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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 05:16:22 -0700
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+ } .xhtml_big {font-size: larger;}</style><title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Professor, by (aka Charlotte Brontë) Currer Bell</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1028 ***</div>
+<h1>
+ THE PROFESSOR
+ </h1>
+<p class="author">
+ by (AKA Charlotte Brontë) Currer Bell
+ </p>
+<p>
+<br> <br>
+</p>
+<hr>
+<p>
+<br> <br>
+</p>
+<blockquote><div>
+<p class="toc">
+<span class="xhtml_big"><b>CONTENTS</b></span>
+</p>
+<p>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2H_PREF" class="pginternal"> PREFACE. </a>
+</p>
+<p>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2H_4_0002" class="pginternal">
+<span class="xhtml_big"><b>T H E   P R O F E S S O R</b></span>
+</a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0001" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0002" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0003" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0004" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0005" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0006" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0007" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0008" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0009" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0010" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0011" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0012" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0013" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0014" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0015" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0016" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0017" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0018" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0019" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0020" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0021" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0022" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XXII </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0023" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XXIII </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0024" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XXIV. </a>
+</p>
+<p class="toc">
+<a href="#link2HCH0025" class="pginternal"> CHAPTER XXV. </a>
+</p>
+</div></blockquote>
+<p>
+<br> <br>
+</p>
+<hr>
+<p>
+<br> <br> <a id="link2H_PREF">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ This little book was written before either “Jane Eyre” or “Shirley,” and
+ yet no indulgence can be solicited for it on the plea of a first attempt.
+ A first attempt it certainly was not, as the pen which wrote it had been
+ previously worn a good deal in a practice of some years. I had not indeed
+ published anything before I commenced “The Professor,” but in many a crude
+ effort, destroyed almost as soon as composed, I had got over any such
+ taste as I might once have had for ornamented and redundant composition,
+ and come to prefer what was plain and homely. At the same time I had
+ adopted a set of principles on the subject of incident, &amp;c., such as
+ would be generally approved in theory, but the result of which, when
+ carried out into practice, often procures for an author more surprise than
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I said to myself that my hero should work his way through life as I had
+ seen real living men work theirs—that he should never get a shilling
+ he had not earned—that no sudden turns should lift him in a moment
+ to wealth and high station; that whatever small competency he might gain,
+ should be won by the sweat of his brow; that, before he could find so much
+ as an arbour to sit down in, he should master at least half the ascent of
+ “the Hill of Difficulty;” that he should not even marry a beautiful girl
+ or a lady of rank. As Adam’s son he should share Adam’s doom, and drain
+ throughout life a mixed and moderate cup of enjoyment.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In the sequel, however, I find that publishers in general scarcely
+ approved of this system, but would have liked something more imaginative
+ and poetical—something more consonant with a highly wrought fancy,
+ with a taste for pathos, with sentiments more tender, elevated, unworldly.
+ Indeed, until an author has tried to dispose of a manuscript of this kind,
+ he can never know what stores of romance and sensibility lie hidden in
+ breasts he would not have suspected of casketing such treasures. Men in
+ business are usually thought to prefer the real; on trial the idea will be
+ often found fallacious: a passionate preference for the wild, wonderful,
+ and thrilling—the strange, startling, and harrowing—agitates
+ divers souls that show a calm and sober surface.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Such being the case, the reader will comprehend that to have reached him
+ in the form of a printed book, this brief narrative must have gone through
+ some struggles—which indeed it has. And after all, its worst
+ struggle and strongest ordeal is yet to come but it takes comfort—subdues
+ fear—leans on the staff of a moderate expectation—and mutters
+ under its breath, while lifting its eye to that of the public,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He that is low need fear no fall.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ CURRER BELL.
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ The foregoing preface was written by my wife with a view to the
+ publication of “The Professor,” shortly after the appearance of “Shirley.”
+ Being dissuaded from her intention, the authoress made some use of the
+ materials in a subsequent work—“Villette.” As, however, these two
+ stories are in most respects unlike, it has been represented to me that I
+ ought not to withhold “The Professor” from the public. I have therefore
+ consented to its publication.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A. B. NICHOLLS
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Haworth Parsonage,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ September 22nd, 1856.
+ </p>
+<div class="chapter no-break">
+<p>
+<a id="link2H_4_0002">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+<h2 class="topspace">
+ T H E    P R O F E S S O R
+ </h2>
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0001">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+<h2 class="topspace no-break">
+ CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTORY.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ THE other day, in looking over my papers, I found in my desk the following
+ copy of a letter, sent by me a year since to an old school acquaintance:—
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “DEAR CHARLES,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I think when you and I were at Eton together, we were neither of us what
+ could be called popular characters: you were a sarcastic, observant,
+ shrewd, cold-blooded creature; my own portrait I will not attempt to draw,
+ but I cannot recollect that it was a strikingly attractive one—can
+ you? What animal magnetism drew thee and me together I know not; certainly
+ I never experienced anything of the Pylades and Orestes sentiment for you,
+ and I have reason to believe that you, on your part, were equally free
+ from all romantic regard to me. Still, out of school hours we walked and
+ talked continually together; when the theme of conversation was our
+ companions or our masters we understood each other, and when I recurred to
+ some sentiment of affection, some vague love of an excellent or beautiful
+ object, whether in animate or inanimate nature, your sardonic coldness did
+ not move me. I felt myself superior to that check <em>then</em> as I do
+ <em>now</em>.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is a long time since I wrote to you, and a still longer time since I
+ saw you. Chancing to take up a newspaper of your county the other day, my
+ eye fell upon your name. I began to think of old times; to run over the
+ events which have transpired since we separated; and I sat down and
+ commenced this letter. What you have been doing I know not; but you shall
+ hear, if you choose to listen, how the world has wagged with me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “First, after leaving Eton, I had an interview with my maternal uncles,
+ Lord Tynedale and the Hon. John Seacombe. They asked me if I would enter
+ the Church, and my uncle the nobleman offered me the living of Seacombe,
+ which is in his gift, if I would; then my other uncle, Mr. Seacombe,
+ hinted that when I became rector of Seacombe-cum-Scaife, I might perhaps
+ be allowed to take, as mistress of my house and head of my parish, one of
+ my six cousins, his daughters, all of whom I greatly dislike.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I declined both the Church and matrimony. A good clergyman is a good
+ thing, but I should have made a very bad one. As to the wife—oh how
+ like a night-mare is the thought of being bound for life to one of my
+ cousins! No doubt they are accomplished and pretty; but not an
+ accomplishment, not a charm of theirs, touches a chord in my bosom. To
+ think of passing the winter evenings by the parlour fire-side of Seacombe
+ Rectory alone with one of them—for instance, the large and
+ well-modelled statue, Sarah—no; I should be a bad husband, under
+ such circumstances, as well as a bad clergyman.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “When I had declined my uncles’ offers they asked me ‘what I intended to
+ do?’ I said I should reflect. They reminded me that I had no fortune, and
+ no expectation of any, and, after a considerable pause, Lord Tynedale
+ demanded sternly, ‘Whether I had thoughts of following my father’s steps
+ and engaging in trade?’ Now, I had had no thoughts of the sort. I do not
+ think that my turn of mind qualifies me to make a good tradesman; my
+ taste, my ambition does not lie in that way; but such was the scorn
+ expressed in Lord Tynedale’s countenance as he pronounced the word
+ <em>trade</em>—such
+ the contemptuous sarcasm of his tone—that I was instantly decided.
+ My father was but a name to me, yet that name I did not like to hear
+ mentioned with a sneer to my very face. I answered then, with haste and
+ warmth, ‘I cannot do better than follow in my father’s steps; yes, I will
+ be a tradesman.’ My uncles did not remonstrate; they and I parted with
+ mutual disgust. In reviewing this transaction, I find that I was quite
+ right to shake off the burden of Tynedale’s patronage, but a fool to offer
+ my shoulders instantly for the reception of another burden—one which
+ might be more intolerable, and which certainly was yet untried.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I wrote instantly to Edward—you know Edward—my only brother,
+ ten years my senior, married to a rich mill-owner’s daughter, and now
+ possessor of the mill and business which was my father’s before he failed.
+ You are aware that my father—once reckoned a Croesus of wealth—became
+ bankrupt a short time previous to his death, and that my mother lived in
+ destitution for some six months after him, unhelped by her aristocratical
+ brothers, whom she had mortally offended by her union with Crimsworth,
+ the ——shire manufacturer. At the end of the six months she brought me into
+ the world, and then herself left it without, I should think, much regret,
+ as it contained little hope or comfort for her.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “My father’s relations took charge of Edward, as they did of me, till I
+ was nine years old. At that period it chanced that the representation of
+ an important borough in our county fell vacant; Mr. Seacombe stood for it.
+ My uncle Crimsworth, an astute mercantile man, took the opportunity of
+ writing a fierce letter to the candidate, stating that if he and Lord
+ Tynedale did not consent to do something towards the support of their
+ sister’s orphan children, he would expose their relentless and malignant
+ conduct towards that sister, and do his best to turn the circumstances
+ against Mr. Seacombe’s election. That gentleman and Lord T. knew well
+ enough that the Crimsworths were an unscrupulous and determined race; they
+ knew also that they had influence in the borough of X——; and,
+ making a virtue of necessity, they consented to defray the expenses of my
+ education. I was sent to Eton, where I remained ten years, during which
+ space of time Edward and I never met. He, when he grew up, entered into
+ trade, and pursued his calling with such diligence, ability, and success,
+ that now, in his thirtieth year, he was fast making a fortune. Of this I
+ was apprised by the occasional short letters I received from him, some
+ three or four times a year; which said letters never concluded without
+ some expression of determined enmity against the house of Seacombe, and
+ some reproach to me for living, as he said, on the bounty of that house.
+ At first, while still in boyhood, I could not understand why, as I had no
+ parents, I should not be indebted to my uncles Tynedale and Seacombe for
+ my education; but as I grew up, and heard by degrees of the persevering
+ hostility, the hatred till death evinced by them against my father—of
+ the sufferings of my mother—of all the wrongs, in short, of our
+ house—then did I conceive shame of the dependence in which I lived,
+ and form a resolution no more to take bread from hands which had refused
+ to minister to the necessities of my dying mother. It was by these
+ feelings I was influenced when I refused the Rectory of Seacombe, and the
+ union with one of my patrician cousins.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “An irreparable breach thus being effected between my uncles and myself, I
+ wrote to Edward; told him what had occurred, and informed him of my
+ intention to follow his steps and be a tradesman. I asked, moreover, if he
+ could give me employment. His answer expressed no approbation of my
+ conduct, but he said I might come down to ——shire, if I liked,
+ and he would ‘see what could be done in the way of furnishing me with
+ work.’ I repressed all—even <em>mental</em> comment on his note—packed
+ my trunk and carpet-bag, and started for the North directly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “After two days’ travelling (railroads were not then in existence) I
+ arrived, one wet October afternoon, in the town of X——. I had
+ always understood that Edward lived in this town, but on inquiry I found
+ that it was only Mr. Crimsworth’s mill and warehouse which were situated
+ in the smoky atmosphere of Bigben Close; his <em>residence</em> lay four
+ miles out, in the country.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It was late in the evening when I alighted at the gates of the habitation
+ designated to me as my brother’s. As I advanced up the avenue, I could see
+ through the shades of twilight, and the dark gloomy mists which deepened
+ those shades, that the house was large, and the grounds surrounding it
+ sufficiently spacious. I paused a moment on the lawn in front, and leaning
+ my back against a tall tree which rose in the centre, I gazed with
+ interest on the exterior of Crimsworth Hall.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Edward is rich,” thought I to myself. ‘I believed him to be doing
+ well—but I did not know he was master of a mansion like this.’ Cutting
+ short all marvelling, speculation, conjecture, &amp;c., I advanced to the
+ front door and rang. A man-servant opened it—I announced myself—he
+ relieved me of my wet cloak and carpet-bag, and ushered me into a room
+ furnished as a library, where there was a bright fire and candles burning
+ on the table; he informed me that his master was not yet returned from
+ X—— market, but that he would certainly be at home in the course of half
+ an hour.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Being left to myself, I took the stuffed easy chair, covered with red
+ morocco, which stood by the fireside, and while my eyes watched the flames
+ dart from the glowing coals, and the cinders fall at intervals on the
+ hearth, my mind busied itself in conjectures concerning the meeting about
+ to take place. Amidst much that was doubtful in the subject of these
+ conjectures, there was one thing tolerably certain—I was in no
+ danger of encountering severe disappointment; from this, the moderation of
+ my expectations guaranteed me. I anticipated no overflowings of fraternal
+ tenderness; Edward’s letters had always been such as to prevent the
+ engendering or harbouring of delusions of this sort. Still, as I sat
+ awaiting his arrival, I felt eager—very eager—I cannot tell
+ you why; my hand, so utterly a stranger to the grasp of a kindred hand,
+ clenched itself to repress the tremor with which impatience would fain
+ have shaken it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I thought of my uncles; and as I was engaged in wondering whether
+ Edward’s indifference would equal the cold disdain I had always
+ experienced from them, I heard the avenue gates open: wheels approached
+ the house; Mr. Crimsworth was arrived; and after the lapse of some
+ minutes, and a brief dialogue between himself and his servant in the hall,
+ his tread drew near the library door—that tread alone announced the
+ master of the house.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I still retained some confused recollection of Edward as he was ten years
+ ago—a tall, wiry, raw youth; <em>now</em>, as I rose from my seat and
+ turned towards the library door, I saw a fine-looking and powerful man,
+ light-complexioned, well-made, and of athletic proportions; the first
+ glance made me aware of an air of promptitude and sharpness, shown as well
+ in his movements as in his port, his eye, and the general expression of
+ his face. He greeted me with brevity, and, in the moment of shaking hands,
+ scanned me from head to foot; he took his seat in the morocco covered
+ arm-chair, and motioned me to another seat.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘I expected you would have called at the counting-house in the Close,’
+ said he; and his voice, I noticed, had an abrupt accent, probably habitual
+ to him; he spoke also with a guttural northern tone, which sounded harsh
+ in my ears, accustomed to the silvery utterance of the South.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘The landlord of the inn, where the coach stopped, directed me here,’
+ said I. ‘I doubted at first the accuracy of his information, not being
+ aware that you had such a residence as this.’
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘Oh, it is all right!’ he replied, ‘only I was kept half an hour behind
+ time, waiting for you—that is all. I thought you must be coming by
+ the eight o’clock coach.’
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I expressed regret that he had had to wait; he made no answer, but
+ stirred the fire, as if to cover a movement of impatience; then he scanned
+ me again.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I felt an inward satisfaction that I had not, in the first moment of
+ meeting, betrayed any warmth, any enthusiasm; that I had saluted this man
+ with a quiet and steady phlegm.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘Have you quite broken with Tynedale and Seacombe?’ he asked hastily.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘I do not think I shall have any further communication with them; my
+ refusal of their proposals will, I fancy, operate as a barrier against all
+ future intercourse.’
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘Why,’ said he, ‘I may as well remind you at the very outset of our
+ connection, that “no man can serve two masters.” Acquaintance with Lord
+ Tynedale will be incompatible with assistance from me.’ There was a kind
+ of gratuitous menace in his eye as he looked at me in finishing this
+ observation.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Feeling no disposition to reply to him, I contented myself with an inward
+ speculation on the differences which exist in the constitution of men’s
+ minds. I do not know what inference Mr. Crimsworth drew from my
+ silence—whether he considered it a symptom of contumacity or an evidence
+ of my being cowed by his peremptory manner. After a long and hard stare at
+ me, he rose sharply from his seat.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘To-morrow,’ said he, ‘I shall call your attention to some other points;
+ but now it is supper time, and Mrs. Crimsworth is probably waiting; will
+ you come?’
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He strode from the room, and I followed. In crossing the hall, I wondered
+ what Mrs. Crimsworth might be. ‘Is she,’ thought I, ‘as alien to what I
+ like as Tynedale, Seacombe, the Misses Seacombe—as the affectionate
+ relative now striding before me? or is she better than these? Shall I, in
+ conversing with her, feel free to show something of my real nature; or—’
+ Further conjectures were arrested by my entrance into the dining-room.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A lamp, burning under a shade of ground-glass, showed a handsome
+ apartment, wainscoted with oak; supper was laid on the table; by the
+ fire-place, standing as if waiting our entrance, appeared a lady; she was
+ young, tall, and well shaped; her dress was handsome and fashionable: so
+ much my first glance sufficed to ascertain. A gay salutation passed
+ between her and Mr. Crimsworth; she chid him, half playfully, half
+ poutingly, for being late; her voice (I always take voices into the
+ account in judging of character) was lively—it indicated, I thought,
+ good animal spirits. Mr. Crimsworth soon checked her animated scolding
+ with a kiss—a kiss that still told of the bridegroom (they had not
+ yet been married a year); she took her seat at the supper-table in
+ first-rate spirits. Perceiving me, she begged my pardon for not noticing
+ me before, and then shook hands with me, as ladies do when a flow of
+ good-humour disposes them to be cheerful to all, even the most indifferent
+ of their acquaintance. It was now further obvious to me that she had a
+ good complexion, and features sufficiently marked but agreeable; her hair
+ was red—quite red. She and Edward talked much, always in a vein of
+ playful contention; she was vexed, or pretended to be vexed, that he had
+ that day driven a vicious horse in the gig, and he made light of her
+ fears. Sometimes she appealed to me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “‘Now, Mr. William, isn’t it absurd in Edward to talk so? He says he will
+ drive Jack, and no other horse, and the brute has thrown him twice
+ already.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She spoke with a kind of lisp, not disagreeable, but childish. I soon saw
+ also that there was more than girlish—a somewhat infantine
+ expression in her by no means small features; this lisp and expression
+ were, I have no doubt, a charm in Edward’s eyes, and would be so to those
+ of most men, but they were not to mine. I sought her eye, desirous to read
+ there the intelligence which I could not discern in her face or hear in
+ her conversation; it was merry, rather small; by turns I saw vivacity,
+ vanity, coquetry, look out through its irid, but I watched in vain for a
+ glimpse of soul. I am no Oriental; white necks, carmine lips and cheeks,
+ clusters of bright curls, do not suffice for me without that Promethean
+ spark which will live after the roses and lilies are faded, the burnished
+ hair grown grey. In sunshine, in prosperity, the flowers are very well;
+ but how many wet days are there in life—November seasons of
+ disaster, when a man’s hearth and home would be cold indeed, without the
+ clear, cheering gleam of intellect.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Having perused the fair page of Mrs. Crimsworth’s face, a deep,
+ involuntary sigh announced my disappointment; she took it as a homage to
+ her beauty, and Edward, who was evidently proud of his rich and handsome
+ young wife, threw on me a glance—half ridicule, half ire.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I turned from them both, and gazing wearily round the room, I saw two
+ pictures set in the oak panelling—one on each side the mantel-piece.
+ Ceasing to take part in the bantering conversation that flowed on between
+ Mr. and Mrs. Crimsworth, I bent my thoughts to the examination of these
+ pictures. They were portraits—a lady and a gentleman, both costumed
+ in the fashion of twenty years ago. The gentleman was in the shade. I
+ could not see him well. The lady had the benefit of a full beam from the
+ softly shaded lamp. I presently recognised her; I had seen this picture
+ before in childhood; it was my mother; that and the companion picture
+ being the only heir-looms saved out of the sale of my father’s property.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The face, I remembered, had pleased me as a boy, but <em>then</em> I did
+ not understand it; <em>now</em> I knew how rare that class of face is in
+ the world, and I appreciated keenly its thoughtful, yet gentle expression.
+ The serious grey eye possessed for me a strong charm, as did certain lines
+ in the features indicative of most true and tender feeling. I was sorry it
+ was only a picture.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I soon left Mr. and Mrs. Crimsworth to themselves; a servant conducted me
+ to my bed-room; in closing my chamber-door, I shut out all intruders—you,
+ Charles, as well as the rest.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Good-bye for the present,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “WILLIAM CRIMSWORTH.”
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ To this letter I never got an answer; before my old friend received it, he
+ had accepted a Government appointment in one of the colonies, and was
+ already on his way to the scene of his official labours. What has become
+ of him since, I know not.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The leisure time I have at command, and which I intended to employ for his
+ private benefit, I shall now dedicate to that of the public at large. My
+ narrative is not exciting, and above all, not marvellous; but it may
+ interest some individuals, who, having toiled in the same vocation as
+ myself, will find in my experience frequent reflections of their own. The
+ above letter will serve as an introduction. I now proceed.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0002">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ A FINE October morning succeeded to the foggy evening that had witnessed
+ my first introduction to Crimsworth Hall. I was early up and walking in
+ the large park-like meadow surrounding the house. The autumn sun, rising
+ over the ——shire hills, disclosed a pleasant country; woods
+ brown and mellow varied the fields from which the harvest had been lately
+ carried; a river, gliding between the woods, caught on its surface the
+ somewhat cold gleam of the October sun and sky; at frequent intervals
+ along the banks of the river, tall, cylindrical chimneys, almost like
+ slender round towers, indicated the factories which the trees half
+ concealed; here and there mansions, similar to Crimsworth Hall, occupied
+ agreeable sites on the hill-side; the country wore, on the whole, a
+ cheerful, active, fertile look. Steam, trade, machinery had long banished
+ from it all romance and seclusion. At a distance of five miles, a valley,
+ opening between the low hills, held in its cups the great town of X——.
+ A dense, permanent vapour brooded over this locality—there lay
+ Edward’s “Concern.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I forced my eye to scrutinize this prospect, I forced my mind to dwell on
+ it for a time, and when I found that it communicated no pleasurable
+ emotion to my heart—that it stirred in me none of the hopes a man
+ ought to feel, when he sees laid before him the scene of his life’s
+ career—I said to myself, “William, you are a rebel against circumstances;
+ you are a fool, and know not what you want; you have chosen trade and you
+ shall be a tradesman. Look!” I continued mentally—“Look at the sooty smoke
+ in that hollow, and know that there is your post! There you cannot dream,
+ you cannot speculate and theorize—there you shall out and work!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Thus self-schooled, I returned to the house. My brother was in the
+ breakfast-room. I met him collectedly—I could not meet him
+ cheerfully; he was standing on the rug, his back to the fire—how
+ much did I read in the expression of his eye as my glance encountered his,
+ when I advanced to bid him good morning; how much that was contradictory
+ to my nature! He said “Good morning” abruptly and nodded, and then he
+ snatched, rather than took, a newspaper from the table, and began to read
+ it with the air of a master who seizes a pretext to escape the bore of
+ conversing with an underling. It was well I had taken a resolution to
+ endure for a time, or his manner would have gone far to render
+ insupportable the disgust I had just been endeavouring to subdue. I looked
+ at him: I measured his robust frame and powerful proportions; I saw my own
+ reflection in the mirror over the mantel-piece; I amused myself with
+ comparing the two pictures. In face I resembled him, though I was not so
+ handsome; my features were less regular; I had a darker eye, and a broader
+ brow—in form I was greatly inferior—thinner, slighter, not so
+ tall. As an animal, Edward excelled me far; should he prove as paramount
+ in mind as in person I must be a slave—for I must expect from him no
+ lion-like generosity to one weaker than himself; his cold, avaricious eye,
+ his stern, forbidding manner told me he would not spare. Had I then force
+ of mind to cope with him? I did not know; I had never been tried.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mrs. Crimsworth’s entrance diverted my thoughts for a moment. She looked
+ well, dressed in white, her face and her attire shining in morning and
+ bridal freshness. I addressed her with the degree of ease her last night’s
+ careless gaiety seemed to warrant, but she replied with coolness and
+ restraint: her husband had tutored her; she was not to be too familiar
+ with his clerk.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ As soon as breakfast was over Mr. Crimsworth intimated to me that they
+ were bringing the gig round to the door, and that in five minutes he
+ should expect me to be ready to go down with him to X——. I did
+ not keep him waiting; we were soon dashing at a rapid rate along the road.
+ The horse he drove was the same vicious animal about which Mrs. Crimsworth
+ had expressed her fears the night before. Once or twice Jack seemed
+ disposed to turn restive, but a vigorous and determined application of the
+ whip from the ruthless hand of his master soon compelled him to
+ submission, and Edward’s dilated nostril expressed his triumph in the
+ result of the contest; he scarcely spoke to me during the whole of the
+ brief drive, only opening his lips at intervals to damn his horse.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ X—— was all stir and bustle when we entered it; we left the
+ clean streets where there were dwelling-houses and shops, churches, and
+ public buildings; we left all these, and turned down to a region of mills
+ and warehouses; thence we passed through two massive gates into a great
+ paved yard, and we were in Bigben Close, and the mill was before us,
+ vomiting soot from its long chimney, and quivering through its thick brick
+ walls with the commotion of its iron bowels. Workpeople were passing to
+ and fro; a waggon was being laden with pieces. Mr. Crimsworth looked from
+ side to side, and seemed at one glance to comprehend all that was going
+ on; he alighted, and leaving his horse and gig to the care of a man who
+ hastened to take the reins from his hand, he bid me follow him to the
+ counting-house. We entered it; a very different place from the parlours of
+ Crimsworth Hall—a place for business, with a bare, planked floor, a
+ safe, two high desks and stools, and some chairs. A person was seated at
+ one of the desks, who took off his square cap when Mr. Crimsworth entered,
+ and in an instant was again absorbed in his occupation of writing or
+ calculating—I know not which.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mr. Crimsworth, having removed his mackintosh, sat down by the fire. I
+ remained standing near the hearth; he said presently—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Steighton, you may leave the room; I have some business to transact with
+ this gentleman. Come back when you hear the bell.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The individual at the desk rose and departed, closing the door as he went
+ out. Mr. Crimsworth stirred the fire, then folded his arms, and sat a
+ moment thinking, his lips compressed, his brow knit. I had nothing to do
+ but to watch him—how well his features were cut! what a handsome man
+ he was! Whence, then, came that air of contraction—that narrow and
+ hard aspect on his forehead, in all his lineaments?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Turning to me he began abruptly:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are come down to ——shire to learn to be a tradesman?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, I am.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Have you made up your mind on the point? Let me know that at once.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, I am not bound to help you, but I have a place here vacant, if you
+ are qualified for it. I will take you on trial. What can you do? Do you
+ know anything besides that useless trash of college learning—Greek,
+ Latin, and so forth?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I have studied mathematics.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Stuff! I dare say you have.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I can read and write French and German.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hum!” He reflected a moment, then opening a drawer in a desk near him
+ took out a letter, and gave it to me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Can you read that?” he asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It was a German commercial letter; I translated it; I could not tell
+ whether he was gratified or not—his countenance remained fixed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is well,” he said, after a pause, “that you are acquainted with
+ something useful, something that may enable you to earn your board and
+ lodging: since you know French and German, I will take you as second clerk
+ to manage the foreign correspondence of the house. I shall give you a good
+ salary—£90 a year—and now,” he continued, raising his voice,
+ “hear once for all what I have to say about our relationship, and all that
+ sort of humbug! I must have no nonsense on that point; it would never suit
+ me. I shall excuse you nothing on the plea of being my brother; if I find
+ you stupid, negligent, dissipated, idle, or possessed of any faults
+ detrimental to the interests of the house, I shall dismiss you as I would
+ any other clerk. Ninety pounds a year are good wages, and I expect to have
+ the full value of my money out of you; remember, too, that things are on a
+ practical footing in my establishment—business-like habits,
+ feelings, and ideas, suit me best. Do you understand?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Partly,” I replied. “I suppose you mean that I am to do my work for my
+ wages; not to expect favour from you, and not to depend on you for any
+ help but what I earn; that suits me exactly, and on these terms I will
+ consent to be your clerk.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I turned on my heel, and walked to the window; this time I did not consult
+ his face to learn his opinion: what it was I do not know, nor did I then
+ care. After a silence of some minutes he recommenced:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You perhaps expect to be accommodated with apartments at Crimsworth Hall,
+ and to go and come with me in the gig. I wish you, however, to be aware
+ that such an arrangement would be quite inconvenient to me. I like to have
+ the seat in my gig at liberty for any gentleman whom for business reasons
+ I may wish to take down to the hall for a night or so. You will seek out
+ lodgings in X——.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Quitting the window, I walked back to the hearth.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Of course I shall seek out lodgings in X——,” I answered. “It
+ would not suit me either to lodge at Crimsworth Hall.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ My tone was quiet. I always speak quietly. Yet Mr. Crimsworth’s blue eye
+ became incensed; he took his revenge rather oddly. Turning to me he said
+ bluntly—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are poor enough, I suppose; how do you expect to live till your
+ quarter’s salary becomes due?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I shall get on,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How do you expect to live?” he repeated in a louder voice.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “As I can, Mr. Crimsworth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Get into debt at your peril! that’s all,” he answered. “For aught I know
+ you may have extravagant aristocratic habits: if you have, drop them; I
+ tolerate nothing of the sort here, and I will never give you a shilling
+ extra, whatever liabilities you may incur—mind that.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, Mr. Crimsworth, you will find I have a good memory.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I said no more. I did not think the time was come for much parley. I had
+ an instinctive feeling that it would be folly to let one’s temper
+ effervesce often with such a man as Edward. I said to myself, “I will
+ place my cup under this continual dropping; it shall stand there still and
+ steady; when full, it will run over of itself—meantime patience. Two
+ things are certain. I am capable of performing the work Mr. Crimsworth has
+ set me; I can earn my wages conscientiously, and those wages are
+ sufficient to enable me to live. As to the fact of my brother assuming
+ towards me the bearing of a proud, harsh master, the fault is his, not
+ mine; and shall his injustice, his bad feeling, turn me at once aside from
+ the path I have chosen? No; at least, ere I deviate, I will advance far
+ enough to see whither my career tends. As yet I am only pressing in at the
+ entrance—a strait gate enough; it ought to have a good terminus.”
+ While I thus reasoned, Mr. Crimsworth rang a bell; his first clerk, the
+ individual dismissed previously to our conference, re-entered.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mr. Steighton,” said he, “show Mr. William the letters from Voss,
+ Brothers, and give him English copies of the answers; he will translate
+ them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mr. Steighton, a man of about thirty-five, with a face at once sly and
+ heavy, hastened to execute this order; he laid the letters on the desk,
+ and I was soon seated at it, and engaged in rendering the English answers
+ into German. A sentiment of keen pleasure accompanied this first effort to
+ earn my own living—a sentiment neither poisoned nor weakened by the
+ presence of the taskmaster, who stood and watched me for some time as I
+ wrote. I thought he was trying to read my character, but I felt as secure
+ against his scrutiny as if I had had on a casque with the visor down—or
+ rather I showed him my countenance with the confidence that one would show
+ an unlearned man a letter written in Greek; he might see lines, and trace
+ characters, but he could make nothing of them; my nature was not his
+ nature, and its signs were to him like the words of an unknown tongue. Ere
+ long he turned away abruptly, as if baffled, and left the counting-house;
+ he returned to it but twice in the course of that day; each time he mixed
+ and swallowed a glass of brandy-and-water, the materials for making which
+ he extracted from a cupboard on one side of the fireplace; having glanced
+ at my translations—he could read both French and German—he
+ went out again in silence.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0003">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ I SERVED Edward as his second clerk faithfully, punctually, diligently.
+ What was given me to do I had the power and the determination to do well.
+ Mr. Crimsworth watched sharply for defects, but found none; he set Timothy
+ Steighton, his favourite and head man, to watch also. Tim was baffled; I
+ was as exact as himself, and quicker. Mr. Crimsworth made inquiries as to
+ how I lived, whether I got into debt—no, my accounts with my
+ landlady were always straight. I had hired small lodgings, which I
+ contrived to pay for out of a slender fund—the accumulated savings
+ of my Eton pocket-money; for as it had ever been abhorrent to my nature to
+ ask pecuniary assistance, I had early acquired habits of self-denying
+ economy; husbanding my monthly allowance with anxious care, in order to
+ obviate the danger of being forced, in some moment of future exigency, to
+ beg additional aid. I remember many called me miser at the time, and I
+ used to couple the reproach with this consolation—better to be
+ misunderstood now than repulsed hereafter. At this day I had my reward; I
+ had had it before, when on parting with my irritated uncles one of them
+ threw down on the table before me a £5 note, which I was able to leave
+ there, saying that my travelling expenses were already provided for. Mr.
+ Crimsworth employed Tim to find out whether my landlady had any complaint
+ to make on the score of my morals; she answered that she believed I was a
+ very religious man, and asked Tim, in her turn, if he thought I had any
+ intention of going into the Church some day; for, she said, she had had
+ young curates to lodge in her house who were nothing equal to me for
+ steadiness and quietness. Tim was “a religious man” himself; indeed, he
+ was “a joined Methodist,” which did not (be it understood) prevent him
+ from being at the same time an engrained rascal, and he came away much
+ posed at hearing this account of my piety. Having imparted it to Mr.
+ Crimsworth, that gentleman, who himself frequented no place of worship,
+ and owned no God but Mammon, turned the information into a weapon of
+ attack against the equability of my temper. He commenced a series of
+ covert sneers, of which I did not at first perceive the drift, till my
+ landlady happened to relate the conversation she had had with Mr.
+ Steighton; this enlightened me; afterwards I came to the counting-house
+ prepared, and managed to receive the millowner’s blasphemous sarcasms,
+ when next levelled at me, on a buckler of impenetrable indifference. Ere
+ long he tired of wasting his ammunition on a statue, but he did not throw
+ away the shafts—he only kept them quiet in his quiver.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Once during my clerkship I had an invitation to Crimsworth Hall; it was on
+ the occasion of a large party given in honour of the master’s birthday; he
+ had always been accustomed to invite his clerks on similar anniversaries,
+ and could not well pass me over; I was, however, kept strictly in the
+ background. Mrs. Crimsworth, elegantly dressed in satin and lace, blooming
+ in youth and health, vouchsafed me no more notice than was expressed by a
+ distant move; Crimsworth, of course, never spoke to me; I was introduced
+ to none of the band of young ladies, who, enveloped in silvery clouds of
+ white gauze and muslin, sat in array against me on the opposite side of a
+ long and large room; in fact, I was fairly isolated, and could but
+ contemplate the shining ones from afar, and when weary of such a dazzling
+ scene, turn for a change to the consideration of the carpet pattern. Mr.
+ Crimsworth, standing on the rug, his elbow supported by the marble
+ mantelpiece, and about him a group of very pretty girls, with whom he
+ conversed gaily—Mr. Crimsworth, thus placed, glanced at me; I looked
+ weary, solitary, kept down like some desolate tutor or governess; he was
+ satisfied.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Dancing began; I should have liked well enough to be introduced to some
+ pleasing and intelligent girl, and to have freedom and opportunity to show
+ that I could both feel and communicate the pleasure of social
+ intercourse—that I was not, in short, a block, or a piece of furniture,
+ but an acting, thinking, sentient man. Many smiling faces and graceful
+ figures glided past me, but the smiles were lavished on other eyes, the
+ figures sustained by other hands than mine. I turned away tantalized, left
+ the dancers, and wandered into the oak-panelled dining-room. No fibre of
+ sympathy united me to any living thing in this house; I looked for and
+ found my mother’s picture. I took a wax taper from a stand, and held it
+ up. I gazed long, earnestly; my heart grew to the image. My mother, I
+ perceived, had bequeathed to me much of her features and countenance—her
+ forehead, her eyes, her complexion. No regular beauty pleases egotistical
+ human beings so much as a softened and refined likeness of themselves; for
+ this reason, fathers regard with complacency the lineaments of their
+ daughters’ faces, where frequently their own similitude is found
+ flatteringly associated with softness of hue and delicacy of outline. I
+ was just wondering how that picture, to me so interesting, would strike an
+ impartial spectator, when a voice close behind me pronounced the words—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Humph! there’s some sense in that face.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I turned; at my elbow stood a tall man, young, though probably five or six
+ years older than I—in other respects of an appearance the opposite
+ to common place; though just now, as I am not disposed to paint his
+ portrait in detail, the reader must be content with the silhouette I have
+ just thrown off; it was all I myself saw of him for the moment: I did not
+ investigate the colour of his eyebrows, nor of his eyes either; I saw his
+ stature, and the outline of his shape; I saw, too, his fastidious-looking
+ <i lang="fr">retroussé</i> nose; these observations, few in number, and
+ general in character (the last excepted), sufficed, for they enabled me to
+ recognize him.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Good evening, Mr. Hunsden,” muttered I with a bow, and then, like a shy
+ noodle as I was, I began moving away—and why? Simply because Mr.
+ Hunsden was a manufacturer and a millowner, and I was only a clerk, and my
+ instinct propelled me from my superior. I had frequently seen Hunsden in
+ Bigben Close, where he came almost weekly to transact business with Mr.
+ Crimsworth, but I had never spoken to him, nor he to me, and I owed him a
+ sort of involuntary grudge, because he had more than once been the tacit
+ witness of insults offered by Edward to me. I had the conviction that he
+ could only regard me as a poor-spirited slave, wherefore I now went about
+ to shun his presence and eschew his conversation.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Where are you going?” asked he, as I edged off sideways. I had already
+ noticed that Mr. Hunsden indulged in abrupt forms of speech, and I
+ perversely said to myself—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He thinks he may speak as he likes to a poor clerk; but my mood is not,
+ perhaps, so supple as he deems it, and his rough freedom pleases me not at
+ all.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I made some slight reply, rather indifferent than courteous, and continued
+ to move away. He coolly planted himself in my path.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Stay here awhile,” said he: “it is so hot in the dancing-room; besides,
+ you don’t dance; you have not had a partner to-night.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He was right, and as he spoke neither his look, tone, nor manner
+ displeased me; my <i lang="fr">amour-propre</i> was propitiated; he had
+ not addressed me out of condescension, but because, having repaired to the
+ cool dining-room for refreshment, he now wanted some one to talk to, by
+ way of temporary amusement. I hate to be condescended to, but I like well
+ enough to oblige; I stayed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is a good picture,” he continued, recurring to the portrait.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you consider the face pretty?” I asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Pretty! no—how can it be pretty, with sunk eyes and hollow cheeks?
+ but it is peculiar; it seems to think. You could have a talk with that
+ woman, if she were alive, on other subjects than dress, visiting, and
+ compliments.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I agreed with him, but did not say so. He went on.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not that I admire a head of that sort; it wants character and force;
+ there’s too much of the sen-si-tive (so he articulated it, curling his lip
+ at the same time) in that mouth; besides, there is Aristocrat written on
+ the brow and defined in the figure; I hate your aristocrats.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You think, then, Mr. Hunsden, that patrician descent may be read in a
+ distinctive cast of form and features?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Patrician descent be hanged! Who doubts that your lordlings may have
+ their ‘distinctive cast of form and features’ as much as we ——shire
+ tradesmen have ours? But which is the best? Not theirs assuredly. As to
+ their women, it is a little different: they cultivate beauty from
+ childhood upwards, and may by care and training attain to a certain degree
+ of excellence in that point, just like the oriental odalisques. Yet even
+ this superiority is doubtful. Compare the figure in that frame with Mrs.
+ Edward Crimsworth—which is the finer animal?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I replied quietly: “Compare yourself and Mr. Edward Crimsworth, Mr
+ Hunsden.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, Crimsworth is better filled up than I am, I know besides he has a
+ straight nose, arched eyebrows, and all that; but these advantages—if
+ they are advantages—he did not inherit from his mother, the
+ patrician, but from his father, old Crimsworth, who, <em>my</em> father
+ says, was as veritable a ——shire blue-dyer as ever put indigo in a vat
+ yet withal the handsomest man in the three Ridings. It is you, William,
+ who are the aristocrat of your family, and you are not as fine a fellow as
+ your plebeian brother by long chalk.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ There was something in Mr. Hunsden’s point-blank mode of speech which
+ rather pleased me than otherwise because it set me at my ease. I continued
+ the conversation with a degree of interest.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How do you happen to know that I am Mr. Crimsworth’s brother? I thought
+ you and everybody else looked upon me only in the light of a poor clerk.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, and so we do; and what are you but a poor clerk? You do
+ Crimsworth’s work, and he gives you wages—shabby wages they are,
+ too.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was silent. Hunsden’s language now bordered on the impertinent, still
+ his manner did not offend me in the least—it only piqued my
+ curiosity; I wanted him to go on, which he did in a little while.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “This world is an absurd one,” said he.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why so, Mr. Hunsden?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I wonder you should ask: you are yourself a strong proof of the absurdity
+ I allude to.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was determined he should explain himself of his own accord, without my
+ pressing him so to do—so I resumed my silence.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is it your intention to become a tradesman?” he inquired presently.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It was my serious intention three months ago.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Humph! the more fool you—you look like a tradesman! What a
+ practical business-like face you have!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “My face is as the Lord made it, Mr. Hunsden.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The Lord never made either your face or head for X—— What
+ good can your bumps of ideality, comparison, self-esteem,
+ conscientiousness, do you here? But if you like Bigben Close, stay there;
+ it’s your own affair, not mine.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Perhaps I have no choice.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, I care nought about it—it will make little difference to me
+ what you do or where you go; but I’m cool now—I want to dance again;
+ and I see such a fine girl sitting in the corner of the sofa there by her
+ mamma; see if I don’t get her for a partner in a jiffy! There’s Waddy—Sam
+ Waddy making up to her; won’t I cut him out?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And Mr. Hunsden strode away. I watched him through the open folding-doors;
+ he outstripped Waddy, applied for the hand of the fine girl, and led her
+ off triumphant. She was a tall, well-made, full-formed, dashingly-dressed
+ young woman, much in the style of Mrs. E. Crimsworth; Hunsden whirled her
+ through the waltz with spirit; he kept at her side during the remainder of
+ the evening, and I read in her animated and gratified countenance that he
+ succeeded in making himself perfectly agreeable. The mamma too (a stout
+ person in a turban—Mrs. Lupton by name) looked well pleased;
+ prophetic visions probably flattered her inward eye. The Hunsdens were of
+ an old stem; and scornful as Yorke (such was my late interlocutor’s name)
+ professed to be of the advantages of birth, in his secret heart he well
+ knew and fully appreciated the distinction his ancient, if not high
+ lineage conferred on him in a mushroom-place like X——,
+ concerning whose inhabitants it was proverbially said, that not one in a
+ thousand knew his own grandfather. Moreover the Hunsdens, once rich, were
+ still independent; and report affirmed that Yorke bade fair, by his
+ success in business, to restore to pristine prosperity the partially
+ decayed fortunes of his house. These circumstances considered, Mrs.
+ Lupton’s broad face might well wear a smile of complacency as she
+ contemplated the heir of Hunsden Wood occupied in paying assiduous court
+ to her darling Sarah Martha. I, however, whose observations being less
+ anxious, were likely to be more accurate, soon saw that the grounds for
+ maternal self-congratulation were slight indeed; the gentleman appeared to
+ me much more desirous of making, than susceptible of receiving an
+ impression. I know not what it was in Mr. Hunsden that, as I watched him
+ (I had nothing better to do), suggested to me, every now and then, the
+ idea of a foreigner. In form and features he might be pronounced English,
+ though even there one caught a dash of something Gallic; but he had no
+ English shyness: he had learnt somewhere, somehow, the art of setting
+ himself quite at his ease, and of allowing no insular timidity to
+ intervene as a barrier between him and his convenience or pleasure.
+ Refinement he did not affect, yet vulgar he could not be called; he was
+ not odd—no quiz—yet he resembled no one else I had ever seen
+ before; his general bearing intimated complete, sovereign satisfaction
+ with himself; yet, at times, an indescribable shade passed like an eclipse
+ over his countenance, and seemed to me like the sign of a sudden and
+ strong inward doubt of himself, his words and actions an energetic
+ discontent at his life or his social position, his future prospects or his
+ mental attainments—I know not which; perhaps after all it might only
+ be a bilious caprice.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0004">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ No man likes to acknowledge that he has made a mistake in the choice of
+ his profession, and every man, worthy of the name, will row long against
+ wind and tide before he allows himself to cry out, “I am baffled!” and
+ submits to be floated passively back to land. From the first week of my
+ residence in X—— I felt my occupation irksome. The thing
+ itself—the work of copying and translating business-letters—was
+ a dry and tedious task enough, but had that been all, I should long have
+ borne with the nuisance; I am not of an impatient nature, and influenced
+ by the double desire of getting my living and justifying to myself and
+ others the resolution I had taken to become a tradesman, I should have
+ endured in silence the rust and cramp of my best faculties; I should not
+ have whispered, even inwardly, that I longed for liberty; I should have
+ pent in every sigh by which my heart might have ventured to intimate its
+ distress under the closeness, smoke, monotony and joyless tumult of Bigben
+ Close, and its panting desire for freer and fresher scenes; I should have
+ set up the image of Duty, the fetish of Perseverance, in my small bedroom
+ at Mrs. King’s lodgings, and they two should have been my household gods,
+ from which my darling, my cherished-in-secret, Imagination, the tender and
+ the mighty, should never, either by softness or strength, have severed me.
+ But this was not all; the antipathy which had sprung up between myself and
+ my employer striking deeper root and spreading denser shade daily,
+ excluded me from every glimpse of the sunshine of life; and I began to
+ feel like a plant growing in humid darkness out of the slimy walls of a
+ well.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Antipathy is the only word which can express the feeling Edward Crimsworth
+ had for me—a feeling, in a great measure, involuntary, and which was
+ liable to be excited by every, the most trifling movement, look, or word
+ of mine. My southern accent annoyed him; the degree of education evinced
+ in my language irritated him; my punctuality, industry, and accuracy,
+ fixed his dislike, and gave it the high flavour and poignant relish of
+ envy; he feared that I too should one day make a successful tradesman. Had
+ I been in anything inferior to him, he would not have hated me so
+ thoroughly, but I knew all that he knew, and, what was worse, he suspected
+ that I kept the padlock of silence on mental wealth in which he was no
+ sharer. If he could have once placed me in a ridiculous or mortifying
+ position, he would have forgiven me much, but I was guarded by three
+ faculties—Caution, Tact, Observation; and prowling and prying as was
+ Edward’s malignity, it could never baffle the lynx-eyes of these, my
+ natural sentinels. Day by day did his malice watch my tact, hoping it
+ would sleep, and prepared to steal snake-like on its slumber; but tact, if
+ it be genuine, never sleeps.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had received my first quarter’s wages, and was returning to my lodgings,
+ possessed heart and soul with the pleasant feeling that the master who had
+ paid me grudged every penny of that hard-earned pittance—(I had long
+ ceased to regard Mr. Crimsworth as my brother—he was a hard,
+ grinding master; he wished to be an inexorable tyrant: that was all).
+ Thoughts, not varied but strong, occupied my mind; two voices spoke within
+ me; again and again they uttered the same monotonous phrases. One said:
+ “William, your life is intolerable.” The other: “What can you do to alter
+ it?” I walked fast, for it was a cold, frosty night in January; as I
+ approached my lodgings, I turned from a general view of my affairs to the
+ particular speculation as to whether my fire would be out; looking towards
+ the window of my sitting-room, I saw no cheering red gleam.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That slut of a servant has neglected it as usual,” said I, “and I shall
+ see nothing but pale ashes if I go in; it is a fine starlight night—I
+ will walk a little farther.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It <em>was</em> a fine night, and the streets were dry and even clean for
+ X——; there was a crescent curve of moonlight to be seen by the parish
+ church tower, and hundreds of stars shone keenly bright in all quarters of
+ the sky.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Unconsciously I steered my course towards the country; I had got into
+ Grove Street, and began to feel the pleasure of seeing dim trees at the
+ extremity, round a suburban house, when a person leaning over the iron
+ gate of one of the small gardens which front the neat dwelling-houses in
+ this street, addressed me as I was hurrying with quick stride past.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What the deuce is the hurry? Just so must Lot have left Sodom, when he
+ expected fire to pour down upon it, out of burning brass clouds.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I stopped short, and looked towards the speaker. I smelt the fragrance,
+ and saw the red spark of a cigar; the dusk outline of a man, too, bent
+ towards me over the wicket.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You see I am meditating in the field at eventide,” continued this shade.
+ “God knows it’s cool work! especially as instead of Rebecca on a camel’s
+ hump, with bracelets on her arms and a ring in her nose, Fate sends me
+ only a counting-house clerk, in a grey tweed wrapper.” The voice was
+ familiar to me—its second utterance enabled me to seize the
+ speaker’s identity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mr. Hunsden! good evening.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Good evening, indeed! yes, but you would have passed me without
+ recognition if I had not been so civil as to speak first.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I did not know you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A famous excuse! You ought to have known me; I knew you, though you were
+ going ahead like a steam-engine. Are the police after you?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It wouldn’t be worth their while; I’m not of consequence enough to
+ attract them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Alas, poor shepherd! Alack and well-a-day! What a theme for regret, and
+ how down in the mouth you must be, judging from the sound of your voice!
+ But since you’re not running from the police, from whom are you running?
+ the devil?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “On the contrary, I am going post to him.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is well—you’re just in luck: this is Tuesday evening; there
+ are scores of market gigs and carts returning to Dinneford to-night; and
+ he, or some of his, have a seat in all regularly; so, if you’ll step in
+ and sit half-an-hour in my bachelor’s parlour, you may catch him as he
+ passes without much trouble. I think though you’d better let him alone
+ to-night, he’ll have so many customers to serve; Tuesday is his busy day
+ in X—— and Dinneford; come in at all events.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He swung the wicket open as he spoke.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you really wish me to go in?” I asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “As you please—I’m alone; your company for an hour or two would be
+ agreeable to me; but, if you don’t choose to favour me so far, I’ll not
+ press the point. I hate to bore any one.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It suited me to accept the invitation as it suited Hunsden to give it. I
+ passed through the gate, and followed him to the front door, which he
+ opened; thence we traversed a passage, and entered his parlour; the door
+ being shut, he pointed me to an arm-chair by the hearth; I sat down, and
+ glanced round me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It was a comfortable room, at once snug and handsome; the bright grate was
+ filled with a genuine ——shire fire, red, clear, and generous,
+ no penurious South-of-England embers heaped in the corner of a grate. On
+ the table a shaded lamp diffused around a soft, pleasant, and equal light;
+ the furniture was almost luxurious for a young bachelor, comprising a
+ couch and two very easy chairs; bookshelves filled the recesses on each
+ side of the mantelpiece; they were well-furnished, and arranged with
+ perfect order. The neatness of the room suited my taste; I hate irregular
+ and slovenly habits. From what I saw I concluded that Hunsden’s ideas on
+ that point corresponded with my own. While he removed from the
+ centre-table to the side-board a few pamphlets and periodicals, I ran my
+ eye along the shelves of the book-case nearest me. French and German works
+ predominated, the old French dramatists, sundry modern authors, Thiers,
+ Villemain, Paul de Kock, George Sand, Eugene Sue; in German—Goëthe,
+ Schiller, Zschokke, Jean Paul Richter; in English there were works on
+ Political Economy. I examined no further, for Mr. Hunsden himself recalled
+ my attention.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You shall have something,” said he, “for you ought to feel disposed for
+ refreshment after walking nobody knows how far on such a Canadian night as
+ this; but it shall not be brandy-and-water, and it shall not be a bottle
+ of port, nor ditto of sherry. I keep no such poison. I have Rhein-wein for
+ my own drinking, and you may choose between that and coffee.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Here again Hunsden suited me: if there was one generally received practice
+ I abhorred more than another, it was the habitual imbibing of spirits and
+ strong wines. I had, however, no fancy for his acid German nectar, but I
+ liked coffee, so I responded—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Give me some coffee, Mr. Hunsden.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I perceived my answer pleased him; he had doubtless expected to see a
+ chilling effect produced by his steady announcement that he would give me
+ neither wine nor spirits; he just shot one searching glance at my face to
+ ascertain whether my cordiality was genuine or a mere feint of politeness.
+ I smiled, because I quite understood him; and, while I honoured his
+ conscientious firmness, I was amused at his mistrust; he seemed satisfied,
+ rang the bell, and ordered coffee, which was presently brought; for
+ himself, a bunch of grapes and half a pint of something sour sufficed. My
+ coffee was excellent; I told him so, and expressed the shuddering pity
+ with which his anchorite fare inspired me. He did not answer, and I
+ scarcely think heard my remark. At that moment one of those momentary
+ eclipses I before alluded to had come over his face, extinguishing his
+ smile, and replacing, by an abstracted and alienated look, the customarily
+ shrewd, bantering glance of his eye. I employed the interval of silence in
+ a rapid scrutiny of his physiognomy. I had never observed him closely
+ before; and, as my sight is very short, I had gathered only a vague,
+ general idea of his appearance; I was surprised now, on examination, to
+ perceive how small, and even feminine, were his lineaments; his tall
+ figure, long and dark locks, his voice and general bearing, had impressed
+ me with the notion of something powerful and massive; not at all:—my
+ own features were cast in a harsher and squarer mould than his. I
+ discerned that there would be contrasts between his inward and outward
+ man; contentions, too; for I suspected his soul had more of will and
+ ambition than his body had of fibre and muscle. Perhaps, in these
+ incompatibilities of the “physique” with the “morale,” lay the secret of
+ that fitful gloom; he <em>would</em> but <em>could</em> not, and the
+ athletic mind scowled
+ scorn on its more fragile companion. As to his good looks, I should have
+ liked to have a woman’s opinion on that subject; it seemed to me that his
+ face might produce the same effect on a lady that a very piquant and
+ interesting, though scarcely pretty, female face would on a man. I have
+ mentioned his dark locks—they were brushed sideways above a white
+ and sufficiently expansive forehead; his cheek had a rather hectic
+ freshness; his features might have done well on canvas, but indifferently
+ in marble: they were plastic; character had set a stamp upon each;
+ expression re-cast them at her pleasure, and strange metamorphoses she
+ wrought, giving him now the mien of a morose bull, and anon that of an
+ arch and mischievous girl; more frequently, the two semblances were blent,
+ and a queer, composite countenance they made.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Starting from his silent fit, he began:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “William! what a fool you are to live in those dismal lodgings of Mrs.
+ King’s, when you might take rooms here in Grove Street, and have a garden
+ like me!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should be too far from the mill.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What of that? It would do you good to walk there and back two or three
+ times a day; besides, are you such a fossil that you never wish to see a
+ flower or a green leaf?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am no fossil.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What are you then? You sit at that desk in Crimsworth’s counting-house
+ day by day and week by week, scraping with a pen on paper, just like an
+ automaton; you never get up; you never say you are tired; you never ask
+ for a holiday; you never take change or relaxation; you give way to no
+ excess of an evening; you neither keep wild company, nor indulge in strong
+ drink.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you, Mr. Hunsden?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Don’t think to pose me with short questions; your case and mine are
+ diametrically different, and it is nonsense attempting to draw a parallel.
+ I say, that when a man endures patiently what ought to be unendurable, he
+ is a fossil.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Whence do you acquire the knowledge of my patience?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why, man, do you suppose you are a mystery? The other night you seemed
+ surprised at my knowing to what family you belonged; now you find subject
+ for wonderment in my calling you patient. What do you think I do with my
+ eyes and ears? I’ve been in your counting-house more than once when
+ Crimsworth has treated you like a dog; called for a book, for instance,
+ and when you gave him the wrong one, or what he chose to consider the
+ wrong one, flung it back almost in your face; desired you to shut or open
+ the door as if you had been his flunkey; to say nothing of your position
+ at the party about a month ago, where you had neither place nor partner,
+ but hovered about like a poor, shabby hanger-on; and how patient you were
+ under each and all of these circumstances!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, Mr. Hunsden, what then?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I can hardly tell you what then; the conclusion to be drawn as to your
+ character depends upon the nature of the motives which guide your conduct;
+ if you are patient because you expect to make something eventually out of
+ Crimsworth, notwithstanding his tyranny, or perhaps by means of it, you
+ are what the world calls an interested and mercenary, but may be a very
+ wise fellow; if you are patient because you think it a duty to meet insult
+ with submission, you are an essential sap, and in no shape the man for my
+ money; if you are patient because your nature is phlegmatic, flat,
+ inexcitable, and that you cannot get up to the pitch of resistance, why,
+ God made you to be crushed; and lie down by all means, and lie flat, and
+ let Juggernaut ride well over you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mr. Hunsden’s eloquence was not, it will be perceived, of the smooth and
+ oily order. As he spoke, he pleased me ill. I seem to recognize in him one
+ of those characters who, sensitive enough themselves, are selfishly
+ relentless towards the sensitiveness of others. Moreover, though he was
+ neither like Crimsworth nor Lord Tynedale, yet he was acrid, and, I
+ suspected, overbearing in his way: there was a tone of despotism in the
+ urgency of the very reproaches by which he aimed at goading the oppressed
+ into rebellion against the oppressor. Looking at him still more fixedly
+ than I had yet done, I saw written in his eye and mien a resolution to
+ arrogate to himself a freedom so unlimited that it might often trench on
+ the just liberty of his neighbours. I rapidly ran over these thoughts, and
+ then I laughed a low and involuntary laugh, moved thereto by a slight
+ inward revelation of the inconsistency of man. It was as I thought:
+ Hunsden had expected me to take with calm his incorrect and offensive
+ surmises, his bitter and haughty taunts; and himself was chafed by a
+ laugh, scarce louder than a whisper.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ His brow darkened, his thin nostril dilated a little.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes,” he began, “I told you that you were an aristocrat, and who but an
+ aristocrat would laugh such a laugh as that, and look such a look? A laugh
+ frigidly jeering; a look lazily mutinous; gentlemanlike irony, patrician
+ resentment. What a nobleman you would have made, William Crimsworth! You
+ are cut out for one; pity Fortune has baulked Nature! Look at the
+ features, figure, even to the hands—distinction all over—ugly
+ distinction! Now, if you’d only an estate and a mansion, and a park, and a
+ title, how you could play the exclusive, maintain the rights of your
+ class, train your tenantry in habits of respect to the peerage, oppose at
+ every step the advancing power of the people, support your rotten order,
+ and be ready for its sake to wade knee-deep in churls’ blood; as it is,
+ you’ve no power; you can do nothing; you’re wrecked and stranded on the
+ shores of commerce; forced into collision with practical men, with whom
+ you cannot cope, for <em>you’ll never be a tradesman</em>.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The first part of Hunsden’s speech moved me not at all, or, if it did, it
+ was only to wonder at the perversion into which prejudice had twisted his
+ judgment of my character; the concluding sentence, however, not only
+ moved, but shook me; the blow it gave was a severe one, because Truth
+ wielded the weapon. If I smiled now, it, was only in disdain of myself.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden saw his advantage; he followed it up.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You’ll make nothing by trade,” continued he; “nothing more than the crust
+ of dry bread and the draught of fair water on which you now live; your
+ only chance of getting a competency lies in marrying a rich widow, or
+ running away with an heiress.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I leave such shifts to be put in practice by those who devise them,” said
+ I, rising.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And even that is hopeless,” he went on coolly. “What widow would have
+ you? Much less, what heiress? You’re not bold and venturesome enough for
+ the one, nor handsome and fascinating enough for the other. You think
+ perhaps you look intelligent and polished; carry your intellect and
+ refinement to market, and tell me in a private note what price is bid for
+ them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mr. Hunsden had taken his tone for the night; the string he struck was out
+ of tune, he would finger no other. Averse to discord, of which I had
+ enough every day and all day long, I concluded, at last, that silence and
+ solitude were preferable to jarring converse; I bade him good-night.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What! Are you going, lad? Well, good-night: you’ll find the door.” And he
+ sat still in front of the fire, while I left the room and the house. I had
+ got a good way on my return to my lodgings before I found out that I was
+ walking very fast, and breathing very hard, and that my nails were almost
+ stuck into the palms of my clenched hands, and that my teeth were set
+ fast; on making this discovery, I relaxed both my pace, fists, and jaws,
+ but I could not so soon cause the regrets rushing rapidly through my mind
+ to slacken their tide. Why did I make myself a tradesman? Why did I enter
+ Hunsden’s house this evening? Why, at dawn to-morrow, must I repair to
+ Crimsworth’s mill? All that night did I ask myself these questions, and
+ all that night fiercely demanded of my soul an answer. I got no sleep; my
+ head burned, my feet froze; at last the factory bells rang, and I sprang
+ from my bed with other slaves.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0005">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ THERE is a climax to everything, to every state of feeling as well as to
+ every position in life. I turned this truism over in my mind as, in the
+ frosty dawn of a January morning, I hurried down the steep and now icy
+ street which descended from Mrs. King’s to the Close. The factory
+ workpeople had preceded me by nearly an hour, and the mill was all lighted
+ up and in full operation when I reached it. I repaired to my post in the
+ counting-house as usual; the fire there, but just lit, as yet only smoked;
+ Steighton had not yet arrived. I shut the door and sat down at the desk;
+ my hands, recently washed in half-frozen water, were still numb; I could
+ not write till they had regained vitality, so I went on thinking, and
+ still the theme of my thoughts was the “climax.” Self-dissatisfaction
+ troubled exceedingly the current of my meditations.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come, William Crimsworth,” said my conscience, or whatever it is that
+ within ourselves takes ourselves to task—“come, get a clear notion
+ of what you would have, or what you would not have. You talk of a climax;
+ pray has your endurance reached its climax? It is not four months old.
+ What a fine resolute fellow you imagined yourself to be when you told
+ Tynedale you would tread in your father’s steps, and a pretty treading you
+ are likely to make of it! How well you like X——! Just at this
+ moment how redolent of pleasant associations are its streets, its shops,
+ its warehouses, its factories! How the prospect of this day cheers you!
+ Letter-copying till noon, solitary dinner at your lodgings, letter-copying
+ till evening, solitude; for you neither find pleasure in Brown’s, nor
+ Smith’s, nor Nicholl’s, nor Eccle’s company; and as to Hunsden, you
+ fancied there was pleasure to be derived from his society—he! he!
+ how did you like the taste you had of him last night? was it sweet? Yet he
+ is a talented, an original-minded man, and even he does not like you; your
+ self-respect defies you to like him; he has always seen you to
+ disadvantage; he always will see you to disadvantage; your positions are
+ unequal, and were they on the same level your minds could not assimilate;
+ never hope, then, to gather the honey of friendship out of that
+ thorn-guarded plant. Hello, Crimsworth! where are your thoughts tending?
+ You leave the recollection of Hunsden as a bee would a rock, as a bird a
+ desert; and your aspirations spread eager wings towards a land of visions
+ where, now in advancing daylight—in X—— daylight—you
+ dare to dream of congeniality, repose, union. Those three you will never
+ meet in this world; they are angels. The souls of just men made perfect
+ may encounter them in heaven, but your soul will never be made perfect.
+ Eight o’clock strikes! your hands are thawed, get to work!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Work? why should I work?” said I sullenly: “I cannot please though I toil
+ like a slave.” “Work, work!” reiterated the inward voice. “I may work, it
+ will do no good,” I growled; but nevertheless I drew out a packet of
+ letters and commenced my task—task thankless and bitter as that of
+ the Israelite crawling over the sun-baked fields of Egypt in search of
+ straw and stubble wherewith to accomplish his tale of bricks.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ About ten o’clock I heard Mr. Crimsworth’s gig turn into the yard, and in
+ a minute or two he entered the counting-house. It was his custom to glance
+ his eye at Steighton and myself, to hang up his mackintosh, stand a minute
+ with his back to the fire, and then walk out. Today he did not deviate
+ from his usual habits; the only difference was that when he looked at me,
+ his brow, instead of being merely hard, was surly; his eye, instead of
+ being cold, was fierce. He studied me a minute or two longer than usual,
+ but went out in silence.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Twelve o’clock arrived; the bell rang for a suspension of labour; the
+ workpeople went off to their dinners; Steighton, too, departed, desiring
+ me to lock the counting-house door, and take the key with me. I was tying
+ up a bundle of papers, and putting them in their place, preparatory to
+ closing my desk, when Crimsworth reappeared at the door, and entering
+ closed it behind him.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You’ll stay here a minute,” said he, in a deep, brutal voice, while his
+ nostrils distended and his eye shot a spark of sinister fire.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Alone with Edward I remembered our relationship, and remembering that
+ forgot the difference of position; I put away deference and careful forms
+ of speech; I answered with simple brevity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is time to go home,” I said, turning the key in my desk.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You’ll stay here!” he reiterated. “And take your hand off that key! leave
+ it in the lock!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why?” asked I. “What cause is there for changing my usual plans?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do as I order,” was the answer, “and no questions! You are my servant,
+ obey me! What have you been about—?” He was going on in the same
+ breath, when an abrupt pause announced that rage had for the moment got
+ the better of articulation.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You may look, if you wish to know,” I replied. “There is the open desk,
+ there are the papers.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Confound your insolence! What have you been about?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your work, and have done it well.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hypocrite and twaddler! Smooth-faced, snivelling greasehorn!” (This last
+ term is, I believe, purely ——shire, and alludes to the horn of
+ black, rancid whale-oil, usually to be seen suspended to cart-wheels, and
+ employed for greasing the same.)
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come, Edward Crimsworth, enough of this. It is time you and I wound up
+ accounts. I have now given your service three months’ trial, and I find it
+ the most nauseous slavery under the sun. Seek another clerk. I stay no
+ longer.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What! do you dare to give me notice? Stop at least for your wages.” He
+ took down the heavy gig whip hanging beside his mackintosh.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I permitted myself to laugh with a degree of scorn I took no pains to
+ temper or hide. His fury boiled up, and when he had sworn half-a-dozen
+ vulgar, impious oaths, without, however, venturing to lift the whip, he
+ continued:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’ve found you out and know you thoroughly, you mean, whining
+ lickspittle! What have you been saying all over X—— about me?
+ answer me that!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You? I have neither inclination nor temptation to talk about you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You lie! It is your practice to talk about me; it is your constant habit
+ to make public complaint of the treatment you receive at my hands. You
+ have gone and told it far and near that I give you low wages and knock you
+ about like a dog. I wish you were a dog! I’d set-to this minute, and never
+ stir from the spot till I’d cut every strip of flesh from your bones with
+ this whip.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He flourished his tool. The end of the lash just touched my forehead. A
+ warm excited thrill ran through my veins, my blood seemed to give a bound,
+ and then raced fast and hot along its channels. I got up nimbly, came
+ round to where he stood, and faced him.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Down with your whip!” said I, “and explain this instant what you mean.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sirrah! to whom are you speaking?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “To you. There is no one else present, I think. You say I have been
+ calumniating you—complaining of your low wages and bad treatment.
+ Give your grounds for these assertions.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Crimsworth had no dignity, and when I sternly demanded an explanation, he
+ gave one in a loud, scolding voice.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Grounds! you shall have them; and turn to the light that I may see your
+ brazen face blush black, when you hear yourself proved to be a liar and a
+ hypocrite. At a public meeting in the Town-hall yesterday, I had the
+ pleasure of hearing myself insulted by the speaker opposed to me in the
+ question under discussion, by allusions to my private affairs; by cant
+ about monsters without natural affection, family despots, and such trash;
+ and when I rose to answer, I was met by a shout from the filthy mob, where
+ the mention of your name enabled me at once to detect the quarter in which
+ this base attack had originated. When I looked round, I saw that
+ treacherous villain, Hunsden acting as fugleman. I detected you in close
+ conversation with Hunsden at my house a month ago, and I know that you
+ were at Hunsden’s rooms last night. Deny it if you dare.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, I shall not deny it! And if Hunsden hounded on the people to hiss
+ you, he did quite right. You deserve popular execration; for a worse man,
+ a harder master, a more brutal brother than you are has seldom existed.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sirrah! sirrah!” reiterated Crimsworth; and to complete his apostrophe,
+ he cracked the whip straight over my head.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A minute sufficed to wrest it from him, break it in two pieces, and throw
+ it under the grate. He made a headlong rush at me, which I evaded, and
+ said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Touch me, and I’ll have you up before the nearest magistrate.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Men like Crimsworth, if firmly and calmly resisted, always abate something
+ of their exorbitant insolence; he had no mind to be brought before a
+ magistrate, and I suppose he saw I meant what I said. After an odd and
+ long stare at me, at once bull-like and amazed, he seemed to bethink
+ himself that, after all, his money gave him sufficient superiority over a
+ beggar like me, and that he had in his hands a surer and more dignified
+ mode of revenge than the somewhat hazardous one of personal chastisement.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Take your hat,” said he. “Take what belongs to you, and go out at that
+ door; get away to your parish, you pauper: beg, steal, starve, get
+ transported, do what you like; but at your peril venture again into my
+ sight! If ever I hear of your setting foot on an inch of ground belonging
+ to me, I’ll hire a man to cane you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is not likely you’ll have the chance; once off your premises, what
+ temptation can I have to return to them? I leave a prison, I leave a
+ tyrant; I leave what is worse than the worst that can lie before me, so no
+ fear of my coming back.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Go, or I’ll make you!” exclaimed Crimsworth.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I walked deliberately to my desk, took out such of its contents as were my
+ own property, put them in my pocket, locked the desk, and placed the key
+ on the top.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What are you abstracting from that desk?” demanded the millowner. “Leave
+ all behind in its place, or I’ll send for a policeman to search you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Look sharp about it, then,” said I, and I took down my hat, drew on my
+ gloves, and walked leisurely out of the counting-house—walked out of
+ it to enter it no more.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I recollect that when the mill-bell rang the dinner hour, before Mr.
+ Crimsworth entered, and the scene above related took place, I had had
+ rather a sharp appetite, and had been waiting somewhat impatiently to hear
+ the signal of feeding time. I forgot it now, however; the images of
+ potatoes and roast mutton were effaced from my mind by the stir and tumult
+ which the transaction of the last half-hour had there excited. I only
+ thought of walking, that the action of my muscles might harmonize with the
+ action of my nerves; and walk I did, fast and far. How could I do
+ otherwise? A load was lifted off my heart; I felt light and liberated. I
+ had got away from Bigben Close without a breach of resolution; without
+ injury to my self-respect. I had not forced circumstances; circumstances
+ had freed me. Life was again open to me; no longer was its horizon limited
+ by the high black wall surrounding Crimsworth’s mill. Two hours had
+ elapsed before my sensations had so far subsided as to leave me calm
+ enough to remark for what wider and clearer boundaries I had exchanged
+ that sooty girdle. When I did look up, lo! straight before me lay
+ Grovetown, a village of villas about five miles out of X——.
+ The short winter day, as I perceived from the far-declined sun, was
+ already approaching its close; a chill frost-mist was rising from the
+ river on which X—— stands, and along whose banks the road I
+ had taken lay; it dimmed the earth, but did not obscure the clear icy blue
+ of the January sky. There was a great stillness near and far; the time of
+ the day favoured tranquillity, as the people were all employed
+ within-doors, the hour of evening release from the factories not being yet
+ arrived; a sound of full-flowing water alone pervaded the air, for the
+ river was deep and abundant, swelled by the melting of a late snow. I
+ stood awhile, leaning over a wall; and looking down at the current: I
+ watched the rapid rush of its waves. I desired memory to take a clear and
+ permanent impression of the scene, and treasure it for future years.
+ Grovetown church clock struck four; looking up, I beheld the last of that
+ day’s sun, glinting red through the leafless boughs of some very old oak
+ trees surrounding the church—its light coloured and characterized
+ the picture as I wished. I paused yet a moment, till the sweet, slow sound
+ of the bell had quite died out of the air; then ear, eye and feeling
+ satisfied, I quitted the wall and once more turned my face towards X——.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0006">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ I RE-ENTERED the town a hungry man; the dinner I had forgotten recurred
+ seductively to my recollection; and it was with a quick step and sharp
+ appetite I ascended the narrow street leading to my lodgings. It was dark
+ when I opened the front door and walked into the house. I wondered how my
+ fire would be; the night was cold, and I shuddered at the prospect of a
+ grate full of sparkless cinders. To my joyful surprise, I found, on
+ entering my sitting-room, a good fire and a clean hearth. I had hardly
+ noticed this phenomenon, when I became aware of another subject for
+ wonderment; the chair I usually occupied near the hearth was already
+ filled; a person sat there with his arms folded on his chest, and his legs
+ stretched out on the rug. Short-sighted as I am, doubtful as was the gleam
+ of the firelight, a moment’s examination enabled me to recognize in this
+ person my acquaintance, Mr. Hunsden. I could not of course be much pleased
+ to see him, considering the manner in which I had parted from him the
+ night before, and as I walked to the hearth, stirred the fire, and said
+ coolly, “Good evening,” my demeanour evinced as little cordiality as I
+ felt; yet I wondered in my own mind what had brought him there; and I
+ wondered, also, what motives had induced him to interfere so actively
+ between me and Edward; it was to him, it appeared, that I owed my welcome
+ dismissal; still I could not bring myself to ask him questions, to show
+ any eagerness of curiosity; if he chose to explain, he might, but the
+ explanation should be a perfectly voluntary one on his part; I thought he
+ was entering upon it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You owe me a debt of gratitude,” were his first words.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do I?” said I; “I hope it is not a large one, for I am much too poor to
+ charge myself with heavy liabilities of any kind.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Then declare yourself bankrupt at once, for this liability is a ton
+ weight at least. When I came in I found your fire out, and I had it lit
+ again, and made that sulky drab of a servant stay and blow at it with the
+ bellows till it had burnt up properly; now, say ‘Thank you!’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not till I have had something to eat; I can thank nobody while I am so
+ famished.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I rang the bell and ordered tea and some cold meat.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Cold meat!” exclaimed Hunsden, as the servant closed the door, “what a
+ glutton you are; man! Meat with tea! you’ll die of eating too much.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, Mr. Hunsden, I shall not.” I felt a necessity for contradicting him;
+ I was irritated with hunger, and irritated at seeing him there, and
+ irritated at the continued roughness of his manner.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is over-eating that makes you so ill-tempered,” said he.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How do you know?” I demanded. “It is like you to give a pragmatical
+ opinion without being acquainted with any of the circumstances of the
+ case; I have had no dinner.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ What I said was petulant and snappish enough, and Hunsden only replied by
+ looking in my face and laughing.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Poor thing!” he whined, after a pause. “It has had no dinner, has it?
+ What! I suppose its master would not let it come home. Did Crimsworth
+ order you to fast by way of punishment, William!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, Mr. Hunsden.” Fortunately at this sulky juncture, tea, was brought
+ in, and I fell to upon some bread and butter and cold beef directly.
+ Having cleared a plateful, I became so far humanized as to intimate to Mr.
+ Hunsden that he need not sit there staring, but might come to the table
+ and do as I did, if he liked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But I don’t like in the least,” said he, and therewith he summoned the
+ servant by a fresh pull of the bell-rope, and intimated a desire to have a
+ glass of toast-and-water. “And some more coal,” he added; “Mr. Crimsworth
+ shall keep a good fire while I stay.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ His orders being executed, he wheeled his chair round to the table, so as
+ to be opposite me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well,” he proceeded. “You are out of work, I suppose.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes,” said I; and not disposed to show the satisfaction I felt on this
+ point, I, yielding to the whim of the moment, took up the subject as
+ though I considered myself aggrieved rather than benefited by what had
+ been done. “Yes—thanks to you, I am. Crimsworth turned me off at a
+ minute’s notice, owing to some interference of yours at a public meeting,
+ I understand.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! what! he mentioned that? He observed me signalling the lads, did he?
+ What had he to say about his friend Hunsden—anything sweet?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He called you a treacherous villain.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, he hardly knows me yet! I’m one of those shy people who don’t come
+ out all at once, and he is only just beginning to make my acquaintance,
+ but he’ll find I’ve some good qualities—excellent ones! The Hunsdens
+ were always unrivalled at tracking a rascal; a downright, dishonourable
+ villain is their natural prey—they could not keep off him wherever
+ they met him; you used the word pragmatical just now—that word is
+ the property of our family; it has been applied to us from generation to
+ generation; we have fine noses for abuses; we scent a scoundrel a mile
+ off; we are reformers born, radical reformers; and it was impossible for
+ me to live in the same town with Crimsworth, to come into weekly contact
+ with him, to witness some of his conduct to you (for whom personally I
+ care nothing; I only consider the brutal injustice with which he violated
+ your natural claim to equality)—I say it was impossible for me to be
+ thus situated and not feel the angel or the demon of my race at work
+ within me. I followed my instinct, opposed a tyrant, and broke a chain.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Now this speech interested me much, both because it brought out Hunsden’s
+ character, and because it explained his motives; it interested me so much
+ that I forgot to reply to it, and sat silent, pondering over a throng of
+ ideas it had suggested.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Are you grateful to me?” he asked, presently.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In fact I was grateful, or almost so, and I believe I half liked him at
+ the moment, notwithstanding his proviso that what he had done was not out
+ of regard for me. But human nature is perverse. Impossible to answer his
+ blunt question in the affirmative, so I disclaimed all tendency to
+ gratitude, and advised him if he expected any reward for his championship,
+ to look for it in a better world, as he was not likely to meet with it
+ here. In reply he termed me “a dry-hearted aristocratic scamp,” whereupon
+ I again charged him with having taken the bread out of my mouth.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your bread was dirty, man!” cried Hunsden—“dirty and unwholesome!
+ It came through the hands of a tyrant, for I tell you Crimsworth is a
+ tyrant,—a tyrant to his workpeople, a tyrant to his clerks, and will
+ some day be a tyrant to his wife.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Nonsense! bread is bread, and a salary is a salary. I’ve lost mine, and
+ through your means.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There’s sense in what you say, after all,” rejoined Hunsden. “I must say
+ I am rather agreeably surprised to hear you make so practical an
+ observation as that last. I had imagined now, from my previous observation
+ of your character, that the sentimental delight you would have taken in
+ your newly regained liberty would, for a while at least, have effaced all
+ ideas of forethought and prudence. I think better of you for looking
+ steadily to the needful.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Looking steadily to the needful! How can I do otherwise? I must live, and
+ to live I must have what you call ‘the needful,’ which I can only get by
+ working. I repeat it, you have taken my work from me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What do you mean to do?” pursued Hunsden coolly. “You have influential
+ relations; I suppose they’ll soon provide you with another place.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Influential relations? Who? I should like to know their names.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The Seacombes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Stuff! I have cut them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden looked at me incredulously.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I have,” said I, “and that definitively.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You must mean they have cut you, William.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “As you please. They offered me their patronage on condition of my
+ entering the Church; I declined both the terms and the recompence; I
+ withdrew from my cold uncles, and preferred throwing myself into my elder
+ brother’s arms, from whose affectionate embrace I am now torn by the cruel
+ intermeddling of a stranger—of yourself, in short.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I could not repress a half-smile as I said this; a similar
+ demi-manifestation of feeling appeared at the same moment on Hunsden’s
+ lips.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, I see!” said he, looking into my eyes, and it was evident he
+ <em>did</em> see right down into my heart. Having sat a minute or two with
+ his chin resting on his hand, diligently occupied in the continued perusal
+ of my countenance, he went on:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Seriously, have you then nothing to expect from the Seacombes?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, rejection and repulsion. Why do you ask me twice? How can hands
+ stained with the ink of a counting-house, soiled with the grease of a
+ wool-warehouse, ever again be permitted to come into contact with
+ aristocratic palms?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There would be a difficulty, no doubt; still you are such a complete
+ Seacombe in appearance, feature, language, almost manner, I wonder they
+ should disown you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “They have disowned me; so talk no more about it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you regret it, William?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why not, lad?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Because they are not people with whom I could ever have had any
+ sympathy.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I say you are one of them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That merely proves that you know nothing at all about it; I am my
+ mother’s son, but not my uncles’ nephew.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Still—one of your uncles is a lord, though rather an obscure and
+ not a very wealthy one, and the other a right honourable: you should
+ consider worldly interest.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Nonsense, Mr. Hunsden. You know or may know that even had I desired to be
+ submissive to my uncles, I could not have stooped with a good enough grace
+ ever to have won their favour. I should have sacrificed my own comfort and
+ not have gained their patronage in return.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very likely—so you calculated your wisest plan was to follow your
+ own devices at once?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Exactly. I must follow my own devices—I must, till the day of my
+ death; because I can neither comprehend, adopt, nor work out those of
+ other people.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden yawned. “Well,” said he, “in all this, I see but one thing
+ clearly—that is, that the whole affair is no business of mine.” He
+ stretched himself and again yawned. “I wonder what time it is,” he went
+ on: “I have an appointment for seven o’clock.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Three quarters past six by my watch.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, then I’ll go.” He got up. “You’ll not meddle with trade again?”
+ said he, leaning his elbow on the mantelpiece.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No; I think not.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You would be a fool if you did. Probably, after all, you’ll think better
+ of your uncles’ proposal and go into the Church.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A singular regeneration must take place in my whole inner and outer man
+ before I do that. A good clergyman is one of the best of men.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indeed! Do you think so?” interrupted Hunsden, scoffingly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I do, and no mistake. But I have not the peculiar points which go to make
+ a good clergyman; and rather than adopt a profession for which I have no
+ vocation, I would endure extremities of hardship from poverty.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You’re a mighty difficult customer to suit. You won’t be a tradesman or a
+ parson; you can’t be a lawyer, or a doctor, or a gentleman, because you’ve
+ no money. I’d recommend you to travel.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What! without money?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You must travel in search of money, man. You can speak French—with
+ a vile English accent, no doubt—still, you can speak it. Go on to
+ the Continent, and see what will turn up for you there.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “God knows I should like to go!” exclaimed I with involuntary ardour.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Go: what the deuce hinders you? You may get to Brussels, for instance,
+ for five or six pounds, if you know how to manage with economy.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Necessity would teach me if I didn’t.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Go, then, and let your wits make a way for you when you get there. I know
+ Brussels almost as well as I know X——, and I am sure it would
+ suit such a one as you better than London.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But occupation, Mr. Hunsden! I must go where occupation is to be had; and
+ how could I get recommendation, or introduction, or employment at
+ Brussels?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There speaks the organ of caution. You hate to advance a step before you
+ know every inch of the way. You haven’t a sheet of paper and a
+ pen-and-ink?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I hope so,” and I produced writing materials with alacrity; for I guessed
+ what he was going to do. He sat down, wrote a few lines, folded, sealed,
+ and addressed a letter, and held it out to me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There, Prudence, there’s a pioneer to hew down the first rough
+ difficulties of your path. I know well enough, lad, you are not one of
+ those who will run their neck into a noose without seeing how they are to
+ get it out again, and you’re right there. A reckless man is my aversion,
+ and nothing should ever persuade me to meddle with the concerns of such a
+ one. Those who are reckless for themselves are generally ten times more so
+ for their friends.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “This is a letter of introduction, I suppose?” said I, taking the epistle.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes. With that in your pocket you will run no risk of finding yourself in
+ a state of absolute destitution, which, I know, you will regard as a
+ degradation—so should I, for that matter. The person to whom you
+ will present it generally has two or three respectable places depending
+ upon his recommendation.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That will just suit me,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, and where’s your gratitude?” demanded Mr. Hunsden; “don’t you know
+ how to say ‘Thank you?’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’ve fifteen pounds and a watch, which my godmother, whom I never saw,
+ gave me eighteen years ago,” was my rather irrelevant answer; and I
+ further avowed myself a happy man, and professed that I did not envy any
+ being in Christendom.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But your gratitude?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I shall be off presently, Mr. Hunsden—to-morrow, if all be well:
+ I’ll not stay a day longer in X—— than I’m obliged.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very good—but it will be decent to make due acknowledgment for the
+ assistance you have received; be quick! It is just going to strike seven:
+ I’m waiting to be thanked.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Just stand out of the way, will you, Mr. Hunsden: I want a key there is
+ on the corner of the mantelpiece. I’ll pack my portmanteau before I go to
+ bed.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The house clock struck seven.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The lad is a heathen,” said Hunsden, and taking his hat from a sideboard,
+ he left the room, laughing to himself. I had half an inclination to follow
+ him: I really intended to leave X—— the next morning, and
+ should certainly not have another opportunity of bidding him good-bye. The
+ front door banged to.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Let him go,” said I, “we shall meet again some day.”
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0007">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ READER, perhaps you were never in Belgium? Haply you don’t know the
+ physiognomy of the country? You have not its lineaments defined upon your
+ memory, as I have them on mine?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Three—nay four—pictures line the four-walled cell where are
+ stored for me the records of the past. First, Eton. All in that picture is
+ in far perspective, receding, diminutive; but freshly coloured, green,
+ dewy, with a spring sky, piled with glittering yet showery clouds; for my
+ childhood was not all sunshine—it had its overcast, its cold, its
+ stormy hours. Second, X——, huge, dingy; the canvas cracked and
+ smoked; a yellow sky, sooty clouds; no sun, no azure; the verdure of the
+ suburbs blighted and sullied—a very dreary scene.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Third, Belgium; and I will pause before this landscape. As to the fourth,
+ a curtain covers it, which I may hereafter withdraw, or may not, as suits
+ my convenience and capacity. At any rate, for the present it must hang
+ undisturbed. Belgium! name unromantic and unpoetic, yet name that whenever
+ uttered has in my ear a sound, in my heart an echo, such as no other
+ assemblage of syllables, however sweet or classic, can produce. Belgium! I
+ repeat the word, now as I sit alone near midnight. It stirs my world of
+ the past like a summons to resurrection; the graves unclose, the dead are
+ raised; thoughts, feelings, memories that slept, are seen by me ascending
+ from the clods—haloed most of them—but while I gaze on their
+ vapoury forms, and strive to ascertain definitely their outline, the sound
+ which wakened them dies, and they sink, each and all, like a light wreath
+ of mist, absorbed in the mould, recalled to urns, resealed in monuments.
+ Farewell, luminous phantoms!
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This is Belgium, reader. Look! don’t call the picture a flat or a dull
+ one—it was neither flat nor dull to me when I first beheld it. When I left
+ Ostend on a mild February morning, and found myself on the road to
+ Brussels, nothing could look vapid to me. My sense of enjoyment possessed
+ an edge whetted to the finest, untouched, keen, exquisite. I was young; I
+ had good health; pleasure and I had never met; no indulgence of hers had
+ enervated or sated one faculty of my nature. Liberty I clasped in my arms
+ for the first time, and the influence of her smile and embrace revived my
+ life like the sun and the west wind. Yes, at that epoch I felt like a
+ morning traveller who doubts not that from the hill he is ascending he
+ shall behold a glorious sunrise; what if the track be strait, steep, and
+ stony? he sees it not; his eyes are fixed on that summit, flushed already,
+ flushed and gilded, and having gained it he is certain of the scene
+ beyond. He knows that the sun will face him, that his chariot is even now
+ coming over the eastern horizon, and that the herald breeze he feels on
+ his cheek is opening for the god’s career a clear, vast path of azure,
+ amidst clouds soft as pearl and warm as flame. Difficulty and toil were to
+ be my lot, but sustained by energy, drawn on by hopes as bright as vague,
+ I deemed such a lot no hardship. I mounted now the hill in shade; there
+ were pebbles, inequalities, briars in my path, but my eyes were fixed on
+ the crimson peak above; my imagination was with the refulgent firmament
+ beyond, and I thought nothing of the stones turning under my feet, or of
+ the thorns scratching my face and hands.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I gazed often, and always with delight, from the window of the diligence
+ (these, be it remembered, were not the days of trains and railroads).
+ Well! and what did I see? I will tell you faithfully. Green, reedy swamps;
+ fields fertile but flat, cultivated in patches that made them look like
+ magnified kitchen-gardens; belts of cut trees, formal as pollard willows,
+ skirting the horizon; narrow canals, gliding slow by the road-side;
+ painted Flemish farmhouses; some very dirty hovels; a gray, dead sky; wet
+ road, wet fields, wet house-tops: not a beautiful, scarcely a picturesque
+ object met my eye along the whole route; yet to me, all was beautiful, all
+ was more than picturesque. It continued fair so long as daylight lasted,
+ though the moisture of many preceding damp days had sodden the whole
+ country; as it grew dark, however, the rain recommenced, and it was
+ through streaming and starless darkness my eye caught the first gleam of
+ the lights of Brussels. I saw little of the city but its lights that
+ night. Having alighted from the diligence, a fiacre conveyed me to the
+ Hotel de ——, where I had been advised by a fellow-traveller to
+ put up; having eaten a traveller’s supper, I retired to bed, and slept a
+ traveller’s sleep.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Next morning I awoke from prolonged and sound repose with the impression
+ that I was yet in X——, and perceiving it to be broad daylight
+ I started up, imagining that I had overslept myself and should be behind
+ time at the counting-house. The momentary and painful sense of restraint
+ vanished before the revived and reviving consciousness of freedom, as,
+ throwing back the white curtains of my bed, I looked forth into a wide,
+ lofty foreign chamber; how different from the small and dingy, though not
+ uncomfortable, apartment I had occupied for a night or two at a
+ respectable inn in London while waiting for the sailing of the packet! Yet
+ far be it from me to profane the memory of that little dingy room! It,
+ too, is dear to my soul; for there, as I lay in quiet and darkness, I
+ first heard the great bell of St. Paul’s telling London it was midnight,
+ and well do I recall the deep, deliberate tones, so full charged with
+ colossal phlegm and force. From the small, narrow window of that room, I
+ first saw <em>the</em> dome, looming through a London mist. I suppose the
+ sensations, stirred by those first sounds, first sights, are felt but
+ once; treasure them, Memory; seal them in urns, and keep them in safe
+ niches! Well—I rose. Travellers talk of the apartments in foreign
+ dwellings being bare and uncomfortable; I thought my chamber looked
+ stately and cheerful. It had such large windows—<i lang="fr">croisées</i>
+ that opened like doors, with such broad, clear panes of glass; such a
+ great looking-glass stood on my dressing-table—such a fine mirror
+ glittered over the mantelpiece—the painted floor looked so clean and
+ glossy; when I had dressed and was descending the stairs, the broad marble
+ steps almost awed me, and so did the lofty hall into which they conducted.
+ On the first landing I met a Flemish housemaid: she had wooden shoes, a
+ short red petticoat, a printed cotton bedgown, her face was broad, her
+ physiognomy eminently stupid; when I spoke to her in French, she answered
+ me in Flemish, with an air the reverse of civil; yet I thought her
+ charming; if she was not pretty or polite, she was, I conceived, very
+ picturesque; she reminded me of the female figures in certain Dutch
+ paintings I had seen in other years at Seacombe Hall.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I repaired to the public room; that, too, was very large and very lofty,
+ and warmed by a stove; the floor was black, and the stove was black, and
+ most of the furniture was black: yet I never experienced a freer sense of
+ exhilaration than when I sat down at a very long, black table (covered,
+ however, in part by a white cloth), and, having ordered breakfast, began
+ to pour out my coffee from a little black coffee-pot. The stove might be
+ dismal-looking to some eyes, not to mine, but it was indisputably very
+ warm, and there were two gentlemen seated by it talking in French;
+ impossible to follow their rapid utterance, or comprehend much of the
+ purport of what they said—yet French, in the mouths of Frenchmen, or
+ Belgians (I was not then sensible of the horrors of the Belgian accent)
+ was as music to my ears. One of these gentlemen presently discerned me to
+ be an Englishman—no doubt from the fashion in which I addressed the
+ waiter; for I would persist in speaking French in my execrable
+ South-of-England style, though the man understood English. The gentleman,
+ after looking towards me once or twice, politely accosted me in very good
+ English; I remember I wished to God that I could speak French as well; his
+ fluency and correct pronunciation impressed me for the first time with a
+ due notion of the cosmopolitan character of the capital I was in; it was
+ my first experience of that skill in living languages I afterwards found
+ to be so general in Brussels.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I lingered over my breakfast as long as I could; while it was there on the
+ table, and while that stranger continued talking to me, I was a free,
+ independent traveller; but at last the things were removed, the two
+ gentlemen left the room; suddenly the illusion ceased, reality and
+ business came back. I, a bondsman just released from the yoke, freed for
+ one week from twenty-one years of constraint, must, of necessity, resume
+ the fetters of dependency. Hardly had I tasted the delight of being
+ without a master when duty issued her stern mandate: “Go forth and seek
+ another service.” I never linger over a painful and necessary task; I
+ never take pleasure before business, it is not in my nature to do so;
+ impossible to enjoy a leisurely walk over the city, though I perceived the
+ morning was very fine, until I had first presented Mr. Hunsden’s letter of
+ introduction, and got fairly on to the track of a new situation. Wrenching
+ my mind from liberty and delight, I seized my hat, and forced my reluctant
+ body out of the Hotel de —— into the foreign street.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It was a fine day, but I would not look at the blue sky or at the stately
+ houses round me; my mind was bent on one thing, finding out “Mr. Brown,
+ Numero —, Rue Royale,” for so my letter was addressed. By dint of
+ inquiry I succeeded; I stood at last at the desired door, knocked, asked
+ for Mr. Brown, and was admitted.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Being shown into a small breakfast-room, I found myself in the presence of
+ an elderly gentleman—very grave, business-like, and
+ respectable-looking. I presented Mr. Hunsden’s letter; he received me very
+ civilly. After a little desultory conversation he asked me if there was
+ anything in which his advice or experience could be of use. I said, “Yes,”
+ and then proceeded to tell him that I was not a gentleman of fortune,
+ travelling for pleasure, but an ex-counting-house clerk, who wanted
+ employment of some kind, and that immediately too. He replied that as a
+ friend of Mr. Hunsden’s he would be willing to assist me as well as he
+ could. After some meditation he named a place in a mercantile house at
+ Liege, and another in a bookseller’s shop at Louvain.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Clerk and shopman!” murmured I to myself. “No.” I shook my head. I had
+ tried the high stool; I hated it; I believed there were other occupations
+ that would suit me better; besides I did not wish to leave Brussels.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I know of no place in Brussels,” answered Mr. Brown, “unless indeed you
+ were disposed to turn your attention to teaching. I am acquainted with the
+ director of a large establishment who is in want of a professor of English
+ and Latin.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I thought two minutes, then I seized the idea eagerly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The very thing, sir!” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But,” asked he, “do you understand French well enough to teach Belgian
+ boys English?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Fortunately I could answer this question in the affirmative; having
+ studied French under a Frenchman, I could speak the language intelligibly
+ though not fluently. I could also read it well, and write it decently.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Then,” pursued Mr. Brown, “I think I can promise you the place, for
+ Monsieur Pelet will not refuse a professor recommended by me; but come
+ here again at five o’clock this afternoon, and I will introduce you to
+ him.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The word “professor” struck me. “I am not a professor,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh,” returned Mr. Brown, “professor, here in Belgium, means a teacher,
+ that is all.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ My conscience thus quieted, I thanked Mr. Brown, and, for the present,
+ withdrew. This time I stepped out into the street with a relieved heart;
+ the task I had imposed on myself for that day was executed. I might now
+ take some hours of holiday. I felt free to look up. For the first time I
+ remarked the sparkling clearness of the air, the deep blue of the sky, the
+ gay clean aspect of the white-washed or painted houses; I saw what a fine
+ street was the Rue Royale, and, walking leisurely along its broad
+ pavement, I continued to survey its stately hotels, till the palisades,
+ the gates, and trees of the park appearing in sight, offered to my eye a
+ new attraction. I remember, before entering the park, I stood awhile to
+ contemplate the statue of General Belliard, and then I advanced to the top
+ of the great staircase just beyond, and I looked down into a narrow back
+ street, which I afterwards learnt was called the Rue d’Isabelle. I well
+ recollect that my eye rested on the green door of a rather large house
+ opposite, where, on a brass plate, was inscribed, “Pensionnat de
+ Demoiselles.” Pensionnat! The word excited an uneasy sensation in my mind;
+ it seemed to speak of restraint. Some of the demoiselles, externats no
+ doubt, were at that moment issuing from the door—I looked for a
+ pretty face amongst them, but their close, little French bonnets hid their
+ features; in a moment they were gone.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had traversed a good deal of Brussels before five o’clock arrived, but
+ punctually as that hour struck I was again in the Rue Royale. Re-admitted
+ to Mr. Brown’s breakfast-room, I found him, as before, seated at the
+ table, and he was not alone—a gentleman stood by the hearth. Two
+ words of introduction designated him as my future master. “M. Pelet, Mr.
+ Crimsworth; Mr. Crimsworth, M. Pelet,” a bow on each side finished the
+ ceremony. I don’t know what sort of a bow I made; an ordinary one, I
+ suppose, for I was in a tranquil, commonplace frame of mind; I felt none
+ of the agitation which had troubled my first interview with Edward
+ Crimsworth. M. Pelet’s bow was extremely polite, yet not theatrical,
+ scarcely French; he and I were presently seated opposite to each other. In
+ a pleasing voice, low, and, out of consideration to my foreign ears, very
+ distinct and deliberate, M. Pelet intimated that he had just been
+ receiving from “le respectable M. Brown,” an account of my attainments and
+ character, which relieved him from all scruple as to the propriety of
+ engaging me as professor of English and Latin in his establishment;
+ nevertheless, for form’s sake, he would put a few questions to test my
+ powers. He did, and expressed in flattering terms his satisfaction at my
+ answers. The subject of salary next came on; it was fixed at one thousand
+ francs per annum, besides board and lodging. “And in addition,” suggested
+ M. Pelet, “as there will be some hours in each day during which your
+ services will not be required in my establishment, you may, in time,
+ obtain employment in other seminaries, and thus turn your vacant moments
+ to profitable account.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I thought this very kind, and indeed I found afterwards that the terms on
+ which M. Pelet had engaged me were really liberal for Brussels;
+ instruction being extremely cheap there on account of the number of
+ teachers. It was further arranged that I should be installed in my new
+ post the very next day, after which M. Pelet and I parted.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Well, and what was he like? and what were my impressions concerning him?
+ He was a man of about forty years of age, of middle size, and rather
+ emaciated figure; his face was pale, his cheeks were sunk, and his eyes
+ hollow; his features were pleasing and regular, they had a French turn
+ (for M. Pelet was no Fleming, but a Frenchman both by birth and
+ parentage), yet the degree of harshness inseparable from Gallic lineaments
+ was, in his case, softened by a mild blue eye, and a melancholy, almost
+ suffering, expression of countenance; his physiognomy was “fine et
+ spirituelle.” I use two French words because they define better than any
+ English terms the species of intelligence with which his features were
+ imbued. He was altogether an interesting and prepossessing personage. I
+ wondered only at the utter absence of all the ordinary characteristics of
+ his profession, and almost feared he could not be stern and resolute
+ enough for a schoolmaster. Externally at least M. Pelet presented an
+ absolute contrast to my late master, Edward Crimsworth.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Influenced by the impression I had received of his gentleness, I was a
+ good deal surprised when, on arriving the next day at my new employer’s
+ house, and being admitted to a first view of what was to be the sphere of
+ my future labours, namely the large, lofty, and well-lighted schoolrooms,
+ I beheld a numerous assemblage of pupils, boys of course, whose collective
+ appearance showed all the signs of a full, flourishing, and
+ well-disciplined seminary. As I traversed the classes in company with M.
+ Pelet, a profound silence reigned on all sides, and if by chance a murmur
+ or a whisper arose, one glance from the pensive eye of this most gentle
+ pedagogue stilled it instantly. It was astonishing, I thought, how so mild
+ a check could prove so effectual. When I had perambulated the length and
+ breadth of the classes, M. Pelet turned and said to me—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Would you object to taking the boys as they are, and testing their
+ proficiency in English?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The proposal was unexpected. I had thought I should have been allowed at
+ least three days to prepare; but it is a bad omen to commence any career
+ by hesitation, so I just stepped to the professor’s desk near which we
+ stood, and faced the circle of my pupils. I took a moment to collect my
+ thoughts, and likewise to frame in French the sentence by which I proposed
+ to open business. I made it as short as possible:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Messieurs, prenez vos livres de lecture.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Anglais ou Français, monsieur?” demanded a thickset, moon-faced young
+ Flamand in a blouse. The answer was fortunately easy:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Anglais.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I determined to give myself as little trouble as possible in this lesson;
+ it would not do yet to trust my unpractised tongue with the delivery of
+ explanations; my accent and idiom would be too open to the criticisms of
+ the young gentlemen before me, relative to whom I felt already it would be
+ necessary at once to take up an advantageous position, and I proceeded to
+ employ means accordingly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Commencez!” cried I, when they had all produced their books. The
+ moon-faced youth (by name Jules Vanderkelkov, as I afterwards learnt) took
+ the first sentence. The “livre de lecture” was the “Vicar of Wakefield,”
+ much used in foreign schools because it is supposed to contain prime
+ samples of conversational English; it might, however, have been a Runic
+ scroll for any resemblance the words, as enunciated by Jules, bore to the
+ language in ordinary use amongst the natives of Great Britain. My God! how
+ he did snuffle, snort, and wheeze! All he said was said in his throat and
+ nose, for it is thus the Flamands speak, but I heard him to the end of his
+ paragraph without proffering a word of correction, whereat he looked
+ vastly self-complacent, convinced, no doubt, that he had acquitted himself
+ like a real born and bred “Anglais.” In the same unmoved silence I
+ listened to a dozen in rotation, and when the twelfth had concluded with
+ splutter, hiss, and mumble, I solemnly laid down the book.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Arrêtez!” said I. There was a pause, during which I regarded them all
+ with a steady and somewhat stern gaze; a dog, if stared at hard enough and
+ long enough, will show symptoms of embarrassment, and so at length did my
+ bench of Belgians. Perceiving that some of the faces before me were
+ beginning to look sullen, and others ashamed, I slowly joined my hands,
+ and ejaculated in a deep “voix de poitrine”—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Comme c’est affreux!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ They looked at each other, pouted, coloured, swung their heels; they were
+ not pleased, I saw, but they were impressed, and in the way I wished them
+ to be. Having thus taken them down a peg in their self-conceit, the next
+ step was to raise myself in their estimation; not a very easy thing,
+ considering that I hardly dared to speak for fear of betraying my own
+ deficiencies.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ecoutez, messieurs!” said I, and I endeavoured to throw into my accents
+ the compassionate tone of a superior being, who, touched by the extremity
+ of the helplessness, which at first only excited his scorn, deigns at
+ length to bestow aid. I then began at the very beginning of the “Vicar of
+ Wakefield,” and read, in a slow, distinct voice, some twenty pages, they
+ all the while sitting mute and listening with fixed attention; by the time
+ I had done nearly an hour had elapsed. I then rose and said:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est assez pour aujourd’hui, messieurs; demain nous recommençerons, et
+ j’espère que tout ira bien.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ With this oracular sentence I bowed, and in company with M. Pelet quitted
+ the school-room.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est bien! c’est très bien!” said my principal as we entered his
+ parlour. “Je vois que monsieur a de l’adresse; cela, me plait, car, dans
+ l’instruction, l’adresse fait tout autant que le savoir.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ From the parlour M. Pelet conducted me to my apartment, my “chambre,” as
+ Monsieur said with a certain air of complacency. It was a very small room,
+ with an excessively small bed, but M. Pelet gave me to understand that I
+ was to occupy it quite alone, which was of course a great comfort. Yet,
+ though so limited in dimensions, it had two windows. Light not being taxed
+ in Belgium, the people never grudge its admission into their houses; just
+ here, however, this observation is not very <em>apropos</em>, for one of
+ these windows was boarded up; the open windows looked into the boys’
+ playground. I glanced at the other, as wondering what aspect it would
+ present if disencumbered of the boards. M. Pelet read, I suppose, the
+ expression of my eye; he explained:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “La fenêtre fermée donne sur un jardin appartenant a un pensionnat de
+ demoiselles,” said he, “et les convenances exigent—enfin, vous
+ comprenez—n’est-ce pas, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oui, oui,” was my reply, and I looked of course quite satisfied; but when
+ M. Pelet had retired and closed the door after him, the first thing I did
+ was to scrutinize closely the nailed boards, hoping to find some chink or
+ crevice which I might enlarge, and so get a peep at the consecrated
+ ground. My researches were vain, for the boards were well joined and
+ strongly nailed. It is astonishing how disappointed I felt. I thought it
+ would have been so pleasant to have looked out upon a garden planted with
+ flowers and trees, so amusing to have watched the demoiselles at their
+ play; to have studied female character in a variety of phases, myself the
+ while sheltered from view by a modest muslin curtain, whereas, owing
+ doubtless to the absurd scruples of some old duenna of a directress, I had
+ now only the option of looking at a bare gravelled court, with an enormous
+ “pas de geant” in the middle, and the monotonous walls and windows of a
+ boys’ school-house round. Not only then, but many a time after, especially
+ in moments of weariness and low spirits, did I look with dissatisfied eyes
+ on that most tantalizing board, longing to tear it away and get a glimpse
+ of the green region which I imagined to lie beyond. I knew a tree grew
+ close up to the window, for though there were as yet no leaves to rustle,
+ I often heard at night the tapping of branches against the panes. In the
+ daytime, when I listened attentively, I could hear, even through the
+ boards, the voices of the demoiselles in their hours of recreation, and,
+ to speak the honest truth, my sentimental reflections were occasionally a
+ trifle disarranged by the not quite silvery, in fact the too often brazen
+ sounds, which, rising from the unseen paradise below, penetrated
+ clamorously into my solitude. Not to mince matters, it really seemed to me
+ a doubtful case whether the lungs of Mdlle. Reuter’s girls or those of M.
+ Pelet’s boys were the strongest, and when it came to shrieking the girls
+ indisputably beat the boys hollow. I forgot to say, by-the-by, that Reuter
+ was the name of the old lady who had had my window bearded up. I say old,
+ for such I, of course, concluded her to be, judging from her cautious,
+ chaperon-like proceedings; besides, nobody ever spoke of her as young. I
+ remember I was very much amused when I first heard her Christian name; it
+ was Zoraïde—Mademoiselle Zoraïde Reuter. But the continental nations
+ do allow themselves vagaries in the choice of names, such as we sober
+ English never run into. I think, indeed, we have too limited a list to
+ choose from.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Meantime my path was gradually growing smooth before me. I, in a few
+ weeks, conquered the teasing difficulties inseparable from the
+ commencement of almost every career. Ere long I had acquired as much
+ facility in speaking French as set me at my ease with my pupils; and as I
+ had encountered them on a right footing at the very beginning, and
+ continued tenaciously to retain the advantage I had early gained, they
+ never attempted mutiny, which circumstance, all who are in any degree
+ acquainted with the ongoings of Belgian schools, and who know the relation
+ in which professors and pupils too frequently stand towards each other in
+ those establishments, will consider an important and uncommon one. Before
+ concluding this chapter I will say a word on the system I pursued with
+ regard to my classes: my experience may possibly be of use to others.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It did not require very keen observation to detect the character of the
+ youth of Brabant, but it needed a certain degree of tact to adopt one’s
+ measures to their capacity. Their intellectual faculties were generally
+ weak, their animal propensities strong; thus there was at once an
+ impotence and a kind of inert force in their natures; they were dull, but
+ they were also singularly stubborn, heavy as lead and, like lead, most
+ difficult to move. Such being the case, it would have been truly absurd to
+ exact from them much in the way of mental exertion; having short memories,
+ dense intelligence, feeble reflective powers, they recoiled with
+ repugnance from any occupation that demanded close study or deep thought.
+ Had the abhorred effort been extorted from them by injudicious and
+ arbitrary measures on the part of the Professor, they would have resisted
+ as obstinately, as clamorously, as desperate swine; and though not brave
+ singly, they were relentless acting <i lang="fr">en masse</i>.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I understood that before my arrival in M. Pelet’s establishment, the
+ combined insubordination of the pupils had effected the dismissal of more
+ than one English master. It was necessary then to exact only the most
+ moderate application from natures so little qualified to apply—to
+ assist, in every practicable way, understandings so opaque and
+ contracted—to be ever gentle, considerate, yielding even, to a certain
+ point, with dispositions so irrationally perverse; but, having reached
+ that culminating point of indulgence, you must fix your foot, plant it,
+ root it in rock—become immutable as the towers of Ste. Gudule; for a
+ step—but half a step farther, and you would plunge headlong into the gulf
+ of imbecility; there lodged, you would speedily receive proofs of Flemish
+ gratitude and magnanimity in showers of Brabant saliva and handfuls of Low
+ Country mud. You might smooth to the utmost the path of learning, remove
+ every pebble from the track; but then you must finally insist with
+ decision on the pupil taking your arm and allowing himself to be led
+ quietly along the prepared road. When I had brought down my lesson to the
+ lowest level of my dullest pupil’s capacity—when I had shown myself
+ the mildest, the most tolerant of masters—a word of impertinence, a
+ movement of disobedience, changed me at once into a despot. I offered then
+ but one alternative—submission and acknowledgment of error, or
+ ignominious expulsion. This system answered, and my influence, by degrees,
+ became established on a firm basis. “The boy is father to the man,” it is
+ said; and so I often thought when I looked at my boys and remembered the
+ political history of their ancestors. Pelet’s school was merely an epitome
+ of the Belgian nation.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0008">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ AND Pelet himself? How did I continue to like him? Oh, extremely well!
+ Nothing could be more smooth, gentlemanlike, and even friendly, than his
+ demeanour to me. I had to endure from him neither cold neglect, irritating
+ interference, nor pretentious assumption of superiority. I fear, however,
+ two poor, hard-worked Belgian ushers in the establishment could not have
+ said as much; to them the director’s manner was invariably dry, stern, and
+ cool. I believe he perceived once or twice that I was a little shocked at
+ the difference he made between them and me, and accounted for it by
+ saying, with a quiet sarcastic smile—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ce ne sont que des Flamands—allez!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And then he took his cigar gently from his lips and spat on the painted
+ floor of the room in which we were sitting. Flamands certainly they were,
+ and both had the true Flamand physiognomy, where intellectual inferiority
+ is marked in lines none can mistake; still they were men, and, in the
+ main, honest men; and I could not see why their being aboriginals of the
+ flat, dull soil should serve as a pretext for treating them with perpetual
+ severity and contempt. This idea of injustice somewhat poisoned the
+ pleasure I might otherwise have derived from Pelet’s soft affable manner
+ to myself. Certainly it was agreeable, when the day’s work was over, to
+ find one’s employer an intelligent and cheerful companion; and if he was
+ sometimes a little sarcastic and sometimes a little too insinuating, and
+ if I did discover that his mildness was more a matter of appearance than
+ of reality—if I did occasionally suspect the existence of flint or
+ steel under an external covering of velvet—still we are none of us
+ perfect; and weary as I was of the atmosphere of brutality and insolence
+ in which I had constantly lived at X——, I had no inclination
+ now, on casting anchor in calmer regions, to institute at once a prying
+ search after defects that were scrupulously withdrawn and carefully veiled
+ from my view. I was willing to take Pelet for what he seemed—to
+ believe him benevolent and friendly until some untoward event should prove
+ him otherwise. He was not married, and I soon perceived he had all a
+ Frenchman’s, all a Parisian’s notions about matrimony and women. I
+ suspected a degree of laxity in his code of morals, there was something so
+ cold and <i lang="fr">blasé</I> in his tone whenever he alluded to what he
+ called “le beau sexe;” but he was too gentlemanlike to intrude topics I
+ did not invite, and as he was really intelligent and really fond of
+ intellectual subjects of discourse, he and I always found enough to talk
+ about, without seeking themes in the mire. I hated his fashion of
+ mentioning love; I abhorred, from my soul, mere licentiousness. He felt
+ the difference of our notions, and, by mutual consent, we kept off ground
+ debateable.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Pelet’s house was kept and his kitchen managed by his mother, a real old
+ Frenchwoman; she had been handsome—at least she told me so, and I
+ strove to believe her; she was now ugly, as only continental old women can
+ be; perhaps, though, her style of dress made her look uglier than she
+ really was. Indoors she would go about without cap, her grey hair
+ strangely dishevelled; then, when at home, she seldom wore a gown—only
+ a shabby cotton camisole; shoes, too, were strangers to her feet, and in
+ lieu of them she sported roomy slippers, trodden down at the heels. On the
+ other hand, whenever it was her pleasure to appear abroad, as on Sundays
+ and fête-days, she would put on some very brilliant-coloured dress,
+ usually of thin texture, a silk bonnet with a wreath of flowers, and a
+ very fine shawl. She was not, in the main, an ill-natured old woman, but
+ an incessant and most indiscreet talker; she kept chiefly in and about the
+ kitchen, and seemed rather to avoid her son’s august presence; of him,
+ indeed, she evidently stood in awe. When he reproved her, his reproofs
+ were bitter and unsparing; but he seldom gave himself that trouble.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Madame Pelet had her own society, her own circle of chosen visitors, whom,
+ however, I seldom saw, as she generally entertained them in what she
+ called her “cabinet,” a small den of a place adjoining the kitchen, and
+ descending into it by one or two steps. On these steps, by-the-by, I have
+ not unfrequently seen Madame Pelet seated with a trencher on her knee,
+ engaged in the threefold employment of eating her dinner, gossiping with
+ her favourite servant, the housemaid, and scolding her antagonist, the
+ cook; she never dined, and seldom indeed took any meal with her son; and
+ as to showing her face at the boys’ table, that was quite out of the
+ question. These details will sound very odd in English ears, but Belgium
+ is not England, and its ways are not our ways.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Madame Pelet’s habits of life, then, being taken into consideration, I was
+ a good deal surprised when, one Thursday evening (Thursday was always a
+ half-holiday), as I was sitting all alone in my apartment, correcting a
+ huge pile of English and Latin exercises, a servant tapped at the door,
+ and, on its being opened, presented Madame Pelet’s compliments, and she
+ would be happy to see me to take my “goûter” (a meal which answers to our
+ English “tea”) with her in the dining-room.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Plait-il?” said I, for I thought I must have misunderstood, the message
+ and invitation were so unusual; the same words were repeated. I accepted,
+ of course, and as I descended the stairs, I wondered what whim had entered
+ the old lady’s brain; her son was out—gone to pass the evening at
+ the Salle of the Grande Harmonie or some other club of which he was a
+ member. Just as I laid my hand on the handle of the dining-room door, a
+ queer idea glanced across my mind.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Surely she’s not going to make love to me,” said I. “I’ve heard of old
+ Frenchwomen doing odd things in that line; and the goûter? They generally
+ begin such affairs with eating and drinking, I believe.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ There was a fearful dismay in this suggestion of my excited imagination,
+ and if I had allowed myself time to dwell upon it, I should no doubt have
+ cut there and then, rushed back to my chamber, and bolted myself in; but
+ whenever a danger or a horror is veiled with uncertainty, the primary wish
+ of the mind is to ascertain first the naked truth, reserving the expedient
+ of flight for the moment when its dread anticipation shall be realized. I
+ turned the door-handle, and in an instant had crossed the fatal threshold,
+ closed the door behind me, and stood in the presence of Madame Pelet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Gracious heavens! The first view of her seemed to confirm my worst
+ apprehensions. There she sat, dressed out in a light green muslin gown, on
+ her head a lace cap with flourishing red roses in the frill; her table was
+ carefully spread; there were fruit, cakes, and coffee, with a bottle of
+ something—I did not know what. Already the cold sweat started on my
+ brow, already I glanced back over my shoulder at the closed door, when, to
+ my unspeakable relief, my eye, wandering mildly in the direction of the
+ stove, rested upon a second figure, seated in a large fauteuil beside it.
+ This was a woman, too, and, moreover, an old woman, and as fat and as
+ rubicund as Madame Pelet was meagre and yellow; her attire was likewise
+ very fine, and spring flowers of different hues circled in a bright wreath
+ the crown of her violet-coloured velvet bonnet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had only time to make these general observations when Madame Pelet,
+ coming forward with what she intended should be a graceful and elastic
+ step, thus accosted me:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur is indeed most obliging to quit his books, his studies, at the
+ request of an insignificant person like me—will Monsieur complete
+ his kindness by allowing me to present him to my dear friend Madame
+ Reuter, who resides in the neighbouring house—the young ladies’
+ school.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah!” thought I, “I knew she was old,” and I bowed and took my seat.
+ Madame Reuter placed herself at the table opposite to me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How do you like Belgium, Monsieur?” asked she, in an accent of the
+ broadest Bruxellois. I could now well distinguish the difference between
+ the fine and pure Parisian utterance of M. Pelet, for instance, and the
+ guttural enunciation of the Flamands. I answered politely, and then
+ wondered how so coarse and clumsy an old woman as the one before me should
+ be at the head of a ladies’ seminary, which I had always heard spoken of
+ in terms of high commendation. In truth there was something to wonder at.
+ Madame Reuter looked more like a joyous, free-living old Flemish fermière,
+ or even a maîtresse d’auberge, than a staid, grave, rigid directrice de
+ pensionnat. In general the continental, or at least the Belgian old women
+ permit themselves a licence of manners, speech, and aspect, such as our
+ venerable granddames would recoil from as absolutely disreputable, and
+ Madame Reuter’s jolly face bore evidence that she was no exception to the
+ rule of her country; there was a twinkle and leer in her left eye; her
+ right she kept habitually half shut, which I thought very odd indeed.
+ After several vain attempts to comprehend the motives of these two droll
+ old creatures for inviting me to join them at their goûter, I at last
+ fairly gave it up, and resigning myself to inevitable mystification, I sat
+ and looked first at one, then at the other, taking care meantime to do
+ justice to the confitures, cakes, and coffee, with which they amply
+ supplied me. They, too, ate, and that with no delicate appetite, and
+ having demolished a large portion of the solids, they proposed a “petit
+ verre.” I declined. Not so Mesdames Pelet and Reuter; each mixed herself
+ what I thought rather a stiff tumbler of punch, and placing it on a stand
+ near the stove, they drew up their chairs to that convenience, and invited
+ me to do the same. I obeyed; and being seated fairly between them, I was
+ thus addressed first by Madame Pelet, then by Madame Reuter.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “We will now speak of business,” said Madame Pelet, and she went on to
+ make an elaborate speech, which, being interpreted, was to the effect that
+ she had asked for the pleasure of my company that evening in order to give
+ her friend Madame Reuter an opportunity of broaching an important
+ proposal, which might turn out greatly to my advantage.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Pourvu que vous soyez sage,” said Madame Reuter, “et à vrai dire, vous en
+ avez bien l’air. Take one drop of the punch” (or ponche, as she pronounced
+ it); “it is an agreeable and wholesome beverage after a full meal.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I bowed, but again declined it. She went on:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I feel,” said she, after a solemn sip—“I feel profoundly the
+ importance of the commission with which my dear daughter has entrusted me,
+ for you are aware, Monsieur, that it is my daughter who directs the
+ establishment in the next house?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! I thought it was yourself, madame.” Though, indeed, at that moment I
+ recollected that it was called Mademoiselle, not Madame Reuter’s
+ pensionnat.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I! Oh, no! I manage the house and look after the servants, as my friend
+ Madame Pelet does for Monsieur her son—nothing more. Ah! you thought
+ I gave lessons in class—did you?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And she laughed loud and long, as though the idea tickled her fancy
+ amazingly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Madame is in the wrong to laugh,” I observed; “if she does not give
+ lessons, I am sure it is not because she cannot;” and I whipped out a
+ white pocket-handkerchief and wafted it, with a French grace, past my
+ nose, bowing at the same time.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Quel charmant jeune homme!” murmured Madame Pelet in a low voice. Madame
+ Reuter, being less sentimental, as she was Flamand and not French, only
+ laughed again.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are a dangerous person, I fear,” said she; “if you can forge
+ compliments at that rate, Zoraïde will positively be afraid of you; but if
+ you are good, I will keep your secret, and not tell her how well you can
+ flatter. Now, listen what sort of a proposal she makes to you. She has
+ heard that you are an excellent professor, and as she wishes to get the
+ very best masters for her school (car Zoraïde fait tout comme une reine,
+ c’est une véritable maîtresse-femme), she has commissioned me to step over
+ this afternoon, and sound Madame Pelet as to the possibility of engaging
+ you. Zoraïde is a wary general; she never advances without first examining
+ well her ground. I don’t think she would be pleased if she knew I had
+ already disclosed her intentions to you; she did not order me to go so
+ far, but I thought there would be no harm in letting you into the secret,
+ and Madame Pelet was of the same opinion. Take care, however, you don’t
+ betray either of us to Zoraïde—to my daughter, I mean; she is so
+ discreet and circumspect herself, she cannot understand that one should
+ find a pleasure in gossiping a little—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est absolument comme mon fils!” cried Madame Pelet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “All the world is so changed since our girlhood!” rejoined the other:
+ “young people have such old heads now. But to return, Monsieur. Madame
+ Pelet will mention the subject of your giving lessons in my daughter’s
+ establishment to her son, and he will speak to you; and then to-morrow,
+ you will step over to our house, and ask to see my daughter, and you will
+ introduce the subject as if the first intimation of it had reached you
+ from M. Pelet himself, and be sure you never mention my name, for I would
+ not displease Zoraïde on any account.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bien! bien!” interrupted I—for all this chatter and circumlocution
+ began to bore me very much; “I will consult M. Pelet, and the thing shall
+ be settled as you desire. Good evening, mesdames—I am infinitely
+ obliged to you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Comment! vous vous en allez déjà?” exclaimed Madame Pelet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Prenez encore quelquechose, monsieur; une pomme cuite, des biscuits,
+ encore une tasse de café?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Merci, merci, madame—au revoir.” And I backed at last out of the
+ apartment.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Having regained my own room, I set myself to turn over in my mind the
+ incident of the evening. It seemed a queer affair altogether, and queerly
+ managed; the two old women had made quite a little intricate mess of it;
+ still I found that the uppermost feeling in my mind on the subject was one
+ of satisfaction. In the first place it would be a change to give lessons
+ in another seminary, and then to teach young ladies would be an occupation
+ so interesting—to be admitted at all into a ladies’ boarding-school
+ would be an incident so new in my life. Besides, thought I, as I glanced
+ at the boarded window, “I shall now at last see the mysterious garden: I
+ shall gaze both on the angels and their Eden.”
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0009">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ M. PELET could not of course object to the proposal made by Mdlle. Reuter;
+ permission to accept such additional employment, should it offer, having
+ formed an article of the terms on which he had engaged me. It was,
+ therefore, arranged in the course of next day that I should be at liberty
+ to give lessons in Mdlle. Reuter’s establishment four afternoons in every
+ week.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When evening came I prepared to step over in order to seek a conference
+ with Mademoiselle herself on the subject; I had not had time to pay the
+ visit before, having been all day closely occupied in class. I remember
+ very well that before quitting my chamber, I held a brief debate with
+ myself as to whether I should change my ordinary attire for something
+ smarter. At last I concluded it would be a waste of labour. “Doubtless,”
+ thought I, “she is some stiff old maid; for though the daughter of Madame
+ Reuter, she may well number upwards of forty winters; besides, if it were
+ otherwise, if she be both young and pretty, I am not handsome, and no
+ dressing can make me so, therefore I’ll go as I am.” And off I started,
+ cursorily glancing sideways as I passed the toilet-table, surmounted by a
+ looking-glass: a thin irregular face I saw, with sunk, dark eyes under a
+ large, square forehead, complexion destitute of bloom or attraction;
+ something young, but not youthful, no object to win a lady’s love, no butt
+ for the shafts of Cupid.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was soon at the entrance of the pensionnat, in a moment I had pulled the
+ bell; in another moment the door was opened, and within appeared a passage
+ paved alternately with black and white marble; the walls were painted in
+ imitation of marble also; and at the far end opened a glass door, through
+ which I saw shrubs and a grass-plat, looking pleasant in the sunshine of
+ the mild spring evening—for it was now the middle of April.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This, then, was my first glimpse of <em>the</em> garden;
+ but I had not time to look
+ long, the portress, after having answered in the affirmative my question
+ as to whether her mistress was at home, opened the folding-doors of a room
+ to the left, and having ushered me in, closed them behind me. I found
+ myself in a salon with a very well-painted, highly varnished floor; chairs
+ and sofas covered with white draperies, a green porcelain stove, walls
+ hung with pictures in gilt frames, a gilt pendule and other ornaments on
+ the mantelpiece, a large lustre pendent from the centre of the ceiling,
+ mirrors, consoles, muslin curtains, and a handsome centre table completed
+ the inventory of furniture. All looked extremely clean and glittering, but
+ the general effect would have been somewhat chilling had not a second
+ large pair of folding-doors, standing wide open, and disclosing another
+ and smaller salon, more snugly furnished, offered some relief to the eye.
+ This room was carpeted, and therein was a piano, a couch, a
+ chiffonniere—above all, it contained a lofty window with a crimson
+ curtain, which, being undrawn, afforded another glimpse of the garden,
+ through the large, clear panes, round which some leaves of ivy, some
+ tendrils of vine were trained.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur Creemsvort, n’est ce pas?” said a voice behind me; and, starting
+ involuntarily, I turned. I had been so taken up with the contemplation of
+ the pretty little salon that I had not noticed the entrance of a person
+ into the larger room. It was, however, Mdlle. Reuter who now addressed me,
+ and stood close beside me; and when I had bowed with instantaneously
+ recovered <i lang="fr">sang froid</i>—for I am not easily embarrassed—I
+ commenced the conversation by remarking on the pleasant aspect of her
+ little cabinet, and the advantage she had over M. Pelet in possessing a
+ garden.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes,” she said, “she often thought so;” and added, “it is my garden,
+ monsieur, which makes me retain this house, otherwise I should probably
+ have removed to larger and more commodious premises long since; but you
+ see I could not take my garden with me, and I should scarcely find one so
+ large and pleasant anywhere else in town.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I approved her judgment.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But you have not seen it yet,” said she, rising; “come to the window and
+ take a better view.” I followed her; she opened the sash, and leaning out
+ I saw in full the enclosed demesne which had hitherto been to me an
+ unknown region. It was a long, not very broad strip of cultured ground,
+ with an alley bordered by enormous old fruit trees down the middle; there
+ was a sort of lawn, a parterre of rose-trees, some flower-borders, and, on
+ the far side, a thickly planted copse of lilacs, laburnums, and acacias.
+ It looked pleasant, to me—very pleasant, so long a time had elapsed
+ since I had seen a garden of any sort. But it was not only on Mdlle.
+ Reuter’s garden that my eyes dwelt; when I had taken a view of her
+ well-trimmed beds and budding shrubberies, I allowed my glance to come
+ back to herself, nor did I hastily withdraw it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had thought to see a tall, meagre, yellow, conventual image in black,
+ with a close white cap, bandaged under the chin like a nun’s head-gear;
+ whereas, there stood by me a little and roundly formed woman, who might
+ indeed be older than I, but was still young; she could not, I thought, be
+ more than six or seven and twenty; she was as fair as a fair Englishwoman;
+ she had no cap; her hair was nut-brown, and she wore it in curls; pretty
+ her features were not, nor very soft, nor very regular, but neither were
+ they in any degree plain, and I already saw cause to deem them expressive.
+ What was their predominant cast? Was it sagacity?—sense? Yes, I
+ thought so; but I could scarcely as yet be sure. I discovered, however,
+ that there was a certain serenity of eye, and freshness of complexion,
+ most pleasing to behold. The colour on her cheek was like the bloom on a
+ good apple, which is as sound at the core as it is red on the rind.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Reuter and I entered upon business. She said she was not absolutely
+ certain of the wisdom of the step she was about to take, because I was so
+ young, and parents might possibly object to a professor like me for their
+ daughters: “But it is often well to act on one’s own judgment,” said she,
+ “and to lead parents, rather than be led by them. The fitness of a
+ professor is not a matter of age; and, from what I have heard, and from
+ what I observe myself, I would much rather trust you than M. Ledru, the
+ music-master, who is a married man of near fifty.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I remarked that I hoped she would find me worthy of her good opinion; that
+ if I knew myself, I was incapable of betraying any confidence reposed in
+ me. “Du reste,” said she, “the surveillance will be strictly attended to.”
+ And then she proceeded to discuss the subject of terms. She was very
+ cautious, quite on her guard; she did not absolutely bargain, but she
+ warily sounded me to find out what my expectations might be; and when she
+ could not get me to name a sum, she reasoned and reasoned with a fluent
+ yet quiet circumlocution of speech, and at last nailed me down to five
+ hundred francs per annum—not too much, but I agreed. Before the
+ negotiation was completed, it began to grow a little dusk. I did not
+ hasten it, for I liked well enough to sit and hear her talk; I was amused
+ with the sort of business talent she displayed. Edward could not have
+ shown himself more practical, though he might have evinced more coarseness
+ and urgency; and then she had so many reasons, so many explanations; and,
+ after all, she succeeded in proving herself quite disinterested and even
+ liberal. At last she concluded, she could say no more, because, as I
+ acquiesced in all things, there was no further ground for the exercise of
+ her parts of speech. I was obliged to rise. I would rather have sat a
+ little longer; what had I to return to but my small empty room? And my
+ eyes had a pleasure in looking at Mdlle. Reuter, especially now, when the
+ twilight softened her features a little, and, in the doubtful dusk, I
+ could fancy her forehead as open as it was really elevated, her mouth
+ touched with turns of sweetness as well as defined in lines of sense. When
+ I rose to go, I held out my hand, on purpose, though I knew it was
+ contrary to the etiquette of foreign habits; she smiled, and said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! c’est comme tous les Anglais,” but gave me her hand very kindly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is the privilege of my country, Mademoiselle,” said I; “and, remember,
+ I shall always claim it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She laughed a little, quite good-naturedly, and with the sort of
+ tranquillity obvious in all she did—a tranquillity which soothed and
+ suited me singularly, at least I thought so that evening. Brussels seemed
+ a very pleasant place to me when I got out again into the street, and it
+ appeared as if some cheerful, eventful, upward-tending career were even
+ then opening to me, on that selfsame mild, still April night. So
+ impressionable a being is man, or at least such a man as I was in those
+ days.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0010">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ NEXT day the morning hours seemed to pass very slowly at M. Pelet’s; I
+ wanted the afternoon to come that I might go again to the neighbouring
+ pensionnat and give my first lesson within its pleasant precincts; for
+ pleasant they appeared to me. At noon the hour of recreation arrived; at
+ one o’clock we had lunch; this got on the time, and at last St. Gudule’s
+ deep bell, tolling slowly two, marked the moment for which I had been
+ waiting.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ At the foot of the narrow back-stairs that descended from my room, I met
+ M. Pelet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Comme vous avez l’air rayonnant!” said he. “Je ne vous ai jamais vu aussi
+ gai. Que s’est-il donc passé?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Apparemment que j’aime les changements,” replied I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! je comprends—c’est cela—soyez sage seulement. Vous êtes bien
+ jeune—trop jeune pour le rôle que vous allez jouer; il faut prendre
+ garde—savez-vous?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais quel danger y a-t-il?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Je n’en sais rien—ne vous laissez pas aller à de vives impressions—voila
+ tout.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I laughed: a sentiment of exquisite pleasure played over my nerves at the
+ thought that “vives impressions” were likely to be created; it was the
+ deadness, the sameness of life’s daily ongoings that had hitherto been my
+ bane; my blouse-clad “élèves” in the boys’ seminary never stirred in me
+ any “vives impressions” except it might be occasionally some of anger. I
+ broke from M. Pelet, and as I strode down the passage he followed me with
+ one of his laughs—a very French, rakish, mocking sound.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Again I stood at the neighbouring door, and soon was re-admitted into the
+ cheerful passage with its clear dove-colour imitation marble walls. I
+ followed the portress, and descending a step, and making a turn, I found
+ myself in a sort of corridor; a side-door opened, Mdlle. Reuter’s little
+ figure, as graceful as it was plump, appeared. I could now see her dress
+ in full daylight; a neat, simple mousseline-laine gown fitted her compact
+ round shape to perfection—delicate little collar and manchettes of
+ lace, trim Parisian brodequins showed her neck, wrists, and feet, to
+ complete advantage; but how grave was her face as she came suddenly upon
+ me! Solicitude and business were in her eye—on her forehead; she
+ looked almost stern. Her “Bon jour, monsieur,” was quite polite, but so
+ orderly, so commonplace, it spread directly a cool, damp towel over my
+ “vives impressions.” The servant turned back when her mistress appeared,
+ and I walked slowly along the corridor, side by side with Mdlle. Reuter.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur will give a lesson in the first class to-day,” said she;
+ “dictation or reading will perhaps be the best thing to begin with, for
+ those are the easiest forms of communicating instruction in a foreign
+ language; and, at the first, a master naturally feels a little unsettled.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She was quite right, as I had found from experience; it only remained for
+ me to acquiesce. We proceeded now in silence. The corridor terminated in a
+ hall, large, lofty, and square; a glass door on one side showed within a
+ long narrow refectory, with tables, an armoire, and two lamps; it was
+ empty; large glass doors, in front, opened on the playground and garden; a
+ broad staircase ascended spirally on the opposite side; the remaining wall
+ showed a pair of great folding-doors, now closed, and admitting,
+ doubtless, to the classes.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Reuter turned her eye laterally on me, to ascertain, probably,
+ whether I was collected enough to be ushered into her sanctum sanctorum. I
+ suppose she judged me to be in a tolerable state of self-government, for
+ she opened the door, and I followed her through. A rustling sound of
+ uprising greeted our entrance; without looking to the right or left, I
+ walked straight up the lane between two sets of benches and desks, and
+ took possession of the empty chair and isolated desk raised on an estrade,
+ of one step high, so as to command one division; the other division being
+ under the surveillance of a maîtresse similarly elevated. At the back of
+ the estrade, and attached to a moveable partition dividing this schoolroom
+ from another beyond, was a large tableau of wood painted black and
+ varnished; a thick crayon of white chalk lay on my desk for the
+ convenience of elucidating any grammatical or verbal obscurity which might
+ occur in my lessons by writing it upon the tableau; a wet sponge appeared
+ beside the chalk, to enable me to efface the marks when they had served
+ the purpose intended.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I carefully and deliberately made these observations before allowing
+ myself to take one glance at the benches before me; having handled the
+ crayon, looked back at the tableau, fingered the sponge in order to
+ ascertain that it was in a right state of moisture, I found myself cool
+ enough to admit of looking calmly up and gazing deliberately round me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And first I observed that Mdlle. Reuter had already glided away, she was
+ nowhere visible; a maîtresse or teacher, the one who occupied the
+ corresponding estrade to my own, alone remained to keep guard over me; she
+ was a little in the shade, and, with my short sight, I could only see that
+ she was of a thin bony figure and rather tallowy complexion, and that her
+ attitude, as she sat, partook equally of listlessness and affectation.
+ More obvious, more prominent, shone on by the full light of the large
+ window, were the occupants of the benches just before me, of whom some
+ were girls of fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, some young women from eighteen
+ (as it appeared to me) up to twenty; the most modest attire, the simplest
+ fashion of wearing the hair, were apparent in all; and good features,
+ ruddy, blooming complexions, large and brilliant eyes, forms full, even to
+ solidity, seemed to abound. I did not bear the first view like a stoic; I
+ was dazzled, my eyes fell, and in a voice somewhat too low I murmured—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Prenez vos cahiers de dictée, mesdemoiselles.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Not so had I bid the boys at Pelet’s take their reading-books. A rustle
+ followed, and an opening of desks; behind the lifted lids which
+ momentarily screened the heads bent down to search for exercise-books, I
+ heard tittering and whispers.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Eulalie, je suis prête à pâmer de rire,” observed one.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Comme il a rougi en parlant!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oui, c’est un véritable blanc-bec.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Tais-toi, Hortense—il nous écoute.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And now the lids sank and the heads reappeared; I had marked three, the
+ whisperers, and I did not scruple to take a very steady look at them as
+ they emerged from their temporary eclipse. It is astonishing what ease and
+ courage their little phrases of flippancy had given me; the idea by which
+ I had been awed was that the youthful beings before me, with their dark
+ nun-like robes and softly braided hair, were a kind of half-angels. The
+ light titter, the giddy whisper, had already in some measure relieved my
+ mind of that fond and oppressive fancy.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The three I allude to were just in front, within half a yard of my
+ estrade, and were among the most womanly-looking present. Their names I
+ knew afterwards, and may as well mention now; they were Eulalie, Hortense,
+ Caroline. Eulalie was tall, and very finely shaped: she was fair, and her
+ features were those of a Low Country Madonna; many a “figure de Vierge”
+ have I seen in Dutch pictures exactly resembling hers; there were no
+ angles in her shape or in her face, all was curve and roundness—neither
+ thought, sentiment, nor passion disturbed by line or flush the equality of
+ her pale, clear skin; her noble bust heaved with her regular breathing,
+ her eyes moved a little—by these evidences of life alone could I
+ have distinguished her from some large handsome figure moulded in wax.
+ Hortense was of middle size and stout, her form was ungraceful, her face
+ striking, more alive and brilliant than Eulalie’s, her hair was dark
+ brown, her complexion richly coloured; there were frolic and mischief in
+ her eye: consistency and good sense she might possess, but none of her
+ features betokened those qualities.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Caroline was little, though evidently full grown; raven-black hair, very
+ dark eyes, absolutely regular features, with a colourless olive
+ complexion, clear as to the face and sallow about the neck, formed in her
+ that assemblage of points whose union many persons regard as the
+ perfection of beauty. How, with the tintless pallor of her skin and the
+ classic straightness of her lineaments, she managed to look sensual, I
+ don’t know. I think her lips and eyes contrived the affair between them,
+ and the result left no uncertainty on the beholder’s mind. She was sensual
+ now, and in ten years’ time she would be coarse—promise plain was
+ written in her face of much future folly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ If I looked at these girls with little scruple, they looked at me with
+ still less. Eulalie raised her unmoved eye to mine, and seemed to expect,
+ passively but securely, an impromptu tribute to her majestic charms.
+ Hortense regarded me boldly, and giggled at the same time, while she said,
+ with an air of impudent freedom—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Dictez-nous quelquechose de facile pour commençer, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Caroline shook her loose ringlets of abundant but somewhat coarse hair
+ over her rolling black eyes; parting her lips, as full as those of a
+ hot-blooded Maroon, she showed her well-set teeth sparkling between them,
+ and treated me at the same time to a smile “de sa façon.” Beautiful as
+ Pauline Borghese, she looked at the moment scarcely purer than Lucrece de
+ Borgia. Caroline was of noble family. I heard her lady-mother’s character
+ afterwards, and then I ceased to wonder at the precocious accomplishments
+ of the daughter. These three, I at once saw, deemed themselves the queens
+ of the school, and conceived that by their splendour they threw all the
+ rest into the shade. In less than five minutes they had thus revealed to
+ me their characters, and in less than five minutes I had buckled on a
+ breast-plate of steely indifference, and let down a visor of impassible
+ austerity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Take your pens and commence writing,” said I, in as dry and trite a voice
+ as if I had been addressing only Jules Vanderkelkov and Co.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The dictée now commenced. My three belles interrupted me perpetually with
+ little silly questions and uncalled-for remarks, to some of which I made
+ no answer, and to others replied very quietly and briefly. “Comment dit-on
+ point et virgule en Anglais, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Semi-colon, mademoiselle.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Semi-collong? Ah, comme c’est drôle!” (giggle.)
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “J’ai une si mauvaise plume—impossible d’écrire!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais, monsieur—je ne sais pas suivre—vous allez si vîte.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Je n’ai rien compris, moi!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Here a general murmur arose, and the teacher, opening her lips for the
+ first time, ejaculated—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Silence, mesdemoiselles!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ No silence followed—on the contrary, the three ladies in front began
+ to talk more loudly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est si difficile, l’Anglais!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Je déteste la dictée.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Quel ennui d’écrire quelquechose que l’on ne comprend pas!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Some of those behind laughed: a degree of confusion began to pervade the
+ class; it was necessary to take prompt measures.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Donnez-moi vôtre cahier,” said I to Eulalie in an abrupt tone; and
+ bending over, I took it before she had time to give it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Et vous, mademoiselle—donnez-moi le vôtre,” continued I, more mildly,
+ addressing a little pale, plain looking girl who sat in the first row of
+ the other division, and whom I had remarked as being at once the ugliest
+ and the most attentive in the room; she rose up, walked over to me, and
+ delivered her book with a grave, modest curtsey. I glanced over the two
+ dictations; Eulalie’s was slurred, blotted, and full of silly
+ mistakes—Sylvie’s (such was the name of the ugly little girl) was clearly
+ written, it contained no error against sense, and but few faults of
+ orthography. I coolly read aloud both exercises, marking the faults—then
+ I looked at Eulalie:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est honteux!” said I, and I deliberately tore her dictation in four
+ parts, and presented her with the fragments. I returned Sylvie her book
+ with a smile, saying—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est bien—je suis content de vous.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Sylvie looked calmly pleased, Eulalie swelled like an incensed turkey, but
+ the mutiny was quelled: the conceited coquetry and futile flirtation of
+ the first bench were exchanged for a taciturn sullenness, much more
+ convenient to me, and the rest of my lesson passed without interruption.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A bell clanging out in the yard announced the moment for the cessation of
+ school labours. I heard our own bell at the same time, and that of a
+ certain public college immediately after. Order dissolved instantly; up
+ started every pupil, I hastened to seize my hat, bow to the maîtresse, and
+ quit the room before the tide of externats should pour from the inner
+ class, where I knew near a hundred were prisoned, and whose rising tumult
+ I already heard.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had scarcely crossed the hall and gained the corridor, when Mdlle.
+ Reuter came again upon me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Step in here a moment,” said she, and she held open the door of the side
+ room from whence she had issued on my arrival; it was a
+ <i lang="fr">salle-à-manger</i>, as
+ appeared from the beaufet and the armoire vitrée, filled with glass and
+ china, which formed part of its furniture. Ere she had closed the door on
+ me and herself, the corridor was already filled with day-pupils, tearing
+ down their cloaks, bonnets, and cabas from the wooden pegs on which they
+ were suspended; the shrill voice of a maîtresse was heard at intervals
+ vainly endeavouring to enforce some sort of order; vainly, I say:
+ discipline there was none in these rough ranks, and yet this was
+ considered one of the best-conducted schools in Brussels.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, you have given your first lesson,” began Mdlle. Reuter in the most
+ calm, equable voice, as though quite unconscious of the chaos from which
+ we were separated only by a single wall.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Were you satisfied with your pupils, or did any circumstance in their
+ conduct give you cause for complaint? Conceal nothing from me, repose in
+ me entire confidence.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Happily, I felt in myself complete power to manage my pupils without aid;
+ the enchantment, the golden haze which had dazzled my perspicuity at
+ first, had been a good deal dissipated. I cannot say I was chagrined or
+ downcast by the contrast which the reality of a pensionnat de demoiselles
+ presented to my vague ideal of the same community; I was only enlightened
+ and amused; consequently, I felt in no disposition to complain to Mdlle.
+ Reuter, and I received her considerate invitation to confidence with a
+ smile.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A thousand thanks, mademoiselle, all has gone very smoothly.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She looked more than doubtful.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Et les trois demoiselles du premier banc?” said she.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! tout va au mieux!” was my answer, and Mdlle. Reuter ceased to
+ question me; but her eye—not large, not brilliant, not melting, or
+ kindling, but astute, penetrating, practical, showed she was even with me;
+ it let out a momentary gleam, which said plainly, “Be as close as you
+ like, I am not dependent on your candour; what you would conceal I already
+ know.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ By a transition so quiet as to be scarcely perceptible, the directress’s
+ manner changed; the anxious business-air passed from her face, and she
+ began chatting about the weather and the town, and asking in neighbourly
+ wise after M. and Madame Pelet. I answered all her little questions; she
+ prolonged her talk, I went on following its many little windings; she sat
+ so long, said so much, varied so often the topics of discourse, that it
+ was not difficult to perceive she had a particular aim in thus detaining
+ me. Her mere words could have afforded no clue to this aim, but her
+ countenance aided; while her lips uttered only affable commonplaces, her
+ eyes reverted continually to my face. Her glances were not given in full,
+ but out of the corners, so quietly, so stealthily, yet I think I lost not
+ one. I watched her as keenly as she watched me; I perceived soon that she
+ was feeling after my real character; she was searching for salient points,
+ and weak points, and eccentric points; she was applying now this test,
+ now that, hoping in the end to find some chink, some niche, where she
+ could put in her little firm foot and stand upon my neck—mistress of
+ my nature. Do not mistake me, reader, it was no amorous influence she
+ wished to gain—at that time it was only the power of the politician
+ to which she aspired; I was now installed as a professor in her
+ establishment, and she wanted to know where her mind was superior to
+ mine—by what feeling or opinion she could lead me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I enjoyed the game much, and did not hasten its conclusion; sometimes I
+ gave her hopes, beginning a sentence rather weakly, when her shrewd eye
+ would light up—she thought she had me; having led her a little way,
+ I delighted to turn round and finish with sound, hard sense, whereat her
+ countenance would fall. At last a servant entered to announce dinner; the
+ conflict being thus necessarily terminated, we parted without having
+ gained any advantage on either side: Mdlle. Reuter had not even given me
+ an opportunity of attacking her with feeling, and I had managed to baffle
+ her little schemes of craft. It was a regular drawn battle. I again held
+ out my hand when I left the room, she gave me hers; it was a small and
+ white hand, but how cool! I met her eye too in full—obliging her to
+ give me a straightforward look; this last test went against me: it left
+ her as it found her—moderate, temperate, tranquil; me it
+ disappointed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am growing wiser,” thought I, as I walked back to M. Pelet’s. “Look at
+ this little woman; is she like the women of novelists and romancers? To
+ read of female character as depicted in Poetry and Fiction, one would
+ think it was made up of sentiment, either for good or bad—here is a
+ specimen, and a most sensible and respectable specimen, too, whose staple
+ ingredient is abstract reason. No Talleyrand was ever more passionless
+ than Zoraïde Reuter!” So I thought then; I found afterwards that blunt
+ susceptibilities are very consistent with strong propensities.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0011">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ I HAD indeed had a very long talk with the crafty little politician, and
+ on regaining my quarters, I found that dinner was half over. To be late at
+ meals was against a standing rule of the establishment, and had it been
+ one of the Flemish ushers who thus entered after the removal of the soup
+ and the commencement of the first course, M. Pelet would probably have
+ greeted him with a public rebuke, and would certainly have mulcted him
+ both of soup and fish; as it was, that polite though partial gentleman
+ only shook his head, and as I took my place, unrolled my napkin, and said
+ my heretical grace to myself, he civilly despatched a servant to the
+ kitchen, to bring me a plate of “purée aux carrottes” (for this was a
+ maigre-day), and before sending away the first course, reserved for me a
+ portion of the stock-fish of which it consisted. Dinner being over, the
+ boys rushed out for their evening play; Kint and Vandam (the two ushers)
+ of course followed them. Poor fellows! if they had not looked so very
+ heavy, so very soulless, so very indifferent to all things in heaven above
+ or in the earth beneath, I could have pitied them greatly for the
+ obligation they were under to trail after those rough lads everywhere and
+ at all times; even as it was, I felt disposed to scout myself as a
+ privileged prig when I turned to ascend to my chamber, sure to find there,
+ if not enjoyment, at least liberty; but this evening (as had often
+ happened before) I was to be still farther distinguished.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Eh bien, mauvais sujet!” said the voice of M. Pelet behind me, as I set
+ my foot on the first step of the stair. “Où allez-vous? Venez à la
+ salle-à-manger, que je vous gronde un peu.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I beg pardon, monsieur,” said I, as I followed him to his private
+ sitting-room, “for having returned so late—it was not my fault.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is just what I want to know,” rejoined M. Pelet, as he ushered me
+ into the comfortable parlour with a good wood-fire—for the stove had
+ now been removed for the season. Having rung the bell he ordered “Coffee
+ for two,” and presently he and I were seated, almost in English comfort,
+ one on each side of the hearth, a little round table between us, with a
+ coffee-pot, a sugar-basin, and two large white china cups. While M. Pelet
+ employed himself in choosing a cigar from a box, my thoughts reverted to
+ the two outcast ushers, whose voices I could hear even now crying hoarsely
+ for order in the playground.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est une grande responsabilité, que la surveillance,” observed I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Plait-il?” dit M. Pelet.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I remarked that I thought Messieurs Vandam and Kint must sometimes be a
+ little fatigued with their labours.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Des bêtes de somme—des bêtes de somme,” murmured scornfully the
+ director. Meantime I offered him his cup of coffee.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Servez-vous mon garçon,” said he blandly, when I had put a couple of huge
+ lumps of continental sugar into his cup. “And now tell me why you stayed
+ so long at Mdlle. Reuter’s. I know that lessons conclude, in her
+ establishment as in mine, at four o’clock, and when you returned it was
+ past five.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mdlle. wished to speak with me, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indeed! on what subject? if one may ask.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle talked about nothing, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A fertile topic! and did she discourse thereon in the schoolroom, before
+ the pupils?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No; like you, monsieur, she asked me to walk into her parlour.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And Madame Reuter—the old duenna—my mother’s gossip, was
+ there, of course?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur; I had the honour of being quite alone with mademoiselle.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est joli—cela,” observed M. Pelet, and he smiled and looked into
+ the fire.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Honi soit qui mal y pense,” murmured I, significantly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Je connais un peu ma petite voisine—voyez-vous.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “In that case, monsieur will be able to aid me in finding out what was
+ mademoiselle’s reason for making me sit before her sofa one mortal hour,
+ listening to the most copious and fluent dissertation on the merest
+ frivolities.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She was sounding your character.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I thought so, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Did she find out your weak point?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What is my weak point?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why, the sentimental. Any woman sinking her shaft deep enough, will at
+ last reach a fathomless spring of sensibility in thy breast, Crimsworth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I felt the blood stir about my heart and rise warm to my cheek.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Some women might, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is Mdlle. Reuter of the number? Come, speak frankly, mon fils; elle est
+ encore jeune, plus agée que toi peut-être, mais juste assez pour unir la
+ tendresse d’une petite maman à l’amour d’une epouse dévouée; n’est-ce pas
+ que cela t’irait supérieurement?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur; I should like my wife to be my wife, and not half my
+ mother.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She is then a little too old for you?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur, not a day too old if she suited me in other things.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “In what does she not suit you, William? She is personally agreeable, is
+ she not?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very; her hair and complexion are just what I admire; and her turn of
+ form, though quite Belgian, is full of grace.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bravo! and her face? her features? How do you like them?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A little harsh, especially her mouth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah, yes! her mouth,” said M. Pelet, and he chuckled inwardly. “There is
+ character about her mouth—firmness—but she has a very pleasant
+ smile; don’t you think so?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rather crafty.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “True, but that expression of craft is owing to her eyebrows; have you
+ remarked her eyebrows?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I answered that I had not.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have not seen her looking down then?” said he.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is a treat, notwithstanding. Observe her when she has some knitting,
+ or some other woman’s work in hand, and sits the image of peace, calmly
+ intent on her needles and her silk, some discussion meantime going on
+ around her, in the course of which peculiarities of character are being
+ developed, or important interests canvassed; she takes no part in it; her
+ humble, feminine mind is wholly with her knitting; none of her features
+ move; she neither presumes to smile approval, nor frown disapprobation;
+ her little hands assiduously ply their unpretending task; if she can only
+ get this purse finished, or this bonnet-grec completed, it is enough for
+ her. If gentlemen approach her chair, a deeper quiescence, a meeker
+ modesty settles on her features, and clothes her general mien; observe
+ then her eyebrows, et dîtes-moi s’il n’y a pas du chat dans l’un et du
+ renard dans l’autre.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I will take careful notice the first opportunity,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And then,” continued M. Pelet, “the eyelid will flicker, the
+ light-coloured lashes be lifted a second, and a blue eye, glancing out
+ from under the screen, will take its brief, sly, searching survey, and
+ retreat again.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I smiled, and so did Pelet, and after a few minutes’ silence, I asked:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Will she ever marry, do you think?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Marry! Will birds pair? Of course it is both her intention and resolution
+ to marry when she finds a suitable match, and no one is better aware than
+ herself of the sort of impression she is capable of producing; no one
+ likes better to captivate in a quiet way. I am mistaken if she will not
+ yet leave the print of her stealing steps on thy heart, Crimsworth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Of her steps? Confound it, no! My heart is not a plank to be walked on.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But the soft touch of a patte de velours will do it no harm.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She offers me no patte de velours; she is all form and reserve with me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That to begin with; let respect be the foundation, affection the first
+ floor, love the superstructure; Mdlle. Reuter is a skilful architect.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And interest, M. Pelet—interest. Will not mademoiselle consider
+ that point?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, yes, no doubt; it will be the cement between every stone. And now we
+ have discussed the directress, what of the pupils? N’y a-t-il pas de
+ belles études parmi ces jeunes têtes?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Studies of character? Yes; curious ones, at least, I imagine; but one
+ cannot divine much from a first interview.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah, you affect discretion; but tell me now, were you not a little abashed
+ before these blooming young creatures?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “At first, yes; but I rallied and got through with all due sang-froid.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I don’t believe you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is true, notwithstanding. At first I thought them angels, but they did
+ not leave me long under that delusion; three of the eldest and handsomest
+ undertook the task of setting me right, and they managed so cleverly that
+ in five minutes I knew <em>them</em>, at least, for what they were—three
+ arrant coquettes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Je les connais!” exclaimed M. Pelet. “Elles sont toujours au premier rang
+ à l’eglise et à la promenade; une blonde superbe, une jolie espiègle, une
+ belle brune.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Exactly.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Lovely creatures all of them—heads for artists; what a group they
+ would make, taken together! Eulalie (I know their names), with her smooth
+ braided hair and calm ivory brow. Hortense, with her rich chesnut locks so
+ luxuriantly knotted, plaited, twisted, as if she did not know how to
+ dispose of all their abundance, with her vermilion lips, damask cheek, and
+ roguish laughing eye. And Caroline de Blemont! Ah, there is beauty! beauty
+ in perfection. What a cloud of sable curls about the face of a houri! What
+ fascinating lips! What glorious black eyes! Your Byron would have
+ worshipped her, and you—you cold, frigid islander!—you played
+ the austere, the insensible in the presence of an Aphrodite so exquisite?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I might have laughed at the director’s enthusiasm had I believed it real,
+ but there was something in his tone which indicated got-up raptures. I
+ felt he was only affecting fervour in order to put me off my guard, to
+ induce me to come out in return, so I scarcely even smiled. He went on:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Confess, William, do not the mere good looks of Zoraïde Reuter appear
+ dowdyish and commonplace compared with the splendid charms of some of her
+ pupils?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The question discomposed me, but I now felt plainly that my principal was
+ endeavouring (for reasons best known to himself—at that time I could
+ not fathom them) to excite ideas and wishes in my mind alien to what was
+ right and honourable. The iniquity of the instigation proved its antidote,
+ and when he further added:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Each of those three beautiful girls will have a handsome fortune; and
+ with a little address, a gentlemanlike, intelligent young fellow like you
+ might make himself master of the hand, heart, and purse of any one of the
+ trio.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I replied by a look and an interrogative “Monsieur?” which startled him.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He laughed a forced laugh, affirmed that he had only been joking, and
+ demanded whether I could possibly have thought him in earnest. Just then
+ the bell rang; the play-hour was over; it was an evening on which M. Pelet
+ was accustomed to read passages from the drama and the belles lettres to
+ his pupils. He did not wait for my answer, but rising, left the room,
+ humming as he went some gay strain of Béranger’s.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0012">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ DAILY, as I continued my attendance at the seminary of Mdlle. Reuter, did
+ I find fresh occasions to compare the ideal with the real. What had I
+ known of female character previously to my arrival at Brussels? Precious
+ little. And what was my notion of it? Something vague, slight, gauzy,
+ glittering; now when I came in contact with it I found it to be a palpable
+ substance enough; very hard too sometimes, and often heavy; there was
+ metal in it, both lead and iron.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Let the idealists, the dreamers about earthly angel and human flowers,
+ just look here while I open my portfolio and show them a sketch or two,
+ pencilled after nature. I took these sketches in the second-class
+ schoolroom of Mdlle. Reuter’s establishment, where about a hundred
+ specimens of the genus “jeune fille” collected together offered a fertile
+ variety of subject. A miscellaneous assortment they were, differing both
+ in caste and country; as I sat on my estrade and glanced over the long
+ range of desks, I had under my eye French, English, Belgians, Austrians,
+ and Prussians. The majority belonged to the class bourgeois; but there
+ were many countesses, there were the daughters of two generals and of
+ several colonels, captains, and government <i lang="fr">employés</i>:
+ these ladies sat side
+ by side with young females destined to be demoiselles de magasins, and
+ with some Flamandes, genuine aborigines of the country. In dress all were
+ nearly similar, and in manners there was small difference; exceptions
+ there were to the general rule, but the majority gave the tone to the
+ establishment, and that tone was rough, boisterous, masked by a
+ point-blank disregard of all forbearance towards each other or their
+ teachers; an eager pursuit by each individual of her own interest and
+ convenience; and a coarse indifference to the interest and convenience of
+ every one else. Most of them could lie with audacity when it appeared
+ advantageous to do so. All understood the art of speaking fair when a
+ point was to be gained, and could with consummate skill and at a moment’s
+ notice turn the cold shoulder the instant civility ceased to be
+ profitable. Very little open quarrelling ever took place amongst them; but
+ backbiting and talebearing were universal. Close friendships were
+ forbidden by the rules of the school, and no one girl seemed to cultivate
+ more regard for another than was just necessary to secure a companion when
+ solitude would have been irksome. They were each and all supposed to have
+ been reared in utter unconsciousness of vice. The precautions used to keep
+ them ignorant, if not innocent, were innumerable. How was it, then, that
+ scarcely one of those girls having attained the age of fourteen could look
+ a man in the face with modesty and propriety? An air of bold, impudent
+ flirtation, or a loose, silly leer, was sure to answer the most ordinary
+ glance from a masculine eye. I know nothing of the arcana of the Roman
+ Catholic religion, and I am not a bigot in matters of theology, but I
+ suspect the root of this precocious impurity, so obvious, so general in
+ Popish countries, is to be found in the discipline, if not the doctrines
+ of the Church of Rome. I record what I have seen: these girls belonged to
+ what are called the respectable ranks of society; they had all been
+ carefully brought up, yet was the mass of them mentally depraved. So much
+ for the general view: now for one or two selected specimens.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The first picture is a full length of Aurelia Koslow, a German fraulein,
+ or rather a half-breed between German and Russian. She is eighteen years
+ of age, and has been sent to Brussels to finish her education; she is of
+ middle size, stiffly made, body long, legs short, bust much developed but
+ not compactly moulded, waist disproportionately compressed by an inhumanly
+ braced corset, dress carefully arranged, large feet tortured into small
+ bottines, head small, hair smoothed, braided, oiled, and gummed to
+ perfection; very low forehead, very diminutive and vindictive grey eyes,
+ somewhat Tartar features, rather flat nose, rather high-cheek bones, yet
+ the ensemble not positively ugly; tolerably good complexion. So much for
+ person. As to mind, deplorably ignorant and ill-informed: incapable of
+ writing or speaking correctly even German, her native tongue, a dunce in
+ French, and her attempts at learning English a mere farce, yet she has
+ been at school twelve years; but as she invariably gets her exercises, of
+ every description, done by a fellow pupil, and reads her lessons off a
+ book concealed in her lap, it is not wonderful that her progress has been
+ so snail-like. I do not know what Aurelia’s daily habits of life are,
+ because I have not the opportunity of observing her at all times; but from
+ what I see of the state of her desk, books, and papers, I should say she
+ is slovenly and even dirty; her outward dress, as I have said, is well
+ attended to, but in passing behind her bench, I have remarked that her
+ neck is gray for want of washing, and her hair, so glossy with gum and
+ grease, is not such as one feels tempted to pass the hand over, much less
+ to run the fingers through. Aurelia’s conduct in class, at least when I am
+ present, is something extraordinary, considered as an index of girlish
+ innocence. The moment I enter the room, she nudges her next neighbour and
+ indulges in a half-suppressed laugh. As I take my seat on the estrade, she
+ fixes her eye on me; she seems resolved to attract, and, if possible,
+ monopolize my notice: to this end she launches at me all sorts of looks,
+ languishing, provoking, leering, laughing. As I am found quite proof
+ against this sort of artillery—for we scorn what, unasked, is
+ lavishly offered—she has recourse to the expedient of making noises;
+ sometimes she sighs, sometimes groans, sometimes utters inarticulate
+ sounds, for which language has no name. If, in walking up the schoolroom,
+ I pass near her, she puts out her foot that it may touch mine; if I do not
+ happen to observe the manoeuvre, and my boot comes in contact with her
+ brodequin, she affects to fall into convulsions of suppressed laughter; if
+ I notice the snare and avoid it, she expresses her mortification in sullen
+ muttering, where I hear myself abused in bad French, pronounced with an
+ intolerable Low German accent.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Not far from Mdlle. Koslow sits another young lady by name Adèle Dronsart:
+ this is a Belgian, rather low of stature, in form heavy, with broad waist,
+ short neck and limbs, good red and white complexion, features well
+ chiselled and regular, well-cut eyes of a clear brown colour, light brown
+ hair, good teeth, age not much above fifteen, but as full-grown as a stout
+ young Englishwoman of twenty. This portrait gives the idea of a somewhat
+ dumpy but good-looking damsel, does it not? Well, when I looked along the
+ row of young heads, my eye generally stopped at this of Adèle’s; her gaze
+ was ever waiting for mine, and it frequently succeeded in arresting it.
+ She was an unnatural-looking being—so young, fresh, blooming, yet so
+ Gorgon-like. Suspicion, sullen ill-temper were on her forehead, vicious
+ propensities in her eye, envy and panther-like deceit about her mouth. In
+ general she sat very still; her massive shape looked as if it could not
+ bend much, nor did her large head—so broad at the base, so narrow
+ towards the top—seem made to turn readily on her short neck. She had
+ but two varieties of expression; the prevalent one a forbidding,
+ dissatisfied scowl, varied sometimes by a most pernicious and perfidious
+ smile. She was shunned by her fellow-pupils, for, bad as many of them
+ were, few were as bad as she.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Aurelia and Adèle were in the first division of the second class; the
+ second division was headed by a pensionnaire named Juanna Trista. This
+ girl was of mixed Belgian and Spanish origin; her Flemish mother was dead,
+ her Catalonian father was a merchant residing in the —— Isles,
+ where Juanna had been born and whence she was sent to Europe to be
+ educated. I wonder that any one, looking at that girl’s head and
+ countenance, would have received her under their roof. She had precisely
+ the same shape of skull as Pope Alexander the Sixth; her organs of
+ benevolence, veneration, conscientiousness, adhesiveness, were singularly
+ small, those of self-esteem, firmness, destructiveness, combativeness,
+ preposterously large; her head sloped up in the penthouse shape, was
+ contracted about the forehead, and prominent behind; she had rather good,
+ though large and marked features; her temperament was fibrous and bilious,
+ her complexion pale and dark, hair and eyes black, form angular and rigid
+ but proportionate, age fifteen.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Juanna was not very thin, but she had a gaunt visage, and her “regard” was
+ fierce and hungry; narrow as was her brow, it presented space enough for
+ the legible graving of two words, Mutiny and Hate; in some one of her
+ other lineaments—I think the eye—cowardice had also its distinct
+ cipher. Mdlle. Trista thought fit to trouble my first lessons with a
+ coarse work-day sort of turbulence; she made noises with her mouth like a
+ horse, she ejected her saliva, she uttered brutal expressions; behind and
+ below her were seated a band of very vulgar, inferior-looking Flamandes,
+ including two or three examples of that deformity of person and imbecility
+ of intellect whose frequency in the Low Countries would seem to furnish
+ proof that the climate is such as to induce degeneracy of the human mind
+ and body; these, I soon found, were completely under her influence, and
+ with their aid she got up and sustained a swinish tumult, which I was
+ constrained at last to quell by ordering her and two of her tools to rise
+ from their seats, and, having kept them standing five minutes, turning
+ them bodily out of the schoolroom: the accomplices into a large place
+ adjoining called the grands salle; the principal into a cabinet, of which
+ I closed the door and pocketed the key. This judgment I executed in the
+ presence of Mdlle. Reuter, who looked much aghast at beholding so decided
+ a proceeding—the most severe that had ever been ventured on in her
+ establishment. Her look of affright I answered with one of composure, and
+ finally with a smile, which perhaps flattered, and certainly soothed her.
+ Juanna Trista remained in Europe long enough to repay, by malevolence and
+ ingratitude, all who had ever done her a good turn; and she then went to
+ join her father in the —— Isles, exulting in the thought that
+ she should there have slaves, whom, as she said, she could kick and strike
+ at will.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ These three pictures are from the life. I possess others, as marked and as
+ little agreeable, but I will spare my reader the exhibition of them.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Doubtless it will be thought that I ought now, by way of contrast, to show
+ something charming; some gentle virgin head, circled with a halo, some
+ sweet personification of innocence, clasping the dove of peace to her
+ bosom. No: I saw nothing of the sort, and therefore cannot portray it. The
+ pupil in the school possessing the happiest disposition was a young girl
+ from the country, Louise Path; she was sufficiently benevolent and
+ obliging, but not well taught nor well mannered; moreover, the plague-spot
+ of dissimulation was in her also; honour and principle were unknown to
+ her, she had scarcely heard their names. The least exceptionable pupil was
+ the poor little Sylvie I have mentioned once before. Sylvie was gentle in
+ manners, intelligent in mind; she was even sincere, as far as her religion
+ would permit her to be so, but her physical organization was defective;
+ weak health stunted her growth and chilled her spirits, and then, destined
+ as she was for the cloister, her whole soul was warped to a conventual
+ bias, and in the tame, trained subjection of her manner, one read that she
+ had already prepared herself for her future course of life, by giving up
+ her independence of thought and action into the hands of some despotic
+ confessor. She permitted herself no original opinion, no preference of
+ companion or employment; in everything she was guided by another. With a
+ pale, passive, automaton air, she went about all day long doing what she
+ was bid; never what she liked, or what, from innate conviction, she
+ thought it right to do. The poor little future religieuse had been early
+ taught to make the dictates of her own reason and conscience quite
+ subordinate to the will of her spiritual director. She was the model pupil
+ of Mdlle. Reuter’s establishment; pale, blighted image, where life
+ lingered feebly, but whence the soul had been conjured by Romish
+ wizard-craft!
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A few English pupils there were in this school, and these might be divided
+ into two classes. 1st. The continental English—the daughters chiefly
+ of broken adventurers, whom debt or dishonour had driven from their own
+ country. These poor girls had never known the advantages of settled homes,
+ decorous example, or honest Protestant education; resident a few months
+ now in one Catholic school, now in another, as their parents wandered from
+ land to land—from France to Germany, from Germany to Belgium—they
+ had picked up some scanty instruction, many bad habits, losing every
+ notion even of the first elements of religion and morals, and acquiring an
+ imbecile indifference to every sentiment that can elevate humanity; they
+ were distinguishable by an habitual look of sullen dejection, the result
+ of crushed self-respect and constant browbeating from their Popish
+ fellow-pupils, who hated them as English, and scorned them as heretics.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The second class were British English. Of these I did not encounter half a
+ dozen during the whole time of my attendance at the seminary; their
+ characteristics were clean but careless dress, ill-arranged hair (compared
+ with the tight and trim foreigners), erect carriage, flexible figures,
+ white and taper hands, features more irregular, but also more intellectual
+ than those of the Belgians, grave and modest countenances, a general air
+ of native propriety and decency; by this last circumstance alone I could
+ at a glance distinguish the daughter of Albion and nursling of
+ Protestantism from the foster-child of Rome, the <i lang="fr">protégé</i>
+ of Jesuistry:
+ proud, too, was the aspect of these British girls; at once envied and
+ ridiculed by their continental associates, they warded off insult with
+ austere civility, and met hate with mute disdain; they eschewed
+ company-keeping, and in the midst of numbers seemed to dwell isolated.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The teachers presiding over this mixed multitude were three in number, all
+ French—their names Mdlles. Zéphyrine, Pélagie, and Suzette; the two
+ last were commonplace personages enough; their look was ordinary, their
+ manner was ordinary, their temper was ordinary, their thoughts, feelings,
+ and views were all ordinary—were I to write a chapter on the subject
+ I could not elucidate it further. Zéphyrine was somewhat more
+ distinguished in appearance and deportment than Pélagie and Suzette, but
+ in character genuine Parisian coquette, perfidious, mercenary, and
+ dry-hearted. A fourth maîtresse I sometimes saw who seemed to come daily
+ to teach needlework, or netting, or lace-mending, or some such flimsy art;
+ but of her I never had more than a passing glimpse, as she sat in the
+ <i lang="fr">carré</i>, with her frames and some dozen of the elder pupils
+ about her,
+ consequently I had no opportunity of studying her character, or even of
+ observing her person much; the latter, I remarked, had a very English air
+ for a maîtresse, otherwise it was not striking; of character I should
+ think she possessed but little, as her pupils seemed constantly “en
+ revolte” against her authority. She did not reside in the house; her name,
+ I think, was Mdlle. Henri.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Amidst this assemblage of all that was insignificant and defective, much
+ that was vicious and repulsive (by that last epithet many would have
+ described the two or three stiff, silent, decently behaved, ill-dressed
+ British girls), the sensible, sagacious, affable directress shone like a
+ steady star over a marsh full of Jack-o’-lanthorns; profoundly aware of
+ her superiority, she derived an inward bliss from that consciousness which
+ sustained her under all the care and responsibility inseparable from her
+ position; it kept her temper calm, her brow smooth, her manner tranquil.
+ She liked—as who would not?—on entering the school-room, to
+ feel that her sole presence sufficed to diffuse that order and quiet which
+ all the remonstrances, and even commands, of her underlings frequently
+ failed to enforce; she liked to stand in comparison, or rather—contrast,
+ with those who surrounded her, and to know that in personal as well as
+ mental advantages, she bore away the undisputed palm of preference—(the
+ three teachers were all plain.) Her pupils she managed with such
+ indulgence and address, taking always on herself the office of recompenser
+ and eulogist, and abandoning to her subalterns every invidious task of
+ blame and punishment, that they all regarded her with deference, if not
+ with affection; her teachers did not love her, but they submitted because
+ they were her inferiors in everything; the various masters who attended
+ her school were each and all in some way or other under her influence;
+ over one she had acquired power by her skilful management of his bad
+ temper; over another by little attentions to his petty caprices; a third
+ she had subdued by flattery; a fourth—a timid man—she kept in
+ awe by a sort of austere decision of mien; me, she still watched, still
+ tried by the most ingenious tests—she roved round me, baffled, yet
+ persevering; I believe she thought I was like a smooth and bare precipice,
+ which offered neither jutting stone nor tree-root, nor tuft of grass to
+ aid the climber. Now she flattered with exquisite tact, now she moralized,
+ now she tried how far I was accessible to mercenary motives, then she
+ disported on the brink of affection—knowing that some men are won by
+ weakness—anon, she talked excellent sense, aware that others have
+ the folly to admire judgment. I found it at once pleasant and easy to
+ evade all these efforts; it was sweet, when she thought me nearly won, to
+ turn round and to smile in her very eyes, half scornfully, and then to
+ witness her scarcely veiled, though mute mortification. Still she
+ persevered, and at last, I am bound to confess it, her finger, essaying,
+ proving every atom of the casket, touched its secret spring, and for a
+ moment the lid sprung open; she laid her hand on the jewel within; whether
+ she stole and broke it, or whether the lid shut again with a snap on her
+ fingers, read on, and you shall know.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It happened that I came one day to give a lesson when I was indisposed; I
+ had a bad cold and a cough; two hours’ incessant talking left me very
+ hoarse and tired; as I quitted the schoolroom, and was passing along the
+ corridor, I met Mdlle. Reuter; she remarked, with an anxious air, that I
+ looked very pale and tired. “Yes,” I said, “I was fatigued;” and then,
+ with increased interest, she rejoined, “You shall not go away till you
+ have had some refreshment.” She persuaded me to step into the parlour, and
+ was very kind and gentle while I stayed. The next day she was kinder
+ still; she came herself into the class to see that the windows were
+ closed, and that there was no draught; she exhorted me with friendly
+ earnestness not to over-exert myself; when I went away, she gave me her
+ hand unasked, and I could not but mark, by a respectful and gentle
+ pressure, that I was sensible of the favour, and grateful for it. My
+ modest demonstration kindled a little merry smile on her countenance; I
+ thought her almost charming. During the remainder of the evening, my mind
+ was full of impatience for the afternoon of the next day to arrive, that I
+ might see her again.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was not disappointed, for she sat in the class during the whole of my
+ subsequent lesson, and often looked at me almost with affection. At four
+ o’clock she accompanied me out of the schoolroom, asking with solicitude
+ after my health, then scolding me sweetly because I spoke too loud and
+ gave myself too much trouble; I stopped at the glass-door which led into
+ the garden, to hear her lecture to the end; the door was open, it was a
+ very fine day, and while I listened to the soothing reprimand, I looked at
+ the sunshine and flowers, and felt very happy. The day-scholars began to
+ pour from the schoolrooms into the passage.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Will you go into the garden a minute or two,” asked she, “till they are
+ gone?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I descended the steps without answering, but I looked back as much as to
+ say—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You will come with me?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In another minute I and the directress were walking side by side down the
+ alley bordered with fruit-trees, whose white blossoms were then in full
+ blow as well as their tender green leaves. The sky was blue, the air
+ still, the May afternoon was full of brightness and fragrance. Released
+ from the stifling class, surrounded with flowers and foliage, with a
+ pleasing, smiling, affable woman at my side—how did I feel? Why,
+ very enviably. It seemed as if the romantic visions my imagination had
+ suggested of this garden, while it was yet hidden from me by the jealous
+ boards, were more than realized; and, when a turn in the alley shut out
+ the view of the house, and some tall shrubs excluded M. Pelet’s mansion,
+ and screened us momentarily from the other houses, rising
+ amphitheatre-like round this green spot, I gave my arm to Mdlle. Reuter,
+ and led her to a garden-chair, nestled under some lilacs near. She sat
+ down; I took my place at her side. She went on talking to me with that
+ ease which communicates ease, and, as I listened, a revelation dawned in
+ my mind that I was on the brink of falling in love. The dinner-bell rang,
+ both at her house and M. Pelet’s; we were obliged to part; I detained her
+ a moment as she was moving away.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I want something,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What?” asked Zoraïde naively.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Only a flower.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Gather it then—or two, or twenty, if you like.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No—one will do—but you must gather it, and give it to me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What a caprice!” she exclaimed, but she raised herself on her tip-toes,
+ and, plucking a beautiful branch of lilac, offered it to me with grace. I
+ took it, and went away, satisfied for the present, and hopeful for the
+ future.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Certainly that May day was a lovely one, and it closed in moonlight night
+ of summer warmth and serenity. I remember this well; for, having sat up
+ late that evening, correcting devoirs, and feeling weary and a little
+ oppressed with the closeness of my small room, I opened the
+ often-mentioned boarded window, whose boards, however, I had persuaded old
+ Madame Pelet to have removed since I had filled the post of professor in
+ the pensionnat de demoiselles, as, from that time, it was no longer
+ “inconvenient” for me to overlook my own pupils at their sports. I sat
+ down in the window-seat, rested my arm on the sill, and leaned out: above
+ me was the clear-obscure of a cloudless night sky—splendid moonlight
+ subdued the tremulous sparkle of the stars—below lay the garden,
+ varied with silvery lustre and deep shade, and all fresh with dew—a
+ grateful perfume exhaled from the closed blossoms of the fruit-trees—not
+ a leaf stirred, the night was breezeless. My window looked directly down
+ upon a certain walk of Mdlle. Reuter’s garden, called “l’allée défendue,”
+ so named because the pupils were forbidden to enter it on account of its
+ proximity to the boys’ school. It was here that the lilacs and laburnums
+ grew especially thick; this was the most sheltered nook in the enclosure,
+ its shrubs screened the garden-chair where that afternoon I had sat with
+ the young directress. I need not say that my thoughts were chiefly with
+ her as I leaned from the lattice, and let my eye roam, now over the walks
+ and borders of the garden, now along the many-windowed front of the house
+ which rose white beyond the masses of foliage. I wondered in what part of
+ the building was situated her apartment; and a single light, shining
+ through the persiennes of one croisée, seemed to direct me to it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She watches late,” thought I, “for it must be now near midnight. She is a
+ fascinating little woman,” I continued in voiceless soliloquy; “her image
+ forms a pleasant picture in memory; I know she is not what the world calls
+ pretty—no matter, there is harmony in her aspect, and I like it; her
+ brown hair, her blue eye, the freshness of her cheek, the whiteness of her
+ neck, all suit my taste. Then I respect her talent; the idea of marrying a
+ doll or a fool was always abhorrent to me: I know that a pretty doll, a
+ fair fool, might do well enough for the honeymoon; but when passion
+ cooled, how dreadful to find a lump of wax and wood laid in my bosom, a
+ half idiot clasped in my arms, and to remember that I had made of this my
+ equal—nay, my idol—to know that I must pass the rest of my
+ dreary life with a creature incapable of understanding what I said, of
+ appreciating what I thought, or of sympathizing with what I felt! “Now,
+ Zoraïde Reuter,” thought I, “has tact, <i lang="fr">caractère</i>,
+ judgment, discretion;
+ has she heart? What a good, simple little smile played about her lips when
+ she gave me the branch of lilacs! I have thought her crafty, dissembling,
+ interested sometimes, it is true; but may not much that looks like cunning
+ and dissimulation in her conduct be only the efforts made by a bland
+ temper to traverse quietly perplexing difficulties? And as to interest,
+ she wishes to make her way in the world, no doubt, and who can blame her?
+ Even if she be truly deficient in sound principle, is it not rather her
+ misfortune than her fault? She has been brought up a Catholic: had she
+ been born an Englishwoman, and reared a Protestant, might she not have
+ added straight integrity to all her other excellences? Supposing she were
+ to marry an English and Protestant husband, would she not, rational,
+ sensible as she is, quickly acknowledge the superiority of right over
+ expediency, honesty over policy? It would be worth a man’s while to try
+ the experiment; to-morrow I will renew my observations. She knows that I
+ watch her: how calm she is under scrutiny! it seems rather to gratify than
+ annoy her.” Here a strain of music stole in upon my monologue, and
+ suspended it; it was a bugle, very skilfully played, in the neighbourhood
+ of the park, I thought, or on the Place Royale. So sweet were the tones,
+ so subduing their effect at that hour, in the midst of silence and under
+ the quiet reign of moonlight, I ceased to think, that I might listen more
+ intently. The strain retreated, its sound waxed fainter and was soon gone;
+ my ear prepared to repose on the absolute hush of midnight once more. No.
+ What murmur was that which, low, and yet near and approaching nearer,
+ frustrated the expectation of total silence? It was some one
+ conversing—yes, evidently, an audible, though subdued voice spoke in the
+ garden immediately below me. Another answered; the first voice was that of
+ a man, the second that of a woman; and a man and a woman I saw coming
+ slowly down the alley. Their forms were at first in shade, I could but
+ discern a dusk outline of each, but a ray of moonlight met them at the
+ termination of the walk, when they were under my very nose, and revealed
+ very plainly, very unequivocally, Mdlle. Zoraïde Reuter, arm-in-arm, or
+ hand-in-hand (I forget which) with my principal, confidant, and
+ counsellor, M. François Pelet. And M. Pelet was saying—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A quand donc le jour des noces, ma bien-aimée?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And Mdlle. Reuter answered—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais, François, tu sais bien qu’il me serait impossible de me marier
+ avant les vacances.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “June, July, August, a whole quarter!” exclaimed the director. “How can I
+ wait so long?—I who am ready, even now, to expire at your feet with
+ impatience!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! if you die, the whole affair will be settled without any trouble
+ about notaries and contracts; I shall only have to order a slight mourning
+ dress, which will be much sooner prepared than the nuptial trousseau.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Cruel Zoraïde! you laugh at the distress of one who loves you so
+ devotedly as I do: my torment is your sport; you scruple not to stretch my
+ soul on the rack of jealousy; for, deny it as you will, I am certain you
+ have cast encouraging glances on that school-boy, Crimsworth; he has
+ presumed to fall in love, which he dared not have done unless you had
+ given him room to hope.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What do you say, François? Do you say Crimsworth is in love with me?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Over head and ears.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Has he told you so?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No—but I see it in his face: he blushes whenever your name is
+ mentioned.” A little laugh of exulting coquetry announced Mdlle. Reuter’s
+ gratification at this piece of intelligence (which was a lie, by-the-by—I
+ had never been so far gone as that, after all). M. Pelet proceeded to ask
+ what she intended to do with me, intimating pretty plainly, and not very
+ gallantly, that it was nonsense for her to think of taking such a
+ “blanc-bec” as a husband, since she must be at least ten years older than
+ I (was she then thirty-two? I should not have thought it). I heard her
+ disclaim any intentions on the subject—the director, however, still
+ pressed her to give a definite answer.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “François,” said she, “you are jealous,” and still she laughed; then, as
+ if suddenly recollecting that this coquetry was not consistent with the
+ character for modest dignity she wished to establish, she proceeded, in a
+ demure voice: “Truly, my dear François, I will not deny that this young
+ Englishman may have made some attempts to ingratiate himself with me; but,
+ so far from giving him any encouragement, I have always treated him with
+ as much reserve as it was possible to combine with civility; affianced as
+ I am to you, I would give no man false hopes; believe me, dear friend.”
+ Still Pelet uttered murmurs of distrust—so I judged, at least, from
+ her reply.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What folly! How could I prefer an unknown foreigner to you? And then—not
+ to flatter your vanity—Crimsworth could not bear comparison with you
+ either physically or mentally; he is not a handsome man at all; some may
+ call him gentleman-like and intelligent-looking, but for my part—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The rest of the sentence was lost in the distance, as the pair, rising
+ from the chair in which they had been seated, moved away. I waited their
+ return, but soon the opening and shutting of a door informed me that they
+ had re-entered the house; I listened a little longer, all was perfectly
+ still; I listened more than an hour—at last I heard M. Pelet come in
+ and ascend to his chamber. Glancing once more towards the long front of
+ the garden-house, I perceived that its solitary light was at length
+ extinguished; so, for a time, was my faith in love and friendship. I went
+ to bed, but something feverish and fiery had got into my veins which
+ prevented me from sleeping much that night.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0013">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ NEXT morning I rose with the dawn, and having dressed myself and stood
+ half-an-hour, my elbow leaning on the chest of drawers, considering what
+ means I should adopt to restore my spirits, fagged with sleeplessness, to
+ their ordinary tone—for I had no intention of getting up a scene
+ with M. Pelet, reproaching him with perfidy, sending him a challenge, or
+ performing other gambadoes of the sort—I hit at last on the
+ expedient of walking out in the cool of the morning to a neighbouring
+ establishment of baths, and treating myself to a bracing plunge. The
+ remedy produced the desired effect. I came back at seven o’clock steadied
+ and invigorated, and was able to greet M. Pelet, when he entered to
+ breakfast, with an unchanged and tranquil countenance; even a cordial
+ offering of the hand and the flattering appellation of “mon fils,”
+ pronounced in that caressing tone with which Monsieur had, of late days
+ especially, been accustomed to address me, did not elicit any external
+ sign of the feeling which, though subdued, still glowed at my heart. Not
+ that I nursed vengeance—no; but the sense of insult and treachery
+ lived in me like a kindling, though as yet smothered coal. God knows I am
+ not by nature vindictive; I would not hurt a man because I can no longer
+ trust or like him; but neither my reason nor feelings are of the
+ vacillating order—they are not of that sand-like sort where
+ impressions, if soon made, are as soon effaced. Once convinced that my
+ friend’s disposition is incompatible with my own, once assured that he is
+ indelibly stained with certain defects obnoxious to my principles, and I
+ dissolve the connection. I did so with Edward. As to Pelet, the discovery
+ was yet new; should I act thus with him? It was the question I placed
+ before my mind as I stirred my cup of coffee with a half-pistolet (we
+ never had spoons), Pelet meantime being seated opposite, his pallid face
+ looking as knowing and more haggard than usual, his blue eye turned, now
+ sternly on his boys and ushers, and now graciously on me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Circumstances must guide me,” said I; and meeting Pelet’s false glance
+ and insinuating smile, I thanked heaven that I had last night opened my
+ window and read by the light of a full moon the true meaning of that
+ guileful countenance. I felt half his master, because the reality of his
+ nature was now known to me; smile and flatter as he would, I saw his soul
+ lurk behind his smile, and heard in every one of his smooth phrases a
+ voice interpreting their treacherous import.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But Zoraïde Reuter? Of course her defection had cut me to the quick? That
+ stint must have gone too deep for any consolations of philosophy to be
+ available in curing its smart? Not at all. The night fever over, I looked
+ about for balm to that wound also, and found some nearer home than at
+ Gilead. Reason was my physician; she began by proving that the prize I had
+ missed was of little value: she admitted that, physically, Zoraïde might
+ have suited me, but affirmed that our souls were not in harmony, and that
+ discord must have resulted from the union of her mind with mine. She then
+ insisted on the suppression of all repining, and commanded me rather to
+ rejoice that I had escaped a snare. Her medicament did me good. I felt its
+ strengthening effect when I met the directress the next day; its stringent
+ operation on the nerves suffered no trembling, no faltering; it enabled me
+ to face her with firmness, to pass her with ease. She had held out her
+ hand to me—that I did not choose to see. She had greeted me with a
+ charming smile—it fell on my heart like light on stone. I passed on
+ to the estrade, she followed me; her eye, fastened on my face, demanded of
+ every feature the meaning of my changed and careless manner. “I will give
+ her an answer,” thought I; and, meeting her gaze full, arresting, fixing
+ her glance, I shot into her eyes, from my own, a look, where there was no
+ respect, no love, no tenderness, no gallantry; where the strictest
+ analysis could detect nothing but scorn, hardihood, irony. I made her bear
+ it, and feel it; her steady countenance did not change, but her colour
+ rose, and she approached me as if fascinated. She stepped on to the
+ estrade, and stood close by my side; she had nothing to say. I would not
+ relieve her embarrassment, and negligently turned over the leaves of a
+ book.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I hope you feel quite recovered to-day,” at last she said, in a low tone.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And I, mademoiselle, hope that you took no cold last night in consequence
+ of your late walk in the garden.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Quick enough of comprehension, she understood me directly; her face became
+ a little blanched—a very little—but no muscle in her rather
+ marked features moved; and, calm and self-possessed, she retired from the
+ estrade, taking her seat quietly at a little distance, and occupying
+ herself with netting a purse. I proceeded to give my lesson; it was a
+ “Composition,” i.e., I dictated certain general questions, of which the
+ pupils were to compose the answers from memory, access to books being
+ forbidden. While Mdlle. Eulalie, Hortense, Caroline, &amp;c., were
+ pondering over the string of rather abstruse grammatical interrogatories I
+ had propounded, I was at liberty to employ the vacant half hour in further
+ observing the directress herself. The green silk purse was progressing
+ fast in her hands; her eyes were bent upon it; her attitude, as she sat
+ netting within two yards of me, was still yet guarded; in her whole person
+ were expressed at once, and with equal clearness, vigilance and repose—a
+ rare union! Looking at her, I was forced, as I had often been before, to
+ offer her good sense, her wondrous self-control, the tribute of
+ involuntary admiration. She had felt that I had withdrawn from her my
+ esteem; she had seen contempt and coldness in my eye, and to her, who
+ coveted the approbation of all around her, who thirsted after universal
+ good opinion, such discovery must have been an acute wound. I had
+ witnessed its effect in the momentary pallor of her cheek--cheek unused to
+ vary; yet how quickly, by dint of self-control, had she recovered her
+ composure! With what quiet dignity she now sat, almost at my side,
+ sustained by her sound and vigorous sense; no trembling in her somewhat
+ lengthened, though shrewd upper lip, no coward shame on her austere
+ forehead!
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There is metal there,” I said, as I gazed. “Would that there were fire
+ also, living ardour to make the steel glow—then I could love her.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Presently I discovered that she knew I was watching her, for she stirred
+ not, she lifted not her crafty eyelid; she had glanced down from her
+ netting to her small foot, peeping from the soft folds of her purple
+ merino gown; thence her eye reverted to her hand, ivory white, with a
+ bright garnet ring on the forefinger, and a light frill of lace round the
+ wrist; with a scarcely perceptible movement she turned her head, causing
+ her nut-brown curls to wave gracefully. In these slight signs I read that
+ the wish of her heart, the design of her brain, was to lure back the game
+ she had scared. A little incident gave her the opportunity of addressing
+ me again.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ While all was silence in the class—silence, but for the rustling of
+ copy-books and the travelling of pens over their pages—a leaf of the
+ large folding-door, opening from the hall, unclosed, admitting a pupil
+ who, after making a hasty obeisance, ensconced herself with some
+ appearance of trepidation, probably occasioned by her entering so late, in
+ a vacant seat at the desk nearest the door. Being seated, she proceeded,
+ still with an air of hurry and embarrassment, to open her cabas, to take
+ out her books; and, while I was waiting for her to look up, in order to
+ make out her identity—for, shortsighted as I was, I had not
+ recognized her at her entrance—Mdlle. Reuter, leaving her chair,
+ approached the estrade.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur Creemsvort,” said she, in a whisper: for when the schoolrooms
+ were silent, the directress always moved with velvet tread, and spoke in
+ the most subdued key, enforcing order and stillness fully as much by
+ example as precept: “Monsieur Creemsvort, that young person, who has just
+ entered, wishes to have the advantage of taking lessons with you in
+ English; she is not a pupil of the house; she is, indeed, in one sense, a
+ teacher, for she gives instruction in lace-mending, and in little
+ varieties of ornamental needle-work. She very properly proposes to qualify
+ herself for a higher department of education, and has asked permission to
+ attend your lessons, in order to perfect her knowledge of English, in
+ which language she has, I believe, already made some progress; of course
+ it is my wish to aid her in an effort so praiseworthy; you will permit her
+ then to benefit by your instruction—n’est ce pas, monsieur?” And
+ Mdlle. Reuter’s eyes were raised to mine with a look at once naive,
+ benign, and beseeching.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I replied, “Of course,” very laconically, almost abruptly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Another word,” she said, with softness: “Mdlle. Henri has not received a
+ regular education; perhaps her natural talents are not of the highest
+ order: but I can assure you of the excellence of her intentions, and even
+ of the amiability of her disposition. Monsieur will then, I am sure, have
+ the goodness to be considerate with her at first, and not expose her
+ backwardness, her inevitable deficiencies, before the young ladies, who,
+ in a sense, are her pupils. Will Monsieur Creemsvort favour me by
+ attending to this hint?” I nodded. She continued with subdued earnestness—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Pardon me, monsieur, if I venture to add that what I have just said is of
+ importance to the poor girl; she already experiences great difficulty in
+ impressing these giddy young things with a due degree of deference for her
+ authority, and should that difficulty be increased by new discoveries of
+ her incapacity, she might find her position in my establishment too
+ painful to be retained; a circumstance I should much regret for her sake,
+ as she can ill afford to lose the profits of her occupation here.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Reuter possessed marvellous tact; but tact the most exclusive,
+ unsupported by sincerity, will sometimes fail of its effect; thus, on this
+ occasion, the longer she preached about the necessity of being indulgent
+ to the governess pupil, the more impatient I felt as I listened. I
+ discerned so clearly that while her professed motive was a wish to aid the
+ dull, though well-meaning Mdlle. Henri, her real one was no other than a
+ design to impress me with an idea of her own exalted goodness and tender
+ considerateness; so having again hastily nodded assent to her remarks, I
+ obviated their renewal by suddenly demanding the compositions, in a sharp
+ accent, and stepping from the estrade, I proceeded to collect them. As I
+ passed the governess-pupil, I said to her—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have come in too late to receive a lesson to-day; try to be more
+ punctual next time.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was behind her, and could not read in her face the effect of my not very
+ civil speech. Probably I should not have troubled myself to do so, had I
+ been full in front; but I observed that she immediately began to slip her
+ books into her cabas again; and, presently, after I had returned to the
+ estrade, while I was arranging the mass of compositions, I heard the
+ folding-door again open and close; and, on looking up, I perceived her
+ place vacant. I thought to myself, “She will consider her first attempt at
+ taking a lesson in English something of a failure;” and I wondered whether
+ she had departed in the sulks, or whether stupidity had induced her to
+ take my words too literally, or, finally, whether my irritable tone had
+ wounded her feelings. The last notion I dismissed almost as soon as I had
+ conceived it, for not having seen any appearance of sensitiveness in any
+ human face since my arrival in Belgium, I had begun to regard it almost as
+ a fabulous quality. Whether her physiognomy announced it I could not tell,
+ for her speedy exit had allowed me no time to ascertain the circumstance.
+ I had, indeed, on two or three previous occasions, caught a passing view
+ of her (as I believe has been mentioned before); but I had never stopped
+ to scrutinize either her face or person, and had but the most vague idea
+ of her general appearance. Just as I had finished rolling up the
+ compositions, the four o’clock bell rang; with my accustomed alertness in
+ obeying that signal, I grasped my hat and evacuated the premises.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0014">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ IF I was punctual in quitting Mdlle. Reuter’s domicile, I was at least
+ equally punctual in arriving there; I came the next day at five minutes
+ before two, and on reaching the schoolroom door, before I opened it, I
+ heard a rapid, gabbling sound, which warned me that the “prière du midi”
+ was not yet concluded. I waited the termination thereof; it would have
+ been impious to intrude my heretical presence during its progress. How the
+ repeater of the prayer did cackle and splutter! I never before or since
+ heard language enounced with such steam-engine haste. “Notre Père qui êtes
+ au ciel” went off like a shot; then followed an address to Marie “vièrge
+ céleste, reine des anges, maison d’or, tour d’ivoire!” and then an
+ invocation to the saint of the day; and then down they all sat, and the
+ solemn (?) rite was over; and I entered, flinging the door wide and
+ striding in fast, as it was my wont to do now; for I had found that in
+ entering with aplomb, and mounting the estrade with emphasis, consisted
+ the grand secret of ensuring immediate silence. The folding-doors between
+ the two classes, opened for the prayer, were instantly closed; a
+ maîtresse, work-box in hand, took her seat at her appropriate desk; the
+ pupils sat still with their pens and books before them; my three beauties
+ in the van, now well humbled by a demeanour of consistent coolness, sat
+ erect with their hands folded quietly on their knees; they had given up
+ giggling and whispering to each other, and no longer ventured to utter
+ pert speeches in my presence; they now only talked to me occasionally with
+ their eyes, by means of which organs they could still, however, say very
+ audacious and coquettish things. Had affection, goodness, modesty, real
+ talent, ever employed those bright orbs as interpreters, I do not think I
+ could have refrained from giving a kind and encouraging, perhaps an ardent
+ reply now and then; but as it was, I found pleasure in answering the
+ glance of vanity with the gaze of stoicism. Youthful, fair, brilliant, as
+ were many of my pupils, I can truly say that in me they never saw any
+ other bearing than such as an austere, though just guardian, might have
+ observed towards them. If any doubt the accuracy of this assertion, as
+ inferring more conscientious self-denial or Scipio-like self-control than
+ they feel disposed to give me credit for, let them take into consideration
+ the following circumstances, which, while detracting from my merit,
+ justify my veracity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Know, O incredulous reader! that a master stands in a somewhat different
+ relation towards a pretty, light-headed, probably ignorant girl, to that
+ occupied by a partner at a ball, or a gallant on the promenade. A
+ professor does not meet his pupil to see her dressed in satin and muslin,
+ with hair perfumed and curled, neck scarcely shaded by aerial lace, round
+ white arms circled with bracelets, feet dressed for the gliding dance. It
+ is not his business to whirl her through the waltz, to feed her with
+ compliments, to heighten her beauty by the flush of gratified vanity.
+ Neither does he encounter her on the smooth-rolled, tree shaded Boulevard,
+ in the green and sunny park, whither she repairs clad in her becoming
+ walking dress, her scarf thrown with grace over her shoulders, her little
+ bonnet scarcely screening her curls, the red rose under its brim adding a
+ new tint to the softer rose on her cheek; her face and eyes, too,
+ illumined with smiles, perhaps as transient as the sunshine of the
+ gala-day, but also quite as brilliant; it is not his office to walk by her
+ side, to listen to her lively chat, to carry her parasol, scarcely larger
+ than a broad green leaf, to lead in a ribbon her Blenheim spaniel or
+ Italian greyhound. No: he finds her in the schoolroom, plainly dressed,
+ with books before her. Owing to her education or her nature books are to
+ her a nuisance, and she opens them with aversion, yet her teacher must
+ instil into her mind the contents of these books; that mind resists the
+ admission of grave information, it recoils, it grows restive, sullen
+ tempers are shown, disfiguring frowns spoil the symmetry of the face,
+ sometimes coarse gestures banish grace from the deportment, while muttered
+ expressions, redolent of native and ineradicable vulgarity, desecrate the
+ sweetness of the voice. Where the temperament is serene though the
+ intellect be sluggish, an unconquerable dullness opposes every effort to
+ instruct. Where there is cunning but not energy, dissimulation, falsehood,
+ a thousand schemes and tricks are put in play to evade the necessity of
+ application; in short, to the tutor, female youth, female charms are like
+ tapestry hangings, of which the wrong side is continually turned towards
+ him; and even when he sees the smooth, neat external surface he so well
+ knows what knots, long stitches, and jagged ends are behind that he has
+ scarce a temptation to admire too fondly the seemly forms and bright
+ colours exposed to general view.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Our likings are regulated by our circumstances. The artist prefers a hilly
+ country because it is picturesque; the engineer a flat one because it is
+ convenient; the man of pleasure likes what he calls “a fine woman”—she
+ suits him; the fashionable young gentleman admires the fashionable young
+ lady—she is of his kind; the toil-worn, fagged, probably irritable
+ tutor, blind almost to beauty, insensible to airs and graces, glories
+ chiefly in certain mental qualities: application, love of knowledge,
+ natural capacity, docility, truthfulness, gratefulness, are the charms
+ that attract his notice and win his regard. These he seeks, but seldom
+ meets; these, if by chance he finds, he would fain retain for ever, and
+ when separation deprives him of them he feels as if some ruthless hand had
+ snatched from him his only ewe-lamb. Such being the case, and the case it
+ is, my readers will agree with me that there was nothing either very
+ meritorious or very marvellous in the integrity and moderation of my
+ conduct at Mdlle. Reuter’s pensionnat de demoiselles.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ My first business this afternoon consisted in reading the list of places
+ for the month, determined by the relative correctness of the compositions
+ given the preceding day. The list was headed, as usual, by the name of
+ Sylvie, that plain, quiet little girl I have described before as being at
+ once the best and ugliest pupil in the establishment; the second place had
+ fallen to the lot of a certain Léonie Ledru, a diminutive, sharp-featured,
+ and parchment-skinned creature of quick wits, frail conscience, and
+ indurated feelings; a lawyer-like thing, of whom I used to say that, had
+ she been a boy, she would have made a model of an unprincipled, clever
+ attorney. Then came Eulalie, the proud beauty, the Juno of the school,
+ whom six long years of drilling in the simple grammar of the English
+ language had compelled, despite the stiff phlegm of her intellect, to
+ acquire a mechanical acquaintance with most of its rules. No smile, no
+ trace of pleasure or satisfaction appeared in Sylvie’s nun-like and
+ passive face as she heard her name read first. I always felt saddened by
+ the sight of that poor girl’s absolute quiescence on all occasions, and it
+ was my custom to look at her, to address her, as seldom as possible; her
+ extreme docility, her assiduous perseverance, would have recommended her
+ warmly to my good opinion; her modesty, her intelligence, would have
+ induced me to feel most kindly—most affectionately towards her,
+ notwithstanding the almost ghastly plainness of her features, the
+ disproportion of her form, the corpse-like lack of animation in her
+ countenance, had I not been aware that every friendly word, every kindly
+ action, would be reported by her to her confessor, and by him
+ misinterpreted and poisoned. Once I laid my hand on her head, in token of
+ approbation; I thought Sylvie was going to smile, her dim eye almost
+ kindled; but, presently, she shrank from me; I was a man and a heretic;
+ she, poor child! a destined nun and devoted Catholic: thus a four-fold
+ wall of separation divided her mind from mine. A pert smirk, and a hard
+ glance of triumph, was Léonie’s method of testifying her gratification;
+ Eulalie looked sullen and envious—she had hoped to be first.
+ Hortense and Caroline exchanged a reckless grimace on hearing their names
+ read out somewhere near the bottom of the list; the brand of mental
+ inferiority was considered by them as no disgrace, their hopes for the
+ future being based solely on their personal attractions.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This affair arranged, the regular lesson followed. During a brief
+ interval, employed by the pupils in ruling their books, my eye, ranging
+ carelessly over the benches, observed, for the first time, that the
+ farthest seat in the farthest row—a seat usually vacant—was
+ again filled by the new scholar, the Mdlle. Henri so ostentatiously
+ recommended to me by the directress. To-day I had on my spectacles; her
+ appearance, therefore, was clear to me at the first glance; I had not to
+ puzzle over it. She looked young; yet, had I been required to name her
+ exact age, I should have been somewhat nonplussed; the slightness of her
+ figure might have suited seventeen; a certain anxious and pre-occupied
+ expression of face seemed the indication of riper years. She was dressed,
+ like all the rest, in a dark stuff gown and a white collar; her features
+ were dissimilar to any there, not so rounded, more defined, yet scarcely
+ regular. The shape of her head too was different, the superior part more
+ developed, the base considerably less. I felt assured, at first sight,
+ that she was not a Belgian; her complexion, her countenance, her
+ lineaments, her figure, were all distinct from theirs, and, evidently, the
+ type of another race—of a race less gifted with fullness of flesh
+ and plenitude of blood; less jocund, material, unthinking. When I first
+ cast my eyes on her, she sat looking fixedly down, her chin resting on her
+ hand, and she did not change her attitude till I commenced the lesson.
+ None of the Belgian girls would have retained one position, and that a
+ reflective one, for the same length of time. Yet, having intimated that
+ her appearance was peculiar, as being unlike that of her Flemish
+ companions, I have little more to say respecting it; I can pronounce no
+ encomiums on her beauty, for she was not beautiful; nor offer condolence
+ on her plainness, for neither was she plain; a careworn character of
+ forehead, and a corresponding moulding of the mouth, struck me with a
+ sentiment resembling surprise, but these traits would probably have passed
+ unnoticed by any less crotchety observer.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Now, reader, though I have spent more than a page in describing Mdlle.
+ Henri, I know well enough that I have left on your mind’s eye no distinct
+ picture of her; I have not painted her complexion, nor her eyes, nor her
+ hair, nor even drawn the outline of her shape. You cannot tell whether her
+ nose was aquiline or retroussé, whether her chin was long or short, her
+ face square or oval; nor could I the first day, and it is not my intention
+ to communicate to you at once a knowledge I myself gained by little and
+ little.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I gave a short exercise which they all wrote down. I saw the new pupil
+ was puzzled at first with the novelty of the form and language; once or
+ twice she looked at me with a sort of painful solicitude, as not
+ comprehending at all what I meant; then she was not ready when the others
+ were, she could not write her phrases so fast as they did; I would not
+ help her, I went on relentless. She looked at me; her eye said most
+ plainly, “I cannot follow you.” I disregarded the appeal, and, carelessly
+ leaning back in my chair, glancing from time to time with a
+ <i lang="fr">nonchalant</i> air
+ out of the window, I dictated a little faster. On looking towards her
+ again, I perceived her face clouded with embarrassment, but she was still
+ writing on most diligently; I paused a few seconds; she employed the
+ interval in hurriedly re-perusing what she had written, and shame and
+ discomfiture were apparent in her countenance; she evidently found she had
+ made great nonsense of it. In ten minutes more the dictation was complete,
+ and, having allowed a brief space in which to correct it, I took their
+ books; it was with a reluctant hand Mdlle. Henri gave up hers, but, having
+ once yielded it to my possession, she composed her anxious face, as if,
+ for the present she had resolved to dismiss regret, and had made up her
+ mind to be thought unprecedentedly stupid. Glancing over her exercise, I
+ found that several lines had been omitted, but what was written contained
+ very few faults; I instantly inscribed “Bon” at the bottom of the page,
+ and returned it to her; she smiled, at first incredulously, then as if
+ reassured, but did not lift her eyes; she could look at me, it seemed,
+ when perplexed and bewildered, but not when gratified; I thought that
+ scarcely fair.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0015">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ SOME time elapsed before I again gave a lesson in the first class; the
+ holiday of Whitsuntide occupied three days, and on the fourth it was the
+ turn of the second division to receive my instructions. As I made the
+ transit of the <i lang="fr">carré</i>, I observed, as usual, the band of
+ sewers surrounding
+ Mdlle. Henri; there were only about a dozen of them, but they made as much
+ noise as might have sufficed for fifty; they seemed very little under her
+ control; three or four at once assailed her with importunate requirements;
+ she looked harassed, she demanded silence, but in vain. She saw me, and I
+ read in her eye pain that a stranger should witness the insubordination of
+ her pupils; she seemed to entreat order—her prayers were useless;
+ then I remarked that she compressed her lips and contracted her brow; and
+ her countenance, if I read it correctly, said—“I have done my best;
+ I seem to merit blame notwithstanding; blame me then who will.” I passed
+ on; as I closed the school-room door, I heard her say, suddenly and
+ sharply, addressing one of the eldest and most turbulent of the lot—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Amélie Mullenberg, ask me no question, and request of me no assistance,
+ for a week to come; during that space of time I will neither speak to you
+ nor help you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The words were uttered with emphasis—nay, with vehemence—and a
+ comparative silence followed; whether the calm was permanent, I know not;
+ two doors now closed between me and the <i lang="fr">carré</i>.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Next day was appropriated to the first class; on my arrival, I found the
+ directress seated, as usual, in a chair between the two estrades, and
+ before her was standing Mdlle. Henri, in an attitude (as it seemed to me)
+ of somewhat reluctant attention. The directress was knitting and talking
+ at the same time. Amidst the hum of a large school-room, it was easy so to
+ speak in the ear of one person, as to be heard by that person alone, and
+ it was thus Mdlle. Reuter parleyed with her teacher. The face of the
+ latter was a little flushed, not a little troubled; there was vexation in
+ it, whence resulting I know not, for the directress looked very placid
+ indeed; she could not be scolding in such gentle whispers, and with so
+ equable a mien; no, it was presently proved that her discourse had been of
+ the most friendly tendency, for I heard the closing words—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est assez, ma bonne amie; à present je ne veux pas vous retenir
+ davantage.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Without reply, Mdlle. Henri turned away; dissatisfaction was plainly
+ evinced in her face, and a smile, slight and brief, but bitter,
+ distrustful, and, I thought, scornful, curled her lip as she took her
+ place in the class; it was a secret, involuntary smile, which lasted but a
+ second; an air of depression succeeded, chased away presently by one of
+ attention and interest, when I gave the word for all the pupils to take
+ their reading-books. In general I hated the reading-lesson, it was such a
+ torture to the ear to listen to their uncouth mouthing of my native
+ tongue, and no effort of example or precept on my part ever seemed to
+ effect the slightest improvement in their accent. To-day, each in her
+ appropriate key, lisped, stuttered, mumbled, and jabbered as usual; about
+ fifteen had racked me in turn, and my auricular nerve was expecting with
+ resignation the discords of the sixteenth, when a full, though low voice,
+ read out, in clear correct English.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “On his way to Perth, the king was met by a Highland woman, calling
+ herself a prophetess; she stood at the side of the ferry by which he was
+ about to travel to the north, and cried with a loud voice, ‘My lord the
+ king, if you pass this water you will never return again alive!’”
+ (<i lang="la">Vide</i> the history of Scotland.)
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I looked up in amazement; the voice was a voice of Albion; the accent was
+ pure and silvery; it only wanted firmness, and assurance, to be the
+ counterpart of what any well-educated lady in Essex or Middlesex might
+ have enounced, yet the speaker or reader was no other than Mdlle. Henri,
+ in whose grave, joyless face I saw no mark of consciousness that she had
+ performed any extraordinary feat. No one else evinced surprise either.
+ Mdlle. Reuter knitted away assiduously; I was aware, however, that at the
+ conclusion of the paragraph, she had lifted her eyelid and honoured me
+ with a glance sideways; she did not know the full excellency of the
+ teacher’s style of reading, but she perceived that her accent was not that
+ of the others, and wanted to discover what I thought; I masked my visage
+ with indifference, and ordered the next girl to proceed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When the lesson was over, I took advantage of the confusion caused by
+ breaking up, to approach Mdlle. Henri; she was standing near the window
+ and retired as I advanced; she thought I wanted to look out, and did not
+ imagine that I could have anything to say to her. I took her
+ exercise-book out of her hand; as I turned over the leaves I addressed
+ her:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have had lessons in English before?” I asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, sir.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No! you read it well; you have been in England?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, no!” with some animation.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have been in English families?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Still the answer was “No.” Here my eye, resting on the flyleaf of the
+ book, saw written, “Frances Evan Henri.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your name?” I asked
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, sir.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ My interrogations were cut short; I heard a little rustling behind me, and
+ close at my back was the directress, professing to be examining the
+ interior of a desk.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle,” said she, looking up and addressing the teacher, “Will you
+ have the goodness to go and stand in the corridor, while the young ladies
+ are putting on their things, and try to keep some order?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Henri obeyed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What splendid weather!” observed the directress cheerfully, glancing at
+ the same time from the window. I assented and was withdrawing. “What of
+ your new pupil, monsieur?” continued she, following my retreating steps.
+ “Is she likely to make progress in English?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indeed I can hardly judge. She possesses a pretty good accent; of her
+ real knowledge of the language I have as yet had no opportunity of forming
+ an opinion.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And her natural capacity, monsieur? I have had my fears about that: can
+ you relieve me by an assurance at least of its average power?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I see no reason to doubt its average power, mademoiselle, but really I
+ scarcely know her, and have not had time to study the calibre of her
+ capacity. I wish you a very good afternoon.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She still pursued me. “You will observe, monsieur, and tell me what you
+ think; I could so much better rely on your opinion than on my own; women
+ cannot judge of these things as men can, and, excuse my pertinacity,
+ monsieur, but it is natural I should feel interested about this poor
+ little girl (pauvre petite); she has scarcely any relations, her own
+ efforts are all she has to look to, her acquirements must be her sole
+ fortune; her present position has once been mine, or nearly so; it is then
+ but natural I should sympathize with her; and sometimes when I see the
+ difficulty she has in managing pupils, I feel quite chagrined. I doubt not
+ she does her best, her intentions are excellent; but, monsieur, she wants
+ tact and firmness. I have talked to her on the subject, but I am not
+ fluent, and probably did not express myself with clearness; she never
+ appears to comprehend me. Now, would you occasionally, when you see an
+ opportunity, slip in a word of advice to her on the subject; men have so
+ much more influence than women have—they argue so much more
+ logically than we do; and you, monsieur, in particular, have so paramount
+ a power of making yourself obeyed; a word of advice from you could not but
+ do her good; even if she were sullen and headstrong (which I hope she is
+ not), she would scarcely refuse to listen to you; for my own part, I can
+ truly say that I never attend one of your lessons without deriving benefit
+ from witnessing your management of the pupils. The other masters are a
+ constant source of anxiety to me; they cannot impress the young ladies
+ with sentiments of respect, nor restrain the levity natural to youth: in
+ you, monsieur, I feel the most absolute confidence; try then to put this
+ poor child into the way of controlling our giddy, high-spirited
+ Brabantoises. But, monsieur, I would add one word more; don’t alarm her
+ <i lang="fr">amour propre</i>; beware of inflicting a wound there. I
+ reluctantly admit that in that particular she is blameably—some would say
+ ridiculously—susceptible. I fear I have touched this sore point
+ inadvertently, and she cannot get over it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ During the greater part of this harangue my hand was on the lock of the
+ outer door; I now turned it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Au revoir, mademoiselle,” said I, and I escaped. I saw the directress’s
+ stock of words was yet far from exhausted. She looked after me, she would
+ fain have detained me longer. Her manner towards me had been altered ever
+ since I had begun to treat her with hardness and indifference: she almost
+ cringed to me on every occasion; she consulted my countenance incessantly,
+ and beset me with innumerable little officious attentions. Servility
+ creates despotism. This slavish homage, instead of softening my heart,
+ only pampered whatever was stern and exacting in its mood. The very
+ circumstance of her hovering round me like a fascinated bird, seemed to
+ transform me into a rigid pillar of stone; her flatteries irritated my
+ scorn, her blandishments confirmed my reserve. At times I wondered what
+ she meant by giving herself such trouble to win me, when the more
+ profitable Pelet was already in her nets, and when, too, she was aware
+ that I possessed her secret, for I had not scrupled to tell her as much:
+ but the fact is that as it was her nature to doubt the reality and
+ under-value the worth of modesty, affection, disinterestedness—to
+ regard these qualities as foibles of character—so it was equally her
+ tendency to consider pride, hardness, selfishness, as proofs of strength.
+ She would trample on the neck of humility, she would kneel at the feet of
+ disdain; she would meet tenderness with secret contempt, indifference she
+ would woo with ceaseless assiduities. Benevolence, devotedness,
+ enthusiasm, were her antipathies; for dissimulation and self-interest she
+ had a preference—they were real wisdom in her eyes; moral and
+ physical degradation, mental and bodily inferiority, she regarded with
+ indulgence; they were foils capable of being turned to good account as
+ set-offs for her own endowments. To violence, injustice, tyranny, she
+ succumbed—they were her natural masters; she had no propensity to
+ hate, no impulse to resist them; the indignation their behests awake in
+ some hearts was unknown in hers. From all this it resulted that the false
+ and selfish called her wise, the vulgar and debased termed her charitable,
+ the insolent and unjust dubbed her amiable, the conscientious and
+ benevolent generally at first accepted as valid her claim to be considered
+ one of themselves; but ere long the plating of pretension wore off, the
+ real material appeared below, and they laid her aside as a deception.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0016">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ In the course of another fortnight I had seen sufficient of Frances Evans
+ Henri, to enable me to form a more definite opinion of her character. I
+ found her possessed in a somewhat remarkable degree of at least two good
+ points, viz., perseverance and a sense of duty; I found she was really
+ capable of applying to study, of contending with difficulties. At first I
+ offered her the same help which I had always found it necessary to confer
+ on the others; I began with unloosing for her each knotty point, but I
+ soon discovered that such help was regarded by my new pupil as degrading;
+ she recoiled from it with a certain proud impatience. Hereupon I appointed
+ her long lessons, and left her to solve alone any perplexities they might
+ present. She set to the task with serious ardour, and having quickly
+ accomplished one labour, eagerly demanded more. So much for her
+ perseverance; as to her sense of duty, it evinced itself thus: she liked
+ to learn, but hated to teach; her progress as a pupil depended upon
+ herself, and I saw that on herself she could calculate with certainty; her
+ success as a teacher rested partly, perhaps chiefly, upon the will of
+ others; it cost her a most painful effort to enter into conflict with this
+ foreign will, to endeavour to bend it into subjection to her own; for in
+ what regarded people in general the action of her will was impeded by many
+ scruples; it was as unembarrassed as strong where her own affairs were
+ concerned, and to it she could at any time subject her inclination, if
+ that inclination went counter to her convictions of right; yet when called
+ upon to wrestle with the propensities, the habits, the faults of others,
+ of children especially, who are deaf to reason, and, for the most part,
+ insensate to persuasion, her will sometimes almost refused to act; then
+ came in the sense of duty, and forced the reluctant will into operation. A
+ wasteful expense of energy and labour was frequently the consequence;
+ Frances toiled for and with her pupils like a drudge, but it was long ere
+ her conscientious exertions were rewarded by anything like docility on
+ their part, because they saw that they had power over her, inasmuch as by
+ resisting her painful attempts to convince, persuade, control—by
+ forcing her to the employment of coercive measures—they could
+ inflict upon her exquisite suffering. Human beings—human children
+ especially—seldom deny themselves the pleasure of exercising a power
+ which they are conscious of possessing, even though that power consist
+ only in a capacity to make others wretched; a pupil whose sensations are
+ duller than those of his instructor, while his nerves are tougher and his
+ bodily strength perhaps greater, has an immense advantage over that
+ instructor, and he will generally use it relentlessly, because the very
+ young, very healthy, very thoughtless, know neither how to sympathize nor
+ how to spare. Frances, I fear, suffered much; a continual weight seemed to
+ oppress her spirits; I have said she did not live in the house, and
+ whether in her own abode, wherever that might be, she wore the same
+ preoccupied, unsmiling, sorrowfully resolved air that always shaded her
+ features under the roof of Mdlle. Reuter, I could not tell.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ One day I gave, as a devoir, the trite little anecdote of Alfred tending
+ cakes in the herdsman’s hut, to be related with amplifications. A singular
+ affair most of the pupils made of it; brevity was what they had chiefly
+ studied; the majority of the narratives were perfectly unintelligible;
+ those of Sylvie and Léonie Ledru alone pretended to anything like sense
+ and connection. Eulalie, indeed, had hit, upon a clever expedient for at
+ once ensuring accuracy and saving trouble; she had obtained access somehow
+ to an abridged history of England, and had copied the anecdote out fair. I
+ wrote on the margin of her production “Stupid and deceitful,” and then
+ tore it down the middle.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Last in the pile of single-leaved devoirs, I found one of several sheets,
+ neatly written out and stitched together; I knew the hand, and scarcely
+ needed the evidence of the signature “Frances Evans Henri” to confirm my
+ conjecture as to the writer’s identity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Night was my usual time for correcting devoirs, and my own room the usual
+ scene of such task—task most onerous hitherto; and it seemed strange
+ to me to feel rising within me an incipient sense of interest, as I
+ snuffed the candle and addressed myself to the perusal of the poor
+ teacher’s manuscript.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Now,” thought I, “I shall see a glimpse of what she really is; I shall
+ get an idea of the nature and extent of her powers; not that she can be
+ expected to express herself well in a foreign tongue, but still, if she
+ has any mind, here will be a reflection of it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The narrative commenced by a description of a Saxon peasant’s hut,
+ situated within the confines of a great, leafless, winter forest; it
+ represented an evening in December; flakes of snow were falling, and the
+ herdsman foretold a heavy storm; he summoned his wife to aid him in
+ collecting their flock, roaming far away on the pastoral banks of the
+ Thone; he warns her that it will be late ere they return. The good woman
+ is reluctant to quit her occupation of baking cakes for the evening meal;
+ but acknowledging the primary importance of securing the herds and flocks,
+ she puts on her sheep-skin mantle; and, addressing a stranger who rests
+ half reclined on a bed of rushes near the hearth, bids him mind the bread
+ till her return.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Take care, young man,” she continues, “that you fasten the door well
+ after us; and, above all, open to none in our absence; whatever sound you
+ hear, stir not, and look not out. The night will soon fall; this forest is
+ most wild and lonely; strange noises are often heard therein after sunset;
+ wolves haunt these glades, and Danish warriors infest the country; worse
+ things are talked of; you might chance to hear, as it were, a child cry,
+ and on opening the door to afford it succour, a great black bull, or a
+ shadowy goblin dog, might rush over the threshold; or, more awful still,
+ if something flapped, as with wings, against the lattice, and then a raven
+ or a white dove flew in and settled on the hearth, such a visitor would be
+ a sure sign of misfortune to the house; therefore, heed my advice, and
+ lift the latchet for nothing.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Her husband calls her away, both depart. The stranger, left alone, listens
+ awhile to the muffled snow-wind, the remote, swollen sound of the river,
+ and then he speaks.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is Christmas Eve,” says he, “I mark the date; here I sit alone on a
+ rude couch of rushes, sheltered by the thatch of a herdsman’s hut; I,
+ whose inheritance was a kingdom, owe my night’s harbourage to a poor serf;
+ my throne is usurped, my crown presses the brow of an invader; I have no
+ friends; my troops wander broken in the hills of Wales; reckless robbers
+ spoil my country; my subjects lie prostrate, their breasts crushed by the
+ heel of the brutal Dane. Fate! thou hast done thy worst, and now thou
+ standest before me resting thy hand on thy blunted blade. Ay; I see thine
+ eye confront mine and demand why I still live, why I still hope. Pagan
+ demon, I credit not thine omnipotence, and so cannot succumb to thy power.
+ My God, whose Son, as on this night, took on Him the form of man, and for
+ man vouchsafed to suffer and bleed, controls thy hand, and without His
+ behest thou canst not strike a stroke. My God is sinless, eternal,
+ all-wise—in Him is my trust; and though stripped and crushed by
+ thee—though naked, desolate, void of resource—I do not despair, I cannot
+ despair: were the lance of Guthrum now wet with my blood, I should not
+ despair. I watch, I toil, I hope, I pray; Jehovah, in his own time, will
+ aid.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I need not continue the quotation; the whole devoir was in the same
+ strain. There were errors of orthography, there were foreign idioms, there
+ were some faults of construction, there were verbs irregular transformed
+ into verbs regular; it was mostly made up, as the above example shows, of
+ short and somewhat rude sentences, and the style stood in great need of
+ polish and sustained dignity; yet such as it was, I had hitherto seen
+ nothing like it in the course of my professorial experience. The girl’s
+ mind had conceived a picture of the hut, of the two peasants, of the
+ crownless king; she had imagined the wintry forest, she had recalled the
+ old Saxon ghost-legends, she had appreciated Alfred’s courage under
+ calamity, she had remembered his Christian education, and had shown him,
+ with the rooted confidence of those primitive days, relying on the
+ scriptural Jehovah for aid against the mythological Destiny. This she had
+ done without a hint from me: I had given the subject, but not said a word
+ about the manner of treating it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I will find, or make, an opportunity of speaking to her,” I said to
+ myself as I rolled the devoir up; “I will learn what she has of English in
+ her besides the name of Frances Evans; she is no novice in the language,
+ that is evident, yet she told me she had neither been in England, nor
+ taken lessons in English, nor lived in English families.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In the course of my next lesson, I made a report of the other devoirs,
+ dealing out praise and blame in very small retail parcels, according to my
+ custom, for there was no use in blaming severely, and high encomiums were
+ rarely merited. I said nothing of Mdlle. Henri’s exercise, and, spectacles
+ on nose, I endeavoured to decipher in her countenance her sentiments at
+ the omission. I wanted to find out whether in her existed a consciousness
+ of her own talents. “If she thinks she did a clever thing in composing
+ that devoir, she will now look mortified,” thought I. Grave as usual,
+ almost sombre, was her face; as usual, her eyes were fastened on the
+ cahier open before her; there was something, I thought, of expectation in
+ her attitude, as I concluded a brief review of the last devoir, and when,
+ casting it from me and rubbing my hands, I bade them take their grammars,
+ some slight change did pass over her air and mien, as though she now
+ relinquished a faint prospect of pleasant excitement; she had been waiting
+ for something to be discussed in which she had a degree of interest; the
+ discussion was not to come on, so expectation sank back, shrunk and sad,
+ but attention, promptly filling up the void, repaired in a moment the
+ transient collapse of feature; still, I felt, rather than saw, during the
+ whole course of the lesson, that a hope had been wrenched from her, and
+ that if she did not show distress, it was because she would not.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ At four o’clock, when the bell rang and the room was in immediate tumult,
+ instead of taking my hat and starting from the estrade, I sat still a
+ moment. I looked at Frances, she was putting her books into her cabas;
+ having fastened the button, she raised her head; encountering my eye, she
+ made a quiet, respectful obeisance, as bidding good afternoon, and was
+ turning to depart:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come here,” said I, lifting my finger at the same time. She hesitated;
+ she could not hear the words amidst the uproar now pervading both
+ school-rooms; I repeated the sign; she approached; again she paused within
+ half a yard of the estrade, and looked shy, and still doubtful whether she
+ had mistaken my meaning.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Step up,” I said, speaking with decision. It is the only way of dealing
+ with diffident, easily embarrassed characters, and with some slight manual
+ aid I presently got her placed just where I wanted her to be, that is,
+ between my desk and the window, where she was screened from the rush of
+ the second division, and where no one could sneak behind her to listen.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Take a seat,” I said, placing a tabouret; and I made her sit down. I knew
+ what I was doing would be considered a very strange thing, and, what was
+ more, I did not care. Frances knew it also, and, I fear, by an appearance
+ of agitation and trembling, that she cared much. I drew from my pocket the
+ rolled-up devoir.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “This is yours, I suppose?” said I, addressing her in English, for I now
+ felt sure she could speak English.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes,” she answered distinctly; and as I unrolled it and laid it out flat
+ on the desk before her with my hand upon it, and a pencil in that hand, I
+ saw her moved, and, as it were, kindled; her depression beamed as a cloud
+ might behind which the sun is burning.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “This devoir has numerous faults,” said I. “It will take you some years of
+ careful study before you are in a condition to write English with absolute
+ correctness. Attend: I will point out some principal defects.” And I went
+ through it carefully, noting every error, and demonstrating why they were
+ errors, and how the words or phrases ought to have been written. In the
+ course of this sobering process she became calm. I now went on:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “As to the substance of your devoir, Mdlle. Henri, it has surprised me; I
+ perused it with pleasure, because I saw in it some proofs of taste and
+ fancy. Taste and fancy are not the highest gifts of the human mind, but
+ such as they are you possess them—not probably in a paramount
+ degree, but in a degree beyond what the majority can boast. You may then
+ take courage; cultivate the faculties that God and nature have bestowed on
+ you, and do not fear in any crisis of suffering, under any pressure of
+ injustice, to derive free and full consolation from the consciousness of
+ their strength and rarity.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Strength and rarity!” I repeated to myself; “ay, the words are probably
+ true,” for on looking up, I saw the sun had dissevered its screening
+ cloud, her countenance was transfigured, a smile shone in her eyes—a
+ smile almost triumphant; it seemed to say—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am glad you have been forced to discover so much of my nature; you need
+ not so carefully moderate your language. Do you think I am myself a
+ stranger to myself? What you tell me in terms so qualified, I have known
+ fully from a child.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She did say this as plainly as a frank and flashing glance could, but in a
+ moment the glow of her complexion, the radiance of her aspect, had
+ subsided; if strongly conscious of her talents, she was equally conscious
+ of her harassing defects, and the remembrance of these obliterated for a
+ single second, now reviving with sudden force, at once subdued the too
+ vivid characters in which her sense of her powers had been expressed. So
+ quick was the revulsion of feeling, I had not time to check her triumph by
+ reproof; ere I could contract my brows to a frown she had become serious
+ and almost mournful-looking.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Thank you, sir,” said she, rising. There was gratitude both in her voice
+ and in the look with which she accompanied it. It was time, indeed, for
+ our conference to terminate; for, when I glanced around, behold all the
+ boarders (the day-scholars had departed) were congregated within a yard or
+ two of my desk, and stood staring with eyes and mouths wide open; the
+ three maîtresses formed a whispering knot in one corner, and, close at my
+ elbow, was the directress, sitting on a low chair, calmly clipping the
+ tassels of her finished purse.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0017">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ AFTER all I had profited but imperfectly by the opportunity I had so
+ boldly achieved of speaking to Mdlle. Henri; it was my intention to ask
+ her how she came to be possessed of two English baptismal names, Frances
+ and Evans, in addition to her French surname, also whence she derived her
+ good accent. I had forgotten both points, or, rather, our colloquy had
+ been so brief that I had not had time to bring them forward; moreover, I
+ had not half tested her powers of speaking English; all I had drawn from
+ her in that language were the words “Yes,” and “Thank you, sir.” “No
+ matter,” I reflected. “What has been left incomplete now, shall be
+ finished another day.” Nor did I fail to keep the promise thus made to
+ myself. It was difficult to get even a few words of particular
+ conversation with one pupil among so many; but, according to the old
+ proverb, “Where there is a will, there is a way;” and again and again I
+ managed to find an opportunity for exchanging a few words with Mdlle.
+ Henri, regardless that envy stared and detraction whispered whenever I
+ approached her.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your book an instant.” Such was the mode in which I often began these
+ brief dialogues; the time was always just at the conclusion of the lesson;
+ and motioning to her to rise, I installed myself in her place, allowing
+ her to stand deferentially at my side; for I esteemed it wise and right in
+ her case to enforce strictly all forms ordinarily in use between master
+ and pupil; the rather because I perceived that in proportion as my manner
+ grew austere and magisterial, hers became easy and self-possessed—an
+ odd contradiction, doubtless, to the ordinary effect in such cases; but so
+ it was.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A pencil,” said I, holding out my hand without looking at her. (I am now
+ about to sketch a brief report of the first of these conferences.) She
+ gave me one, and while I underlined some errors in a grammatical exercise
+ she had written, I observed—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are not a native of Belgium?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Nor of France?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Where, then, is your birthplace?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I was born at Geneva.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You don’t call Frances and Evans Swiss names, I presume?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, sir; they are English names.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Just so; and is it the custom of the Genevese to give their children
+ English appellatives?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Non, Monsieur; mais—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Speak English, if you please.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “English—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But” (slowly and with embarrassment) “my parents were not all the two
+ Genevese.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Say <em>both</em>, instead of ‘all the two,’ mademoiselle.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not <em>both</em> Swiss: my mother was English.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah! and of English extraction?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes—her ancestors were all English.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And your father?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He was Swiss.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What besides? What was his profession?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ecclesiastic—pastor—he had a church.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Since your mother is an Englishwoman, why do you not speak English with
+ more facility?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Maman est morte, il y a dix ans.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And you do homage to her memory by forgetting her language. Have the
+ goodness to put French out of your mind so long as I converse with
+ you—keep to English.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est si difficile, monsieur, quand on n’en a plus l’habitude.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You had the habitude formerly, I suppose? Now answer me in your mother
+ tongue.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, sir, I spoke the English more than the French when I was a child.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why do you not speak it now?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Because I have no English friends.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You live with your father, I suppose?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “My father is dead.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have brothers and sisters?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not one.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you live alone?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No—I have an aunt—ma tante Julienne.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your father’s sister?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Justement, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is that English?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No—but I forget—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “For which, mademoiselle, if you were a child I should certainly devise
+ some slight punishment; at your age—you must be two or three and
+ twenty, I should think?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Pas encore, monsieur—en un mois j’aurai dix-neuf ans.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, nineteen is a mature age, and, having attained it, you ought to be
+ so solicitous for your own improvement, that it should not be needful for
+ a master to remind you twice of the expediency of your speaking English
+ whenever practicable.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ To this wise speech I received no answer; and, when I looked up, my pupil
+ was smiling to herself a much-meaning, though not very gay smile; it
+ seemed to say, “He talks of he knows not what:” it said this so plainly,
+ that I determined to request information on the point concerning which my
+ ignorance seemed to be thus tacitly affirmed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Are you solicitous for your own improvement?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rather.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How do you prove it, mademoiselle?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ An odd question, and bluntly put; it excited a second smile.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why, monsieur, I am not inattentive—am I? I learn my lessons well—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, a child can do that! and what more do you do?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What more can I do?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, certainly, not much; but you are a teacher, are you not, as well as a
+ pupil?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You teach lace-mending?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A dull, stupid occupation; do you like it?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No—it is tedious.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why do you pursue it? Why do you not rather teach history, geography,
+ grammar, even arithmetic?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is monsieur certain that I am myself thoroughly acquainted with these
+ studies?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I don’t know; you ought to be at your age.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But I never was at school, monsieur—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indeed! What then were your friends—what was your aunt about? She
+ is very much to blame.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No monsieur, no—my aunt is good—she is not to blame—she
+ does what she can; she lodges and nourishes me” (I report Mdlle. Henri’s
+ phrases literally, and it was thus she translated from the French). “She
+ is not rich; she has only an annuity of twelve hundred francs, and it
+ would be impossible for her to send me to school.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rather,” thought I to myself on hearing this, but I continued, in the
+ dogmatical tone I had adopted:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is sad, however, that you should be brought up in ignorance of the
+ most ordinary branches of education; had you known something of history
+ and grammar you might, by degrees, have relinquished your lace-mending
+ drudgery, and risen in the world.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is what I mean to do.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How? By a knowledge of English alone? That will not suffice; no
+ respectable family will receive a governess whose whole stock of knowledge
+ consists in a familiarity with one foreign language.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I know other things.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, yes, you can work with Berlin wools, and embroider handkerchiefs and
+ collars—that will do little for you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Henri’s lips were unclosed to answer, but she checked herself, as
+ thinking the discussion had been sufficiently pursued, and remained
+ silent.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Speak,” I continued, impatiently; “I never like the appearance of
+ acquiescence when the reality is not there; and you had a contradiction at
+ your tongue’s end.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I have had many lessons both in grammar, history, geography,
+ and arithmetic. I have gone through a course of each study.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bravo! but how did you manage it, since your aunt could not afford to
+ send you to school?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “By lace-mending; by the thing monsieur despises so much.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Truly! And now, mademoiselle, it will be a good exercise for you to
+ explain to me in English how such a result was produced by such means.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I begged my aunt to have me taught lace-mending soon after we
+ came to Brussels, because I knew it was a métier, a trade which was easily
+ learnt, and by which I could earn some money very soon. I learnt it in a
+ few days, and I quickly got work, for all the Brussels ladies have old
+ lace—very precious—which must be mended all the times it is
+ washed. I earned money a little, and this money I gave for lessons in the
+ studies I have mentioned; some of it I spent in buying books, English
+ books especially; soon I shall try to find a place of governess, or
+ school-teacher, when I can write and speak English well; but it will be
+ difficult, because those who know I have been a lace-mender will despise
+ me, as the pupils here despise me. Pourtant j’ai mon projet,” she added in
+ a lower tone.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What is it?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I will go and live in England; I will teach French there.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The words were pronounced emphatically. She said “England” as you might
+ suppose an Israelite of Moses’ days would have said Canaan.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Have you a wish to see England?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, and an intention.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And here a voice, the voice of the directress, interposed:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle Henri, je crois qu’il va pleuvoir; vous feriez bien, ma
+ bonne amie, de retourner chez vous tout de suite.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In silence, without a word of thanks for this officious warning, Mdlle.
+ Henri collected her books; she moved to me respectfully, endeavoured to
+ move to her superior, though the endeavour was almost a failure, for her
+ head seemed as if it would not bend, and thus departed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Where there is one grain of perseverance or wilfulness in the composition,
+ trifling obstacles are ever known rather to stimulate than discourage.
+ Mdlle. Reuter might as well have spared herself the trouble of giving that
+ intimation about the weather (by-the-by her prediction was falsified by
+ the event—it did not rain that evening). At the close of the next
+ lesson I was again at Mdlle. Henri’s desk. Thus did I accost her:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What is your idea of England, mademoiselle? Why do you wish to go there?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Accustomed by this time to the calculated abruptness of my manner, it no
+ longer discomposed or surprised her, and she answered with only so much of
+ hesitation as was rendered inevitable by the difficulty she experienced in
+ improvising the translation of her thoughts from French to English.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “England is something unique, as I have heard and read; my idea of it is
+ vague, and I want to go there to render my idea clear, definite.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hum! How much of England do you suppose you could see if you went there
+ in the capacity of a teacher? A strange notion you must have of getting a
+ clear and definite idea of a country! All you could see of Great Britain
+ would be the interior of a school, or at most of one or two private
+ dwellings.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It would be an English school; they would be English dwellings.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indisputably; but what then? What would be the value of observations made
+ on a scale so narrow?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, might not one learn something by analogy? An—échantillon—a—a
+ sample often serves to give an idea of the whole; besides, narrow and wide
+ are words comparative, are they not? All my life would perhaps seem narrow
+ in your eyes—all the life of a—that little animal subterranean—une
+ taupe—comment dit-on?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mole.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes—a mole, which lives underground would seem narrow even to me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, mademoiselle—what then? Proceed.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais, monsieur, vous me comprenez.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not in the least; have the goodness to explain.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why, monsieur, it is just so. In Switzerland I have done but little,
+ learnt but little, and seen but little; my life there was in a circle; I
+ walked the same round every day; I could not get out of it; had I
+ rested—remained there even till my death, I should never have enlarged it,
+ because I am poor and not skilful, I have not great acquirements; when I
+ was quite tired of this round, I begged my aunt to go to Brussels; my
+ existence is no larger here, because I am no richer or higher; I walk in
+ as narrow a limit, but the scene is changed; it would change again if I
+ went to England. I knew something of the bourgeois of Geneva, now I know
+ something of the bourgeois of Brussels; if I went to London, I would know
+ something of the bourgeois of London. Can you make any sense out of what I
+ say, monsieur, or is it all obscure?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I see, I see—now let us advert to another subject; you propose to
+ devote your life to teaching, and you are a most unsuccessful teacher; you
+ cannot keep your pupils in order.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A flush of painful confusion was the result of this harsh remark; she bent
+ her head to the desk, but soon raising it replied—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I am not a skilful teacher, it is true, but practice improves;
+ besides, I work under difficulties; here I only teach sewing, I can show
+ no power in sewing, no superiority—it is a subordinate art; then I
+ have no associates in this house, I am isolated; I am too a heretic, which
+ deprives me of influence.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And in England you would be a foreigner; that too would deprive you of
+ influence, and would effectually separate you from all round you; in
+ England you would have as few connections, as little importance as you
+ have here.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But I should be learning something; for the rest, there are probably
+ difficulties for such as I everywhere, and if I must contend, and perhaps
+ be conquered, I would rather submit to English pride than to Flemish
+ coarseness; besides, monsieur—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She stopped—not evidently from any difficulty in finding words to
+ express herself, but because discretion seemed to say, “You have said
+ enough.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Finish your phrase,” I urged.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Besides, monsieur, I long to live once more among Protestants; they are
+ more honest than Catholics; a Romish school is a building with porous
+ walls, a hollow floor, a false ceiling; every room in this house,
+ monsieur, has eyeholes and ear-holes, and what the house is, the
+ inhabitants are, very treacherous; they all think it lawful to tell lies;
+ they all call it politeness to profess friendship where they feel hatred.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “All?” said I; “you mean the pupils—the mere children—inexperienced,
+ giddy things, who have not learnt to distinguish the difference between
+ right and wrong?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “On the contrary, monsieur—the children are the most sincere; they
+ have not yet had time to become accomplished in duplicity; they will tell
+ lies, but they do it inartificially, and you know they are lying; but the
+ grown-up people are very false; they deceive strangers, they deceive each
+ other—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A servant here entered:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mdlle. Henri—Mdlle. Reuter vous prie de vouloir bien conduire la
+ petite de Dorlodot chez elle, elle vous attend dans le cabinet de Rosalie
+ la portière—c’est que sa bonne n’est pas venue la chercher—voyez-vous.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Eh bien! est-ce que je suis sa bonne—moi?” demanded Mdlle. Henri;
+ then smiling, with that same bitter, derisive smile I had seen on her lips
+ once before, she hastily rose and made her exit.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0018">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ THE young Anglo-Swiss evidently derived both pleasure and profit from the
+ study of her mother-tongue. In teaching her I did not, of course, confine
+ myself to the ordinary school routine; I made instruction in English a
+ channel for instruction in literature. I prescribed to her a course of
+ reading; she had a little selection of English classics, a few of which
+ had been left her by her mother, and the others she had purchased with her
+ own penny-fee. I lent her some more modern works; all these she read with
+ avidity, giving me, in writing, a clear summary of each work when she had
+ perused it. Composition, too, she delighted in. Such occupation seemed the
+ very breath of her nostrils, and soon her improved productions wrung from
+ me the avowal that those qualities in her I had termed taste and fancy
+ ought rather to have been denominated judgment and imagination. When I
+ intimated so much, which I did as usual in dry and stinted phrase, I
+ looked for the radiant and exulting smile my one word of eulogy had
+ elicited before; but Frances coloured. If she did smile, it was very
+ softly and shyly; and instead of looking up to me with a conquering
+ glance, her eyes rested on my hand, which, stretched over her shoulder,
+ was writing some directions with a pencil on the margin of her book.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, are you pleased that I am satisfied with your progress?” I asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes,” said she slowly, gently, the blush that had half subsided
+ returning.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But I do not say enough, I suppose?” I continued. “My praises are too
+ cool?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She made no answer, and, I thought, looked a little sad. I divined her
+ thoughts, and should much have liked to have responded to them, had it
+ been expedient so to do. She was not now very ambitious of my
+ admiration—not eagerly desirous of dazzling me; a little affection—ever so
+ little—pleased her better than all the panegyrics in the world. Feeling
+ this, I stood a good while behind her, writing on the margin of her book.
+ I could hardly quit my station or relinquish my occupation; something
+ retained me bending there, my head very near hers, and my hand near hers
+ too; but the margin of a copy-book is not an illimitable space—so,
+ doubtless, the directress thought; and she took occasion to walk past in
+ order to ascertain by what art I prolonged so disproportionately the
+ period necessary for filling it. I was obliged to go. Distasteful
+ effort—to leave what we most prefer!
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances did not become pale or feeble in consequence of her sedentary
+ employment; perhaps the stimulus it communicated to her mind
+ counterbalanced the inaction it imposed on her body. She changed, indeed,
+ changed obviously and rapidly; but it was for the better. When I first saw
+ her, her countenance was sunless, her complexion colourless; she looked
+ like one who had no source of enjoyment, no store of bliss anywhere in the
+ world; now the cloud had passed from her mien, leaving space for the dawn
+ of hope and interest, and those feelings rose like a clear morning,
+ animating what had been depressed, tinting what had been pale. Her eyes,
+ whose colour I had not at first known, so dim were they with repressed
+ tears, so shadowed with ceaseless dejection, now, lit by a ray of the
+ sunshine that cheered her heart, revealed irids of bright hazel—irids
+ large and full, screened with long lashes; and pupils instinct with fire.
+ That look of wan emaciation which anxiety or low spirits often
+ communicates to a thoughtful, thin face, rather long than round, having
+ vanished from hers, a clearness of skin almost bloom, and a plumpness
+ almost embonpoint, softened the decided lines of her features. Her figure
+ shared in this beneficial change; it became rounder, and as the harmony of
+ her form was complete and her stature of the graceful middle height, one
+ did not regret (or at least <em>I</em> did not regret) the absence of
+ confirmed fulness, in contours, still slight, though compact, elegant,
+ flexible—the exquisite turning of waist, wrist, hand, foot, and ankle
+ satisfied completely my notions of symmetry, and allowed a lightness and
+ freedom of movement which corresponded with my ideas of grace.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Thus improved, thus wakened to life, Mdlle. Henri began to take a new
+ footing in the school; her mental power, manifested gradually but
+ steadily, ere long extorted recognition even from the envious; and when
+ the young and healthy saw that she could smile brightly, converse gaily,
+ move with vivacity and alertness, they acknowledged in her a sisterhood of
+ youth and health, and tolerated her as of their kind accordingly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ To speak truth, I watched this change much as a gardener watches the
+ growth of a precious plant, and I contributed to it too, even as the said
+ gardener contributes to the development of his favourite. To me it was not
+ difficult to discover how I could best foster my pupil, cherish her
+ starved feelings, and induce the outward manifestation of that inward
+ vigour which sunless drought and blighting blast had hitherto forbidden to
+ expand. Constancy of attention—a kindness as mute as watchful,
+ always standing by her, cloaked in the rough garb of austerity, and making
+ its real nature known only by a rare glance of interest, or a cordial and
+ gentle word; real respect masked with seeming imperiousness, directing,
+ urging her actions, yet helping her too, and that with devoted care: these
+ were the means I used, for these means best suited Frances’ feelings, as
+ susceptible as deep vibrating—her nature at once proud and shy.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The benefits of my system became apparent also in her altered demeanour as
+ a teacher; she now took her place amongst her pupils with an air of spirit
+ and firmness which assured them at once that she meant to be obeyed—and
+ obeyed she was. They felt they had lost their power over her. If any girl
+ had rebelled, she would no longer have taken her rebellion to heart; she
+ possessed a source of comfort they could not drain, a pillar of support
+ they could not overthrow: formerly, when insulted, she wept; now, she
+ smiled.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The public reading of one of her devoirs achieved the revelation of her
+ talents to all and sundry; I remember the subject—it was an
+ emigrant’s letter to his friends at home. It opened with simplicity; some
+ natural and graphic touches disclosed to the reader the scene of virgin
+ forest and great, New-World river—barren of sail and flag—amidst
+ which the epistle was supposed to be indited. The difficulties and dangers
+ that attend a settler’s life, were hinted at; and in the few words said on
+ that subject, Mdlle. Henri failed not to render audible the voice of
+ resolve, patience, endeavour. The disasters which had driven him from his
+ native country were alluded to; stainless honour, inflexible independence,
+ indestructible self-respect there took the word. Past days were spoken of;
+ the grief of parting, the regrets of absence, were touched upon; feeling,
+ forcible and fine, breathed eloquent in every period. At the close,
+ consolation was suggested; religious faith became there the speaker, and
+ she spoke well.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The devoir was powerfully written in language at once chaste and choice,
+ in a style nerved with vigour and graced with harmony.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mdlle. Reuter was quite sufficiently acquainted with English to understand
+ it when read or spoken in her presence, though she could neither speak nor
+ write it herself. During the perusal of this devoir, she sat placidly
+ busy, her eyes and fingers occupied with the formation of a “rivière” or
+ open-work hem round a cambric handkerchief; she said nothing, and her face
+ and forehead, clothed with a mask of purely negative expression, were as
+ blank of comment as her lips. As neither surprise, pleasure, approbation,
+ nor interest were evinced in her countenance, so no more were disdain,
+ envy, annoyance, weariness; if that inscrutable mien said anything, it was
+ simply this—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “The matter is too trite to excite an emotion, or call forth an opinion.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ As soon as I had done, a hum rose; several of the pupils, pressing round
+ Mdlle. Henri, began to beset her with compliments; the composed voice of
+ the directress was now heard:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Young ladies, such of you as have cloaks and umbrellas will hasten to
+ return home before the shower becomes heavier” (it was raining a little),
+ “the remainder will wait till their respective servants arrive to fetch
+ them.” And the school dispersed, for it was four o’clock.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, a word,” said Mdlle. Reuter, stepping on to the estrade, and
+ signifying, by a movement of the hand, that she wished me to relinquish,
+ for an instant, the castor I had clutched.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle, I am at your service.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, it is of course an excellent plan to encourage effort in young
+ people by making conspicuous the progress of any particularly industrious
+ pupil; but do you not think that in the present instance, Mdlle. Henri can
+ hardly be considered as a concurrent with the other pupils? She is older
+ than most of them, and has had advantages of an exclusive nature for
+ acquiring a knowledge of English; on the other hand, her sphere of life is
+ somewhat beneath theirs; under these circumstances, a public distinction,
+ conferred upon Mdlle. Henri, may be the means of suggesting comparisons,
+ and exciting feelings such as would be far from advantageous to the
+ individual forming their object. The interest I take in Mdlle. Henri’s
+ real welfare makes me desirous of screening her from annoyances of this
+ sort; besides, monsieur, as I have before hinted to you, the sentiment of
+ <i lang="fr">amour-propre</i> has a somewhat marked preponderance in her
+ character; celebrity has a tendency to foster this sentiment, and in her
+ it should be rather repressed—she rather needs keeping down than bringing
+ forward; and then I think, monsieur—it appears to me that ambition,
+ <em>literary</em> ambition especially, is not a feeling to be cherished in
+ the mind of a woman: would not Mdlle. Henri be much safer and happier if
+ taught to believe that in the quiet discharge of social duties consists
+ her real vocation, than if stimulated to aspire after applause and
+ publicity? She may never marry; scanty as are her resources, obscure as
+ are her connections, uncertain as is her health (for I think her
+ consumptive, her mother died of that complaint), it is more than probable
+ she never will. I do not see how she can rise to a position, whence such a
+ step would be possible; but even in celibacy it would be better for her to
+ retain the character and habits of a respectable decorous female.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indisputably, mademoiselle,” was my answer. “Your opinion admits of no
+ doubt;” and, fearful of the harangue being renewed, I retreated under
+ cover of that cordial sentence of assent.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ At the date of a fortnight after the little incident noted above, I find
+ it recorded in my diary that a hiatus occurred in Mdlle. Henri’s usually
+ regular attendance in class. The first day or two I wondered at her
+ absence, but did not like to ask an explanation of it; I thought indeed
+ some chance word might be dropped which would afford me the information I
+ wished to obtain, without my running the risk of exciting silly smiles and
+ gossiping whispers by demanding it. But when a week passed and the seat at
+ the desk near the door still remained vacant, and when no allusion was
+ made to the circumstance by any individual of the class—when, on the
+ contrary, I found that all observed a marked silence on the point—I
+ determined, <i lang="fr">coûte qui coûte</i>, to break the ice of this
+ silly reserve. I selected Sylvie as my informant, because from her I knew
+ that I should at least get a sensible answer, unaccompanied by wriggle,
+ titter, or other flourish of folly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Où donc est Mdlle. Henri?” I said one day as I returned an exercise-book
+ I had been examining.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Elle est partie, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Partie? et pour combien de temps? Quand reviendra-t-elle?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Elle est partie pour toujours, monsieur; elle ne reviendra plus.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah!” was my involuntary exclamation; then after a pause:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “En êtes-vous bien sûre, Sylvie?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oui, oui, monsieur, mademoiselle la directrice nous l’a dit elle-même il
+ y a deux ou trois jours.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And I could pursue my inquiries no further; time, place, and circumstances
+ forbade my adding another word. I could neither comment on what had been
+ said, nor demand further particulars. A question as to the reason of the
+ teacher’s departure, as to whether it had been voluntary or otherwise, was
+ indeed on my lips, but I suppressed it—there were listeners all
+ round. An hour after, in passing Sylvie in the corridor as she was putting
+ on her bonnet, I stopped short and asked:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sylvie, do you know Mdlle. Henri’s address? I have some books of hers,” I
+ added carelessly, “and I should wish to send them to her.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur,” replied Sylvie; “but perhaps Rosalie, the portress, will
+ be able to give it you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Rosalie’s cabinet was just at hand; I stepped in and repeated the inquiry.
+ Rosalie—a smart French grisette—looked up from her work with a
+ knowing smile, precisely the sort of smile I had been so desirous to avoid
+ exciting. Her answer was prepared; she knew nothing whatever of Mdlle.
+ Henri’s address—had never known it. Turning from her with impatience—for
+ I believed she lied and was hired to lie—I almost knocked down some
+ one who had been standing at my back; it was the directress. My abrupt
+ movement made her recoil two or three steps. I was obliged to apologize,
+ which I did more concisely than politely. No man likes to be dogged, and
+ in the very irritable mood in which I then was the sight of Mdlle. Reuter
+ thoroughly incensed me. At the moment I turned her countenance looked
+ hard, dark, and inquisitive; her eyes were bent upon me with an expression
+ of almost hungry curiosity. I had scarcely caught this phase of
+ physiognomy ere it had vanished; a bland smile played on her features; my
+ harsh apology was received with good-humoured facility.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, don’t mention it, monsieur; you only touched my hair with your elbow;
+ it is no worse, only a little dishevelled.” She shook it back, and passing
+ her fingers through her curls, loosened them into more numerous and
+ flowing ringlets. Then she went on with vivacity:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rosalie, I was coming to tell you to go instantly and close the windows
+ of the salon; the wind is rising, and the muslin curtains will be covered
+ with dust.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Rosalie departed. “Now,” thought I, “this will not do; Mdlle. Reuter
+ thinks her meanness in eaves-dropping is screened by her art in devising a
+ pretext, whereas the muslin curtains she speaks of are not more
+ transparent than this same pretext.” An impulse came over me to thrust the
+ flimsy screen aside, and confront her craft boldly with a word or two of
+ plain truth. “The rough-shod foot treads most firmly on slippery ground,”
+ thought I; so I began:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle Henri has left your establishment—been dismissed, I
+ presume?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah, I wished to have a little conversation with you, monsieur,” replied
+ the directress with the most natural and affable air in the world; “but we
+ cannot talk quietly here; will Monsieur step into the garden a minute?”
+ And she preceded me, stepping out through the glass-door I have before
+ mentioned.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There,” said she, when we had reached the centre of the middle alley, and
+ when the foliage of shrubs and trees, now in their summer pride, closing
+ behind and around us, shut out the view of the house, and thus imparted a
+ sense of seclusion even to this little plot of ground in the very core of
+ a capital.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There, one feels quiet and free when there are only pear-trees and
+ rose-bushes about one; I dare say you, like me, monsieur, are sometimes
+ tired of being eternally in the midst of life; of having human faces
+ always round you, human eyes always upon you, human voices always in your
+ ear. I am sure I often wish intensely for liberty to spend a whole month
+ in the country at some little farm-house, bien gentille, bien propre, tout
+ entourée de champs et de bois; quelle vie charmante que la vie champêtre!
+ N’est-ce pas, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Cela dépend, mademoiselle.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Que le vent est bon et frais!” continued the directress; and she was
+ right there, for it was a south wind, soft and sweet. I carried my hat in
+ my hand, and this gentle breeze, passing through my hair, soothed my
+ temples like balm. Its refreshing effect, however, penetrated no deeper
+ than the mere surface of the frame; for as I walked by the side of Mdlle.
+ Reuter, my heart was still hot within me, and while I was musing the fire
+ burned; then spake I with my tongue:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I understand Mdlle. Henri is gone from hence, and will not return?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah, true! I meant to have named the subject to you some days ago, but my
+ time is so completely taken up, I cannot do half the things I wish: have
+ you never experienced what it is, monsieur, to find the day too short by
+ twelve hours for your numerous duties?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not often. Mdlle. Henri’s departure was not voluntary, I presume? If it
+ had been, she would certainly have given me some intimation of it, being
+ my pupil.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, did she not tell you? that was strange; for my part, I never thought
+ of adverting to the subject; when one has so many things to attend to, one
+ is apt to forget little incidents that are not of primary importance.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You consider Mdlle. Henri’s dismission, then, as a very insignificant
+ event?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Dismission? Ah! she was not dismissed; I can say with truth, monsieur,
+ that since I became the head of this establishment no master or teacher
+ has ever been <em>dismissed</em> from it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yet some have left it, mademoiselle?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Many; I have found it necessary to change frequently—a change of
+ instructors is often beneficial to the interests of a school; it gives
+ life and variety to the proceedings; it amuses the pupils, and suggests to
+ the parents the idea of exertion and progress.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yet when you are tired of a professor or maîtresse, you scruple to
+ dismiss them?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No need to have recourse to such extreme measures, I assure you. Allons,
+ monsieur le professeur—asseyons-nous; je vais vous donner une petite
+ leçon dans votre état d’instituteur.” (I wish I might write all she said
+ to me in French—it loses sadly by being translated into English.) We
+ had now reached <em>the</em> garden-chair; the directress sat down, and
+ signed to me to sit by her, but I only rested my knee on the seat, and
+ stood leaning my head and arm against the embowering branch of a huge
+ laburnum, whose golden flowers, blent with the dusky green leaves of a
+ lilac-bush, formed a mixed arch of shade and sunshine over the retreat.
+ Mdlle. Reuter sat silent a moment; some novel movements were evidently
+ working in her mind, and they showed their nature on her astute brow; she
+ was meditating some <i lang="fr">chef d’oeuvre</i> of policy. Convinced by
+ several months’ experience that the affectation of virtues she did not
+ possess was unavailing to ensnare me—aware that I had read her real
+ nature, and would believe nothing of the character she gave out as being
+ hers—she had determined, at last, to try a new key, and see if the lock of
+ my heart would yield to that; a little audacity, a word of truth, a
+ glimpse of the real. “Yes, I will try,” was her inward resolve; and then
+ her blue eye glittered upon me—it did not flash—nothing of flame ever
+ kindled in its temperate gleam.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur fears to sit by me?” she inquired playfully.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I have no wish to usurp Pelet’s place,” I answered, for I had got the
+ habit of speaking to her bluntly—a habit begun in anger, but
+ continued because I saw that, instead of offending, it fascinated her. She
+ cast down her eyes, and drooped her eyelids; she sighed uneasily; she
+ turned with an anxious gesture, as if she would give me the idea of a bird
+ that flutters in its cage, and would fain fly from its jail and jailer,
+ and seek its natural mate and pleasant nest.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well—and your lesson?” I demanded briefly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah!” she exclaimed, recovering herself, “you are so young, so frank and
+ fearless, so talented, so impatient of imbecility, so disdainful of
+ vulgarity, you need a lesson; here it is then: far more is to be done in
+ this world by dexterity than by strength; but, perhaps, you knew that
+ before, for there is delicacy as well as power in your character—policy,
+ as well as pride?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Go on,” said I; and I could hardly help smiling, the flattery was so
+ piquant, so finely seasoned. She caught the prohibited smile, though I
+ passed my hand over my mouth to conceal it; and again she made room for me
+ to sit beside her. I shook my head, though temptation penetrated to my
+ senses at the moment, and once more I told her to go on.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, then, if ever you are at the head of a large establishment, dismiss
+ nobody. To speak truth, monsieur (and to you I will speak truth), I
+ despise people who are always making rows, blustering, sending off one to
+ the right, and another to the left, urging and hurrying circumstances.
+ I’ll tell you what I like best to do, monsieur, shall I?” She looked up
+ again; she had compounded her glance well this time—much archness,
+ more deference, a spicy dash of coquetry, an unveiled consciousness of
+ capacity. I nodded; she treated me like the great Mogul; so I became the
+ great Mogul as far as she was concerned.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I like, monsieur, to take my knitting in my hands, and to sit quietly
+ down in my chair; circumstances defile past me; I watch their march; so
+ long as they follow the course I wish, I say nothing, and do nothing; I
+ don’t clap my hands, and cry out ‘Bravo! How lucky I am!’ to attract the
+ attention and envy of my neighbours—I am merely passive; but when
+ events fall out ill—when circumstances become adverse—I watch
+ very vigilantly; I knit on still, and still I hold my tongue; but every
+ now and then, monsieur, I just put my toe out—so—and give the
+ rebellious circumstance a little secret push, without noise, which sends
+ it the way I wish, and I am successful after all, and nobody has seen my
+ expedient. So, when teachers or masters become troublesome and
+ inefficient—when, in short, the interests of the school would suffer from
+ their retaining their places—I mind my knitting, events progress,
+ circumstances glide past; I see one which, if pushed ever so little awry,
+ will render untenable the post I wish to have vacated—the deed is done—the
+ stumbling-block removed—and no one saw me: I have not made an enemy,
+ I am rid of an incumbrance.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A moment since, and I thought her alluring; this speech concluded, I
+ looked on her with distaste. “Just like you,” was my cold answer. “And in
+ this way you have ousted Mdlle. Henri? You wanted her office, therefore
+ you rendered it intolerable to her?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not at all, monsieur, I was merely anxious about Mdlle. Henri’s health;
+ no, your moral sight is clear and piercing, but there you have failed to
+ discover the truth. I took—I have always taken a real interest in
+ Mdlle. Henri’s welfare; I did not like her going out in all weathers; I
+ thought it would be more advantageous for her to obtain a permanent
+ situation; besides, I considered her now qualified to do something more
+ than teach sewing. I reasoned with her; left the decision to herself; she
+ saw the correctness of my views, and adopted them.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Excellent! and now, mademoiselle, you will have the goodness to give me
+ her address.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Her address!” and a sombre and stony change came over the mien of the
+ directress. “Her address? Ah?—well—I wish I could oblige you,
+ monsieur, but I cannot, and I will tell you why; whenever I myself asked
+ her for her address, she always evaded the inquiry. I thought—I may
+ be wrong—but I <em>thought</em> her motive for doing so, was a natural,
+ though mistaken reluctance to introduce me to some, probably, very poor
+ abode; her means were narrow, her origin obscure; she lives somewhere,
+ doubtless, in the ‘basse ville.’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’ll not lose sight of my best pupil yet,” said I, “though she were born
+ of beggars and lodged in a cellar; for the rest, it is absurd to make a
+ bugbear of her origin to me—I happen to know that she was a Swiss
+ pastor’s daughter, neither more nor less; and, as to her narrow means, I
+ care nothing for the poverty of her purse so long as her heart overflows
+ with affluence.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your sentiments are perfectly noble, monsieur,” said the directress,
+ affecting to suppress a yawn; her sprightliness was now extinct, her
+ temporary candour shut up; the little, red-coloured, piratical-looking
+ pennon of audacity she had allowed to float a minute in the air, was
+ furled, and the broad, sober-hued flag of dissimulation again hung low
+ over the citadel. I did not like her thus, so I cut short the
+ <i lang="fr">tête-à-tête</i> and departed.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0019">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ NOVELISTS should never allow themselves to weary of the study of real
+ life. If they observed this duty conscientiously, they would give us fewer
+ pictures chequered with vivid contrasts of light and shade; they would
+ seldom elevate their heroes and heroines to the heights of rapture—still
+ seldomer sink them to the depths of despair; for if we rarely taste the
+ fulness of joy in this life, we yet more rarely savour the acrid
+ bitterness of hopeless anguish; unless, indeed, we have plunged like
+ beasts into sensual indulgence, abused, strained, stimulated, again
+ overstrained, and, at last, destroyed our faculties for enjoyment; then,
+ truly, we may find ourselves without support, robbed of hope. Our agony is
+ great, and how can it end? We have broken the spring of our powers; life
+ must be all suffering—too feeble to conceive faith—death must
+ be darkness—God, spirits, religion can have no place in our
+ collapsed minds, where linger only hideous and polluting recollections of
+ vice; and time brings us on to the brink of the grave, and dissolution
+ flings us in—a rag eaten through and through with disease, wrung
+ together with pain, stamped into the churchyard sod by the inexorable heel
+ of despair.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But the man of regular life and rational mind never despairs. He loses his
+ property—it is a blow—he staggers a moment; then, his
+ energies, roused by the smart, are at work to seek a remedy; activity soon
+ mitigates regret. Sickness affects him; he takes patience—endures
+ what he cannot cure. Acute pain racks him; his writhing limbs know not
+ where to find rest; he leans on Hope’s anchors. Death takes from him what
+ he loves; roots up, and tears violently away the stem round which his
+ affections were twined—a dark, dismal time, a frightful wrench—but
+ some morning Religion looks into his desolate house with sunrise, and
+ says, that in another world, another life, he shall meet his kindred
+ again. She speaks of that world as a place unsullied by sin—of that
+ life, as an era unembittered by suffering; she mightily strengthens her
+ consolation by connecting with it two ideas—which mortals cannot
+ comprehend, but on which they love to repose—Eternity, Immortality;
+ and the mind of the mourner, being filled with an image, faint yet
+ glorious, of heavenly hills all light and peace—of a spirit resting
+ there in bliss—of a day when his spirit shall also alight there,
+ free and disembodied—of a reunion perfected by love, purified from
+ fear—he takes courage—goes out to encounter the necessities
+ and discharge the duties of life; and, though sadness may never lift her
+ burden from his mind, Hope will enable him to support it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Well—and what suggested all this? and what is the inference to be
+ drawn therefrom? What suggested it, is the circumstance of my best
+ pupil—my treasure—being snatched from my hands, and put away out of my
+ reach; the inference to be drawn from it is—that, being a steady,
+ reasonable man, I did not allow the resentment, disappointment, and grief,
+ engendered in my mind by this evil chance, to grow there to any monstrous
+ size; nor did I allow them to monopolize the whole space of my heart; I
+ pent them, on the contrary, in one strait and secret nook. In the daytime,
+ too, when I was about my duties, I put them on the silent system; and it
+ was only after I had closed the door of my chamber at night that I
+ somewhat relaxed my severity towards these morose nurslings, and allowed
+ vent to their language of murmurs; then, in revenge, they sat on my
+ pillow, haunted my bed, and kept me awake with their long, midnight cry.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A week passed. I had said nothing more to Mdlle. Reuter. I had been calm
+ in my demeanour to her, though stony cold and hard. When I looked at her,
+ it was with the glance fitting to be bestowed on one who I knew had
+ consulted jealousy as an adviser, and employed treachery as an
+ instrument—the glance of quiet disdain and rooted distrust. On Saturday
+ evening, ere I left the house, I stept into the
+ <i lang="fr">salle-à-manger</i>, where she was sitting alone, and, placing
+ myself before her, I asked, with the same tranquil tone and manner that I
+ should have used had I put the question for the first time—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle, will you have the goodness to give me the address of
+ Frances Evans Henri?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A little surprised, but not disconcerted, she smilingly disclaimed any
+ knowledge of that address, adding, “Monsieur has perhaps forgotten that I
+ explained all about that circumstance before—a week ago?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle,” I continued, “you would greatly oblige me by directing me
+ to that young person’s abode.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She seemed somewhat puzzled; and, at last, looking up with an admirably
+ counterfeited air of naivete, she demanded, “Does Monsieur think I am
+ telling an untruth?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Still avoiding to give her a direct answer, I said, “It is not then your
+ intention, mademoiselle, to oblige me in this particular?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But, monsieur, how can I tell you what I do not know?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very well; I understand you perfectly, mademoiselle, and now I have only
+ two or three words to say. This is the last week in July; in another month
+ the vacation will commence, have the goodness to avail yourself of the
+ leisure it will afford you to look out for another English master—at
+ the close of August, I shall be under the necessity of resigning my post
+ in your establishment.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I did not wait for her comments on this announcement, but bowed and
+ immediately withdrew.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ That same evening, soon after dinner, a servant brought me a small packet;
+ it was directed in a hand I knew, but had not hoped so soon to see again;
+ being in my own apartment and alone, there was nothing to prevent my
+ immediately opening it; it contained four five-franc pieces, and a note in
+ English.
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “MONSIEUR,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I came to Mdlle. Reuter’s house yesterday, at the time when I knew you
+ would be just about finishing your lesson, and I asked if I might go into
+ the schoolroom and speak to you. Mdlle. Reuter came out and said you were
+ already gone; it had not yet struck four, so I thought she must be
+ mistaken, but concluded it would be vain to call another day on the same
+ errand. In one sense a note will do as well—it will wrap up the 20
+ francs, the price of the lessons I have received from you; and if it will
+ not fully express the thanks I owe you in addition—if it will not
+ bid you good-bye as I could wish to have done—if it will not tell
+ you, as I long to do, how sorry I am that I shall probably never see you
+ more—why, spoken words would hardly be more adequate to the task.
+ Had I seen you, I should probably have stammered out something feeble and
+ unsatisfactory—something belying my feelings rather than explaining
+ them; so it is perhaps as well that I was denied admission to your
+ presence. You often remarked, monsieur, that my devoirs dwelt a great deal
+ on fortitude in bearing grief—you said I introduced that theme too
+ often: I find indeed that it is much easier to write about a severe duty
+ than to perform it, for I am oppressed when I see and feel to what a
+ reverse fate has condemned me; you were kind to me, monsieur—very
+ kind; I am afflicted—I am heart-broken to be quite separated from
+ you; soon I shall have no friend on earth. But it is useless troubling you
+ with my distresses. What claim have I on your sympathy? None; I will then
+ say no more.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Farewell, Monsieur.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “F. E. HENRI.”
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ I put up the note in my pocket-book. I slipped the five-franc pieces into
+ my purse—then I took a turn through my narrow chamber.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mdlle. Reuter talked about her poverty,” said I, “and she is poor; yet
+ she pays her debts and more. I have not yet given her a quarter’s lessons,
+ and she has sent me a quarter’s due. I wonder of what she deprived herself
+ to scrape together the twenty francs—I wonder what sort of a place
+ she has to live in, and what sort of a woman her aunt is, and whether she
+ is likely to get employment to supply the place she has lost. No doubt she
+ will have to trudge about long enough from school to school, to inquire
+ here, and apply there—be rejected in this place, disappointed in
+ that. Many an evening she’ll go to her bed tired and unsuccessful. And the
+ directress would not let her in to bid me good-bye? I might not have the
+ chance of standing with her for a few minutes at a window in the
+ schoolroom and exchanging some half-dozen of sentences—getting to
+ know where she lived—putting matters in train for having all things
+ arranged to my mind? No address on the note”—I continued, drawing it
+ again from the pocket-book and examining it on each side of the two
+ leaves: “women are women, that is certain, and always do business like
+ women; men mechanically put a date and address to their communications.
+ And these five-franc pieces?”—(I hauled them forth from my purse)—“if
+ she had offered me them herself instead of tying them up with a thread of
+ green silk in a kind of Lilliputian packet, I could have thrust them back
+ into her little hand, and shut up the small, taper fingers over
+ them—so—and compelled her shame, her pride, her shyness, all to yield to a
+ little bit of determined Will—now where is she? How can I get at her?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Opening my chamber door I walked down into the kitchen.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Who brought the packet?” I asked of the servant who had delivered it to
+ me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Un petit commissionaire, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Did he say anything?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rien.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And I wended my way up the back-stairs, wondrously the wiser for my
+ inquiries.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No matter,” said I to myself, as I again closed the door. “No matter—I’ll
+ seek her through Brussels.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And I did. I sought her day by day whenever I had a moment’s leisure, for
+ four weeks; I sought her on Sundays all day long; I sought her on the
+ Boulevards, in the Allée Verte, in the Park; I sought her in Ste. Gudule
+ and St. Jacques; I sought her in the two Protestant chapels; I attended
+ these latter at the German, French, and English services, not doubting
+ that I should meet her at one of them. All my researches were absolutely
+ fruitless; my security on the last point was proved by the event to be
+ equally groundless with my other calculations. I stood at the door of each
+ chapel after the service, and waited till every individual had come out,
+ scrutinizing every gown draping a slender form, peering under every bonnet
+ covering a young head. In vain; I saw girlish figures pass me, drawing
+ their black scarfs over their sloping shoulders, but none of them had the
+ exact turn and air of Mdlle. Henri’s; I saw pale and thoughtful faces
+ “encadrees” in bands of brown hair, but I never found her forehead, her
+ eyes, her eyebrows. All the features of all the faces I met seemed
+ frittered away, because my eye failed to recognize the peculiarities it
+ was bent upon; an ample space of brow and a large, dark, and serious eye,
+ with a fine but decided line of eyebrow traced above.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She has probably left Brussels—perhaps is gone to England, as she
+ said she would,” muttered I inwardly, as on the afternoon of the fourth
+ Sunday, I turned from the door of the chapel-royal which the door-keeper
+ had just closed and locked, and followed in the wake of the last of the
+ congregation, now dispersed and dispersing over the square. I had soon
+ outwalked the couples of English gentlemen and ladies. (Gracious goodness!
+ why don’t they dress better? My eye is yet filled with visions of the
+ high-flounced, slovenly, and tumbled dresses in costly silk and satin, of
+ the large unbecoming collars in expensive lace; of the ill-cut coats and
+ strangely fashioned pantaloons which every Sunday, at the English service,
+ filled the choirs of the chapel-royal, and after it, issuing forth into
+ the square, came into disadvantageous contrast with freshly and trimly
+ attired foreign figures, hastening to attend salut at the church of
+ Coburg.) I had passed these pairs of Britons, and the groups of pretty
+ British children, and the British footmen and waiting-maids; I had crossed
+ the Place Royale, and got into the Rue Royale, thence I had diverged into
+ the Rue de Louvain—an old and quiet street. I remember that, feeling
+ a little hungry, and not desiring to go back and take my share of the
+ “goûter,” now on the refectory-table at Pelet’s—to wit, pistolets
+ and water—I stepped into a baker’s and refreshed myself on a
+ <i>couc</i> (?)—it is a Flemish word, I don’t know how to spell
+ it—<i lang="fr">à Corinthe—Anglice</i>,
+ a currant bun—and a cup of coffee; and then I strolled on towards
+ the Porte de Louvain. Very soon I was out of the city, and slowly mounting
+ the hill, which ascends from the gate, I took my time; for the afternoon,
+ though cloudy, was very sultry, and not a breeze stirred to refresh the
+ atmosphere. No inhabitant of Brussels need wander far to search for
+ solitude; let him but move half a league from his own city and he will
+ find her brooding still and blank over the wide fields, so drear though so
+ fertile, spread out treeless and trackless round the capital of Brabant.
+ Having gained the summit of the hill, and having stood and looked long
+ over the cultured but lifeless campaign, I felt a wish to quit the high
+ road, which I had hitherto followed, and get in among those tilled
+ grounds—fertile as the beds of a Brobdignagian kitchen-garden—spreading
+ far and wide even to the boundaries of the horizon, where, from a dusk
+ green, distance changed them to a sullen blue, and confused their tints
+ with those of the livid and thunderous-looking sky.
+ Accordingly I turned up a by-path to the
+ right; I had not followed it far ere it brought me, as I expected, into
+ the fields, amidst which, just before me, stretched a long and lofty white
+ wall enclosing, as it seemed from the foliage showing above, some thickly
+ planted nursery of yew and cypress, for of that species were the branches
+ resting on the pale parapets, and crowding gloomily about a massive cross,
+ planted doubtless on a central eminence and extending its arms, which
+ seemed of black marble, over the summits of those sinister trees. I
+ approached, wondering to what house this well-protected garden
+ appertained; I turned the angle of the wall, thinking to see some stately
+ residence; I was close upon great iron gates; there was a hut serving for
+ a lodge near, but I had no occasion to apply for the key—the gates
+ were open; I pushed one leaf back—rain had rusted its hinges, for it
+ groaned dolefully as they revolved. Thick planting embowered the entrance.
+ Passing up the avenue, I saw objects on each hand which, in their own mute
+ language of inscription and sign, explained clearly to what abode I had
+ made my way. This was the house appointed for all living; crosses,
+ monuments, and garlands of everlastings announced, “The Protestant
+ Cemetery, outside the gate of Louvain.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The place was large enough to afford half an hour’s strolling without the
+ monotony of treading continually the same path; and, for those who love to
+ peruse the annals of graveyards, here was variety of inscription enough to
+ occupy the attention for double or treble that space of time. Hither
+ people of many kindreds, tongues, and nations, had brought their dead for
+ interment; and here, on pages of stone, of marble, and of brass, were
+ written names, dates, last tributes of pomp or love, in English, in
+ French, in German, and Latin. Here the Englishman had erected a marble
+ monument over the remains of his Mary Smith or Jane Brown, and inscribed
+ it only with her name. There the French widower had shaded the grave of
+ his Elmire or Celestine with a brilliant thicket of roses, amidst which a
+ little tablet rising, bore an equally bright testimony to her countless
+ virtues. Every nation, tribe, and kindred, mourned after its own fashion;
+ and how soundless was the mourning of all! My own tread, though slow and
+ upon smooth-rolled paths, seemed to startle, because it formed the sole
+ break to a silence otherwise total. Not only the winds, but the very
+ fitful, wandering airs, were that afternoon, as by common consent, all
+ fallen asleep in their various quarters; the north was hushed, the south
+ silent, the east sobbed not, nor did the west whisper. The clouds in
+ heaven were condensed and dull, but apparently quite motionless. Under the
+ trees of this cemetery nestled a warm breathless gloom, out of which the
+ cypresses stood up straight and mute, above which the willows hung low and
+ still; where the flowers, as languid as fair, waited listless for night
+ dew or thunder-shower; where the tombs, and those they hid, lay impassible
+ to sun or shadow, to rain or drought.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Importuned by the sound of my own footsteps, I turned off upon the turf,
+ and slowly advanced to a grove of yews; I saw something stir among the
+ stems; I thought it might be a broken branch swinging, my short-sighted
+ vision had caught no form, only a sense of motion; but the dusky shade
+ passed on, appearing and disappearing at the openings in the avenue. I
+ soon discerned it was a living thing, and a human thing; and, drawing
+ nearer, I perceived it was a woman, pacing slowly to and fro, and
+ evidently deeming herself alone as I had deemed myself alone, and
+ meditating as I had been meditating. Ere long she returned to a seat which
+ I fancy she had but just quitted, or I should have caught sight of her
+ before. It was in a nook, screened by a clump of trees; there was the
+ white wall before her, and a little stone set up against the wall, and, at
+ the foot of the stone, was an allotment of turf freshly turned up, a
+ new-made grave. I put on my spectacles, and passed softly close behind
+ her; glancing at the inscription on the stone, I read, “Julienne Henri,
+ died at Brussels, aged sixty. August 10th, 18—.” Having perused the
+ inscription, I looked down at the form sitting bent and thoughtful just
+ under my eyes, unconscious of the vicinity of any living thing; it was a
+ slim, youthful figure in mourning apparel of the plainest black stuff,
+ with a little simple, black crape bonnet; I felt, as well as saw, who it
+ was; and, moving neither hand nor foot, I stood some moments enjoying the
+ security of conviction. I had sought her for a month, and had never
+ discovered one of her traces—never met a hope, or seized a chance of
+ encountering her anywhere. I had been forced to loosen my grasp on
+ expectation; and, but an hour ago, had sunk slackly under the discouraging
+ thought that the current of life, and the impulse of destiny, had swept
+ her for ever from my reach; and, behold, while bending suddenly earthward
+ beneath the pressure of despondency—while following with my eyes the
+ track of sorrow on the turf of a graveyard—here was my lost jewel
+ dropped on the tear-fed herbage, nestling in the messy and mouldy roots of
+ yew-trees.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances sat very quiet, her elbow on her knee, and her head on her hand. I
+ knew she could retain a thinking attitude a long time without change; at
+ last, a tear fell; she had been looking at the name on the stone before
+ her, and her heart had no doubt endured one of those constrictions with
+ which the desolate living, regretting the dead, are, at times, so sorely
+ oppressed. Many tears rolled down, which she wiped away, again and again,
+ with her handkerchief; some distressed sobs escaped her, and then, the
+ paroxysm over, she sat quiet as before. I put my hand gently on her
+ shoulder; no need further to prepare her, for she was neither hysterical
+ nor liable to fainting-fits; a sudden push, indeed, might have startled
+ her, but the contact of my quiet touch merely woke attention as I wished;
+ and, though she turned quickly, yet so lightning-swift is thought—in
+ some minds especially—I believe the wonder of what—the
+ consciousness of who it was that thus stole unawares on her solitude, had
+ passed through her brain, and flashed into her heart, even before she had
+ effected that hasty movement; at least, Amazement had hardly opened her
+ eyes and raised them to mine, ere Recognition informed their irids with
+ most speaking brightness. Nervous surprise had hardly discomposed her
+ features ere a sentiment of most vivid joy shone clear and warm on her
+ whole countenance. I had hardly time to observe that she was wasted and
+ pale, ere called to feel a responsive inward pleasure by the sense of most
+ full and exquisite pleasure glowing in the animated flush, and shining in
+ the expansive light, now diffused over my pupil’s face. It was the summer
+ sun flashing out after the heavy summer shower; and what fertilizes more
+ rapidly than that beam, burning almost like fire in its ardour?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I hate boldness—that boldness which is of the brassy brow and
+ insensate nerves; but I love the courage of the strong heart, the fervour
+ of the generous blood; I loved with passion the light of Frances Evans’
+ clear hazel eye when it did not fear to look straight into mine; I loved
+ the tones with which she uttered the words—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mon maître! mon maître!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I loved the movement with which she confided her hand to my hand; I loved
+ her as she stood there, penniless and parentless; for a sensualist
+ charmless, for me a treasure—my best object of sympathy on earth,
+ thinking such thoughts as I thought, feeling such feelings as I felt; my
+ ideal of the shrine in which to seal my stores of love; personification of
+ discretion and forethought, of diligence and perseverance, of self-denial
+ and self-control—those guardians, those trusty keepers of the gift I
+ longed to confer on her—the gift of all my affections; model of
+ truth and honour, of independence and conscientiousness—those
+ refiners and sustainers of an honest life; silent possessor of a well of
+ tenderness, of a flame, as genial as still, as pure as quenchless, of
+ natural feeling, natural passion—those sources of refreshment and
+ comfort to the sanctuary of home. I knew how quietly and how deeply the
+ well bubbled in her heart; I knew how the more dangerous flame burned
+ safely under the eye of reason; I had seen when the fire shot up a moment
+ high and vivid, when the accelerated heat troubled life’s current in its
+ channels; I had seen reason reduce the rebel, and humble its blaze to
+ embers. I had confidence in Frances Evans; I had respect for her, and as I
+ drew her arm through mine, and led her out of the cemetery, I felt I had
+ another sentiment, as strong as confidence, as firm as respect, more
+ fervid than either—that of love.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, my pupil,” said I, as the ominous sounding gate swung to behind
+ us—“Well, I have found you again: a month’s search has seemed long, and I
+ little thought to have discovered my lost sheep straying amongst graves.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Never had I addressed her but as “Mademoiselle” before, and to speak thus
+ was to take up a tone new to both her and me. Her answer suprised me that
+ this language ruffled none of her feelings, woke no discord in her heart:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mon maître,” she said, “have you troubled yourself to seek me? I little
+ imagined you would think much of my absence, but I grieved bitterly to be
+ taken away from you. I was sorry for that circumstance when heavier
+ troubles ought to have made me forget it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your aunt is dead?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, a fortnight since, and she died full of regret, which I could not
+ chase from her mind; she kept repeating, even during the last night of her
+ existence, ‘Frances, you will be so lonely when I am gone, so friendless:’
+ she wished too that she could have been buried in Switzerland, and it was
+ I who persuaded her in her old age to leave the banks of Lake Leman, and
+ to come, only as it seems to die, in this flat region of Flanders.
+ Willingly would I have observed her last wish, and taken her remains back
+ to our own country, but that was impossible; I was forced to lay her
+ here.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She was ill but a short time, I presume?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But three weeks. When she began to sink I asked Mdlle. Reuter’s leave to
+ stay with her and wait on her; I readily got leave.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do you return to the pensionnat!” I demanded hastily.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, when I had been at home a week Mdlle. Reuter called one
+ evening, just after I had got my aunt to bed; she went into her room to
+ speak to her, and was extremely civil and affable, as she always is;
+ afterwards she came and sat with me a long time, and just as she rose to
+ go away, she said: “Mademoiselle, I shall not soon cease to regret your
+ departure from my establishment, though indeed it is true that you have
+ taught your class of pupils so well that they are all quite accomplished
+ in the little works you manage so skilfully, and have not the slightest
+ need of further instruction; my second teacher must in future supply your
+ place, with regard to the younger pupils, as well as she can, though she
+ is indeed an inferior artiste to you, and doubtless it will be your part
+ now to assume a higher position in your calling; I am sure you will
+ everywhere find schools and families willing to profit by your talents.’
+ And then she paid me my last quarter’s salary. I asked, as mademoiselle
+ would no doubt think, very bluntly, if she designed to discharge me from
+ the establishment. She smiled at my inelegance of speech, and answered
+ that ‘our connection as employer and employed was certainly dissolved, but
+ that she hoped still to retain the pleasure of my acquaintance; she should
+ always be happy to see me as a friend;’ and then she said something about
+ the excellent condition of the streets, and the long continuance of fine
+ weather, and went away quite cheerful.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I laughed inwardly; all this was so like the directress—so like what
+ I had expected and guessed of her conduct; and then the exposure and proof
+ of her lie, unconsciously afforded by Frances:—“She had frequently
+ applied for Mdlle. Henri’s address,” forsooth; “Mdlle. Henri had always
+ evaded giving it,” &amp;c., &amp;c., and here I found her a visitor at the
+ very house of whose locality she had professed absolute ignorance!
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Any comments I might have intended to make on my pupil’s communication,
+ were checked by the plashing of large rain-drops on our faces and on the
+ path, and by the muttering of a distant but coming storm. The warning
+ obvious in stagnant air and leaden sky had already induced me to take the
+ road leading back to Brussels, and now I hastened my own steps and those
+ of my companion, and, as our way lay downhill, we got on rapidly. There
+ was an interval after the fall of the first broad drops before heavy rain
+ came on; in the meantime we had passed through the Porte de Louvain, and
+ were again in the city.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Where do you live?” I asked; “I will see you safe home.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Rue Notre Dame aux Neiges,” answered Frances.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It was not far from the Rue de Louvain, and we stood on the doorsteps of
+ the house we sought ere the clouds, severing with loud peal and shattered
+ cataract of lightning, emptied their livid folds in a torrent, heavy,
+ prone, and broad.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come in! come in!” said Frances, as, after putting her into the house, I
+ paused ere I followed: the word decided me; I stepped across the
+ threshold, shut the door on the rushing, flashing, whitening storm, and
+ followed her upstairs to her apartments. Neither she nor I were wet; a
+ projection over the door had warded off the straight-descending flood;
+ none but the first, large drops had touched our garments; one minute more
+ and we should not have had a dry thread on us.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Stepping over a little mat of green wool, I found myself in a small room
+ with a painted floor and a square of green carpet in the middle; the
+ articles of furniture were few, but all bright and exquisitely clean;
+ order reigned through its narrow limits—such order as it soothed my
+ punctilious soul to behold. And I had hesitated to enter the abode,
+ because I apprehended after all that Mdlle. Reuter’s hint about its
+ extreme poverty might be too well-founded, and I feared to embarrass the
+ lace-mender by entering her lodgings unawares! Poor the place might be;
+ poor truly it was; but its neatness was better than elegance, and had but
+ a bright little fire shone on that clean hearth, I should have deemed it
+ more attractive than a palace. No fire was there, however, and no fuel
+ laid ready to light; the lace-mender was unable to allow herself that
+ indulgence, especially now when, deprived by death of her sole relative,
+ she had only her own unaided exertions to rely on. Frances went into an
+ inner room to take off her bonnet, and she came out a model of frugal
+ neatness, with her well-fitting black stuff dress, so accurately defining
+ her elegant bust and taper waist, with her spotless white collar turned
+ back from a fair and shapely neck, with her plenteous brown hair arranged
+ in smooth bands on her temples, and in a large Grecian plait behind:
+ ornaments she had none—neither brooch, ring, nor ribbon; she did
+ well enough without them—perfection of fit, proportion of form,
+ grace of carriage, agreeably supplied their place. Her eye, as she
+ re-entered the small sitting-room, instantly sought mine, which was just
+ then lingering on the hearth; I knew she read at once the sort of inward
+ ruth and pitying pain which the chill vacancy of that hearth stirred in my
+ soul: quick to penetrate, quick to determine, and quicker to put in
+ practice, she had in a moment tied a holland apron round her waist; then
+ she disappeared, and reappeared with a basket; it had a cover; she opened
+ it, and produced wood and coal; deftly and compactly she arranged them in
+ the grate.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is her whole stock, and she will exhaust it out of hospitality,”
+ thought I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What are you going to do?” I asked: “not surely to light a fire this hot
+ evening? I shall be smothered.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Indeed, monsieur, I feel it very chilly since the rain began; besides, I
+ must boil the water for my tea, for I take tea on Sundays; you will be
+ obliged to try and bear the heat.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She had struck a light; the wood was already in a blaze; and truly, when
+ contrasted with the darkness, the wild tumult of the tempest without, that
+ peaceful glow which began to beam on the now animated hearth, seemed very
+ cheering. A low, purring sound, from some quarter, announced that another
+ being, besides myself, was pleased with the change; a black cat, roused by
+ the light from its sleep on a little cushioned foot-stool, came and rubbed
+ its head against Frances’ gown as she knelt; she caressed it, saying it
+ had been a favourite with her “pauvre tante Julienne.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The fire being lit, the hearth swept, and a small kettle of a very antique
+ pattern, such as I thought I remembered to have seen in old farmhouses in
+ England, placed over the now ruddy flame, Frances’ hands were washed, and
+ her apron removed in an instant; then she opened a cupboard, and took out
+ a tea-tray, on which she had soon arranged a china tea-equipage, whose
+ pattern, shape, and size, denoted a remote antiquity; a little,
+ old-fashioned silver spoon was deposited in each saucer; and a pair of
+ silver tongs, equally old-fashioned, were laid on the sugar-basin; from
+ the cupboard, too, was produced a tidy silver cream-ewer, not larger then
+ an egg-shell. While making these preparations, she chanced to look up,
+ and, reading curiosity in my eyes, she smiled and asked—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is this like England, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Like the England of a hundred years ago,” I replied.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is it truly? Well, everything on this tray is at least a hundred years
+ old: these cups, these spoons, this ewer, are all heirlooms; my
+ great-grandmother left them to my grandmother, she to my mother, and my
+ mother brought them with her from England to Switzerland, and left them to
+ me; and, ever since I was a little girl, I have thought I should like to
+ carry them back to England, whence they came.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She put some pistolets on the table; she made the tea, as foreigners do
+ make tea—i.e., at the rate of a teaspoonful to half-a-dozen cups;
+ she placed me a chair, and, as I took it, she asked, with a sort of
+ exaltation—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Will it make you think yourself at home for a moment?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “If I had a home in England, I believe it would recall it,” I answered;
+ and, in truth, there was a sort of illusion in seeing the
+ fair-complexioned English-looking girl presiding at the English meal, and
+ speaking in the English language.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have then no home?” was her remark.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “None, nor ever have had. If ever I possess a home, it must be of my own
+ making, and the task is yet to begin.” And, as I spoke, a pang, new to me,
+ shot across my heart: it was a pang of mortification at the humility of my
+ position, and the inadequacy of my means; while with that pang was born a
+ strong desire to do more, earn more, be more, possess more; and in the
+ increased possessions, my roused and eager spirit panted to include the
+ home I had never had, the wife I inwardly vowed to win.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances’ tea was little better than hot water, sugar, and milk; and her
+ pistolets, with which she could not offer me butter, were sweet to my
+ palate as manna.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The repast over, and the treasured plate and porcelain being washed and
+ put by, the bright table rubbed still brighter, “le chat de ma tante
+ Julienne” also being fed with provisions brought forth on a plate for its
+ special use, a few stray cinders, and a scattering of ashes too, being
+ swept from the hearth, Frances at last sat down; and then, as she took a
+ chair opposite to me, she betrayed, for the first time, a little
+ embarrassment; and no wonder, for indeed I had unconsciously watched her
+ rather too closely, followed all her steps and all her movements a little
+ too perseveringly with my eyes, for she mesmerized me by the grace and
+ alertness of her action—by the deft, cleanly, and even decorative
+ effect resulting from each touch of her slight and fine fingers; and when,
+ at last, she subsided to stillness, the intelligence of her face seemed
+ beauty to me, and I dwelt on it accordingly. Her colour, however, rising,
+ rather than settling with repose, and her eyes remaining downcast, though
+ I kept waiting for the lids to be raised that I might drink a ray of the
+ light I loved—a light where fire dissolved in softness, where
+ affection tempered penetration, where, just now at least, pleasure played
+ with thought—this expectation not being gratified, I began at last
+ to suspect that I had probably myself to blame for the disappointment; I
+ must cease gazing, and begin talking, if I wished to break the spell under
+ which she now sat motionless; so recollecting the composing effect which
+ an authoritative tone and manner had ever been wont to produce on her, I
+ said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Get one of your English books, mademoiselle, for the rain yet falls
+ heavily, and will probably detain me half an hour longer.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Released, and set at ease, up she rose, got her book, and accepted at once
+ the chair I placed for her at my side. She had selected “Paradise Lost”
+ from her shelf of classics, thinking, I suppose, the religious character
+ of the book best adapted it to Sunday; I told her to begin at the
+ beginning, and while she read Milton’s invocation to that heavenly muse,
+ who on the “secret top of Oreb or Sinai” had taught the Hebrew shepherd
+ how in the womb of chaos, the conception of a world had originated and
+ ripened, I enjoyed, undisturbed, the treble pleasure of having her near
+ me, hearing the sound of her voice—a sound sweet and satisfying in
+ my ear—and looking, by intervals, at her face: of this last
+ privilege, I chiefly availed myself when I found fault with an intonation,
+ a pause, or an emphasis; as long as I dogmatized, I might also gaze,
+ without exciting too warm a flush.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Enough,” said I, when she had gone through some half dozen pages (a work
+ of time with her, for she read slowly and paused often to ask and receive
+ information)—“enough; and now the rain is ceasing, and I must soon
+ go.” For indeed, at that moment, looking towards the window, I saw it all
+ blue; the thunder-clouds were broken and scattered, and the setting August
+ sun sent a gleam like the reflection of rubies through the lattice. I got
+ up; I drew on my gloves.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have not yet found another situation to supply the place of that from
+ which you were dismissed by Mdlle. Reuter?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur; I have made inquiries everywhere, but they all ask me for
+ references; and to speak truth, I do not like to apply to the directress,
+ because I consider she acted neither justly nor honourably towards me; she
+ used underhand means to set my pupils against me, and thereby render me
+ unhappy while I held my place in her establishment, and she eventually
+ deprived me of it by a masked and hypocritical manoeuvre, pretending that
+ she was acting for my good, but really snatching from me my chief means of
+ subsistence, at a crisis when not only my own life, but that of another,
+ depended on my exertions: of her I will never more ask a favour.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How, then, do you propose to get on? How do you live now?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I have still my lace-mending trade; with care it will keep me from
+ starvation, and I doubt not by dint of exertion to get better employment
+ yet; it is only a fortnight since I began to try; my courage or hopes are
+ by no means worn out yet.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And if you get what you wish, what then? what are your ultimate views?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “To save enough to cross the Channel: I always look to England as my
+ Canaan.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, well—ere long I shall pay you another visit; good evening
+ now,” and I left her rather abruptly; I had much ado to resist a strong
+ inward impulse, urging me to take a warmer, more expressive leave: what so
+ natural as to fold her for a moment in a close embrace, to imprint one
+ kiss on her cheek or forehead? I was not unreasonable—that was all I
+ wanted; satisfied in that point, I could go away content; and Reason
+ denied me even this; she ordered me to turn my eyes from her face, and my
+ steps from her apartment—to quit her as dryly and coldly as I would
+ have quitted old Madame Pelet. I obeyed, but I swore rancorously to be
+ avenged one day. “I’ll earn a right to do as I please in this matter, or
+ I’ll die in the contest. I have one object before me now—to get that
+ Genevese girl for my wife; and my wife she shall be—that is,
+ provided she has as much, or half as much regard for her master as he has
+ for her. And would she be so docile, so smiling, so happy under my
+ instructions if she had not? would she sit at my side when I dictate or
+ correct, with such a still, contented, halcyon mien?” for I had ever
+ remarked, that however sad or harassed her countenance might be when I
+ entered a room, yet after I had been near her, spoken to her a few words,
+ given her some directions, uttered perhaps some reproofs, she would, all
+ at once, nestle into a nook of happiness, and look up serene and revived.
+ The reproofs suited her best of all: while I scolded she would chip away
+ with her pen-knife at a pencil or a pen; fidgetting a little, pouting a
+ little, defending herself by monosyllables, and when I deprived her of the
+ pen or pencil, fearing it would be all cut away, and when I interdicted
+ even the monosyllabic defence, for the purpose of working up the subdued
+ excitement a little higher, she would at last raise her eyes and give me a
+ certain glance, sweetened with gaiety, and pointed with defiance, which,
+ to speak truth, thrilled me as nothing had ever done, and made me, in a
+ fashion (though happily she did not know it), her subject, if not her
+ slave. After such little scenes her spirits would maintain their flow,
+ often for some hours, and, as I remarked before, her health therefrom took
+ a sustenance and vigour which, previously to the event of her aunt’s death
+ and her dismissal, had almost recreated her whole frame.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It has taken me several minutes to write these last sentences; but I had
+ thought all their purport during the brief interval of descending the
+ stairs from Frances’ room. Just as I was opening the outer door, I
+ remembered the twenty francs which I had not restored; I paused:
+ impossible to carry them away with me; difficult to force them back on
+ their original owner; I had now seen her in her own humble abode,
+ witnessed the dignity of her poverty, the pride of order, the fastidious
+ care of conservatism, obvious in the arrangement and economy of her little
+ home; I was sure she would not suffer herself to be excused paying her
+ debts; I was certain the favour of indemnity would be accepted from no
+ hand, perhaps least of all from mine: yet these four five-franc pieces
+ were a burden to my self-respect, and I must get rid of them. An
+ expedient—a clumsy one no doubt, but the best I could devise—suggested
+ itself to me. I darted up the stairs, knocked, re-entered the room as if
+ in haste:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle, I have forgotten one of my gloves; I must have left it
+ here.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She instantly rose to seek it; as she turned her back, I—being now
+ at the hearth—noiselessly lifted a little vase, one of a set of
+ china ornaments, as old-fashioned as the tea-cups—slipped the money
+ under it, then saying—“Oh here is my glove! I had dropped it within
+ the fender; good evening, mademoiselle,” I made my second exit.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Brief as my impromptu return had been, it had afforded me time to pick up
+ a heart-ache; I remarked that Frances had already removed the red embers
+ of her cheerful little fire from the grate: forced to calculate every
+ item, to save in every detail, she had instantly on my departure
+ retrenched a luxury too expensive to be enjoyed alone.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am glad it is not yet winter,” thought I; “but in two months more come
+ the winds and rains of November; would to God that before then I could
+ earn the right, and the power, to shovel coals into that grate
+ <i lang="la">ad libitum</i>!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Already the pavement was drying; a balmy and fresh breeze stirred the air,
+ purified by lightning; I felt the West behind me, where spread a sky like
+ opal; azure immingled with crimson: the enlarged sun, glorious in Tyrian
+ tints, dipped his brim already; stepping, as I was, eastward, I faced a
+ vast bank of clouds, but also I had before me the arch of an evening
+ rainbow; a perfect rainbow—high, wide, vivid. I looked long; my eye
+ drank in the scene, and I suppose my brain must have absorbed it; for that
+ night, after lying awake in pleasant fever a long time, watching the
+ silent sheet-lightning, which still played among the retreating clouds,
+ and flashed silvery over the stars, I at last fell asleep; and then in a
+ dream were reproduced the setting sun, the bank of clouds, the mighty
+ rainbow. I stood, methought, on a terrace; I leaned over a parapeted wall;
+ there was space below me, depth I could not fathom, but hearing an endless
+ dash of waves, I believed it to be the sea; sea spread to the horizon; sea
+ of changeful green and intense blue: all was soft in the distance; all
+ vapour-veiled. A spark of gold glistened on the line between water and
+ air, floated up, approached, enlarged, changed; the object hung midway
+ between heaven and earth, under the arch of the rainbow; the soft but dusk
+ clouds diffused behind. It hovered as on wings; pearly, fleecy, gleaming
+ air streamed like raiment round it; light, tinted with carnation, coloured
+ what seemed face and limbs; a large star shone with still lustre on an
+ angel’s forehead; an upraised arm and hand, glancing like a ray, pointed
+ to the bow overhead, and a voice in my heart whispered—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hope smiles on Effort!”
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0020">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ A COMPETENCY was what I wanted; a competency it was now my aim and resolve
+ to secure; but never had I been farther from the mark. With August the
+ school-year (l’année scolaire) closed, the examinations concluded, the
+ prizes were adjudged, the schools dispersed, the gates of all colleges,
+ the doors of all pensionnats shut, not to be reopened till the beginning
+ or middle of October. The last day of August was at hand, and what was my
+ position? Had I advanced a step since the commencement of the past
+ quarter? On the contrary, I had receded one. By renouncing my engagement
+ as English master in Mdlle. Reuter’s establishment, I had voluntarily cut
+ off £20 from my yearly income; I had diminished my £60 per annum to
+ £40, and even that sum I now held by a very precarious tenure.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It is some time since I made any reference to M. Pelet. The moonlight walk
+ is, I think, the last incident recorded in this narrative where that
+ gentleman cuts any conspicuous figure: the fact is, since that event, a
+ change had come over the spirit of our intercourse. He, indeed, ignorant
+ that the still hour, a cloudless moon, and an open lattice, had revealed
+ to me the secret of his selfish love and false friendship, would have
+ continued smooth and complaisant as ever; but I grew spiny as a porcupine,
+ and inflexible as a blackthorn cudgel; I never had a smile for his
+ raillery, never a moment for his society; his invitations to take coffee
+ with him in his parlour were invariably rejected, and very stiffly and
+ sternly rejected too; his jesting allusions to the directress (which he
+ still continued) were heard with a grim calm very different from the
+ petulant pleasure they were formerly wont to excite. For a long time Pelet
+ bore with my frigid demeanour very patiently; he even increased his
+ attentions; but finding that even a cringing politeness failed to thaw or
+ move me, he at last altered too; in his turn he cooled; his invitations
+ ceased; his countenance became suspicious and overcast, and I read in the
+ perplexed yet brooding aspect of his brow, a constant examination and
+ comparison of premises, and an anxious endeavour to draw thence some
+ explanatory inference. Ere long, I fancy, he succeeded, for he was not
+ without penetration; perhaps, too, Mdlle. Zoraïde might have aided him in
+ the solution of the enigma; at any rate I soon found that the uncertainty
+ of doubt had vanished from his manner; renouncing all pretence of
+ friendship and cordiality, he adopted a reserved, formal, but still
+ scrupulously polite deportment. This was the point to which I had wished
+ to bring him, and I was now again comparatively at my ease. I did not, it
+ is true, like my position in his house; but being freed from the annoyance
+ of false professions and double-dealing I could endure it, especially as
+ no heroic sentiment of hatred or jealousy of the director distracted my
+ philosophical soul; he had not, I found, wounded me in a very tender
+ point, the wound was so soon and so radically healed, leaving only a sense
+ of contempt for the treacherous fashion in which it had been inflicted,
+ and a lasting mistrust of the hand which I had detected attempting to stab
+ in the dark.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This state of things continued till about the middle of July, and then
+ there was a little change; Pelet came home one night, an hour after his
+ usual time, in a state of unequivocal intoxication, a thing anomalous with
+ him; for if he had some of the worst faults of his countrymen, he had also
+ one at least of their virtues, i.e. sobriety. So drunk, however, was he
+ upon this occasion, that after having roused the whole establishment
+ (except the pupils, whose dormitory being over the classes in a building
+ apart from the dwelling-house, was consequently out of the reach of
+ disturbance) by violently ringing the hall-bell and ordering lunch to be
+ brought in immediately, for he imagined it was noon, whereas the city
+ bells had just tolled midnight; after having furiously rated the servants
+ for their want of punctuality, and gone near to chastise his poor old
+ mother, who advised him to go to bed, he began raving dreadfully about “le
+ maudit Anglais, Creemsvort.” I had not yet retired; some German books I
+ had got hold of had kept me up late; I heard the uproar below, and could
+ distinguish the director’s voice exalted in a manner as appalling as it
+ was unusual. Opening my door a little, I became aware of a demand on his
+ part for “Creemsvort” to be brought down to him that he might cut his
+ throat on the hall-table and wash his honour, which he affirmed to be in a
+ dirty condition, in infernal British blood. “He is either mad or drunk,”
+ thought I, “and in either case the old woman and the servants will be the
+ better of a man’s assistance,” so I descended straight to the hall. I
+ found him staggering about, his eyes in a fine frenzy rolling—a
+ pretty sight he was, a just medium between the fool and the lunatic.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come, M. Pelet,” said I, “you had better go to bed,” and I took hold of
+ his arm. His excitement, of course, increased greatly at sight and touch
+ of the individual for whose blood he had been making application: he
+ struggled and struck with fury—but a drunken man is no match for a
+ sober one; and, even in his normal state, Pelet’s worn out frame could not
+ have stood against my sound one. I got him up-stairs, and, in process of
+ time, to bed. During the operation he did not fail to utter comminations
+ which, though broken, had a sense in them; while stigmatizing me as the
+ treacherous spawn of a perfidious country, he, in the same breath,
+ anathematized Zoraïde Reuter; he termed her “femme sotte et vicieuse,”
+ who, in a fit of lewd caprice, had thrown herself away on an unprincipled
+ adventurer; directing the point of the last appellation by a furious blow,
+ obliquely aimed at me. I left him in the act of bounding elastically out
+ of the bed into which I had tucked him; but, as I took the precaution of
+ turning the key in the door behind me, I retired to my own room, assured
+ of his safe custody till the morning, and free to draw undisturbed
+ conclusions from the scene I had just witnessed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Now, it was precisely about this time that the directress, stung by my
+ coldness, bewitched by my scorn, and excited by the preference she
+ suspected me of cherishing for another, had fallen into a snare of her own
+ laying—was herself caught in the meshes of the very passion with
+ which she wished to entangle me. Conscious of the state of things in that
+ quarter, I gathered, from the condition in which I saw my employer, that
+ his lady-love had betrayed the alienation of her affections—inclinations,
+ rather, I would say; affection is a word at once too warm and too pure for
+ the subject—had let him see that the cavity of her hollow heart,
+ emptied of his image, was now occupied by that of his usher. It was not
+ without some surprise that I found myself obliged to entertain this view
+ of the case; Pelet, with his old-established school, was so convenient, so
+ profitable a match—Zoraïde was so calculating, so interested a woman—I
+ wondered mere personal preference could, in her mind, have prevailed for a
+ moment over worldly advantage: yet, it was evident, from what Pelet said,
+ that, not only had she repulsed him, but had even let slip expressions of
+ partiality for me. One of his drunken exclamations was, “And the jade
+ doats on your youth, you raw blockhead! and talks of your noble
+ deportment, as she calls your accursed English formality—and your
+ pure morals, forsooth! des moeurs de Caton a-t-elle dit—sotte!”
+ Hers, I thought, must be a curious soul, where in spite of a strong,
+ natural tendency to estimate unduly advantages of wealth and station, the
+ sardonic disdain of a fortuneless subordinate had wrought a deeper
+ impression than could be imprinted by the most flattering assiduities of a
+ prosperous <i lang="fr">chef d’institution</i>. I smiled inwardly; and
+ strange to say, though my <i lang="fr">amour propre</i> was excited not
+ disagreeably by the conquest, my
+ better feelings remained untouched. Next day, when I saw the directress,
+ and when she made an excuse to meet me in the corridor, and besought my
+ notice by a demeanour and look subdued to Helot humility, I could not
+ love, I could scarcely pity her. To answer briefly and dryly some
+ interesting inquiry about my health—to pass her by with a stern bow—was
+ all I could; her presence and manner had then, and for some time
+ previously and consequently, a singular effect upon me: they sealed up all
+ that was good, elicited all that was noxious in my nature; sometimes they
+ enervated my senses, but they always hardened my heart. I was aware of the
+ detriment done, and quarrelled with myself for the change. I had ever
+ hated a tyrant; and, behold, the possession of a slave, self-given, went
+ near to transform me into what I abhorred! There was at once a sort of low
+ gratification in receiving this luscious incense from an attractive and
+ still young worshipper; and an irritating sense of degradation in the very
+ experience of the pleasure. When she stole about me with the soft step of
+ a slave, I felt at once barbarous and sensual as a pasha. I endured her
+ homage sometimes; sometimes I rebuked it. My indifference or harshness
+ served equally to increase the evil I desired to check.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Que le dédain lui sied bien!” I once overheard her say to her mother: “il
+ est beau comme Apollon quand il sourit de son air hautain.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ And the jolly old dame laughed, and said she thought her daughter was
+ bewitched, for I had no point of a handsome man about me, except being
+ straight and without deformity. “Pour moi,” she continued, “il me fait
+ tout l’effet d’un chat-huant, avec ses bésicles.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Worthy old girl! I could have gone and kissed her had she not been a
+ little too old, too fat, and too red-faced; her sensible, truthful words
+ seemed so wholesome, contrasted with the morbid illusions of her daughter.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When Pelet awoke on the morning after his frenzy fit, he retained no
+ recollection of what had happened the previous night, and his mother
+ fortunately had the discretion to refrain from informing him that I had
+ been a witness of his degradation. He did not again have recourse to wine
+ for curing his griefs, but even in his sober mood he soon showed that the
+ iron of jealousy had entered into his soul. A thorough Frenchman, the
+ national characteristic of ferocity had not been omitted by nature in
+ compounding the ingredients of his character; it had appeared first in his
+ access of drunken wrath, when some of his demonstrations of hatred to my
+ person were of a truly fiendish character, and now it was more covertly
+ betrayed by momentary contractions of the features, and flashes of
+ fierceness in his light blue eyes, when their glance chanced to encounter
+ mine. He absolutely avoided speaking to me; I was now spared even the
+ falsehood of his politeness. In this state of our mutual relations, my
+ soul rebelled sometimes almost ungovernably, against living in the house
+ and discharging the service of such a man; but who is free from the
+ constraint of circumstances? At that time, I was not: I used to rise each
+ morning eager to shake off his yoke, and go out with my portmanteau under
+ my arm, if a beggar, at least a freeman; and in the evening, when I came
+ back from the pensionnat de demoiselles, a certain pleasant voice in my
+ ear; a certain face, so intelligent, yet so docile, so reflective, yet so
+ soft, in my eyes; a certain cast of character, at once proud and pliant,
+ sensitive and sagacious, serious and ardent, in my head; a certain tone of
+ feeling, fervid and modest, refined and practical, pure and powerful,
+ delighting and troubling my memory—visions of new ties I longed to
+ contract, of new duties I longed to undertake, had taken the rover and the
+ rebel out of me, and had shown endurance of my hated lot in the light of a
+ Spartan virtue.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But Pelet’s fury subsided; a fortnight sufficed for its rise, progress,
+ and extinction: in that space of time the dismissal of the obnoxious
+ teacher had been effected in the neighbouring house, and in the same
+ interval I had declared my resolution to follow and find out my pupil, and
+ upon my application for her address being refused, I had summarily
+ resigned my own post. This last act seemed at once to restore Mdlle.
+ Reuter to her senses; her sagacity, her judgment, so long misled by a
+ fascinating delusion, struck again into the right track the moment that
+ delusion vanished. By the right track, I do not mean the steep and
+ difficult path of principle—in that path she never trod; but the
+ plain highway of common sense, from which she had of late widely diverged.
+ When there she carefully sought, and having found, industriously pursued
+ the trail of her old suitor, M. Pelet. She soon overtook him. What arts
+ she employed to soothe and blind him I know not, but she succeeded both in
+ allaying his wrath, and hoodwinking his discernment, as was soon proved by
+ the alteration in his mien and manner; she must have managed to convince
+ him that I neither was, nor ever had been, a rival of his, for the
+ fortnight of fury against me terminated in a fit of exceeding graciousness
+ and amenity, not unmixed with a dash of exulting self-complacency, more
+ ludicrous than irritating. Pelet’s bachelor’s life had been passed in
+ proper French style with due disregard to moral restraint, and I thought
+ his married life promised to be very French also. He often boasted to me
+ what a terror he had been to certain husbands of his acquaintance; I
+ perceived it would not now be difficult to pay him back in his own coin.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The crisis drew on. No sooner had the holidays commenced than note of
+ preparation for some momentous event sounded all through the premises of
+ Pelet: painters, polishers, and upholsterers were immediately set to work,
+ and there was talk of “la chambre de Madame,” “le salon de Madame.” Not
+ deeming it probable that the old duenna at present graced with that title
+ in our house, had inspired her son with such enthusiasm of filial piety,
+ as to induce him to fit up apartments expressly for her use, I concluded,
+ in common with the cook, the two housemaids, and the kitchen-scullion,
+ that a new and more juvenile Madame was destined to be the tenant of these
+ gay chambers.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Presently official announcement of the coming event was put forth. In
+ another week’s time M. François Pelet, directeur, and Mdlle. Zoraïde
+ Reuter, directrice, were to be joined together in the bands of matrimony.
+ Monsieur, in person, heralded the fact to me; terminating his
+ communication by an obliging expression of his desire that I should
+ continue, as heretofore, his ablest assistant and most trusted friend; and
+ a proposition to raise my salary by an additional two hundred francs per
+ annum. I thanked him, gave no conclusive answer at the time, and, when he
+ had left me, threw off my blouse, put on my coat, and set out on a long
+ walk outside the Porte de Flandre, in order, as I thought, to cool my
+ blood, calm my nerves, and shake my disarranged ideas into some order. In
+ fact, I had just received what was virtually my dismissal. I could not
+ conceal, I did not desire to conceal from myself the conviction that,
+ being now certain that Mdlle. Reuter was destined to become Madame Pelet
+ it would not do for me to remain a dependent dweller in the house which
+ was soon to be hers. Her present demeanour towards me was deficient
+ neither in dignity nor propriety; but I knew her former feeling was
+ unchanged. Decorum now repressed, and Policy masked it, but Opportunity
+ would be too strong for either of these—Temptation would shiver
+ their restraints.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was no pope—I could not boast infallibility: in short, if I
+ stayed, the probability was that, in three months’ time, a practical
+ modern French novel would be in full process of concoction under the roof
+ of the unsuspecting Pelet. Now, modern French novels are not to my taste,
+ either practically or theoretically. Limited as had yet been my experience
+ of life, I had once had the opportunity of contemplating, near at hand, an
+ example of the results produced by a course of interesting and romantic
+ domestic treachery. No golden halo of fiction was about this example, I
+ saw it bare and real, and it was very loathsome. I saw a mind degraded by
+ the practice of mean subterfuge, by the habit of perfidious deception, and
+ a body depraved by the infectious influence of the vice-polluted soul. I
+ had suffered much from the forced and prolonged view of this spectacle;
+ those sufferings I did not now regret, for their simple recollection acted
+ as a most wholesome antidote to temptation. They had inscribed on my
+ reason the conviction that unlawful pleasure, trenching on another’s
+ rights, is delusive and envenomed pleasure—its hollowness
+ disappoints at the time, its poison cruelly tortures afterwards, its
+ effects deprave for ever.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ From all this resulted the conclusion that I must leave Pelet’s, and that
+ instantly; “but,” said Prudence, “you know not where to go, nor how to
+ live;” and then the dream of true love came over me: Frances Henri seemed
+ to stand at my side; her slender waist to invite my arm; her hand to court
+ my hand; I felt it was made to nestle in mine; I could not relinquish my
+ right to it, nor could I withdraw my eyes for ever from hers, where I saw
+ so much happiness, such a correspondence of heart with heart; over whose
+ expression I had such influence; where I could kindle bliss, infuse awe,
+ stir deep delight, rouse sparkling spirit, and sometimes waken pleasurable
+ dread. My hopes to will and possess, my resolutions to merit and rise,
+ rose in array against me; and here I was about to plunge into the gulf of
+ absolute destitution; “and all this,” suggested an inward voice, “because
+ you fear an evil which may never happen!” “It will happen; you
+ <em>know</em> it will,” answered that stubborn monitor, Conscience. “Do
+ what you feel is right; obey me, and even in the sloughs of want I will
+ plant for you firm footing.” And then, as I walked fast along the road,
+ there rose upon me a strange, inly-felt idea of some Great Being, unseen,
+ but all present, who in His beneficence desired only my welfare, and now
+ watched the struggle of good and evil in my heart, and waited to see
+ whether I should obey His voice, heard in the whispers of my conscience,
+ or lend an ear to the sophisms by which His enemy and mine—the Spirit of
+ Evil—sought to lead me astray.
+ Rough and steep was the path indicated by divine
+ suggestion; mossy and declining the green way along which Temptation
+ strewed flowers; but whereas, methought, the Deity of Love, the Friend of
+ all that exists, would smile well-pleased were I to gird up my loins and
+ address myself to the rude ascent; so, on the other hand, each inclination
+ to the velvet declivity seemed to kindle a gleam of triumph on the brow of
+ the man-hating, God-defying demon. Sharp and short I turned round; fast I
+ retraced my steps; in half an hour I was again at M. Pelet’s: I sought him
+ in his study; brief parley, concise explanation sufficed; my manner proved
+ that I was resolved; he, perhaps, at heart approved my decision. After
+ twenty minutes’ conversation, I re-entered my own room, self-deprived of
+ the means of living, self-sentenced to leave my present home, with the
+ short notice of a week in which to provide another.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0021">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ DIRECTLY as I closed the door, I saw laid on the table two letters; my
+ thought was, that they were notes of invitation from the friends of some
+ of my pupils; I had received such marks of attention occasionally, and
+ with me, who had no friends, correspondence of more interest was out of
+ the question; the postman’s arrival had never yet been an event of
+ interest to me since I came to Brussels. I laid my hand carelessly on the
+ documents, and coldly and slowly glancing at them, I prepared to break the
+ seals; my eye was arrested and my hand too; I saw what excited me, as if I
+ had found a vivid picture where I expected only to discover a blank page:
+ on one cover was an English postmark; on the other, a lady’s clear, fine
+ autograph; the last I opened first:—
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “MONSIEUR,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I found out what you had done the very morning after your visit to me;
+ you might be sure I should dust the china, every day; and, as no one but
+ you had been in my room for a week, and as fairy-money is not current in
+ Brussels, I could not doubt who left the twenty francs on the
+ chimney-piece. I thought I heard you stir the vase when I was stooping to
+ look for your glove under the table, and I wondered you should imagine it
+ had got into such a little cup. Now, monsieur, the money is not mine, and
+ I shall not keep it; I will not send it in this note because it might be
+ lost—besides, it is heavy; but I will restore it to you the first
+ time I see you, and you must make no difficulties about taking it;
+ because, in the first place, I am sure, monsieur, you can understand that
+ one likes to pay one’s debts; that it is satisfactory to owe no man
+ anything; and, in the second place, I can now very well afford to be
+ honest, as I am provided with a situation. This last circumstance is,
+ indeed, the reason of my writing to you, for it is pleasant to communicate
+ good news; and, in these days, I have only my master to whom I can tell
+ anything.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A week ago, monsieur, I was sent for by a Mrs. Wharton, an English lady;
+ her eldest daughter was going to be married, and some rich relation having
+ made her a present of a veil and dress in costly old lace, as precious,
+ they said, almost as jewels, but a little damaged by time, I was
+ commissioned to put them in repair. I had to do it at the house; they gave
+ me, besides, some embroidery to complete, and nearly a week elapsed before
+ I had finished everything. While I worked, Miss Wharton often came into
+ the room and sat with me, and so did Mrs. Wharton; they made me talk
+ English; asked how I had learned to speak it so well; then they inquired
+ what I knew besides—what books I had read; soon they seemed to make
+ a sort of wonder of me, considering me no doubt as a learned grisette. One
+ afternoon, Mrs. Wharton brought in a Parisian lady to test the accuracy of
+ my knowledge of French; the result of it was that, owing probably in a
+ great degree to the mother’s and daughter’s good humour about the
+ marriage, which inclined them to do beneficent deeds, and partly, I think,
+ because they are naturally benevolent people, they decided that the wish I
+ had expressed to do something more than mend lace was a very legitimate
+ one; and the same day they took me in their carriage to Mrs. D.‘s, who is
+ the directress of the first English school at Brussels. It seems she
+ happened to be in want of a French lady to give lessons in geography,
+ history, grammar, and composition, in the French language. Mrs. Wharton
+ recommended me very warmly; and, as two of her younger daughters are
+ pupils in the house, her patronage availed to get me the place. It was
+ settled that I am to attend six hours daily (for, happily, it was not
+ required that I should live in the house; I should have been sorry to
+ leave my lodgings), and, for this, Mrs. D. will give me twelve hundred
+ francs per annum.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You see, therefore, monsieur, that I am now rich; richer almost than I
+ ever hoped to be: I feel thankful for it, especially as my sight was
+ beginning to be injured by constant working at fine lace; and I was
+ getting, too, very weary of sitting up late at nights, and yet not being
+ able to find time for reading or study. I began to fear that I should fall
+ ill, and be unable to pay my way; this fear is now, in a great measure,
+ removed; and, in truth, monsieur, I am very grateful to God for the
+ relief; and I feel it necessary, almost, to speak of my happiness to some
+ one who is kind-hearted enough to derive joy from seeing others joyful. I
+ could not, therefore, resist the temptation of writing to you; I argued
+ with myself it is very pleasant for me to write, and it will not be
+ exactly painful, though it may be tiresome to monsieur to read. Do not be
+ too angry with my circumlocution and inelegancies of expression, and,
+ believe me
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your attached pupil,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “F. E. HENRI.”
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ Having read this letter, I mused on its contents for a few moments—whether
+ with sentiments pleasurable or otherwise I will hereafter note—and
+ then took up the other. It was directed in a hand to me unknown—small,
+ and rather neat; neither masculine nor exactly feminine; the seal bore a
+ coat of arms, concerning which I could only decipher that it was not that
+ of the Seacombe family, consequently the epistle could be from none of my
+ almost forgotten, and certainly quite forgetting patrician relations. From
+ whom, then, was it? I removed the envelope; the note folded within ran as
+ follows:
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “I have no doubt in the world that you are doing well in that greasy
+ Flanders; living probably on the fat of the unctuous land; sitting like a
+ black-haired, tawny-skinned, long-nosed Israelite by the flesh-pots of
+ Egypt; or like a rascally son of Levi near the brass cauldrons of the
+ sanctuary, and every now and then plunging in a consecrated hook, and
+ drawing out of the sea of broth the fattest of heave-shoulders and the
+ fleshiest of wave-breasts. I know this, because you never write to any one
+ in England. Thankless dog that you are! I, by the sovereign efficacy of my
+ recommendation, got you the place where you are now living in clover, and
+ yet not a word of gratitude, or even acknowledgment, have you ever offered
+ in return; but I am coming to see you, and small conception can you, with
+ your addled aristocratic brains, form of the sort of moral kicking I have,
+ ready packed in my carpet-bag, destined to be presented to you immediately
+ on my arrival.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Meantime I know all about your affairs, and have just got information, by
+ Brown’s last letter, that you are said to be on the point of forming an
+ advantageous match with a pursy, little Belgian schoolmistress—a
+ Mdlle. Zénobie, or some such name. Won’t I have a look at her when I come
+ over! And this you may rely on: if she pleases my taste, or if I think it
+ worth while in a pecuniary point of view, I’ll pounce on your prize and
+ bear her away triumphant in spite of your teeth. Yet I don’t like dumpies
+ either, and Brown says she is little and stout—the better fitted for
+ a wiry, starved-looking chap like you. “Be on the look-out, for you know
+ neither the day nor hour when your ——” (I don’t wish to
+ blaspheme, so I’ll leave a blank)—cometh.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yours truly,
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “HUNSDEN YORKE HUNSDEN.”
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “Humph!” said I; and ere I laid the letter down, I again glanced at the
+ small, neat handwriting, not a bit like that of a mercantile man, nor,
+ indeed, of any man except Hunsden himself. They talk of affinities between
+ the autograph and the character: what affinity was there here? I recalled
+ the writer’s peculiar face and certain traits I suspected, rather than
+ knew, to appertain to his nature, and I answered, “A great deal.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden, then, was coming to Brussels, and coming I knew not when; coming
+ charged with the expectation of finding me on the summit of prosperity,
+ about to be married, to step into a warm nest, to lie comfortably down by
+ the side of a snug, well-fed little mate.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I wish him joy of the fidelity of the picture he has painted,” thought I.
+ “What will he say when, instead of a pair of plump turtle doves, billing
+ and cooing in a bower of roses, he finds a single lean cormorant, standing
+ mateless and shelterless on poverty’s bleak cliff? Oh, confound him! Let
+ him come, and let him laugh at the contrast between rumour and fact. Were
+ he the devil himself, instead of being merely very like him, I’d not
+ condescend to get out of his way, or to forge a smile or a cheerful word
+ wherewith to avert his sarcasm.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Then I recurred to the other letter: that struck a chord whose sound I
+ could not deaden by thrusting my fingers into my ears, for it vibrated
+ within; and though its swell might be exquisite music, its cadence was a
+ groan.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ That Frances was relieved from the pressure of want, that the curse of
+ excessive labour was taken off her, filled me with happiness; that her
+ first thought in prosperity should be to augment her joy by sharing it
+ with me, met and satisfied the wish of my heart. Two results of her letter
+ were then pleasant, sweet as two draughts of nectar; but applying my lips
+ for the third time to the cup, and they were excoriated as with vinegar
+ and gall.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Two persons whose desires are moderate may live well enough in Brussels on
+ an income which would scarcely afford a respectable maintenance for one in
+ London: and that, not because the necessaries of life are so much dearer
+ in the latter capital, or taxes so much higher than in the former, but
+ because the English surpass in folly all the nations on God’s earth, and
+ are more abject slaves to custom, to opinion, to the desire to keep up a
+ certain appearance, than the Italians are to priestcraft, the French to
+ vain-glory, the Russians to their Czar, or the Germans to black beer. I
+ have seen a degree of sense in the modest arrangement of one homely
+ Belgian household, that might put to shame the elegance, the
+ superfluities, the luxuries, the strained refinements of a hundred genteel
+ English mansions. In Belgium, provided you can make money, you may save
+ it; this is scarcely possible in England; ostentation there lavishes in a
+ month what industry has earned in a year. More shame to all classes in
+ that most bountiful and beggarly country for their servile following of
+ Fashion; I could write a chapter or two on this subject, but must forbear,
+ at least for the present. Had I retained my £60 per annum I could, now
+ that Frances was in possession of £50, have gone straight to her this
+ very evening, and spoken out the words which, repressed, kept fretting my
+ heart with fever; our united income would, as we should have managed it,
+ have sufficed well for our mutual support; since we lived in a country
+ where economy was not confounded with meanness, where frugality in dress,
+ food, and furniture, was not synonymous with vulgarity in these various
+ points. But the placeless usher, bare of resource, and unsupported by
+ connections, must not think of this; such a sentiment as love, such a word
+ as marriage, were misplaced in his heart, and on his lips. Now for the
+ first time did I truly feel what it was to be poor; now did the sacrifice
+ I had made in casting from me the means of living put on a new aspect;
+ instead of a correct, just, honourable act, it seemed a deed at once light
+ and fanatical; I took several turns in my room, under the goading
+ influence of most poignant remorse; I walked a quarter of an hour from the
+ wall to the window; and at the window, self-reproach seemed to face me; at
+ the wall, self-disdain: all at once out spoke Conscience:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Down, stupid tormenters!” cried she; “the man has done his duty; you
+ shall not bait him thus by thoughts of what might have been; he
+ relinquished a temporary and contingent good to avoid a permanent and
+ certain evil; he did well. Let him reflect now, and when your blinding
+ dust and deafening hum subside, he will discover a path.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I sat down; I propped my forehead on both my hands; I thought and thought
+ an hour—two hours; vainly. I seemed like one sealed in a subterranean
+ vault, who gazes at utter blackness; at blackness ensured by yard-thick
+ stone walls around, and by piles of building above, expecting light to
+ penetrate through granite, and through cement firm as granite. But there
+ are chinks, or there may be chinks, in the best adjusted masonry; there
+ was a chink in my cavernous cell; for, eventually, I saw, or seemed to
+ see, a ray—pallid, indeed, and cold, and doubtful, but still a ray,
+ for it showed that narrow path which conscience had promised after two,
+ three hours’ torturing research in brain and memory, I disinterred certain
+ remains of circumstances, and conceived a hope that by putting them
+ together an expedient might be framed, and a resource discovered. The
+ circumstances were briefly these:
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Some three months ago M. Pelet had, on the occasion of his
+ <i lang="fr">fête</i>, given the
+ boys a treat, which treat consisted in a party of pleasure to a certain
+ place of public resort in the outskirts of Brussels, of which I do not at
+ this moment remember the name, but near it were several of those lakelets
+ called étangs; and there was one étang, larger than the rest, where on
+ holidays people were accustomed to amuse themselves by rowing round it in
+ little boats. The boys having eaten an unlimited quantity of “gaufres,”
+ and drank several bottles of Louvain beer, amid the shades of a garden
+ made and provided for such crams, petitioned the director for leave to
+ take a row on the étang. Half a dozen of the eldest succeeded in obtaining
+ leave, and I was commissioned to accompany them as surveillant. Among the
+ half dozen happened to be a certain Jean Baptiste Vandenhuten, a most
+ ponderous young Flamand, not tall, but even now, at the early age of
+ sixteen, possessing a breadth and depth of personal development truly
+ national. It chanced that Jean was the first lad to step into the boat; he
+ stumbled, rolled to one side, the boat revolted at his weight and
+ capsized. Vandenhuten sank like lead, rose, sank again. My coat and
+ waistcoat were off in an instant; I had not been brought up at Eton and
+ boated and bathed and swam there ten long years for nothing; it was a
+ natural and easy act for me to leap to the rescue. The lads and the
+ boatmen yelled; they thought there would be two deaths by drowning instead
+ of one; but as Jean rose the third time, I clutched him by one leg and the
+ collar, and in three minutes more both he and I were safe landed. To speak
+ heaven’s truth, my merit in the action was small indeed, for I had run no
+ risk, and subsequently did not even catch cold from the wetting; but when
+ M. and Madame Vandenhuten, of whom Jean Baptiste was the sole hope, came
+ to hear of the exploit, they seemed to think I had evinced a bravery and
+ devotion which no thanks could sufficiently repay. Madame, in particular,
+ was “certain I must have dearly loved their sweet son, or I would not thus
+ have hazarded my own life to save his.” Monsieur, an honest-looking,
+ though phlegmatic man, said very little, but he would not suffer me to
+ leave the room, till I had promised that in case I ever stood in need of
+ help I would, by applying to him, give him a chance of discharging the
+ obligation under which he affirmed I had laid him. These words, then, were
+ my glimmer of light; it was here I found my sole outlet; and in truth,
+ though the cold light roused, it did not cheer me; nor did the outlet seem
+ such as I should like to pass through. Right I had none to M.
+ Vandenhuten’s good offices; it was not on the ground of merit I could
+ apply to him; no, I must stand on that of necessity: I had no work; I
+ wanted work; my best chance of obtaining it lay in securing his
+ recommendation. This I knew could be had by asking for it; not to ask,
+ because the request revolted my pride and contradicted my habits, would, I
+ felt, be an indulgence of false and indolent fastidiousness. I might
+ repent the omission all my life; I would not then be guilty of it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ That evening I went to M. Vandenhuten’s; but I had bent the bow and
+ adjusted the shaft in vain; the string broke. I rang the bell at the great
+ door (it was a large, handsome house in an expensive part of the town); a
+ manservant opened; I asked for M. Vandenhuten; M. Vandenhuten and family
+ were all out of town—gone to Ostend—did not know when they
+ would be back. I left my card, and retraced my steps.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0022">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ A WEEK is gone; <i lang="fr">le jour des noces</i> arrived; the marriage
+ was solemnized at St. Jacques; Mdlle. Zoraïde became Madame Pelet,
+ <i lang="fr">née</i> Reuter; and, in about
+ an hour after this transformation, “the happy pair,” as newspapers phrase
+ it, were on their way to Paris; where, according to previous arrangement,
+ the honeymoon was to be spent. The next day I quitted the pensionnat.
+ Myself and my chattels (some books and clothes) were soon transferred to a
+ modest lodging I had hired in a street not far off. In half an hour my
+ clothes were arranged in a commode, my books on a shelf, and the
+ “flitting” was effected. I should not have been unhappy that day had not
+ one pang tortured me—a longing to go to the Rue Notre Dame aux
+ Neiges, resisted, yet irritated by an inward resolve to avoid that street
+ till such time as the mist of doubt should clear from my prospects.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It was a sweet September evening—very mild, very still; I had
+ nothing to do; at that hour I knew Frances would be equally released from
+ occupation; I thought she might possibly be wishing for her master, I knew
+ I wished for my pupil. Imagination began with her low whispers, infusing
+ into my soul the soft tale of pleasures that might be.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You will find her reading or writing,” said she; “you can take your seat
+ at her side; you need not startle her peace by undue excitement; you need
+ not embarrass her manner by unusual action or language. Be as you always
+ are; look over what she has written; listen while she reads; chide her, or
+ quietly approve; you know the effect of either system; you know her smile
+ when pleased, you know the play of her looks when roused; you have the
+ secret of awakening what expression you will, and you can choose amongst
+ that pleasant variety. With you she will sit silent as long as it suits
+ you to talk alone; you can hold her under a potent spell: intelligent as
+ she is, eloquent as she can be, you can seal her lips, and veil her bright
+ countenance with diffidence; yet, you know, she is not all monotonous
+ mildness; you have seen, with a sort of strange pleasure, revolt, scorn,
+ austerity, bitterness, lay energetic claim to a place in her feelings and
+ physiognomy; you know that few could rule her as you do; you know she
+ might break, but never bend under the hand of Tyranny and Injustice, but
+ Reason and Affection can guide her by a sign. Try their influence now.
+ Go—they are not passions; you may handle them safely.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I will <em>not</em> go,” was my answer to the sweet temptress. A man is
+ master of himself to a certain point, but not beyond it. Could I seek
+ Frances to-night, could I sit with her alone in a quiet room, and address
+ her only in the language of Reason and Affection?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No,” was the brief, fervent reply of that Love which had conquered and
+ now controlled me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Time seemed to stagnate; the sun would not go down; my watch ticked, but I
+ thought the hands were paralyzed.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What a hot evening!” I cried, throwing open the lattice; for, indeed, I
+ had seldom felt so feverish. Hearing a step ascending the common stair, I
+ wondered whether the “locataire,” now mounting to his apartments, were as
+ unsettled in mind and condition as I was, or whether he lived in the calm
+ of certain resources, and in the freedom of unfettered feelings. What! was
+ he coming in person to solve the problem hardly proposed in inaudible
+ thought? He had actually knocked at the door—at <em>my</em> door; a smart,
+ prompt rap; and, almost before I could invite him in, he was over the
+ threshold, and had closed the door behind him.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And how are you?” asked an indifferent, quiet voice, in the English
+ language; while my visitor, without any sort of bustle or introduction,
+ put his hat on the table, and his gloves into his hat, and drawing the
+ only armchair the room afforded a little forward, seated himself
+ tranquilly therein.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Can’t you speak?” he inquired in a few moments, in a tone whose
+ nonchalance seemed to intimate that it was much the same thing whether I
+ answered or not. The fact is, I found it desirable to have recourse to my
+ good friends “les bésicles;” not exactly to ascertain the identity of my
+ visitor—for I already knew him, confound his impudence! but to see
+ how he looked—to get a clear notion of his mien and countenance. I
+ wiped the glasses very deliberately, and put them on quite as
+ deliberately; adjusting them so as not to hurt the bridge of my nose or
+ get entangled in my short tufts of dun hair. I was sitting in the
+ window-seat, with my back to the light, and I had him
+ <i lang="fr">vis-à-vis</i>; a position he would much rather have had
+ reversed; for, at any time, he preferred scrutinizing to being
+ scrutinized. Yes, it was <em>he</em>, and no mistake, with his six feet
+ of length arranged in a sitting attitude; with his dark travelling surtout
+ with its velvet collar, his gray pantaloons, his black stock, and
+ <em>his</em> face, the most original one Nature ever modelled,
+ yet the least obtrusively so; not one feature that could be termed marked
+ or odd, yet the effect of the whole unique. There is no use in attempting
+ to describe what is indescribable. Being in no hurry to address him, I sat
+ and stared at my ease.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, that’s your game—is it?” said he at last. “Well, we’ll see
+ which is soonest tired.” And he slowly drew out a fine cigar-case, picked
+ one to his taste, lit it, took a book from the shelf convenient to his
+ hand, then leaning back, proceeded to smoke and read as tranquilly as if
+ he had been in his own room, in Grove-street, X—-shire, England. I
+ knew he was capable of continuing in that attitude till midnight, if he
+ conceived the whim, so I rose, and taking the book from his hand, I said,—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You did not ask for it, and you shall not have it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “It is silly and dull,” he observed, “so I have not lost much;” then the
+ spell being broken, he went on: “I thought you lived at Pelet’s; I went
+ there this afternoon expecting to be starved to death by sitting in a
+ boarding-school drawing-room, and they told me you were gone, had departed
+ this morning; you had left your address behind you though, which I
+ wondered at; it was a more practical and sensible precaution than I should
+ have imagined you capable of. Why did you leave?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Because M. Pelet has just married the lady whom you and Mr. Brown
+ assigned to me as my wife.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, indeed!” replied Hunsden with a short laugh; “so you’ve lost both
+ your wife and your place?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Precisely so.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I saw him give a quick, covert glance all round my room; he marked its
+ narrow limits, its scanty furniture: in an instant he had comprehended the
+ state of matters—had absolved me from the crime of prosperity. A
+ curious effect this discovery wrought in his strange mind; I am morally
+ certain that if he had found me installed in a handsome parlour, lounging
+ on a soft couch, with a pretty, wealthy wife at my side, he would have
+ hated me; a brief, cold, haughty visit, would in such a case have been the
+ extreme limit of his civilities, and never would he have come near me
+ more, so long as the tide of fortune bore me smoothly on its surface; but
+ the painted furniture, the bare walls, the cheerless solitude of my room
+ relaxed his rigid pride, and I know not what softening change had taken
+ place both in his voice and look ere he spoke again.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have got another place?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are in the way of getting one?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is bad; have you applied to Brown?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, indeed.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You had better; he often has it in his power to give useful information
+ in such matters.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He served me once very well; I have no claim on him, and am not in the
+ humour to bother him again.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, if you’re bashful, and dread being intrusive, you need only
+ commission me. I shall see him to-night; I can put in a word.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I beg you will not, Mr. Hunsden; I am in your debt already; you did me an
+ important service when I was at X——; got me out of a den where
+ I was dying: that service I have never repaid, and at present I decline
+ positively adding another item to the account.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “If the wind sits that way, I’m satisfied. I thought my unexampled
+ generosity in turning you out of that accursed counting-house would be
+ duly appreciated some day: ‘Cast your bread on the waters, and it shall be
+ found after many days,’ say the Scriptures. Yes, that’s right, lad—make
+ much of me—I’m a nonpareil: there’s nothing like me in the common
+ herd. In the meantime, to put all humbug aside and talk sense for a few
+ moments, you would be greatly the better of a situation, and what is more,
+ you are a fool if you refuse to take one from any hand that offers it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very well, Mr. Hunsden; now you have settled that point, talk of
+ something else. What news from X——?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I have not settled that point, or at least there is another to settle
+ before we get to X——. Is this Miss Zénobie” (Zoraïde,
+ interposed I)—“well, Zoraïde—is she really married to Pelet?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I tell you yes—and if you don’t believe me, go and ask the curé of
+ St. Jacques.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And your heart is broken?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am not aware that it is; it feels all right—beats as usual.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Then your feelings are less superfine than I took them to be; you must be
+ a coarse, callous character, to bear such a thwack without staggering
+ under it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Staggering under it? What the deuce is there to stagger under in the
+ circumstance of a Belgian schoolmistress marrying a French schoolmaster?
+ The progeny will doubtless be a strange hybrid race; but that’s their
+ look-out—not mine.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He indulges in scurrilous jests, and the bride was his affianced one!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Who said so?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Brown.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’ll tell you what, Hunsden—Brown is an old gossip.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He is; but in the meantime, if his gossip be founded on less than fact—if
+ you took no particular interest in Miss Zoraïde—why, O youthful
+ pedagogue! did you leave your place in consequence of her becoming Madame
+ Pelet?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Because—” I felt my face grow a little hot; “because—in
+ short, Mr. Hunsden, I decline answering any more questions,” and I plunged
+ my hands deep in my breeches pocket.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden triumphed: his eyes—his laugh announced victory.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What the deuce are you laughing at, Mr. Hunsden?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “At your exemplary composure. Well, lad, I’ll not bore you; I see how it
+ is: Zoraïde has jilted you—married some one richer, as any sensible
+ woman would have done if she had had the chance.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I made no reply—I let him think so, not feeling inclined to enter
+ into an explanation of the real state of things, and as little to forge a
+ false account; but it was not easy to blind Hunsden; my very silence,
+ instead of convincing him that he had hit the truth, seemed to render him
+ doubtful about it; he went on:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I suppose the affair has been conducted as such affairs always are
+ amongst rational people: you offered her your youth and your talents—such
+ as they are—in exchange for her position and money: I don’t suppose you
+ took appearance, or what is called <em>love</em>, into the account—for I
+ understand she is older than you, and Brown says, rather sensible-looking
+ than beautiful. She, having then no chance of making a better bargain,
+ was at first inclined to come to terms with you, but Pelet—the head of a
+ flourishing school—stepped in with a higher bid; she accepted, and
+ he has got her: a correct transaction—perfectly so—business-like
+ and legitimate. And now we’ll talk of something else.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do,” said I, very glad to dismiss the topic, and especially glad to have
+ baffled the sagacity of my cross-questioner—if, indeed, I had
+ baffled it; for though his words now led away from the dangerous point,
+ his eyes, keen and watchful, seemed still preoccupied with the former
+ idea.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You want to hear news from X——? And what interest can you
+ have in X——? You left no friends there, for you made none.
+ Nobody ever asks after you—neither man nor woman; and if I mention
+ your name in company, the men look as if I had spoken of Prester John; and
+ the women sneer covertly. Our X—— belles must have disliked
+ you. How did you excite their displeasure?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I don’t know. I seldom spoke to them—they were nothing to me. I
+ considered them only as something to be glanced at from a distance; their
+ dresses and faces were often pleasing enough to the eye: but I could not
+ understand their conversation, nor even read their countenances. When I
+ caught snatches of what they said, I could never make much of it; and the
+ play of their lips and eyes did not help me at all.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That was your fault, not theirs. There are sensible, as well as handsome
+ women in X——; women it is worth any man’s while to talk to,
+ and with whom I can talk with pleasure: but you had and have no pleasant
+ address; there is nothing in you to induce a woman to be affable. I have
+ remarked you sitting near the door in a room full of company, bent on
+ hearing, not on speaking; on observing, not on entertaining; looking
+ frigidly shy at the commencement of a party, confusingly vigilant about
+ the middle, and insultingly weary towards the end. Is that the way, do you
+ think, ever to communicate pleasure or excite interest? No; and if you are
+ generally unpopular, it is because you deserve to be so.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Content!” I ejaculated.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, you are not content; you see beauty always turning its back on you;
+ you are mortified and then you sneer. I verily believe all that is
+ desirable on earth—wealth, reputation, love—will for ever to
+ you be the ripe grapes on the high trellis: you’ll look up at them; they
+ will tantalize in you the lust of the eye; but they are out of reach: you
+ have not the address to fetch a ladder, and you’ll go away calling them
+ sour.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Cutting as these words might have been under some circumstances, they drew
+ no blood now. My life was changed; my experience had been varied since I
+ left X——, but Hunsden could not know this; he had seen me only
+ in the character of Mr. Crimsworth’s clerk—a dependant amongst
+ wealthy strangers, meeting disdain with a hard front, conscious of an
+ unsocial and unattractive exterior, refusing to sue for notice which I was
+ sure would be withheld, declining to evince an admiration which I knew
+ would be scorned as worthless. He could not be aware that since then youth
+ and loveliness had been to me everyday objects; that I had studied them at
+ leisure and closely, and had seen the plain texture of truth under the
+ embroidery of appearance; nor could he, keen-sighted as he was, penetrate
+ into my heart, search my brain, and read my peculiar sympathies and
+ antipathies; he had not known me long enough, or well enough, to perceive
+ how low my feelings would ebb under some influences, powerful over most
+ minds; how high, how fast they would flow under other influences, that
+ perhaps acted with the more intense force on me, because they acted on me
+ alone. Neither could he suspect for an instant the history of my
+ communications with Mdlle. Reuter; secret to him and to all others was the
+ tale of her strange infatuation; her blandishments, her wiles had been
+ seen but by me, and to me only were they known; but they had changed me,
+ for they had proved that I <em>could</em> impress. A sweeter secret
+ nestled deeper
+ in my heart; one full of tenderness and as full of strength: it took the
+ sting out of Hunsden’s sarcasm; it kept me unbent by shame, and unstirred
+ by wrath. But of all this I could say nothing—nothing decisive at
+ least; uncertainty sealed my lips, and during the interval of silence by
+ which alone I replied to Mr. Hunsden, I made up my mind to be for the
+ present wholly misjudged by him, and misjudged I was; he thought he had
+ been rather too hard upon me, and that I was crushed by the weight of his
+ upbraidings; so to re-assure me he said, doubtless I should mend some day;
+ I was only at the beginning of life yet; and since happily I was not quite
+ without sense, every false step I made would be a good lesson.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Just then I turned my face a little to the light; the approach of
+ twilight, and my position in the window-seat, had, for the last ten
+ minutes, prevented him from studying my countenance; as I moved, however,
+ he caught an expression which he thus interpreted:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Confound it! How doggedly self-approving the lad looks! I thought he was
+ fit to die with shame, and there he sits grinning smiles, as good as to
+ say, ‘Let the world wag as it will, I’ve the philosopher’s stone in my
+ waist-coat pocket, and the elixir of life in my cupboard; I’m independent
+ of both Fate and Fortune.’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hunsden—you spoke of grapes; I was thinking of a fruit I like
+ better than your X—— hot-house grapes—an unique fruit,
+ growing wild, which I have marked as my own, and hope one day to gather
+ and taste. It is of no use your offering me the draught of bitterness, or
+ threatening me with death by thirst: I have the anticipation of sweetness
+ on my palate; the hope of freshness on my lips; I can reject the
+ unsavoury, and endure the exhausting.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “For how long?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Till the next opportunity for effort; and as the prize of success will be
+ a treasure after my own heart, I’ll bring a bull’s strength to the
+ struggle.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bad luck crushes bulls as easily as bullaces; and, I believe, the fury
+ dogs you: you were born with a wooden spoon in your mouth, depend on it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I believe you; and I mean to make my wooden spoon do the work of some
+ people’s silver ladles: grasped firmly, and handled nimbly, even a wooden
+ spoon will shovel up broth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden rose: “I see,” said he; “I suppose you’re one of those who develop
+ best unwatched, and act best unaided—work your own way. Now, I’ll go.”
+ And, without another word, he was going; at the door he turned:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Crimsworth Hall is sold,” said he.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sold!” was my echo.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes; you know, of course, that your brother failed three months ago?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What! Edward Crimsworth?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Precisely; and his wife went home to her father’s; when affairs went
+ awry, his temper sympathized with them; he used her ill; I told you he
+ would be a tyrant to her some day; as to him—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ay, as to him—what is become of him?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Nothing extraordinary—don’t be alarmed; he put himself under the
+ protection of the court, compounded with his creditors—tenpence in
+ the pound; in six weeks set up again, coaxed back his wife, and is
+ flourishing like a green bay-tree.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And Crimsworth Hall—was the furniture sold too?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Everything—from the grand piano down to the rolling-pin.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And the contents of the oak dining-room—were they sold?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Of course; why should the sofas and chairs of that room be held more
+ sacred than those of any other?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And the pictures?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What pictures? Crimsworth had no special collection that I know of—he
+ did not profess to be an amateur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There were two portraits, one on each side the mantelpiece; you cannot
+ have forgotten them, Mr. Hunsden; you once noticed that of the lady—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, I know—the thin-faced gentlewoman with a shawl put on like
+ drapery. Why, as a matter of course, it would be sold among the other
+ things. If you had been rich, you might have bought it, for I remember you
+ said it represented your mother: you see what it is to be without a sou.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I did. “But surely,” I thought to myself, “I shall not always be so
+ poverty-stricken; I may one day buy it back yet. Who purchased it?
+ do you know?” I asked.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How is it likely? I never inquired who purchased anything; there spoke
+ the unpractical man—to imagine all the world is interested in what
+ interests himself! Now, good night—I’m off for Germany to-morrow
+ morning; I shall be back here in six weeks, and possibly I may call and
+ see you again; I wonder whether you’ll be still out of place!” he laughed,
+ as mockingly, as heartlessly as Mephistopheles, and so laughing, vanished.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Some people, however indifferent they may become after a considerable
+ space of absence, always contrive to leave a pleasant impression just at
+ parting; not so Hunsden, a conference with him affected one like a draught
+ of Peruvian bark; it seemed a concentration of the specially harsh,
+ stringent, bitter; whether, like bark, it invigorated, I scarcely knew.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A ruffled mind makes a restless pillow; I slept little on the night after
+ this interview; towards morning I began to doze, but hardly had my slumber
+ become sleep, when I was roused from it by hearing a noise in my sitting
+ room, to which my bed-room adjoined—a step, and a shoving of
+ furniture; the movement lasted barely two minutes; with the closing of the
+ door it ceased. I listened; not a mouse stirred; perhaps I had dreamt it;
+ perhaps a <i lang="fr">locataire</i> had made a mistake, and entered my
+ apartment instead of his own. It was yet but five o’clock; neither I nor
+ the day were wide awake; I turned, and was soon unconscious. When I did
+ rise, about two hours later, I had forgotten the circumstance; the first
+ thing I saw, however, on quitting my chamber, recalled it; just pushed in
+ at the door of my sitting-room, and still standing on end, was a wooden
+ packing-case—a rough deal affair, wide but shallow; a porter had doubtless
+ shoved it forward, but seeing no occupant of the room, had left it at the
+ entrance.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is none of mine,” thought I, approaching; “it must be meant for
+ somebody else.” I stooped to examine the address:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Wm. Crimsworth, Esq., No —, — St., Brussels.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was puzzled, but concluding that the best way to obtain information was
+ to ask within, I cut the cords and opened the case. Green baize enveloped
+ its contents, sewn carefully at the sides; I ripped the pack-thread with
+ my pen-knife, and still, as the seam gave way, glimpses of gilding
+ appeared through the widening interstices. Boards and baize being at
+ length removed, I lifted from the case a large picture, in a magnificent
+ frame; leaning it against a chair, in a position where the light from the
+ window fell favourably upon it, I stepped back—already I had mounted
+ my spectacles. A portrait-painter’s sky (the most sombre and threatening
+ of welkins), and distant trees of a conventional depth of hue, raised in
+ full relief a pale, pensive-looking female face, shadowed with soft dark
+ hair, almost blending with the equally dark clouds; large, solemn eyes
+ looked reflectively into mine; a thin cheek rested on a delicate little
+ hand; a shawl, artistically draped, half hid, half showed a slight figure.
+ A listener (had there been one) might have heard me, after ten minutes’
+ silent gazing, utter the word “Mother!” I might have said more—but
+ with me, the first word uttered aloud in soliloquy rouses consciousness;
+ it reminds me that only crazy people talk to themselves, and then I think
+ out my monologue, instead of speaking it. I had thought a long while, and
+ a long while had contemplated the intelligence, the sweetness, and—alas!
+ the sadness also of those fine, grey eyes, the mental power of that
+ forehead, and the rare sensibility of that serious mouth, when my glance,
+ travelling downwards, fell on a narrow billet, stuck in the corner of the
+ picture, between the frame and the canvas. Then I first asked, “Who sent
+ this picture? Who thought of me, saved it out of the wreck of Crimsworth
+ Hall, and now commits it to the care of its natural keeper?” I took the
+ note from its niche; thus it spoke:—
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ “There is a sort of stupid pleasure in giving a child sweets, a fool his
+ bells, a dog a bone. You are repaid by seeing the child besmear his face
+ with sugar; by witnessing how the fool’s ecstasy makes a greater fool of
+ him than ever; by watching the dog’s nature come out over his bone. In
+ giving William Crimsworth his mother’s picture, I give him sweets, bells,
+ and bone all in one; what grieves me is, that I cannot behold the result;
+ I would have added five shillings more to my bid if the auctioneer could
+ only have promised me that pleasure.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “H. Y. H.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “P.S.—You said last night you positively declined adding another
+ item to your account with me; don’t you think I’ve saved you that
+ trouble?”
+ </p>
+<p class="topspace">
+ I muffled the picture in its green baize covering, restored it to the
+ case, and having transported the whole concern to my bed-room, put it out
+ of sight under my bed. My pleasure was now poisoned by pungent pain; I
+ determined to look no more till I could look at my ease. If Hunsden had
+ come in at that moment, I should have said to him, “I owe you nothing,
+ Hunsden—not a fraction of a farthing: you have paid yourself in
+ taunts!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Too anxious to remain any longer quiescent, I had no sooner breakfasted,
+ than I repaired once more to M. Vandenhuten’s, scarcely hoping to find him
+ at home; for a week had barely elapsed since my first call: but fancying I
+ might be able to glean information as to the time when his return was
+ expected. A better result awaited me than I had anticipated, for though
+ the family were yet at Ostend, M. Vandenhuten had come over to Brussels on
+ business for the day. He received me with the quiet kindness of a sincere
+ though not excitable man. I had not sat five minutes alone with him in his
+ bureau, before I became aware of a sense of ease in his presence, such as
+ I rarely experienced with strangers. I was surprised at my own composure,
+ for, after all, I had come on business to me exceedingly painful—that
+ of soliciting a favour. I asked on what basis the calm rested—I
+ feared it might be deceptive. Ere long I caught a glimpse of the ground,
+ and at once I felt assured of its solidity; I knew where it was.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ M. Vandenhuten was rich, respected, and influential; I, poor, despised and
+ powerless; so we stood to the world at large as members of the world’s
+ society; but to each other, as a pair of human beings, our positions were
+ reversed. The Dutchman (he was not Flamand, but pure Hollandais) was slow,
+ cool, of rather dense intelligence, though sound and accurate judgment;
+ the Englishman far more nervous, active, quicker both to plan and to
+ practise, to conceive and to realize. The Dutchman was benevolent, the
+ Englishman susceptible; in short our characters dovetailed, but my mind
+ having more fire and action than his, instinctively assumed and kept the
+ predominance.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This point settled, and my position well ascertained, I addressed him on
+ the subject of my affairs with that genuine frankness which full
+ confidence can alone inspire. It was a pleasure to him to be so appealed
+ to; he thanked me for giving him this opportunity of using a little
+ exertion in my behalf. I went on to explain to him that my wish was not so
+ much to be helped, as to be put into the way of helping myself; of him I
+ did not want exertion—that was to be my part—but only
+ information and recommendation. Soon after I rose to go. He held out his
+ hand at parting—an action of greater significance with foreigners
+ than with Englishmen. As I exchanged a smile with him, I thought the
+ benevolence of his truthful face was better than the intelligence of my
+ own. Characters of my order experience a balm-like solace in the contact
+ of such souls as animated the honest breast of Victor Vandenhuten.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The next fortnight was a period of many alternations; my existence during
+ its lapse resembled a sky of one of those autumnal nights which are
+ specially haunted by meteors and falling stars. Hopes and fears,
+ expectations and disappointments, descended in glancing showers from
+ zenith to horizon; but all were transient, and darkness followed swift
+ each vanishing apparition. M. Vandenhuten aided me faithfully; he set me
+ on the track of several places, and himself made efforts to secure them
+ for me; but for a long time solicitation and recommendation were vain—the
+ door either shut in my face when I was about to walk in, or another
+ candidate, entering before me, rendered my further advance useless.
+ Feverish and roused, no disappointment arrested me; defeat following fast
+ on defeat served as stimulants to will. I forgot fastidiousness, conquered
+ reserve, thrust pride from me: I asked, I persevered, I remonstrated, I
+ dunned. It is so that openings are forced into the guarded circle where
+ Fortune sits dealing favours round. My perseverance made me known; my
+ importunity made me remarked. I was inquired about; my former pupils’
+ parents, gathering the reports of their children, heard me spoken of as
+ talented, and they echoed the word: the sound, bandied about at random,
+ came at last to ears which, but for its universality, it might never have
+ reached; and at the very crisis when I had tried my last effort and knew
+ not what to do, Fortune looked in at me one morning, as I sat in drear and
+ almost desperate deliberation on my bedstead, nodded with the familiarity
+ of an old acquaintance—though God knows I had never met her before—and
+ threw a prize into my lap.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In the second week of October, 18—, I got the appointment of English
+ professor to all the classes of —— College, Brussels, with a
+ salary of three thousand francs per annum; and the certainty of being
+ able, by dint of the reputation and publicity accompanying the position,
+ to make as much more by private means. The official notice, which
+ communicated this information, mentioned also that it was the strong
+ recommendation of M. Vandenhuten, negociant, which had turned the scale of
+ choice in my favour.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ No sooner had I read the announcement than I hurried to M. Vandenhuten’s
+ bureau, pushed the document under his nose, and when he had perused it,
+ took both his hands, and thanked him with unrestrained vivacity. My vivid
+ words and emphatic gesture moved his Dutch calm to unwonted sensation. He
+ said he was happy—glad to have served me; but he had done nothing
+ meriting such thanks. He had not laid out a centime—only scratched a
+ few words on a sheet of paper.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Again I repeated to him—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have made me quite happy, and in a way that suits me; I do not feel
+ an obligation irksome, conferred by your kind hand; I do not feel disposed
+ to shun you because you have done me a favour; from this day you must
+ consent to admit me to your intimate acquaintance, for I shall hereafter
+ recur again and again to the pleasure of your society.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ainsi soit-il,” was the reply, accompanied by a smile of benignant
+ content. I went away with its sunshine in my heart.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0023">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ IT was two o’clock when I returned to my lodgings; my dinner, just brought
+ in from a neighbouring hotel, smoked on the table; I sat down thinking to
+ eat—had the plate been heaped with potsherds and broken glass,
+ instead of boiled beef and haricots, I could not have made a more signal
+ failure: appetite had forsaken me. Impatient of seeing food which I could
+ not taste, I put it all aside into a cupboard, and then demanded, “What
+ shall I do till evening?” for before six P.M. it would be vain to seek the
+ Rue Notre Dame aux Neiges; its inhabitant (for me it had but one) was
+ detained by her vocation elsewhere. I walked in the streets of Brussels,
+ and I walked in my own room from two o’clock till six; never once in that
+ space of time did I sit down. I was in my chamber when the last-named hour
+ struck; I had just bathed my face and feverish hands, and was standing
+ near the glass; my cheek was crimson, my eye was flame, still all my
+ features looked quite settled and calm. Descending swiftly the stair and
+ stepping out, I was glad to see Twilight drawing on in clouds; such shade
+ was to me like a grateful screen, and the chill of latter Autumn,
+ breathing in a fitful wind from the north-west, met me as a refreshing
+ coolness. Still I saw it was cold to others, for the women I passed were
+ wrapped in shawls, and the men had their coats buttoned close.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When are we quite happy? Was I so then? No; an urgent and growing dread
+ worried my nerves, and had worried them since the first moment good
+ tidings had reached me. How was Frances? It was ten weeks since I had seen
+ her, six since I had heard from her, or of her. I had answered her letter
+ by a brief note, friendly but calm, in which no mention of continued
+ correspondence or further visits was made. At that hour my bark hung on
+ the topmost curl of a wave of fate, and I knew not on what shoal the
+ onward rush of the billow might hurl it; I would not then attach her
+ destiny to mine by the slightest thread; if doomed to split on the rock,
+ or run aground on the sand-bank, I was resolved no other vessel should
+ share my disaster: but six weeks was a long time; and could it be that she
+ was still well and doing well? Were not all sages agreed in declaring that
+ happiness finds no climax on earth? Dared I think that but half a street
+ now divided me from the full cup of contentment—the draught drawn
+ from waters said to flow only in heaven?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I was at the door; I entered the quiet house; I mounted the stairs; the
+ lobby was void and still, all the doors closed; I looked for the neat
+ green mat; it lay duly in its place.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Signal of hope!” I said, and advanced. “But I will be a little calmer; I
+ am not going to rush in, and get up a scene directly.” Forcibly staying my
+ eager step, I paused on the mat.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What an absolute hush! Is she in? Is anybody in?” I demanded to myself. A
+ little tinkle, as of cinders falling from a grate, replied; a movement—a
+ fire was gently stirred; and the slight rustle of life continuing, a step
+ paced equably backwards and forwards, backwards and forwards, in the
+ apartment. Fascinated, I stood, more fixedly fascinated when a voice
+ rewarded the attention of my strained ear—so low, so self-addressed,
+ I never fancied the speaker otherwise than alone; solitude might speak
+ thus in a desert, or in the hall of a forsaken house.
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “‘And ne’er but once, my son,’ he said,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">‘Was yon dark cavern trod;</span><br>
+ In persecution’s iron days,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">When the land was left by God.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ From Bewley’s bog, with slaughter red,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">A wanderer hither drew;</span><br>
+ And oft he stopp’d and turn’d his head,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">As by fits the night-winds blew.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ For trampling round by Cheviot-edge<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">Were heard the troopers keen;</span><br>
+ And frequent from the Whitelaw ridge<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">The death-shot flash’d between.’” &amp;c. &amp;c.
+ </span>
+</p>
+<p>
+ The old Scotch ballad was partly recited, then dropt; a pause ensued; then
+ another strain followed, in French, of which the purport, translated, ran
+ as follows:—
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ I gave, at first, attention close;<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">Then interest warm ensued;</span><br>
+ From interest, as improvement rose,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">Succeeded gratitude.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ Obedience was no effort soon,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> And labour was no pain;</span><br>
+ If tired, a word, a glance alone<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Would give me strength again.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ From others of the studious band,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Ere long he singled me;</span><br>
+ But only by more close demand,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> And sterner urgency.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ The task he from another took,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> From me he did reject;</span><br>
+ He would no slight omission brook,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> And suffer no defect.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ If my companions went astray,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> He scarce their wanderings blam’d;</span><br>
+ If I but falter’d in the way,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> His anger fiercely flam’d.</span>
+</p>
+<p>
+ Something stirred in an adjoining chamber; it would not do to be surprised
+ eaves-dropping; I tapped hastily, and as hastily entered. Frances was just
+ before me; she had been walking slowly in her room, and her step was
+ checked by my advent: Twilight only was with her, and tranquil, ruddy
+ Firelight; to these sisters, the Bright and the Dark, she had been
+ speaking, ere I entered, in poetry. Sir Walter Scott’s voice, to her a
+ foreign, far-off sound, a mountain echo, had uttered itself in the first
+ stanzas; the second, I thought, from the style and the substance, was the
+ language of her own heart. Her face was grave, its expression
+ concentrated; she bent on me an unsmiling eye—an eye just returning
+ from abstraction, just awaking from dreams: well-arranged was her simple
+ attire, smooth her dark hair, orderly her tranquil room; but what—with
+ her thoughtful look, her serious self-reliance, her bent to meditation and
+ haply inspiration—what had she to do with love? “Nothing,” was the
+ answer of her own sad, though gentle countenance; it seemed to say, “I
+ must cultivate fortitude and cling to poetry; one is to be my support and
+ the other my solace through life. Human affections do not bloom, nor do
+ human passions glow for me.” Other women have such thoughts. Frances, had
+ she been as desolate as she deemed, would not have been worse off than
+ thousands of her sex. Look at the rigid and formal race of old maids—the
+ race whom all despise; they have fed themselves, from youth upwards, on
+ maxims of resignation and endurance. Many of them get ossified with the
+ dry diet; self-control is so continually their thought, so perpetually
+ their object, that at last it absorbs the softer and more agreeable
+ qualities of their nature; and they die mere models of austerity,
+ fashioned out of a little parchment and much bone. Anatomists will tell
+ you that there is a heart in the withered old maid’s carcass—the
+ same as in that of any cherished wife or proud mother in the land. Can
+ this be so? I really don’t know; but feel inclined to doubt it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I came forward, bade Frances “good evening,” and took my seat. The chair I
+ had chosen was one she had probably just left; it stood by a little table
+ where were her open desk and papers. I know not whether she had fully
+ recognized me at first, but she did so now; and in a voice, soft but
+ quiet, she returned my greeting. I had shown no eagerness; she took her
+ cue from me, and evinced no surprise. We met as we had always met, as
+ master and pupil—nothing more. I proceeded to handle the papers;
+ Frances, observant and serviceable, stepped into an inner room, brought a
+ candle, lit it, placed it by me; then drew the curtain over the lattice,
+ and having added a little fresh fuel to the already bright fire, she drew
+ a second chair to the table and sat down at my right hand, a little
+ removed. The paper on the top was a translation of some grave French
+ author into English, but underneath lay a sheet with stanzas; on this I
+ laid hands. Frances half rose, made a movement to recover the captured
+ spoil, saying, that was nothing—a mere copy of verses. I put by
+ resistance with the decision I knew she never long opposed; but on this
+ occasion her fingers had fastened on the paper. I had quietly to unloose
+ them; their hold dissolved to my touch; her hand shrunk away; my own would
+ fain have followed it, but for the present I forbade such impulse. The
+ first page of the sheet was occupied with the lines I had overheard; the
+ sequel was not exactly the writer’s own experience, but a composition by
+ portions of that experience suggested. Thus while egotism was avoided, the
+ fancy was exercised, and the heart satisfied. I translate as before, and
+ my translation is nearly literal; it continued thus:—
+ </p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ When sickness stay’d awhile my course,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">He seem’d impatient still,</span><br>
+ Because his pupil’s flagging force<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">Could not obey his will.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ One day when summoned to the bed<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Where pain and I did strive,</span><br>
+ I heard him, as he bent his head,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Say, “God, she <em>must</em> revive!”</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ I felt his hand, with gentle stress,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> A moment laid on mine,</span><br>
+ And wished to mark my consciousness<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> By some responsive sign.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ But pow’rless then to speak or move,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> I only felt, within,</span><br>
+ The sense of Hope, the strength of Love,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Their healing work begin.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ And as he from the room withdrew,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> My heart his steps pursued;</span><br>
+ I long’d to prove, by efforts new;<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> My speechless gratitude.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ When once again I took my place,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Long vacant, in the class,</span><br>
+ Th’ unfrequent smile across his face<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Did for one moment pass.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ The lessons done; the signal made<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Of glad release and play,</span><br>
+ He, as he passed, an instant stay’d,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> One kindly word to say.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “Jane, till to-morrow you are free<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> From tedious task and rule;</span><br>
+ This afternoon I must not see<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> That yet pale face in school.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “Seek in the garden-shades a seat,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Far from the play-ground din;</span><br>
+ The sun is warm, the air is sweet:<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Stay till I call you in.”</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ A long and pleasant afternoon<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> I passed in those green bowers;</span><br>
+ All silent, tranquil, and alone<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> With birds, and bees, and flowers.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ Yet, when my master’s voice I heard<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Call, from the window, “Jane!”</span><br>
+ I entered, joyful, at the word,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The busy house again.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ He, in the hall, paced up and down;<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> He paused as I passed by;</span><br>
+ His forehead stern relaxed its frown:<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> He raised his deep-set eye.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “Not quite so pale,” he murmured low.<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> “Now Jane, go rest awhile.”</span><br>
+ And as I smiled, his smoothened brow<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">Returned as glad a smile.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ My perfect health restored, he took<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> His mien austere again;</span><br>
+ And, as before, he would not brook<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The slightest fault from Jane.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ The longest task, the hardest theme<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Fell to my share as erst,</span><br>
+ And still I toiled to place my name<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> In every study first.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ He yet begrudged and stinted praise,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> But I had learnt to read</span><br>
+ The secret meaning of his face,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> And that was my best meed.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ Even when his hasty temper spoke<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> In tones that sorrow stirred,</span><br>
+ My grief was lulled as soon as woke<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> By some relenting word.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ And when he lent some precious book,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Or gave some fragrant flower,</span><br>
+ I did not quail to Envy’s look,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Upheld by Pleasure’s power.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ At last our school ranks took their ground,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The hard-fought field I won;</span><br>
+ The prize, a laurel-wreath, was bound<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> My throbbing forehead on.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ Low at my master’s knee I bent,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The offered crown to meet;</span><br>
+ Its green leaves through my temples sent<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> A thrill as wild as sweet.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ The strong pulse of Ambition struck<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> In every vein I owned;</span><br>
+ At the same instant, bleeding broke<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> A secret, inward wound.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ The hour of triumph was to me<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The hour of sorrow sore;</span><br>
+ A day hence I must cross the sea,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Ne’er to recross it more.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ An hour hence, in my master’s room<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> I with him sat alone,</span><br>
+ And told him what a dreary gloom<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> O’er joy had parting thrown.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ He little said; the time was brief,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> The ship was soon to sail,</span><br>
+ And while I sobbed in bitter grief,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> My master but looked pale.</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ They called in haste; he bade me go,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Then snatched me back again;</span><br>
+ He held me fast and murmured low,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent">“Why will they part us, Jane?”</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “Were you not happy in my care?<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Did I not faithful prove?</span><br>
+ Will others to my darling bear<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> As true, as deep a love?</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “O God, watch o’er my foster child!<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> O guard her gentle head!</span><br>
+ When minds are high and tempests wild<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Protection round her spread!</span>
+ </p>
+<p class="poem">
+ “They call again; leave then my breast;<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Quit thy true shelter, Jane;</span><br>
+ But when deceived, repulsed, opprest,<br>
+ <span class="poemindent"> Come home to me again!”</span>
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I read—then dreamily made marks on the margin with my pencil;
+ thinking all the while of other things; thinking that “Jane” was now at my
+ side; no child, but a girl of nineteen; and she might be mine, so my heart
+ affirmed; Poverty’s curse was taken off me; Envy and Jealousy were far
+ away, and unapprized of this our quiet meeting; the frost of the Master’s
+ manner might melt; I felt the thaw coming fast, whether I would or not; no
+ further need for the eye to practise a hard look, for the brow to compress
+ its expanse into a stern fold: it was now permitted to suffer the outward
+ revelation of the inward glow—to seek, demand, elicit an answering
+ ardour. While musing thus, I thought that the grass on Hermon never drank
+ the fresh dews of sunset more gratefully than my feelings drank the bliss
+ of this hour.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances rose, as if restless; she passed before me to stir the fire, which
+ did not want stirring; she lifted and put down the little ornaments on the
+ mantelpiece; her dress waved within a yard of me; slight, straight, and
+ elegant, she stood erect on the hearth.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ There are impulses we can control; but there are others which control us,
+ because they attain us with a tiger-leap, and are our masters ere we have
+ seen them. Perhaps, though, such impulses are seldom altogether bad;
+ perhaps Reason, by a process as brief as quiet, a process that is finished
+ ere felt, has ascertained the sanity of the deed. Instinct meditates, and
+ feels justified in remaining passive while it is performed. I know I did
+ not reason, I did not plan or intend, yet, whereas one moment I was
+ sitting solus on the chair near the table, the next, I held Frances on my
+ knee, placed there with sharpness and decision, and retained with
+ exceeding tenacity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur!” cried Frances, and was still: not another word escaped her
+ lips; sorely confounded she seemed during the lapse of the first few
+ moments; but the amazement soon subsided; terror did not succeed, nor
+ fury: after all, she was only a little nearer than she had ever been
+ before, to one she habitually respected and trusted; embarrassment might
+ have impelled her to contend, but self-respect checked resistance where
+ resistance was useless.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Frances, how much regard have you for me?” was my demand. No answer; the
+ situation was yet too new and surprising to permit speech. On this
+ consideration, I compelled myself for some seconds to tolerate her
+ silence, though impatient of it: presently, I repeated the same
+ question—probably, not in the calmest of tones; she looked at me; my face,
+ doubtless, was no model of composure, my eyes no still wells of
+ tranquillity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Do speak,” I urged; and a very low, hurried, yet still arch voice said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, vous me faîtes mal; de grâce lâchez un peu ma main droite.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In truth I became aware that I was holding the said “main droite” in a
+ somewhat ruthless grasp: I did as desired; and, for the third time, asked
+ more gently—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Frances, how much regard have you for me?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mon maître, j’en ai beaucoup,” was the truthful rejoinder.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Frances, have you enough to give yourself to me as my wife?—to
+ accept me as your husband?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I felt the agitation of the heart, I saw “the purple light of love” cast
+ its glowing reflection on cheeks, temples, neck; I desired to consult the
+ eye, but sheltering lash and lid forbade.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur,” said the soft voice at last,—“Monsieur désire savoir si
+ je consens—si—enfin, si je veux me marier avec lui?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Justement.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur sera-t-il aussi bon mari qu’il a été bon maître?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I will try, Frances.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A pause; then with a new, yet still subdued inflexion of the voice—an
+ inflexion which provoked while it pleased me—accompanied, too, by a
+ “sourire à la fois fin et timide” in perfect harmony with the tone:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “C’est à dire, monsieur sera toujours un peu entêté exigeant,
+ volontaire—?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Have I been so, Frances?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais oui; vous le savez bien.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Have I been nothing else?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mais oui; vous avez été mon meilleur ami.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And what, Frances, are you to me?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Votre dévouée élève, qui vous aime de tout son coeur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Will my pupil consent to pass her life with me? Speak English now,
+ Frances.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Some moments were taken for reflection; the answer, pronounced slowly, ran
+ thus:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have always made me happy; I like to hear you speak; I like to see
+ you; I like to be near you; I believe you are very good, and very
+ superior; I know you are stern to those who are careless and idle, but you
+ are kind, very kind to the attentive and industrious, even if they are not
+ clever. Master, I should be <em>glad</em> to live with you always;” and
+ she made a sort of movement, as if she would have clung to me, but
+ restraining herself she only added with earnest emphasis—“Master, I
+ consent to pass my life with you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Very well, Frances.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I drew her a little nearer to my heart; I took a first kiss from her lips,
+ thereby sealing the compact, now framed between us; afterwards she and I
+ were silent, nor was our silence brief. Frances’ thoughts, during this
+ interval, I know not, nor did I attempt to guess them; I was not occupied
+ in searching her countenance, nor in otherwise troubling her composure.
+ The peace I felt, I wished her to feel; my arm, it is true, still detained
+ her; but with a restraint that was gentle enough, so long as no opposition
+ tightened it. My gaze was on the red fire; my heart was measuring its own
+ content; it sounded and sounded, and found the depth fathomless.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur,” at last said my quiet companion, as stirless in her happiness
+ as a mouse in its terror. Even now in speaking she scarcely lifted her
+ head.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, Frances?” I like unexaggerated intercourse; it is not my way to
+ overpower with amorous epithets, any more than to worry with selfishly
+ importunate caresses.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur est raisonnable, n’est-ce pas?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes; especially when I am requested to be so in English: but why do you
+ ask me? You see nothing vehement or obtrusive in my manner; am I not
+ tranquil enough?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ce n’est pas cela—” began Frances.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “English!” I reminded her.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, monsieur, I wished merely to say, that I should like, of course, to
+ retain my employment of teaching. You will teach still, I suppose,
+ monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, yes! It is all I have to depend on.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bon!—I mean good. Thus we shall have both the same profession. I
+ like that; and my efforts to get on will be as unrestrained as yours—will
+ they not, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You are laying plans to be independent of me,” said I.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, monsieur; I must be no incumbrance to you—no burden in any
+ way.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But, Frances, I have not yet told you what my prospects are. I have left
+ M. Pelet’s; and after nearly a month’s seeking, I have got another place,
+ with a salary of three thousand francs a year, which I can easily double
+ by a little additional exertion. Thus you see it would be useless for you
+ to fag yourself by going out to give lessons; on six thousand francs you
+ and I can live, and live well.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances seemed to consider. There is something flattering to man’s
+ strength, something consonant to his honourable pride, in the idea of
+ becoming the providence of what he loves—feeding and clothing it, as
+ God does the lilies of the field. So, to decide her resolution, I went
+ on:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Life has been painful and laborious enough to you so far, Frances; you
+ require complete rest; your twelve hundred francs would not form a very
+ important addition to our income, and what sacrifice of comfort to earn
+ it! Relinquish your labours: you must be weary, and let me have the
+ happiness of giving you rest.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I am not sure whether Frances had accorded due attention to my harangue;
+ instead of answering me with her usual respectful promptitude, she only
+ sighed and said,—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How rich you are, monsieur!” and then she stirred uneasy in my arms.
+ “Three thousand francs!” she murmured, “While I get only twelve hundred!”
+ She went on faster. “However, it must be so for the present; and,
+ monsieur, were you not saying something about my giving up my place? Oh
+ no! I shall hold it fast;” and her little fingers emphatically tightened
+ on mine.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Think of my marrying you to be kept by you, monsieur! I could not do it;
+ and how dull my days would be! You would be away teaching in close, noisy
+ school-rooms, from morning till evening, and I should be lingering at
+ home, unemployed and solitary; I should get depressed and sullen, and you
+ would soon tire of me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Frances, you could read and study—two things you like so well.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I could not; I like a contemplative life, but I like an active
+ life better; I must act in some way, and act with you. I have taken
+ notice, monsieur, that people who are only in each other’s company for
+ amusement, never really like each other so well, or esteem each other so
+ highly, as those who work together, and perhaps suffer together.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You speak God’s truth,” said I at last, “and you shall have your own way,
+ for it is the best way. Now, as a reward for such ready consent, give me a
+ voluntary kiss.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ After some hesitation, natural to a novice in the art of kissing, she
+ brought her lips into very shy and gentle contact with my forehead; I took
+ the small gift as a loan, and repaid it promptly, and with generous
+ interest.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I know not whether Frances was really much altered since the time I first
+ saw her; but, as I looked at her now, I felt that she was singularly
+ changed for me; the sad eye, the pale cheek, the dejected and joyless
+ countenance I remembered as her early attributes, were quite gone, and now
+ I saw a face dressed in graces; smile, dimple, and rosy tint rounded its
+ contours and brightened its hues. I had been accustomed to nurse a
+ flattering idea that my strong attachment to her proved some particular
+ perspicacity in my nature; she was not handsome, she was not rich, she was
+ not even accomplished, yet was she my life’s treasure; I must then be a
+ man of peculiar discernment. To-night my eyes opened on the mistake I had
+ made; I began to suspect that it was only my tastes which were unique, not
+ my power of discovering and appreciating the superiority of moral worth
+ over physical charms. For me Frances had physical charms: in her there was
+ no deformity to get over; none of those prominent defects of eyes, teeth,
+ complexion, shape, which hold at bay the admiration of the boldest male
+ champions of intellect (for women can love a downright ugly man if he be
+ but talented); had she been either “édentée, myope, rugueuse, ou bossue,”
+ my feelings towards her might still have been kindly, but they could never
+ have been impassioned; I had affection for the poor little misshapen
+ Sylvie, but for her I could never have had love. It is true Frances’
+ mental points had been the first to interest me, and they still retained
+ the strongest hold on my preference; but I liked the graces of her person
+ too. I derived a pleasure, purely material, from contemplating the
+ clearness of her brown eyes, the fairness of her fine skin, the purity of
+ her well-set teeth, the proportion of her delicate form; and that pleasure
+ I could ill have dispensed with. It appeared, then, that I too was a
+ sensualist, in my temperate and fastidious way.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Now, reader, during the last two pages I have been giving you honey fresh
+ from flowers, but you must not live entirely on food so luscious; taste
+ then a little gall—just a drop, by way of change.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ At a somewhat late hour I returned to my lodgings: having temporarily
+ forgotten that man had any such coarse cares as those of eating and
+ drinking, I went to bed fasting. I had been excited and in action all day,
+ and had tasted no food since eight that morning; besides, for a fortnight
+ past, I had known no rest either of body or mind; the last few hours had
+ been a sweet delirium, it would not subside now, and till long after
+ midnight, broke with troubled ecstacy the rest I so much needed. At last I
+ dozed, but not for long; it was yet quite dark when I awoke, and my waking
+ was like that of Job when a spirit passed before his face, and like him,
+ “the hair of my flesh stood up.” I might continue the parallel, for in
+ truth, though I saw nothing, yet “a thing was secretly brought unto me,
+ and mine ear received a little thereof; there was silence, and I heard a
+ voice,” saying—“In the midst of life we are in death.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ That sound, and the sensation of chill anguish accompanying it, many would
+ have regarded as supernatural; but I recognized it at once as the effect
+ of reaction. Man is ever clogged with his mortality, and it was my mortal
+ nature which now faltered and plained; my nerves, which jarred and gave a
+ false sound, because the soul, of late rushing headlong to an aim, had
+ overstrained the body’s comparative weakness. A horror of great darkness
+ fell upon me; I felt my chamber invaded by one I had known formerly, but
+ had thought for ever departed. I was temporarily a prey to hypochondria.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She had been my acquaintance, nay, my guest, once before in boyhood; I had
+ entertained her at bed and board for a year; for that space of time I had
+ her to myself in secret; she lay with me, she ate with me, she walked out
+ with me, showing me nooks in woods, hollows in hills, where we could sit
+ together, and where she could drop her drear veil over me, and so hide sky
+ and sun, grass and green tree; taking me entirely to her death-cold bosom,
+ and holding me with arms of bone. What tales she would tell me at such
+ hours! What songs she would recite in my ears! How she would discourse to
+ me of her own country—the grave—and again and again promise to
+ conduct me there ere long; and, drawing me to the very brink of a black,
+ sullen river, show me, on the other side, shores unequal with mound,
+ monument, and tablet, standing up in a glimmer more hoary than moonlight.
+ “Necropolis!” she would whisper, pointing to the pale piles, and add, “It
+ contains a mansion prepared for you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But my boyhood was lonely, parentless; uncheered by brother or sister; and
+ there was no marvel that, just as I rose to youth, a sorceress, finding me
+ lost in vague mental wanderings, with many affections and few objects,
+ glowing aspirations and gloomy prospects, strong desires and slender
+ hopes, should lift up her illusive lamp to me in the distance, and lure me
+ to her vaulted home of horrors. No wonder her spells <em>then</em> had
+ power; but <em>now</em>, when my course was widening, my prospect
+ brightening; when my affections had found a rest; when my desires, folding
+ wings, weary with long flight, had just alighted on the very lap of
+ fruition, and nestled there warm, content, under the caress of a soft
+ hand—why did hypochondria accost me now?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I repulsed her as one would a dreaded and ghastly concubine coming to
+ embitter a husband’s heart toward his young bride; in vain; she kept her
+ sway over me for that night and the next day, and eight succeeding days.
+ Afterwards, my spirits began slowly to recover their tone; my appetite
+ returned, and in a fortnight I was well. I had gone about as usual all the
+ time, and had said nothing to anybody of what I felt; but I was glad when
+ the evil spirit departed from me, and I could again seek Frances, and sit
+ at her side, freed from the dreadful tyranny of my demon.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0024">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ ONE fine, frosty Sunday in November, Frances and I took a long walk; we
+ made the tour of the city by the Boulevards; and, afterwards, Frances
+ being a little tired, we sat down on one of those wayside seats placed
+ under the trees, at intervals, for the accommodation of the weary. Frances
+ was telling me about Switzerland; the subject animated her; and I was just
+ thinking that her eyes spoke full as eloquently as her tongue, when she
+ stopped and remarked—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, there is a gentleman who knows you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I looked up; three fashionably dressed men were just then
+ passing—Englishmen, I knew by their air and gait as well as by their
+ features; in the tallest of the trio I at once recognized Mr. Hunsden; he
+ was in the act of lifting his hat to Frances; afterwards, he made a
+ grimace at me, and passed on.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Who is he?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A person I knew in England.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why did he bow to me? He does not know me.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, he does know you, in his way.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “How, monsieur?” (She still called me “monsieur”; I could not persuade her
+ to adopt any more familiar term.)
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Did you not read the expression of his eyes?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Of his eyes? No. What did they say?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “To you they said, ‘How do you do, Wilhelmina Crimsworth?’ To me, ‘So you
+ have found your counterpart at last; there she sits, the female of your
+ kind!’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, you could not read all that in his eyes; he was so soon gone.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I read that and more, Frances; I read that he will probably call on me
+ this evening, or on some future occasion shortly; and I have no doubt he
+ will insist on being introduced to you; shall I bring him to your rooms?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “If you please, monsieur—I have no objection; I think, indeed, I
+ should rather like to see him nearer; he looks so original.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ As I had anticipated, Mr. Hunsden came that evening. The first thing he
+ said was:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You need not begin boasting, Monsieur le Professeur; I know about your
+ appointment to —— College, and all that; Brown has told me.”
+ Then he intimated that he had returned from Germany but a day or two
+ since; afterwards, he abruptly demanded whether that was Madame
+ Pelet-Reuter with whom he had seen me on the Boulevards. I was going to
+ utter a rather emphatic negative, but on second thoughts I checked myself,
+ and, seeming to assent, asked what he thought of her?
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “As to her, I’ll come to that directly; but first I’ve a word for you. I
+ see you are a scoundrel; you’ve no business to be promenading about with
+ another man’s wife. I thought you had sounder sense than to get mixed up
+ in foreign hodge-podge of this sort.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But the lady?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She’s too good for you evidently; she is like you, but something better
+ than you—no beauty, though; yet when she rose (for I looked back to
+ see you both walk away) I thought her figure and carriage good. These
+ foreigners understand grace. What the devil has she done with Pelet? She
+ has not been married to him three months—he must be a spoon!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I would not let the mistake go too far; I did not like it much.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Pelet? How your head runs on Mons. and Madame Pelet! You are always
+ talking about them. I wish to the gods you had wed Mdlle. Zoraïde
+ yourself!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Was that young gentlewoman not Mdlle. Zoraïde?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No; nor Madame Zoraïde either.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why did you tell a lie, then?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I told no lie; but you are is such a hurry. She is a pupil of mine—a
+ Swiss girl.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And of course you are going to be married to her? Don’t deny that.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Married! I think I shall—if Fate spares us both ten weeks longer.
+ That is my little wild strawberry, Hunsden, whose sweetness made me
+ careless of your hothouse grapes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Stop! No boasting—no heroics; I won’t hear them. What is she? To
+ what <em>caste</em> does she belong?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I smiled. Hunsden unconsciously laid stress on the word <em>caste</em>,
+ and, in fact, republican, lord-hater as he was, Hunsden was as proud of
+ his old ——shire blood, of his descent and family standing, respectable
+ and respected through long generations back, as any peer in the realm of
+ his Norman race and Conquest-dated title. Hunsden would as little have
+ thought of taking a wife from a <em>caste</em> inferior to his own, as a
+ Stanley would think of mating with a Cobden. I enjoyed the surprise I
+ should give; I enjoyed the triumph of my practice over his theory; and
+ leaning over the table, and uttering the words slowly but with repressed
+ glee, I said concisely—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “She is a lace-mender.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden examined me. He did not <em>say</em> he was surprised, but
+ surprised he was; he had his own notions of good breeding. I saw he
+ suspected I was going to take some very rash step; but repressing
+ declamation or remonstrance, he only answered—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, you are the best judge of your own affairs. A lace-mender may make
+ a good wife as well as a lady; but of course you have taken care to
+ ascertain thoroughly that since she has not education, fortune or station,
+ she is well furnished with such natural qualities as you think most likely
+ to conduce to your happiness. Has she many relations?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “None in Brussels.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is better. Relations are often the real evil in such cases. I cannot
+ but think that a train of inferior connections would have been a bore to
+ you to your life’s end.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ After sitting in silence a little while longer, Hunsden rose, and was
+ quietly bidding me good evening; the polite, considerate manner in which
+ he offered me his hand (a thing he had never done before), convinced me
+ that he thought I had made a terrible fool of myself; and that, ruined and
+ thrown away as I was, it was no time for sarcasm or cynicism, or indeed
+ for anything but indulgence and forbearance.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Good night, William,” he said, in a really soft voice, while his face
+ looked benevolently compassionate. “Good night, lad. I wish you and your
+ future wife much prosperity; and I hope she will satisfy your fastidious
+ soul.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had much ado to refrain from laughing as I beheld the magnanimous pity
+ of his mien; maintaining, however, a grave air, I said:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I thought you would have liked to have seen Mdlle. Henri?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, that is the name! Yes—if it would be convenient, I should like
+ to see her—but——.” He hesitated.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should on no account wish to intrude.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come, then,” said I. We set out. Hunsden no doubt regarded me as a rash,
+ imprudent man, thus to show my poor little grisette sweetheart, in her
+ poor little unfurnished grenier; but he prepared to act the real
+ gentleman, having, in fact, the kernel of that character, under the harsh
+ husk it pleased him to wear by way of mental mackintosh. He talked
+ affably, and even gently, as we went along the street; he had never been
+ so civil to me in his life. We reached the house, entered, ascended the
+ stair; on gaining the lobby, Hunsden turned to mount a narrower stair
+ which led to a higher story; I saw his mind was bent on the attics.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Here, Mr. Hunsden,” said I quietly, tapping at Frances’ door. He turned;
+ in his genuine politeness he was a little disconcerted at having made the
+ mistake; his eye reverted to the green mat, but he said nothing.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ We walked in, and Frances rose from her seat near the table to receive us;
+ her mourning attire gave her a recluse, rather conventual, but withal very
+ distinguished look; its grave simplicity added nothing to beauty, but much
+ to dignity; the finish of the white collar and manchettes sufficed for a
+ relief to the merino gown of solemn black; ornament was forsworn. Frances
+ curtsied with sedate grace, looking, as she always did, when one first
+ accosted her, more a woman to respect than to love; I introduced Mr.
+ Hunsden, and she expressed her happiness at making his acquaintance in
+ French. The pure and polished accent, the low yet sweet and rather full
+ voice, produced their effect immediately; Hunsden spoke French in reply; I
+ had not heard him speak that language before; he managed it very well. I
+ retired to the window-seat; Mr. Hunsden, at his hostess’s invitation,
+ occupied a chair near the hearth; from my position I could see them both,
+ and the room too, at a glance. The room was so clean and bright, it looked
+ like a little polished cabinet; a glass filled with flowers in the centre
+ of the table, a fresh rose in each china cup on the mantelpiece gave it an
+ air of <i lang="fr">fête</i>. Frances was serious, and Mr. Hunsden
+ subdued, but both
+ mutually polite; they got on at the French swimmingly: ordinary topics
+ were discussed with great state and decorum; I thought I had never seen
+ two such models of propriety, for Hunsden (thanks to the constraint of the
+ foreign tongue) was obliged to shape his phrases, and measure his
+ sentences, with a care that forbade any eccentricity. At last England was
+ mentioned, and Frances proceeded to ask questions. Animated by degrees,
+ she began to change, just as a grave night-sky changes at the approach of
+ sunrise: first it seemed as if her forehead cleared, then her eyes
+ glittered, her features relaxed, and became quite mobile; her subdued
+ complexion grew warm and transparent; to me, she now looked pretty;
+ before, she had only looked ladylike.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She had many things to say to the Englishman just fresh from his
+ island-country, and she urged him with an enthusiasm of curiosity, which
+ ere long thawed Hunsden’s reserve as fire thaws a congealed viper. I use
+ this not very flattering comparison because he vividly reminded me of a
+ snake waking from torpor, as he erected his tall form, reared his head,
+ before a little declined, and putting back his hair from his broad Saxon
+ forehead, showed unshaded the gleam of almost savage satire which his
+ interlocutor’s tone of eagerness and look of ardour had sufficed at once
+ to kindle in his soul and elicit from his eyes: he was himself; as Frances
+ was herself, and in none but his own language would he now address her.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You understand English?” was the prefatory question.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “A little.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, then, you shall have plenty of it; and first, I see you’ve not much
+ more sense than some others of my acquaintance” (indicating me with his
+ thumb), “or else you’d never turn rabid about that dirty little country
+ called England; for rabid, I see you are; I read Anglophobia in your
+ looks, and hear it in your words. Why, mademoiselle, is it possible that
+ anybody with a grain of rationality should feel enthusiasm about a mere
+ name, and that name England? I thought you were a lady-abbess five minutes
+ ago, and respected you accordingly; and now I see you are a sort of Swiss
+ sibyl, with high Tory and high Church principles!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “England is your country?” asked Frances.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And you don’t like it?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’d be sorry to like it! A little corrupt, venal, lord-and-king-cursed
+ nation, full of mucky pride (as they say in ——shire), and
+ helpless pauperism; rotten with abuses, worm-eaten with prejudices!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You might say so of almost every state; there are abuses and prejudices
+ everywhere, and I thought fewer in England than in other countries.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Come to England and see. Come to Birmingham and Manchester; come to St.
+ Giles’ in London, and get a practical notion of how our system works.
+ Examine the footprints of our august aristocracy; see how they walk in
+ blood, crushing hearts as they go. Just put your head in at English
+ cottage doors; get a glimpse of Famine crouched torpid on black
+ hearthstones; of Disease lying bare on beds without coverlets, of Infamy
+ wantoning viciously with Ignorance, though indeed Luxury is her favourite
+ paramour, and princely halls are dearer to her than thatched hovels——”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I was not thinking of the wretchedness and vice in England; I was
+ thinking of the good side—of what is elevated in your character as a
+ nation.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There is no good side—none at least of which you can have any
+ knowledge; for you cannot appreciate the efforts of industry, the
+ achievements of enterprise, or the discoveries of science: narrowness of
+ education and obscurity of position quite incapacitate you from
+ understanding these points; and as to historical and poetical
+ associations, I will not insult you, mademoiselle, by supposing that you
+ alluded to such humbug.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “But I did partly.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden laughed—his laugh of unmitigated scorn.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I did, Mr. Hunsden. Are you of the number of those to whom such
+ associations give no pleasure?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mademoiselle, what is an association? I never saw one. What is its
+ length, breadth, weight, value—ay, <em>value</em>? What price will it
+ bring in the market?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your portrait, to any one who loved you, would, for the sake of
+ association, be without price.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ That inscrutable Hunsden heard this remark and felt it rather acutely,
+ too, somewhere; for he coloured—a thing not unusual with him, when
+ hit unawares on a tender point. A sort of trouble momentarily darkened his
+ eye, and I believe he filled up the transient pause succeeding his
+ antagonist’s home-thrust, by a wish that some one did love him as he would
+ like to be loved—some one whose love he could unreservedly return.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The lady pursued her temporary advantage.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “If your world is a world without associations, Mr. Hunsden, I no longer
+ wonder that you hate England so. I don’t clearly know what Paradise is,
+ and what angels are; yet taking it to be the most glorious region I can
+ conceive, and angels the most elevated existences—if one of them—if
+ Abdiel the Faithful himself” (she was thinking of Milton) “were suddenly
+ stripped of the faculty of association, I think he would soon rush forth
+ from ‘the ever-during gates,’ leave heaven, and seek what he had lost in
+ hell. Yes, in the very hell from which he turned ‘with retorted scorn.’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances’ tone in saying this was as marked as her language, and it was
+ when the word “hell” twanged off from her lips, with a somewhat startling
+ emphasis, that Hunsden deigned to bestow one slight glance of admiration.
+ He liked something strong, whether in man or woman; he liked whatever
+ dared to clear conventional limits. He had never before heard a lady say
+ “hell” with that uncompromising sort of accent, and the sound pleased him
+ from a lady’s lips; he would fain have had Frances to strike the string
+ again, but it was not in her way. The display of eccentric vigour never
+ gave her pleasure, and it only sounded in her voice or flashed in her
+ countenance when extraordinary circumstances—and those generally
+ painful—forced it out of the depths where it burned latent. To me,
+ once or twice, she had in intimate conversation, uttered venturous
+ thoughts in nervous language; but when the hour of such manifestation was
+ past, I could not recall it; it came of itself and of itself departed.
+ Hunsden’s excitations she put by soon with a smile, and recurring to the
+ theme of disputation, said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Since England is nothing, why do the continental nations respect her so?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should have thought no child would have asked that question,” replied
+ Hunsden, who never at any time gave information without reproving for
+ stupidity those who asked it of him. “If you had been my pupil, as I
+ suppose you once had the misfortune to be that of a deplorable character
+ not a hundred miles off, I would have put you in the corner for such a
+ confession of ignorance. Why, mademoiselle, can’t you see that it is our
+ <em>gold</em> which buys us French politeness, German good-will, and Swiss
+ servility?” And he sneered diabolically.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Swiss?” said Frances, catching the word “servility.” “Do you call my
+ countrymen servile?” and she started up. I could not suppress a low laugh;
+ there was ire in her glance and defiance in her attitude. “Do you abuse
+ Switzerland to me, Mr. Hunsden? Do you think I have no associations? Do
+ you calculate that I am prepared to dwell only on what vice and
+ degradation may be found in Alpine villages, and to leave quite out of my
+ heart the social greatness of my countrymen, and our blood-earned freedom,
+ and the natural glories of our mountains? You’re mistaken—you’re
+ mistaken.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Social greatness? Call it what you will, your countrymen are sensible
+ fellows; they make a marketable article of what to you is an abstract
+ idea; they have, ere this, sold their social greatness and also their
+ blood-earned freedom to be the servants of foreign kings.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You never were in Switzerland?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes—I have been there twice.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You know nothing of it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I do.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And you say the Swiss are mercenary, as a parrot says ‘Poor Poll,’ or as
+ the Belgians here say the English are not brave, or as the French accuse
+ them of being perfidious: there is no justice in your dictums.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There is truth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I tell you, Mr. Hunsden, you are a more unpractical man than I am an
+ unpractical woman, for you don’t acknowledge what really exists; you want
+ to annihilate individual patriotism and national greatness as an atheist
+ would annihilate God and his own soul, by denying their existence.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Where are you flying to? You are off at a tangent—I thought we were
+ talking about the mercenary nature of the Swiss.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “We were—and if you proved to me that the Swiss are mercenary
+ to-morrow (which you cannot do) I should love Switzerland still.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You would be mad, then—mad as a March hare—to indulge in a
+ passion for millions of shiploads of soil, timber, snow, and ice.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not so mad as you who love nothing.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There’s a method in my madness; there’s none in yours.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Your method is to squeeze the sap out of creation and make manure of the
+ refuse, by way of turning it to what you call use.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You cannot reason at all,” said Hunsden; “there is no logic in you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Better to be without logic than without feeling,” retorted Frances, who
+ was now passing backwards and forwards from her cupboard to the table,
+ intent, if not on hospitable thoughts, at least on hospitable deeds, for
+ she was laying the cloth, and putting plates, knives and forks thereon.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Is that a hit at me, mademoiselle? Do you suppose I am without feeling?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I suppose you are always interfering with your own feelings, and those of
+ other people, and dogmatizing about the irrationality of this, that, and
+ the other sentiment, and then ordering it to be suppressed because you
+ imagine it to be inconsistent with logic.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I do right.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances had stepped out of sight into a sort of little pantry; she soon
+ reappeared.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You do right? Indeed, no! You are much mistaken if you think so. Just be
+ so good as to let me get to the fire, Mr. Hunsden; I have something to
+ cook.” (An interval occupied in settling a casserole on the fire; then,
+ while she stirred its contents:) “Right! as if it were right to crush any
+ pleasurable sentiment that God has given to man, especially any sentiment
+ that, like patriotism, spreads man’s selfishness in wider circles” (fire
+ stirred, dish put down before it).
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Were you born in Switzerland?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should think so, or else why should I call it my country?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And where did you get your English features and figure?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am English, too; half the blood in my veins is English; thus I have a
+ right to a double power of patriotism, possessing an interest in two
+ noble, free, and fortunate countries.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You had an English mother?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, yes; and you, I suppose, had a mother from the moon or from Utopia,
+ since not a nation in Europe has a claim on your interest?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “On the contrary, I’m a universal patriot, if you could understand me
+ rightly: my country is the world.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sympathies so widely diffused must be very shallow: will you have the
+ goodness to come to table. Monsieur” (to me who appeared to be now
+ absorbed in reading by moonlight)—“Monsieur, supper is served.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ This was said in quite a different voice to that in which she had been
+ bandying phrases with Mr. Hunsden—not so short, graver and softer.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Frances, what do you mean by preparing, supper? we had no intention of
+ staying.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ah, monsieur, but you have stayed, and supper is prepared; you have only
+ the alternative of eating it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The meal was a foreign one, of course; it consisted in two small but tasty
+ dishes of meat prepared with skill and served with nicety; a salad and
+ “fromage Français,” completed it. The business of eating interposed a
+ brief truce between the belligerents, but no sooner was supper disposed of
+ than they were at it again. The fresh subject of dispute ran on the spirit
+ of religious intolerance which Mr. Hunsden affirmed to exist strongly in
+ Switzerland, notwithstanding the professed attachment of the Swiss to
+ freedom. Here Frances had greatly the worst of it, not only because she
+ was unskilled to argue, but because her own real opinions on the point in
+ question happened to coincide pretty nearly with Mr. Hunsden’s, and she
+ only contradicted him out of opposition. At last she gave in, confessing
+ that she thought as he thought, but bidding him take notice that she did
+ not consider herself beaten.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No more did the French at Waterloo,” said Hunsden.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There is no comparison between the cases,” rejoined Frances; “mine was a
+ sham fight.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Sham or real, it’s up with you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No; though I have neither logic nor wealth of words, yet in a case where
+ my opinion really differed from yours, I would adhere to it when I had not
+ another word to say in its defence; you should be baffled by dumb
+ determination. You speak of Waterloo; your Wellington ought to have been
+ conquered there, according to Napoleon; but he persevered in spite of the
+ laws of war, and was victorious in defiance of military tactics. I would
+ do as he did.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I’ll be bound for it you would; probably you have some of the same sort
+ of stubborn stuff in you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should be sorry if I had not; he and Tell were brothers, and I’d scorn
+ the Swiss, man or woman, who had none of the much-enduring nature of our
+ heroic William in his soul.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “If Tell was like Wellington, he was an ass.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Does not <em>ass</em> mean <em>baudet</em>?” asked Frances, turning to
+ me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, no,” replied I, “it means an <i lang="fr">esprit-fort</i>; and now,”
+ I continued, as I saw that fresh occasion of strife was brewing between
+ these two, “it is high time to go.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden rose. “Good bye,” said he to Frances; “I shall be off for this
+ glorious England to-morrow, and it may be twelve months or more before I
+ come to Brussels again; whenever I do come I’ll seek you out, and you
+ shall see if I don’t find means to make you fiercer than a dragon. You’ve
+ done pretty well this evening, but next interview you shall challenge me
+ outright. Meantime you’re doomed to become Mrs. William Crimsworth, I
+ suppose; poor young lady? but you have a spark of spirit; cherish it, and
+ give the Professor the full benefit thereof.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Are you married, Mr. Hunsden?” asked Frances, suddenly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No. I should have thought you might have guessed I was a Benedict by my
+ look.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, whenever you marry don’t take a wife out of Switzerland; for if you
+ begin blaspheming Helvetia, and cursing the cantons—above all, if
+ you mention the word <em>ass</em> in the same breath with the name Tell
+ (for ass <em>is</em> baudet, I know; though Monsieur is pleased to
+ translate it <i lang="fr">esprit-fort</i>) your mountain maid will some
+ night smother her Breton-bretonnant, even as your own Shakspeare’s Othello
+ smothered Desdemona.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am warned,” said Hunsden; “and so are you, lad,” (nodding to me). “I
+ hope yet to hear of a travesty of the Moor and his gentle lady, in which
+ the parts shall be reversed according to the plan just sketched—you,
+ however, being in my nightcap. Farewell, mademoiselle!” He bowed on her
+ hand, absolutely like Sir Charles Grandison on that of Harriet Byron;
+ adding—“Death from such fingers would not be without charms.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Mon Dieu!” murmured Frances, opening her large eyes and lifting her
+ distinctly arched brows; “c’est qu’il fait des compliments! je ne m’y suis
+ pas attendu.” She smiled, half in ire, half in mirth, curtsied with
+ foreign grace, and so they parted.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ No sooner had we got into the street than Hunsden collared me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And that is your lace-mender?” said he; “and you reckon you have done a
+ fine, magnanimous thing in offering to marry her? You, a scion of
+ Seacombe, have proved your disdain of social distinctions by taking up
+ with an <i lang="fr">ouvrière</i>! And I pitied the fellow, thinking his
+ feelings had misled him, and that he had hurt himself by contracting a low
+ match!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Just let go my collar, Hunsden.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ On the contrary, he swayed me to and fro; so I grappled him round the
+ waist. It was dark; the street lonely and lampless. We had then a tug for
+ it; and after we had both rolled on the pavement, and with difficulty
+ picked ourselves up, we agreed to walk on more soberly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, that’s my lace-mender,” said I; “and she is to be mine for life—God
+ willing.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “God is not willing—you can’t suppose it; what business have you to
+ be suited so well with a partner? And she treats you with a sort of
+ respect, too, and says, ‘Monsieur’ and modulates her tone in addressing
+ you, actually, as if you were something superior! She could not evince
+ more deference to such a one as I, were she favoured by fortune to the
+ supreme extent of being my choice instead of yours.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Hunsden, you’re a puppy. But you’ve only seen the title-page of my
+ happiness; you don’t know the tale that follows; you cannot conceive the
+ interest and sweet variety and thrilling excitement of the narrative.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden—speaking low and deep, for we had now entered a busier
+ street—desired me to hold my peace, threatening to do something
+ dreadful if I stimulated his wrath further by boasting. I laughed till my
+ sides ached. We soon reached his hotel; before he entered it, he said—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Don’t be vainglorious. Your lace-mender is too good for you, but not good
+ enough for me; neither physically nor morally does she come up to my ideal
+ of a woman. No; I dream of something far beyond that pale-faced, excitable
+ little Helvetian (by-the-by she has infinitely more of the nervous, mobile
+ Parisienne in her than of the the robust ‘jungfrau’). Your Mdlle. Henri is
+ in person <i lang="fr">chétive</i>, in mind
+ <i lang="fr">sans caractère</i>, compared with the queen of my visions.
+ You, indeed, may put up with that <i lang="fr">minois chiffoné</i>; but
+ when I marry I must have straighter and more harmonious features, to say
+ nothing of a nobler and better developed shape than that perverse,
+ ill-thriven child can boast.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Bribe a seraph to fetch you a coal of fire from heaven, if you will,”
+ said I, “and with it kindle life in the tallest, fattest, most boneless,
+ fullest-blooded of Ruben’s painted women—leave me only my Alpine
+ peri, and I’ll not envy you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ With a simultaneous movement, each turned his back on the other. Neither
+ said “God bless you;” yet on the morrow the sea was to roll between us.
+ </p>
+</div><p><!--end chapter-->
+</p><div class="chapter">
+<p>
+<a id="link2HCH0025">
+<!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+</p>
+<h2 class="no-break">
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ </h2>
+<p>
+ IN two months more Frances had fulfilled the time of mourning for her
+ aunt. One January morning—the first of the new year holidays—I
+ went in a fiacre, accompanied only by M. Vandenhuten, to the Rue Notre
+ Dame aux Neiges, and having alighted alone and walked upstairs, I found
+ Frances apparently waiting for me, dressed in a style scarcely appropriate
+ to that cold, bright, frosty day. Never till now had I seen her attired in
+ any other than black or sad-coloured stuff; and there she stood by the
+ window, clad all in white, and white of a most diaphanous texture; her
+ array was very simple, to be sure, but it looked imposing and festal
+ because it was so clear, full, and floating; a veil shadowed her head, and
+ hung below her knee; a little wreath of pink flowers fastened it to her
+ thickly tressed Grecian plait, and thence it fell softly on each side of
+ her face. Singular to state, she was, or had been crying; when I asked her
+ if she were ready, she said “Yes, monsieur,” with something very like a
+ checked sob; and when I took a shawl, which lay on the table, and folded
+ it round her, not only did tear after tear course unbidden down her cheek,
+ but she shook to my ministration like a reed. I said I was sorry to see
+ her in such low spirits, and requested to be allowed an insight into the
+ origin thereof. She only said, “It was impossible to help it,” and then
+ voluntarily, though hurriedly, putting her hand into mine, accompanied me
+ out of the room, and ran downstairs with a quick, uncertain step, like one
+ who was eager to get some formidable piece of business over. I put her
+ into the fiacre. M. Vandenhuten received her, and seated her beside
+ himself; we drove all together to the Protestant chapel, went through a
+ certain service in the Common Prayer Book, and she and I came out married.
+ M. Vandenhuten had given the bride away.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ We took no bridal trip; our modesty, screened by the peaceful obscurity of
+ our station, and the pleasant isolation of our circumstances, did not
+ exact that additional precaution. We repaired at once to a small house I
+ had taken in the faubourg nearest to that part of the city where the scene
+ of our avocations lay.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Three or four hours after the wedding ceremony, Frances, divested of her
+ bridal snow, and attired in a pretty lilac gown of warmer materials, a
+ piquant black silk apron, and a lace collar with some finishing decoration
+ of lilac ribbon, was kneeling on the carpet of a neatly furnished though
+ not spacious parlour, arranging on the shelves of a chiffonière some
+ books, which I handed to her from the table. It was snowing fast out of
+ doors; the afternoon had turned out wild and cold; the leaden sky seemed
+ full of drifts, and the street was already ankle-deep in the white
+ downfall. Our fire burned bright, our new habitation looked brilliantly
+ clean and fresh, the furniture was all arranged, and there were but some
+ articles of glass, china, books, &amp;c., to put in order. Frances found
+ in this business occupation till tea-time, and then, after I had
+ distinctly instructed her how to make a cup of tea in rational English
+ style, and after she had got over the dismay occasioned by seeing such an
+ extravagant amount of material put into the pot, she administered to me a
+ proper British repast, at which there wanted neither candles nor urn,
+ firelight nor comfort.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Our week’s holiday glided by, and we readdressed ourselves to labour. Both
+ my wife and I began in good earnest with the notion that we were working
+ people, destined to earn our bread by exertion, and that of the most
+ assiduous kind. Our days were thoroughly occupied; we used to part every
+ morning at eight o’clock, and not meet again till five P.M.; but into what
+ sweet rest did the turmoil of each busy day decline! Looking down the
+ vista of memory, I see the evenings passed in that little parlour like a
+ long string of rubies circling the dusky brow of the past. Unvaried were
+ they as each cut gem, and like each gem brilliant and burning.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ A year and a half passed. One morning (it was a <i lang="fr">fête</i>, and
+ we had the day to ourselves) Frances said to me, with a suddenness
+ peculiar to her when she had been thinking long on a subject, and at last,
+ having come to a conclusion, wished to test its soundness by the
+ touchstone of my judgment:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I don’t work enough.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What now?” demanded I, looking up from my coffee, which I had been
+ deliberately stirring while enjoying, in anticipation, a walk I proposed
+ to take with Frances, that fine summer day (it was June), to a certain
+ farmhouse in the country, where we were to dine. “What now?” and I saw at
+ once, in the serious ardour of her face, a project of vital importance.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am not satisfied,” returned she; “you are now earning eight thousand
+ francs a year” (it was true; my efforts, punctuality, the fame of my
+ pupils’ progress, the publicity of my station, had so far helped me on),
+ “while I am still at my miserable twelve hundred francs. I <em>can</em> do
+ better, and I <em>will</em>.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You work as long and as diligently as I do, Frances.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, monsieur, but I am not working in the right way, and I am convinced
+ of it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You wish to change—you have a plan for progress in your mind; go
+ and put on your bonnet; and, while we take our walk, you shall tell me of
+ it.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She went—as docile as a well-trained child; she was a curious
+ mixture of tractability and firmness: I sat thinking about her, and
+ wondering what her plan could be, when she re-entered.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, I have given Minnie” (our bonne) “leave to go out too, as it is
+ so very fine; so will you be kind enough to lock the door, and take the
+ key with you?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Kiss me, Mrs. Crimsworth,” was my not very apposite reply; but she looked
+ so engaging in her light summer dress and little cottage bonnet, and her
+ manner in speaking to me was then, as always, so unaffectedly and suavely
+ respectful, that my heart expanded at the sight of her, and a kiss seemed
+ necessary to content its importunity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “There, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Why do you always call me ‘Monsieur’? Say, ‘William.’”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I cannot pronounce your W; besides, ‘Monsieur’ belongs to you; I like it
+ best.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Minnie having departed in clean cap and smart shawl, we, too, set out,
+ leaving the house solitary and silent—silent, at least, but for the
+ ticking of the clock. We were soon clear of Brussels; the fields received
+ us, and then the lanes, remote from carriage-resounding
+ <i lang="fr">chaussées</i>. Ere
+ long we came upon a nook, so rural, green, and secluded, it might have
+ been a spot in some pastoral English province; a bank of short and mossy
+ grass, under a hawthorn, offered a seat too tempting to be declined; we
+ took it, and when we had admired and examined some English-looking
+ wild-flowers growing at our feet, I recalled Frances’ attention and my own
+ to the topic touched on at breakfast.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What was her plan?” A natural one—the next step to be mounted by
+ us, or, at least, by her, if she wanted to rise in her profession. She
+ proposed to begin a school. We already had the means for commencing on a
+ careful scale, having lived greatly within our income. We possessed, too,
+ by this time, an extensive and eligible connection, in the sense
+ advantageous to our business; for, though our circle of visiting
+ acquaintance continued as limited as ever, we were now widely known in
+ schools and families as teachers. When Frances had developed her plan, she
+ intimated, in some closing sentences, her hopes for the future. If we only
+ had good health and tolerable success, me might, she was sure, in time
+ realize an independency; and that, perhaps, before we were too old to
+ enjoy it; then both she and I would rest; and what was to hinder us from
+ going to live in England? England was still her Promised Land.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I put no obstacle in her way; raised no objection; I knew she was not one
+ who could live quiescent and inactive, or even comparatively inactive.
+ Duties she must have to fulfil, and important duties; work to do—and
+ exciting, absorbing, profitable work; strong faculties stirred in her
+ frame, and they demanded full nourishment, free exercise: mine was not the
+ hand ever to starve or cramp them; no, I delighted in offering them
+ sustenance, and in clearing them wider space for action.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You have conceived a plan, Frances,” said I, “and a good plan; execute
+ it; you have my free consent, and wherever and whenever my assistance is
+ wanted, ask and you shall have.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances’ eyes thanked me almost with tears; just a sparkle or two, soon
+ brushed away; she possessed herself of my hand too, and held it for some
+ time very close clasped in both her own, but she said no more than “Thank
+ you, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ We passed a divine day, and came home late, lighted by a full summer moon.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Ten years rushed now upon me with dusty, vibrating, unresting wings; years
+ of bustle, action, unslacked endeavour; years in which I and my wife,
+ having launched ourselves in the full career of progress, as progress
+ whirls on in European capitals, scarcely knew repose, were strangers to
+ amusement, never thought of indulgence, and yet, as our course ran side by
+ side, as we marched hand in hand, we neither murmured, repented, nor
+ faltered. Hope indeed cheered us; health kept us up; harmony of thought
+ and deed smoothed many difficulties, and finally, success bestowed every
+ now and then encouraging reward on diligence. Our school became one of the
+ most popular in Brussels, and as by degrees we raised our terms and
+ elevated our system of education, our choice of pupils grew more select,
+ and at length included the children of the best families in Belgium. We
+ had too an excellent connection in England, first opened by the
+ unsolicited recommendation of Mr. Hunsden, who having been over, and
+ having abused me for my prosperity in set terms, went back, and soon after
+ sent a leash of young ——shire heiresses—his cousins; as
+ he said “to be polished off by Mrs. Crimsworth.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ As to this same Mrs. Crimsworth, in one sense she was become another
+ woman, though in another she remained unchanged. So different was she
+ under different circumstances. I seemed to possess two wives. The
+ faculties of her nature, already disclosed when I married her, remained
+ fresh and fair; but other faculties shot up strong, branched out broad,
+ and quite altered the external character of the plant. Firmness, activity,
+ and enterprise, covered with grave foliage, poetic feeling and fervour;
+ but these flowers were still there, preserved pure and dewy under the
+ umbrage of later growth and hardier nature: perhaps I only in the world
+ knew the secret of their existence, but to me they were ever ready to
+ yield an exquisite fragrance and present a beauty as chaste as radiant.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ In the daytime my house and establishment were conducted by Madame the
+ directress, a stately and elegant woman, bearing much anxious thought on
+ her large brow; much calculated dignity in her serious mien: immediately
+ after breakfast I used to part with this lady; I went to my college, she
+ to her schoolroom; returning for an hour in the course of the day, I found
+ her always in class, intently occupied; silence, industry, observance,
+ attending on her presence. When not actually teaching, she was overlooking
+ and guiding by eye and gesture; she then appeared vigilant and solicitous.
+ When communicating instruction, her aspect was more animated; she seemed
+ to feel a certain enjoyment in the occupation. The language in which she
+ addressed her pupils, though simple and unpretending, was never trite or
+ dry; she did not speak from routine formulas—she made her own
+ phrases as she went on, and very nervous and impressive phrases they
+ frequently were; often, when elucidating favourite points of history, or
+ geography, she would wax genuinely eloquent in her earnestness. Her
+ pupils, or at least the elder and more intelligent amongst them,
+ recognized well the language of a superior mind; they felt too, and some
+ of them received the impression of elevated sentiments; there was little
+ fondling between mistress and girls, but some of Frances’ pupils in time
+ learnt to love her sincerely, all of them beheld her with respect; her
+ general demeanour towards them was serious; sometimes benignant when they
+ pleased her with their progress and attention, always scrupulously refined
+ and considerate. In cases where reproof or punishment was called for she
+ was usually forbearing enough; but if any took advantage of that
+ forbearance, which sometimes happened, a sharp, sudden and lightning-like
+ severity taught the culprit the extent of the mistake committed. Sometimes
+ a gleam of tenderness softened her eyes and manner, but this was rare;
+ only when a pupil was sick, or when it pined after home, or in the case of
+ some little motherless child, or of one much poorer than its companions,
+ whose scanty wardrobe and mean appointments brought on it the contempt of
+ the jewelled young countesses and silk-clad misses. Over such feeble
+ fledglings the directress spread a wing of kindliest protection: it was to
+ their bedside she came at night to tuck them warmly in; it was after them
+ she looked in winter to see that they always had a comfortable seat by the
+ stove; it was they who by turns were summoned to the salon to receive some
+ little dole of cake or fruit—to sit on a footstool at the fireside—to
+ enjoy home comforts, and almost home liberty, for an evening together—to
+ be spoken to gently and softly, comforted, encouraged, cherished—and
+ when bedtime came, dismissed with a kiss of true tenderness. As to Julia
+ and Georgiana G——, daughters of an English baronet, as to
+ Mdlle. Mathilde de ——, heiress of a Belgian count, and sundry
+ other children of patrician race, the directress was careful of them as of
+ the others, anxious for their progress, as for that of the rest—but
+ it never seemed to enter her head to distinguish them by a mark of
+ preference; one girl of noble blood she loved dearly—a young Irish
+ baroness—lady Catherine ——; but it was for her
+ enthusiastic heart and clever head, for her generosity and her genius, the
+ title and rank went for nothing.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ My afternoons were spent also in college, with the exception of an hour
+ that my wife daily exacted of me for her establishment, and with which she
+ would not dispense. She said that I must spend that time amongst her
+ pupils to learn their characters, to be “<i lang="fr">au courant</i>”
+ with everything that
+ was passing in the house, to become interested in what interested her, to
+ be able to give her my opinion on knotty points when she required it, and
+ this she did constantly, never allowing my interest in the pupils to fall
+ asleep, and never making any change of importance without my cognizance
+ and consent. She delighted to sit by me when I gave my lessons (lessons in
+ literature), her hands folded on her knee, the most fixedly attentive of
+ any present. She rarely addressed me in class; when she did it was with an
+ air of marked deference; it was her pleasure, her joy to make me still the
+ master in all things.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ At six o’clock P.M. my daily labours ceased. I then came home, for my home
+ was my heaven; ever at that hour, as I entered our private sitting-room,
+ the lady-directress vanished from before my eyes, and Frances Henri, my
+ own little lace-mender, was magically restored to my arms; much
+ disappointed she would have been if her master had not been as constant to
+ the tryst as herself, and if his truthfull kiss had not been prompt to
+ answer her soft, “Bon soir, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Talk French to me she would, and many a punishment she has had for her
+ wilfulness. I fear the choice of chastisement must have been injudicious,
+ for instead of correcting the fault, it seemed to encourage its renewal.
+ Our evenings were our own; that recreation was necessary to refresh our
+ strength for the due discharge of our duties; sometimes we spent them all
+ in conversation, and my young Genevese, now that she was thoroughly
+ accustomed to her English professor, now that she loved him too absolutely
+ to fear him much, reposed in him a confidence so unlimited that topics of
+ conversation could no more be wanting with him than subjects for communion
+ with her own heart. In those moments, happy as a bird with its mate, she
+ would show me what she had of vivacity, of mirth, of originality in her
+ well-dowered nature. She would show, too, some stores of raillery, of
+ “malice,” and would vex, tease, pique me sometimes about what she called
+ my “bizarreries anglaises,” my “caprices insulaires,” with a wild and
+ witty wickedness that made a perfect white demon of her while it lasted.
+ This was rare, however, and the elfish freak was always short: sometimes
+ when driven a little hard in the war of words—for her tongue did
+ ample justice to the pith, the point, the delicacy of her native French,
+ in which language she always attacked me—I used to turn upon her
+ with my old decision, and arrest bodily the sprite that teased me. Vain
+ idea! no sooner had I grasped hand or arm than the elf was gone; the
+ provocative smile quenched in the expressive brown eyes, and a ray of
+ gentle homage shone under the lids in its place. I had seized a mere
+ vexing fairy, and found a submissive and supplicating little mortal woman
+ in my arms. Then I made her get a book, and read English to me for an hour
+ by way of penance. I frequently dosed her with Wordsworth in this way, and
+ Wordsworth steadied her soon; she had a difficulty in comprehending his
+ deep, serene, and sober mind; his language, too, was not facile to her;
+ she had to ask questions, to sue for explanations, to be like a child and
+ a novice, and to acknowledge me as her senior and director. Her instinct
+ instantly penetrated and possessed the meaning of more ardent and
+ imaginative writers. Byron excited her; Scott she loved; Wordsworth only
+ she puzzled at, wondered over, and hesitated to pronounce an opinion upon.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But whether she read to me, or talked with me; whether she teased me in
+ French, or entreated me in English; whether she jested with wit, or
+ inquired with deference; narrated with interest, or listened with
+ attention; whether she smiled <em>at</em> me or <em>on</em> me, always
+ at nine o’clock I was left abandoned.
+ She would extricate herself from my arms, quit my side,
+ take her lamp, and be gone. Her mission was upstairs; I have followed her
+ sometimes and watched her. First she opened the door of the dortoir (the
+ pupils’ chamber), noiselessly she glided up the long room between the two
+ rows of white beds, surveyed all the sleepers; if any were wakeful,
+ especially if any were sad, spoke to them and soothed them; stood some
+ minutes to ascertain that all was safe and tranquil; trimmed the
+ watch-light which burned in the apartment all night, then withdrew,
+ closing the door behind her without sound. Thence she glided to our own
+ chamber; it had a little cabinet within; this she sought; there, too,
+ appeared a bed, but one, and that a very small one; her face (the night I
+ followed and observed her) changed as she approached this tiny couch; from
+ grave it warmed to earnest; she shaded with one hand the lamp she held in
+ the other; she bent above the pillow and hung over a child asleep; its
+ slumber (that evening at least, and usually, I believe) was sound and
+ calm; no tear wet its dark eyelashes; no fever heated its round cheek; no
+ ill dream discomposed its budding features. Frances gazed, she did not
+ smile, and yet the deepest delight filled, flushed her face; feeling
+ pleasurable, powerful, worked in her whole frame, which still was
+ motionless. I saw, indeed, her heart heave, her lips were a little apart,
+ her breathing grew somewhat hurried; the child smiled; then at last the
+ mother smiled too, and said in low soliloquy, “God bless my little son!”
+ She stooped closer over him, breathed the softest of kisses on his brow,
+ covered his minute hand with hers, and at last started up and came away. I
+ regained the parlour before her. Entering it two minutes later she said
+ quietly as she put down her extinguished lamp—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Victor rests well: he smiled in his sleep; he has your smile, monsieur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The said Victor was of course her own boy, born in the third year of our
+ marriage: his Christian name had been given him in honour of M.
+ Vandenhuten, who continued always our trusty and well-beloved friend.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances was then a good and dear wife to me, because I was to her a good,
+ just, and faithful husband. What she would have been had she married a
+ harsh, envious, careless man—a profligate, a prodigal, a drunkard,
+ or a tyrant—is another question, and one which I once propounded to
+ her. Her answer, given after some reflection, was—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should have tried to endure the evil or cure it for awhile; and when I
+ found it intolerable and incurable, I should have left my torturer
+ suddenly and silently.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And if law or might had forced you back again?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What, to a drunkard, a profligate, a selfish spendthrift, an unjust
+ fool?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I would have gone back; again assured myself whether or not his vice and
+ my misery were capable of remedy; and if not, have left him again.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And if again forced to return, and compelled to abide?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I don’t know,” she said, hastily. “Why do you ask me, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I would have an answer, because I saw a strange kind of spirit in her eye,
+ whose voice I determined to waken.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur, if a wife’s nature loathes that of the man she is wedded to,
+ marriage must be slavery. Against slavery all right thinkers revolt, and
+ though torture be the price of resistance, torture must be dared: though
+ the only road to freedom lie through the gates of death, those gates must
+ be passed; for freedom is indispensable. Then, monsieur, I would resist as
+ far as my strength permitted; when that strength failed I should be sure
+ of a refuge. Death would certainly screen me both from bad laws and their
+ consequences.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Voluntary death, Frances?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “No, monsieur. I’d have courage to live out every throe of anguish fate
+ assigned me, and principle to contend for justice and liberty to the
+ last.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I see you would have made no patient Grizzle. And now, supposing fate had
+ merely assigned you the lot of an old maid, what then? How would you have
+ liked celibacy?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Not much, certainly. An old maid’s life must doubtless be void and
+ vapid—her heart strained and empty. Had I been an old maid I should have
+ spent existence in efforts to fill the void and ease the aching. I should
+ have probably failed, and died weary and disappointed, despised and of no
+ account, like other single women. But I’m not an old maid,” she added
+ quickly. “I should have been, though, but for my master. I should never
+ have suited any man but Professor Crimsworth—no other gentleman,
+ French, English, or Belgian, would have thought me amiable or handsome;
+ and I doubt whether I should have cared for the approbation of many
+ others, if I could have obtained it. Now, I have been Professor
+ Crimsworth’s wife eight years, and what is he in my eyes? Is he
+ honourable, beloved ——?” She stopped, her voice was cut off,
+ her eyes suddenly suffused. She and I were standing side by side; she
+ threw her arms round me, and strained me to her heart with passionate
+ earnestness: the energy of her whole being glowed in her dark and then
+ dilated eye, and crimsoned her animated cheek; her look and movement were
+ like inspiration; in one there was such a flash, in the other such a
+ power. Half an hour afterwards, when she had become calm, I asked where
+ all that wild vigour was gone which had transformed her ere-while and made
+ her glance so thrilling and ardent—her action so rapid and strong.
+ She looked down, smiling softly and passively:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I cannot tell where it is gone, monsieur,” said she, “but I know that,
+ whenever it is wanted, it will come back again.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Behold us now at the close of the ten years, and we have realized an
+ independency. The rapidity with which we attained this end had its origin
+ in three reasons:— Firstly, we worked so hard for it; secondly, we
+ had no incumbrances to delay success; thirdly, as soon as we had capital
+ to invest, two well-skilled counsellors, one in Belgium, one in England,
+ viz. Vandenhuten and Hunsden, gave us each a word of advice as to the sort
+ of investment to be chosen. The suggestion made was judicious; and, being
+ promptly acted on, the result proved gainful—I need not say how
+ gainful; I communicated details to Messrs. Vandenhuten and Hunsden; nobody
+ else can be interested in hearing them.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Accounts being wound up, and our professional connection disposed of, we
+ both agreed that, as mammon was not our master, nor his service that in
+ which we desired to spend our lives; as our desires were temperate, and
+ our habits unostentatious, we had now abundance to live on—abundance
+ to leave our boy; and should besides always have a balance on hand, which,
+ properly managed by right sympathy and unselfish activity, might help
+ philanthropy in her enterprises, and put solace into the hand of charity.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ To England we now resolved to take wing; we arrived there safely; Frances
+ realized the dream of her lifetime. We spent a whole summer and autumn in
+ travelling from end to end of the British islands, and afterwards passed a
+ winter in London. Then we thought it high time to fix our residence. My
+ heart yearned towards my native county of ——shire; and it is
+ in ——shire I now live; it is in the library of my own home I
+ am now writing. That home lies amid a sequestered and rather hilly region,
+ thirty miles removed from X——; a region whose verdure the
+ smoke of mills has not yet sullied, whose waters still run pure, whose
+ swells of moorland preserve in some ferny glens that lie between them the
+ very primal wildness of nature, her moss, her bracken, her blue-bells, her
+ scents of reed and heather, her free and fresh breezes. My house is a
+ picturesque and not too spacious dwelling, with low and long windows, a
+ trellised and leaf-veiled porch over the front door, just now, on this
+ summer evening, looking like an arch of roses and ivy. The garden is
+ chiefly laid out in lawn, formed of the sod of the hills, with herbage
+ short and soft as moss, full of its own peculiar flowers, tiny and
+ starlike, imbedded in the minute embroidery of their fine foliage. At the
+ bottom of the sloping garden there is a wicket, which opens upon a lane as
+ green as the lawn, very long, shady, and little frequented; on the turf of
+ this lane generally appear the first daisies of spring—whence its
+ name—Daisy Lane; serving also as a distinction to the house.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ It terminates (the lane I mean) in a valley full of wood; which
+ wood—chiefly oak and beech—spreads shadowy about the vicinage of a very
+ old mansion, one of the Elizabethan structures, much larger, as well as
+ more antique than Daisy Lane, the property and residence of an individual
+ familiar both to me and to the reader. Yes, in Hunsden Wood—for so
+ are those glades and that grey building, with many gables and more
+ chimneys, named—abides Yorke Hunsden, still unmarried; never, I
+ suppose, having yet found his ideal, though I know at least a score of
+ young ladies within a circuit of forty miles, who would be willing to
+ assist him in the search.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ The estate fell to him by the death of his father, five years since; he
+ has given up trade, after having made by it sufficient to pay off some
+ incumbrances by which the family heritage was burdened. I say he abides
+ here, but I do not think he is resident above five months out of the
+ twelve; he wanders from land to land, and spends some part of each winter
+ in town: he frequently brings visitors with him when he comes to ——shire,
+ and these visitors are often foreigners; sometimes he has a German
+ metaphysician, sometimes a French savant; he had once a dissatisfied and
+ savage-looking Italian, who neither sang nor played, and of whom Frances
+ affirmed that he had “tout l’air d’un conspirateur.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ What English guests Hunsden invites, are all either men of Birmingham or
+ Manchester—hard men, seemingly knit up in one thought, whose talk is
+ of free trade. The foreign visitors, too, are politicians; they take a
+ wider theme—European progress—the spread of liberal sentiments
+ over the Continent; on their mental tablets, the names of Russia, Austria,
+ and the Pope, are inscribed in red ink. I have heard some of them talk
+ vigorous sense—yea, I have been present at polyglot discussions in
+ the old, oak-lined dining-room at Hunsden Wood, where a singular insight
+ was given of the sentiments entertained by resolute minds respecting old
+ northern despotisms, and old southern superstitions: also, I have heard
+ much twaddle, enounced chiefly in French and Deutsch, but let that pass.
+ Hunsden himself tolerated the drivelling theorists; with the practical men
+ he seemed leagued hand and heart.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When Hunsden is staying alone at the Wood (which seldom happens) he
+ generally finds his way two or three times a week to Daisy Lane. He has a
+ philanthropic motive for coming to smoke his cigar in our porch on summer
+ evenings; he says he does it to kill the earwigs amongst the roses, with
+ which insects, but for his benevolent fumigations, he intimates we should
+ certainly be overrun. On wet days, too, we are almost sure to see him;
+ according to him, it gets on time to work me into lunacy by treading on my
+ mental corns, or to force from Mrs. Crimsworth revelations of the dragon
+ within her, by insulting the memory of Hofer and Tell.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ We also go frequently to Hunsden Wood, and both I and Frances relish a
+ visit there highly. If there are other guests, their characters are an
+ interesting study; their conversation is exciting and strange; the absence
+ of all local narrowness both in the host and his chosen society gives a
+ metropolitan, almost a cosmopolitan freedom and largeness to the talk.
+ Hunsden himself is a polite man in his own house: he has, when he chooses
+ to employ it, an inexhaustible power of entertaining guests; his very
+ mansion too is interesting, the rooms look storied, the passages
+ legendary, the low-ceiled chambers, with their long rows of diamond-paned
+ lattices, have an old-world, haunted air: in his travels he has collected
+ stores of articles of <i lang="fr">virtu</i>, which are well and
+ tastefully disposed in his panelled or tapestried rooms: I have seen there
+ one or two pictures, and one or two pieces of statuary which many an
+ aristocratic connoisseur might have envied.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ When I and Frances have dined and spent an evening with Hunsden, he often
+ walks home with us. His wood is large, and some of the timber is old and
+ of huge growth. There are winding ways in it which, pursued through glade
+ and brake, make the walk back to Daisy Lane a somewhat long one. Many a
+ time, when we have had the benefit of a full moon, and when the night has
+ been mild and balmy, when, moreover, a certain nightingale has been
+ singing, and a certain stream, hid in alders, has lent the song a soft
+ accompaniment, the remote church-bell of the one hamlet in a district of
+ ten miles, has tolled midnight ere the lord of the wood left us at our
+ porch. Free-flowing was his talk at such hours, and far more quiet and
+ gentle than in the day-time and before numbers. He would then forget
+ politics and discussion, and would dwell on the past times of his house,
+ on his family history, on himself and his own feelings—subjects each
+ and all invested with a peculiar zest, for they were each and all unique.
+ One glorious night in June, after I had been taunting him about his ideal
+ bride and asking him when she would come and graft her foreign beauty on
+ the old Hunsden oak, he answered suddenly—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “You call her ideal; but see, here is her shadow; and there cannot be a
+ shadow without a substance.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He had led us from the depth of the “winding way” into a glade from whence
+ the beeches withdrew, leaving it open to the sky; an unclouded moon poured
+ her light into this glade, and Hunsden held out under her beam an ivory
+ miniature.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances, with eagerness, examined it first; then she gave it to me—still,
+ however, pushing her little face close to mine, and seeking in my eyes
+ what I thought of the portrait. I thought it represented a very handsome
+ and very individual-looking female face, with, as he had once said,
+ “straight and harmonious features.” It was dark; the hair, raven-black,
+ swept not only from the brow, but from the temples—seemed thrust
+ away carelessly, as if such beauty dispensed with, nay, despised
+ arrangement. The Italian eye looked straight into you, and an independent,
+ determined eye it was; the mouth was as firm as fine; the chin ditto. On
+ the back of the miniature was gilded “Lucia.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “That is a real head,” was my conclusion.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Hunsden smiled.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I think so,” he replied. “All was real in Lucia.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “And she was somebody you would have liked to marry—but could not?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I should certainly have liked to marry her, and that I <em>have</em> not
+ done so is a proof that I <em>could</em> not.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He repossessed himself of the miniature, now again in Frances’ hand, and
+ put it away.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “What do <em>you</em> think of it?” he asked of my wife, as he buttoned
+ his coat over it.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I am sure Lucia once wore chains and broke them,” was the strange answer.
+ “I do not mean matrimonial chains,” she added, correcting herself, as if
+ she feared mis-interpretation, “but social chains of some sort. The face
+ is that of one who has made an effort, and a successful and triumphant
+ effort, to wrest some vigorous and valued faculty from insupportable
+ constraint; and when Lucia’s faculty got free, I am certain it spread wide
+ pinions and carried her higher than—” she hesitated.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Than what?” demanded Hunsden.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Than ‘les convenances’ permitted you to follow.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I think you grow spiteful—impertinent.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Lucia has trodden the stage,” continued Frances. “You never seriously
+ thought of marrying her; you admired her originality, her fearlessness,
+ her energy of body and mind; you delighted in her talent, whatever that
+ was, whether song, dance, or dramatic representation; you worshipped her
+ beauty, which was of the sort after your own heart: but I am sure she
+ filled a sphere from whence you would never have thought of taking a
+ wife.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Ingenious,” remarked Hunsden; “whether true or not is another question.
+ Meantime, don’t you feel your little lamp of a spirit wax very pale,
+ beside such a girandole as Lucia’s?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Yes.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Candid, at least; and the Professor will soon be dissatisfied with the
+ dim light you give?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Will you, monsieur?”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “My sight was always too weak to endure a blaze, Frances,” and we had now
+ reached the wicket.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I said, a few pages back, that this is a sweet summer evening; it is—there
+ has been a series of lovely days, and this is the loveliest; the hay is
+ just carried from my fields, its perfume still lingers in the air. Frances
+ proposed to me, an hour or two since, to take tea out on the lawn; I see
+ the round table, loaded with china, placed under a certain beech; Hunsden
+ is expected—nay, I hear he is come—there is his voice, laying
+ down the law on some point with authority; that of Frances replies; she
+ opposes him of course. They are disputing about Victor, of whom Hunsden
+ affirms that his mother is making a milksop. Mrs. Crimsworth retaliates:—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Better a thousand times he should be a milksop than what he, Hunsden,
+ calls ‘a fine lad;’ and moreover she says that if Hunsden were to become a
+ fixture in the neighbourhood, and were not a mere comet, coming and going,
+ no one knows how, when, where, or why, she should be quite uneasy till she
+ had got Victor away to a school at least a hundred miles off; for that
+ with his mutinous maxims and unpractical dogmas, he would ruin a score of
+ children.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I have a word to say of Victor ere I shut this manuscript in my desk—but
+ it must be a brief one, for I hear the tinkle of silver on porcelain.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Victor is as little of a pretty child as I am of a handsome man, or his
+ mother of a fine woman; he is pale and spare, with large eyes, as dark as
+ those of Frances, and as deeply set as mine. His shape is symmetrical
+ enough, but slight; his health is good. I never saw a child smile less
+ than he does, nor one who knits such a formidable brow when sitting over a
+ book that interests him, or while listening to tales of adventure, peril,
+ or wonder, narrated by his mother, Hunsden, or myself. But though still,
+ he is not unhappy—though serious, not morose; he has a
+ susceptibility to pleasurable sensations almost too keen, for it amounts
+ to enthusiasm. He learned to read in the old-fashioned way out of a
+ spelling-book at his mother’s knee, and as he got on without driving by
+ that method, she thought it unnecessary to buy him ivory letters, or to
+ try any of the other inducements to learning now deemed indispensable.
+ When he could read, he became a glutton of books, and is so still. His
+ toys have been few, and he has never wanted more. For those he possesses,
+ he seems to have contracted a partiality amounting to affection; this
+ feeling, directed towards one or two living animals of the house,
+ strengthens almost to a passion.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Mr. Hunsden gave him a mastiff cub, which he called Yorke, after the
+ donor; it grew to a superb dog, whose fierceness, however, was much
+ modified by the companionship and caresses of its young master. He would
+ go nowhere, do nothing without Yorke; Yorke lay at his feet while he
+ learned his lessons, played with him in the garden, walked with him in the
+ lane and wood, sat near his chair at meals, was fed always by his own
+ hand, was the first thing he sought in the morning, the last he left at
+ night. Yorke accompanied Mr. Hunsden one day to X——, and was
+ bitten in the street by a dog in a rabid state. As soon as Hunsden had
+ brought him home, and had informed me of the circumstance, I went into the
+ yard and shot him where he lay licking his wound: he was dead in an
+ instant; he had not seen me level the gun; I stood behind him. I had
+ scarcely been ten minutes in the house, when my ear was struck with sounds
+ of anguish: I repaired to the yard once more, for they proceeded thence.
+ Victor was kneeling beside his dead mastiff, bent over it, embracing its
+ bull-like neck, and lost in a passion of the wildest woe: he saw me.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Oh, papa, I’ll never forgive you! I’ll never forgive you!” was his
+ exclamation. “You shot Yorke—I saw it from the window. I never
+ believed you could be so cruel—I can love you no more!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I had much ado to explain to him, with a steady voice, the stern necessity
+ of the deed; he still, with that inconsolable and bitter accent which I
+ cannot render, but which pierced my heart, repeated—
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “He might have been cured—you should have tried—you should
+ have burnt the wound with a hot iron, or covered it with caustic. You gave
+ no time; and now it is too late—he is dead!”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ He sank fairly down on the senseless carcase; I waited patiently a long
+ while, till his grief had somewhat exhausted him; and then I lifted him in
+ my arms and carried him to his mother, sure that she would comfort him
+ best. She had witnessed the whole scene from a window; she would not come
+ out for fear of increasing my difficulties by her emotion, but she was
+ ready now to receive him. She took him to her kind heart, and on to her
+ gentle lap; consoled him but with her lips, her eyes, her soft embrace,
+ for some time; and then, when his sobs diminished, told him that Yorke had
+ felt no pain in dying, and that if he had been left to expire naturally,
+ his end would have been most horrible; above all, she told him that I was
+ not cruel (for that idea seemed to give exquisite pain to poor Victor),
+ that it was my affection for Yorke and him which had made me act so, and
+ that I was now almost heart-broken to see him weep thus bitterly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Victor would have been no true son of his father, had these
+ considerations, these reasons, breathed in so low, so sweet a tone—married
+ to caresses so benign, so tender—to looks so inspired with pitying
+ sympathy—produced no effect on him. They did produce an effect: he
+ grew calmer, rested his face on her shoulder, and lay still in her arms.
+ Looking up, shortly, he asked his mother to tell him over again what she
+ had said about Yorke having suffered no pain, and my not being cruel; the
+ balmy words being repeated, he again pillowed his cheek on her breast, and
+ was again tranquil.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Some hours after, he came to me in my library, asked if I forgave him, and
+ desired to be reconciled. I drew the lad to my side, and there I kept him
+ a good while, and had much talk with him, in the course of which he
+ disclosed many points of feeling and thought I approved of in my son. I
+ found, it is true, few elements of the “good fellow” or the “fine fellow”
+ in him; scant sparkles of the spirit which loves to flash over the wine
+ cup, or which kindles the passions to a destroying fire; but I saw in the
+ soil of his heart healthy and swelling germs of compassion, affection,
+ fidelity. I discovered in the garden of his intellect a rich growth of
+ wholesome principles—reason, justice, moral courage, promised, if
+ not blighted, a fertile bearing. So I bestowed on his large forehead, and
+ on his cheek—still pale with tears—a proud and contented kiss,
+ and sent him away comforted. Yet I saw him the next day laid on the mound
+ under which Yorke had been buried, his face covered with his hands; he was
+ melancholy for some weeks, and more than a year elapsed before he would
+ listen to any proposal of having another dog.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Victor learns fast. He must soon go to Eton, where, I suspect, his first
+ year or two will be utter wretchedness: to leave me, his mother, and his
+ home, will give his heart an agonized wrench; then, the fagging will not
+ suit him—but emulation, thirst after knowledge, the glory of
+ success, will stir and reward him in time. Meantime, I feel in myself a
+ strong repugnance to fix the hour which will uproot my sole olive branch,
+ and transplant it far from me; and, when I speak to Frances on the
+ subject, I am heard with a kind of patient pain, as though I alluded to
+ some fearful operation, at which her nature shudders, but from which her
+ fortitude will not permit her to recoil. The step must, however, be taken,
+ and it <em>shall</em> be; for, though Frances will not make a milksop of
+ her son, she will accustom him to a style of treatment, a forbearance, a
+ congenial tenderness, he will meet with from none else. She sees, as I
+ also see, a something in Victor’s temper—a kind of electrical ardour and
+ power—which emits, now and then, ominous sparks; Hunsden calls it his
+ spirit, and says it should not be curbed. I call it the leaven of the
+ offending Adam, and consider that it should be, if not <em>whipped</em>
+ out of him, at least soundly disciplined; and that he will be cheap of any
+ amount of either bodily or mental suffering which will ground him
+ radically in the art of self-control. Frances gives this
+ <em>something</em> in her son’s marked character
+ no name; but when it appears in the grinding of his teeth, in the
+ glittering of his eye, in the fierce revolt of feeling against
+ disappointment, mischance, sudden sorrow, or supposed injustice, she folds
+ him to her breast, or takes him to walk with her alone in the wood; then
+ she reasons with him like any philosopher, and to reason Victor is ever
+ accessible; then she looks at him with eyes of love, and by love Victor
+ can be infallibly subjugated; but will reason or love be the weapons with
+ which in future the world will meet his violence? Oh, no! for that flash
+ in his black eye—for that cloud on his bony brow—for that
+ compression of his statuesque lips, the lad will some day get blows
+ instead of blandishments—kicks instead of kisses; then for the fit
+ of mute fury which will sicken his body and madden his soul; then for the
+ ordeal of merited and salutary suffering, out of which he will come (I
+ trust) a wiser and a better man.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ I see him now; he stands by Hunsden, who is seated on the lawn under the
+ beech; Hunsden’s hand rests on the boy’s collar, and he is instilling God
+ knows what principles into his ear. Victor looks well just now, for he
+ listens with a sort of smiling interest; he never looks so like his mother
+ as when he smiles—pity the sunshine breaks out so rarely! Victor has
+ a preference for Hunsden, full as strong as I deem desirable, being
+ considerably more potent, decided, and indiscriminating, than any I ever
+ entertained for that personage myself. Frances, too, regards it with a
+ sort of unexpressed anxiety; while her son leans on Hunsden’s knee, or
+ rests against his shoulder, she roves with restless movement round, like a
+ dove guarding its young from a hovering hawk; she says she wishes Hunsden
+ had children of his own, for then he would better know the danger of
+ inciting their pride and indulging their foibles.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ Frances approaches my library window; puts aside the honeysuckle which
+ half covers it, and tells me tea is ready; seeing that I continue busy she
+ enters the room, comes near me quietly, and puts her hand on my shoulder.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Monsieur est trop appliqué.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I shall soon have done.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ She draws a chair near, and sits down to wait till I have finished; her
+ presence is as pleasant to my mind as the perfume of the fresh hay and
+ spicy flowers, as the glow of the westering sun, as the repose of the
+ midsummer eve are to my senses.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ But Hunsden comes; I hear his step, and there he is, bending through the
+ lattice, from which he has thrust away the woodbine with unsparing hand,
+ disturbing two bees and a butterfly.
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Crimsworth! I say, Crimsworth! take that pen out of his hand, mistress,
+ and make him lift up his head.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Well, Hunsden? I hear you—”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “I was at X—— yesterday! your brother Ned is getting richer
+ than Croesus by railway speculations; they call him in the Piece Hall a
+ stag of ten; and I have heard from Brown. M. and Madame Vandenhuten and
+ Jean Baptiste talk of coming to see you next month. He mentions the Pelets
+ too; he says their domestic harmony is not the finest in the world, but in
+ business they are doing ‘on ne peut mieux,’ which circumstance he
+ concludes will be a sufficient consolation to both for any little crosses
+ in the affections. Why don’t you invite the Pelets to ——shire,
+ Crimsworth? I should so like to see your first flame, Zoraïde. Mistress,
+ don’t be jealous, but he loved that lady to distraction; I know it for a
+ fact. Brown says she weighs twelve stones now; you see what you’ve lost,
+ Mr. Professor. Now, Monsieur and Madame, if you don’t come to tea, Victor
+ and I will begin without you.”
+ </p>
+<p>
+ “Papa, come!”
+ </p>
+</div>
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1028 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>