snitchey,
  • glancing at him, thought so. There was something naturally graceful and
  • pleasant in the very carelessness of his air. It seemed to suggest, of
  • his comely face and well-knit figure, that they might be greatly better
  • if he chose: and that, once roused and made earnest (but he never had
  • been earnest yet), he could be full of fire and purpose. "A dangerous
  • sort of libertine," thought the shrewd lawyer, "to seem to catch the
  • spark he wants from a young lady's eyes."
  • "Now, observe, Snitchey," he continued, rising and taking him by the
  • button, "and Craggs," taking him by the button also, and placing one
  • partner on either side of him, so that neither might evade him. "I
  • don't ask you for any advice. You are right to keep quite aloof from
  • all parties in such a matter, which is not one in which grave men like
  • you could interfere, on any side. I am briefly going to review in
  • half-a-dozen words, my position and intention, and then I shall leave it
  • to you to do the best for me, in money matters, that you can: seeing,
  • that, if I run away with the Doctor's beautiful daughter (as I hope to
  • do, and to become another man under her bright influence), it will be,
  • for the moment, more chargeable than running away alone. But I shall
  • soon make all that up in an altered life."
  • "I think it will be better not to hear this, Mr. Craggs?" said Snitchey,
  • looking at him across the client.
  • "_I_ think not," said Craggs.--Both listening attentively.
  • "Well! You needn't hear it," replied their client. "I'll mention it,
  • however. I don't mean to ask the Doctor's consent, because he wouldn't
  • give it me. But I mean to do the Doctor no wrong or harm, because
  • (besides there being nothing serious in such trifles, as he says) I hope
  • to rescue his child, my Marion, from what I see--I _know_--she dreads,
  • and contemplates with misery: that is, the return of this old lover. If
  • anything in the world is true, it is true that she dreads his return.
  • Nobody is injured so far. I am so harried and worried here just now,
  • that I lead the life of a flying-fish; skulk about in the dark, am shut
  • out of my own house, and warned off my own grounds: but that house,
  • and those grounds, and many an acre besides, will come back to me one
  • day, as you know and say; and Marion will probably be richer--on your
  • showing, who are never sanguine--ten years hence as my wife, than as the
  • wife of Alfred Heathfield, whose return she dreads (remember that), and
  • in whom or in any man, my passion is not surpassed. Who is injured yet?
  • It is a fair case throughout. My right is as good as his, if she decide
  • in my favor; and I will try my right by her alone. You will like to know
  • no more after this, and I will tell you no more. Now you know my
  • purpose, and wants. When must I leave here?"
  • "In a week," said Snitchey. "Mr. Craggs?--"
  • "In something less, I should say," responded Craggs.
  • "In a month," said the client, after attentively watching the two faces.
  • "This day month. To-day is Thursday. Succeed or fail, on this day month
  • I go."
  • "It's too long a delay," said Snitchey; "much too long. But let it be
  • so. I thought he'd have stipulated for three," he murmured to himself.
  • "Are you going? Good night, Sir."
  • "Good night!" returned the client, shaking hands with the Firm. "You'll
  • live to see me making a good use of riches yet. Henceforth, the star of
  • my destiny is, Marion!"
  • "Take care of the stairs, Sir," replied Snitchey; "for she don't shine
  • there. Good night!"
  • "Good night!"
  • So they both stood at the stair-head with a pair of office-candles,
  • watching him down; and when he had gone away, stood looking at each
  • other.
  • "What do you think of all this, Mr. Craggs?" said Snitchey.
  • Mr. Craggs shook his head.
  • "It was our opinion, on the day when that release was executed, that
  • there was something curious in the parting of that pair, I recollect,"
  • said Snitchey.
  • "It was," said Mr. Craggs.
  • "Perhaps he deceives himself altogether," pursued Mr. Snitchey, locking
  • up the fireproof box, and putting it away; "or if he don't, a little
  • bit of fickleness and perfidy is not a miracle, Mr. Craggs. And yet I
  • thought that pretty face was very true. I thought," said Mr. Snitchey,
  • putting on his great coat, (for the weather was very cold), drawing on
  • his gloves, and snuffing out one candle, "that I had even seen her
  • character becoming stronger and more resolved of late. More like her
  • sister's."
  • "Mrs. Craggs was of the same opinion," returned Craggs.
  • "I'd really give a trifle to-night," observed Mr. Snitchey, who was
  • a good-natured man, "if I could believe that Mr. Warden was reckoning
  • without his host; but light-headed, capricious, and unballasted as he
  • is, he knows something of the world and its people (he ought to, for
  • he has bought what he does know, dear enough); and I can't quite think
  • that. We had better not interfere: we can do nothing, Mr. Craggs, but
  • keep quiet."
  • "Nothing," returned Craggs.
  • "Our friend the Doctor makes light of such things," said Mr. Snitchey,
  • shaking his head. "I hope he mayn't stand in need of his philosophy. Our
  • friend Alfred talks of the battle of life," he shook his head again, "I
  • hope he mayn't be cut down early in the day. Have you got your hat, Mr.
  • Craggs? I am going to put the other candle out."
  • Mr Craggs replying in the affirmative, Mr. Snitchey suited the action to
  • the word, and they groped their way out of the council-chamber: now as
  • dark as the subject, or the law in general.
  • * * * * *
  • My story passes to a quiet little study, where, on that same night, the
  • sisters and the hale old Doctor sat by a cheerful fire-side. Grace was
  • working at her needle. Marion read aloud from a book before her. The
  • Doctor, in his dressing-gown and slippers, with his feet spread out upon
  • the warm rug, leaned back in his easy chair, and listened to the book,
  • and looked upon his daughters.
  • They were very beautiful to look upon. Two better faces for a fireside,
  • never made a fireside bright and sacred. Something of the difference
  • between them had been softened down in three years' time; and enthroned
  • upon the clear brow of the younger sister, looking through her eyes,
  • and thrilling in her voice, was the same earnest nature that her own
  • motherless youth had ripened in the elder sister long ago. But she
  • still appeared at once the lovelier and weaker of the two; still seemed
  • to rest her head upon her sister's breast, and put her trust in her, and
  • look into her eyes for counsel and reliance. Those loving eyes, so calm,
  • serene, and cheerful, as of old.
  • "'And being in her own home,'" read Marion, from the book; "'her home
  • made exquisitely dear by these remembrances, she now began to know
  • that the great trial of her heart must soon come on, and could not be
  • delayed. Oh Home, our comforter and friend when others fall away, to
  • part with whom, at any step between the cradle and the grave--'"
  • "Marion, my love!" said Grace.
  • "Why, Puss!" exclaimed her father, "what's the matter?"
  • She put her hand upon the hand her sister stretched towards her, and
  • read on; her voice still faltering and trembling, though she made an
  • effort to command it when thus interrupted.
  • "'To part with whom, at any step between the cradle and the grave,
  • is always sorrowful. Oh Home, so true to us, so often slighted in
  • return, be lenient to them that turn away from thee, and do not haunt
  • their erring footsteps too reproachfully! Let no kind looks, no
  • well-remembered smiles, be seen upon thy phantom face. Let no ray of
  • affection, welcome, gentleness, forbearance, cordiality, shine from thy
  • white head. Let no old loving word or tone rise up in judgment against
  • thy deserter; but if thou canst look harshly and severely, do, in mercy
  • to the Penitent!'"
  • "Dear Marion, read no more to-night," said Grace--for she was weeping.
  • "I cannot," she replied, and closed the book. "The words seem all on
  • fire!"
  • The Doctor was amused at this; and laughed as he patted her on the head.
  • "What! overcome by a story-book!" said Doctor Jeddler. "Print and paper!
  • Well, well, it's all one. It's as rational to make a serious matter of
  • print and paper as of anything else. But dry your eyes, love, dry your
  • eyes. I dare say the heroine has got home again long ago, and made it up
  • all round--and if she hasn't, a real home is only four walls; and a
  • fictitious one, mere rags and ink. What's the matter now?"
  • "It's only me, Mister," said Clemency, putting in her head at the door.
  • "And what's the matter with _you_?" said the Doctor.
  • "Oh, bless you, nothing an't the matter with me," returned Clemency--and
  • truly too, to judge from her well-soaped face, in which there gleamed as
  • usual the very soul of good humour, which, ungainly as she was, made her
  • quite engaging. Abrasions on the elbows are not generally understood,
  • it is true, to range within that class of personal charms called
  • beauty-spots. But it is better, going through the world, to have the
  • arms chafed in that narrow passage, than the temper: and Clemency's was
  • sound and whole as any beauty's in the land.
  • "Nothing an't the matter with me," said Clemency, entering, "but--come a
  • little closer, Mister."
  • The Doctor, in some astonishment, complied with this invitation.
  • "You said I wasn't to give you one before them, you know," said
  • Clemency.
  • A novice in the family might have supposed, from her extraordinary
  • ogling as she said it, as well as from a singular rapture or ecstasy
  • which pervaded her elbows, as if she were embracing herself, that
  • 'one,' in its most favorable interpretation, meant a chaste salute.
  • Indeed the Doctor himself seemed alarmed, for the moment; but quickly
  • regained his composure, as Clemency, having had recourse to both her
  • pockets--beginning with the right one, going away to the wrong one,
  • and afterwards coming back to the right one again--produced a letter
  • from the Post-office.
  • "Britain was riding by on a errand," she chuckled, handing it to the
  • Doctor, "and see the Mail come in, and waited for it. There's A. H. in
  • the corner. Mr. Alfred's on his journey home, I bet. We shall have a
  • wedding in the house--there was two spoons in my saucer this morning.
  • Oh Luck, how slow he opens it!"
  • All this she delivered, by way of soliloquy, gradually rising higher
  • and higher on tiptoe, in her impatience to hear the news, and making a
  • corkscrew of her apron, and a bottle of her mouth. At last, arriving at
  • a climax of suspense, and seeing the Doctor still engaged in the perusal
  • of the letter, she came down flat upon the soles of her feet again, and
  • cast her apron, as a veil, over her head, in a mute despair, and
  • inability to bear it any longer.
  • "Here! Girls!" cried the Doctor. "I can't help it: I never could keep a
  • secret in my life. There are not many secrets, indeed, worth being kept
  • in such a--well! never mind that. Alfred's coming home, my dears,
  • directly."
  • "Directly!" exclaimed Marion.
  • "What! The story-book is soon forgotten!" said the Doctor, pinching her
  • cheek. "I thought the news would dry those tears. Yes. 'Let it be a
  • surprise,' he says, here. But I can't let it be a surprise. He must have
  • a welcome."
  • "Directly!" repeated Marion.
  • "Why, perhaps not what your impatience calls 'directly,'" returned
  • the Doctor; "but pretty soon too. Let us see. Let us see. To-day is
  • Thursday, is it not? Then he promises to be here, this day month."
  • "This day month!" repeated Marion, softly.
  • "A gay day and a holiday for us," said the cheerful voice of her sister
  • Grace, kissing her in congratulation. "Long looked forward to, dearest,
  • and come at last."
  • She answered with a smile; a mournful smile, but full of sisterly
  • affection: and as she looked in her sister's face, and listened to the
  • quiet music of her voice, picturing the happiness of this return, her
  • own face glowed with hope and joy.
  • And with a something else: a something shining more and more through
  • all the rest of its expression: for which I have no name. It was not
  • exultation, triumph, proud enthusiasm. They are not so calmly shown. It
  • was not love and gratitude alone, though love and gratitude were part of
  • it. It emanated from no sordid thought, for sordid thoughts do not light
  • up the brow, and hover on the lips, and move the spirit, like a
  • fluttered light, until the sympathetic figure trembles.
  • Doctor Jeddler, in spite of his system of philosophy--which he was
  • continually contradicting and denying in practice, but more famous
  • philosophers have done that--could not help having as much interest in
  • the return of his old ward and pupil, as if it had been a serious event.
  • So he sat himself down in his easy chair again, stretched out his
  • slippered feet once more upon the rug, read the letter over and over a
  • great many times, and talked it over more times still.
  • "Ah! The day was," said the Doctor, looking at the fire, "when you and
  • he, Grace, used to trot about arm-in-arm, in his holiday time, like a
  • couple of walking dolls. You remember?"
  • "I remember," she answered, with her pleasant laugh, and plying her
  • needle busily.
  • "This day month, indeed!" mused the Doctor. "That hardly seems a
  • twelve-month ago. And where was my little Marion then!"
  • "Never far from her sister," said Marion, cheerily, "however little.
  • Grace was everything to me, even when she was a young child herself."
  • "True, Puss, true," returned the Doctor. "She was a staid little woman,
  • was Grace, and a wise housekeeper, and a busy, quiet, pleasant body;
  • bearing with our humours and anticipating our wishes, and always ready
  • to forget her own, even in those times. I never knew you positive or
  • obstinate, Grace, my darling, even then, on any subject but one."
  • "I am afraid I have changed sadly for the worse, since," laughed Grace,
  • still busy at her work. "What was that one, father?"
  • "Alfred, of course," said the Doctor. "Nothing would serve you but you
  • must be called Alfred's wife; so we called you Alfred's wife; and you
  • liked it better, I believe (odd as it seems now), than being called a
  • Duchess, if we could have made you one."
  • "Indeed!" said Grace, placidly.
  • "Why, don't you remember?" inquired the Doctor.
  • "I think I remember something of it," she returned, "but not much. It's
  • so long ago." And as she sat at work, she hummed the burden of an old
  • song, which the Doctor liked.
  • "Alfred will find a real wife soon," she said, breaking off; "and that
  • will be a happy time indeed for all of us. My three years' trust is
  • nearly at an end, Marion. It has been a very easy one. I shall tell
  • Alfred, when I give you back to him, that you have loved him dearly all
  • the time, and that he has never once needed my good services. May I tell
  • him so, love?"
  • "Tell him, dear Grace," replied Marion, "that there never was a trust
  • so generously, nobly, stedfastly discharged; and that I have loved
  • _you_, all the time, dearer and dearer every day; and oh! how dearly
  • now!"
  • "Nay," said her cheerful sister, returning her embrace, "I can scarcely
  • tell him that; we will leave my deserts to Alfred's imagination. It will
  • be liberal enough, dear Marion; like your own."
  • With that she resumed the work she had for a moment laid down, when her
  • sister spoke so fervently: and with it the old song the Doctor liked
  • to hear. And the Doctor, still reposing in his easy chair, with his
  • slippered feet stretched out before him on the rug, listened to the
  • tune, and beat time on his knee with Alfred's letter, and looked at his
  • two daughters, and thought that among the many trifles of the trifling
  • world, these trifles were agreeable enough.
  • Clemency Newcome in the mean time, having accomplished her mission and
  • lingered in the room until she had made herself a party to the news,
  • descended to the kitchen, where her coadjutor, Mr. Britain, was regaling
  • after supper, surrounded by such a plentiful collection of bright
  • pot-lids, well-scoured saucepans, burnished dinner-covers, gleaming
  • kettles, and other tokens of her industrious habits, arranged upon the
  • walls and shelves, that he sat as in the centre of a hall of mirrors.
  • The majority did not give forth very flattering portraits of him,
  • certainly; nor were they by any means unanimous in their reflections; as
  • some made him very long-faced, others very broad-faced, some tolerably
  • well-looking, others vastly ill-looking, according to their several
  • manners of reflecting: which were as various, in respect of one fact, as
  • those of so many kinds of men. But they all agreed that in the midst of
  • them sat, quite at his ease, an individual with a pipe in his mouth, and
  • a jug of beer at his elbow, who nodded condescendingly to Clemency, when
  • she stationed herself at the same table.
  • "Well, Clemmy," said Britain, "how are you by this time, and what's the
  • news?"
  • Clemency told him the news, which he received very graciously. A
  • gracious change had come over Benjamin from head to foot. He was much
  • broader, much redder, much more cheerful, and much jollier in all
  • respects. It seemed as if his face had been tied up in a knot before,
  • and was now untwisted and smoothed out.
  • "There'll be another job for Snitchey and Craggs, I suppose," he
  • observed, puffing slowly at his pipe. "More witnessing for you and me,
  • perhaps, Clemmy!"
  • "Lor!" replied his fair companion, with her favorite twist of her
  • favorite joints. "I wish it was me, Britain."
  • "Wish what was you?"
  • "A going to be married," said Clemency.
  • Benjamin took his pipe out of his mouth and laughed heartily. "Yes!
  • you're a likely subject for that!" he said. "Poor Clem!" Clemency for
  • her part laughed as heartily as he, and seemed as much amused by the
  • idea. "Yes," she assented, "I'm a likely subject for that; an't I?"
  • "_You_'ll never be married, you know," said Mr. Britain, resuming his
  • pipe.
  • "Don't you think I ever shall though?" said Clemency, in perfect good
  • faith.
  • Mr. Britain shook his head. "Not a chance of it!"
  • "Only think!" said Clemency. "Well!--I suppose you mean to, Britain,
  • one of these days; don't you?"
  • A question so abrupt, upon a subject so momentous, required
  • consideration. After blowing out a great cloud of smoke, and looking
  • at it with his head now on this side and now on that, as if it were
  • actually the question, and he were surveying it in various aspects,
  • Mr. Britain replied that he wasn't altogether clear about it,
  • but--ye-es--he thought he might come to that at last.
  • "I wish her joy, whoever she may be!" cried Clemency.
  • "Oh she'll have that," said Benjamin; "safe enough."
  • "But she wouldn't have led quite such a joyful life as she will lead,
  • and wouldn't have had quite such a sociable sort of husband as she will
  • have," said Clemency, spreading herself half over the table, and staring
  • retrospectively at the candle, "if it hadn't been for--not that I went
  • to do it, for it was accidental, I am sure--if it hadn't been for me;
  • now would she, Britain?"
  • "Certainly not," returned Mr. Britain, by this time in that high state
  • of appreciation of his pipe, when a man can open his mouth but a very
  • little way for speaking purposes; and sitting luxuriously immovable in
  • his chair, can afford to turn only his eyes towards a companion, and
  • that very passively and gravely. "Oh! I'm greatly beholden to you, you
  • know, Clem."
  • "Lor, how nice that is to think of!" said Clemency.
  • At the same time, bringing her thoughts as well as her sight to bear
  • upon the candle-grease, and becoming abruptly reminiscent of its healing
  • qualities as a balsam, she anointed her left elbow with a plentiful
  • application of that remedy.
  • "You see I've made a good many investigations of one sort and another in
  • my time," pursued Mr. Britain, with the profundity of a sage; "having
  • been always of an inquiring turn of mind; and I've read a good many
  • books about the general Rights of things and Wrongs of things, for I
  • went into the literary line myself, when I began life."
  • "Did you though!" cried the admiring Clemency.
  • "Yes," said Mr. Britain; "I was hid for the best part of two years
  • behind a bookstall, ready to fly out if anybody pocketed a volume; and
  • after that I was light porter to a stay and mantua maker, in which
  • capacity I was employed to carry about, in oilskin baskets, nothing but
  • deceptions--which soured my spirits and disturbed my confidence in human
  • nature; and after that, I heard a world of discussions in this house,
  • which soured my spirits fresh; and my opinion after all is, that, as a
  • safe and comfortable sweetener of the same, and as a pleasant guide
  • through life, there's nothing like a nutmeg-grater."
  • Clemency was about to offer a suggestion, but he stopped her by
  • anticipating it.
  • "Com-bined," he added gravely, "with a thimble."
  • "Do as you wold, you know, and cetrer, eh!" observed Clemency, folding
  • her arms comfortably in her delight at this avowal, and patting her
  • elbows. "Such a short cut, an't it?"
  • "I'm not sure," said Mr. Britain, "that it's what would be considered
  • good philosophy. I've my doubts about that: but it wears well, and saves
  • a quantity of snarling, which the genuine article don't always."
  • "See how you used to go on once, yourself, you know!" said Clemency.
  • "Ah!" said Mr. Britain. "But the most extraordinary thing, Clemmy, is
  • that I should live to be brought round, through you. That's the strange
  • part of it. Through you! Why, I suppose you haven't so much as half an
  • idea in your head."
  • Clemency, without taking the least offence, shook it, and laughed, and
  • hugged herself, and said, "No, she didn't suppose she had."
  • "I'm pretty sure of it," said Mr. Britain.
  • "Oh! I dare say you're right," said Clemency. "I don't pretend to none.
  • I don't want any."
  • Benjamin took his pipe from his lips, and laughed till the tears ran
  • down his face. "What a natural you are, Clemmy!" he said, shaking
  • his head, with an infinite relish of the joke, and wiping his eyes.
  • Clemency, without the smallest inclination to dispute it, did the like,
  • and laughed as heartily as he.
  • "But I can't help liking you," said Mr. Britain; "you're a regular good
  • creature in your way; so shake hands, Clem. Whatever happens, I'll
  • always take notice of you, and be a friend to you."
  • "Will you?" returned Clemency. "Well! that's very good of you."
  • "Yes, yes," said Mr. Britain, giving her his pipe to knock the ashes out
  • of; "I'll stand by you. Hark! That's a curious noise!"
  • "Noise!" repeated Clemency.
  • "A footstep outside. Somebody dropping from the wall, it sounded like,"
  • said Britain. "Are they all abed up-stairs?"
  • "Yes, all abed by this time," she replied.
  • "Didn't you hear anything?"
  • "No."
  • They both listened, but heard nothing.
  • "I tell you what," said Benjamin, taking down a lantern. "I'll have a
  • look round before I go to bed myself, for satisfaction's sake. Undo the
  • door while I light this, Clemmy."
  • Clemency complied briskly; but observed as she did so, that he would
  • only have his walk for his pains, that it was all his fancy, and so
  • forth. Mr. Britain said 'very likely;' but sallied out, nevertheless,
  • armed with the poker, and casting the light of the lantern far and near
  • in all directions.
  • "It's as quiet as a churchyard," said Clemency, looking after him; "and
  • almost as ghostly too!"
  • Glancing back into the kitchen, she cried fearfully, as a light figure
  • stole into her view, "What's that!"
  • "Hush!" said Marion, in an agitated whisper. "You have always loved me,
  • have you not!"
  • "Loved you, child! You may be sure I have."
  • "I am sure. And I may trust you, may I not? There is no one else just
  • now, in whom I _can_ trust."
  • "Yes," said Clemency, with all her heart.
  • "There is some one out there," pointing to the door, "whom I must see,
  • and speak with, to-night. Michael Warden, for God's sake retire! Not
  • now!"
  • Clemency started with surprise and trouble as, following the direction
  • of the speaker's eyes, she saw a dark figure standing in the doorway.
  • "In another moment you may be discovered," said Marion. "Not now! Wait,
  • if you can, in some concealment. I will come, presently."
  • He waved his hand to her, and was gone.
  • "Don't go to bed. Wait here for me!" said Marion, hurriedly. "I have
  • been seeking to speak to you for an hour past. Oh, be true to me!"
  • Eagerly seizing her bewildered hand, and pressing it with both her own
  • to her breast--an action more expressive, in its passion of entreaty,
  • than the most eloquent appeal in words,--Marion withdrew; as the light
  • of the returning lantern flashed into the room.
  • "All still and peaceable. Nobody there. Fancy, I suppose," said Mr.
  • Britain, as he locked and barred the door. "One of the effects of having
  • a lively imagination. Halloa! Why, what's the matter?"
  • Clemency, who could not conceal the effects of her surprise and concern,
  • was sitting in a chair: pale, and trembling from head to foot.
  • "Matter!" she repeated, chafing her hands and elbows, nervously, and
  • looking anywhere but at him. "That's good in you, Britain, that is!
  • After going and frightening one out of one's life with noises, and
  • lanterns, and I don't know what all. Matter! Oh, yes."
  • "If you're frightened out of your life by a lantern, Clemmy," said Mr.
  • Britain, composedly blowing it out and hanging it up again, "that
  • apparition's very soon got rid of. But you're as bold as brass in
  • general," he said, stopping to observe her; "and were, after the noise
  • and the lantern too. What have you taken into your head? Not an idea,
  • eh?"
  • But as Clemency bade him good night very much after her usual fashion,
  • and began to bustle about with a show of going to bed herself
  • immediately, Little Britain, after giving utterance to the original
  • remark that it was impossible to account for a woman's whims, bade her
  • good night in return, and taking up his candle strolled drowsily away to
  • bed.
  • When all was quiet, Marion returned.
  • "Open the door," she said; "and stand there close beside me, while I
  • speak to him, outside."
  • Timid as her manner was, it still evinced a resolute and settled
  • purpose, such as Clemency could not resist. She softly unbarred the
  • door: but before turning the key, looked round on the young creature
  • waiting to issue forth when she should open it.
  • The face was not averted or cast down, but looking full upon her, in
  • its pride of youth and beauty. Some simple sense of the slightness of
  • the barrier that interposed itself between the happy home and honoured
  • love of the fair girl, and what might be the desolation of that home,
  • and shipwreck of its dearest treasure, smote so keenly on the tender
  • heart of Clemency, and so filled it to overflowing with sorrow and
  • compassion, that, bursting into tears, she threw her arms round
  • Marion's neck.
  • "It's little that I know, my dear," cried Clemency, "very little; but I
  • know that this should not be. Think of what you do!"
  • "I have thought of it many times," said Marion, gently.
  • "Once more," urged Clemency. "Till to-morrow."
  • Marion shook her head.
  • "For Mr. Alfred's sake," said Clemency, with homely earnestness. "Him
  • that you used to love so dearly, once!"
  • She hid her face, upon the instant, in her hands, repeating "Once!" as
  • if it rent her heart.
  • "Let me go out," said Clemency, soothing her. "I'll tell him what you
  • like. Don't cross the door-step to-night. I'm sure no good will come of
  • it. Oh, it was an unhappy day when Mr. Warden was ever brought here!
  • Think of your good father, darling: of your sister."
  • "I have," said Marion, hastily raising her head. "You don't know what I
  • do. You don't know what I do. I _must_ speak to him. You are the best
  • and truest friend in all the world for what you have said to me, but I
  • must take this step. Will you go with me, Clemency," she kissed her on
  • her friendly face, "or shall I go alone?"
  • [Illustration]
  • Sorrowing and wondering, Clemency turned the key, and opened the door.
  • Into the dark and doubtful night that lay beyond the threshhold, Marion
  • passed quickly, holding by her hand.
  • In the dark night he joined her, and they spoke together earnestly and
  • long: and the hand that held so fast by Clemency's, now trembled, now
  • turned deadly cold, now clasped and closed on hers, in the strong
  • feeling of the speech it emphasized unconsciously. When they returned,
  • he followed to the door; and pausing there a moment, seized the other
  • hand, and pressed it to his lips. Then stealthily withdrew.
  • The door was barred and locked again, and once again she stood beneath
  • her father's roof. Not bowed down by the secret that she brought there,
  • though so young; but with that same expression on her face, for which I
  • had no name before, and shining through her tears.
  • Again she thanked and thanked her humble friend, and trusted to her, as
  • she said, with confidence, implicitly. Her chamber safely reached, she
  • fell upon her knees; and with her secret weighing on her heart, could
  • pray!
  • Could rise up from her prayers, so tranquil and serene, and bending over
  • her fond sister in her slumber, look upon her face and smile: though
  • sadly: murmuring as she kissed her forehead, how that Grace had been a
  • mother to her, ever, and she loved her as a child!
  • Could draw the passive arm about her neck when lying down to rest--it
  • seemed to cling there, of its own will, protectingly and tenderly even
  • in sleep--and breathe upon the parted lips, God bless her!
  • Could sink into a peaceful sleep, herself; but for one dream, in which
  • she cried out, in her innocent and touching voice, that she was quite
  • alone, and they had all forgotten her.
  • * * * * *
  • A month soon passes, even at its tardiest pace. The month appointed to
  • elapse between that night and the return, was quick of foot, and went
  • by, like a vapour.
  • The day arrived. A raging winter day, that shook the old house,
  • sometimes, as if it shivered in the blast. A day to make home doubly
  • home. To give the chimney corner new delights. To shed a ruddier glow
  • upon the faces gathered round the hearth; and draw each fireside group
  • into a closer and more social league, against the roaring elements
  • without. Such a wild winter day as best prepares the way for shut-out
  • night; for curtained rooms, and cheerful looks; for music, laughter,
  • dancing, light, and jovial entertainment!
  • All these the Doctor had in store to welcome Alfred back. They knew that
  • he could not arrive till night; and they would make the night air ring,
  • he said, as he approached. All his old friends should congregate about
  • him. He should not miss a face that he had known and liked. No! They
  • should every one be there!
  • So, guests were bidden, and musicians were engaged, and tables spread,
  • and floors prepared for active feet, and bountiful provision made, of
  • every hospitable kind. Because it was the Christmas season, and his eyes
  • were all unused to English holly, and its sturdy green, the dancing room
  • was garlanded and hung with it; and the red berries gleamed an English
  • welcome to him, peeping from among the leaves.
  • It was a busy day for all of them: a busier day for none of them than
  • Grace, who noiselessly presided everywhere, and was the cheerful mind of
  • all the preparations. Many a time that day (as well as many a time
  • within the fleeting month preceding it), did Clemency glance anxiously,
  • and almost fearfully, at Marion. She saw her paler, perhaps, than usual;
  • but there was a sweet composure on her face that made it lovelier than
  • ever.
  • At night when she was dressed, and wore upon her head a wreath that
  • Grace had proudly twined about it--its mimic flowers were Alfred's
  • favorites, as Grace remembered when she chose them--that old expression,
  • pensive, almost sorrowful, and yet so spiritual, high, and stirring, sat
  • again upon her brow, enhanced a hundred fold.
  • "The next wreath I adjust on this fair head, will be a marriage wreath,"
  • said Grace; "or I am no true prophet, dear."
  • Her sister smiled, and held her in her arms.
  • "A moment, Grace. Don't leave me yet. Are you sure that I want nothing
  • more?"
  • Her care was not for that. It was her sister's face she thought of, and
  • her eyes were fixed upon it, tenderly.
  • "My art," said Grace, "can go no farther, dear girl; nor your beauty. I
  • never saw you look so beautiful as now."
  • "I never was so happy," she returned.
  • "Aye, but there is greater happiness in store. In such another home, as
  • cheerful and as bright as this looks now," said Grace, "Alfred and his
  • young wife will soon be living."
  • She smiled again. "It is a happy home, Grace, in your fancy. I can see
  • it in your eyes. I know it _will_ be happy, dear. How glad I am to know
  • it."
  • "Well," cried the Doctor, bustling in. "Here we are, all ready for
  • Alfred, eh? He can't be here until pretty late--an hour or so before
  • midnight--so there'll be plenty of time for making merry before he
  • comes. He'll not find us with the ice unbroken. Pile up the fire here,
  • Britain! Let it shine upon the holly till it winks again. It's a world
  • of nonsense, Puss; true lovers and all the rest of it--all nonsense; but
  • we'll be nonsensical with the rest of 'em, and give our true lover a mad
  • welcome. Upon my word!" said the old Doctor, looking at his daughters
  • proudly, "I'm not clear to-night, among other absurdities, but that I'm
  • the father of two handsome girls."
  • "All that one of them has ever done, or may do--may do, dearest
  • father--to cause you pain or grief, forgive her," said Marion: "forgive
  • her now, when her heart is full. Say that you forgive her. That you will
  • forgive her. That she shall always share your love, and--," and the rest
  • was not said, for her face was hidden on the old man's shoulder.
  • "Tut, tut, tut," said the Doctor, gently. "Forgive! What have I to
  • forgive? Heyday, if our true lovers come back to flurry us like this,
  • we must hold 'em at a distance; we must send expresses out to stop 'em
  • short upon the road, and bring 'em on a mile or two a day, until we're
  • properly prepared to meet 'em. Kiss me, Puss. Forgive! Why, what a
  • silly child you are. If you had vexed and crossed me fifty times
  • a day, instead of not at all, I'd forgive you everything, but
  • such a supplication. Kiss me again, Puss. There! Prospective and
  • retrospective--a clear score between us. Pile up the fire here! Would
  • you freeze the people on this bleak December night! Let us be light,
  • and warm, and merry, or I'll not forgive some of you!"
  • So gaily the old Doctor carried it! And the fire was piled up, and the
  • lights were bright, and company arrived, and a murmuring of lively
  • tongues began, and already there was a pleasant air of cheerful
  • excitement stirring through all the house.
  • More and more company came flocking in. Bright eyes sparkled upon
  • Marion; smiling lips gave her joy of his return; sage mothers fanned
  • themselves, and hoped she mightn't be too youthful and inconstant for
  • the quiet round of home; impetuous fathers fell into disgrace, for too
  • much exaltation of her beauty; daughters envied her; sons envied him;
  • innumerable pairs of lovers profited by the occasion; all were
  • interested, animated, and expectant.
  • Mr. and Mrs. Craggs came arm in arm, but Mrs. Snitchey came alone. "Why,
  • what's become of _him_?" inquired the Doctor.
  • The feather of a Bird of Paradise in Mrs. Snitchey's turban, trembled as
  • if the bird of Paradise were alive again, when she said that doubtless
  • Mr. Craggs knew. _She_ was never told.
  • "That nasty office," said Mrs. Craggs.
  • "I wish it was burnt down," said Mrs. Snitchey.
  • "He's--he's--there's a little matter of business that keeps my partner
  • rather late," said Mr. Craggs, looking uneasily about him.
  • "Oh--h! Business. Don't tell me!" said Mrs. Snitchey.
  • "_We_ know what business means," said Mrs. Craggs.
  • But their not knowing what it meant, was perhaps the reason why Mrs.
  • Snitchey's Bird of Paradise feather quivered so portentously, and all
  • the pendant bits on Mrs. Craggs's ear-rings shook like little bells.
  • "I wonder _you_ could come away, Mr. Craggs," said his wife.
  • "Mr. Craggs is fortunate, I'm sure!" said Mrs. Snitchey.
  • "That office so engrosses 'em," said Mrs. Craggs.
  • "A person with an office has no business to be married at all," said
  • Mrs. Snitchey.
  • Then Mrs. Snitchey said, within herself, that that look of hers had
  • pierced to Craggs's soul, and he knew it: and Mrs. Craggs observed, to
  • Craggs, that 'his Snitcheys' were deceiving him behind his back, and he
  • would find it out when it was too late.
  • Still, Mr. Craggs, without much heeding these remarks, looked uneasily
  • about him until his eye rested on Grace, to whom he immediately
  • presented himself.
  • "Good evening, Ma'am," said Craggs. "You look charmingly.
  • Your--Miss--your sister, Miss Marion, is she----"
  • "Oh she's quite well, Mr. Craggs."
  • "Yes--I--is she here?" asked Craggs.
  • "Here! Don't you see her yonder? Going to dance?" said Grace.
  • Mr. Craggs put on his spectacles to see the better; looked at her
  • through them, for some time; coughed; and put them, with an air of
  • satisfaction, in their sheath again, and in his pocket.
  • Now the music struck up, and the dance commenced. The bright fire
  • crackled and sparkled, rose and fell, as though it joined the dance
  • itself, in right good fellowship. Sometimes it roared as if it would
  • make music too. Sometimes it flashed and beamed as if it were the eye of
  • the old room: it winked too, sometimes, like a knowing patriarch, upon
  • the youthful whisperers in corners. Sometimes it sported with the
  • holly-boughs; and, shining on the leaves by fits and starts, made them
  • look as if they were in the cold winter night again, and fluttering in
  • the wind. Sometimes its genial humour grew obstreperous, and passed all
  • bounds; and then it cast into the room, among the twinkling feet, with a
  • loud burst, a shower of harmless little sparks, and in its exultation
  • leaped and bounded, like a mad thing, up the broad old chimney.
  • Another dance was near its close, when Mr. Snitchey touched his partner,
  • who was looking on, upon the arm.
  • Mr. Craggs started, as if his familiar had been a spectre.
  • "Is he gone?" he asked.
  • "Hush! He has been with me," said Snitchey, "for three hours and more.
  • He went over everything. He looked into all our arrangements for him,
  • and was very particular indeed. He--Humph!"
  • The dance was finished. Marion passed close before him, as he spoke.
  • She did not observe him, or his partner; but looked over her shoulder
  • towards her sister in the distance, as she slowly made her way into the
  • crowd, and passed out of their view.
  • "You see! All safe and well," said Mr. Craggs. "He didn't recur to that
  • subject, I suppose?"
  • "Not a word."
  • "And is he really gone? Is he safe away?"
  • "He keeps to his word. He drops down the river with the tide in that
  • shell of a boat of his, and so goes out to sea on this dark night--a
  • dare-devil he is--before the wind. There's no such lonely road anywhere
  • else. That's one thing. The tide flows, he says, an hour before midnight
  • about this time. I'm glad it's over." Mr. Snitchey wiped his forehead,
  • which looked hot and anxious.
  • "What do you think," said Mr. Craggs, "about--"
  • "Hush!" replied his cautious partner, looking straight before him. "I
  • understand you. Don't mention names, and don't let us seem to be talking
  • secrets. I don't know what to think; and to tell you the truth, I don't
  • care now. It's a great relief. His self-love deceived him, I suppose.
  • Perhaps the young lady coquetted a little. The evidence would seem to
  • point that way. Alfred not arrived?"
  • "Not yet," said Mr. Craggs. "Expected every minute."
  • "Good." Mr. Snitchey wiped his forehead again. "It's a great relief. I
  • haven't been so nervous since we've been in partnership. I intend to
  • spend the evening now, Mr. Craggs."
  • Mrs. Craggs and Mrs. Snitchey joined them as he announced this
  • intention. The Bird of Paradise was in a state of extreme vibration; and
  • the little bells were ringing quite audibly.
  • "It has been the theme of general comment, Mr. Snitchey," said Mrs.
  • Snitchey. "I hope the office is satisfied."
  • "Satisfied with what, my dear?" asked Mr. Snitchey.
  • "With the exposure of a defenceless woman to ridicule and remark,"
  • returned his wife. "That is quite in the way of the office, _that_ is."
  • "I really, myself," said Mrs. Craggs, "have been so long accustomed to
  • connect the office with everything opposed to domesticity, that I am
  • glad to know it as the avowed enemy of my peace. There is something
  • honest in that, at all events."
  • "My dear," urged Mr. Craggs, "your good opinion is invaluable, but _I_
  • never avowed that the office was the enemy of your peace."
  • "No," said Mrs. Craggs, ringing a perfect peal upon the little bells.
  • "Not you, indeed. You wouldn't be worthy of the office, if you had the
  • candor to."
  • "As to my having been away to-night, my dear," said Mr. Snitchey, giving
  • her his arm, "the deprivation has been mine, I'm sure; but, as Mr.
  • Craggs knows--"
  • Mrs. Snitchey cut this reference very short by hitching her husband to
  • a distance, and asking him to look at that man. To do her the favor to
  • look at him.
  • "At which man, my dear?" said Mr. Snitchey.
  • "Your chosen companion; _I_'m no companion to you Mr. Snitchey."
  • "Yes, yes, you are, my dear," he interposed.
  • "No no, I'm not," said Mrs. Snitchey with a majestic smile. "I know my
  • station. Will you look at your chosen companion, Mr. Snitchey; at your
  • referee; at the keeper of your secrets; at the man you trust; at your
  • other self, in short."
  • The habitual association of Self with Craggs, occasioned Mr. Snitchey to
  • look in that direction.
  • "If you can look that man in the eye this night," said Mrs. Snitchey,
  • "and not know that you are deluded, practised upon: made the victim of
  • his arts, and bent down prostrate to his will, by some unaccountable
  • fascination which it is impossible to explain, and against which no
  • warning of mine is of the least avail: all I can say is--I pity you!"
  • At the very same moment Mrs. Craggs was oracular on the cross subject.
  • Was it possible she said, that Craggs could so blind himself to his
  • Snitcheys, as not to feel his true position. Did he mean to say that he
  • had seen his Snitcheys come into that room, and didn't plainly see that
  • there was reservation, cunning, treachery in the man? Would he tell
  • her that his very action, when he wiped his forehead and looked so
  • stealthily about him, didn't show that there was something weighing on
  • the conscience of his precious Snitcheys (if he had a conscience), that
  • wouldn't bear the light. Did anybody but his Snitcheys come to festive
  • entertainments like a burglar?--which, by the way, was hardly a clear
  • illustration of the case, as he had walked in very mildly at the door.
  • And would he still assert to her at noon-day (it being nearly midnight),
  • that his Snitcheys were to be justified through thick and thin, against
  • all facts, and reason, and experience?
  • Neither Snitchey nor Craggs openly attempted to stem the current which
  • had thus set in, but both were content to be carried gently along it,
  • until its force abated; which happened at about the same time as a
  • general movement for a country dance; when Mr. Snitchey proposed himself
  • as a partner to Mrs. Craggs, and Mr. Craggs gallantly offered himself to
  • Mrs. Snitchey; and after some such slight evasions as "why don't you ask
  • somebody else?" and "you'll be glad, I know, if I decline," and "I
  • wonder you can dance out of the office" (but this jocosely now), each
  • lady graciously accepted, and took her place.
  • It was an old custom among them, indeed, to do so, and to pair off, in
  • like manner, at dinners and suppers; for they were excellent friends,
  • and on a footing of easy familiarity. Perhaps the false Craggs and the
  • wicked Snitchey were a recognised fiction with the two wives, as Doe
  • and Roe, incessantly running up and down bailiwicks, were with the
  • two husbands: or perhaps the ladies had instituted, and taken upon
  • themselves, these two shares in the business, rather than be left out of
  • it altogether. But certain it is, that each wife went as gravely and
  • steadily to work in her vocation as her husband did in his: and would
  • have considered it almost impossible for the Firm to maintain a
  • successful and respectable existence, without her laudable exertions.
  • But now the Bird of Paradise was seen to flutter down the middle; and
  • the little bells began to bounce and jingle in poussette; and the
  • Doctor's rosy face spun round and round, like an expressive pegtop
  • highly varnished; and breathless Mr. Craggs began to doubt already,
  • whether country dancing had been made "too easy," like the rest of life;
  • and Mr. Snitchey, with his nimble cuts and capers, footed it for Self,
  • and Craggs, and half a dozen more.
  • Now, too, the fire took fresh courage, favored by the lively wind the
  • dance awakened, and burnt clear and high. It was the Genius of the room,
  • and present everywhere. It shone in people's eyes, it sparkled in the
  • jewels on the snowy necks of girls, it twinkled at their ears as if it
  • whispered to them slyly, it flashed about their waists, it flickered on
  • the ground and made it rosy for their feet, it bloomed upon the ceiling
  • that its glow might set off their bright faces, and it kindled up a
  • general illumination in Mrs. Craggs's little belfry.
  • Now, too, the lively air that fanned it, grew less gentle as the music
  • quickened and the dance proceeded with new spirit; and a breeze arose
  • that made the leaves and berries dance upon the wall, as they had often
  • done upon the trees; and rustled in the room as if an invisible company
  • of fairies, treading in the footsteps of the good substantial revellers,
  • were whirling after them. Now, too, no feature of the Doctor's face
  • could be distinguished as he spun and spun; and now there seemed a dozen
  • Birds of Paradise in fitful flight; and now there were a thousand little
  • bells at work; and now a fleet of flying skirts was ruffled by a little
  • tempest; when the music gave in, and the dance was over.
  • [Illustration]
  • Hot and breathless as the Doctor was, it only made him the more
  • impatient for Alfred's coming.
  • "Anything been seen, Britain? Anything been heard?"
  • "Too dark to see far, Sir. Too much noise inside the house to hear."
  • "That's right! The gayer welcome for him. How goes the time?"
  • "Just twelve, Sir. He can't be long, Sir."
  • "Stir up the fire, and throw another log upon it," said the Doctor. "Let
  • him see his welcome blazing out upon the night--good boy!--as he comes
  • along!"
  • He saw it--Yes! From the chaise he caught the light, as he turned the
  • corner by the old church. He knew the room from which it shone. He saw
  • the wintry branches of the old trees between the light and him. He knew
  • that one of those trees rustled musically in the summer time at the
  • window of Marion's chamber.
  • The tears were in his eyes. His heart throbbed so violently that he
  • could hardly bear his happiness. How often he had thought of this
  • time--pictured it under all circumstances--feared that it might never
  • come--yearned, and wearied for it--far away!
  • Again the light! Distinct and ruddy; kindled, he knew, to give him
  • welcome, and to speed him home. He beckoned with his hand, and waved his
  • hat, and cheered out, loud, as if the light were they, and they could
  • see and hear him, as he dashed towards them through the mud and mire,
  • triumphantly.
  • "Stop!" He knew the Doctor, and understood what he had done. He would
  • not let it be a surprise to them. But he could make it one, yet, by
  • going forward on foot. If the orchard gate were open, he could enter
  • there; if not, the wall was easily climbed, as he knew of old; and he
  • would be among them in an instant.
  • He dismounted from the chaise, and telling the driver--even that was not
  • easy in his agitation--to remain behind for a few minutes, and then to
  • follow slowly, ran on with exceeding swiftness, tried the gate, scaled
  • the wall, jumped down on the other side, and stood panting in the old
  • orchard.
  • There was a frosty rime upon the trees, which, in the faint light of
  • the clouded moon, hung upon the smaller branches like dead garlands.
  • Withered leaves crackled and snapped beneath his feet, as he crept
  • softly on towards the house. The desolation of a winter night sat
  • brooding on the earth, and in the sky. But the red light came cheerily
  • towards him from the windows: figures passed and repassed there: and the
  • hum and murmur of voices greeted his ear, sweetly.
  • Listening for hers: attempting, as he crept on, to detach it from the
  • rest, and half-believing that he heard it: he had nearly reached the
  • door, when it was abruptly opened, and a figure coming out encountered
  • his. It instantly recoiled with a half-suppressed cry.
  • "Clemency," he said, "don't you know me?"
  • "Don't come in," she answered, pushing him back. "Go away. Don't ask me
  • why. Don't come in."
  • "What is the matter?" he exclaimed.
  • "I don't know. I--I am afraid to think. Go back. Hark!"
  • There was a sudden tumult in the house. She put her hands upon her ears.
  • A wild scream, such as no hands could shut out, was heard; and
  • Grace--distraction in her looks and manner--rushed out at the door.
  • "Grace!" He caught her in his arms. "What is it! Is she dead!"
  • She disengaged herself, as if to recognise his face, and fell down at
  • his feet.
  • A crowd of figures came about them from the house. Among them was her
  • father, with a paper in his hand.
  • "What is it!" cried Alfred, grasping his hair with his hands, and
  • looking in an agony from face to face, as he bent upon his knee, beside
  • the insensible girl. "Will no one look at me? Will no one speak to me?
  • Does no one know me? Is there no voice among you all, to tell me what it
  • is!"
  • There was a murmur among them. "She is gone."
  • "Gone!" he echoed.
  • "Fled, my dear Alfred!" said the Doctor, in a broken voice, and with his
  • hands before his face. "Gone from her home and us. To-night! She writes
  • that she has made her innocent and blameless choice--entreats that we
  • will forgive her--prays that we will not forget her--and is gone."
  • "With whom? Where?"
  • He started up as if to follow in pursuit, but when they gave way to let
  • him pass, looked wildly round upon them, staggered back, and sunk down
  • in his former attitude, clasping one of Grace's cold hands in his own.
  • There was a hurried running to and fro, confusion, noise, disorder, and
  • no purpose. Some proceeded to disperse themselves about the roads, and
  • some took horse, and some got lights, and some conversed together,
  • urging that there was no trace or track to follow. Some approached him
  • kindly, with the view of offering consolation; some admonished him that
  • Grace must be removed into the house, and he prevented it. He never
  • heard them, and he never moved.
  • The snow fell fast and thick. He looked up for a moment in the air, and
  • thought that those white ashes strewn upon his hopes and misery, were
  • suited to them well. He looked round on the whitening ground, and
  • thought how Marion's foot-prints would be hushed and covered up, as soon
  • as made, and even that remembrance of her blotted out. But he never felt
  • the weather, and he never stirred.
  • PART THE THIRD.
  • [Illustration]
  • PART THE THIRD
  • [Illustration]
  • The world had grown six years older since that night of the return. It
  • was a warm autumn afternoon, and there had been heavy rain.
  • The sun burst suddenly from among the clouds: and the old battle-ground,
  • sparkling brilliantly and cheerfully at sight of it in one green place,
  • flashed a responsive welcome there, which spread along the country side
  • as if a joyful beacon had been lighted up, and answered from a thousand
  • stations.
  • How beautiful the landscape kindling in the light, and that luxuriant
  • influence passing on like a celestial presence, brightening everything!
  • The wood, a sombre mass before, revealed its varied tints of yellow,
  • green, brown, red; its different forms of trees, with raindrops
  • glittering on their leaves and twinkling as they fell. The verdant
  • meadow-land, bright and glowing, seemed as if it had been blind a minute
  • since, and now had found a sense of sight wherewith to look up at the
  • shining sky. Corn-fields, hedge-rows, fences, homesteads, the clustered
  • roofs, the steeple of the church, the stream, the watermill, all sprung
  • out of the gloomy darkness, smiling. Birds sang sweetly, flowers raised
  • their drooping heads, fresh scents arose from the invigorated ground;
  • the blue expanse above, extended and diffused itself; already the sun's
  • slanting rays pierced mortally the sullen bank of cloud that lingered
  • in its flight; and a rainbow, spirit of all the colors that adorned the
  • earth and sky, spanned the whole arch with its triumphant glory.
  • At such a time, one little roadside Inn, snugly sheltered behind a
  • great elm-tree with a rare seat for idlers encircling its capacious
  • bole, addressed a cheerful front towards the traveller, as a house of
  • entertainment ought, and tempted him with many mute but significant
  • assurances of a comfortable welcome. The ruddy sign-board perched up
  • in the tree, with its golden letters winking in the sun, ogled the
  • passer-by from among the green leaves, like a jolly face, and promised
  • good cheer. The horse-trough, full of clear fresh water, and the ground
  • below it, sprinkled with droppings of fragrant hay, made every horse
  • that passed prick up his ears. The crimson curtains in the lower rooms,
  • and the pure white hangings in the little bed-chambers above, beckoned,
  • Come in! with every breath of air. Upon the bright green shutters, there
  • were golden legends about beer and ale, and neat wines, and good beds;
  • and an affecting picture of a brown jug frothing over at the top. Upon
  • the window-sills were flowering plants in bright red pots, which made a
  • lively show against the white front of the house; and in the darkness of
  • the doorway there were streaks of light, which glanced off from the
  • surfaces of bottles and tankards.
  • On the door-step, appeared a proper figure of a landlord, too; for
  • though he was a short man, he was round and broad; and stood with his
  • hands in his pockets, and his legs just wide enough apart to express a
  • mind at rest upon the subject of the cellar, and an easy confidence--too
  • calm and virtuous to become a swagger--in the general resources of the
  • Inn. The superabundant moisture, trickling from everything after the
  • late rain, set him off well. Nothing near him was thirsty. Certain
  • top-heavy dahlias, looking over the palings of his neat well-ordered
  • garden, had swilled as much as they could carry--perhaps a trifle
  • more--and may have been the worse for liquor; but the sweetbriar, roses,
  • wall-flowers, the plants at the windows, and the leaves on the old tree,
  • were in the beaming state of moderate company that had taken no more
  • than was wholesome for them, and had served to develope their best
  • qualities. Sprinkling dewy drops about them on the ground, they seemed
  • profuse of innocent and sparkling mirth, that did good where it lighted,
  • softening neglected corners which the steady rain could seldom reach,
  • and hurting nothing.
  • [Illustration]
  • This village Inn had assumed, on being established, an uncommon sign. It
  • was called The Nutmeg Grater. And underneath that household word, was
  • inscribed, up in the tree, on the same flaming board, and in the like
  • golden characters, By Benjamin Britain.
  • At a second glance, and on a more minute examination of his face, you
  • might have known that it was no other than Benjamin Britain himself who
  • stood in the doorway--reasonably changed by time, but for the better; a
  • very comfortable host indeed.
  • "Mrs. B.," said Mr. Britain, looking down the road, "is rather late.
  • It's tea time."
  • As there was no Mrs. Britain coming, he strolled leisurely out into the
  • road and looked up at the house, very much to his satisfaction. "It's
  • just the sort of house," said Benjamin, "I should wish to stop at, if I
  • didn't keep it."
  • Then he strolled towards the garden paling, and took a look at the
  • dahlias. They looked over at him, with a helpless, drowsy hanging of
  • their heads: which bobbed again, as the heavy drops of wet dripped off
  • them.
  • "You must be looked after," said Benjamin. "Memorandum, not to forget
  • to tell her so. She's a long time coming!"
  • Mr. Britain's better half seemed to be by so very much his better half,
  • that his own moiety of himself was utterly cast away and helpless
  • without her.
  • "She hadn't much to do, I think," said Ben. "There were a few little
  • matters of business after market, but not many. Oh! here we are at
  • last!"
  • A chaise-cart, driven by a boy, came clattering along the road: and
  • seated in it, in a chair, with a large well-saturated umbrella spread
  • out to dry behind her, was the plump figure of a matronly woman, with
  • her bare arms folded across a basket which she carried on her knee,
  • several other baskets and parcels lying crowded about her, and a certain
  • bright good-nature in her face and contented awkwardness in her manner,
  • as she jogged to and fro with the motion of her carriage, which smacked
  • of old times, even in the distance. Upon her nearer approach, this
  • relish of bygone days was not diminished; and when the cart stopped
  • at the Nutmeg Grater door, a pair of shoes, alighting from it,
  • slipped nimbly through Mr. Britain's open arms, and came down with a
  • substantial weight upon the pathway, which shoes could hardly have
  • belonged to any one but Clemency Newcome.
  • In fact they did belong to her, and she stood in them, and a rosy
  • comfortable-looking soul she was: with as much soap on her glossy face
  • as in times of yore, but with whole elbows now, that had grown quite
  • dimpled in her improved condition.
  • "You're late, Clemmy!" said Mr. Britain.
  • "Why, you see, Ben, I've had a deal to do!" she replied, looking busily
  • after the safe removal into the house of all the packages and baskets;
  • "eight, nine, ten--where's eleven? Oh! my baskets, eleven! It's all
  • right. Put the horse up, Harry, and if he coughs again give him a warm
  • mash to-night. Eight, nine, ten. Why, where's eleven? Oh I forgot, it's
  • all right. How's the children, Ben?"
  • "Hearty, Clemmy, hearty."
  • "Bless their precious faces!" said Mrs. Britain, unbonneting her own
  • round countenance (for she and her husband were by this time in the
  • bar), and smoothing her hair with her open hands. "Give us a kiss, old
  • man."
  • Mr. Britain promptly complied.
  • "I think," said Mrs. Britain, applying herself to her pockets and
  • drawing forth an immense bulk of thin books and crumpled papers,
  • a very kennel of dogs' ears: "I've done everything. Bills all
  • settled--turnips sold--brewer's account looked into and paid--'bacco
  • pipes ordered--seventeen pound four paid into the Bank--Doctor
  • Heathfield's charge for little Clem--you'll guess what that is--Doctor
  • Heathfield won't take nothing again, Ben."
  • "I thought he wouldn't," returned Britain.
  • "No. He says whatever family you was to have, Ben, he'd never put you to
  • the cost of a halfpenny. Not if you was to have twenty."
  • Mr. Britain's face assumed a serious expression, and he looked hard at
  • the wall.
  • "A'nt it kind of him?" said Clemency.
  • "Very," returned Mr. Britain. "It's the sort of kindness that I wouldn't
  • presume upon, on any account."
  • "No," retorted Clemency. "Of course not. Then there's the pony--he
  • fetched eight pound two; and that a'nt bad, is it?"
  • "It's very good," said Ben.
  • "I'm glad you're pleased!" exclaimed his wife. "I thought you would be;
  • and I think that's all, and so no more at present from yours and cetrer,
  • C. Britain. Ha ha ha! There! Take all the papers, and lock 'em. Oh! Wait
  • a minute. Here's a printed bill to stick on the wall. Wet from the
  • printer's. How nice it smells!"
  • "What's this?" said Ben, looking over the document.
  • "I don't know," replied his wife. "I haven't read a word of it."
  • "'To be sold by Auction,'" read the host of the Nutmeg Grater, "'unless
  • previously disposed of by private contract.'"
  • "They always put that," said Clemency.
  • "Yes, but they don't always put this," he returned. "Look here,
  • 'Mansion' &c.--'offices,' &c., 'shrubberies,' &c., 'ring fence,'
  • &c. 'Messrs. Snitchey and Craggs,' &c. 'ornamental portion of the
  • unencumbered freehold property of Michael Warden, Esquire, intending to
  • continue to reside abroad'!"
  • "Intending to continue to reside abroad!" repeated Clemency.
  • "Here it is," said Mr. Britain. "Look!"
  • "And it was only this very day that I heard it whispered at the old
  • house, that better and plainer news had been half promised of her,
  • soon!" said Clemency, shaking her head sorrowfully, and patting her
  • elbows as if the recollection of old times unconsciously awakened her
  • old habits. "Dear, dear, dear! There'll be heavy hearts, Ben, yonder."
  • Mr. Britain heaved a sigh, and shook his head, and said he couldn't make
  • it out: he had left off trying long ago. With that remark, he applied
  • himself to putting up the bill just inside the bar window: and Clemency,
  • after meditating in silence for a few moments, roused herself, cleared
  • her thoughtful brow, and bustled off to look after the children.
  • Though the host of the Nutmeg Grater had a lively regard for his
  • good-wife, it was of the old patronising kind; and she amused him
  • mightily. Nothing would have astonished him so much, as to have known
  • for certain from any third party, that it was she who managed the whole
  • house, and made him, by her plain straightforward thrift, good-humour,
  • honesty, and industry, a thriving man. So easy it is, in any degree of
  • life, (as the world very often finds it,) to take those cheerful natures
  • that never assert their merit, at their own modest valuation; and to
  • conceive a flippant liking of people for their outward oddities and
  • eccentricities, whose innate worth, if we would look so far, might make
  • us blush in the comparison!
  • It was comfortable to Mr. Britain, to think of his own condescension in
  • having married Clemency. She was a perpetual testimony to him of the
  • goodness of his heart, and the kindness of his disposition; and he felt
  • that her being an excellent wife was an illustration of the old precept
  • that virtue is its own reward.
  • He had finished wafering up the bill, and had locked the vouchers for
  • her day's proceedings in the cupboard--chuckling all the time, over her
  • capacity for business--when, returning with the news that the two Master
  • Britains were playing in the coach-house, under the superintendence of
  • one Betsey, and that little Clem was sleeping "like a picture," she sat
  • down to tea, which had awaited her arrival, on a little table. It was a
  • very neat little bar, with the usual display of bottles and glasses; a
  • sedate clock, right to the minute (it was half-past five); everything
  • in its place, and everything furbished and polished up to the very
  • utmost.
  • "It's the first time I've sat down quietly to-day, I declare," said Mrs.
  • Britain, taking a long breath, as if she had sat down for the night; but
  • getting up again immediately to hand her husband his tea, and cut him
  • his bread-and-butter; "how that bill does set me thinking of old times!"
  • "Ah!" said Mr. Britain, handling his saucer like an oyster, and
  • disposing of its contents on the same principle.
  • "That same Mr. Michael Warden," said Clemency, shaking her head at the
  • notice of sale, "lost me my old place."
  • "And got you your husband," said Mr. Britain.
  • "Well! So he did," retorted Clemency, "and many thanks to him."
  • "Man's the creature of habit," said Mr. Britain, surveying her, over his
  • saucer. "I had somehow got used to you, Clem; and I found I shouldn't be
  • able to get on without you. So we went and got made man and wife. Ha,
  • ha! We! Who'd have thought it!"
  • "Who indeed!" cried Clemency. "It was very good of you, Ben."
  • "No, no, no," replied Mr. Britain, with an air of self-denial. "Nothing
  • worth mentioning."
  • "Oh yes it was, Ben," said his wife, with great simplicity; "I'm sure I
  • think so; and am very much obliged to you. Ah!" looking again at the
  • bill; "when she was known to be gone, and out of reach, dear girl, I
  • couldn't help telling--for her sake quite as much as theirs--what I
  • knew, could I?"
  • "You told it, any how," observed her husband.
  • "And Doctor Jeddler," pursued Clemency, putting down her tea-cup, and
  • looking thoughtfully at the bill, "in his grief and passion, turned me
  • out of house and home! I never have been so glad of anything in all my
  • life, as that I didn't say an angry word to him, and hadn't an angry
  • feeling towards him, even then; for he repented that truly, afterwards.
  • How often he has sat in this room, and told me over and over again, he
  • was sorry for it!--the last time, only yesterday, when you were out. How
  • often he has sat in this room, and talked to me, hour after hour, about
  • one thing and another, in which he made believe to be interested!--but
  • only for the sake of the days that are gone away, and because he knows
  • she used to like me, Ben!"
  • "Why, how did you ever come to catch a glimpse of that, Clem?" asked her
  • husband: astonished that she should have a distinct perception of a
  • truth which had only dimly suggested itself to his inquiring mind.
  • "I don't know I'm sure," said Clemency, blowing her tea, to cool it.
  • "Bless you, I couldn't tell you if you was to offer me a reward of a
  • hundred pound."
  • He might have pursued this metaphysical subject but for her catching a
  • glimpse of a substantial fact behind him, in the shape of a gentleman
  • attired in mourning, and cloaked and booted like a rider on horseback,
  • who stood at the bar-door. He seemed attentive to their conversation,
  • and not at all impatient to interrupt it.
  • Clemency hastily rose at this sight. Mr. Britain also rose and saluted
  • the guest. "Will you please to walk up stairs, Sir. There's a very nice
  • room up stairs, Sir."
  • "Thank you," said the stranger, looking earnestly at Mr. Britain's wife.
  • "May I come in here?"
  • "Oh, surely, if you like, Sir," returned Clemency, admitting him. "What
  • would you please to want, Sir?"
  • The bill had caught his eye, and he was reading it.
  • "Excellent property that, Sir," observed Mr. Britain.
  • He made no answer; but turning round, when he had finished reading,
  • looked at Clemency with the same observant curiosity as before. "You
  • were asking me," he said, still looking at her--
  • "What you would please to take, Sir," answered Clemency, stealing a
  • glance at him in return.
  • "If you will let me have a draught of ale," he said, moving to a table
  • by the window, "and will let me have it here, without being any
  • interruption to your meal, I shall be much obliged to you."
  • He sat down as he spoke, without any further parley, and looked out at
  • the prospect. He was an easy well-knit figure of a man in the prime of
  • life. His face, much browned by the sun, was shaded by a quantity of
  • dark hair; and he wore a moustache. His beer being set before him, he
  • filled out a glass, and drank, good-humouredly, to the house; adding, as
  • he put the tumbler down again:
  • "It's a new house, is it not?"
  • "Not particularly new, Sir," replied Mr. Britain.
  • "Between five and six years old," said Clemency: speaking very
  • distinctly.
  • "I think I heard you mention Doctor Jeddler's name, as I came in,"
  • inquired the stranger. "That bill reminds me of him; for I happen to
  • know something of that story, by hearsay, and through certain connexions
  • of mine.--Is the old man living?"
  • "Yes, he's living, Sir," said Clemency.
  • "Much changed?"
  • "Since when, Sir?" returned Clemency, with remarkable emphasis and
  • expression.
  • "Since his daughter--went away."
  • "Yes! he's greatly changed since then," said Clemency. "He's grey and
  • old, and hasn't the same way with him at all; but I think he's happy
  • now. He has taken on with his sister since then, and goes to see her
  • very often. That did him good, directly. At first, he was sadly broken
  • down; and it was enough to make one's heart bleed, to see him wandering
  • about, railing at the world; but a great change for the better came over
  • him after a year or two, and then he began to like to talk about his
  • lost daughter, and to praise her, ay and the world too! and was never
  • tired of saying, with the tears in his poor eyes, how beautiful and good
  • she was. He had forgiven her then. That was about the same time as Miss
  • Grace's marriage. Britain, you remember?"
  • Mr. Britain remembered very well.
  • "The sister _is_ married then," returned the stranger. He paused for
  • some time before he asked, "To whom?"
  • Clemency narrowly escaped oversetting the tea-board, in her emotion at
  • this question.
  • "Did _you_ never hear?" she said.
  • "I should like to hear," he replied, as he filled his glass again, and
  • raised it to his lips.
  • "Ah! It would be a long story, if it was properly told," said Clemency,
  • resting her chin on the palm of her left hand, and supporting that elbow
  • on her right hand, as she shook her head, and looked back through the
  • intervening years, as if she were looking at a fire. "It would be a long
  • story, I am sure."
  • "But told as a short one," suggested the stranger.
  • "Told as a short one," repeated Clemency in the same thoughtful tone,
  • and without any apparent reference to him, or consciousness of having
  • auditors, "what would there be to tell? That they grieved together, and
  • remembered her together, like a person dead; that they were so tender of
  • her, never would reproach her, called her back to one another as she
  • used to be, and found excuses for her? Every one knows that. I'm sure
  • _I_ do. No one better," added Clemency, wiping her eyes with her hand.
  • "And so," suggested the stranger.
  • "And so," said Clemency, taking him up mechanically, and without any
  • change in her attitude or manner, "they at last were married. They were
  • married on her birth-day--it comes round again to-morrow--very quiet,
  • very humble like, but very happy. Mr. Alfred said, one night when they
  • were walking in the orchard, 'Grace, shall our wedding-day be Marion's
  • birth-day?' And it was."
  • "And they have lived happily together?" said the stranger.
  • "Ay," said Clemency. "No two people ever more so. They have had no
  • sorrow but this."
  • She raised her head as with a sudden attention to the circumstances
  • under which she was recalling these events, and looked quickly at the
  • stranger. Seeing that his face was turned towards the window, and that
  • he seemed intent upon the prospect, she made some eager signs to her
  • husband, and pointed to the bill, and moved her mouth as if she were
  • repeating with great energy, one word or phrase to him over and over
  • again. As she uttered no sound, and as her dumb motions like most of her
  • gestures were of a very extraordinary kind, this unintelligible conduct
  • reduced Mr. Britain to the confines of despair. He stared at the table,
  • at the stranger, at the spoons, at his wife--followed her pantomime with
  • looks of deep amazement and perplexity--asked in the same language, was
  • it property in danger, was it he in danger, was it she--answered her
  • signals with other signals expressive of the deepest distress and
  • confusion--followed the motions of her lips--guessed half aloud "milk
  • and water," "monthly warning," "mice and walnuts"--and couldn't approach
  • her meaning.
  • Clemency gave it up at last, as a hopeless attempt; and moving her chair
  • by very slow degrees a little nearer to the stranger, sat with her eyes
  • apparently cast down but glancing sharply at him now and then, waiting
  • until he should ask some other question. She had not to wait long; for
  • he said, presently,
  • "And what is the after history of the young lady who went away? They
  • know it, I suppose?"
  • Clemency shook her head. "I've heard," she said, "that Doctor Jeddler is
  • thought to know more of it than he tells. Miss Grace has had letters
  • from her sister, saying that she was well and happy, and made much
  • happier by her being married to Mr. Alfred: and has written letters
  • back. But there's a mystery about her life and fortunes, altogether,
  • which nothing has cleared up to this hour, and which--"
  • She faltered here, and stopped.
  • "And which--" repeated the stranger.
  • "Which only one other person, I believe, could explain," said Clemency,
  • drawing her breath quickly.
  • "Who may that be?" asked the stranger.
  • "Mr. Michael Warden!" answered Clemency, almost in a shriek: at once
  • conveying to her husband what she would have had him understand before,
  • and letting Michael Warden know that he was recognised.
  • "You remember me, Sir," said Clemency, trembling with emotion; "I saw
  • just now you did! You remember me, that night in the garden. I was with
  • her!"
  • "Yes. You were," he said.
  • "Yes, Sir," returned Clemency. "Yes, to be sure. This is my husband, if
  • you please. Ben, my dear Ben, run to Miss Grace--run to Mr. Alfred--run
  • somewhere, Ben! Bring somebody here, directly!"
  • "Stay!" said Michael Warden, quietly interposing himself between the
  • door and Britain. "What would you do?"
  • "Let them know that you are here, Sir," answered Clemency, clapping her
  • hands in sheer agitation. "Let them know that they may hear of her, from
  • your own lips; let them know that she is not quite lost to them, but
  • that she will come home again yet, to bless her father and her loving
  • sister--even her old servant, even me," she struck herself upon the
  • breast with both hands, "with a sight of her sweet face. Run, Ben,
  • run!" And still she pressed him on towards the door, and still Mr.
  • Warden stood before it, with his hand stretched out, not angrily, but
  • sorrowfully.
  • "Or perhaps," said Clemency, running past her husband, and catching in
  • her emotion at Mr. Warden's cloak, "perhaps she's here now; perhaps
  • she's close by. I think from your manner she is. Let me see her, Sir, if
  • you please. I waited on her when she was a little child. I saw her grow
  • to be the pride of all this place. I knew her when she was Mr. Alfred's
  • promised wife. I tried to warn her when you tempted her away. I know
  • what her old home was when she was like the soul of it, and how it
  • changed when she was gone and lost. Let me speak to her, if you please!"
  • He gazed at her with compassion, not unmixed with wonder: but he made no
  • gesture of assent.
  • "I don't think she _can_ know," pursued Clemency, "how truly they
  • forgive her; how they love her; what joy it would be to them, to see her
  • once more. She may be timorous of going home. Perhaps if she sees me, it
  • may give her new heart. Only tell me truly, Mr. Warden, is she with
  • you?"
  • "She is not," he answered, shaking his head.
  • This answer, and his manner, and his black dress, and his coming back so
  • quietly, and his announced intention of continuing to live abroad,
  • explained it all. Marion was dead.
  • He didn't contradict her; yes, she was dead! Clemency sat down, hid her
  • face upon the table, and cried.
  • At that moment, a grey-headed old gentleman came running in quite out of
  • breath, and panting so much that his voice was scarcely to be recognised
  • as the voice of Mr. Snitchey.
  • "Good Heaven, Mr. Warden!" said the lawyer, taking him aside, "what wind
  • has blown----" He was so blown himself, that he couldn't get on any
  • further until after a pause, when he added, feebly, "you here?"
  • "An ill wind, I am afraid," he answered. "If you could have heard what
  • has just passed--how I have been besought and entreated to perform
  • impossibilities--what confusion and affliction I carry with me!"
  • "I can guess it all. But why did you ever come here, my good Sir?"
  • retorted Snitchey.
  • "Come! How should I know who kept the house? When I sent my servant on
  • to you, I strolled in here because the place was new to me; and I had a
  • natural curiosity in everything new and old, in these old scenes; and it
  • was outside the town. I wanted to communicate with you first, before
  • appearing there. I wanted to know what people would say to me. I see by
  • your manner that you can tell me. If it were not for your confounded
  • caution, I should have been possessed of everything long ago."
  • "Our caution!" returned the lawyer. "Speaking for Self and
  • Craggs--deceased," here Mr. Snitchey, glancing at his hat-band,
  • shook his head, "how can you reasonably blame us, Mr. Warden? It was
  • understood between us that the subject was never to be renewed, and
  • that it wasn't a subject on which grave and sober men like us (I made
  • a note of your observations at the time) could interfere? Our caution
  • too! when Mr. Craggs, Sir, went down to his respected grave in the
  • full belief----"
  • "I had given a solemn promise of silence until I should return, whenever
  • that might be," interrupted Mr. Warden; "and I have kept it."
  • "Well, Sir, and I repeat it," returned Mr. Snitchey, "we were bound to
  • silence too. We were bound to silence in our duty towards ourselves, and
  • in our duty towards a variety of clients, you among them, who were as
  • close as wax. It was not our place to make inquiries of you on such a
  • delicate subject. I had my suspicions, Sir; but it is not six months
  • since I have known the truth, and been assured that you lost her."
  • "By whom?" inquired his client.
  • "By Doctor Jeddler himself, Sir, who at last reposed that confidence in
  • me voluntarily. He, and only he, has known the whole truth, years and
  • years."
  • "And you know it?" said his client.
  • "I do, Sir!" replied Snitchey; "and I have also reason to know that it
  • will be broken to her sister to-morrow evening. They have given her
  • that promise. In the meantime, perhaps you'll give me the honor of your
  • company at my house; being unexpected at your own. But, not to run the
  • chance of any more such difficulties as you have had here, in case you
  • should be recognised--though you're a good deal changed--I think I might
  • have passed you myself, Mr. Warden--we had better dine here, and walk
  • on in the evening. It's a very good place to dine at, Mr. Warden: your
  • own property, by the bye. Self and Craggs (deceased) took a chop here
  • sometimes, and had it very comfortably served. Mr. Craggs, Sir," said
  • Snitchey, shutting his eyes tight for an instant, and opening them
  • again, "was struck off the roll of life too soon."
  • "Heaven forgive me for not condoling with you," returned Michael Warden,
  • passing his hand across his forehead, "but I'm like a man in a dream at
  • present. I seem to want my wits. Mr. Craggs--yes--I am very sorry we
  • have lost Mr. Craggs." But he looked at Clemency as he said it, and
  • seemed to sympathise with Ben, consoling her.
  • "Mr. Craggs, Sir," observed Snitchey, "didn't find life, I regret to
  • say, as easy to have and to hold as his theory made it out, or he would
  • have been among us now. It's a great loss to me. He was my right arm, my
  • right leg, my right ear, my right eye, was Mr. Craggs. I am paralytic
  • without him. He bequeathed his share of the business to Mrs. Craggs, her
  • executors, administrators, and assigns. His name remains in the Firm
  • to this hour. I try, in a childish sort of a way, to make believe,
  • sometimes, that he's alive. You may observe that I speak for Self and
  • Craggs--deceased Sir--deceased," said the tender-hearted attorney,
  • waving his pocket-handkerchief.
  • Michael Warden, who had still been observant of Clemency, turned to Mr.
  • Snitchey, when he ceased to speak, and whispered in his ear.
  • "Ah, poor thing!" said Snitchey, shaking his head. "Yes. She was always
  • very faithful to Marion. She was always very fond of her. Pretty Marion!
  • Poor Marion! Cheer up, Mistress--you _are_ married now, you know,
  • Clemency."
  • Clemency only sighed, and shook her head.
  • "Well, well! Wait 'till to-morrow," said the lawyer, kindly.
  • "To-morrow can't bring back the dead to life, Mister," said Clemency,
  • sobbing.
  • "No. It can't do that, or it would bring back Mr. Craggs, deceased,"
  • returned the lawyer. "But it may bring some soothing circumstances; it
  • may bring some comfort. Wait 'till to-morrow!"
  • So Clemency, shaking his proffered hand, said that she would; and
  • Britain, who had been terribly cast down at sight of his despondent
  • wife (which was like the business hanging its head), said that was
  • right; and Mr. Snitchey and Michael Warden went up stairs; and there
  • they were soon engaged in a conversation so cautiously conducted, that
  • no murmur of it was audible above the clatter of plates and dishes, the
  • hissing of the frying-pan, the bubbling of saucepans, the low monotonous
  • waltzing of the Jack--with a dreadful click every now and then as
  • if it had met with some mortal accident to its head, in a fit of
  • giddiness--and all the other preparations in the kitchen, for their
  • dinner.
  • * * * * *
  • To-morrow was a bright and peaceful day; and nowhere were the autumn
  • tints more beautifully seen, than from the quiet orchard of the Doctor's
  • house. The snows of many winter nights had melted from that ground, the
  • withered leaves of many summer times had rustled there, since she had
  • fled. The honey-suckle porch was green again, the trees cast bountiful
  • and changing shadows on the grass, the landscape was as tranquil and
  • serene as it had ever been; but where was she!
  • Not there. Not there. She would have been a stranger sight in her old
  • home now, even than that home had been at first, without her. But a lady
  • sat in the familiar place, from whose heart she had never passed away;
  • in whose true memory she lived, unchanging, youthful, radiant with all
  • promise and all hope; in whose affection--and it was a mother's now:
  • there was a cherished little daughter playing by her side--she had no
  • rival, no successor; upon whose gentle lips her name was trembling then.
  • The spirit of the lost girl looked out of those eyes. Those eyes of
  • Grace, her sister, sitting with her husband in the orchard, on their
  • wedding-day, and his and Marion's birth-day.
  • He had not become a great man; he had not grown rich; he had not
  • forgotten the scenes and friends of his youth: he had not fulfilled any
  • one of the Doctor's old predictions. But in his useful, patient, unknown
  • visiting of poor men's homes; and in his watching of sick beds; and
  • in his daily knowledge of the gentleness and goodness flowering the
  • bye-paths of the world, not to be trodden down beneath the heavy foot of
  • poverty, but springing up, elastic, in its track, and making its way
  • beautiful; he had better learned and proved, in each succeeding year,
  • the truth of his old faith. The manner of his life, though quiet and
  • remote, had shown him how often men still entertained angels, unawares,
  • as in the olden time; and how the most unlikely forms--even some that
  • were mean and ugly to the view, and poorly clad--became irradiated by
  • the couch of sorrow, want, and pain, and changed to ministering spirits
  • with a glory round their heads.
  • He lived to better purpose on the altered battle-ground perhaps, than if
  • he had contended restlessly in more ambitious lists; and he was happy
  • with his wife, dear Grace.
  • And Marion. Had _he_ forgotten her?
  • "The time has flown, dear Grace," he said, "since then;" they had been
  • talking of that night; "and yet it seems a long long while ago. We count
  • by changes and events within us. Not by years."
  • "Yet we have years to count by, too, since Marion was with us," returned
  • Grace. "Six times, dear husband, counting to-night as one, we have sat
  • here on her birth-day, and spoken together of that happy return, so
  • eagerly expected and so long deferred. Ah when will it be! When will it
  • be!"
  • Her husband attentively observed her, as the tears collected in her
  • eyes; and drawing nearer, said:
  • "But Marion told you, in that farewell letter which she left for you
  • upon your table, love, and which you read so often, that years must pass
  • away before it _could_ be. Did she not?"
  • She took a letter from her breast, and kissed it, and said "Yes."
  • "That through those intervening years, however happy she might be, she
  • would look forward to the time when you would meet again, and all would
  • be made clear: and prayed you, trustfully and hopefully to do the same.
  • The letter runs so, does it not, my dear?"
  • "Yes, Alfred."
  • "And every other letter she has written since?"
  • "Except the last--some months ago--in which she spoke of you, and what
  • you then knew, and what I was to learn to-night."
  • He looked towards the sun, then fast declining, and said that the
  • appointed time was sunset.
  • "Alfred!" said Grace, laying her hand upon his shoulder earnestly,
  • "there is something in this letter--this old letter, which you say I
  • read so often--that I have never told you. But to-night, dear husband,
  • with that sunset drawing near, and all our life seeming to soften and
  • become hushed with the departing day, I cannot keep it secret."
  • "What is it, love?"
  • "When Marion went away, she wrote me, here, that you had once left her a
  • sacred trust to me, and that now she left you, Alfred, such a trust in
  • my hands: praying and beseeching me, as I loved her, and as I loved you,
  • not to reject the affection she believed (she knew, she said) you would
  • transfer to me when the new wound was healed, but to encourage and
  • return it."
  • "--And make me a proud, and happy man again, Grace. Did she say so?"
  • "She meant, to make myself so blest and honored in your love," was his
  • wife's answer, as he held her in his arms.
  • "Hear me, my dear!" he said.--"No. Hear me so!"--and as he spoke, he
  • gently laid the head she had raised, again upon his shoulder. "I know
  • why I have never heard this passage in the letter, until now. I know why
  • no trace of it ever shewed itself in any word or look of yours at that
  • time. I know why Grace, although so true a friend to me, was hard to win
  • to be my wife. And knowing it, my own! I know the priceless value of the
  • heart I gird within my arms, and thank GOD for the rich possession!"
  • She wept, but not for sorrow, as he pressed her to his heart. After a
  • brief space, he looked down at the child, who was sitting at their feet,
  • playing with a little basket of flowers, and bade her look how golden
  • and how red the sun was.
  • "Alfred," said Grace, raising her head quickly at these words. "The sun
  • is going down. You have not forgotten what I am to know before it sets."
  • "You are to know the truth of Marion's history, my love," he answered.
  • "All the truth," she said, imploringly. "Nothing veiled from me, any
  • more. That was the promise. Was it not?"
  • "It was," he answered.
  • "Before the sun went down on Marion's birth-day. And you see it, Alfred?
  • It is sinking fast."
  • He put his arm about her waist; and, looking steadily into her eyes,
  • rejoined,
  • "That truth is not reserved so long for me to tell, dear Grace. It is to
  • come from other lips."
  • "From other lips!" she faintly echoed.
  • "Yes. I know your constant heart, I know how brave you are, I know that
  • to you a word of preparation is enough. You have said, truly, that the
  • time is come. It is. Tell me that you have present fortitude to bear a
  • trial--a surprise--a shock: and the messenger is waiting at the gate."
  • "What messenger?" she said. "And what intelligence does he bring?"
  • "I am pledged," he answered her, preserving his steady look, "to say no
  • more. Do you think you understand me?"
  • "I am afraid to think," she said.
  • There was that emotion in his face, despite its steady gaze, which
  • frightened her. Again she hid her own face on his shoulder, trembling,
  • and entreated him to pause--a moment.
  • "Courage, my wife! When you have firmness to receive the messenger, the
  • messenger is waiting at the gate. The sun is setting on Marion's
  • birth-day. Courage, courage, Grace!"
  • She raised her head, and, looking at him, told him she was ready. As she
  • stood, and looked upon him going away, her face was so like Marion's as
  • it had been in her later days at home, that it was wonderful to see. He
  • took the child with him. She called her back--she bore the lost girl's
  • name--and pressed her to her bosom. The little creature, being released
  • again, sped after him, and Grace was left alone.
  • She knew not what she dreaded, or what hoped; but remained there,
  • motionless, looking at the porch by which they had disappeared.
  • Ah! what was that, emerging from its shadow; standing on its threshold!
  • that figure, with its white garments rustling in the evening air; its
  • head laid down upon her father's breast, and pressed against it to his
  • loving heart! Oh, God! was it a vision that came bursting from the old
  • man's arms, and with a cry, and with a waving of its hands, and with a
  • wild precipitation of itself upon her in its boundless love, sank down
  • in her embrace!
  • "Oh, Marion, Marion! Oh, my sister! Oh, my heart's dear love! Oh, joy
  • and happiness unutterable, so to meet again!"
  • It was no dream, no phantom conjured up by hope and fear, but Marion,
  • sweet Marion! So beautiful, so happy, so unalloyed by care and trial, so
  • elevated and exalted in her loveliness, that as the setting sun shone
  • brightly on her upturned face, she might have been a spirit visiting the
  • earth upon some healing mission.
  • Clinging to her sister, who had dropped upon a seat, and bent down over
  • her: and smiling through her tears, and kneeling close before her, with
  • both arms twining round her, and never turning for an instant from her
  • face: and with the glory of the setting sun upon her brow, and with the
  • soft tranquillity of evening gathering around them: Marion at length
  • broke silence; her voice, so calm, low, clear, and pleasant, well-tuned
  • to the time.
  • "When this was my dear home, Grace, as it will be now, again--"
  • "Stay, my sweet love! A moment! Oh Marion, to hear you speak again."
  • She could not bear the voice she loved so well, at first.
  • "When this was my dear home, Grace, as it will be now, again, I loved
  • him from my soul. I loved him most devotedly. I would have died for him,
  • though I was so young. I never slighted his affection in my secret
  • breast, for one brief instant. It was far beyond all price to me.
  • Although it is so long ago, and past and gone, and everything is wholly
  • changed, I could not bear to think that you, who love so well, should
  • think I did not truly love him once. I never loved him better, Grace,
  • than when he left this very scene upon this very day. I never loved him
  • better, dear one, than I did that night when _I_ left here."
  • Her sister, bending over her, could only look into her face, and hold
  • her fast.
  • "But he had gained, unconsciously," said Marion, with a gentle smile,
  • "another heart, before I knew that I had one to give him. That
  • heart--yours, my sister--was so yielded up, in all its other tenderness,
  • to me; was so devoted, and so noble; that it plucked its love away,
  • and kept its secret from all eyes but mine--Ah! what other eyes were
  • quickened by such tenderness and gratitude!--and was content to
  • sacrifice itself to me. But I knew something of its depths. I knew the
  • struggle it had made. I knew its high, inestimable worth to him, and his
  • appreciation of it, let him love me as he would. I knew the debt I owed
  • it. I had its great example every day before me. What you had done for
  • me, I knew that I could do, Grace, if I would, for you. I never laid my
  • head down on my pillow, but I prayed with tears to do it. I never laid
  • my head down on my pillow, but I thought of Alfred's own words, on the
  • day of his departure, and how truly he had said (for I knew that, by
  • you) that there were victories gained every day, in struggling hearts,
  • to which these fields of battle were as nothing. Thinking more and more
  • upon the great endurance cheerfully sustained, and never known or cared
  • for, that there must be every day and hour, in that great strife of
  • which he spoke, my trial seemed to grow light and easy: and He who knows
  • our hearts, my dearest, at this moment, and who knows there is no drop
  • of bitterness or grief--of anything but unmixed happiness--in mine,
  • enabled me to make the resolution that I never would be Alfred's wife.
  • That he should be my brother, and your husband, if the course I took
  • could bring that happy end to pass; but that I never would (Grace, I
  • then loved him dearly, dearly!) be his wife!"
  • "Oh, Marion! oh, Marion!"
  • "I had tried to seem indifferent to him;" and she pressed her sister's
  • face against her own; "but that was hard, and you were always his true
  • advocate. I had tried to tell you of my resolution, but you would never
  • hear me; you would never understand me. The time was drawing near for
  • his return. I felt that I must act, before the daily intercourse between
  • us was renewed. I knew that one great pang, undergone at that time,
  • would save a lengthened agony to all of us. I knew that if I went away
  • then, that end must follow which _has_ followed, and which has made us
  • both so happy, Grace! I wrote to good Aunt Martha, for a refuge in her
  • house: I did not then tell her all, but something of my story, and she
  • freely promised it. While I was contesting that step with myself, and
  • with my love of you, and home, Mr. Warden, brought here by an accident,
  • became, for some time, our companion."
  • "I have sometimes feared of late years, that this might have been,"
  • exclaimed her sister, and her countenance was ashy-pale. "You never
  • loved him--and you married him in your self-sacrifice to me!"
  • "He was then," said Marion, drawing her sister closer to her, "on the
  • eve of going secretly away for a long time. He wrote to me, after
  • leaving here; told me what his condition and prospects really were; and
  • offered me his hand. He told me he had seen I was not happy in the
  • prospect of Alfred's return. I believe he thought my heart had no part
  • in that contract; perhaps thought I might have loved him once, and did
  • not then; perhaps thought that when I tried to seem indifferent, I tried
  • to hide indifference--I cannot tell. But I wished that you should feel
  • me wholly lost to Alfred--hopeless to him--dead. Do you understand me,
  • love?"
  • Her sister looked into her face, attentively. She seemed in doubt.
  • "I saw Mr. Warden, and confided in his honor; charged him with my
  • secret, on the eve of his and my departure. He kept it. Do you
  • understand me, dear?"
  • Grace looked confusedly upon her. She scarcely seemed to hear.
  • "My love, my sister!" said Marion, "recall your thoughts a moment:
  • listen to me. Do not look so strangely on me. There are countries,
  • dearest, where those who would abjure a misplaced passion, or would
  • strive against some cherished feeling of their hearts and conquer it,
  • retire into a hopeless solitude, and close the world against themselves
  • and worldly loves and hopes for ever. When women do so, they assume that
  • name which is so dear to you and me, and call each other Sisters. But
  • there may be sisters, Grace, who, in the broad world out of doors, and
  • underneath its free sky, and in its crowded places and among its busy
  • life, and trying to assist and cheer it and to do some good,--learn the
  • same lesson; and, with hearts still fresh and young, and open to all
  • happiness and means of happiness, can say the battle is long past, the
  • victory long won. And such a one am I! You understand me now?"
  • Still she looked fixedly upon her, and made no reply.
  • "Oh Grace, dear Grace," said Marion, clinging yet more tenderly and
  • fondly to that breast from which she had been so long exiled, "if you
  • were not a happy wife and mother--if I had no little namesake here--if
  • Alfred, my kind brother, were not your own fond husband--from whence
  • could I derive the ecstasy I feel to-night! But as I left here, so I
  • have returned. My heart has known no other love, my hand has never been
  • bestowed apart from it, I am still your maiden sister: unmarried,
  • unbetrothed: your own old loving Marion, in whose affection you exist
  • alone, and have no partner, Grace!"
  • She understood her now. Her face relaxed; sobs came to her relief; and
  • falling on her neck, she wept and wept, and fondled her as if she were a
  • child again.
  • When they were more composed, they found that the Doctor, and his sister
  • good Aunt Martha, were standing near at hand, with Alfred.
  • "This is a weary day for me," said good Aunt Martha, smiling through her
  • tears, as she embraced her nieces; "for I lose my dear companion in
  • making you all happy; and what can you give me in return for my Marion?"
  • "A converted brother," said the Doctor.
  • "That's something, to be sure," retorted Aunt Martha, "in such a farce
  • as--"
  • "No, pray don't," said the Doctor, penitently.
  • "Well, I won't," replied Aunt Martha. "But I consider myself ill-used. I
  • don't know what's to become of me without my Marion, after we have lived
  • together half-a-dozen years."
  • "You must come and live here, I suppose," replied the Doctor. "We
  • sha'n't quarrel now, Martha."
  • "Or get married, Aunt," said Alfred.
  • "Indeed," returned the old lady, "I think it might be a good speculation
  • if I were to set my cap at Michael Warden, who, I hear, is come home
  • much the better for his absence, in all respects. But as I knew him when
  • he was a boy, and I was not a very young woman then, perhaps he mightn't
  • respond. So I'll make up my mind to go and live with Marion, when she
  • marries, and until then (it will not be very long, I dare say) to live
  • alone. What do _you_ say, Brother?"
  • "I've a great mind to say it's a ridiculous world altogether, and
  • there's nothing serious in it," observed the poor old Doctor.
  • "You might take twenty affidavits of it if you chose, Anthony," said his
  • sister; "but nobody would believe you with such eyes as those."
  • "It's a world full of hearts," said the Doctor; hugging his younger
  • daughter, and bending across her to hug Grace--for he couldn't separate
  • the sisters; "and a serious world, with all its folly--even with mine,
  • which was enough to have swamped the whole globe; and a world on which
  • the sun never rises, but it looks upon a thousand bloodless battles that
  • are some set-off against the miseries and wickedness of Battle-Fields;
  • and a world we need be careful how we libel, Heaven forgive us, for it
  • is a world of sacred mysteries, and its Creator only knows what lies
  • beneath the surface of His lightest image!"
  • You would not be the better pleased with my rude pen, if it dissected
  • and laid open to your view the transports of this family, long severed
  • and now reunited. Therefore, I will not follow the poor Doctor through
  • his humbled recollection of the sorrow he had had, when Marion was lost
  • to him; nor will I tell how serious he had found that world to be, in
  • which some love deep-anchored, is the portion of all human creatures;
  • nor how such a trifle as the absence of one little unit in the great
  • absurd account, had stricken him to the ground. Nor how, in compassion
  • for his distress, his sister had, long ago, revealed the truth to him,
  • by slow degrees; and brought him to the knowledge of the heart of his
  • self-banished daughter, and to that daughter's side.
  • Nor how Alfred Heathfield had been told the truth, too, in the course of
  • that then current year; and Marion had seen him, and had promised him,
  • as her brother, that on her birth-day, in the evening, Grace should know
  • it from her lips at last.
  • "I beg your pardon, Doctor," said Mr. Snitchey, looking into the
  • orchard, "but have I liberty to come in?"
  • Without waiting for permission, he came straight to Marion, and kissed
  • her hand, quite joyfully.
  • "If Mr. Craggs had been alive, my dear Miss Marion," said Mr. Snitchey,
  • "he would have had great interest in this occasion. It might have
  • suggested to him, Mr. Alfred, that our life is not too easy, perhaps;
  • that, taken altogether, it will bear any little smoothing we can give
  • it; but Mr. Craggs was a man who could endure to be convinced, Sir. He
  • was always open to conviction. If he were open to conviction now,
  • I--this is weakness. Mrs. Snitchey, my dear,"--at his summons that lady
  • appeared from behind the door, "you are among old friends."
  • Mrs. Snitchey having delivered her congratulations, took her husband
  • aside.
  • "One moment, Mr. Snitchey," said that lady. "It is not in my nature to
  • rake up the ashes of the departed."
  • "No my dear," returned her husband.
  • "Mr. Craggs is--"
  • "Yes, my dear, he is deceased," said Mr. Snitchey.
  • "But I ask you if you recollect," pursued his wife, "that evening of
  • the ball. I only ask you that. If you do; and if your memory has not
  • entirely failed you, Mr. Snitchey; and if you are not absolutely in your
  • dotage; I ask you to connect this time with that--to remember how I
  • begged and prayed you, on my knees--"
  • "Upon your knees, my dear?" said Mr. Snitchey.
  • "Yes," said Mrs. Snitchey, confidently, "and you know it--to beware of
  • that man--to observe his eye--and now to tell me whether I was right,
  • and whether at that moment he knew secrets which he didn't choose to
  • tell."
  • "Mrs. Snitchey," returned her husband, in her ear, "Madam. Did you ever
  • observe anything in _my_ eye?"
  • "No," said Mrs. Snitchey, sharply. "Don't flatter yourself."
  • "Because, Ma'am, that night," he continued, twitching her by the sleeve,
  • "it happens that we both knew secrets which we didn't choose to tell,
  • and both knew just the same, professionally. And so the less you say
  • about such things the better, Mrs. Snitchey; and take this as a warning
  • to have wiser and more charitable eyes another time. Miss Marion, I
  • brought a friend of yours along with me. Here! Mistress."
  • Poor Clemency, with her apron to her eyes, came slowly in, escorted by
  • her husband; the latter doleful with the presentiment, that if she
  • abandoned herself to grief, the Nutmeg Grater was done for.
  • "Now, Mistress," said the lawyer, checking Marion as she ran towards
  • her, and interposing himself between them, "what's the matter with
  • _you_?"
  • "The matter!" cried poor Clemency.
  • When, looking up in wonder, and in indignant remonstrance, and in the
  • added emotion of a great roar from Mr. Britain, and seeing that sweet
  • face so well-remembered close before her, she stared, sobbed, laughed,
  • cried, screamed, embraced her, held her fast, released her, fell on Mr.
  • Snitchey and embraced him (much to Mrs. Snitchey's indignation), fell on
  • the Doctor and embraced him, fell on Mr. Britain and embraced him, and
  • concluded by embracing herself, throwing her apron over her head, and
  • going into hysterics behind it.
  • A stranger had come into the orchard, after Mr. Snitchey, and had
  • remained apart, near the gate, without being observed by any of the
  • group; for they had little spare attention to bestow, and that had been
  • monopolised by the ecstasies of Clemency. He did not appear to wish to
  • be observed, but stood alone, with downcast eyes; and there was an air
  • of dejection about him (though he was a gentleman of a gallant
  • appearance) which the general happiness rendered more remarkable.
  • None but the quick eyes of Aunt Martha, however, remarked him at all;
  • but almost as soon as she espied him, she was in conversation with him.
  • Presently, going to where Marion stood with Grace and her little
  • namesake, she whispered something in Marion's ear, at which she started,
  • and appeared surprised; but soon recovering from her confusion, she
  • timidly approached the stranger, in Aunt Martha's company, and engaged
  • in conversation with him too.
  • "Mr. Britain," said the lawyer, putting his hand in his pocket, and
  • bringing out a legal-looking document, while this was going on, "I
  • congratulate you. You are now the whole and sole proprietor of that
  • freehold tenement, at present occupied and held by yourself as a
  • licensed tavern, or house of public entertainment, and commonly called
  • or known by the sign of the Nutmeg Grater. Your wife lost one house,
  • through my client Mr. Michael Warden; and now gains another. I shall
  • have the pleasure of canvassing you for the county, one of these fine
  • mornings."
  • "Would it make any difference in the vote if the sign was altered, Sir?"
  • asked Britain.
  • "Not in the least," replied the lawyer.
  • "Then," said Mr. Britain, handing him back the conveyance, "just clap in
  • the words, 'and Thimble,' will you be so good; and I'll have the two
  • mottoes painted up in the parlour, instead of my wife's portrait."
  • [Illustration]
  • "And let me," said a voice behind them; it was the stranger's--Michael
  • Warden's; "let me claim the benefit of those inscriptions. Mr.
  • Heathfield and Dr. Jeddler, I might have deeply wronged you both. That
  • I did not, is no virtue of my own. I will not say that I am six years
  • wiser than I was, or better. But I have known, at any rate, that term
  • of selfreproach. I can urge no reason why you should deal gently
  • with me. I abused the hospitality of this house; and learnt my own
  • demerits, with a shame I never have forgotten, yet with some profit
  • too I would fain hope, from one," he glanced at Marion, "to whom I
  • made my humble supplication for forgiveness, when I knew her merit and
  • my deep unworthiness. In a few days I shall quit this place for ever.
  • I entreat your pardon. Do as you would be done by! Forget, and forgive!"
  • TIME--from whom I had the latter portion of this story, and with whom I
  • have the pleasure of a personal acquaintance of some five and thirty
  • years' duration--informed me, leaning easily upon his scythe, that
  • Michael Warden never went away again, and never sold his house, but
  • opened it afresh, maintained a golden mean of hospitality, and had a
  • wife, the pride and honor of that country-side, whose name was Marion.
  • But as I have observed that Time confuses facts occasionally, I hardly
  • know what weight to give to his authority.
  • THE END.
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  • Transcriber's Note
  • In this text-version italics have been surrounded with _underscores_ and
  • small capitals have been changed to all capitals.
  • The following corrections have been made, on page
  • 25 "Heathfeld" changed to "Heathfield" (Mr. Heathfield," said
  • Snitchey)
  • 65 " added (said the client, "but I am)
  • 88 " added (you know, Clem.")
  • 118 , changed to . (Go away. Don't ask)
  • 131 " added (on any account.")
  • 131 and 132 "Tim" changed to "Ben", (Doctor Heathfield won't take
  • nothing again, Ben."), (whatever family you was to have, Ben)
  • and ("What's this?" said Ben)
  • 143 "faultered" changed to "faltered" (She faultered here, and
  • stopped.)
  • 157 " added (It is sinking fast.")
  • 164 "recal" changed to "recall" (said Marion, "recall your thoughts).
  • Otherwise the original has been preserved, including inconsistent
  • spelling and hyphenation.
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