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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53724 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53724)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jessie Trim, by B. L. Farjeon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Jessie Trim
-
-Author: B. L. Farjeon
-
-Release Date: December 12, 2016 [EBook #53724]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JESSIE TRIM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page images provided by
-Google Books (Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public
-Library)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes: This edition of Jessie Trim was published by
-Tinsley Brothers (London) in two installments in the following issues
-of Tinsleys' Magazine:
-
- Vol. XIV. From January to June 1874. Chapters I.-XXV.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=Dj8xAQAAMAAJ
- (Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public Library)
-
- Vol. XV. From July to December 1874. Chapters XXVI.-LI.
- https://books.google.com/books?id=1-kRAAAAYAAJ
- (Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public Library)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE
-
-
-
-LONDON:
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE.
-
-
-
-----------
-VOL. XIV.
-From January to June 1874.
-----------
-
-
-
-LONDON:
-TINSLEY BROTHERS,
-8 CATHERINE STREET, STRAND, W.C.
-[_All rights of translation and reproduction reserved_.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-JESSIE TRIM. By B. L. Farjeon, Author of Blade-o'-Grass,'
-'Golden Grain,' Bread-and-Cheese and Kisses,' 'Grif,' 'London's
-Heart,' and 'Joshua Marvel:'
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-Chap.
-
- I. My Grandmother's Wedding.
- II. I am frightened of my Shadow.
- III. My Grandmother's Long Stocking.
- IV. I murder my Baby-brother.
- V. I play the Part of Chief Mourner.
- VI. In which a great Change in my Circumstances takes place.
- VII. In which a Fairy in a Cotton-Print Dress is introduced.
- VIII. A Postman's Knock.
- IX. Uncle Bryan introduces himself.
- X. Our new Home.
- XI. In which I take part in some lawless Expeditions.
- XII. A singular Episode in our quiet Life.
- XIII. A sudden Shock.
- XIV. The World becomes bright again.
- XV. Jessie's Rosewater Philosophy.
- XVI. The Stone Monkey Figure gives up its Treasures.
- XVII. The true Story of Anthony Bullpit.
- XVIII. Uncle Bryan commences the Story of his Life.
- XIX. Strange Revelations in Uncle Bryan's Life.
- XX. Uncle Bryan concludes his Story.
- XXI. I receive an Invitation.
- XXII. I am introduced to a Theatrical Family.
- XXIII. The Sunday-night Suppers at the Wests'.
- XXIV. Turk, the First Villain.
- XXV. Holding the Word of Promise to the Ear.
- XXVI. We enjoy a deceitful Calm.
- XXVII. The Storm breaks.
- XXVIII. Colour-blind.
- XXIX. Preparations for an important Event
- XXX. Jessie's Triumph.
- XXXI. My Mother expresses her Fears concerning Jessie.
- XXXII. Jessie makes an Explanation.
- XXXIII. Mr. Glover.
- XXXIV. Turk West's Appearance at the West-end Theatre, and its
- Results.
- XXXV. Jessie's Birthday.
- XXXVI. I speak plainly to uncle Bryan.
- XXXVII. Turk makes a Confession.
- XXXVIII. Mr. Glover declines to satisfy me.
- XXXIX. A new Fear.
- XL. What the Neighbours said.
- XLI. Josey West declares that she has got into her proper
- Groove.
- XLII. From Frances to her Husband, Bryan Carey.
- XLIII. A happy Recovery.
- XLIV. At Rehearsal.
- XLV. Old Mac expresses his Opinion of Mr. Glover.
- XLVI. A strange Dream.
- XLVII. Exit Mr. Glover.
- XLVIII. Josey West laments her crooked Legs.
- XLIX. Uncle Bryan again.
- L. Josey West disturbs us in the Middle of the Night.
- LI. My Mother's Bible.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-_TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE_.
-January 1874.
-
-
-JESSIE TRIM.
-
-BY B. L. FARJEON,
-
-AUTHOR OF 'BLADE-O'-GRASS,' 'GOLDEN GRAIN,' 'BREAD-AND-CHEESE AND
-KISSES.' 'GRIF,' 'LONDON'S HEART,' AND 'JOSHUA MARVEL.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-MY GRANDMOTHER'S WEDDING.
-
-
-As my earliest remembrances are associated with my grandmother's
-wedding, it takes natural precedence here of all other matter. I was
-not there, of course, but I seem to see it through a mist, and I have
-a distinct impression of certain actors in the scene. These are: a
-smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, my grandmother, my grandfather
-(whom I never saw in the flesh), and a man with a knob on the top of
-his head, making a meal off his finger-nails.
-
-Naturally, this man's head is bald. Naturally, this man's nails are
-eaten down to the quick. I am unable to state how I come to the
-knowledge of these details, but I know them, and am prepared to stand
-by them. Sitting, as I see myself, in a very low armchair--in which I
-am such an exact fit that when I rise it rises with me, much to my
-discomfort--I hear my grandmother say:
-
-'He had a knob on the top of his head, and he was always eating his
-nails.'
-
-Then a solemn pause ensues, broken by my grandmother adding, in a
-dismal tone:
-
-'And the last time I set eyes on him was on my wedding-day.'
-
-The words are addressed not so much to me as to the smoke-dried monkey
-of a man in stone, which had occupied the place of honour on the
-mantelpiece in my grandmother's house, and which she had brought with
-her as a precious relic--(Jane Painter, I remember, always called it a
-relict)--when she came to live with us. The head of this stone figure
-is loose, and wags upon the slightest provocation. When something
-falls in the room, when the door is slammed, when a person walks
-sharply towards it, when it is merely looked at I sometimes fancy. I
-am not prepossessed in its favour, and I regard it with uneasy
-feelings, as probably possessing a power for evil, like a
-malevolently-inclined idol. But my grandmother, for some mysterious
-reason, values it as a very precious possession, and sits staring
-dumbly at it for hours. I watch her and it until, in my imagination,
-its monkey-face begins to twitch and its monkey-lips to move. At a
-certain point of my watch, I fancy that its eyes roll and glare at me,
-and I cover mine with my hands to shut out the disturbing sight. But I
-have not sufficient courage to remain blind for more than a very few
-moments, and I am soon fascinated into peeping at the figure through
-the lattice of my fingers. My grandmother observes me, and says:
-
-'I see you, child! Take your fingers away.'
-
-I obey her timidly, and with many a doubtful glance at the monkey-man,
-I ask:
-
-'Does _it_ see me, grandmother?'
-
-My grandmother regards it with a gloomy air; evidently she has doubts.
-She does not commit herself, however, but says:
-
-'It will belong to you, child, when I am gone. It must be kept always
-in the family.'
-
-The tone in which she utters these words denotes that evil will fall
-upon the family when this heirloom is lost sight of. I am not grateful
-for the prospective gift. It has already become a frightful incubus;
-it weighs me down, and is a future as well as a present torment. I
-think it has lived long enough--too long--and that when my grandmother
-goes, she ought to take it with her. Happening to catch the eye of the
-figure while this thought is in my mind, I am convinced that it shows
-in its ugly face a consciousness of my bad feeling towards it; its
-eyes and lips threaten me. It would have terrified, but it would not
-have surprised me to find it suddenly gifted with the power of speech,
-and to hear it utter dreadful words. But happily for my peace of mind
-no such miracle happens. I look at my grandmother, and I begin to
-fancy that she, from long staring at it, bears in her face a
-resemblance to the face of the monkey-man. For how much longer will my
-grandmother sit and stare at it? For how many more days and weeks and
-years? She has frequently told me that naughty boys were invariably
-'fetched away' to a dismal place by Some One wearing horns and a tail.
-She made no mention of naughty girls; and sometimes when she has been
-delighting me with these wholesome lessons, a sort of rebellion has
-possessed me that I was not born a girl. Now, if Some One were to come
-and 'fetch' my grandmother away, it would not grieve me; I should
-rejoice. But I dare not for my life give utterance to my thought. Says
-my grandmother, with a nod at the stone figure, which, suddenly
-animated by a mysterious influence, returns the nod:
-
-'I had it in my pocket on my wedding-day.'
-
-The circumstance of its being a guest at my grandmother's wedding
-invests it with an additional claim to my protection when she is gone.
-How happy I should be if it would fall into the fireplace, and break
-into a thousand pieces!
-
-'Grandmother!'
-
-'Well, child.'
-
-Was the man with the knob on the top of his head----'
-
-My grandmother interrupts me.
-
-'You mean the gentleman, child.'
-
-'Yes, I mean the gentleman--and who was always eating his nails,--was
-he like that?' Pointing to the stone monkey-figure.
-
-'Like that, child! How can such an idea have entered your head? No; he
-was a very handsome man.'
-
-A pure fiction, I am convinced, if nothing worse. How _could_ a man
-with a knob on his head, and who was always eating his nails, be
-handsome?
-
-'Your grandfather used to be very jealous of him; he was one of my
-sweethearts. I had several, and nine proposals of marriage before I
-was twenty years of age. Some girls that I knew were ready to scratch
-their eyes out with vexation. He proposed, and wished to run away with
-me, but my family stepped in between us, and prevented him. You can
-never be sufficiently grateful to me, child; for what would have
-become of you if I had run away and married him, goodness only knows!'
-
-The reflection which is thus forced upon me involves such wild
-entanglements of possibilities that I am lost in the contemplation of
-them. What _would_ have become of me? Supposing it had occurred--should
-I ever have been?
-
-'He told me,' continues my grandmother, revelling in these honey-sweet
-reminiscences, 'after I had accepted your grandfather, that life was
-valueless without me, and that as he had lost me, he would be sure to
-go to the Devil. I don't know the end of him, for I only saw him once
-after that; but he was a man of his word. He told me so in Lovers'
-Walk, where I happened to be strolling one evening--quite by
-accident, child, I assure you, for I burnt the letter I received from
-him in the morning, for fear your grandfather should see it. Your
-grandfather had a frightfully jealous disposition--as if I could help
-the men looking at me! When we were first married he used to smash a
-deal of crockery, with his quick temper. I hope he is forgiven for it
-in the place he has gone to. He was an auctioneer and valuer; he had
-an immense reputation as a valuer. It was not undeserved; he fell in
-love with me. Oh, he was clever, child, in his way!'
-
-Although I am positive that I never saw my grandfather, I have, in
-some strange way, a perfect remembrance of him as a little man, very
-dapper, and very precisely dressed in a snuff-coloured coat and black
-breeches and stockings. Now, my grandmother was a very large woman;
-side by side they are, to my mind, a ridiculous match. I have grown
-quite curious concerning my grandmother's lover, and I venture to
-recall her from a moody contemplation of the monkey-figure into which
-she is falling.
-
-'But about the man with the knob, grandmother?' I commence.
-
-'Child, you are disrespectful! The man with the knob, indeed!'
-
-'The gentleman, I mean, who wanted to marry you. What was his name?'
-
-'Bullpit. He was connected with the law, and might have become Lord
-Chancellor if I hadn't blighted him.'
-
-'Did he behave himself at your wedding, grandmother?'
-
-'Save the child!' she exclaims. 'You don't suppose that Mr. Bullpit
-was at my wedding, do you? Why, there would have been murder done!
-Your grandfather and he would have torn each other to pieces!' These
-latter words are spoken in a tone of positive satisfaction, as adding
-immensely to my grandmother's reputation.
-
-'But I thought you said that the last time you saw him was on your
-wedding-day?'
-
-'So I did, child; but I didn't say he was _at_ the wedding. We were
-coming out of church---- Deary, deary me! I can see it as if it was
-only yesterday that it took place! The church was scarcely three
-minutes' walk from mother's house, and the expense would not have been
-great, but your grandfather, who was a very mean man, did not provide
-carriages, and we had to go on foot. It was the talk of the whole
-neighbourhood for months afterwards. I never forgave him for it, and I
-can't forget it, although he is in his grave now, where all things
-ought to be forgotten and forgiven. Remember that, child, and if you
-have anything to forget and forgive, forget and forgive it. Animosity
-is a bad thing.'
-
-My grandmother gives me time to remember if I have anything to forget
-and forgive. I feel somewhat remorseful because of the hard thoughts I
-have borne towards her, and I mentally resolve that when she is in her
-grave I will endeavour to forget and forgive.
-
-'We walked,' she continues, from mother's house to the church, and
-from the church back again. It was like a procession. There were five
-bridesmaids, and mother and father, and your grandfather's mother and
-father,'--(I am a little confused here with so many mothers and
-fathers, and, notwithstanding my efforts to prevent it, they all get
-jumbled up with one another)--'whom we could very well have done
-without, and the Best Man, who did not know how to behave himself,
-making the bridesmaids giggle as he did, as if my wedding was a thing
-to be laughed at! and a great number of guests with white favours in
-their coats--all but one, who ought to have known better, and who was
-properly punished afterwards by being jilted by Mary Morgan. Everybody
-in the town came to see us walk to church, and when the fatal knot was
-tied, the crowd round the church door was so large that we could
-scarcely make our way through it. The Best Man misbehaved himself
-shamefully. He pretended to be overcome by grief, and he sobbed in
-such a violent manner as to make the mob laugh at him, and the
-bridesmaids giggle more than ever. I knew what they did it for, the
-hussies! They thought he was a catch; a nice husband he turned out to
-be afterwards! When we were half way between the church and mother's
-house, our procession met another procession, and for a minute or two
-there was a stoppage and great confusion, and several vulgar boys
-hurrayed. What do you think that other procession was, child?'
-
-I ponder deeply, but am unable to guess.
-
-That other procession, child, was made up of policemen and riff-raff.
-And in the middle of it, with handcuffs on, was Anthony Bullpit. He
-had been arrested on a warrant for forgery. What with the confusion
-and the struggling, the processions got mixed up together, and as I
-raised my eyes I saw the eyes of Anthony Bullpit fixed upon me. Such a
-shock as that look of his gave me I shall never forget--never! I knew
-the meaning of it too well. It meant that all this had occurred
-through me; that life without me was a mockery; that he had arranged
-everything so that we should meet immediately the fatal knot was tied;
-and that he was on his road to ---- where he said he would go.'
-
-'He must have been a very wicked man, grandmother.'
-
-'A wicked man, child! How dare you! He was as innocent as I was, and
-he did it all to punish me. I fainted dead away in the middle of the
-street, and had to be carried home, and have hartshorn given to me,
-and brown paper burnt under my nose. When I came to, I looked more
-like a blackamoor than a bride, and my wedding dress was completely
-spoilt. And nothing of all this would have occurred, child, if it had
-not been for the meanness of your grandfather. If he had provided
-carriages _we_ should never have met. When poor Mr. Bullpit was put
-upon his trial he would not make any defence. Your grandfather said
-the case was so clear that it would only have aggravated it to defend
-it. But I knew better. When he pleaded guilty, I knew that he did it
-to spite me, and to prove that he was a man of his word. I wanted to
-go to the trial, but your grandfather objected; and when I said I
-_would_ go, he locked all the doors in the house, and took the keys
-away with him. Your grandfather has much to answer for. Mr. Bullpit
-was transported for twenty-one years. Some wicked people said it was a
-mercy he wasn't hanged. If he had been, I should never have survived
-it. Poor Anthony!'
-
-I was too young to exercise a proper judgment upon this incident in my
-grandmother's life, but it is imprinted indelibly upon my memory. I
-knew very well that I did not like my grandmother, and that I did not
-feel happy in her society. Often when I wished to go out into the
-sunshine to play, she would say,
-
-'Bring the boy in here, and let him keep me company. It will do him
-more good than running about in the dirt.'
-
-And her word being law in the house, I used to be taken into the room
-where she sat in her armchair, staring at the monkey-man on the
-mantelshelf, and used to be squeezed into my own little armchair, and
-placed in the corner to keep her company. For a certain sufficient
-reason I deemed it advisable to be companionable; for once I had
-sulked, and was sullen and ill-tempered. Then my grandmother had said:
-
-'The child is unwell! He must have some physic.'
-
-She herself prescribed the medicine--jalap, which was my disgust and
-abhorrence--and the dose, which was not a small one. Out of that
-companionship sprang my knowledge of the man with the knob on the top
-of his head, and who was always eating his nails. By some process of
-ratiocination I associate him with the smoke-dried monkey of a man in
-stone, and I hate them both honestly. As for Anthony Bullpit being
-innocent of the crime for which he was transported, I smile scornfully
-at the idea. He is my model for all that is disagreeable and bad, and
-I never see a man whose nails are bitten down to the quick without
-associating him--often unjustly, I am sure--with meanness and
-trickery.
-
-There was a reason for my being doomed to the companionship of my
-grandmother, and for my being made her victim as it were. Our family
-circle comprised five individuals: my grandmother, my father and
-mother, myself, and a baby-brother. My parents had, through no fault
-of their own, drifted into that struggling-genteel class of persons
-whose means never quite come up to their efforts to make an
-appearance. We had been a little better off once upon a time, but
-unfortunately my father's health had failed him, and at the period of
-which I am writing he was confined to his bed, unable to work. My
-mother, what with her anxiety and her ignorance of the world, was to a
-certain extent helpless. Therefore, when my grandmother proposed to
-come and live with us, and bring her servant, and pay so much a week
-for board and lodging, her offer was gladly accepted. It was a current
-belief that my grandmother had a 'long stocking' somewhere, with
-plenty of money in it, and to this long stocking may be attributed
-much of my unhappiness at that time. For it had come to be recognised
-that I was to be my grandmother's heir, and that her long stocking
-would descend to me. It was, perhaps, regarded as a fair arrangement
-that, as my grandmother's property was to be mine when she was dead, I
-was to be my grandmother's property while she was alive; and I have no
-doubt that care was taken that her whims with respect to me should be
-carefully attended to, so that my inheritance might not be
-jeopardised. My mother did not know that I was unhappy; I was as a
-child somewhat secretive by nature, and I kept my thoughts and
-feelings much to myself. Besides, I had an intuitive perception of the
-state of affairs at home, and I felt that if I offended my grandmother
-my parents might suffer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-I AM FRIGHTENED OF MY SHADOW.
-
-
-I have already mentioned the name of the servant whom my grandmother
-brought with her to our house; it was Jane Painter. She had
-been with my grandmother for many years, from girlhood I believe,
-and she was now about thirty years of age. In appearance she was
-a thin, sharp-featured, pale-faced woman; in manners she was a
-viciously-minded creature, fond of pinching children on the sly in
-tender places, assuming the while, to deceive observers, an expression
-of amiability, which intensified the malignity of her conduct. From
-the moment she entered our house she became the enemy of every person
-in it, and waged open and secret war upon all of us. Her service with
-my grandmother had been a very easy one, but things were different
-when her mistress changed her residence. She had to do double the work
-she had been accustomed to, and as we were the direct cause of this,
-she was not slow in showing resentment. My mother, patient as she
-always was, made light of the woman's infirmities of temper, believing
-that she was necessary to my grandmother; Jane Painter, however,
-declined to accept the olive-branch which my mother held out to her,
-and would certainly not have remained in the house but for one
-inducement. This was made clear to us a very few days after the
-change. My mother had occasion to remonstrate with her for some
-piece of impertinence, and Jane Painter ran into my grandmother's room
-in a fury, and demanded to know if she was to be treated like a
-galley-slave. My mother stood quietly by, listening to the servant's
-complainings. Said my grandmother,
-
-'You must do what my daughter desires you to do, Jane. I told her you
-would help her in the house.'
-
-'I won't be ordered about as if I was a bit of dirt!' exclaimed Jane
-Painter, gasping.
-
-'O Jane!' remonstrated my mother.
-
-'Don't O Jane me!' and then followed the unreasoning argument. 'I'm
-flesh and blood the same as you are!'
-
-'Jane,' said my grandmother, 'I mustn't be worried; my nerves won't
-stand it. I sha'n't be here long, and you know what I have promised
-you.'
-
-'Whose servant am I--yours or hers?'
-
-'Mine, Jane, and a very good servant you've been. I hope for your own
-sake you are not going to be different now.'
-
-'Haven't I served you faithfully?' asked Jane Painter, sobbing herself
-into a quieter emotional stage.
-
-'Yes, Jane, yes; and you shall be remembered for it.'
-
-'Haven't I waited on you hand and foot?'
-
-'Yes, Jane, yes; and you shall be remembered.'
-
-'When you was took bad with the spasms,' blubbered Jane, didn't I stop
-up with you all night till I was fit to drop?'
-
-'Yes, Jane; and I haven't forgotten you for it. You shall be
-remembered, I tell you.'
-
-By being remembered, my grandmother meant that Jane Painter was set
-down in her will for a certain portion of the contents of her long
-stocking; and but for this inducement it was pretty clear that Jane
-Painter would have taken her departure. The war she waged against us
-from this time was passive, but bitter. I, as the recognised heir to
-the long stocking, and as being likely, therefore, to diminish her
-portion, came in for the largest share of her ill-temper and
-animosity, and she showed much ingenuity in devising means to torment
-me. Parting my hair on the wrong side, brushing it into my eyes,
-rubbing the soap in my mouth and only half-wiping my face after I was
-washed, buttoning my clothes awry, running pins into me, holding me
-suspended by one arm as we went down stairs; these were the smallest
-of my sufferings. An incident, laughable in itself, but exceedingly
-painful in its effect upon me, comes vividly to my remembrance here;
-and it afforded Jane Painter an opportunity of inventing a new
-torture, and of inflicting upon me the sharpest and most terrible
-distress I ever experienced. It occurred in this way:
-
-Whether it was that the dull companionship of a peevish old woman was
-having its due effect upon me, or whether it sprang from my natural
-constitution, I was growing to be very nervous. I was frightened of
-being alone in the dark; a sudden noise startled me painfully; any
-unusual exhibition of tenderness brought tears to my eyes. One bright
-summer afternoon I was sitting with my grandmother. Everything about
-me was very quiet; my grandmother had not spoken for a long time, and
-I listened to the regular sound of her breathing which told me she was
-asleep. I tried all kinds of devices to while away the time. I looked
-at the wall and traced the pattern of the paper; I tried to stare the
-monkey-man on the mantelshelf out of countenance; I closed my eyes and
-placed the tips of my forefingers on them, and then opened them to
-assure myself that the world had not come to an end; I counted the
-rise and fall of my grandmother's capacious bosom till I grew so
-confused that the billows before me seemed to swell and fill the room.
-There was no pleasure to be gained from any of these tasks, and I felt
-weary and dispirited. The sunshine streaming in at the parlour-window
-seemed to say, 'Why are you stopping in that dull room? Come out and
-play.' I gazed wistfully at the light, and thought how nice it would
-be outside. I felt that I _should_ like to go. But I knew from rueful
-experience how cross my grandmother would be if I made a noise and
-awoke her; and I was so tightly fixed in my little armchair that I
-could not extricate myself without a struggle. I dared not attempt to
-wrench myself free from its embrace in the room; it might fall to the
-ground. There was nothing for it but to try and escape from the room
-with the chair fixed to me. The sunshine grew brighter and brighter,
-and more and more tempting. My grandmother really seemed to be fast
-asleep. I stretched out my hand and touched her dress: she always
-dressed in silk, and sat in state. Her steady breathing continued. I
-coughed, and whispered, 'Grandmother!' but she did not hear. I spoke
-more loudly. 'Grandmother!' There was no response, and then I thought
-I would venture. I rose, with my chair attached to me--the firmest and
-closest of friends--and crept slowly and softly out of the room into
-the passage. There I released myself, and then ran out into the
-sunshine. In aglow of delight I flitted about like a butterfly escaped
-from prison. I was in the full height of my enjoyment, when turning my
-head over my shoulder, I saw my long ungainly shadow following me, and
-in sudden unreasoning fright I ran away from it. I screamed in terror
-as I saw it racing fast at my heels, as if trying to leap upon me and
-seize me, and my mother happening at that moment to come to the
-street-door, I flew towards her in a paroxysm of terror, and,
-clutching tight hold of her, hid my face in her gown. In that position
-my mother, with soothing words, drew me into the house, and I was only
-pacified by being assured that the 'black man' who had frightened me
-had disappeared; and certainly, when I was persuaded to look around I
-saw no trace of him. My grandmother, awakened by my screams, did not
-fail to give me a solemn lecture for my bad behaviour in stealing from
-the room, and she improved the occasion by making me tremble with new
-fears by her dreadful prophecies as to what the 'black man' would do
-to me if I dared to be naughty again. The incident had a serious
-effect upon me, and I was ill for a week afterwards. The doctor who
-was attending my father said that I was of a peculiarly sensitive
-temperament, and that great care must be taken of me.
-
-'The nervousness,' he said, which has been the cause of his fright
-may, if not counteracted, produce bad results by-and-by. The lad's
-nature is essentially womanly and delicate. None the worse for
-that--none the worse for that!'
-
-He laid his hand upon my head in a very kind manner, and tears rushed
-to my eyes. Seeing these, he immediately removed his hand, and gave my
-cheek a merry pinch.
-
-'He will grow out of it?' questioned my mother, anxiously.
-
-'Oh, yes,' was the reply, cheerfully uttered, 'he will grow out of it;
-but you must be careful with him. Don't let him mope; give him plenty
-of exercise and fresh air.'
-
-'I should like a pony,' I said. My mother's troubled eyes sought the
-floor. If she could only have seen a magic pumpkin there!
-
-'Then,' continued the doctor, until he is older and stronger I would
-fill his mind with cheerful fancies. Tell him as many stories as you
-please of fairies, and princesses, and flowers, and such-like; but
-none about ghosts. You would like to hear about beautiful fairies
-rising out of flower-bells, and sailing in the clouds, and floating on
-the water in lilies, would you not, my lad?'
-
-I nodded gaily; his bright manner was better than all the medicine.
-
-'Do they really do all these things, sir?'
-
-'Surely; for such as you, my boy.' I clapped my hands. 'You see!' he
-said to my mother.
-
-Many a time after this did my mother ransack her mental store, and
-bring forth bright-coloured fancies to make me glad. She told Jane
-Painter what the doctor said, and asked her to tell me the prettiest
-stories she knew. Jane Painter replied with one of her sweetest
-smiles. It was part of her duties to put me to bed every night, and
-one night, soon after I was well, she came into my room in the dark,
-as I was lying half awake and half asleep. She crept up the stairs and
-into the room so stealthily that I had no consciousness of her
-presence until a sepulchral voice stole upon my ears saying,
-
-'Ho! Mister Friar, Don't be so bold, For fear you should make My
-'eart's blood run cold!'
-
-My heart's blood did run cold at these dreadful words, and I uttered a
-cry of fright. Then Jane Painter spoke in her natural tone.
-
-'I knew a boy once, and his name was Namby-Pamby. He was the greatest
-coward that ever breathed, and he was always telling tales. I know
-what happened to him at last. You're like him. Perhaps it'll happen to
-you. A fine boy you are! You ought to have been born a rabbit. I
-suppose you'll tell your mother. All cowards do.' Here she must have
-put her head up the chimney, for her voice sounded very hollow as she
-repeated, 'Ho! Mister Friar, Don't be so bold, For fear you should
-make My 'eart's blood run cold!'
-
-I cannot describe my terror. I wrapped the counterpane tightly round
-my head, and lay all of a tremble until Jane Painter thought fit to
-take her departure. From that night she inflicted the most dreadful
-tortures upon me. The first thing she did after putting me to bed was
-to blow out the candle; then she would calmly sit down and tell me
-frightful stories of murders and ghosts. Blood was her favourite
-theme; she absolutely revelled in it, and to this day I cannot look
-upon it without a shudder. She would prowl about the room, muttering:
-
-'I smell blood! I smell blood!'
-
-And then:
-
-'Let him be alive, Or let him be dead, I'll have his blood to make my
-wine, I'll grind his bones to make my bread.'
-
-After that she would grind her teeth, and make sounds as though she
-were drinking.
-
-'Serve him right, too, the little coward! Grind his bones on two large
-stones. His blood and brine I'll drink for wine.'
-
-I suffered this martyrdom in silence. I would not tell my mother, as
-all cowards did. What the effect on me would have been if
-circumstances had allowed Jane Painter to continue her persecution I
-am afraid to think; but fortunately for me the event occurred which
-she was waiting for. My grandmother died very suddenly. The last words
-she was heard to utter were, Poor Anthony!' I was not sorry when she
-died. I tried to look sad, as everybody else looked, but I knew that I
-was a dreadful hypocrite.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-MY GRANDMOTHER'S LONG STOCKING.
-
-
-There was a friend of the family of whose name I have no
-remembrance, and whom, from a certain personal peculiarity, I must
-denominate Snaggletooth. He was a large man--very tall, and round in
-proportion--with a glistening bald head, a smooth full-fleshed face,
-and clear gray eyes. In repose, and when he was not speaking, he was
-by no means an unpleasant-looking man; his face was benignant, and his
-clear gray eyes beamed kindly upon you. But directly he smiled he
-became transformed, and his features were made to assume an almost
-fiendish expression by reason of a hideous snaggle-tooth which thrust
-itself forward immediately he opened his mouth. It stuck out like a
-horn, and the change it effected in his appearance was something
-marvellous.
-
-As the friend of the family, Snaggletooth came forward and offered his
-assistance. My father being confined to his bed by sickness, there was
-no man in the house to look after the funeral of my grandmother, and
-Snaggletooth's services were gladly accepted. I fancy that he was fond
-of funerals, from the zealous manner in which he attended to the
-details of this and a sadder one which followed not long afterwards.
-Setting this fancy aside, he proved himself a genuine and
-disinterested friend. We had no near relatives; my mother was an only
-daughter, and my father had but one brother, older than he, whom I had
-never seen, and who had disappeared from the place many years ago. He
-was supposed to be dead; and from certain chance words which I must
-have heard, I had gained a vague impression that he was not a credit
-to the family.
-
-It was a strange experience for me to sit in my grandmother's room
-after her death, gazing at her empty armchair. I could not keep away
-from the room; I crept into it at all hours of the day, and sat there
-trembling. I mentally asked the stone monkey-figure what it thought of
-my grandmother's death, and I put my fingers in my ears lest I should
-hear an answer. Jane Painter found me there in the evening when she
-came to put me to bed, and stated that my grandmother's spirit was
-present, and that she was in communication with it. She held imaginary
-conversations with my grandmother's ghost in the dusk, speaking very
-softly and waiting for the answers. The effect was ghastly and
-terrifying. These conversations related to nothing but poor me, and
-the exquisite pain Jane Painter inflicted upon me by these means may
-be easily imagined.
-
-The first thing Snaggletooth did after my grandmother's funeral was to
-search for her long stocking and the treasures it was supposed to
-contain. Taking the words in their literal sense, I really thought
-that the long stocking would be found hidden somewhere--under the bed
-perhaps, or among the feathers, or up the chimney--stuffed with money,
-in shape resembling my grandmother's leg, which I knew from actual
-observation to be a substantial one.
-
-'Perhaps she made a will,' observed Snaggletooth to my mother. Jane
-Painter was present, hovering about us with hungry jealous eyes, lest
-she should be cheated.
-
-'She did make a will,' said Jane Painter, 'and I'm down in it.'
-
-'Then we will find it,' said Snaggletooth cheerfully.
-
-My grandmother's desk was opened, and every piece of paper in it was
-examined. No will was there, nor a word relating to it. Her trunk was
-searched with a like result.
-
-'Never mind,' said Snaggletooth, with a genial smile, 'we shall be
-sure to find the old lady's long stocking.'
-
-And he set to work. But although a rigid search was made, no long
-stocking could be found. Snaggletooth became immensely excited. Very
-hot, very dusty and dirty, and with his shirt-sleeves tucked up to his
-shoulders, he gazed at vacancy, and paused to take breath.
-Disappointed as he was up to this point, his faith in my grandmother's
-long stocking was not shaken; he had it not, and yet he saw it in form
-as palpable as the lisle-thread stockings of my grandmother, which
-were scattered about the room. A closer and more systematic search was
-commenced. The hunt became more and more exciting, and still not a
-glimpse of the fox's tail could be seen. Under Snaggletooth's
-instructions the bedstead was taken down, the pillows and mattresses
-were ripped open (Snaggletooth being determined not to leave a feather
-unturned), the posts were sounded to discover if they were hollow, and
-the strictest examination was made of every vestige of my
-grandmother's clothing without a satisfactory result. Dirtier and
-hotter than ever, and covered with fluff and feathers, Snaggletooth
-looked about him with an air of 'What next?' His eye fell upon my
-grandmother's armchair. Out came the stuffing that it contained, and
-nothing more. My grandmother's footstool: a like result. Her portly
-pincushion: nothing but bran. Up came the carpet, and almost blinded
-us with dust. And then Snaggletooth sat down in the midst of the wreck
-and said disconsolately:
-
-'I am afraid we must give it up.'
-
-So it was given up, and the mystery of my grandmother's long stocking
-took honourable place in the family records as an important legend for
-ever afterwards.
-
-Jane Painter passed through many stages of emotion, and ended by being
-furious. She vowed--no, she swore; it is more appropriate--that she
-had been robbed, and openly declared that my mother had secreted my
-grandmother's long stocking, and had destroyed the will. Nay, more;
-she screamed that she had seen the treasure, which consisted of new
-Bank of England notes and a heap of gold, and that in the will my
-grandmother had left her three hundred pounds.
-
-'Woman!' exclaimed Snaggletooth, rising from the ruins, 'be quiet!'
-
-'Woman yourself!' screamed Jane Painter. 'You're in the plot to rob a
-poor girl, and I'll have the law of you; I'll have the law, I'll have
-the law!'
-
-'Take it and welcome,' replied Snaggletooth. 'I hate it.'
-
-But he was no match for Jane Painter, and he retired from the contest
-discomfited; did not even stop to wash his face.
-
-My mother was sad and puzzled. I did not entirely realise at the time
-the cause of her sadness, because I did not know how poor she really
-was, but I learnt it afterwards. She gathered sufficient courage to
-tell Jane Painter that of course she could not stop in the house after
-what she had said.
-
-'If every hair in your head was a diamond,' gasped Jane Painter, 'I
-wouldn't stop. No, not if you went down on your bended knees! I'll go
-to-morrow.'
-
-Then she pounced upon two silk dresses and some other articles of
-clothing, and said that my grandmother had given them to her. My
-mother submitted without a word, and Jane Painter marched to her room
-and locked them in her box. She did as much mischief as she could on
-her last evening in our house; broke things purposely and revenged
-herself grandly on poor little me. After undressing and putting me to
-bed as usual, and after smelling about the room, and under the bed,
-and up the chimney for blood, she imparted to me the cheerful
-intelligence that my grandmother's ghost would come and take me away
-exactly at twelve o'clock that night. Near to our house was a church,
-and many a night had I lain awake waiting for the tolling of the hour;
-but I never listened with such intensity of purpose as I listened on
-this night. As midnight drew near, I clenched my fists, I bit my lips,
-I drew my knees almost up to my nose. I trembled and shook in the
-darkness. I would not look, I thought; and when the hour tolled, every
-note seemed charged with terrible meaning, and I shut my eyes tighter
-and held my breath under the clothes. But when the bell had done
-tolling, my state of horrible curiosity and fear compelled me to peep
-out, and there in the middle of the room stood a tall figure in white.
-So loud and shrill were my hysterical cries that my mother ran into
-the room, there to find Jane Painter in her nightdress. I think the
-woman herself; fearful lest she had gone too far, was glad to quit the
-house the following day without being called to account for her
-misdeeds. She did not leave without a few parting words. She called us
-all a parcel of thieves, and said that a judgment would fall upon us
-one day for robbing a poor servant of the money her dead mistress had
-left her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-I MURDER MY BABY-BROTHER.
-
-
-Misfortunes never come singly, and they did not come singly to us. It
-was not for us to give the lie to a proverb. Often in a family, death
-is in a hurry when it commences, and takes one after another quickly;
-then pauses for a long breath.
-
-In very truth, sorrow in its deepest phase had entered our house, and
-my mother's form seemed to shrink and grow less from the day she put
-on mourning for my grandmother. But if my mother had her troubles, I
-am sure I had mine; and one was of such a strange and terrible nature
-that, even at this distance of time, and with a better comprehension
-of things, a curiously-reluctant feeling comes upon me as I prepare to
-narrate it. It is summarised in a very few words. I murdered my
-baby-brother.
-
-At least, such was my impression at the time. For a long while I was
-afflicted by secret remorse and by fear of discovery, and never till
-now have I made confession. There was only one witness of my crime:
-our cat. I remember well that my father was said to be sinking at the
-time, and my mother, having her hands full, and her heart, too, poor
-dear! placed me and my baby-brother in the room in which I used to sit
-with my grandmother. My task was to take care of the little fellow,
-and to amuse him. He was so young that he could scarcely toddle, and
-we had great fun with two oranges which my mother had given us to play
-with. It required great strength of mind not to eat them instead of
-playing with them; but the purpose for which they were given to us had
-been plainly set down by my mother. All that I could hope for,
-therefore, was that they might burst their skins after being knocked
-about a little, when of course they would become lawful food. We
-played ball with them; my baby-brother rolling them towards me, not
-being strong enough to throw them, and I (secretly animated by the
-wish that they would burst their skins) throwing them up to him, with
-a little more force than was actually necessary, and trying to make
-him catch them. I cannot tell for how long we played, for at this
-precise moment of my history a mist steals upon such of my early
-reminiscences as are related in this and the preceding chapters--a
-mist which divides, as by a curtain, one part of my life from another.
-My actual life will soon commence, the life that is tangible to me, as
-it were, that stands out in stronger colour and is distinct from the
-brief prologue which was acted in dreamland, and which lies nestled
-deep among the days of my childhood. Cloud-memories these; most of us
-have such. Some are wholly bright and sweet, some wholly sad and
-bitter, some parti-coloured. When the dreamland in which these
-cloud-memories have birth has faded, and we are in the summer or the
-winter of our days, fighting the Battle, or, having fought it, are
-waiting for the trumpet-sound which proclaims the Grand Retreat, we
-can all remember where we received such and such a wound, where such
-and such a refreshing draught was given to us, at what part of the
-fight such and such a scar was gained, and at what part a spiritual
-vision dawned upon our souls, captivating and entrancing us with hopes
-too bright and beautiful ever to be realised; and though our blood be
-thin and poor, and the glory of life seems to have waned with the
-waning of our strength, our pulses thrill and our hearts beat with
-something of the old glow as the remembrance of these pains and
-pleasures comes upon us!
-
-To return to my baby-brother. The dusk steals upon us, and we are
-still playing with the oranges. The cat is watching us, and when an
-orange rolls in her direction she, half timidly, half sportively,
-stretches out her paw towards it, and on one occasion lies full-length
-on her stomach, with an orange between the tips of her paws, and her
-nose in a straight line with it. I hear my baby-brother laugh
-gleefully as I scramble on all-fours after the orange. The dusk has
-deepened, and my baby-brother's face grows indistinct. I throw the
-orange towards him. It hits him in the face, and his gleeful laughter
-changes to a scream. I absolutely never see my baby-brother again, and
-never again hear his voice. All that afterwards refers to him seems to
-be imparted to me when it is dark, and so strong is my impression of
-this detail that in my memory I never see his face with a light upon
-it. My baby-brother is taken suddenly ill, I am told. I go about the
-house, always in the dark, stepping very gently, and wondering whether
-my secret will become known, and if it does, what will be done to me.
-Still in the dark I hear that my baby-brother is worse; that he is
-dangerously ill. Then, without an interval as it seems, comes the news
-that my baby-brother is dead, and I learn in some undiscoverable way
-that he has died of the croup. I know better. I know that I gave him
-his death-blow with the orange, and I tremble for the consequences.
-But no human being appears to suspect me, and for my own sake I must
-preserve silence. Even to assume an air of grief at my baby-brother's
-death might be dangerous; it might look as if I were too deeply
-interested in the event; so I put on my most indifferent air. There
-are, however, two things in the house that I am frightened of. One is
-our old Dutch clock, the significant ticking and the very ropes and
-iron weights of which appear to me to be pregnant with knowledge of my
-crime. Five minutes before every hour the clock gives vent to a
-whirring sound, and at that sound, hitherto without significance, I
-tremble. There is a warning in it, and with nervous apprehension I
-count the seconds that intervene between it and the striking of the
-hour, believing that then the bell will proclaim my guilt. It _does_
-proclaim it; but no person understands it, no one heeds it. I lean
-against the passage wall, listening to the denunciation. Snaggletooth
-comes in and stands by my side while the clock is striking. I look up
-into his face with imploring eyes and a sinking heart. He taps my
-cheek kindly, and passes on. I breathe more freely; he does not know
-the language of the bells. The other thing of which I am frightened is
-our cat. I know that she knows, and I am fearful lest, by some
-mysterious means, she will denounce me. If I meet her in the dark, her
-green eyes glare at me. I try to win her over to my side in a covert
-manner by stroking her coat; but as I smooth her fur skilfully and
-cunningly, I am convinced that she arches her back in a manner more
-significant than usual, and that by that action she declines to be a
-passive accessory to the fact. Her very tail, as it curls beneath my
-fingers, accuses me. But time goes on, and I am not arrested and led
-away to be hanged. When my baby-brother is in his coffin I am taken to
-see him. The cat follows at my heels; I strive to push her away
-stealthily with my foot, but she rubs her ear against my leg, and will
-not leave me. I do not see my baby-brother, because I shut my eyes,
-and I sob and tremble so that they are compelled to take me out of the
-room; but I have a vague remembrance of flowers about his coffin. I am
-a little relieved when I hear that he is buried, but the night that
-follows is a night of torture to me. The Dutch clock ticks, 'I know! I
-know!' and the cat purrs, 'I know! I know!' and when I am in bed the
-shade of Jane Painter steals into the room, and after smelling about
-for blood, whispers in a ghastly undertone that _she_ knows, and is
-going to tell. Of the doctor, also, I begin to be frightened, for
-after his visit to my father's sick-room, my mother brings him to see
-me--being anxious about me, I hear her say. He stops and speaks to me,
-and when his fingers are on my wrist, I fancy that the beating of my
-pulse is revealing my crime to him.
-
-But more weighty cares even than mine are stirring in our house, and
-making themselves felt. My father's last moments are approaching, and
-I hear that he cannot last the day out. He lasts the day out, but he
-does not last the night out. As the friend of the family, Snaggletooth
-remains in the house to see the end of his old comrade. He and my
-father were schoolboys together, he tells me. 'He was the cleverest
-boy in the school,' Snaggletooth says; 'the cleverest boy in the
-school! He used to do my sums for me. We went out birds'-nesting
-together; and many and many's the time we've stood up against the
-whole school, snowballing. A snowball, with a stone in it, hit him in
-the face once, and knocked him flat down; but he was up in a minute,
-all bloody, and rushed into the middle of our enemies, like a young
-lion--like a young lion! He was the first and the cleverest of all of
-us--I was a long way behind him. And now, think of him lying there
-almost at his last breath, and look at me!' Snaggletooth straightens
-himself as he walks upstairs, murmuring, 'The cleverest boy in the
-school! And now think of him, and look at me!'
-
-Snaggletooth's wife is in the house, and helps my mother in her
-trouble. In the night this good creature and I sit together in the
-kitchen--waiting. My mother comes in softly two or three times; once
-she draws me out of the kitchen on to the dark landing, and kneels
-down, and with her arms around my neck, sobs quietly upon my shoulder.
-She kisses me many times, and whispers a prayer to me, which I repeat
-after her.
-
-'Be a good child always, Chris,' she says.
-
-'I will, mother.' And the promise, given at such a time, sinks into my
-heart with the force of a sacred obligation.
-
-Then my mother takes me into the kitchen, and gives me into the charge
-of Snaggletooth's wife, and steals away. Snaggletooth's wife begins to
-prattle to amuse me, and in a few minutes I ascertain that she in some
-way resembles Jane Painter; for--probably influenced by the
-appropriateness of the occasion for such narrations--she tells me
-stories in a low tone about the Ghost of the Red Barn, and the
-Cock-lane Ghost, and Old Mother Shipton. The old witch is a favourite
-theme with Snaggletooth's wife, and I hear many strange things. She
-says:
-
-'One night Mother Shipton was in a terrible rage, and she told the
-grasshopper on the top of the Royal Exchange to jump over to the ball
-on St. Paul's Church steeple. And so it did. Soon after that, London
-was burnt to the ground.'
-
-I muse upon this, and presently inquire: 'Was it an accident?'
-
-'The fire? No; it was done on purpose.'
-
-'Was it because the grasshopper jumped on to the steeple that London
-was set on fire?'
-
-'Of course,' is the reply. 'That was Mother Shipton's spite.'
-
-Snaggletooth's wife tells so many stories of ghosts and witches that
-the air smells of fire and brimstone, and I see the cat's tail stiffen
-and its eyes glow fearfully. Then I hear a cry from upstairs, and
-Snaggletooth's wife rises hurriedly, and looks about her with restless
-hands, and the whole house is in a strange confusion. Snaggletooth
-himself comes into the room, and as he whispers some consoling words
-to me--only the import of which I understand--his great tooth sticks
-out like a horn. He looks like a fiend.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-I PLAY THE PART OF CHIEF MOURNER.
-
-
-Notwithstanding her limited means, my mother had always managed to
-keep up a respectable appearance. Popular report had settled it that
-my grandmother was a woman of property and that my father had money;
-and the fact that my grandmother's long stocking had proved to be a
-myth was most completely discredited. We are supposed, therefore, to
-be well to do, and the scandal would have been great if my father had
-not received a respectable funeral. Public opinion called for it. My
-mother makes a great effort, and quite out of love, I am sure, and not
-at all in deference to public opinion, buries my father in a manner so
-respectable as to receive the entire approval of our neighbours.
-Public opinion called for mutes, and two mutes--one with a very long
-face and one with a very square face--are at our door, the objects of
-deep and attentive contemplation on the part of the sundry and
-several. Public opinion called for four black horses, and there they
-stand, champing their bits, with their mouths well soaped. Public
-opinion called for plumes, and there they wave, and bow, and bend,
-proud and graceful attendants at the shrine of death. Public opinion
-called for mock mourners, and they are ready to parody grief, with
-very large feet, ill-fitting black gloves, and red-rimmed eyes, which
-suggest the idea that their eyelids have been wept away by a long
-course of salaried affliction. Never all his life had my father been
-so surrounded by pomps and vanities; but public opinion has decided
-that on such solemn occasions grief is not grief unless it is
-lacquered, and that common decency would be outraged by following the
-dead to the grave with simple humility.
-
-The interior of our house has an appearance generally suggestive of
-graves and coffins. The company is assembled in the little parlour
-facing the street--my grandmother's room--and in her expiring attempt
-at respectability my mother has provided sherry and biscuits. The
-blinds are down although it is broad day; a parody of a sunbeam flows
-through a chink, but the motes within it are anything but lively, and
-float up and down the slanting pillar in a sluggish and funereal
-manner, in perfect sympathy with the occasion. The cat peeps into the
-room, debating whether she shall enter; after a cautious scrutiny she
-decides in the negative, and retires stealthily, to muse over the
-uncertainty of life in a more retired spot. The company is not
-numerous. Snaggletooth is present, and the doctor, and two neighbours
-who approve of the sherry. These latter invite Snaggletooth's
-attention to the wine, and he pours out a glass and disposes of it
-with a sadly resigned air; saying before he drinks it, with a tender
-reference to my father as he holds it up to the light, Ah! If _he_
-could!' Conversation is carried on in a deadly-lively style. I think
-of my baby-brother, and a wild temptation urges me to fall upon my
-knees and make confession of the murder; but I resist it, and am
-guiltily dumb. Snaggletooth, observing signs of agitation in my face,
-pats me on the shoulder, and says, 'Poor little fellow!' The two
-neighbours follow suit, and poor-little-fellow me in sympathising
-tones. After this, they approach the decanter of sherry with one
-intention. There is but half a glass left, which the first to reach
-the decanter pours out and drinks, while the second regards him
-reproachfully, with a look which asks, On such an occasion should not
-self be sacrificed? Before the lid of the coffin is fastened down, I
-am taken into the room by Snaggletooth to look for the last time upon
-my father's face. I see nothing but a figure in white which inspires
-me with fear. I cling close to Snaggletooth. He is immensely affected,
-and mutters, 'Good-bye, old schoolfellow! Ah, time! time!' As I look
-up at him, his bald head glistens as would a ball of wax, and
-something glistens in his eyes.
-
-When the coffin is taken out of the house, there is great excitement
-among the throng of persons in the street. They peep over each other's
-shoulders to catch a glimpse of the coffin and of me. I cannot help
-feeling that I am in an exalted position. A thrill of pride stirs my
-heart. Am I not chief mourner?
-
-I stand by the side of a narrow grave, dug in a corner of the
-churchyard, and shaded from the sun's glare by a triangular wall, the
-top of which is covered with pieces of broken bottles, arranged with
-cruel nicety and precision, so that their sharp and jagged ends are
-uppermost. Standing also within the shadow of the triangular wall are
-a number of tombstones, some fair and white, others yellow and
-crumbling from age, which I regard with the air of one who has
-acquired a vested interest in the property. I do not understand the
-words the clergyman utters, for he has an impediment in his speech.
-But as the coffin is lowered, I am impelled gently towards the grave,
-from which I shrink, however, apprehensive lest I shall be thrust into
-it, and buried beneath the earth which is scattered on the coffin with
-a leaden miserable sound. When the service is ended, I hear
-Snaggletooth mutter, 'Think of him lying there, and look at me! And we
-were schoolfellows, and played snowball together!' Snaggletooth shows
-me my grandmother's grave, and the grave of my baby-brother. I dare
-not look upon the latter, knowing what I know. Then Snaggletooth,
-still with head uncovered, stands before a little gave over which is a
-small marble tombstone, with the inscription, 'Here Lieth our Beloved
-Daughter.' Seeing that his tears are falling on the grave, I creep
-closer to him, and he presses me gently to his side. I read the
-inscription slowly, spelling the words, 'Here Lieth our Beloved
-Daughter,' and I look at him inquiringly.
-
-'My daughter,' he says; 'the sweetest angel that ever breathed. She
-was three years and one day old when she died, nearly five years ago.
-Poor darling! Five years ago! Ah, time! time!'
-
-As we pass out of the churchyard I notice again the broken glass on
-the top of the wall, and I say,
-
-'Isn't that cruel?'
-
-'Why cruel?' asks Snaggletooth. 'No one can get in without hurting
-himself.'
-
-Snaggletooth regards me with an eye of curiosity.
-
-'And who do you think wants to get into such a place, my little
-fellow?'
-
-I do not answer, and Snaggletooth adds,
-
-'The angels, perhaps. Good--good. But they come in another way.'
-
-'No one can get out without hurting himself,' I suggest.
-
-'That is a better thought; but if they lived good lives----'
-
-'Yes, sir.'
-
-'Walls covered with broken glass won't hurt them.'
-
-Snaggletooth looks upwards contemplatively. I look up also, and a
-sudden dizziness comes upon me and overpowers me. Snaggletooth catches
-me as I am falling.
-
-'You are not well, my little fellow.'
-
-'No, sir; I feel very weak, but the doctor says I shall get over it.'
-
-Snaggletooth lifts me in his arms, and I fall asleep on his shoulder
-as he carries me tenderly home.
-
-Here we are, my mother and I, sitting in the little parlour. My mother
-has been crying over me, and perhaps over the sad future that lies
-before us. Not a sound now is to be heard. My condition is a strange
-one. Everything about me is very unreal, and I wonderingly consider if
-I shall ever wake up. All my young experiences come to me again.
-I see my grandmother and myself sitting together. There upon the
-mantelshelf is the figure of the smoke-dried monkey of a man in
-stone, wagging his head at me; there is the man with the knob on the
-top of his head--what is his name? Anthony--yes, Anthony
-Bullpit--making a meal off his finger nails. In marches my
-grandmother's long stocking, bulged out with money to the shape of a
-very substantial leg, just as I had fancied it--that makes me laugh;
-but my flesh creeps as I hear Jane Painter's voice in the dark,
-telling of blood and murder. The last word, as she dwells upon it,
-brings up my baby-brother, and I hear the Dutch clock tick: 'I know! I
-know!' But it ticks all these fancies into oblivion, and ticks in the
-picture of the churchyard. I see the graves and the tombstones, and I
-read the inscription: 'Here Lieth our Beloved Daughter.' How it must
-grieve her parents to know that their beloved daughter is lying shut
-up in the cold earth! I raise a portrait of the child, with fair hair
-and laughing eyes, and I wonder how she would look now if she were dug
-up, and whether her parents would know her again. Night surprises me
-confined within the triangular wall of the churchyard. The gates are
-closed, and I cannot pass out. The moon shines down icily. The cold
-air makes my fevered blood hotter. I _must_ get out! I cannot stop
-confined here for ever! I dig my fingers into the wall; desperately I
-cling to it, and strive to climb. Inch by inch I mount. With an
-exquisite sense of relief I reach the top, but as I place my hands
-upon it they are cut to the bone by the broken glass, and with a wild
-shudder I sink into darkness and oblivion!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-IN WHICH A GREAT CHANGE IN MY CIRCUMSTANCES TAKES PLACE.
-
-
-When I recovered from the fever of which the experiences just recorded
-were the prelude, I found that we had removed from the house in which
-I was born, and that we were occupying apartments. We had removed also
-from the neighbourhood; the streets were strange, the people were
-strange; I saw no familiar faces. Hitherto we had been living in
-Hertford, and many a time had I watched the barges going lazily to and
-fro on the River Lea. The place we were in now was nothing but a
-village; my mother told me it was called Chipping Barnet. I cannot
-tell exactly what it was that restrained me from asking why the change
-had been made; it must have been from an intuitive consciousness that
-the subject was painful to my mother. But when, after the lapse of a
-year or so, we moved away from Chipping Barnet, and began to live in
-very humble fashion in two small rooms, I asked the reason.
-
-'My dear,' said my mother, 'we cannot afford better.'
-
-I looked into her face; it was pale and cheerful. But I saw, although
-no signs of repining were there, that care had made its mark. She
-smiled at me.
-
-'We are very poor, dear child,' she said; and added quickly, with a
-light in her eyes, 'but that is no reason why we should not be happy.'
-
-She did her best to make me so, and poor as our home was, it contained
-many sweet pleasures. By this time I had completely lost sight of
-Snaggletooth and all our former friends and acquaintances. I did not
-miss them; I had my mother with me, and I wished for no one else.
-Already, my former life and my former friends were becoming to me
-things of long ago. My mother often spoke of London, and of her wish
-to go there.
-
-'I think it would be better for us, Chris,' she said.
-
-'Is London a very large place?' I asked. 'As large as this?'
-stretching out my arms to gain an idea of its extent.
-
-My mother told me what she knew of London, which was not much, for she
-had only been there once, for a couple of days, and I said I was sure
-I should not like it; there were too many people in it. My idea of
-perfect happiness was to live with my mother in some pretty country
-place, where there were fields and shady walks and turnstiles and
-narrow lanes, and perhaps a river. I described the very place, and
-artistically dotted it with lazy cattle listening for mysterious signs
-in earth or air, or looking with steady solemn gaze far into the
-horizon, as if they were observing signs hidden from human gaze. I
-also put some lazy barges on the river, 'Creeping, creeping,
-creeping,' I said, 'as if they were _so_ tired!'
-
-'And we would go and live in that very place, my dear,' said my
-mother, 'if we had money enough.'
-
-'When you get money enough, mother, we _will_ go.'
-
-'Yes, my dear.'
-
-Other changes were made, but not in the direction I desired. Like a
-whirlpool, London was drawing us nearer and nearer to its depths, and
-by the time I was twelve years of age we were nearly at the bottom of
-the hill down which we had been steadily going. My clothes were very
-much patched and mended now; all our furniture was sold, and we were
-living in one room, which was rented to us ready furnished. The
-knowledge of the struggle in which my mother was engaged loomed
-gradually upon me, and distressed me in a vague manner. We were really
-now in London, although not in the heart of the City; and my mother,
-whose needle brought us bread and very little butter, often walked
-four miles to the workshop, and four miles back, on a fruitless
-errand. Things were getting worse and worse with us. My mother grew
-thinner and paler, but she never looked at me without a smile on her
-lips--a smile that was often sad, but always tender. At night, while
-she worked, she taught me to read and write; there was no free school
-near us, and she could not afford to pay for my learning. But no
-schoolmaster could have taught me as well as she did. She had a thin,
-sweet voice, and often when I was in bed I fell asleep with her
-singing by my side. I used to love to lie thus peacefully with closed
-eyes, and float into dreamland upon the wings of her sweet melodies. I
-woke up sometimes late in the night, and saw her dear face bending
-over her work. It was always meek and cheerful; I never saw anger or
-bad passion in it.
-
-'Mother,' I said one night, after I had lain and watched her for a
-long time.
-
-She gave a start. 'Dear child; I thought you were asleep.'
-
-'So I have been; but I woke up, and I've been watching you for a long,
-long time. Mother, when I am a man I shall work for you.'
-
-'That's right, dear. You give me pleasure and delight. I know my good
-boy will try to be a good man.'
-
-'I will try to; as good as you are. I want to be like you. Could I not
-work now, mother?'
-
-'No, dear child; you are not strong enough yet.'
-
-'I wish I could grow into a strong man in a night,' I thought.
-
-My mother came to the bedside and rested her fingers upon my neck.
-What tenderness dwells in a loving mother's touch! I imprisoned her
-fingers in mine. She leant towards me caressingly and kissed me. Sleep
-stole upon me in that kiss of love.
-
-I saw a picture in a shop window of a girl whose bright fresh face
-brought my mother's face before me. But the girl's face was full of
-gladness, and her cheeks were glowing; my mother's cheeks were sunken
-and wan. Still the likeness was unmistakably there, and I thought how
-much I should love to see my mother as bright as this bright girl. I
-spoke to her about it, and she went to see the picture, which was in
-the next street to ours. She came back smiling.
-
-'It _is_ like me, Chris,' she said; 'as I was once.'
-
-'Then you must have been very, very pretty,' I said, stroking her
-cheek.
-
-My mother laughed melodiously.
-
-'When I was young, my dear,' she said with innocent vanity, blushing
-like a girl, 'I was thought not to be ugly.'
-
-'Ugly, indeed!' I exclaimed, looking around defiantly. 'My mother
-couldn't be ugly!'
-
-'What do you call me now, Chris?'
-
-'You are beautiful--beautiful!' with another defiant look. My mother
-shook her hand in mild remonstrance. 'You are--you are! But you're
-pale and thin, and you've got lines here--and here.' I smoothed them
-with my hand. 'And, mother, you're not old!'
-
-'I'm forty, Chris.'
-
-'That is not old. Tell me--why did you alter so?'
-
-'Time and trouble alter us, dear. We can't be always bright.'
-
-I thought that I might be the trouble she referred to, and I asked the
-question anxiously.
-
-'You, my darling!' she said, drawing me to her side and petting me.
-'You are my joy, my comfort! I live only for you, Chris--only for
-you!'
-
-I noticed something here, and, with a touch of that logical
-argumentativeness for which I was afterwards not undistinguished, I
-said:
-
-'If I am your joy and comfort, you ought to be glad.'
-
-'And am I not glad? What does my little boy mean by his roundabouts?'
-
-'You cried when you said I was your joy and comfort.'
-
-'They were tears of pleasure, my dear--tears that sprang from my love
-for my boy. Then perhaps they sprang from the thought--for we will be
-truthful always, Chris--that I should like to buy my boy a new pair of
-boots and some new clothes, and that I couldn't because I hadn't money
-enough.'
-
-'You would buy them for me if you had money?'
-
-'Ah! what would I not buy for my darling if I had money!'
-
-How delicious it was to nestle in her arms as she poured out the love
-of her heart for me! How I worshipped her, and kissed her, and patted
-her cheek, and smoothed her hair.
-
-'You are like a lover, my dear,' she said.
-
-'I am your lover,' I replied, and murmured softly to myself, 'Wait
-till I am a man! wait till I am a man!'
-
-That night I coaxed my mother to talk to me of the time when she was
-young, and she did, with many a smile and many a blush; and in our one
-little room there was much delight. She picked out the daisies of her
-life, and laid them before me to gladden my heart. Simple and
-beautiful were they as Nature's own sweet flower. She showed me a
-picture of herself as a girl, and I saw its likeness to the picture
-I had admired in the shop window. She sang me to sleep with her dear
-old songs, full of sweetness and simplicity. How different are our
-modern songs from those sweet old airs! The charm of simplicity is
-wanting--but, indeed, it is wanting in other modern things as well.
-The spirit of simplicity dwells not in crowded places.
-
-Then commenced my first conscious worship of woman. I held her in my
-heart as a devotee holds a saint. How good was this world which
-contained such goodness! How sweet this life which contained such
-sweetness! She was the flower of both. Modesty, simplicity, and truth,
-were with her invariably. To me she became the incarnation of purity.
-
-Time went on, and low as we were we were still going down hill
-steadily and surely. It is a long hill, and there are many depths in
-it. Work grew slack, and in the struggle to make both ends meet, my
-mother was frequently worsted; there was often a great gap between. I
-do not wonder that hearts sometimes crack in that endeavour. Yet my
-mother ('by hook and by crook,' as I have heard her say merrily)
-generally managed in the course of the week to scrape together some
-few coins which, jealously watched and jealously spent, sufficed in a
-poor way to keep body and soul together. How it was managed is a
-mystery to me. The winter came on: a hard winter. Bread went up in
-price; every additional halfpenny on a four-pound loaf was a dagger in
-my mother's breast. We rubbed through this hard time somehow, and
-Christmas glided by and the new year came upon us. A cold spring set
-in, and work, which had been getting slacker and slacker, could not
-now be obtained. Still my mother did not lie down and yield. She tried
-other shops, and received a little work--very little--at odd times.
-There came a very hard week, and my mother was much distressed. On the
-Friday night I heard her murmuring to herself in her sleep as I
-thought, and I fancied I heard her sob. I called to her, but she did
-not answer me. Her breath rose and fell in regular rhythm. Yes, she
-was asleep, and the sob I thought I heard was born of my fancy. I was
-thankful for that!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-IN WHICH A FAIRY IN A COTTON-PRINT DRESS IS INTRODUCED.
-
-
-The next day was Saturday, and my mother went out early in the
-morning, and returned at two o'clock with the saddest of faces.
-
-'No work, mother?' I asked.
-
-'No, my dear,' she replied; 'but come, my child, you must be hungry.'
-
-There was little enough to eat, but my boy's appetite, and the cunning
-way my mother had of placing our humble fare before me, made the plain
-food as sweet as the best.
-
-I noticed that she ate nothing, and I tried to persuade her to eat.
-
-'I have no appetite, my dear,' she said, and added in reply to my
-sorrowful look, 'My little boy doesn't know what I've had while I was
-out this morning.'
-
-Deeper thought than usual seemed to occupy her mind during the
-afternoon, and she suddenly started up, and hurriedly threw on her
-bonnet and shawl.
-
-'Are you going to try again, mother?'
-
-'Yes, my darling; I must try again.'
-
-She did not return until late, but she returned radiant, and said, as
-she took my face between her two hands, and kissed me:
-
-'Child, dear child! God bless those who help the poor!'
-
-She did not bid me repeat the words; but some deep meaning in her
-voice impelled me to do so, and I said in a solemn tone, what the
-words seemed to demand,
-
-'God bless those who help the poor!'
-
-She nodded pensively as she knelt before me, and as I looked at her
-somewhat earnestly, her face flushed, and she rose, and bustled about
-the room, putting things in order. I think she tried to hide her face
-from me, and that her bustling about was a pretence.
-
-'And now, Chris,' she said presently, drawing her breath quickly, as
-though she had been running, 'let us go out and get something nice for
-supper, and for dinner to-morrow. Put on your cap, dear; you must be
-hungry.'
-
-I was; and I was glad, indeed, to hear the good news, and to accompany
-her on such an errand. She consulted me as to what she should buy, and
-made me very proud and happy with her 'What do you say to this, dear?'
-and 'Would you like this, my darling?' We returned home loaded with
-meat, potatoes, and one or two little delicacies. I was in a state of
-great satisfaction, and we made quite merry over the trifling incident
-of a few potatoes rolling out of my mother's apron down the stairs in
-the dark. Bump, bump, bumping,' I said, as I scrambled down after
-them, 'as if they knew their way in the dark, and could see without a
-candle.'
-
-'Potatoes have eyes, my dear,' said my mother; and we laughed blithely
-over it.
-
-My mother's mood changed after supper. We always said a very simple
-grace after meals. It was, 'Thank God for a good breakfast!' 'Thank
-God for a good dinner!' or whatever meal it was of which we had
-partaken. Our 'Thank God for a good supper!' being said, most
-earnestly by my mother, she cleared away the things, and said,
-
-'Now we will see how rich we are.'
-
-We sat down at the table, side by side, and my mother took out of her
-pocket what money it contained. I thought that our all had been
-expended in our frugal purchases, but I was agreeably mistaken. There
-were still left two sixpences and a few coppers. My mother selected a
-battered halfpenny, and regarded it tenderly--so tenderly, and with so
-much feeling, that her tears fell on it. I wondered. A battered
-halfpenny, dented, dirty, bruised! I wondered more as she kissed it,
-and held it to me to kiss.
-
-'Why, mother?' I asked, as I kissed.
-
-In reply, she told me a story.
-
-'My dear, there lived in a great forest a poor woman who had no friend
-in the world but one--a bird that she loved with all her heart and
-soul, and who, not being big enough or strong enough to get food for
-himself, depended, because he couldn't help it, upon what this poor
-woman could provide for him. There were other birds that in some way
-resembled the bird that belonged to this poor woman, and that she
-loved so dearly, and many of these were also compelled to wander about
-the great forest in search of food; but they found it so difficult to
-obtain sufficient to eat, and they met with so many sad adventures in
-their search, that their wings lost their strength, and their hearts
-the brightness that was their proper heritage--for they were young
-birds, whose time for battling with the world had not arrived. The
-poor woman did not wish her dear bird to meet with such sad
-experiences until he was strong and able to cope with them. I can't
-tell you, my dear, how much she loved her bird, and how thoroughly her
-whole heart was wrapped up in her treasure. Once she had friends who
-were good to her; but it was the will of God that she should lose
-them, and she and her bird were left alone in the world. She had many
-difficulties to contend with, being a weak and foolish woman----'
-
-I shook my head, and said, 'I am sure she wasn't; I am sure she
-wasn't!' My mother pressed me closer to her side, and continued, her
-fingers caressing my neck:
-
-----'And the days were sometimes very dark for her, or would have been
-but for the joy she found in her only treasure. A time came when her
-heart almost fainted within her--for her bird was at home hungry, and
-there was no food in the nest, and she did not know which way to turn
-to get it. She wandered about the forest with rebellious thoughts in
-her mind--yes, my dear, she did!--and out of her blindness and
-wickedness--hush, my dearest!--out of her blindness and wickedness,
-she began almost to doubt the goodness of God. She thought, foolish
-woman that she was! that there was no love in the forest but the love
-which filled _her_ breast; that pity, compassion, charity, had died
-out of the world, and that she and her bird were to be left to perish.
-But she received such a lesson, my dear, as she will never forget till
-her dying day. While these despairing thoughts were in her mind, and
-while her rebellious heart was crying against the sweetest attributes
-with which God has endowed His children, a fairy in a cotton-print
-dress came to her side----'
-
-Mother!'
-
-'It is true, my dear. A fairy in a cotton-print dress came to her
-side, and with a sweet word and a sweeter look put into her hand a
-talisman--call it a stone, my dear, if you will--a common, almost
-valueless piece of stone; and the touch of the pretty little fairy
-fingers to the poor woman's hand was like the touch of Moses's rod to
-the rock, when the waters came forth for the famished people. And she
-prayed God to forgive her for doubting His goodness, and the goodness
-of those whom He made in the image of Himself. Then, as she looked at
-the common piece of stone which the fairy had given to her, she saw in
-it the face of an angel, and she kissed it again and again, as I do
-this.'
-
-After a little while my mother wrapped the halfpenny in a piece of
-paper, and put it by, saying she hoped she would never be compelled to
-spend it.
-
-During the whole of the following week my mother was unsuccessful in
-obtaining work. It was not from want of perseverance that she did not
-succeed, for she came home every day weary and footsore.
-
-'The sewing-machines are keeping many poor women out of work,' she
-said.
-
-'Then they are bad things,' I exclaimed; 'I wish they were all burnt!'
-
-'No, my dear; they are good things; they are blessings to many poor
-creatures. Why, Chris, if I had one, we should be quite rich!'
-
-But she did not have one, and her needles were at a discount, so far
-as earning bread for us was concerned. On the Saturday she went out
-again early, and did not come home until late at night. Good fortune
-had again attended her, and she brought home a little money.
-
-'Have you seen the fairy in the cotton-print dress?' I asked gaily. My
-mother nodded sorrowfully. Saturday's a lucky day, mother,' I said,
-rubbing my hands.
-
-'Yes, my child,' she answered, with a heavy sigh.
-
-She added another halfpenny to the one she had kissed and put by last
-week, and we went out again to make our purchases. Another week
-followed, and another, with similar results and similar incidents.
-Then my mother fell sick, and could not, although she tried, keep the
-knowledge of her weakness from me; a sorrow of which I was not a
-sharer was preying on her heart. I did not know of it; but I saw that
-my mother was growing even paler and thinner, and often, when she did
-not think I was observing her, I saw the tears roll down her cheek,
-and her lips quiver piteously. Friday night found us with a cupboard
-nearly empty, and with but one halfpenny in our treasury--the first
-battered and bruised halfpenny, which my mother hoped she would never
-be compelled to spend. Those she had added to it had gone during the
-week. She looked at it wistfully:
-
-'Must we spend it, Chris?'
-
-'Is the angel's face there?' I asked.
-
-'Yes, I see it.' And she kissed the battered coin again.
-
-'Then we must keep it,' I said stoutly.
-
-When I awoke the next morning, my mother was kneeling by my bedside,
-and when she saw my eyes resting on her face, she clasped me in her
-arms, and so we lay for fully half an hour, without a word being
-spoken. There was a little milk left for breakfast, and this my mother
-made into very weak milk-and-water. The bread she cut into four
-slices. One she ate, two she gave to me, and one she put into the
-cupboard. She laid the battered halfpenny on the mantelshelf.
-
-'Now, Chris,' she said, as she put on her poor worn bonnet, 'when you
-are hungry you can eat the slice of bread that's in the cupboard; and
-if I am not at home before you are hungry again, you can buy some
-bread with that halfpenny. Kiss me, dear child.'
-
-'But, mother,' I remonstrated, you are too ill to go out. You ought to
-stay at home to-day.'
-
-I dare not, child. I _must_ go out. Why, doesn't my Chris want his
-supper to-night, and his dinner to-morrow? And don't I want my supper
-and dinner, too?'
-
-'Are you going to the workshop, mother?'
-
-'I am going that way, child.'
-
-But I begged her to promise that she would try and be home early, and
-she was compelled to promise, to satisfy me. With faltering steps she
-left the room, and walked slowly downstairs. I felt that there was
-something wrong, but I did not understand it, and certainly would have
-been powerless to remedy it. I was soon hungry enough to eat the slice
-of bread; and then I went out, and strolled restlessly about the
-streets. It was a cold day, and I was glad to get indoors again,
-although there was no fire. In the afternoon I was hungry again, and
-mother had not returned. Should I spend the halfpenny? I took it from
-the mantelshelf. The gift of a fairy in a cotton-print dress! I turned
-it this way and that, in the endeavour to find some special charm in
-it. It was as common a halfpenny as I had ever looked upon. I saw no
-angel's face in it. But my mother said there was, and that was enough.
-No; I could not spend it. Then I thought that it was unkind of me to
-let my mother, ill and weak as she was, go out by herself. I
-reproached myself; I might have helped her on. She promised to return
-soon; perhaps she was not strong enough to return. These reproachful
-thoughts and my hunger grew upon me, and my uneasiness increased,
-until I became very wretched indeed. As dusk was falling, I made up my
-mind that a certain duty was before me. I must walk into the City to
-the shop for which my mother used to work, and seek for her. I had
-been to the place two or three times to take work home, and I knew my
-way pretty well. Perhaps I should meet my mother on the road. Off I
-started on my self-imposed task. My increasing hunger made the
-distance appear twice as long as it really was, and I could not help
-lingering and longing for a little while at a fine cook-shop, the
-perfume which pervaded it being more fragrant to me at the time than
-all the perfumes of Arabia would have been. When I arrived at the
-workshop, it was closed. There was nothing for it but to turn my face
-homeward. Weary, hungry, and dispirited, I commenced my journey back;
-I was anxious to get home quickly now, to lessen the chance of my
-mother returning while I was absent. In my eagerness and confusion I
-missed my way, and it was quite ten o'clock at night when I found
-myself in a street which was familiar to me, and which I knew to be
-about two miles from the street in which we lived. The neighbourhood
-in which I was now was a busy one; a kind of market was held there
-every Saturday night, in which poor people could purchase what they
-required a trifle cheaper than they could be supplied at the regular
-shops. There were a great glare of lights and a great hurly-burly of
-noise which in my weak condition confused and frightened me. I
-staggered feebly on, and stumbled against a man who was passing me in
-a great hurry. He caught hold of my arm with such force as to swing me
-round; and without any effort on my part to escape, for I was almost
-unconscious, I slipped from his grasp and fell to the ground. I think
-I heard the words, Unmanly brute uttered in a female voice; but my
-next distinct remembrance is that I was standing on my feet, swaying
-slightly, and held up by the man I had run against. He spoke to me in
-sharp tones, and demanded to know where I was running to. I begged his
-pardon humbly, but in tones too faint to reach his ear, for he
-inquired roughly if I had a tongue in my head. There were a few
-persons standing about us, and one or two women told the man he ought
-to be ashamed of himself, and asked him what he meant by it, and why
-he didn't leave the boy alone. In sneering reply he called them a
-parcel of wise women.
-
-'Did you ever see a thief of his size?' he asked.
-
-'I am not a thief,' I said, in a faint tone. 'Let me go. I want to get
-home.'
-
-I raised my eyes to his face as I spoke. I could not distinguish his
-features, for everything was dim before me, but he seemed to see
-something in my face that occupied his attention, for he looked at me
-long and earnestly.
-
-'Have you been ill?'
-
-'I am tired and hungry. Let me go, please,' I implored.
-
-He released his hold of me. Glad to be free, and intent only on
-getting home as soon as I could, I walked from him with uncertain
-steps. But I did not know how weak I really was; and I was compelled
-to cling to the shop-fronts for support. I must have stumbled on in
-this way for fifty or sixty yards, when stopped to rest myself. Then,'
-without raising my eyes, I knew that the man against whom I had
-stumbled was standing by me again; he must have followed me out of his
-course, for when we first met his road was different from mine.
-
-'Did you see me following you?' he asked.
-
-I was frightened of him; his voice seemed to hurt me. I had scarcely a
-comprehension of the meaning of his words; and I was fearful that, if
-I disputed anything he said, I might arouse his anger, and that he
-would detain me again. He repeated his question; and I answered,
-almost without knowing what I said,
-
-'Yes, sir.'
-
-My reply appeared to dissatisfy him.
-
-'Then you have been shamming weakness?'
-
-'Yes, sir.'
-
-I looked about me timidly and nervously for a means of escape.
-Standing in the road, close to the kerbstone, and facing a portion of
-the pavement which was partly in shade, was a beggar-woman, with her
-face hidden on her breast. One hand held her thin shawl tightly in
-front of her; the other hand was held out supplicatingly. What it was
-that caused me to fix my eyes on her I cannot tell; perhaps it was
-because I recognised in her drooping form and humble attitude
-something kindred to my own pitiable condition. As I gazed at her, a
-little girl, very poorly dressed, and with a basket on her arm,
-stopped before the woman, and put a coin into her outstretched hand.
-The woman curtseyed, and stooped and kissed the little girl. As the
-child, her act of charity performed, walked away, I saw her face; and
-it was so sweet and good, that my mother's words with reference to the
-battered halfpenny came to my mind: 'I see an angel's face in it.' I
-watched her until she was lost in the throng; and then I turned to the
-beggar-woman again, and saw, as in a flash of light, my mother! Was it
-shame, was it joy, that convulsed me, as crying, 'Mother! mother!' I
-ran and fell senseless at her feet?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-A POSTMAN'S KNOCK.
-
-
-It seemed to me as if I had closed my eyes and opened them with
-scarcely a moment's interval; and yet I was at home in our own little
-room, and my mother was bending over me tenderly. I could not
-immediately realise the change. The busy streets, and the glare in
-them, and my fear of the man who had accused me of being a thief, were
-still present to my mind. I clung closer to my mother.
-
-'What is my darling frightened of?' she said soothingly. 'He is at
-home, and safe in his mother's arms.'
-
-'At home!' I looked around apprehensively. 'Where's the man?'
-
-'What man, dear child? The man who carried you home?'
-
-I had no remembrance of being carried home.
-
-'The man who carried me home!' I exclaimed; and repeated wonderingly,
-'Carried me home! No, I don't know him.'
-
-'There is no one here, dear child, but you and I. Taste this.'
-
-She held a cup of tea to my lips, and I drank gratefully; and ate a
-slice of bread-and-butter she gave me.
-
-'There, my dear! My darling feels better, does he not?'
-
-'Yes.' As I looked at her, the scene I had witnessed, of which she had
-been the principal figure, dawned upon me. I could not check my sobs;
-I felt as if my heart would burst. 'O mother! mother!' I cried. 'I
-remember now; I remember now!'
-
-She held me in her arms, and caressed me, and pressed me to her heart.
-My tears flowed upon her faithful breast.
-
-'How did you find me, dear child? Unkind mother that I am to leave my
-darling hungry and alone all the day!'
-
-'Don't say that, mother. You mustn't; you mustn't! If anybody else
-said it, I would kill him!'
-
-'Hush, dear child! You must not excite yourself. Come, you shall go to
-bed; and you shall tell me all in the morning, please God.'
-
-'No, I want to tell you now; I want to talk to you now. I want to lie
-here, and talk quietly, quietly! Oh, but I am so sorry! so sorry!'
-
-'For what, dear child?'
-
-Through my sobs I murmured, 'That you should have to stand in the
-cold, and beg for me!' My arms were round her, and I felt her shrink
-and tremble within them. 'Now I know what the poor woman in the forest
-did when she went to look for food for her bird. If any one saw you
-that knew you, would you not be ashamed? Would you not run away?'
-
-Sadly and tearfully she replied, 'No, my own darling, I do not think I
-should. Who would be so cruel as to say I ought to be ashamed of doing
-what I do?'
-
-'But, mother, you stand with your head down, as if you wanted to hide
-your face!'
-
-The blood rose to her face and forehead pitifully.
-
-'I cannot help it, dearest,' she said with trembling lips; it comes
-natural to me to stand so. I do not think of it at the time. And O,
-Chris! don't despise your poor mother now that you have found out her
-secret!'
-
-She would have fallen at my feet if I had not kept my arms tightly
-around her. In the brief pause that ensued before she spoke again, I
-closed my eyes, and leant my head upon her shoulder, the better to
-think of her goodness to me. I saw all the details of the picture
-which now occupied my mind. I saw my mother approach the spot where
-she had decided to stand, to solicit charity for me; I saw her
-hesitate, and tremble, and look around warily and timidly, as though
-she were about to commit a crime; and then I saw her glide swiftly
-into the road and take her station there, with her dear head drooping
-on her breast from shame. Yes, from shame. And it was for me she did
-this!
-
-'If I could get work to do,' she presently said, in low meek tones,
-such as one who was crushed and who despaired might use if wrongfully
-accused, 'I would not beg. Heaven knows I have tried hard enough; I
-have implored, have almost gone on my knees for it, in vain. What was
-I to do? We could not starve, and I would not go to the parish; I
-would not bring that shame upon my darling's life, until everything
-else in the world had failed. I did not intend my child to know. I
-tried to keep the knowledge from him--I tried, I tried! O, my dear
-boy! my heart is fit to break!'
-
-I listened in awe, and could say no word to comfort her.
-
-'It is no shame to me to do as I have done,' she said half
-appealingly, half defiantly. 'It is for bread for my dear child's
-life. I should stand with my face open to the people, if I had the
-courage. But I am a coward--a coward! and I shrink and tremble, as if
-I were a thief, with terror in my heart!'
-
-She a coward! Dear heart! Brave soul! Her voice grew softer.
-
-'And O, Chris, my child! since I have stood there I have learnt so
-much that I did not know before. It has made me better--humbler. Never
-again, never again can I doubt the goodness of God! What good there is
-in the world of which we are ignorant, until sorrow brings us to the
-knowledge of it! When I first stood there, the world seemed to pass
-away from me, so dreadful a feeling took possession of me. In my
-fancy, harsh voices clamoured at me, cruel faces mocked me from all
-sides; I did not dare raise my head. But in the midst of my soul's
-agony, soft fingers touched mine, and the sweet voice of a child
-brought comfort to my heart. And then poor women gave, and I was
-ashamed to take. I held it out to them again, begging them with my
-eyes to take it back again; and they ran away, some of them.'
-
-The floodgates of my mother's heart were open, and she was talking now
-as much to herself as to me, recalling what had touched her most
-deeply.
-
-'Two weeks ago a young woman came and stood before me. God knows what
-she was thinking of as she stood there in a way it made my heart ache
-to see. She was very, very pretty; very, very young. She stood looking
-at me so long in silence that I began almost to be afraid. I dared not
-speak to her first. I have never yet spoken unbidden in that place; I
-seem to myself to have no right to speak. But, seeking to soften any
-hard thought she may have had in her mind for me or for herself, I
-returned her look, kindly I hope, and pityingly too. "I thought I'd
-make you look at me," she said in a hard voice that I felt was not
-natural to her; "beggars like you haven't much to be proud of, I
-should say. Thank the Lord I haven't come to that yet!" I tried to
-shape an answer, but the words wouldn't leave my lips, and I could
-only look at her appealingly. Poor girl! she seemed to resent this,
-and tossed her head, and went away singing. But there was no singing
-in her heart. I followed her with my eyes, and saw her stop at a
-public-house; but she hesitated at the door, and did not enter. No;
-she came back, and stood before me again. "What do you come here for?"
-she asked, after a little pause. "For food," I answered. She sneered
-at my answer, and I waited in sorrow for her next words. "Have you got
-a husband?" "No," I said, wondering why she asked. "No more have I,"
-she said. My thoughts wandered to a happier time, and pictures of
-brighter days which seem to have passed away for ever came to my mind;
-but the girl soon brought me back to reality. "Are you a mother?" she
-asked. "Oh, yes!" I answered, with a sob of thankfulness, for the dear
-Lord has made my boy a blessing to me. "So am I," she said, with a
-little laugh that struck me like a knife. "Here--take this; I was
-going to spend it in drink." And she put sixpence in coppers into my
-hand, and ran away. But I ran after her, and entreated her to take the
-money back; but she would not, and grew sullen. I still entreated, and
-she said, "Very well; give it to me; I'll spend it in gin." What I
-said to her after this I do not know, I was so grieved and sorry for
-her; but I told her I would keep the money, and she thanked me for the
-promise, oh! so humbly and gratefully, and began to cry so piteously
-and passionately, that my own sorrows seemed light compared with hers.
-I drew her away to a quiet street, and kissed her and soothed her, and
-although we had never met before, she clung to me, and blessed me with
-broken words and sobs. Then, when she was quieter, I asked her where
-her little one was, and might I go with her and see it? She took me to
-her room, and I saw her baby--such a pretty little thing!--and I
-nursed it till it fell asleep, and then tidied up the room, and put
-the bed straight. Ah, my darling! I could not repeat all that the poor
-girl said. I went out and spent fourpence of the sixpence she gave me
-in food for the baby, and she was not angry with me for it. I have
-been to see her and her baby twice since that night, and my heart has
-ached often when I have thought of them. If I were not as poor as I
-am, I would try to be a friend to them. But, alas! what can I do? Yet
-there is not a night I have stood in that place that I have not lifted
-my heart to God for the goodness that has been shown to me. How good a
-thing it is for the poor to help the poor as they do! God sweeten
-their lives for them!'
-
-We were silent for a long time after this. I broke the silence by
-whispering,
-
-'Mother, I didn't spend the halfpenny; it is on the mantelshelf now.'
-
-'Dear child! I am sorry and glad. It is the first halfpenny I ever
-received in charity, and it was given to me by a little child.'
-
-'Let me look at it, mother.'
-
-She took it from the mantelshelf, and placed it in my hands.
-
-'I can see the angel's face now,' I said. 'It is the fairy in a
-cotton-print dress.'
-
-My mother nodded with a sweet smile.
-
-'And the fairy is a little girl?'
-
-'Yes, dear.'
-
-'And she came every Saturday night afterwards, with a basket on her
-arm, and gave you a halfpenny?'
-
-'Yes, dear. How do you know?'
-
-'I saw her to-night, and I guessed the rest. I am so glad you kissed
-her! Mother, we will never, never spend this halfpenny!'
-
-'Very well, my darling; but you haven't told me yet how it was you
-found me out.'
-
-I had barely finished my recital when a knock came at our door. On
-opening it, our landlady was discovered, puffing and blowing. A great
-basket was hanging from her hand. Benignant confidence in her lodger
-reigned in her face; curiosity dwelt in her eye. As she entered, the
-air became spirituously perfumed.
-
-'O, them stairs!' she panted. They ketch me in the side! If you'll
-excuse me, my dear!' And she sat down, still retaining her hold of the
-basket. She went through many stages before she quite recovered
-herself, gazing at us the while with that imploring look peculiar to
-women who are liable to be 'ketched in the side.' Then she brightened
-up, and spoke again. 'I thought I'd bring it up myself,' she said; the
-stairs ain't been long cleaned, and the boy's boots are that muddy
-that I told him to wait in the passage for the basket. If you'll empty
-it, I'll take it down to him. Oh,' she continued, seeing that my
-mother was in doubt, I don't mind the trouble the least bit in the
-world! If all lodgers was as regular with their rent as you, my dear,
-I shouldn't be put upon as I am!'
-
-Still my mother hesitated; she did not understand it. I saw that the
-basket was well filled, for the lid bulged up. The landlady, declaring
-that it was very heavy, placed it on the table, and was about to lift
-the lid, when my mother's hand restrained her.
-
-'There is some mistake; these things are not for me.'
-
-'Why, my dear creature!' exclaimed the landlady, growing exceedingly
-confidential, 'didn't you order 'em?'
-
-'No, I haven't marketed yet. My poor boy has been ill, and I haven't
-been able to go out.'
-
-'Well, but there can't be any mistake, my dear;' and the landlady,
-scenting a mystery, became very inquisitive indeed; here's your name
-on a bit of paper.'
-
-The writing was plain enough, certainly: 'For Mrs. Carey. Paid for.
-Basket to be returned.'
-
-'Do you know the boy who brought them?' asked my mother.
-
-'To be sure I do, my dear creature! He belongs to Mrs. Strangeways,
-the greengrocer round the corner.'
-
-'I should like to speak to him. May he come up?'
-
-'Certainly, my dear soul!'
-
-And the landlady, in her eagerness to get at the heart of the mystery,
-disregarded the effect of muddy boots on clean stairs, and called the
-boy up. But he could throw no light upon the matter. All that he knew
-was that his mistress directed him to bring the things round to Mrs.
-Carey's, and to make haste back with the basket. 'And please, will you
-look sharp about it?' he adjured in a tone of injured innocence,
-digging his knuckles into his eyes, and working them round so forcibly
-that it almost seemed as though he were trying to gouge out his
-eyeballs; if you keep me here much longer, missis'll swear when I get
-back that I've been stopping on the road playing pitch and toss.'
-
-The landlady, whose curiosity had now reached the highest point,
-protested that it would be flying in the face of Providence to
-hesitate another moment, and whipped open the basket.
-
-'Half a pound of salt butter,' she said, calling out the things as
-she placed them on the table; half a pound of tea; sixpennorth of
-eggs--they're Mrs. Chizlett's eggs, my dear, sixteen a shilling--I
-know 'em by the bag; a pound of brown sugar; a cabbage; taters--seven
-pound for tuppence, my dear; and a lovely shoulder of mutton--none of
-your scrag! There!'
-
-My eyes glistened as I saw the good things, and my mother was
-gratefully puzzled. The garrulous landlady stopped in the room for a
-quarter of an hour, placing all kinds of possible constructions upon
-the mystery, and inviting, in the most insinuating manner, the
-confidence of my mother, whom she evidently regarded as a very artful
-creature. It was sufficient for me that the food was lawfully ours,
-and I blessed the generous donor in my heart. On the following day my
-mother took me for a walk in the Park, and we arrived home in time to
-get the baked dish from the baker's, which my mother had prepared. We
-had a grand dinner, and we fared tolerably well during the week. On
-the Saturday, however, our cupboard and treasury were bare, and my
-mother was once more racked by those pin-and-needle anxieties which,
-insignificant as they seem by the side of matters of public interest,
-form the sum of the lives of hundreds of thousands of our fellow
-creatures. My mother watched me very nervously. I knew what was in her
-mind. She was striving to gather courage to bid me stop at home while
-she went out to beg. My heart was very full as, watching her
-furtively, I saw her put on her bonnet and shawl. Then she stood
-irresolutely by the mantelshelf. I crept to her side.
-
-'Mother?'
-
-'My child!'
-
-'Let me go with you,' I implored.
-
-'No, no, dear child! No, no!' she cried, and she knelt before me,
-and twined her arms around my neck. She was entreating me in the
-tenderest manner to stop at home, when the simplest thing in the world
-changed the current of our lives. A postman's knock was heard at the
-street-door, and a minute afterwards the landlady came running
-upstairs, almost breathless. My mother started to her feet. In one
-hand the landlady held a letter by the corner of her apron; the other
-hand was pressed to her side; and she panted as if her last moments
-had arrived.
-
-'O them stairs!' she exclaimed. 'They'll be the death of me! For you,
-my dear.' And she held the letter towards my mother.
-
-A circumstance so unusual as the receipt of a letter threw us all into
-a state of excitement. It was certainly an event in my life. My mother
-was very agitated as she looked at the address, and the landlady took
-a seat, and waited in the expectation of hearing the news. But the
-letter was not opened until that worthy woman had retired, which she
-did in a very dignified, not to say offended, manner, as a proof that
-she had not the slightest wish--not she! to pry into our private
-concerns.
-
-'There's no mistake, mother,' I said.
-
-'No, my dear; it is addressed to me.'
-
-Then, with great care, she opened the letter, and read aloud:
-
-
-'14 Paradise-row, Windmill-street.
-
-'Emma Carey,--Personally you will have not the slightest knowledge of
-me, for I do not think you ever set eyes on me; but you will know my
-name. I was not aware until a few days ago that your husband was dead.
-I am poor, but not as poor as you are. I offer you and your boy a
-home. You can both come and live with me if you like. If you decide to
-come, you must not expect much. I am not a pleasant character, and my
-disposition is not amiable. But the probability is, if you accept my
-offer, that you and your boy will have regular meals, such as they
-are. I keep a shop; you can help me in it. You can come at once if you
-like--this very day. I don't suppose it will take you long to pack up.
-
-'Bryan Carey.'
-
-
-I started when I heard the name, for it was our own.
-
-'It is from your uncle Bryan,' said my mother; 'your dear father's
-elder brother, who disappeared many years ago.'
-
-'I thought he was dead, mother.'
-
-'We all supposed so, never having heard from him.'
-
-'Was he nice, mother?'
-
-'I have no idea, child; I never saw him. But he says that he is
-neither amiable nor pleasant.'
-
-Two words in the letter had especially attracted my attention.
-
-'Regular meals,' I murmured, somewhat timidly.
-
-My mother rose instantly. Unless she accepted the offer, there was but
-one alternative before her; and no one knew better than I how her
-sensitive nature shrank from it. It was the bitterest necessity only
-that had driven her to beg.
-
-'I will go at once and see your uncle, my dear. I don't know where
-Paradise-row is, but I shall be able to find it out. I will be back as
-soon as possible. Keep indoors, there's a dear child!'
-
-She was absent for nearly three hours.
-
-'Well, mother?' I said, running to the door as I heard her step on the
-stairs.
-
-She drew me into the room, and sat down, with her arms round my neck.
-
-'We will go, dear,' she said, and my heart beat joyfully at the words.
-'it will be a home for us. Situated as we are, what would become of my
-dear child if I were to fall really ill? And I have been afraid of it
-many times. Yes, we will go. Your uncle Bryan keeps a grocer's shop. I
-told him I should have to give a week's warning here, and he gave me
-the money to pay the rent, so that we might go to him at once.'
-
-My mother looked about her regretfully. It belonged to her nature to
-become attached to everything with which she was associated, and she
-could not help having a tender feeling even for our one little room in
-which we had seen so much trouble.
-
-'Now, Chris, We will pack up.'
-
-As uncle Bryan predicted in his letter, it did not take us long.
-Everything we possessed went into one small trunk, and there was room
-for more when everything was in. The smoke-dried monkey of a man in
-stone--the precious relic I had inherited from my grandmother--had
-been carefully taken care of, and now lay at the bottom of the trunk.
-It had not brought us much luck, and I regarded it with something like
-aversion.
-
-From the inscrutable eye of a landlady living in the house nothing can
-be concealed, and our landlady hovered in the passage, divining (with
-that peculiar inspiration with which all of her class are gifted) that
-something important was taking place. My mother called her in, and
-paid her the week's rent in lieu of a week's notice. She was deeply
-moved, after the fashion of landladies (living in the house), when
-lodgers who have paid regularly take their departure. The fear of
-another lodger not so punctual in paying as the last harrows their
-souls. As my mother did not enter into particulars, not even
-mentioning to the landlady where we were moving to, the inquisitive
-creature invited confidence by producing from a mysterious recess in
-her flannel petticoat a bottle of gin and a glass. My mother, however,
-declined to be bribed, much to the landlady's chagrin; after this she
-evidently regarded us with less favour.
-
-'Uncle Bryan sent a boy with a wheelbarrow, Chris,' said my mother,
-'to wheel your trunk home. He's waiting at the door now.'
-
-'_With_ the wheelbarrow?' I asked gaily. I was in high spirits at the
-better prospect which lay before us.
-
-'Yes, dear. _With_ the wheelbarrow.'
-
-I could not help laughing, it seemed to me such a comical idea. My
-mother cast an affectionate look at the humble room we were leaving
-for ever, and then we carried the trunk down to the street door, the
-landlady _not_ assisting. There stood the boy with the wheelbarrow.
-The trunk was lifted in, and we marched away, the boy trundling the
-barrow, we holding on in front, for fear the trunk should fall into
-the road. All the neighbours rushed into the street to look at the
-procession.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-UNCLE BRYAN INTRODUCES HIMSELF.
-
-
-The boy took no notice of the neighbours, but wheeled straight through
-them, regardless of their legs. Neither did he take any notice of us,
-except by whistling in our faces. But he trundled the wheelbarrow
-cheerfully, and with an airy independence most delightful to witness.
-It was a long journey to Paradise-row, and it occupied a long time;
-but the boy never flagged, never stopped to rest, although in the
-course of the journey he performed some eccentric antics. He was not
-as old as I, but he was much more strongly built. I envied him his
-strong limbs and broad shoulders. It was a cold day, and he was
-insufficiently clad; his toes peeped out of his boots, and his hair
-straggled through a hole in his cap, and a glimpse of his bare chest
-could now and then be seen through a rent in his waistcoat, which was
-made to serve the purpose of a jacket by being pinned at the throat;
-but the boy was not in the slightest degree affected by these
-disadvantages. The wind, which made me shiver, seemed to warm him, and
-he took it to his bosom literally with great contentment. His eyes
-were dark and bright, his nose was a most ostensible pug, and the
-curves of his large well-shaped mouth and lips spoke of saucy
-enjoyment. Indeed, he was full of life, noting with eager curiosity
-everything about him, and his dirty face sparkled with intelligence.
-As he drove the barrow before him, he whistled and sang without the
-slightest regard to nerves, and if any street lad accosted him
-jocosely or derisively, he returned the salutation with spirited
-interest. He appeared to be disposed to pause near the first
-organ-grinder we approached; but he resisted the inclination, and
-after a short but severe mental struggle, he compromised matters by
-trundling the barrow three times round the unfortunate Italian, making
-a wider sweep each time. My mother remonstrated with him; but the boy,
-with the reins of command in his hand, paid no other attention to her
-remonstrance than was expressed in a knowing cock of his eye, implying
-that it was all right, and that he knew what he was about. For the
-safety of our trunk we were compelled to accompany him in his circular
-wanderings, and I felt particularly foolish as we swept round and
-round. But the third circle completed, the boy drove straight along
-again contentedly, whistling the last air the organ-grinder had played
-with such force and expression as to cause some of the passers-by to
-put their fingers to their ears. This man[oe]uvre the boy
-conscientiously repeated with every organ-grinder we met on the road;
-repeated it also, very slowly and lingeringly, at a Punch-and-Judy
-show, afterwards conveying to the British public discordant
-reminiscences through his nose of the interview between Punch and the
-Devil; and with supreme audacity repeated it when we came to a band of
-negro minstrels, proving himself quite a match for them when they
-threatened him with dreadful consequences if he did not immediately
-put a stop to his circular performance. Indeed, when one of the band
-advanced towards him with menacing gestures, he ran the wheelbarrow
-against the opposing force with such an unmistakable intention, that
-to save his legs the nigger had to fly. In this manner we came at
-length to the end of our journey.
-
-I found Windmill-street to be a mere slit in a busy and bustling
-neighbourhood, and Paradise-row, where uncle Bryan lived, a distinct
-libel upon heaven, being, I fervently hope, as little like a
-thoroughfare in Paradise as can well be imagined. Uncle Bryan's shop
-was at the corner of Windmill-street and Paradise-row, and uncle Bryan
-himself stood at his street-door, seemingly awaiting our arrival.
-
-'Been loitering, eh?' was uncle Bryan's first salutation; sharply
-spoken, not to us, but to the boy.
-
-'Never stopped wheelin', so 'elp me!' returned the boy, in a tone as
-sharp as my uncle's, yet with a doubtful look at my mother. 'Never
-stopped to take a breathful of air from the blessed minute we started.
-Arks 'er!'
-
-My mother, being appealed to by uncle Bryan, confirmed the boy's
-statement, which was strictly correct, and, to his manifest
-astonishment, made no reproachful reference to his circular flights.
-His astonishment, however, almost immediately assumed the form of a
-satisfied leer.
-
-'How much was it to be?' asked uncle Bryan, not at all satisfied with
-my mother's assurance.
-
-'Thrums,' replied the boy, readily. By which he meant threepence.
-
-Uncle Bryan regarded him sourly.
-
-'Say that again, and I'll take off a penny.'
-
-'Well, tuppence, then. I got to pay a ha'penny for the barrer. What's
-a brown, more or less?'
-
-The question was not addressed to any of us in particular, so none of
-us answered it. Uncle Bryan paid him twopence; and the boy, with never
-a 'thank you,' spun the coins in the air, and caught them deftly;
-then, with a wink at my mother as a trustworthy conspirator, he walked
-away with his empty barrow, whistling with all his wind at mankind in
-general.
-
-Now, when uncle Bryan first spoke, I started. I thought it was not the
-first time I had heard his voice. It sounded to me like the voice of
-the man with whom I had had the adventure on the previous Saturday
-night. The boy being out of sight, uncle Bryan turned to me.
-
-'Why did you start just now?'
-
-'I thought I knew your voice, sir,' I said.
-
-'Call me uncle Bryan. Knew my voice! It isn't possible, as you've
-never set eyes on me, nor I on you, till this moment.'
-
-This was intended to settle the doubt, and I never again referred to
-it, although it remained with me for a long while afterwards. The
-trunk had been left on the doorstep, and uncle Bryan assisted us to
-carry it upstairs to the bedroom allotted to us. A little bed for
-me--uncle Bryan made it over to me in three words--was placed behind a
-screen.
-
-'I thought,' he said to my mother, 'you would like your boy to sleep
-in the same room as yourself. The house is a small one, but we can
-find another place for him if you wish.'
-
-'Thank you, Bryan,' replied my mother simply, 'I would like to have
-him with me.'
-
-Uncle Bryan was evidently no waster of words, and my mother entered
-readily into his humour.
-
-'You must be tired,' he said, as he was about to leave the room; 'rest
-yourself a bit. But the sooner you come downstairs, the better I
-shall be pleased.'
-
-My mother laid her hand on his arm, and detained him.
-
-'Let me say a word to you, Bryan.'
-
-'You will never repeat it!' he exclaimed, with a quick apprehension of
-what she wished to say.
-
-'Never, without a strong necessity, Bryan.'
-
-He laughed; but it was more like a dry husky cough than a laugh.
-
-'When a man locks the street-door,' he said, 'trust a woman to see
-that the yard-door's on the latch.'
-
-'I want to thank you, Bryan, for the home you have offered me and my
-boy.'
-
-'Perhaps it won't suit you.'
-
-'It will suit us, Bryan, if it will suit you to allow us to remain.'
-
-He seemed to chew the words, 'allow us to remain,' silently, as if
-their flavour were unpleasant to him; but he said aloud:
-
-'Wait and see, then.' And although my mother wished to continue the
-conversation, he turned his back to us, and abruptly left the room.
-
-My mother sank into a chair; she must have been very tired, for she
-had walked not less than twelve miles that day.
-
-'You must be tired too, my dear,' she said, drawing me to her side.
-
-'Not so tired as you, mother.'
-
-'I don't feel very, very tired, my dear!'
-
-I knew why she said so; hope dwelt in her heart.
-
-'I think your uncle Bryan is a good man,' she said.
-
-I did not express dissent; but I must have looked it.
-
-'My dear,' she said, answering my look, 'you will find in your course
-through life that many sweet things have their home in the roughest
-shells. Uncle Bryan has a strange rough manner, but I think--nay, I am
-sure--he is a good man. Do you know, Chris, I believe those things
-that came home for us last Saturday night were sent by him. No, my
-dear, we will not ask him, or even speak of it. He will be better
-pleased if it is not referred to. And yet I wonder how he found us
-out!'
-
-The room which was assigned to us was a back-room, small, and commonly
-but cleanly furnished. Immediately beneath the window was the
-water-butt, and beyond it were numbers of small back-yards--so many,
-indeed, that I wondered where the houses could be that belonged to
-them. The general prospect from this window, as I very soon learned,
-was composed of sheets, shirts, stockings, and the usual articles of
-male and female attire in the process of drying: of some other things
-also--of washing-tubs, and women and little girls wringing and washing
-and up to their arm-pits in soap-suds. Occasionally I saw men also
-thus engaged. A variation in the prospect was sometimes afforded by
-small children being brought into the yards to be slapped and then set
-upon the stones to cool, and by other small children blowing
-soap-bubbles out of father's pipes. The peculiarity of the scene was
-that the clothes never appeared to be dried. They were eternally
-hanging on the lines, which intersected each other like a Chinese
-puzzle, or were being skewered to them in a damp condition. I can
-safely assert that existence, as seen from our bedroom window, was one
-interminable washing-day.
-
-When we went downstairs uncle Bryan was in the shop, weighing up his
-wares and attending to occasional customers. Attached to the shop were
-a parlour, in which the meals were taken and which served as a general
-sitting-room, and a smaller apartment in the rear. My mother called me
-into the smaller room. Do you see, Chris?' she said, pointing to some
-flowers on the window-sill. There were two or three pots also, in
-which seeds had evidently been newly planted. In my mother's eyes,
-these were a strong proof of my uncle's goodness. A rickety flight of
-steps led to the basement of the house, in which there was a gloomy
-kitchen (very blackbeetle-y), which could not have been used for a
-considerable time. The cobwebs were thick in the corners, and a
-prosperous spider, a very alderman in its proportions, peeped out of
-its stronghold, with an air of 'What is all this about?' The
-appearance of a woman in that deserted retreat did not please my
-gentleman; it was a sign of progress. In the basement were also two or
-three other gloomy recesses.
-
-Our brief inspection ended, we ascended to the parlour. The fire was
-burning brightly, and the kettle was on the hob. My mother went to the
-door which led to the shop.
-
-'At what time do you generally have tea, Bryan?' she inquired.
-
-'At half-past five,' he replied.
-
-It was a quarter-past five by an American clock which stood in the
-centre of the mantelshelf. The clock was a common wooden one, with a
-glass door in front, on which was engraved a figure of Father Time
-with a crack down his back. One of his eyes was damaged, and his
-scythe also was mutilated; taking him altogether, as he was there
-represented, damaged and with cracks in him, old Father Time seemed by
-his disconsolate appearance to be of the opinion that it was high time
-an end was made of _him_. Without more ado, my mother opened the
-cupboard, and finding everything there she wanted, laid the table, and
-prepared the meal. Exactly at half-past five uncle Bryan came in, and
-we had tea. He did not express the slightest approval of my mother's
-quickness, nor did she ask for it; and when tea was over, he went into
-the shop again, and my mother cleared up the things. She asked him
-about to-morrow's dinner, and took me with her to market with the money
-he gave her. While we were looking about us we came across the boy who
-had fetched our trunk in the wheelbarrow. He was standing with others
-listening to a hymn which was being sung by two men and a woman. One
-of the men was blind, and he played on a harmonium, while his
-companions sang. He joined in also, having a powerful voice, and I
-thought the performance a very fine one.
-
-The boy saw us; approached my mother, and said in a tone of strong
-approval:
-
-'You're a brick. I say, we sold old Bryan, didn't us?'
-
-My mother could not help smiling, which heightened the favourable
-opinion he had of her.
-
-'What are you going to do?' he asked.
-
-My mother explained that she was going to market.
-
-'I'll show you the shops,' he said; and his offer was accepted.
-
-He proved useful, and took us to the best and cheapest shops, and gave
-his candid opinion (generally unfavourable) of the articles my mother
-purchased. When the marketing was finished, he volunteered to carry
-the basket, and did not leave us until we were within a yard or two of
-uncle Bryan's shop. He enlivened the walk with many quaint and
-original observations, and when he had nothing to say he whistled. He
-took his departure with good-humoured winks and nods. Upon my mother
-counting out her purchases to uncle Bryan, and returning him the few
-coppers that were left, he said,
-
-'We'll settle things on Monday, Emma. You'll have to take the entire
-charge of the house, and to keep the expenses down, and we'll arrange
-a certain sum, which must not be exceeded. If anything is saved out of
-it, you can put it by in this box,' pointing to a stone money-box
-shaped like an urn, which was on a shelf. You can do anything you like
-to the place, but don't disturb my flower-pots.'
-
-'What have you planted in the new pots, Bryan?'
-
-'Some of the new Japan lilies; they'll not flower till summer. Don't
-touch them; you don't understand them.'
-
-My mother was very busy that night, dusting and cleaning, and I think
-I never saw her in a happier mood. Now and then she went into the
-shop, and stood quietly behind the counter, noting how uncle Bryan
-attended to his business. He took not the slightest notice of her; did
-not address a single word to her. Once she came bustling back, with an
-air of importance. 'I've served a customer, Chris,' she said
-gleefully.
-
-Uncle Bryan's shop was stocked with small supplies of everything in
-the grocery line, and in addition to these, he sold a few simple
-medicines for clearing the blood--some of them, I afterwards learned,
-of his own concoction and mixing. Friday was the day fixed for the
-preparation and making-up of these medicines, for Saturday was the
-great night for the sale of the mixtures to working people, who
-purchased them in halfpenny and penny doses. I discovered that uncle
-Bryan's pills were famous in the neighbourhood. I calculated that on
-this Saturday night he must have served at least fifty customers with
-his medicines. The little parlour presented quite a different
-appearance when my mother had finished cleaning and dusting. I looked
-for some expression of approval in uncle Bryan's face when he came in
-to partake of a bread-and-cheese supper; but I saw none. During the
-night my thoughts wandered to the little girl who had given the first
-halfpenny to my mother. I spoke about her.
-
-'Do you think she will be sorry or glad, mother, because she will not
-see you to-night?'
-
-'Sorry, I think, Chris; she will fancy I am ill.'
-
-'But this is a great deal better, mother.'
-
-'Infinitely better, dear child: and remember, we owe it all to uncle
-Bryan.'
-
-Neither my mother nor I felt at all strange in our new home, and I
-slept as soundly as if I had lived in the house for years. Before we
-went to bed, my mother and I had a delicious ten minutes' chat; the
-storm in our lives which had lasted so long, and which had threatened
-to wreck us, had cleared away, and a delightful sense of rest stole
-into our hearts.
-
-On the Sunday no business was done. After breakfast, uncle Bryan
-brought his account-book into the parlour, and busied himself with his
-accounts, adding up the week's takings, and calculating what profit
-was made. My mother asked him if he was going to church.
-
-'I never go to church,' was his reply.
-
-My mother looked grieved, but she entered into no argument with him.
-
-'You have no objection to our going?' she said timidly.
-
-'What have I to do with it? I dictate to no one. If you think it right
-to go to church, go.'
-
-'Is there one near, Bryan?'
-
-'Zion Chapel isn't two minutes' walk.'
-
-Uncle Bryan asked no questions when we returned, and the day passed
-quietly. He devoted the evening to smoking and reading. My mother did
-not like the smoke at first, but it was not long before she schooled
-herself to fill uncle Bryan's pipe for him. So, with a pair of horn
-spectacles on his nose, and his pipe in his mouth, uncle Bryan read
-and enjoyed his leisure. Occasionally he took his pipe from his mouth,
-and read a few words aloud. At one time he became deeply engrossed in
-a book which he took from a shelf in the shop, and he read the
-following passage aloud:
-
-'That the consciousness of existence is not dependent on the same form
-or the same matter is demonstrated to our senses in the works of the
-Creator, as far as our senses are capable of receiving that
-demonstration. A very numerous part of the animal creation preaches to
-us, far better than Paul, the belief in a life hereafter. Their little
-life resembles an earth and a heaven, a present and a future state;
-and comprises, if it may be so expressed, immortality in miniature.'
-
-'Immortality in miniature!' repeated my mother, in a puzzled tone.
-'What is that from, Bryan?'
-
-'The _Age of Reason_,' he answered.
-
-There was a long pause, broken again by uncle Bryan's voice:
-
-'If we consider the nature of our condition here, we must see there is
-no occasion for such thing as revealed religion. What is it we want to
-know? Does not the creation, the universe we behold, preach to us the
-existence of an Almighty Power, that governs and regulates the whole?
-And is not the evidence that this creation, holds out to our senses
-infinitely stronger than anything we can read in a book that any
-impostor might make and call the word of God? As for morality, the
-knowledge of it exists in every man's conscience.'
-
-Presently he laid the book aside, and my mother took it up. Uncle
-Bryan stretched forth his hand with the intention of keeping it from
-her; but he was too late. He gazed at her furtively from beneath his
-horn spectacles, as she turned over the pages. After a few minutes'
-inspection of the book she returned his gaze sadly, and, with a
-protecting motion, drew me to her side. I had not liked uncle Bryan's
-laugh, and I liked it less now.
-
-'Chris, my dear child,' said my mother, in a tone of infinite
-tenderness, 'go upstairs and bring down my Bible.'
-
-I did as she desired, and my mother caressed me close, with her arm
-round my waist. Uncle Bryan sat on one side of the fireplace, reading
-the _Age of Reason_; my mother sat on the other side, reading the
-Bible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-OUR NEW HOME.
-
-
-A day or two afterwards I surprised my mother and uncle Bryan in the
-midst of a conversation which I supposed had reference to myself. My
-mother was in a very earnest mood, but uncle Bryan, except that he
-listened attentively to what she was saying, seemed in no way stirred.
-In all my life's experiences I never met or heard of a man who was
-more thoroughly attentive to every little detail that passed around
-him than was uncle Bryan; but although he gave his whole mind to the
-smallest matter for the time being, he evinced no indication of it,
-and persons who did not understand his character might reasonably have
-supposed him to be utterly indifferent to what was going on.
-
-'You will promise me, Bryan,' my mother said.
-
-'I will promise nothing, Emma,' he replied; 'I made a promise once in
-my life, and I received a promise in return. I know what came of it.'
-He smiled bitterly, and added, his words seeming to me to be prompted
-more by inner consciousness than by the signs of distress in my
-mother's face, 'But you can make your mind easy. It is not in my
-nature to force my views upon any one. Force! as if it were any matter
-of mine! What comes to him must come as it has come to me--through the
-light of experience.'
-
-'Do you not believe, Bryan----'
-
-He interrupted her, almost vehemently. 'I believe in nothing! If that
-does not content you, I cannot help it.'
-
-'If I could assist you, Bryan--if I could in any way relieve you----'
-
-'You cannot. I am fixed. Life for me is tasteless.'
-
-Something of desolation was in his tone as he said this, but its
-plaintiveness was not designed by the speaker. Rather did he intend to
-express defiance, and a renunciation of sympathy.
-
-'But, Bryan,' said my mother, with a tender movement towards him----
-
-'I must stop you,' he said, 'for fear you should say something which
-would compel an explanation from me. Let matters rest I am but one
-among hundreds of millions of crawlers. Once I saw other than visible
-signs--or fancied that I saw them, fool that I was! The time has gone,
-never to return; the power of comprehension has gone, never to return.
-You must take me as you find me. There is very little in the world
-that I like or dislike; but I can heartily despise one thing:
-insincerity. Have you anything more to say?'
-
-'No, Bryan;' and I could see that my mother was both pained and
-relieved.
-
-'I have; two or three words. A question first. You can be satisfied to
-remain here?'
-
-'Yes, Bryan, if it satisfies you. I can do no better.'
-
-A gleam came into his eyes. 'That is sincere,' he said, with a
-pleasanter smile than the last. 'Very well, then; it does satisfy me.
-What I want to say now is, that there must be no break. You must not
-remain, and let me get accustomed to you, and then leave me for a
-woman's reason.'
-
-'I will not, Bryan.'
-
-With that, the conversation ended. In the night, when my mother and I
-were alone in our bedroom, I said,
-
-'Do you think uncle Bryan is a good man now, mother?'
-
-'Is it not good of him, Chris, to give us a home?'
-
-'Yes,' I said; but I was not quite satisfied with her answer. 'His
-shell is very rough, though.'
-
-My mother laughed. I loved to hear her laugh; it was so different from
-uncle Bryan's. His laughter had no gladness in it.
-
-'We shall find a sweet place here and there, Chris,' she said.
-
-She tried to, I am sure, and she brightened the house with her
-pleasant ways. One night we were sitting together as usual; I was
-doing a sum on a slate which uncle Bryan had set for me; he was
-reading; my mother was mending clothes. We had been sitting quiet for
-a long time, when my mother commenced to sing one of her simple songs,
-very softly, as though she were singing to herself. In the midst of
-her singing she became aware that uncle Bryan was present, and with a
-rapid apprehensive glance at him she paused. He looked up from his
-book at once.
-
-'Why do you stop, Emma?' he asked.
-
-'I thought I might disturb you.'
-
-'You do not; I like to hear you.'
-
-The charm, however, was broken for that night, and my mother knew it,
-and sang but little. Two or three nights afterwards, when uncle Bryan
-was engrossed in his book, my mother began to sing again over her
-work. I knew every trick of her features, and I think she was
-designing enough to watch her opportunity, for there was never a more
-perfect master than she of the delicate cunning which kindness to
-rough and cross natures often requires. It was with much curiosity
-that I quietly observed uncle Bryan's behaviour while my mother sang.
-He held his book steadily before him, but he did not turn a page; and
-to my, perhaps, too curious eyes there appeared to be, in the very
-curve of his shoulders, a grateful recognition of my mother's wish to
-please him. I could not see his face, but I liked him better at that
-time than I had ever yet done. Truly, my mother was right; here at
-least was one sweet place found in the rough shell. She continued her
-singing in the same soft strains; and often afterwards sang when we
-three were sitting together of an evening.
-
-Exactly three weeks after we had taken up our quarters with uncle
-Bryan, my mother and I paid a visit to the neighbourhood in which she
-had made the acquaintance of the fairy in the cotton-print dress; but
-although it was Saturday night we saw no trace of the little girl. My
-mother was much disappointed; and then she went to the house in which
-the young woman lived who had given her sixpence, and learned that she
-had moved, the landlady did not know whither. I was glad to get away
-from the neighbourhood, although I was almost as much disappointed as
-my mother was at not finding our little fairy.
-
-Our new life, having thus fairly commenced, went on for a long time
-with but little variation. Uncle Bryan allowed my mother to do exactly
-as she pleased, and she, without in the slightest way disturbing his
-regular habits, made the house very different from what it was when
-she first entered it. Every room in it, down to the basement, where
-she did the cooking, was always sweet and clean. We also had flowers
-on the sill of our bedroom window, and their graceful forms and bright
-colours were a refreshing relief to the dark back wall. It delights me
-to see the taste for _growing_ flowers cultivated by the poor. Flowers
-are purifiers; they breed good thoughts. Quite a rivalry was
-established between uncle Bryan and my mother in the care and
-attention which they bestowed on their respective window-sills. It
-went on silently and pleasantly, and my mother was not displeased
-because uncle Bryan was the victor. He trained some creepers from the
-window of his little back room to the window of our bedroom, and my
-mother watched them with intense interest creeping up, and up, until
-they reached the sill. 'They are like a message of love from your
-uncle, my dear,' she said. It is by such small precious links as these
-that heart is bound to heart. Yet the feelings with which uncle Bryan
-inspired me were by no means of a tender nature. He made no effort to
-win my affection; as a general rule, his bearing towards me was
-sufficiently cold to check tender impulse, and the words, 'I believe
-in nothing!' which I had heard him address sternly to my mother, had
-impressed me very seriously. I regarded him sometimes with fear and
-aversion.
-
-I was sent to a cheap school, a very few pence a week being paid for
-my education. My career in the school is scarcely worthy of record.
-All that was taught there were reading, writing, and arithmetic; and
-when these were learned our education was completed. The master never
-allowed himself to be tripped up by his pupils. Arithmetic was his
-strong point, and the rule-of-three was his boundary.
-
-In that happy hunting-ground we bought and sold the usual illimitable
-quantities of eggs, and yards of calico, and firkins of butter; and
-there we should have wallowed until we were old men, had we remained
-long enough, without ever reaching another heaven. My principal
-reminiscences of those days are connected with the bully of the
-school; who, whenever we met in the streets out of school-hours,
-compelled me to make three very low and humble bows to him before he
-would allow me to pass. I have not the satisfaction of being able to
-record that he met with the usual fate (in fiction) of school
-bullies--that of being soundly licked, and of being compelled to eat
-humble pie for ever afterwards. He was a successful tyrant. His
-position occasionally compelled him to fight two boys at a
-time--one down, the other come up--but he was never beaten. A tyrant
-he was, and a tyrant he remained until I lost sight of him. In his
-career, virtue was never triumphant.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-IN WHICH I TAKE PART IN SOME LAWLESS EXPEDITIONS.
-
-
-In his letter which offered us a home, uncle Bryan had stated, truly
-enough, that he was a poor man. Although he purchased his stock in
-very small quantities, he often had as much as he could do to pay his
-monthly bills. I remember well a certain occasion when he was
-seriously perplexed in this way. My mother, who had been attentively
-observant of him during the day, said in the evening:
-
-'You are troubled, Bryan.'
-
-'I am short of money, Emma,' he replied; and he went on to say that he
-had to pay Messrs. So-and-so and So-and-so to-morrow; and that his
-last week's takings were two pounds less than he had reckoned upon.
-
-How much short are you, Bryan?'
-
-He adjusted his horn spectacles, and brought forward his account-book,
-and his file of bills, and every farthing the till contained. In a few
-minutes he had his trouble staring him in the face in black and white,
-in the shape of a deficit of two pounds eighteen shillings--a serious
-sum. My mother, with a grateful look in her eyes, produced the stone
-money-box, in which he had said she might put by anything she was able
-to save out of the money he gave her to keep house with. She shook it;
-what was in it rattled merrily. It was a hard job to get the money
-out, the slit in the box was so narrow; but it was managed at last by
-means of the blade of a knife, and a little pile of copper and silver
-lay on the table. I think the three of us seated round the table would
-not make a bad picture; but then you could not put in my mother's
-delicious laugh. She had saved more than three pounds. I could
-scarcely tell whether uncle Bryan was sorry or pleased. He bit his
-lips very hard, but said never a word; and, taking the exact sum he
-required, put the balance back into the box.
-
-The chief difficulty uncle Bryan had to contend with in keeping his
-stock properly assorted was brown sugar. Indeed, brown sugar may be
-said to have been the bane of his life; to me, it was a most hateful
-commodity, and I often wished there was not such an article in the
-world. Uncle Bryan had to pay ready money for sugar, and he could not
-purchase at the warehouse less than a bag at the time--about two
-hundredpounds weight, I believe. Sometimes he had not the money to go
-to the sugar market with, and the stock on the shelves had dwindled
-down almost to the last quarter of a pound. Then commenced a series of
-dreadful expeditions which I remember with comical terror. One of the
-first instructions given by uncle Bryan to my mother had been, never,
-under any pretext, to serve even the smallest quantity of sugar to a
-strange customer unless he or she purchased something else at the same
-time. The reason for this was that there was no profit on sugar; it
-was what was called a leading article in the trade, and by some
-mysterious trade machinations, arising probably out of the fever of
-competition, had come to be sold by the large grocers at exactly cost
-price. The small grocers, of course, were compelled to follow in the
-wake of the large ones; if they had not, their customers would have
-deserted them. Not only, indeed, did the small grocers make no profit
-on the sugar they sold, but, taking into consideration the draft
-necessary to turn the scale ever so little when weighing out quarter
-and half pounds, there was an absolute loss; even the paper in the
-scale would not make up for it, for it cost as much per pound as the
-sugar. Hence the necessity for not serving strangers with sugar by
-itself, and hence it was that I not unnaturally came to look upon it
-as a desperate crime for any stranger to attempt to purchase sugar
-over uncle Bryan's counter without asking at the same time for a
-proper quantity of tea or coffee, or some other article upon which
-there was a profit. My feelings, then, can be imagined when uncle
-Bryan (being short of sugar, and not having sufficient funds to
-purchase a bag at the warehouse), bidding me carry a fair-sized market
-basket, took me with him one dark night--and often afterwards on many
-other dark nights--to purchase brown sugar, and nothing else, in
-pounds, half pounds, and quarters. The plan of operation was as
-follows: uncle Bryan, selecting a likely-looking grocer's shop (an
-innocent-looking fly, he being the spider), would station me at some
-distance from it, bidding me wait until he returned. Then he would
-enter the shop boldly, and come out, with the air of one who resided
-in the neighbourhood, holding in his hand a quarter or half pound of
-feloniously-acquired moist. This he would deposit in the basket (which
-had a cover to it, to hide our villainy), and we would wander to
-another street, in which he pounced upon another grocer's shop, where
-the operation would be repeated. Thus we would wander, often for two
-or three miles, until the basket was filled with packages of sugar,
-with which we would return stealthily, like burglars after the
-successful accomplishment of daring and unlawful deeds. When the
-basket was too heavy for me to carry, uncle Bryan carried it, and
-would place me in a convenient spot--always at the corner of two
-streets, so that in case of pursuit we could make a rapid
-disappearance--with the basket on the ground. While thus stationed, I
-have trembled at the very shadow of a policeman, and have often
-wondered that we were not marched off to prison. Uncle Bryan was not
-always successful. On occasions he would pause suddenly in the middle
-of a street, and wheel sharply round. 'Can't go into that shop,' he
-would say; 'was turned out of it the week before last;' or, 'They know
-me there; swore at me when they served me the last time; mustn't show
-my face there for another month;' or, with a laugh, 'Come away, Chris,
-quick! That woman wanted to know what I meant by imposing on a poor
-widow who was trying to get an honest living.' These remarks, of
-themselves, would have been sufficient to convince me that we were
-committing an offence against law and morality. At first I was a
-passive accomplice in these unlawful operations, but in time I became
-an active agent.
-
-'Chris, my boy,' said uncle Bryan to me one night, in an insinuating
-tone; he was out of spirits, having met with a number of continuous
-failures; 'do you think you could buy a quarter of a pound in that
-shop?'
-
-'I'll try to, uncle,' I said, with a sinking heart, for I had long
-anticipated the dreaded moment.
-
-'Go into the shop in an offhand way, as if you were a regular
-customer. I'll wait at the corner for you.'
-
-Go into the shop in an offhand way! Why, if I had been the greatest
-criminal in the world, I could not have been more impressed with a
-sense of guilt. I showed it in my face when I stepped tremblingly to
-the counter, and I was instantly detected by the shopkeeper.
-
-'Do you want anything else besides sugar?' he demanded sternly.
-
-'N-no, sir,' I managed to answer.
-
-'Do you know, you young ruffian, that there's a loss on sugar!' I knew
-it well enough--too well to convict myself by answering. 'What do you
-say to two ounces of our best mixed at two-and-eight,' he then
-inquired, with satirical inquisitiveness, 'or half a pound of our
-genuine mocha at one-and-four?'
-
-As I did not know what to say except, 'Guilty, if you please, sir!'
-and as I suspected him of an intention to leap over the counter and
-seize me by the throat, I fled precipitately, with my heart in my
-mouth, and the next minute was running away, with uncle Bryan at my
-heels, as fast as my legs would carry me. When we were well out of
-danger's reach, uncle Bryan indulged in the only genuine laugh I had
-heard from him; but he soon became serious, and we resumed our
-unlawful journey. This first attempt was not the last; I tried again
-and again; but practice, which makes most things perfect, never made
-me an adept in the art. Dark nights were always chosen for our
-expeditions, and sometimes so many streets and thoroughfares were
-closed to uncle Bryan, that he was at his wits' end which way to turn
-to fill the basket.
-
-Things went on with us in the same way until I was fourteen years of
-age. Long before this, I had learned all my schoolmaster had to teach
-me, and I was beginning to be distressed by the thought that I was
-doing a wrong thing by remaining idle. It was time that I set to work,
-and tried to help those who had been so good to me. I spoke about it,
-and uncle Bryan approved in a few curt words.
-
-'I'm afraid he's not strong enough,' said my mother.
-
-'Nonsense!' exclaimed uncle Bryan; and I supported him.
-
-'I want to work,' I said; 'I should like to.'
-
-'A good trade would be the best thing,' said my mother.
-
-Weeks passed, and I was still idle. My mother had been busy enough in
-the mean while, but her efforts were unsuccessful. She learnt that a
-good trade for me meant a good premium from my friends; and that of
-course was out of the question. It would have been a hard matter to
-scrape together even so small a sum as five pounds, and the lowest
-premium asked was far above that amount. I thought it behoved me to
-look for myself; and I began to stroll about the streets, and search
-in the shop windows for some such announcement as, 'Wanted an
-apprentice to a good trade: no premium required; liberal wages;'
-followed by a description which fitted me exactly as the sort of lad
-which would be preferred. But no such announcement greeted my wistful
-gaze. I saw bills, 'Wanted this,' Wanted that,' and now and then I
-mustered sufficient courage to go in and offer myself; but at the end
-of a month's experience I could come to no other conclusion than that
-I was fit for neither this nor that. My manner was against me; I was
-shy and timid, and sometimes could scarcely find words suitable for my
-application; but I had that kind of courage which lies in
-perseverance, and my aspirations were not of an exalted nature; I was
-willing to accept anything in the shape of work. I know now that I
-applied for many situations for which I was totally unfitted, but I
-was not conscious of it at the time; and I know also that for a few
-days I was absurdly and supremely reckless in my estimate of my
-fitness for the employers who made their wants public. It was during
-this time that I found myself standing before one of those exceedingly
-small offices which squeeze themselves by the force of impudence and
-ingenuity into the very midst of really pretentious buildings which
-frown them down, but cannot take the impudence out of them. In the
-front of this office was a large black board, on which were wafered,
-in the neatest of round-hand, the most amazing temptations to persons
-in search of situations. The first temptation which assailed me was,
-'Wanted a Gardener for a Gentleman's Family. Must have an
-Unexceptionable Moral Character. Apply within.' The doubt I had with
-reference to this announcement was not whether I would do for a
-gardener (this was during my reckless days, remember), but whether my
-moral character was unexceptionable. I had never before been called to
-answer a declaration of this description, and now that it was put to
-me in bold round-hand, I was stung by the share I took in the lawless
-sugar expeditions. Not being able to resolve the doubt as to my moral
-character (although sorely tempted by the exigences of my position to
-give myself the benefit of it), I laid aside the gardener for future
-consideration. The next temptation was, 'Wanted a Cook. High Church.'
-I discarded the cook. Reckless as I was, it exceeded the limits of my
-boldness to declare myself a High-Church Cook. I was not even aware
-that I had ever tasted food cooked in that way; the very flavour was a
-mystery to me. The next was, 'Wanted a Groom, Smart and Active. Seven
-Stone. Apply within.' I debated for some time over seven stone before
-I decided that it must apply to the weight of the groom. A stone was
-fourteen pounds. Seven fourteens was ninety-eight (I did the sum on a
-dead wall with a bit of brick I picked up in the road.) That I was
-perfectly ignorant of the duties of a groom did not affect me in the
-slightest degree; my only trouble was, did I weigh ninety-eight
-pounds? I immediately resolved to ascertain. I strolled into a
-by-street, and discovering a mysterious-looking recess wherein was
-exhibited a small pile of coals and a large pair of scales to weigh
-them in, I considered it a likely place to solve the problem. I had
-two halfpennies in my pocket, and I thought I might bargain to be
-weighed for one of them. So I walked into the recess, and tapping upon
-the scales with a halfpenny, as a proof that I meant business, waited
-for the result. The result came in the shape of a waddling woman with
-a coaly face and an immense bonnet, who said, 'Now then?' Timidly I
-replied, 'I want to be weighed, ma'am; I'll give you a halfpenny.' I
-was not prepared for the suddenness of what immediately followed.
-Without the slightest warning the woman lifted me in her arms with
-great ease, and laid me across the scales, which were shaped like a
-scuttle, with great difficulty, although I tried honestly to suit
-myself to the peculiarity of the case. Presently she threw me off as
-if I were a sack of coals, and tossing the weights aside, one after
-another, as if they were feathers, said, 'There you are!' Her words
-did not enlighten me. '_Am_ I seven stone, ma'am?' I asked, as I
-handed her the coin. 'About,' was her reply. I retired, dubious, in a
-very grimy and gritty condition, and walking to the little office
-where the black board was, I boldly entered, and asked the young man
-behind the counter (there was only room for him and me) if he wanted a
-groom. _His_ reply was, 'Half a crown.' This was perplexing, and I
-asked again, and received a similar answer. I soon understood that I
-should have to pay the sum down before I could be accommodated with
-particulars, and as a halfpenny was the whole of my wealth, I was
-compelled to retire, much disheartened.
-
-However, I was successful at length. I obtained a situation as
-errand-boy, sweeper, and whatnot, at a wood-engraver's, the wages
-being three shillings a week to commence with. How delighted I was
-when I told my mother, and with what pride I brought home my first
-week's wages, and placed them in her hand! In the duties of my new
-position, and in endeavouring, not unsuccessfully, to pick up a
-knowledge of the business, time passed rapidly. My steady attention to
-everything that was set me to do gradually attracted the notice of my
-employer, and he encouraged me in my efforts to raise myself. I was
-fond of cleanliness for its own sake, and my mother's chief pleasure
-was to keep my clothes neat and properly mended. I can see now the
-value of the difference between my appearance and that of other boys
-of my own age in the same position of life as myself, and I can more
-fully appreciate the beauty of a mother's love when it is deep and
-abiding--as my mother's love was for me.
-
-And here I must say a word, lest I should be misunderstood. Some
-kindly-hearted readers may suppose that my life and its surrounding
-circumstances call for pity and commiseration. I declare that they are
-mistaken, and that I was perfectly happy, contented in the present,
-hopeful in the future. What more could I desire? Poor as our home was,
-it was decent and comfortable; the anxieties which invaded it were
-not, I apprehend, of a more bitter nature than the anxieties which
-reign in the houses of really well-to-do and wealthy people. Well, I
-had a home which contented and satisfied me; and dearer, holier,
-purer, than anything else in life there was shed upon me a love which
-brightened my days and sweetened my labour. Life was opening out to me
-its most delightful pages. Already had I learned to love books for the
-good that was in them; I was also learning to draw, and every hour's
-leisure was an hour of profitable enjoyment. I began to see things,
-not with the eyes of a soured and discontented mind, but with the eyes
-of a mind which had been, almost unconsciously, trained to learn that
-sorrow and adversity may bring forth much for which we should be truly
-and sincerely grateful, and which, but for these trials, might be
-hidden from us. And all this was due to the influence of Home, and of
-the love which life's hard trials had strengthened. Sweet indeed are
-the uses of adversity. But for it, the milk of human kindness would
-taste like brackish water.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-A SINGULAR EPISODE IN OUR QUIET LIFE.
-
-
-At this point I am reminded that I have not described uncle Bryan. A
-few words will suffice. A tall spare man, strongly built, with no
-superfluity of flesh about him; iron-gray hair, thick and abundant;
-eyebrows overlapping most conspicuously, guarding his eyes, as it
-were, which lurked in their caverns, as animals might in their lairs,
-on the watch. He wore no hair on his face, his cheeks were furrowed,
-and his features were large and well formed. He possessed the power of
-keeping himself perfectly under control; but on rare occasions, a
-nervous twitching of his lips in one corner of his mouth mastered him.
-This always occurred when he was in any way stirred to emotion, and I
-knew perfectly well, although he tried to disguise it from me, that it
-was one of his greatest annoyances that he could not conquer this
-physical symptom of mental disturbance. He was not only scrupulously
-just in his dealings as a tradesman; he exercised this moral sentiment
-with almost painful preciseness in his intercourse with my mother and
-me. He had no intimates, and he determinedly rejected all overtures of
-friendship. His habits were regular, his desires few, his tastes
-simple. He appeared to be contented with everything, and grateful for
-nothing. If love resided in his nature, it showed itself in a fondness
-for flowers; in no other form.
-
-I was nearly eighteen years of age, and the days--garlanded with the
-sweet pleasures which spring naturally from a mother's love--followed
-one another calmly and tranquilly. Nothing had occurred to disturb the
-peaceful current of our lives. Uneventful as the small circumstances
-of my past life were in the light of surrounding things, each scene in
-the simple drama which had thus far progressed was distinctly defined,
-and seemed to have no connection with what preceded it or followed it.
-The first, which had occurred in the house where I was born, and which
-ended with my father's death; the second, in which my mother had taken
-so mournful a part, and which contained so strange a mingling of joy
-and sorrow; the third, which was now being played, and which up to
-this period had been the least eventful of all. A certain routine of
-duties was got through with unvarying regularity. Uncle Bryan's trade
-yielded, with careful watching, sufficient profit for our wants; but
-I, also, was earning money now, and it was with an honest feeling of
-pride that I paid my mother so many shillings a week--I am almost
-ashamed to say how few--towards the expenses of my living. And so the
-days rolled on.
-
-But in the web of our lives a thread was woven of which no sign had
-yet been seen, and chance or destiny was drawing it towards us with
-firm hand--a thread which, when it was linked to our hearts, was to
-throw strong light and colour on the tranquil days.
-
-A very pleasant summer had set in, and uncle Bryan's flowers were at
-their brightest. It had grown into a custom with my mother to come for
-me two or three times a week during the fine weather, in the evening,
-when my day's work was done. She would wait at the corner of the
-street which led to my place of business, and we generally had a
-pleasant walk, arriving home at about half-past nine o'clock, in time
-for supper, a favourite meal with uncle Bryan. Now, my mother and I
-had been for some time casting about for an opportunity to present
-uncle Bryan with a token of our affection in the shape of a pipe and a
-tobacco-jar; he was so strange a character that it was absolutely
-necessary we should have a tangible excuse for the presentation. My
-mother found the opportunity. With great glee she informed me that she
-had found out uncle Bryan's birthday, and that the presentation should
-take the form of a birthday gift. 'It will be an unexpected surprise
-to him, my dear,' she said, 'and we will say nothing about it
-beforehand.' On a fine morning in August I rose as usual at half-past
-five, and made my breakfast in the kitchen; I slept now in the little
-back-room on a line with the shop and parlour. Eight o'clock was the
-hour for commencing work, and I generally had a couple of hours'
-delightful reading in the kitchen before I started. Sometimes,
-however, when we were busy, I was directed to be at the office an hour
-or so earlier, and on this morning I was due at seven o'clock. I
-always wished my mother good-bye before I went to work. Treading very
-softly, so as not to disturb uncle Bryan, and with my dinner and tea
-under my arm--invariably prepared the last thing at night, and packed
-in a handkerchief by my mother's careful hands--I crept upstairs to
-her room. She called me in, and I sat by her bedside, chatting for a
-few minutes. This was the anniversary of uncle Bryan's birthday, and
-our purchases were to be made in the evening.
-
-'I must be off, mother,' I said, starting up; 'I shall have to run for
-it.'
-
-'Good-morning, dear child,' she said; 'I shall come for you exactly at
-eight o'clock.'
-
-I kissed her, and ran off to work. My mother was punctual in the
-evening, and we set off at once on a pilgrimage to tobacconists'
-windows. Any person observing us as we stood at the windows, debating
-on the shape of this pipe and the pattern of that tobacco-jar, would
-at once have recognised the importance of our proceedings. At length,
-after much anxious deliberation, our purchases were made, and we
-walked home to Paradise-row. My mother had suggested that I should
-present uncle Bryan with the birthday gifts, and in a vainful moment I
-had consented, and had mentally rehearsed a fine little speech, which
-I prided myself was perfect in its way. But, as is usual with the
-amateur, and sometimes with the over-confident, on such occasions, my
-fine little speech flew clean out of my head when the critical moment
-arrived, and resolved itself into about a dozen stammering and
-perfectly incomprehensible words. Covered with confusion, I pushed the
-pipe and tobacco-pouch towards uncle Bryan in a most ungraceful
-manner. My mother saw my difficulty.
-
-'We have brought you a little birthday present, Bryan,' she said,
-'with our love.'
-
-He made a grimace at the last three words, and I thought at first that
-he was about to sweep the things from him; but if he had any such
-intention, he relinquished it.
-
-'How did you know it was my birthday?'
-
-'I found it out.'
-
-'How?'
-
-'Oh,' replied my mother, with a coquettish movement of her head, which
-delighted me, but did not find favour with uncle Bryan, 'little birds
-come down the chimney to tell me things.'
-
-'Psha!' he muttered impatiently.
-
-'Or perhaps I put this and that together, and found it out that way.
-You can't hide anything from a woman, you know.'
-
-Her gay manner met with no sympathetic response from uncle Bryan. On
-the contrary, he gazed at her for a moment almost suspiciously, but
-the look softened in the clear light of my mother's eyes. Then, in a
-careless, ungracious manner, he thanked us for the present. I was hurt
-and indignant, and I told my mother a few minutes afterwards, when we
-were together in the kitchen, that I was sorry we had taken any notice
-of uncle Bryan's birthday.
-
-'He would have been much better pleased if we hadn't mentioned it,' I
-said.
-
-'No, my dear,' said my mother, 'you are not quite right. Your uncle
-will grow very fond of that pipe by and by.'
-
-My mother always won me over to her way of thinking, and I thought the
-failure might be due to the bungling manner in which I had presented
-the birthday offerings. I walked about the kitchen, and spoke to
-myself the speech I had intended to make, with the most beautiful
-effect. It was a masterpiece of elegant phrasing, and every sentence
-was beautifully rounded, and came trippingly off the tongue. Of course
-I was much annoyed that the opportunity of impressing uncle Bryan with
-my eloquence was lost. When we reëntered the room, uncle Bryan's head
-was resting on his hand, and there was an expression of weariness in
-his face, which had grown pale and sad during our brief absence. My
-mother's keen eyes instantly detected the change.
-
-'You are not well, Bryan,' she said, in a concerned tone, stepping to
-his side.
-
-'There are two things that disagree with me, Emma,' he replied, with a
-grim and unsuccessful attempt at humour; 'my own medicine is one,
-memory is another. I've been taking a dose of each. There, don't
-bother me. I have a slight headache, that's all.'
-
-But although he tried to turn it off thus lightly, he was certainly
-far from well; for he asked my mother to attend to the shop, and
-leaning back in his chair, threw a handkerchief over his face, and
-fell asleep. My mother and I talked in whispers, so as not to disturb
-him. Uncle Bryan was not a supporter of the early-closing movement,
-for he kept his shop open until eleven o'clock every night. Very
-dismal it must have looked from the outside in the long winter nights,
-lighted up by only one tallow candle; but it had always a home
-appearance for me, from the first day I entered it. The shop-door
-which led into the street was closed, and so was the door of the
-parlour in which we were sitting. The upper half of this door was
-glass, to enable us to see into the shop. My mother's hearing was
-generally very acute, and the slightest tap on the counter was
-sufficient to arouse her attention; but the tapping was seldom needed,
-for the shop-door, having a complaining creak in its hinges, never
-failed to announce the entrance of a customer. On this night,
-customers were like angels' visits, few and far between. It was nearly
-ten o'clock; uncle Bryan was still sleeping; my mother, whose hands
-were never idle, was working as usual; I was reading a volume of
-_Chambers's Traits for the People_, from which many a young mind has
-received healthy nourishment. I was deep in the touching story of
-'Picciola, or the Prison Flower,' when an amazing incident
-occurred--heralded by a tap at the parlour-door.
-
-Whoever it was that knocked must not only have opened the street-door,
-but must have silenced its watch-dog creak (by bribery, perhaps); or
-else my mother's hearing must have played her very false. Again, it
-was necessary to lift the ledge of the counter and creep under it,
-before the parlour-door could be reached.
-
-My mother started to her feet; and opened the door. A young girl, with
-bonnet and cloak on, stood before us. I thought immediately of the
-fairy in the cotton-print dress; but no, it was not she who had thus
-mysteriously appeared. The girl looked at us in silence.
-
-'You should have tapped on the counter, my dear,' said my mother.
-
-'What for?' was the answer, in the most musical voice I had ever
-heard. 'I don't want to buy anything.'
-
-This was a puzzling rejoinder. If she did not want to buy anything,
-why was she here?
-
-'This is Mr. Carey's? asked the girl.
-
-'Yes, my dear.'
-
-'Who are you?'
-
-Now this was so manifestly a question which should have come from us,
-and not from her, that I gazed at her in some wonder, and at the same
-time in admiration, for her manner was very winning. She returned my
-gaze frankly, and seemed to be pleased with my look of admiration.
-Certainly a perfectly self-possessed little creature in every respect.
-Uncle Bryan still slept.
-
-'Who are you?' repeated our visitor, to my mother.
-
-'My name is Carey,' said my mother.
-
-'Oh, indeed!' exclaimed the girl. 'That is nice. And who is he?'
-indicating uncle Bryan.
-
-'That is my brother-in-law, Bryan.'
-
-'Mr. Bryan Carey. I've come to see him.' And she made a movement
-towards him. My mother's hand restrained her.
-
-'Hush, my dear! You must not disturb him.'
-
-'Oh, I am not in a hurry. But I think you ought to help me in with my
-box.' This to me. 'If I was a man, I wouldn't ask you.'
-
-Her box! Deeper and deeper the mystery grew. When the girl thus
-directly addressed me, my heart beat with a feeling of intense
-pleasure. Hitherto I had been mortified that she had evinced no
-interest in me.
-
-'Come along!' she exclaimed imperiously.
-
-I followed her to the door, like a slave, and there was her box,
-almost similar in appearance to the box we had brought with us. It was
-altogether such an astounding experience, and so entirely an
-innovation upon the regular routine of our days, that I rubbed my eyes
-to be sure that I was awake. My mother had closed the door of the room
-in which uncle Bryan was sleeping, and now stood by my side. I stooped
-to lift the box, and found it heavy.
-
-'What is in it?' I asked.
-
-'Books and things,' our visitor replied. 'I'll help you. Oh, I'm
-strong, though I _am_ a girl! I wish I was you.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Then I should be a boy. There! You see I am almost as strong as you
-are.'
-
-The box was in the shop by this time. My mother was perfectly
-bewildered, as I myself was; but mine was a delightful bewilderment
-The adventure was so new, so novel, so like an adventure, that I was
-filled with excitement.
-
-'How did the box come here?' I asked.
-
-'Walked here, of course,' she said somewhat scornfully.
-
-'Nonsense!' I exclaimed; although if she had persisted in her
-statement, I was quite ready to believe it, as I would have believed
-anything from her lips.
-
-'Oh, you don't believe in things!'
-
-'Yes, I do; but I don't believe that thing. How _did_ it come?'
-
-'A boy carried it. A strong boy--not like you. Isn't that candied
-lemon-peel in the glass bottle?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'I should like some. I'm very fond of sweet things.'
-
-Quite as though the little girl were mistress of the establishment, my
-mother went behind the counter, and cut a slice of the lemon-peel.
-
-'What a small piece!' exclaimed the girl, sitting on the box, and
-biting it. 'I could put it all in my mouth at once; but I like to
-linger over nice things.'
-
-And she did linger over it, while we looked on. When she had finished,
-she said:
-
-'I suppose I am to sit here till he wakes.'
-
-'No, my dear,' said my mother, who had been regarding her childlike
-ways with tenderness; 'you had better come inside. It will be more
-comfortable. But, indeed, indeed, you have bewildered me!'
-
-The girl laughed, soft and low, and my mother's heart went out to her.
-The next minute we were in the parlour again. My mother motioned that
-she would have to be very quiet, and pointed to a seat. Before our
-visitor sat down, she took off her bonnet and mantle, and laid them
-aside. The presence of this slight graceful creature was like a new
-revelation to me; the common room became idealised by a subtle charm.
-But how was it all to end? An hour ago she was not here; and I
-wondered how we could have been happy and contented without her. She
-was exceedingly pretty, and her face was full of expression. That,
-indeed, was one of her strongest charms. When she spoke, it was not
-only her tongue that spoke. Her eyes, her hands, the movements of her
-head, put life and soul into her words, and made them sparkle. Her
-hair was cut short, and just touched her shoulders; its colour was a
-light auburn. Her hands were small and white; I noticed them
-particularly as she took from the table the book I had been reading.
-
-Are you fond of reading?' she asked, in a low tone.
-
-'Yes,' I answered. It really seemed to me as if I had known her for
-years. 'Are you?'
-
-'I love it. I like to read in bed. Then I don't care for anything.'
-
-Soon she was skimming through 'Picciola;' but looking up she noticed
-that my mother's eyes were fixed admiringly upon her. She laid the
-book aside and approached my mother, so that her words might not be
-lost.
-
-'It makes it strong to cut it, does it not?' was the first question.
-
-'Makes what strong?' My mother did not know to what it was our visitor
-referred. I made a shrewd guess, mentally, and discovered that I was
-right.
-
-'The hair. To cut it when one is young, as mine is cut, makes it
-strong?'
-
-'Yes, my dear. It will be all the better for being cut.'
-
-'Why do you call me your dear?'
-
-My mother replied gently, with a slight hesitancy: 'I won't, if you
-don't like me to.'
-
-'Oh, but I like it! And it sounds nice from you. It will be all the
-better for being cut! That's what _I_ think. It was nearly down to my
-waist. Do you like it?'
-
-'It is very pretty.'
-
-'And soft, is it not? Feel it. When I was a little child, it was much
-lighter--almost like gold. I used to be glad to hear people say, "What
-beautiful hair that child has got!"'
-
-'It will get darker as you grow older.'
-
-'I don't want it to. I'll sit in the sun as much as ever I can, so
-that it sha'n't grow darker.'
-
-'Why, my----'
-
-'Dear. Say it, please!'
-
-'My dear, have you been told that that is the way to keep hair light?'
-
-'No, but I think it is. It must be the best way.' This with a positive
-air, as if contradiction were out of the question.
-
-'If you are so fond of your hair, what made you say just now that you
-wished you were a boy?'
-
-'Because I do wish it. I think it is a shame. Persons ought to have
-their choice before they're born, whether they would be boys or
-girls.'
-
-'My dear!'
-
-'Yes, they ought to have, and you can't help agreeing with me. Then I
-should have been a boy, and things would have been different. All that
-I should have wanted would have been to grow tall and strong. Men have
-no business to be little. But as I am a girl, I must grow as pretty as
-I can.'
-
-And she smoothed her hair from her forehead with her small white
-hands, and looked at us and smiled with her eyes and her lips. All
-this was done with such an utter absence of conscious vanity that it
-deepened my admiration of her, and I was ready to take sides with her
-against the world in any proposition she might choose to lay down.
-That she saw this expressed in my face, and that she, in an easy
-graceful way, received the homage I paid her, as being naturally her
-due, and did her best--again without conscious artifice--to strengthen
-it, were as plainly conveyed by her demeanour towards me as though she
-had expressed it in so many words. It struck me as strange that my
-mother did not ask her any questions concerning herself, not even her
-name, nor where she lived, nor what was her errand; and although all
-of these questions, and especially the first, were on the tip of my
-tongue a dozen times, I did not have the courage to shape them in
-words. My mother not saying anything more to her, she turned towards
-me.
-
-'Are you generally rude to girls--I mean to young ladies?'
-
-'No,' I protested warmly, ransacking my mind for the clue.
-
-'You were to me just now. You said that I spoke nonsense.'
-
-'I am very sorry,' I stammered; I beg your pardon; but when you said
-your box walked here----'
-
-'You shouldn't have asked foolish questions. Never mind; we are
-friends again.' She gave me her hand, quite as though we had had a
-serious quarrel, which was now made up. Then she nestled a little
-closer to me, and proceeded with 'Picciola.'
-
-Nothing further was said until the scene assumed another aspect. I was
-looking over the pages of the story with her, when, raising my eyes, I
-saw that uncle Bryan was awake. His eyes were fixed on the girl, with
-a sort of bewilderment on his face as to whether he was asleep or
-awake. He looked neither at my mother nor me, but only at the girl.
-Her head was bent over the book, and he could not see her face. I
-plucked her dress furtively under the table, and she looked up, and
-met my uncle's gaze. Then I noticed his usual sign of agitation, the
-twitching of his lips.
-
-'What is this, Emma? he demanded, presently, of my mother.
-
-My mother had been waiting for him to speak. 'This young----'
-
-'Lady,' added the girl quickly, as my mother slightly hesitated, and
-rising with great composure. 'Say it. I like to hear it. This young
-lady----'
-
-Completely dominated by the girl's gentle imperiousness, my mother
-said, 'This young lady has come to see you.'
-
-He glanced at her uncovered head; then at her bonnet and mantle. A
-flush came into her cheeks, and she exclaimed,
-
-'Oh, I don't want to stop, if you're not agreeable. I only like
-agreeable people. But if you turn me out to-night I don't exactly know
-where to go to; and there's my box----'
-
-'Your box!'
-
-'Yes, with all my things in. It's in the shop. You can go and see if
-you don't believe me. But if you do go, I sha'n't like you. You have
-no right to doubt my word.'
-
-Her eyes filled with tears, and these and the words of helplessness
-she had spoken were sufficient for my mother. She drew the girl to her
-side with a protecting motion.
-
-'Are you a stranger about here, my dear?'
-
-'I don't know anything of the place,' replied the girl, in a more
-childlike tone than she had yet used. 'I have no idea where I
-am--except that this is Paradise-row. I shouldn't like to wander about
-the streets at this time of night.'
-
-'There is no need, my dear, there is no need. There, there! don't
-cry.'
-
-'But of course,' continued the girl, striving to restrain the
-quivering of her lips, 'I would sooner do that than stop where I am
-not wanted.' She would have said more, but I saw that she was fearful
-of breaking down, and thus showing signs of weakness. I looked
-somewhat angrily towards uncle Bryan; my mother's arm was still around
-the girl's waist. With a quick comprehension he seized all the points
-of sentiment in the picture.
-
-'Ah,' he growled, this is more like a leaf out of a story-book than
-anything else. You'--to the girl--'are injured innocence; you'--to my
-mother--'are the good genius of the oppressed; and I am the dragon
-whom St. George here'--meaning me--'would like to spit on his lance.'
-
-'I am sure, Bryan--' commenced my mother, in a tone of mild
-remonstrance; but uncle Bryan interrupted her.
-
-'Don't be sure of anything, Emma. Let me understand matters first. How
-long have I been asleep--days, weeks, or years?'
-
-'Nearly two hours, Bryan.'
-
-'So long! There was a man once who, at the bidding of a magician, but
-dipped his head into a bucket of water----' he paused moodily.
-
-'Yes, yes!' exclaimed the girl eagerly, advancing a step towards him,
-with a desire to propitiate him. 'Go on. Tell me about him. I'm fond
-of stories about magicians.'
-
-He stared at her. 'Injured innocence,' he said, 'speak when you're
-spoken to.' She tossed her head, and retreated, and uncle Bryan again
-questioned my mother. 'How long has this little----'
-
-'Young lady,' interposed the girl, with rather a comical assertion of
-independence.
-
---'This little girl--how long has she been here?'
-
-'About an hour, Bryan.'
-
-'Long enough, I see, to make herself quite at home.' He seemed to be
-at a loss for words, and sat drumming his fingers on the table, moving
-his lips as if he were holding converse with them, and with his eyes
-turned from us.
-
-In the silence that ensued, the girl stole towards him. My mother's
-footstool was near his chair, and she sat upon it, and resting her
-hand timidly on his knee, said, in a sweet pleading voice,
-
-'I wish you would be kind to me.'
-
-Her face was upturned to his. He looked down upon it, and placing his
-hands on her shoulders, said in a tone which was both low and bitter,
-which was harsh from passion and tender from a softer emotion which he
-could not control,
-
-'For God's sake, child, tell me who you are! What is your name?'
-
-'My name is Jessie Trim.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-A SUDDEN SHOCK.
-
-
-'Emma,' said my uncle, 'can you find something to do for a few
-minutes? Chris can shut up the shop.'
-
-We went out of the parlour together, and I put up the shutters, and
-bolted them. Then my mother and I went downstairs to the kitchen, and
-my mother set light to the fire, and warmed up what remained of the
-day's dinner. Our usual supper was bread-and-cheese.
-
-'She must be hungry,' said my mother, and I think it will please your
-uncle.'
-
-'I am glad she is going to stay, mother. Do you think she will stop
-altogether with us?'
-
-'I have no idea, child.'
-
-'Jessie Trim! It's a pretty name, isn't it? Jessie, Jessie! Mother,
-why didn't you ask her her name when she came in?'
-
-'She came to see your uncle, Chris. We must never forget one thing, my
-dear. This is his house, and he has been very kind to us.'
-
-'He would be angry if he heard you say so.'
-
-'That is his nature, and I should not say it to him. The least we can
-do in return for all his goodness is to study him in every possible
-way in our power. To have asked her all about herself might have been
-like stealing into his confidence. He may have secrets which he would
-not wish us to know.'
-
-'Secrets! Do you think _she_ is one of them?'
-
-'How can she be? But let you and me make up our minds, my dear--I made
-up mine a long time ago, Chris--not to be too curious concerning
-anything your uncle does. If he wished us to know anything, he would
-tell us of his own free will.'
-
-'I don't suppose he has anything to tell,' I said, with not the
-slightest belief in my own words.
-
-'Perhaps not. Anyhow, we'll not say anything--eh, Chris?'
-
-'Very well, mother. She is very pretty, isn't she?'
-
-'Very, very pretty.'
-
-'Such beautiful hair--and such white hands!'
-
-I was proceeding with my raptures, when my mother tapped my cheek
-merrily, which brought the blood into my face strangely enough. 'At
-all events,' I said, I hope she will stay with us always.'
-
-'You stupid Chris! What has got into your head? I really don't suppose
-she will stay very long.'
-
-'But she has brought her box--and--and--'
-
-My mother suddenly assumed a look of perplexity. 'Really, really now,'
-she said, sitting down, and holding me in front of her, 'I know every
-mark upon you. You have got a brown mole on your left side, and a
-little red spot like a currant on the back of your neck, and another
-one just here----' and then she paused.
-
-'Well, mother?'
-
-'Well, Chris, I really _cannot_ remember that I have ever seen a note
-of interrogation anywhere about you. Have you got one, my dear? And
-where is it?'
-
-'But, mother,' I said, laughing, and kissing her, 'I must be
-inquisitive and I must ask questions.'
-
-'Only of me, dear child.'
-
-'Well, then, only of you. Now wouldn't you grow quite fond of her?'
-
-'I am sure I should, dear.'
-
-'Well, wouldn't it be too bad, directly you got fond of her, for her
-to go away? Now wouldn't it?'
-
-'But life is full of changes, my dear!'
-
-'That's not an answer, mother. You're fond of me;'--an endearing
-caress answered me--'very, very fond, I know, and I am of you. Now,
-supposing _I_ was to go away!'
-
-'Child, child!' cried my mother, kneeling suddenly before me and
-clasping me in her arms. If I were to lose you, my heart would break!'
-
-I was frightened at the vehement passion of her words, and at the
-white face upon which my eyes rested; but she grew more composed
-presently. Then the voice of uncle Bryan was heard at the top of the
-stairs, calling to us to come up.
-
-'What can we do with our visitor to-night, Emma?' he said, thus
-indicating that matters had been arranged during our absence.
-
-'She can sleep with me. You won't mind, my dear?'
-
-'I shall like to,' replied Jessie. He's ever so much nicer than he
-was, although I can't say that he's at all polite.' This referred to
-uncle Bryan, who made a grimace. 'I couldn't help coming.'
-
-'The least said,' observed uncle Bryan, with all his usual manner upon
-him, 'the soonest mended, young lady.'
-
-She pursed up her lips: Young lady! That was all very well when we
-were distant. You may call me something else now, if you like.'
-
-'Indeed! Well, then, Miss Trim.'
-
-She laughed saucily. How funny it sounds as you say it! Miss Trim! I
-think we are quite intimate enough for you to call me Jessie.'
-
-'You think!' retorted uncle Bryan, with some sense of enjoyment.
-
-'You are given to thinking, I have no doubt.'
-
-'Oh, yes; I think a good deal.'
-
-'Upon my word What about?'
-
-'All sorts of things that wouldn't interest you.'
-
-I quite believe you, young lady.'
-
-'Oh, if you like to call me that,' she said, with a shrug of her
-shoulders, you can. 'But I think it's a pity when people try to make
-themselves more disagreeable than they naturally are.'
-
-For the life of him, uncle Bryan could not help laughing. This little
-play of words was to him what the world is always looking out for
-nowadays--a new sensation.
-
-'Then I am naturally disagreeable, you think?'
-
-She did not reply.
-
-'What else do you think about me?'
-
-'I think it must be uncomfortable for the others for you to go to
-sleep every night, with a handkerchief over your face.'
-
-'If I had known you were coming----' he said, with mock politeness;
-but she interrupted him with wonderful quickness.
-
-'Don't say unkind things. I feel when they are coming; my flesh begins
-to creep.'
-
-'Do you think anything else about me?'
-
-'Yes; I think you might give me some supper. You can't know how hungry
-I am; and I have always a good appetite.'
-
-My mother was so intent upon this unusual dialogue, and was probably
-so lost in wonder (as I myself was) at the appearance of uncle Bryan
-in a new character, that she had entirely forgotten the supper; but at
-Jessie Trim's mention of it she ran downstairs, and it was soon on
-the table.
-
-'Ah,' exclaimed Jessie, with approving nods; 'that smells nice.'
-
-Uncle Bryan stared at the unexpected fare.
-
-'You see what it is to be a young lady,' he said; hitherto we have
-always been contented with bread-and-cheese.'
-
-'This is much nicer,' said Jessie, beginning to eat; 'are you not
-going to have some?'
-
-'No. Give me some bread-and-cheese, Emma.'
-
-The girl was too much occupied with her supper to bandy words with
-him; she ate heartily, and when she had finished, asked uncle Bryan if
-he did not feel in a better humour.
-
-'_I_ always do,' she remarked, 'after meals. There is only one thing I
-want now to make me feel quite amiable.'
-
-'Then,' said uncle Bryan sententiously, 'all the trouble in the world
-would come to an end.'
-
-She nodded acquiescently.
-
-'And that one thing is----' he questioned.
-
-'Something I sha'n't get. I see it in your face; it is really too much
-to ask for.'
-
-'To put an end to all the trouble in the world, I would make a
-sacrifice.'
-
-'No,' she said, shaking her head, I really haven't courage to ask.'
-
-'What is it?' demanded uncle Bryan impatiently.
-
-Then ensued a perfect piece of comedy-acting on the part of Jessie
-Trim; who, when she had worked uncle Bryan almost into a passion, made
-the prettiest of curtseys, and said that the only thing she wanted to
-make her feel quite amiable was a piece of candied lemon-peel.
-
-'I always,' she added, with the oddest little twinkle in her eyes,
-'like something sweet to finish my meals with.'
-
-The expression on uncle Bryan's face was so singular that I did not
-know if he was going to laugh or storm. But Jessie got her piece of
-candied lemon-peel, and chewed it with great contentment, and with
-many sly looks at uncle Bryan.
-
-'Now, then,' he cried, 'it is time to go to bed.'
-
-'It isn't healthy,' observed Jessie, who seemed determined to upset
-all the rules of the house, 'to go to bed the moment after one has
-eaten a heavy supper.' She spoke with perfect gravity, and with the
-serious authority of a grown-up woman.
-
-'Then we are to sit up after our time because you have over-eaten
-yourself.'
-
-'I have not over-eaten myself: I have had just enough. I wish you
-wouldn't say disagreeable things; you would find it much nicer not to.
-If you think I am not right in what I say about going to bed
-immediately after supper, of course I will go. You are much older than
-I, and ought to be much wiser.'
-
-'But I think you _are_ right,' he growled.
-
-'Why do you make yourself disagreeable then?' she asked, sitting down
-on the stool at his feet.
-
-Not a word was spoken for half an hour; at the end of which time our
-visitor rose, just as if she were the mistress of the house, and
-remarked that now she _did_ think it time we were all in bed.
-
-'Good-night,' she said, giving him her hand; 'I hope I haven't vexed
-you.' She held up her face to him to be kissed, but he did not avail
-himself of the invitation, and retired to his room.
-
-'He is a very strange man,' she said to us, and I don't quite know
-whether I like him or whether I don't. Good-night, Chris.'
-
-'Good-night, Jessie.'
-
-My mind was full of her and her quaint ways as I undressed myself, and
-I found myself unconsciously repeating, 'Good-night, Jessie! Jessie!
-Jessie!' Her name was to me the sweetest of morsels. 'I am glad she
-has come,' I thought; 'I hope she will stop.' I had not been in my
-room two minutes before I heard her knocking at the door of the room
-in which uncle Bryan slept. I crept to the wall to listen.
-
-'Do you hear me?' she said. 'You can't be asleep already.'
-
-But no response came from uncle Bryan.
-
-'Do answer me!' she continued. 'If you think I have been rude to you,
-I am very sorry. I shall catch my death of cold if I stand here long.
-Say, good-night, Jessie!'
-
-'Good-night.'
-
-'Jessie!' she called out archly.
-
-'Good-night, Jessie. Now go to bed, like a good--little girl.'
-
-And then the house was quiet, and I fell asleep, and dreamt the
-strangest and sweetest dreams about our new friend.
-
-The following morning when I rose I moved about very quietly, and I
-debated with myself whether I ought to bid my mother good-morning as
-usual. I stole softly upstairs, and put my ear to the door.
-
-'Good-morning, mother.'
-
-I almost whispered the words, but the reply came instantly, in clear
-sweet tones,
-
-'Good-morning, dear child.'
-
-She must have been listening for my step.
-
-Is that you, Chris?' inquired a voice which, if I had not known the
-speaker, I should have imagined had proceeded from a little child.
-
-'Yes, Jessie,' I answered, with a thrill of delight.
-
-'Where are you going?'
-
-'I am going to work.'
-
-'Good-morning.'
-
-'Good-morning.'
-
-I had never been so happy in my work as I was during this day, and yet
-I wanted the hours to fly so that I might be home again. When eight
-o'clock struck, I whipped off my apron eagerly, and ran out of the
-office. My mother was at the gate.
-
-'I didn't expect you, mother.'
-
-'No, dear child. I wished to leave your uncle and Jessie together for
-a little while. She wanted to come with me, but I thought it best to
-leave her at home. Shall we take a walk, my dear?'
-
-'Yes, but not a long one. Mother, who is she?'
-
-'I do not know, my dear; and your uncle hasn't said a word--neither
-has she.'
-
-'Not a word! Why, mother, she couldn't keep quiet!'
-
-'I don't think she could, dear,' said my mother, with a smile. 'I mean
-not a word as to who she is. I think she gave your uncle a letter, for
-he has been writing to-day with one before him; but I am not sure.'
-
-'I have been thinking about her all day, and I can't make her out.
-Anyhow, I hope she will stop with us. The house is quite different
-with her in it. Don't you think so? She is as light-hearted and as
-sparkling as a--a sunbeam.' I thought it a very happy simile. 'She
-couldn't be anything else.'
-
-'My dear,' said my mother gravely, she was sobbing in her sleep last
-night as if her heart would break.' I looked so grieved at this that
-my mother quickly added, But she has been talking to your uncle to-day
-just as she did last night. She is like an April day; but then she is
-quite a child.'
-
-'A child! Why, mother, she must be--how old should _you_ think?'
-
-'About fifteen, I should say, Chris.'
-
-'So how can she be quite a child? And she doesn't talk like a child.'
-
-'She does and she doesn't, my dear. I shouldn't wonder,' she said,
-with her sweet laugh, that because you are nearly eighteen, you think
-yourself quite a man.'
-
-'I _am_ growing, mother, am I not?' And I straightened myself stiffly
-up. Why, I am taller than you!'
-
-'You will be as tall as your father was, my dear.'
-
-'I am glad of that. She said men had no business to be little.'
-
-'_She_ said!' repeated my mother, laughing; and she tapped my cheek
-merrily, as she had done on the previous night, and again I blushed.
-Jessie ran into the shop to welcome us when we arrived home.
-
-The evening passed very happily with me, Jessie entertaining us with
-her light talk. Her marvellous ingenuity, in twisting a few simple
-words so as to make them bear sparkling meanings, afforded me endless
-enjoyment. Uncle Bryan said very little, and notwithstanding the many
-challenges she slyly threw out to him, declined to be drawn into
-battle; but now and then she provoked him to answer her. He needed all
-his skill to hold his own against her, and he spoke rather roughly to
-her once or twice. On those occasions she became grave, and edged
-closer to my mother, having already learned that nothing but what was
-gentle could emanate from her tender nature. When Jessie went to bed
-with my mother, she did not hold up her face to be kissed, as she had
-done on the previous night. I do not think she debated the point with
-herself, whether she should do so; she gave him a rapid look when she
-wished him good-night, and decided on the instant--as she would have
-decided the other way had she seen anything in his face to encourage
-her. A week passed, and no word of explanation fell from uncle Bryan's
-lips as to the connection that existed between these two opposite
-beings; but I could not help observing that he grew more and more
-reserved, more and more thoughtful. In after days I recognised how
-strange a household ours really was during this period, but it did not
-strike me at the time, so entirely was I wrapped up in the new sense
-of happiness which Jessie Trim had brought into my life. Of the four
-persons who composed the household only Jessie and I were really
-happy. My mother was distressed because of uncle Bryan's growing
-moroseness; with unobtrusive gentleness she strove, in a hundred
-little ways, to break through the wall of silence and reserve which he
-built around himself, as it were, but she could scarcely win a word
-from his lips. It did not trouble me; my mind, was occupied only with
-Jessie. What Jessie did, what Jessie said, how Jessie looked and felt
-and thought--that was the world in which I moved now. A second week
-passed, and there was still no change. One night my mother said that
-she would come for me on the following evening.
-
-'And bring Jessie,' I suggested, taking advantage of the opportunity
-which I had been waiting for all the week; 'a walk will do her good.'
-
-Jessie's eyes sparkled at the suggestion.
-
-'I should like to come,' she said, with a grateful look; 'I haven't
-had a walk since I came here. What are you thinking about?' to my
-mother.
-
-'I am thinking,' replied my mother, 'whether there will be any
-objection to it.'
-
-'On whose part?' I asked. 'Uncle Bryan's? Why, what objection can he
-have?'
-
-'I am sure,' said Jessie, he won't care, one way or another; he
-doesn't care about anything, and especially about me. Why, how many
-words do you think he has spoken to me all this day, Chris?'
-
-'I can't guess, Jessie.'
-
-She counted on her fingers. One, two, three--sixteen. "I don't know
-anything about it! Be quiet! You're a magpie--nothing but chatter,
-chatter, chatter!" and he didn't speak them--he growled them. So he
-can't care. I shall come, Chris,'--pressing close to my mother
-coaxingly--'and we'll take a nice long walk.'
-
-'Very well, my dear,' said my mother, with a smile; 'but I _must_ ask
-your uncle, Chris.'
-
-I mapped out in my mind the pleasantest walk I knew, and on the
-following night, when work was over, I hastened into the street; but
-neither my mother nor Jessie was there. I looked about for them, and
-waited for a quarter of an hour, and then raced home. Only my mother
-was in the house.
-
-'Why didn't you come, mother?' I asked. 'I've been waiting ever so
-long. And where's Jessie?'
-
-'My dear,' replied my mother, with her arm around my waist, 'Jessie
-has gone.'
-
-'Gone! Oh, for a walk with uncle Bryan, I suppose?'
-
-'No, my dear; she has gone away altogether.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-THE WORLD BECOMES BRIGHT AGAIN.
-
-'Gone away altogether!'
-
-I echoed the words, but the news was so sudden and unexpected that for
-a few moments I did not quite understand their meaning. I had never,
-until the last fortnight, had a friend so nearly of my own age as
-Jessie; and the companionship had been to me so sweet and delightful,
-and so altogether new, that to lose it now seemed like losing the best
-part of my life. I released myself from my mother's embrace, and ran
-upstairs to her bedroom, to look for Jessie's box. It was gone, and
-the room was in all respects the same as it had been before Jessie's
-arrival. Until that time it had always worn a cheerful aspect in my
-eyes, but now it looked cold and desolate; the happy experiences of
-the last two weeks seemed to me like a dream--but a dream which, now
-that it had passed away, filled my heart with pain.
-
-'Her box is gone,' I said, with quivering lips, when I rejoined my
-mother.
-
-'It was taken away this morning, my dear.'
-
-'That shows that she is not coming back; and I shall never, never see
-her again!'
-
-My mother did not reply. The feeling that now stole upon me was one of
-resentment towards uncle Bryan. Who was to blame but he? From the
-first he had behaved harshly towards her. He saw that we were fond of
-her, and he was jealous of her. He was always cold and unsympathetic
-and unkind. Every unreasonable suggestion that presented itself to me
-with reference to him, I welcomed and accepted as an argument against
-him; and to this effect I spoke hotly and intemperately.
-
-'Chris, Chris, my dear!' remonstrated my mother; 'you should not have
-hard thoughts towards your uncle.'
-
-'I can't help it; he almost asks for them. He won't let us like
-him--he won't! I don't care if he hears me say so.'
-
-'He can't hear you, my dear; he went away with Jessie this morning.'
-
-'Where to?'
-
-'I have no idea, Chris; he did not tell me.'
-
-'And wouldn't, if you had asked,' I said bitterly.
-
-My mother sighed, but said, with gentle firmness, 'I had no right to
-ask, my dear.'
-
-'Then we are alone in the house, mother.'
-
-'Yes, my dear, for a little while. Sit down, and I will tell you all
-about it.'
-
-I sat down, and my mother sat beside me, and took my hand in hers.
-
-'It came upon me as suddenly as it has come upon you, my dear, and I
-am almost as sorry as you are. But life is full of such changes, my
-dear child.'
-
-'Go on, mother.' In my rebellious mood her gentle words brought no
-comfort to me.
-
-'When I said last night that I would come for you this evening, I had
-no idea that anything would have prevented me. I intended to bring
-Jessie, and I looked forward with pleasure to the walk we intended to
-take. I did not tell your uncle that Jessie would come with me; I
-thought I would wait till teatime. Lately I have considered it more
-than ever my duty to study him, because of the change that has taken
-place in him--you have noticed it yourself, my dear--since Jessie
-came so strangely among us. For it was strange, was it not, my
-dear?--almost as strange as her going away so suddenly, and as
-unexpected too; for I am certain your uncle did not expect her, and
-that he was as much surprised as we were. He is not to blame,
-therefore, for what has occurred now. It is not for us, dear child, to
-find fault with him because he is silent and reserved with us; the
-only feeling we ought to have towards him is one of deep gratitude for
-his great kindness to us. You don't forget our sad condition, my
-darling, on the morning we received your uncle's letter.'
-
-'No, mother, I don't forget,' I said, somewhat softened towards uncle
-Bryan.
-
-'He did not deceive us; he spoke plainly and honestly, and the
-brightest expectations we could have entertained from his offer, and
-the manner in which it was made, have been more than realised. Is it
-not so, dear child?'
-
-In common honesty I was compelled to admit that it was so.
-
-'I shudder when I think what might have become of my dear boy if it
-had not been for this one friend--this one only friend, my darling, in
-all the wide, wide world!--who stepped forward so unselfishly to save
-us. And we have been so happy here, my darling, so very, very happy,
-all these years! If a cloud has come, have we not still a little
-sunshine left? There, there, my dear!' returning my kisses, and wiping
-her eyes; 'as I was saying'--(although she had said nothing of the
-kind; but she was flurried and nervous)--'and as I told you once
-before, I think Jessie gave your uncle a letter, and that I saw him,
-the day after she came, writing, with this letter before him. Every
-morning since then I have observed him watch for the arrival of the
-postman in the neighbourhood, and every time the postman passed
-without giving him the letter which I saw he expected, he grew more
-anxious. This morning he reminded me that I had some errands to make;
-I was away for nearly two hours, and when I came home he and Jessie
-were in the shop, dressed for walking. What passed after that was so
-quick and rapid that I was quite bewildered. Your uncle, beckoning me
-into the parlour, said that he and Jessie were going away, and that I
-was to take care of the shop while he was absent. "I want you not to
-ask any questions," he said, seeing, I suppose, that I was about to
-ask some. "I shall be away for two or three days, perhaps longer. Do
-the best you can. You had better wish Jessie good-bye now." I could
-not help asking, "Is she coming back with you?" And he said, "No." I
-was so grieved, Chris, that when I went into the shop, where Jessie
-was waiting, I was crying. "You are sorry I am going, then," she said.
-"Indeed, indeed, I am, my dear," I replied, as I kissed her. She
-kissed me quite affectionately, and said she was glad I was sorry, and
-that I was to give her love to you----'
-
-'Did she say that, mother? Did she?'
-
-'Yes, my dear. "Give my love to Chris," she said, "and say how sorry I
-am to go away without seeing him." And the next minute she was gone. I
-thought of her box then, and I ran upstairs, as you did just now, and
-found that it had been taken away while I was out. And that is all I
-know, my dear.'
-
-'It is very strange,' I said, after a long pause. Mother, what do you
-think of it, eh?'
-
-'My dear, I don't know what to think. The more I think, the more I am
-confused. And now, my dear----'
-
-'Yes, mother.'
-
-'We must make ourselves happy in our old way, and we must attend to
-the business properly until your uncle returns.'
-
-Make ourselves happy in our old way! How was that possible? The light
-had gone out of the house. The very room in which we three--uncle
-Bryan, my mother, and I--had spent so many pleasant days before Jessie
-came, looked cold and comfortless now. Even the figure of my dear
-mother, bustling cheerfully about, and the sweet considerate manner in
-which she strove, in many tender ways, to soften my sorrow, were not a
-recompense for the loss of Jessie. I opened my book and pretended to
-be occupied with it, and my mother, with that rare wisdom which
-springs from perfect unselfish love, did not disturb my musings. The
-evening passed very quietly, and directly the shop was shut, I went to
-bed. I was in a very unhappy mood, and it was past midnight before I
-fell asleep. I did not think of my mother, or of the pain she was
-suffering through me. My grief was intensely selfish; I had not the
-strength which often comes from suffering, nor was I blessed with such
-a nature as my mother's--a nature which does not colour surrounding
-circumstances with the melancholy hue of its own sorrows. Unhappily,
-it falls to the lot of few to be brought within the sweet influence of
-one whose mission on earth seems to be to shed the light of peace and
-love upon those among whom her lot is cast, and to whom, unless we are
-ungratefully forgetful, as I was on this night, we look instinctively
-for comfort and consolation when trouble comes to us. In the middle of
-the night, I awoke suddenly, and found my mother sitting by my bed;
-she was in her nightdress, and there was a light in the room.
-
-'Why, mother!' I exclaimed, confused for a moment.
-
-'Don't be alarmed, dear child,' she said; 'there's nothing the matter;
-but I could not sleep, knowing that you were unhappy. You too, my
-dear, were a long time before you went to sleep.'
-
-Then I knew that she must have watched and waited at my bedroom door
-until I had blown out my candle.
-
-'What time is it, mother?'
-
-'It must be three o'clock, my dear.'
-
-'O, mother! And you awake at this time of the night for me!'
-
-She smiled softly. Something of worship for that pure nature stole
-into my heart as I looked into her dear eyes. But there was grief in
-them, too, and I asked her the reason.
-
-'Do you know, my darling,' she said, with a wistful yearning look, and
-with a sigh which she vainly strove to check, that you went to bed
-to-night without kissing me? For the first time in your life, dear
-child; for the first time in your life!'
-
-In a passion of remorse I threw my arms around her neck, and kissed
-her again and again, and asked her forgiveness, and said, 'How could
-I--how could I be so unloving and unkind?' But she stopped my
-self-reproaches with her lips on my lips, and with broken words of joy
-and thankfulness. She folded me in her arms, and there was silence
-between us for many minutes--silence made sacred by love as pure and
-faithful as ever dwelt in woman's breast. Then I drew the clothes
-around her, and she lay by my side, saying that she would wait until I
-was asleep.
-
-'This is like the old time, mother,' I whispered, 'when there was no
-one else but you and me. But I love you more than I did then, mother.'
-
-'My darling child!' she whispered, in return; 'how you comfort me! But
-I won't have my dear boy speak another word, except good-night.'
-
-We looked out on the following day for a letter from uncle Bryan, but
-none came, nor any news of him. It was the same on the second day, and
-the third. My mother began to grow uneasy.
-
-'If he had only left word where he was going to!' she said. 'I am
-afraid he must be ill.'
-
-The business went on very well without him, thanks to my mother's
-care and attention, except that on Saturday night the supply of 'uncle
-Bryan's pills,' as they had got to be called in the neighbourhood, ran
-short, which occasioned my mother much concern. Sunday and Monday
-passed, and still no tidings of him. On the Tuesday--I remember the
-day well: we were very busy where I was employed, and I did not come
-home until past ten o'clock--the shop was shut--a most unusual thing.
-I knocked at the door hurriedly, and my mother, with happiness in her
-face, opened it for me.
-
-'Uncle Bryan has come home!' I cried, in a hearty tone.
-
-She nodded gladly, and I ran in, and threw my arms about him. I think
-he was pleased with this spontaneous mark of affection; but he looked
-at me curiously too, I thought. We sat down--the three of us--and a
-dead silence ensued. We all looked at each other, and spoke not a
-word.
-
-'What's the matter, mother?' I asked, for certainly so strange a
-silence needed explanation.
-
-A sweet laugh answered me, and my heart almost leaped into my throat.
-I darted behind the door, and there stood Jessie Trim, bending
-forward, with eager face, and sparkling eyes, and hand uplifted to her
-ear. But when she saw that she was discovered, her manner changed
-instantly. She came forward, quite demurely.
-
-'Are you glad?' she asked gravely, with her hand in mine.
-
-My looks were a sufficient answer.
-
-'And now,' she said, sitting down on the stool, and resting her hands
-on her lap, we are going to live happily together for ever
-afterwards.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-JESSIE'S ROSEWATER PHILOSOPHY.
-
-
-Her voice was like music to my heart. With Jessie on one side of me,
-and my mother on the other, there was not a cloud on my life, nor room
-for one. I sat between them, now patting my mother's hand, now turning
-restlessly to Jessie, and looking at her in delight. But the change in
-the aspect of things was so sudden and unexpected, that it would not
-have much amazed me to see Jessie melt into thin air. This must have
-been expressed in my face, for Jessie, who was a skilful interpreter
-of expression, whispered,
-
-'It is true; I have really come back.'
-
-'I was doubting,' I said, in a similar low tone, 'whether I was asleep
-or awake.'
-
-'Don't speak loud,' she said mockingly, 'don't look at me too hard,
-and don't blow on me, or you will find that you're only dreaming.
-Shall I pinch you?'
-
-'No; I am awake, I know. This is the most famous thing that ever
-happened.'
-
-'You were sorry when I went away, then?'
-
-'I can't tell you how sorry; but you are not going away again?'
-
-'I suppose not; I have no place to go to.'
-
-There was a change in her manner; she was more thoughtful and sedate
-than usual, and her face was pale; but I noted these signs only in a
-casual way. To be certain that everything was right, I went out of the
-room to see if her box had been brought back. It was in its old place
-in my mother's bedroom. My mother had followed me.
-
-'So you are happy again, my dear,' she said, as we stood, like lovers,
-with our arms around each other's waist.
-
-'I _am_ glad, mother,' I replied, pressing her fondly to me; 'and so
-are you too, I know. But tell me how it all happened.'
-
-'There is very little to tell, dear child. I was as surprised as you
-were. I was having tea when your uncle and Jessie came in suddenly; it
-gave me quite a turn, for Jessie, as you see, is in mourning.' (I had
-not noticed it, and I wondered at my blindness.) 'Your uncle looked
-worn and anxious, and they were both very tired, as if they had come a
-long distance. "I have not quite deserted you, you see," your uncle
-said. I told him how glad I was he had returned, and how anxious we
-had been about him. "And Jessie, too," I said. "I was afraid I was not
-to see her again." "You will see a great deal of her for the future,"
-said your uncle; "she will live with us now. She must sleep with you,
-as there is no other room in the house for her." And that is
-positively all I have to tell, Chris, except that Jessie has been very
-quiet all the evening, and only showed her old spirits when your knock
-was heard at the street-door.'
-
-'And Jessie has told you nothing, mother?'
-
-'Nothing, dear child; and I have not asked.'
-
-'You don't even know whom she is in mourning for?'
-
-'No, my dear.'
-
-Jessie was displaying more of her old spirits when my mother and I
-went downstairs; as we entered the room she was saying to uncle
-Bryan,
-
-'I wish you would tell me what I _am_ to call you. I can't call you
-Bryan, and I don't like Mr. Carey. I could invent a name certainly, if
-I wanted to be spiteful.'
-
-'What name?' he asked, in his rough manner.
-
-'Never mind. You'd like to know, so that you could bark and fight.
-What _shall_ I call you?'
-
-'Call me what you please,' he answered.
-
-'Well, then, I shall call you uncle Bryan, as Chris does; I daresay I
-shall get used to it in time.'
-
-Soon after this point was settled I found an opportunity to touch
-Jessie's black dress, and to press her hand sympathisingly. She
-understood the meaning of the action, and her lips quivered; she did
-not speak another word until she went to bed. The events of the
-evening had for a time driven from my head news which I had to tell,
-and which I knew would be received with pleasure. My errand-running
-days were over. My employer, whose name was Eden, satisfied with the
-manner in which I had performed my duties, had placed me on the
-footing of a regular apprentice, and I was to learn the art of
-wood-engraving in all its branches. A fair career was therefore open
-to me. It is needless for me to say how these glad tidings rejoiced my
-dear mother.
-
-'Mr. Eden,' I said, 'has often asked to see my little sketches, and
-has been pleased with them, I think. He told me that he commenced in
-the same way himself, and he has given me every encouragement. He says
-that in three years I shall be able to earn good wages. Who knows? I
-may have a business of my own one day.'
-
-And you have only yourself to thank for it, my dear child; said my
-mother, casting looks of pride around.
-
-'No, mother; you are wrong. I have kept the best bit to the last. Mr.
-Eden has spoken of you a good many times--he has often seen you, you
-know, when you came for me of an evening--and I have told him all
-about you. When he called me into his office this afternoon, he said
-that I had you to thank for this promotion, and that I was to tell you
-so, with his compliments.'
-
-'Why, my dear!' exclaimed my mother; Mr. Eden has never spoken one
-word to me.'
-
-'But he has seen you,' interrupted uncle Bryan, the tone and meaning
-of his words being strangely at variance, and that is enough. Mr. Eden
-is right, Chris. Whatever good fortune comes to you in life, you have
-only one person in the world to thank for it.'
-
-'I think so too, uncle.' His words softened me towards him, and I went
-to his side, and said gratefully, 'You have been very good to me, sir,
-also.'
-
-'Psha!' he said, with an impatient movement of his head. 'Emma, if you
-will fill my pipe for me, I will smoke it.'
-
-The pipe we had presented to him on his birthday had not yet been
-used, and my mother took it from the mantelshelf, filled it, and
-handed it to him. He received it with a kind of growl, implying that
-he had been conquered unawares, but he smoked it with much inward
-contentment nevertheless.
-
-I was so excitedly happy when I went to bed that I was as long getting
-to sleep as I was on the night of Jessie's sudden disappearance. Here
-and there life is dotted with sunny spots, the light of which is but
-rarely entirely darkened, and had Jessie never returned, she might
-have dwelt in my mind as one of these; or--so surrounded with romance
-was her appearance and disappearance--I might have grown to wonder
-whether she was a creation of my fancy, or had really belonged to my
-life. But now that she was among us again, and was going to live with
-us, I felt as if a bright clear stream were flowing within me,
-invigorating and gladdening my pulses--a sweet refreshing stream
-within the range of which sadness or melancholy could find no place.
-Reason became the slave of creative thought, and within my heart
-flowers were blooming, the beautiful forms and colours of which could
-never wither and fade. Jessie had struck the key-note of my certain
-belief when she said, 'And now we are going to live happily together
-for ever afterwards.'
-
-Curious as I was to know why she had returned to us in mourning, I
-held my tongue, out of respect for my mother's wish that we should ask
-no questions. Jessie's quieter mood soon wore away; little by little
-she introduced colour into her dress, and in three months she was out
-of mourning. I fancied now and then, as these alterations in her dress
-were made, that her manner towards uncle Bryan indicated an
-expectation that he would speak to her on the subject. But he made no
-remark, and noticed her the least when most she invited notice.
-
-She changed the entire aspect of our house. It belonged to her to
-brighten, apparently without conscious effort, everything which came
-in contact with her. The contrast between her and my mother was very
-great. My mother's tastes, like her nature, were quiet and unassuming.
-Her hair was always plainly done, and, within my experience, she had
-never worn cap or flower; her dress was always of one sober tint; and
-her pale face and almost noiseless step were in keeping with these. If
-she had had the slightest reason to suppose that by placing a flower
-in her hair, and wearing a bit of bright ribbon, or by any other
-innocently-attractive device, she could have given me or uncle Bryan
-pleasure, she would have done so instantly; but, out of her entire
-disregard of self, no such thought ever entered her mind. Now Jessie
-was fond of flowers and ribbons, and was gifted with the rare faculty
-of knowing where a bit of colour, and what colour, would prove most
-attractive. From the most simple means she produced the most exquisite
-results. Her box was a perfect Pandora's box in its inexhaustible
-supply of adornments, and she was continually surprising us with
-something new, or something which she made to look like new. And she
-was by no means disposed to hide her light under a bushel. Everything
-she did must be admired, and if admiration did not come spontaneously,
-she was very prompt in asking or even begging for it. It was amusing
-to watch the tricksy efforts by which she strove to attract attention
-to anything she was wearing for the first time, however trifling it
-might be, or to the slightest change in the arrangement of her dress.
-Then, when her object was attained, she would ask, 'And do you really
-like it? Are you sure now?' or 'Would it look better so?' or 'What do
-you think of its being this way--or that?' I was the person whom she
-consulted most frequently; but I could see nothing to find fault with,
-and could never suggest any improvement; whereas uncle Bryan would
-shrug his shoulders, and mutter disparaging remarks, which never
-failed to provoke warm replies from Jessie. Then he would smile
-caustically, and hit her hard with words still more spiteful, or
-retire into his shell, according to his humour.
-
-'We will have a world made especially for you, young lady,' he
-said--whenever he was disposed to be bitter, he called her young
-lady'--'a world full of ribbons and flounces and flowers and silk
-dresses and satin shoes, and everything else you crave for.'
-
-'That would be nice,' she observed complacently.
-
-'And you shall live in it all alone, so that your title to these nice
-things shall not be disputed.'
-
-'That wouldn't do,' she answered promptly; 'what is the use of having
-nice things unless you get people to admire them?'
-
-'We will have people made to order for you, then; people who shall be
-always admiring you and praising you and flattering you.' He rung
-changes on this theme for five minutes or so, and when he paused, she
-made a grimace, as if she had been compelled to swallow a dose of
-medicine. But this kind of warfare did not alter her nature. She
-coaxed my mother to buy a pair of pretty ornaments for the
-mantelshelf; she coaxed uncle Bryan--how she managed it, heaven only
-knows! but she was cunning, and she must have entrapped him in an
-unguarded moment--to allow her to buy a piece of oil-cloth for the
-table, and she herself chose the pattern; and in many other ways she
-made it apparent that a new spirit was at work in our household. She
-made the bedroom in which she and my mother slept the prettiest room
-in the house; pictures were hung or pasted on the wall; her own
-especial looking-glass was set in a framework of white muslin,
-daintily edged with blue ribbon. 'Blue is my favourite colour,' she
-said, as she stood, the fairest object there, pointing out to me some
-trifling improvement; 'it suits my complexion.' It is not difficult to
-understand how popular she soon became in the neighbourhood; admiring
-eyes followed her whenever she appeared in the narrow streets round
-about, and I would not have changed places with an emperor when I
-walked out with her by my side. If any one quality in her could have
-made her more precious to me, it was her feeling towards my mother.
-
-'No one can help loving her,' said Jessie to me, in one of our
-confidential conversations. 'Is she ever angry with any one?'
-
-'I think not,' I replied. 'Where another person would be angry, she is
-sorry. There isn't another mother in the world like mine.'
-
-'Would you like me to be like her? Would it be better for me, do you
-think?'
-
-I like you as you are, Jessie; I shouldn't like you to alter. There
-are different kinds of good people, you know.'
-
-'I am not good.'
-
-'Nonsense! you not good!'
-
-'Your mother is, Chris; she never goes to bed without kneeling down
-and saying her prayers.'
-
-'I know it, Jessie. And you?'
-
-'Oh, I often forget--always when I go to bed before her. When we go
-together, I kneel down, and shut my eyes; but I don't say anything. I
-see things.'
-
-On one occasion Jessie met me at the street-door when I came home from
-work, and led me with an air of importance into the sitting-room,
-where my mother sat in a new dress and a cap with ribbons in it. My
-mother blushed as I looked at her.
-
-'She _would_ make me do it, Chris,' she said apologetically.
-
-'Now doesn't she look prettier so?' asked Jessie.
-
-There was no denying it; I had never seen my mother look so
-attractive, and I kissed her and told her so.
-
-'That makes it all right,' cried Jessie, clapping her hands. 'All the
-time I was persuading her, she said, "What will Chris say?" and, "Will
-not Chris think it strange?"'
-
-And Jessie pretended that something was wrong with the cap, and spread
-out a ribbon here and a ribbon there, and fluttered about my mother in
-the prettiest way, and then fell back to admire her handiwork.
-
-'I want a new nightcap,' growled uncle Bryan, adding with a sarcastic
-laugh, 'but the ribbons in it must suit my complexion.'
-
-The next night Jessie gravely presented him with a nightcap gaily
-decorated with ribbons. 'It will become you beautifully,' she said,
-with a demure look. When he crossed lances with her, he was generally
-vanquished.
-
-Jessie explained to me the philosophy of all this.
-
-'I like everything about me to look nice,' she said; 'what else are
-things for? Everybody ought to be nice to everybody. What are people
-sent into the world for, I should like to know--to make each other
-comfortable or miserable?'
-
-I subscribed most heartily to this rosewater philosophy. Certainly, if
-Jessie had had her way, there would have been no heartaches in the
-world; no poverty, no sickness, no rags, no rainy days. The sun would
-have been eternally shining where she moved, and everything around
-her would have been eternally bright. The world would have been a
-garden, and she the prettiest flower in it.
-
-In the mean time I was making rapid progress in my business. My great
-ambition was to become a good draughtsman; and I had learnt all that
-could be learnt in the school of art, which I had attended regularly
-for some time.
-
-'Now sketch from nature,' the master said; 'I can do nothing more for
-you. You have a talent for caricature, but before that can be properly
-developed, you must learn figure drawing from the life.'
-
-These words fired me, and I commenced my studies in this direction
-with my mother, who was always ready to stand in any uncomfortable
-position for any length of time, while I laboured to reproduce her.
-Perhaps I would come suddenly into the room while she was stooping
-over the fire, or standing on tiptoe to reach something from the top
-shelf of the cupboard. 'Stand still, mother,' I would cry; 'don't
-move!' And the dear mother would stand as immovable as a statue until
-I released her; and then, dropping her arms, or rising from her
-stooping posture, with a sigh of relief which she could not suppress,
-she would fall into ecstasies with my work, whether it were good or
-bad. Uncle Bryan was a capital study for me, and would smile cynically
-when I produced any especially ill-favoured sketch of his face or
-figure. It was but natural that I should make the most careful studies
-of Jessie; and she, not at all unwilling, posed for me half a dozen
-times a week, until my desk was filled with sketches of her in scores
-of graceful attitudes and positions. Her face was my principal study;
-and I sketched it with so many different expressions upon it, that
-before long I knew it by heart, and could see it with my eyes
-shut--smiling, or pouting, or looking demurely at me. Jessie inspected
-every scrap of my work, and very promptly tore into pieces anything
-that did not please her, saying she did not want any ugly likenesses
-of herself lying about. I made studies of her eyes, her lips, her
-ears, her hands; and we passed a great deal of time together in this
-way, to our mutual satisfaction. We were allowed full liberty; but I
-sometimes detected uncle Bryan observing us with a curiously pondering
-expression on his face. This did not trouble me however.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-THE STONE MONKEY FIGURE GIVES UP ITS TREASURES.
-
-
-I had been for some time employed on a large drawing of Jessie, in
-crayons. It was my first ambitious attempt in colours; and it arose
-from Jessie's complaint that I could not paint her as she was.
-
-'I am all black and white,' she said; 'I am tired of seeing myself so.
-Now if you could show me my eyes as they are---- What colour are they,
-Chris?'
-
-Thereupon it was necessary that a close investigation should be made,
-which was not too rapidly concluded: these matters take a long time to
-determine, especially when one is an enthusiast in his art, as I was.
-The next day I bought crayons, and practised secretly; and secretly
-also commenced the sketch of Jessie above mentioned. I was never tired
-of contemplating my work, which promised to be a success; and one
-Sunday, when it was nearly completed, I went to my room to examine it.
-I kept it carefully concealed in my box, and, after a long
-examination, I was about to replace it, when I was startled by
-Jessie's voice, asking me what I was hiding. She had entered the room
-softly and slyly, on purpose to surprise me, she told me.
-
-'I am certain,' she said, 'that you are doing something secretly. For
-the last three or four weeks you have shut yourself in here night
-after night, for hours together. Now I want to know all about it.'
-
-I did not wish her to see the sketch until it was quite finished; but
-as she knelt by my side, and as my box was open, I could not prevent
-her from discovering it.
-
-'O Chris!' she cried. It's beautiful!'
-
-And she expressed such praise of it that my heart thrilled with
-delight.
-
-'You think it's like you, then, Jessie?'
-
-'Like me! It's _me_--me, myself! Set it on the box there; I'll show
-you.'
-
-And with a rapid movement she altered the fashion of her hair to suit
-my picture, and assumed the exact expression I had chosen. She looked
-very bewitching as she stood before me, the living embodiment of my
-work. Then she knelt before the box again, and praised the picture
-still more warmly, analysing it with exclamations of pleasure.
-
-While she was talking and admiring herself; she was tossing over the
-contents of my box, when she came upon the only legacy my grandmother
-had left me--the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, which the old
-lady had solemnly confided to my care. From the day I had entered
-uncle Bryan's house it had lain in my box, and by this time I had
-almost forgotten it; but as Jessie held it up and turned it about, my
-mind was strangely stirred by those reminiscences of my early life
-with which it was inseparably connected.
-
-'What a curious image?' exclaimed Jessie. 'How long have you had it?'
-
-'All my life, Jessie. Put it away; it's the ugliest thing that ever
-was seen.'
-
-'I don't think so. It's funny; look at it, wagging its head. Why, you
-seem quite frightened of it! Well, then, I shall take it, and keep it
-in my room.'
-
-'No, I mustn't part with it. It was given to me by my grandmother, and
-she said that it must be kept always in the family. Not that I think
-much of what she said.'
-
-Jessie shifted her position, and seated herself very comfortably upon
-the floor.
-
-'Now you've got something to tell me,' she said, pulling me down
-beside her. 'I've never heard of your grandmother before, and you know
-how fond I am of stories.'
-
-'But mine is not a story, And there's nothing interesting to tell.'
-
-'Oh, yes, there is; there must be. Everybody's life is full of
-stories.'
-
-'Yours, Jessie?' I put the question somewhat timorously.
-
-'Perhaps,' she answered gravely; and added, after a short pause, 'But
-we're not speaking of me; we're speaking of you. I want to know
-everything.'
-
-But it was long before she could coax me to speak of my early life.
-There was much that I felt I should be ashamed for Jessie to know; and
-a burning blush came to my cheeks as I thought of the time when my
-mother used to beg for our living. To escape too searching an inquiry
-I began to tell her of my grandmother, which led naturally to the
-story of my grandmother's wedding. Of course the man with the knob on
-the top of his head, and who was always eating his nails, was
-introduced, he being the principal figure at the wedding.
-
-'There!' cried Jessie. You said you hadn't any story to tell. Why,
-you've told me half a dozen already. I can see your grandmother as
-plain as plain can be; and that disagreeable man, too--I wonder what
-became of him, after all? What was his name, Chris?'
-
-'Anthony Bullpit'
-
-'I hate the name of Anthony. Go on; I want to hear more.'
-
-I gave a description of Jane Painter, at which Jessie laughed
-heartily, and clapped her hands.
-
-'I shall come into your bedroom one night with a sheet over me, and
-frighten you.'
-
-'I shouldn't be frightened of you, Jessie; besides, I'm not a boy now,
-and I'm not afraid of anything. Then your voice----'
-
-'Well!'
-
-'Your voice is musical. How could you frighten anybody with it?'
-
-Jessie edged a little closer to me.
-
-'Go on, Chris. Anything more about Jane Painter? What a wretch she
-must have been!' Then came an account of my grandmother's death, and
-the legend of the long stocking, in which Jessie was immensely
-interested.
-
-'And you never found any money after all, Chris?'
-
-'No; and I'm sure we searched for it everywhere. We looked up the
-chimney, and ripped the bed open, and pulled the armchair all to
-pieces.'
-
-'I'd have had the cellar dug up,' cried Jessie excitedly; I'd have had
-the paper taken off the walls, and the flooring taken away bit by bit.
-I am certain the money was hidden somewhere.'
-
-I shook my head.
-
-'Or Jane Painter stole it,' she continued. 'I sha'n't sleep to-night
-for thinking of it. I do so like to find out things! And I'd like to
-find out this thing more than any other.'
-
-'Why, Jessie?'
-
-'Such a lot of money, Chris! Hundreds and hundreds of pounds there
-must have been hidden away, or stolen. Hundreds and hundreds of
-pounds!'
-
-'Would you like to be rich, Jessie?'
-
-'Chris,' she replied, looking at me seriously, 'I think I would do
-anything in the world for money.'
-
-A miserable feeling came over me, and for the first time in my life I
-repined at my lot. What would I not have sacrificed at that moment if
-I could have filled her lap with money! All this time Jessie had been
-playing with the stone monkey figure, and now she suddenly uttered an
-exclamation of surprise.
-
-'Look!' she cried. 'The head comes off. It isn't broken; here's the
-wire it hangs upon. Why, Chris----'
-
-She seized my hand in uncontrollable excitement, and hid the figure in
-her lap.
-
-'What's the matter, Jessie?'
-
-'There's something inside. It's stuffed full of paper. What if it
-should be your grandmother's money?'
-
-The amazing suggestion almost took away my breath.
-
-'It's just the kind of place,' continued Jessie, panting, 'she would
-have hidden it in. She kept it all in large bank-notes, and stuffed
-them in here, where nobody could possibly suspect they were, and where
-she could have them under her eye all the day. O Chris! feel how my
-heart beats!'
-
-My excitement was now as great as her own.
-
-'Quick, Jessie! Let us look!'
-
-'No,' she cried, covering the figure with both hands, 'let us wait a
-bit. This is the best part of things: knowing that something wonderful
-is coming, and waiting a little before it comes. How much is it? A
-hundred pounds! Five hundred pounds! It can't be less, for you say she
-always wore silk dresses. What will you do with it? We'll all have new
-clothes. I know where there's such a lovely blue barege, and I saw a
-hat in a window yesterday, trimmed with blue ribbon, and with lilies
-and forget-me-nots in it, that I'd give my life for. O Chris! I can
-see myself in them already.'
-
-So she went on for full five minutes, building her castles; then with
-a long-drawn breath she said,
-
-'Now, Chris!'
-
-The inside of the figure was certainly full of paper, which I fished
-out very easily with one of Jessie's hairpins, and amid a little cloud
-of dust--emblematical of Jessie's castles, for the paper was utterly
-valueless. She refused to believe at first, and when she was
-convinced, her disappointment took the form of anger against my
-grandmother; she declared that the old lady had done it on purpose,
-and that she was a spiteful, wicked, deceitful old creature. I was
-quite as disappointed as Jessie was, more for her sake than my own,
-and I tried to talk her into a better mood. Thinking there might be
-writing on some of the paper, I smoothed it out, piece by piece; but
-there was nothing written or printed on any of it with the exception
-of one long slip, which was evidently a cutting from a newspaper. It
-was headed, 'Remarkable Discovery of a Forger by the Celebrated
-Detective, Mr. Vinnicombe.' And glancing down the column, the name of
-Anthony Bullpit attracted my attention. I became interested
-immediately.
-
-'Here's something, at all events,' I said; 'something about my
-grandmother's nail-eating lover. Listen, Jessie.'
-
-'I don't want to hear anything about him,' replied Jessie, in a pet,
-leaving the room.
-
-So I read this 'Remarkable Discovery' quietly by myself. It ran as
-follows:
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-THE TRUE STORY OF ANTHONY BULLPIT.
-
-
-Among the cases tried at the late assizes was one not only of local
-interest, but exceedingly remarkable, because of the extraordinary
-circumstances attendant upon the arrest of the prisoner, who, after
-the commission of his crime, had absconded. We throw the particulars
-of this case into the form of a narrative, as being likely to prove
-more interesting to our readers. The three principal characters in the
-story are Mr. James Pardon, a Solicitor; Mr. Anthony Bullpit, his
-confidential clerk; and Mr. Vinnicombe, a detective. These terse
-definitions would be sufficient for dramatic purposes, but a
-more comprehensive description is necessary here for the purposes
-of our story. Mr. James Pardon is the head of the well-known and
-highly-respected firm of solicitors in High-street, and to his care is
-intrusted a vast amount of important business. Not only as a
-solicitor, but as a man and a churchwarden his name commands universal
-respect. He employs a large staff of clerks, conspicuous among whom
-was Anthony Bullpit, who had been in his service from boyhood, and
-whose face is familiar to most of our townsmen. Mr. Vinnicombe, we
-need scarcely say, is the name of the celebrated detective whose
-unerring instinct, in conjunction with a powerful and keen intellect,
-has been the means of bringing many a criminal to justice. In his
-profession, Mr. Vinnicombe is _facile princeps_. There is a fourth
-character, who plays a minor but important part, and whom it will be
-sufficiently explicit to describe as Mr. Vinnicombe's friend. Now for
-the story.
-
-To all outward appearance trustworthy and attentive to his duties,
-Anthony Bullpit rose step by step in the office of Mr. James Pardon
-until he had arrived at the position of head clerk; his manners were
-civil and plausible, and not the slightest suspicion was entertained
-of his honesty. He had access to the safe and cheque-book of the firm,
-and was intrusted with much confidential business. On the twenty-first
-of last month Mr. James Pardon had occasion to go to London on a
-matter of great importance; he expected to be absent for at least
-three weeks, and Anthony Bullpit was left to superintend the affairs
-of the firm. It fortunately happened that Mr. Pardon's business in
-London was transacted more rapidly than he had anticipated, and he
-returned to Hertford, without warning, after an absence of fourteen
-days only. His confidential clerk was absent; and to his astonishment
-he was informed that, three days before his return, Anthony Bullpit
-had stated in the office that he had received a letter from Mr.
-Pardon, desiring his immediate attendance in London, to render
-assistance in the matter on which Mr. Pardon was engaged. As Mr.
-Pardon had sent no such letter to Anthony Bullpit, his suspicions that
-all was not as it should be were naturally aroused, and he at once
-made an examination of the affairs of the business. A very slight
-inquiry was sufficient to justify his suspicions: not only had all the
-money which had been received during his absence been abstracted, but
-a cheque for seven hundred pounds, taken from his cheque-book, and
-purporting to be signed by James Pardon, had been presented to the
-bank, and cashed without hesitation. The signature was a most skilful
-imitation, and Mr. Pardon acknowledges that any person might have been
-deceived by it. Thus far the story is, unhappily, but an ordinary one
-in the history of crime; but now come the extraordinary incidents
-which elevate it almost into the sphere of romance. Mr. Pardon's
-indignation was extreme, and being determined to bring the delinquent
-to justice, he went at once to the police-court, and laid his charge.
-While it was being taken down a person, who did not appear to be
-particularly interested in the narration, was sitting by the fire,
-apparently deeply engaged in a newspaper which he held in his hand.
-When Mr. Pardon had finished, he gave expression to his indignation,
-and to his determination to inflict upon the forger the utmost
-punishment of the law. The person who was reading by the fire said
-aloud, 'First catch your hare, then cook it.' Mr. Pardon, not being
-aware whether the stranger was quoting from the paper he was reading
-or was making an independent observation, asked, in his quick manner,
-whether the words were addressed to him. 'To any one,' answered the
-stranger. 'And you said----' prompted Mr. Pardon. 'I said,' repeated
-the stranger, 'first catch your hare, then cook it. You see,' added
-the stranger, 'the first thing you have to do is to catch your clerk;
-then you can cook him--not before. Now how are you going to do it?'
-Mr. Pardon confessed that he did not know how it was to be done, but
-he supposed that the police---- The stranger interrupted him. 'This
-clerk, Anthony Bullpit, is more than a match for the police. You
-acknowledge that your name was so skilfully forged that you might have
-been taken in by it yourself. Now, the skill which enabled Anthony
-Bullpit to write your name in such a way as might deceive even you,
-was not acquired in an hour or a day. He has been secretly practising
-your signature for years, and has been secretly practising, I don't
-doubt, many other things you're not acquainted with, which might come
-useful to in one day or another. What does this imply? That Anthony
-Bullpit is a shallow bungling sort of criminal, or an artful,
-scheming, designing sort of criminal?' Mr. Pardon, himself the
-shrewdest of lawyers, was struck by the shrewd intelligence of the
-stranger, and admitted that it was clear that Anthony Bullpit was a
-scheming, artful, designing scoundrel. 'But he had a quiet way with
-him,' said Mr. Pardon, 'that any person might have been taken in by.'
-The stranger smiled. 'One of your sneaking kind,' he said; 'I know
-them. They're the most difficult to deal with, and the most difficult
-to catch. The chances are that Anthony Bullpit had all his plans well
-laid beforehand. And don't forget that he's got three days' start.
-Why, you don't even know what road he has taken!' Mr. Pardon
-acknowledged the reasonableness of these observations. 'May I ask,' he
-said, 'with whom I have the pleasure of conversing?' 'My name is
-Vinnicombe,' replied the stranger, rising. 'Mr. Vinnicombe, the famous
-detective!' exclaimed Mr. Pardon. 'The same,' was the answer. Mr.
-Pardon immediately made a proposition to Mr. Vinnicombe, and the
-result was that, within an hour, Mr. Vinnicombe presented himself at
-Mr. Pardon's office, saying that he was ready to take the case in hand
-at once. What follows is from the eminent detective's own lips,
-_verbatim et literatim_, taken down in our own office by the editor of
-this paper:[1]
-
-
-[Footnote 1: It is evident, from the manner in which he presented his
-report of the case to his readers, that 'the editor of this paper' was
-in advance of his times; he would have made an admirable descriptive
-reporter in these days. Mr. Vinnicombe also, as is apparent from the
-style of the narrative, was an advanced detective; but the qualities
-which are necessary for the making of a good detective, and the spirit
-which animates the class, do not differ, whatever the year.--Author.]
-
-
-'The first thing Mr. Pardon wanted me to do,' said Mr. Vinnicombe, was
-to trace the notes; but I said, No; the thief first, the property
-afterwards. If I could trace him by the property, all right; but there
-was no time to lose in ascertaining what road he had taken, and where
-he was bound to. In a very short time I discovered by what means and
-by what road Anthony Bullpit had left the town. That road did _not_
-lead to Liverpool, and immediately I learnt this, I decided that
-Liverpool was the port which he intended to reach. Why port? you ask.
-Well, it wasn't likely that a cunning card like this Bullpit was going
-to remain in England. I picked up a bit of gossip concerning him, and
-I found out that he had had a love affair with a young lady--I mention
-no names, and I only mention it professionally--and that her family,
-not liking his sneaking ways, had shut their doors on him; I found out
-also that this young lady was soon to be married to a gentleman who
-was more worthy of her. That was one reason why it wasn't likely he
-was going to remain in England; having filled his pockets with another
-man's money was another reason. But there were stronger reasons than
-these. He had peculiar marks about him, and if he wasn't found out
-to-day by these marks, he would be to-morrow; and he knew it. So what
-he had to do was to get out of the country as quick as he could. Now,
-there's only two ports in England from where a man as wants to go can
-go to all parts of the world, civilised and uncivilised. These ports
-are London and Liverpool.
-
-'Bullpit wouldn't go to London. Why? Mr. Pardon was there. He'd go
-naturally to Liverpool, because Mr. Pardon was _not_ there. Now, I'll
-tell you about these peculiar marks of his. First, he had--a knob on
-the top of his head. But the knob couldn't be seen, you'll say,
-because he had a bushy head of hair. That's right enough, but it don't
-do away with the knob; he had it, and that was enough for me. I don't
-know as ever I had any business in connection with a man as had a knob
-on his head, and that circumstance made the case interesting to me. I
-like to do with all sorts. Second, he had a peculiarity with his
-teeth. The two middle ones in the top jaw--I hope you don't think I'm
-going to swear or use bad language; but jaw's a word, and when a
-word's got to be used, I use it--the two middle teeth in his top jaw
-had a slit between 'em, a slit as you could see daylight through, if
-there was such a thing in his mouth. That slit ain't much, you'll say.
-All right. Third, he had a habit of biting his nails. Well, now, that
-ain't a crime, you say. _I_ don't say it is, but he had it, and that
-was enough for me. These peculiarities and a general description of
-Bullpit--as to how tall he was (a man can't alter _that_), how stout
-(nor that), what kind of complexion, and other personal details--were
-all I had to go upon. I tracked him, without ever making a miss, in
-the contrary direction of Liverpool, and then back again by another
-road in the direction of Liverpool, and there I lost sight of him
-completely. But I knew he must be there, and that was enough for me. I
-had travelled faster than he had, and I reckoned I had gained a day
-and a half on him. According to my calculation, he hadn't had time to
-get away yet; he could only have been in Liverpool two days, and as
-Mr. Pardon wasn't expected home for a week after he left, there was no
-need for him to put on any show of hurry; it might look suspicious.
-Now, what should I do? Bullpit would be sure to disguise himself--clap
-on a pair of false whiskers and coloured spectacles perhaps, cut his
-hair short, wear a wig; he would certainly not walk about in the
-clothes he run away in. Thinking of these things I felt that Bullpit
-might prove more than a match for _me_. There was the knob on his head
-certainly; but I couldn't go up to every suspicious-looking stranger,
-pull off his hat, and feel for the knob; people might resent it as a
-liberty, and treat it accordingly. There was his habit of biting his
-nails; but he would be sure to restrain himself, though it is about
-the most difficult thing in the world for a man to keep from, when
-he's been accustomed to it all his life. I don't see what there is in
-nails except dirt to make people fond of 'em. They ain't sweet and
-they ain't tasty. Well, but Bullpit. He'd be cunning enough to
-restrain himself from biting his nails, knowing it was a mark to go
-by; still nails don't grow in a day, and they'd be short on _his_
-fingers naturally. But he'd wear gloves. Then the slit between his
-teeth. Well, that couldn't be altered; but he could keep his mouth
-shut. Now if I was to tell you everything I did in the first two days
-I was in Liverpool, it would fill a book, and that's what you don't
-want; what you _do_ want is for me to come to the point, and that I'll
-do in a jiffy. I went down to the docks, and took up my lodgings near
-there; I didn't stop in any particular place, but shifted from one
-eating-house to another, and mixed with the customers, and talked to
-the waiters; no ship sailed out of the Mersey without my being on it
-at the last minute, with my eyes wide open; I communicated with the
-captains and the ship-agents; I watched every new arrival at the
-eating-houses, and drank with them, and did a hundred other
-things--and at the end of the fourth day I was as far off as ever; I
-hadn't picked up a link. Now, that nettled me; it did--it nettled me.
-I had set my heart on catching this Bullpit; he was worth catching, he
-was such a sly cunning customer; I looked upon it as a match between
-us, and I wanted to win, and here was I four days in Liverpool, with
-never a link in my hands for my pains. On the fifth day I met--quite
-by accident--a professional friend, who had come down to Liverpool to
-say good-bye to a relative of his who was going to America. The ship
-was to sail that afternoon; it was called The Prairie Bird. We had a
-bit of dinner together in the coffee-room, where other men were
-dining. Over dinner I told my friend what had brought _me_ to
-Liverpool; I spoke in a low tone, so as not to be overheard, and I was
-not sorry when the man who was eating at the next table to ours went
-away in the middle of my story; he was a little too close to us. Well,
-we finished dinner; my friend insisted on paying the reckoning, and I
-moved a step or two towards the next table, where the man who went
-away in the middle of my story had been dining. The waiter was
-clearing the table, when I saw something that set me on fire. Now,
-what do you think it was? You can't guess. I should think you
-couldn't, if you tried for a week. What do you say to a piece of
-bread? You laugh! Well, but that piece of bread was enough for me. It
-wasn't a link. It was the chain itself. In what way? I'll tell you.
-You see, that piece of bread was partly eaten, and the man who had
-been dining had put it down after taking his last bite at it. The
-marks of his teeth were in it, but the only mark I saw was a little
-ridge in the centre of the bite--just such a ridge as would be left by
-a man who had a slit between two of his upper teeth, as Anthony
-Bullpit had. Would that little mark have been enough for you?
-
-'Now I had seen this man a dozen times; a most respectable-looking man
-he was, with leg-of-mutton whiskers, and most respectably dressed,
-something like a clergyman; and I knew he was a passenger by The
-Prairie Bird. I had never for one moment suspected him. Anthony.
-Bullpit was a pale-faced man; this man had a high colour. There was
-nothing particular in Anthony Bullpit's walk; this man dragged one leg
-behind the other slightly. Anthony Bullpit's hair was black; this
-man's hair was sandy. Anthony Bullpit had good eyebrows; this man had
-no eyebrows at all to speak of. Ah, he's a cunning rascal is Anthony
-Bullpit, and was worth catching. I put things together very quickly in
-my mind, and I settled it--if it wanted settling after the first sight
-of that piece of bread--that this man, and no other, was the man I
-wanted. There was only one thing that puzzled me, and that was his
-nails; they were long. However, I wasn't going to let that stop me, so
-I laid a little plot with my professional friend, and we went aboard
-The Prairie Bird--not in company, because of the little plot I laid,
-but one a minute after the other. There was my respectable customer,
-standing by himself; I was puzzled even then as I looked at him, he
-was so well disguised; but his height was there, and his bulk was
-there, with a little added to it, which might be padding. Well, while
-I stood a little distance away, with my eye on him, but not in an open
-way, my professional friend walks up to him from behind, until he gets
-close, and this is what my professional friend whispers to him: "Don't
-start," whispers my professional friend, most confidentially; "don't
-turn your head, or it might attract notice. My name's Simpson, and I
-cashed the cheque for seven hundred pound for you in the Hertford
-Bank. I was in the bank for six years, and I've done a little bit of
-business on my own account, and have got clear away. Twelve hundred
-pounds I've got about me, and I'm a fellow passenger of yours; when
-The Prairie Bird gets to America, what's to hinder you and me going
-partners and making our fortunes? Two such heads as ours'll be sure
-to make a big one. I sha'n't speak another word to you till we're
-safely off, but I'm glad I've got a friend on board." With that, my
-professional friend slips quietly away. Now, if my respectable-looking
-customer hadn't been the man I wanted, he would have turned round on
-my professional friend, and hit him in the eye perhaps; at all events,
-he would have kicked up a row. But he listened to every word, with his
-eyes looking down on the deck, and the only movement he made was a
-kind of twitching with his fingers, and a rising of them to his lips,
-as if he wanted to set to work on his nails. He didn't get so far as
-his mouth with them; he had himself too well in hand; but I was sure
-of my man--his own cunning was the trap in which he was caught. I
-waited until the last minute, until those who weren't going to the
-other side of the Atlantic in The Prairie Bird were scrambling away
-lest they should be taken by mistake; and I saw my respectable friend
-give one triumphant look around, being sure then he was safe. At the
-same moment, as if he couldn't stand it any longer, up went his
-fingers to his lips; his longing to get at those nails of his must
-have been something dreadful. Then I stepped up to him suddenly, and
-before he knew where he was I had the handcuffs on him. "It's no use
-making a noise about it," I said; "I want you, Anthony Bullpit. Here's
-the warrant." And quick as lightning I passed my hand over his head,
-and felt the knob. He saw it was all over with him, and I could see
-that he turned deadly white, for all his false colour. "You sha'n't be
-done out of a voyage across the sea," I said; "but it'll be a longer
-voyage than the one to America. Botany Bay'll be the place as'll
-suit _you_ best, I should think." He never spoke a word; I got his
-trunk, and found the money in it--all changed into gold it was, the
-cunning one. Well, everything was comfortably arranged, and I was
-about to guide him down the ladder to the boat, when he whispered to
-me, "There's another man on board as you'd like to have. He's a better
-prize than I am. If you'll make it easier for me, I'll tell you who it
-is." "What man?" I asked, with a quiet chuckle. "A man as has robbed
-the bank of twelve hundred pound." Just then my professional friend
-came to my side. "That's him," said Anthony Bullpit "And you and him's
-going partners when you get safe across," I said, with a wink at my
-professional friend; "he cashed that cheque for you, didn't he? Lord!
-you're not half as clever as I took you to be!" He was clever enough
-to understand it all without another word, for he only gave a scowl;
-and when me and him and my professional friend was in the boat, he
-fell-to on his nails without restraint, and before the day was out he
-had eaten them down to the quick. He only asked one question, and that
-was how I had discovered him. I pulled the piece of bread from my
-pocket, and pointed to the marks of his teeth in it, and to the ridge
-the slit in his teeth had left. I brought my man safely back, and you
-know what has become of him. If I live till I'm a hundred--which isn't
-likely--I shall never forget the feeling that came over me when I saw
-that piece of bread with the ridge in it that brought Anthony Bullpit
-to justice.'
-
-We have only to add to Mr. Vinnicombe's statement that Anthony
-Bullpit, when placed in the dock, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to
-twenty-one years' transportation. The sentence would have been for
-life, but for Mr. Pardon's intercession, who pleaded for mercy for the
-infamous scoundrel who had abused his trust. We have occupied more
-space than we otherwise should have done with the details of this
-case, for the purpose of pointing out how often the most trivial
-circumstance will lead to the detection and punishment of the most
-cunning criminals.
-
-
-Apart from the circumstance of this Anthony Bullpit being one of my
-grandmother's lovers, the narrative was interesting to me from the
-really remarkable manner in which the forger was discovered. I
-refolded the printed paper carefully, and replaced it in the interior
-of the stone figure; and in the course of a couple of days I made a
-drawing of Anthony Bullpit, as I imagined him to be, a sneaking
-hang-dog figure of a man, with a hypocritical face, gnawing his
-finger-nails.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-UNCLE BRYAN COMMENCES THE STORY OF HIS LIFE.
-
-
-'Chris is growing quite a man,' observed my mother one evening to
-uncle Bryan.
-
-Her words attracted uncle Bryan's attention, and he regarded me with
-more interest than he usually evinced. We three were alone. Jessie was
-spending the evening with some neighbours, and was not expected home
-before ten o'clock. The family she visited was named West. I did not
-know them personally, but I was curious about them, not only because
-Jessie's visits to their house had lately grown very frequent, but
-because they were a theatrical family. They were, in a certain sense,
-famous in the neighbourhood because of their vocation, which lifted
-them out of the humdrum ordinary course of common affairs. During the
-whole time we had lived in Paradise-row, I had made no friends among
-our neighbours. It was different with Jessie: before she had been with
-us six months, she knew and was known by nearly every person in the
-locality. She informed me that she was fond of company, and she
-accepted invitations to tea from one and another. But lately she had
-confined her intimacy to the Wests, and whenever I came home, and she
-was absent, I was told she was spending an hour at their house. Many
-weeks before the observation which commences this chapter was made,
-Jessie and I had had a conversation about the Wests. She introduced
-their name, and after informing me that she was going to have tea with
-them on the following evening, asked me if I would come for her at
-nine o'clock and bring her home. But I demurred to this, as being
-likely to be considered an intrusion.
-
-'What nonsense you talk!' she exclaimed. They are the most delightful
-persons in the world.'
-
-'Your friendships are quickly made, Jessie,' I said, with a jealous
-pang.
-
-'Directly I see persons I know whether I like them or not. Don't you?'
-
-'I can't say,' I replied sententiously; 'I have never considered it.'
-
-'Well, consider it now. Don't be disagreeable. Directly you saw me,
-didn't you like me?'
-
-'Oh, yes.'
-
-'Very well, then; that shows you _do_ make up your mind properly about
-these things, as a man ought to do.'
-
-I thrilled with pleasure at this cunning compliment.
-
-'But you are different, Jessie, from any one else.' (What I really
-wanted to say was, 'You are different in my eyes from any one else;'
-but the most important words oozed away, from my want of courage.)
-
-'Am I?' she cried softly and complacently, as was her way when she
-felt she was about to be flattered. How different? In what way? Tell
-me.'
-
-'You are prettier and nicer. There's no one in the world like you.'
-
-'That's what you think.'
-
-'That's what everybody must think.'
-
-'Why, Chris!' she exclaimed, making a telescope with her two hands,
-and peeping at me through them, I declare your moustachois are
-coming.'
-
-I blushed scarlet. 'Are they?' I inquired, with an effort at
-unconsciousness, notwithstanding that I had already many times
-secretly contemplated in my looking-glass, with the most intense
-interest, these coming signs of manliness. 'But never mind them,
-Jessie; tell me about the Wests.'
-
-'They are the most wonderful people, and the most delightful. I'm in
-love with all of them.'
-
-My blushes died away; jealous pangs assailed me again.
-
-'Are there many of them?' I asked gloomily.
-
-'Ever so many; but you must see for yourself. You will come for me,
-then? You mustn't knock at the door and say, "Tell Miss Trim I am
-waiting for her;" you must come right into the house.'
-
-But being angry with the Wests, and beginning to hate them because
-Jessie was so fond of them, I insisted that it would not be proper,
-because I had never been invited; and after a little quarrel, in which
-I deemed it necessary, as an assertion of manliness, to become more
-and more obstinate in my refusal, Jessie said with a pout, 'Oh, very
-well; if you're determined to stand upon your dignity, you'll see that
-other people can do so as well as you.' Thus it fell about that it
-became a point almost of honour with me not to go to the Wests, nor to
-express any desire to go; but I suffered agonies in consequence, and
-was tempted many times to humble myself. Jessie knew as well as
-possible what was going on in my mind; but she was offended with me on
-the subject, and would not assist me--would not even give me an
-opportunity of humbling myself.
-
-But all this while I have left uncle Bryan regarding me, as I have
-said, with more than usual interest. From me he turned his attention
-to the wall, upon which hung the picture of Jessie, in crayons, which
-I had finished. I said nothing, but proceeded with my work.
-
-'What are you drawing now, Chris?' asked my uncle.
-
-Of course it was a sketch of Jessie. I murmured some words to the
-effect that it was nothing particular, and was about to put it in my
-desk, when uncle Bryan expressed a wish to see it. I could not refuse,
-and I handed it to him. It happened to be one of my happiest efforts;
-it would have been difficult to find a more winsome face than that
-which uncle Bryan gazed upon. He contemplated it for a long time
-without speaking--for so long a time that I asked him if he liked it,
-so as to break the awkward silence. He did not answer me. With the
-sketch still in his hand he said to my mother,
-
-'Emma, I have not treated you fairly.'
-
-My mother looked up from her work in surprise. Uncle Bryan continued:
-
-'What I am about to tell you ought to have been told before; but
-probably no better time than this could be chosen. By the time I have
-finished, you will perhaps understand my motive for saying so; but
-whether you do or not, it is due to you that I should clear away some
-part of the mystery which hangs around Jessie.'
-
-Although I was burning with curiosity, I rose to leave the room,
-thinking from his manner that what he was about to say was intended
-only for my mother's ears.
-
-'Nay, Chris,' he said, you can stay. 'You are almost a man, as your
-mother says, and you may learn something from my words. I am about to
-read some pages in my life.'
-
-He turned from us, so that we could not see his face; and full five
-minutes elapsed before he spoke. I was awaiting to hear with so much
-eagerness what he had to tell, that the five minutes seemed an hour.
-With his face still averted, he addressed my mother.
-
-'Emma, you know the house in which I was born?'
-
-'Yes, Bryan.'
-
-'And you knew my family--my father and mother?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'They are not alive?'
-
-I could scarcely restrain an exclamation of surprise at such a
-question from the lips of a son concerning his parents. My mother's
-tone was soft and pitiful as she replied,
-
-'They have been dead many years, Bryan. They died within a year of my
-marriage with your brother.'
-
-'During the time you and my brother courted, and afterwards indeed, my
-name must have been occasionally mentioned.'
-
-'It was, Bryan.'
-
-'In what terms?'
-
-He paused for a reply, but my mother held her tongue.
-
-'Be frank and candid with me, Emma; it will not hurt me. What you
-heard was not to my credit?'
-
-He was determined that the subject should not be evaded; and my mother
-was wise enough not to thwart him.
-
-'It was said that you had a violent temper.'
-
-'It was doubtless true; but,' said uncle Bryan somewhat grimly, 'time
-must have softened it. No one now can accuse me justly--if there is
-such a thing as justice in the world--of showing violence, in the
-ordinary meaning of the word.'
-
-'I can bear witness to that, Bryan.'
-
-'Go on; there was more.'
-
-'And that it was impossible to agree with you, or your opinions.'
-
-'My opinions! That is one of the things I wanted to arrive at.
-Remember, Emma, that after I left home, I held no communication with
-my parents; that I was as one dead to them. What was said of my
-opinions? Nay, nay; you hurt me more by your silence than you can
-possibly do by anything you can say.'
-
-'I heard that, as a boy, you associated yourself with a society of
-Freethinkers, who openly boasted of their infidelity.'
-
-'I can guess the rest; I was wanting in respect to my elders, and in
-obedience and duty. They did not spare me, evidently. When I left home
-I was seventeen years of age; I ran away--no, I walked away, in fact,
-for they did not care to stop me--as much displeased with the
-narrow-minded views of those who were nearest to me in blood, as they
-were doubtless with my violent temper and my independent expression of
-opinion. A free exercise of the reasoning powers with which we are
-endowed was, in their eyes, a sacrilege. Still, when I was fairly
-gone, they might have let me rest. Of my after career they had no
-knowledge.'
-
-These last words he did not put as a question, but as a satisfactory
-reflection. The simplest assent from my mother would have contented
-him; but she was too truthful to give utterance to it, and all his
-suspicions were aroused by her silence.
-
-'I repeat--of my after career, they had no knowledge.'
-
-She would have spared him, but he would not allow her to do so.
-
-'They had!' he exclaimed, his rapid breathing showing how deeply he
-was moved.' What did they know?'
-
-'The rumour was very vague, Bryan----'
-
-'But discreditable. To what effect?'
-
-'I really cannot explain, nor could they have done so, I believe.' My
-mother was much distressed. 'If Chris were not here----'
-
-'Say no more.' I could not see his face, but his tone indicated that
-he had recovered his composure. 'I can fill up the blanks. Chris is
-older than I was when I threw myself upon the world, and it will be
-best for him to hear the story I shall relate.'
-
-'Whatever impression I might have gained,' said my mother
-solicitously, 'from the vague rumours I heard has been entirely
-obliterated since I have known you. Believe me that this is so, dear
-Bryan.'
-
-'Thank you for saying so much. But I doubt whether my parents would
-ever have believed that I was not the blackest of black sheep. They
-were hard and intolerant to me from the first, and I have no
-pleasurable recollections of even my earliest days. I do not know if
-it was the same when you were first introduced into it as it is in my
-remembrance, but the home in which I was born and reared was ruled by
-cold and formal laws, and by a cold and formal master. How it came
-about is a mystery I have never tried to solve, but it is a plain fact
-that I was not a favourite with my parents. My brother--your
-husband--was; he was much younger than I, but I saw it clearly. His
-nature was a more pliable one than mine; he could be easily led, not
-because he was weak, but because he was sympathetic and amiable. I was
-neither. Perhaps I imbibed some drops of gall with my mother's milk;
-but I don't pretend to account for my cross grain. My parents might
-have loved me after their fashion, but their mode of showing their
-love deprived it of all tenderness. It is a blessing to a man to be
-able to think of his mother with affection and veneration when she has
-passed away from him. Such a feeling, and the roads he must have
-trodden to acquire it, are a counterfoil to much that may be bad in
-his own nature; but this feeling is not mine. My mother was a
-weak-minded woman, entirely dominated by the strong mind of her
-husband. She had no will of her own; she followed the current of his
-likes and dislikes, of his opinions, of his commands, without question
-and without inquiry, as a spaniel follows its master. Many persons
-would see a kind of virtue in this submission; I do not. My father was
-dogmatic and stern; I could have forgiven him that, if he had been
-honest-minded. But he was a hypocrite, and I knew it, and he knew that
-I knew it. With great appearance of candour, he, when conversing with
-acquaintances in the presence of my mother and myself, would give
-expression to sentiments in which he did not believe; then, when we
-were alone, he would take off his mask of dissimulation, and go over
-the ground again according to his own conviction, and justify his
-deceit. If my mother ever thought of these things, she must have been
-bewildered; I did think of him, and I was indignant. Most especially
-was he a hypocrite in religious matters; his prayers and his practice
-were utterly at variance. I could not respect one who professed to
-believe that charity was a good thing, and who declined to practise
-it. He was intolerant to a degree; his was the only right way--all
-others were wrong. It was my evil fortune--I suppose I must call it
-so--to possess a mind which led me to sift things for myself; I
-_could_ not accept established doctrines, and this, in my father's
-eyes, was not only a great presumption but a great crime. It is not
-necessary for me to state how, little by little, I became estranged
-from such parental affection as might have been bestowed upon me had I
-been docile and obedient--as might have been mine if I had tried to
-win it. I sought for congenial companionship away from the social
-circle in which my parents moved; it is true that I found associates
-among men who, doubtless with more reason than myself, were
-dissatisfied with things as they were, and that I identified
-myself--being, as a youth, proud of the connection--with a body of
-so-called Freethinkers, whose chief crime was that they were groping
-to find truth by the light of reason. My father, hearing of this
-connection, sternly commanded me to relinquish it, and when I refused,
-threatened me. He declared he would drive the evil spirit out of me,
-and he tried to do so by blows; but he hurt only my body--my spirit he
-strengthened. About this time a circumstance occurred which for ever
-destroyed all chance of peace between us. We had a servant at home, a
-poor half-witted creature--an orphan without a friend in the world.
-One would have supposed that my father, being so fond of his prayers,
-would have been kind to this servant because of her utterly dependent
-condition, and because she performed her work as well and as
-faithfully as her dull wits allowed her. Had this been so, I think I
-might have been inclined to waver in my estimate of him; but the
-contrary was the case. My father, through his unvarying harshness
-towards the poor girl, made her life a torture to her. I constituted
-myself her champion, and stepped between her and his blows many a
-time. Boy as I was, he chose to place misconstruction upon my
-championship, and each became more embittered against the other. I fed
-my bitterness by contemplation of the girl's misery, and the unhappy
-war went on until it was terminated by a tragic circumstance. One day
-the servant was missing; the next, the body was found in the river.
-The idea fixed itself firmly in my mind that my father was accountable
-for her death; I even hinted as much to him when my blood was boiling
-with a new injustice inflicted upon myself. What passed between us
-after that, it will be as well not to recall; the result was that I
-left my home, and no hand was held out to stay me. I never saw my
-parents from that day, nor have I ever mentioned them until this
-evening. Whether I have done them injustice cannot now be decided; but
-I have no doubt, if the world were to judge between us, the verdict
-would be against me.
-
-'I retained my name because, in my opinion, I had done nothing to
-disgrace it, and because I abhor deceit. I was neither elated nor
-depressed at the step I had taken. It is said that the springtime of
-life is bright with sunshine. The springtime of my life was joyless
-and gloomy. I had no hope in anything, no belief in anything, no faith
-in anything. I had no special ambition and no desire to become rich;
-all that I desired was to earn a decent living by the labour of my
-hands and the exercise of my abilities. I determined to make no
-friendships, and to live only in myself and by myself. Although I had
-no thought of it at the time, I can see now that the rules I laid down
-for myself were just the rules, with fair opportunities, to lead to
-success in life.
-
-'In my determination to sever myself entirely from my family, I
-wandered away from my native place until I was distant from it
-hundreds of miles. Then, a stranger among strangers, I applied myself
-to the task of obtaining a situation. I could read, I could write, and
-I was a fair bookkeeper; but these qualifications did not avail me,
-and I was driven to hard shifts. Had I been shipwrecked on a lonely
-land I should have fared better. I did nothing dishonest, nor would I
-have done it to save my life; but I shrunk from nothing to earn a few
-pence. I accepted employment in whatever shape it was offered; no toil
-was too low for me, so long as it would buy me bread. The hardships
-which the world dealt out to me did not dishearten me, did not humble
-me; I bore them with pride, and in my bitter frame of mind I found a
-certain pleasure even in misery. My unmerited sufferings were
-arguments to convince me that I was right in my estimate of things.
-Look where I would, I could nowhere find morality and humanity
-exercised in their larger sense; where charity was most due, it was
-least given; virtue and goodness were terms; all over the civilised
-world religious precepts were being preached; all over the civilised
-world religious precepts were being violated; what was good in the
-Bible was turned to bad account--its power was so used as to teach
-people to fear, not to love. During these days I used to creep into
-the churches and laugh at the moralities there laid down. It was a
-hard bitterly-sweet time; I did not repine; in my pride I exulted in
-my condition. Many a night did I walk the streets homeless and hungry,
-laughing at my sufferings. Life had no attractions for me, and I did
-not desire to live. But I was part of a scheme--I recognised that,
-although I could not solve the problem--and I would do nothing to
-myself; I would simply wait. From men and women in as miserable a
-position as myself I rejected all overtures of friendship; I had
-nothing in common with them. But on a starless night I met one to whom
-was drawn by humanity, if you like to call it by that name. A woman
-this, a girl indeed, homeless as I was, friendless as I was. Nay, you
-may listen, Emma. I became like a brother to her, and she like a
-sister to me. Neither knew how the other lived, neither asked; and
-when we were specially unfortunate we wandered by instinct to a
-certain street, and met by premeditated chance. Then we would talk
-together for hours, or sit in silence in the shadow of a friendly
-refuge. She told me her story--a pitiful story, but common: it
-hardened me the more. I never saw her face by daylight; a dark shadow
-encompassed her and her history. "I am so tired of life!" she said to
-me; "these stones must be happier than I, for they cannot feel. Would
-it be wrong to die?" I drove the thought from her mind. "Be brave, and
-play your part," I said aloud, and added mentally, "It will not be for
-long." I can hear now the faint echo of her dreary laugh at my words,
-and the strangely-pitiful tone in which she repeated, "Be brave, and
-play my part!" I knew she would not live long; a desperate cold had
-settled on her lungs, and her cough, as we walked the desolate streets
-or sat in them after midnight, was a sound to cause the stars to weep.
-She died in my arms during one of these wanderings. I had no special
-foreboding of her death, nor had she, I believe; she was seized with a
-violent fit of coughing, and she clung to me, as she had often done,
-for support, then suddenly she fell to the ground, and I saw blood
-coming from her mouth. "Don't leave me," she sighed, almost with her
-last breath; "you can do me no good. Thank God it is over!" An inquest
-was held, and I gave evidence. Necessarily some particulars concerning
-my own mode of life came out, and after the inquest a man offered me
-money. I rejected it; I had resolved never to accept charity. The man
-was surprised; questioned me; and learning that I was willing to work,
-offered me employment. I remained with him long enough to clothe
-myself decently and to save a little money, and then I turned my back
-upon a place which had become hateful to me. It must have been a
-rumour of my connection with the poor girl who died in my arms that
-was twisted to my discredit in my native town, and it was your mention
-of it that has caused me to drift into details which, when I
-commenced, I had no intention of relating.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-STRANGE REVELATIONS IN UNCLE BRYAN'S LIFE.
-
-
-So, without a friend in the world, I wandered still further away from
-the town in which I was born. I tarried here and tarried there, and
-found no rest for the sole of my foot until I reached a city where,
-before my means were exhausted, I obtained employment in the office of
-an accountant. It was by the merest chance that I obtained the
-situation, for there were many applicants; but I was quick at figures,
-and that quality served me. The position was not a distinguished one;
-I was not destined to occupy it long, however, for being coldly
-interested in my work--simply because it enabled me to live--I
-performed the tasks set for me to do, not only expeditiously, but with
-the exactitude of a machine. This was precisely what was required of
-me, and I rose into favour with my employer. Some of the clients who
-came to us for advice in their difficulties were afflicted with a kind
-of moral disease, which for their credits' sake it was necessary
-should not be exposed to the world. It was not the business of our
-office to be nice as to our clients' honesty and integrity, and it did
-not trouble me to see rogues walking about in broadcloth. It was of a
-piece with the rest. Many delicate matters of figures were intrusted
-to me; my lonely habits, my reserved manner, and the circumstance of
-my having no connections or friends, were high recommendations, and I
-heard my employer say, more than once, to his clients, 'Mr. Carey is
-as secret as the grave; you may confide anything to him.' No wonder,
-therefore, that in the course of years I became manager of the
-business. I began to save money, simply because I was earning more
-than I required for my necessities. I had no extravagances, I never
-went into society, and I did not see that any pleasure was to be
-derived from following the ordinary pursuits of men of my own age. I
-set down a rigid course of life for myself, and I spent my leisure in
-solitude; walked and read and lived entirely in myself. One fancy
-alone I indulged in; I loved flowers, and I made them my companions.
-An occupation of some kind for my leisure was forced upon me, I
-suppose, by natural necessity; the mind, if its balance is to be
-maintained, must have something to feed upon, and I tended my flowers
-and watched them through their various stages with much interest; I
-had, and have a real affection for them. Every year that passed fixed
-my habits more firmly, and I had no desire to change them. Apart from
-my mute and beautiful friends, life was tasteless for me; there was no
-sweetness in it that I could see. It consisted of dull plodding day
-after day, of growing older day after day. I reflected upon it with
-scornful curiosity, and made myself, as it were, a text for
-speculative commentary. I knew what would be the end of it: in the
-natural order of things I should live until I grew old, when, in the
-natural order of things, I should die and pass away, fading into
-absolute nothingness--that was all. It seemed to me a poor affair, so
-far as it was presented to me in the different aspects with which I
-had been made familiar. I often thought of the poor girl who had been
-the only friend I had ever had in the world, and in that remembrance
-was comprised all the tenderness I had ever felt towards my species.
-
-I hope I do not distress you by my words; but it has come upon me in
-some odd way to give you as exact a portrait of myself, as I was at
-that time, as I can produce; perhaps for the reason that I wish you to
-understand the wonderful change that took place in me not long
-afterwards. Years ago I buried as in a grave all the records of my
-life, with the intention of never speaking of them, of never thinking
-of them if I could help it. But man proposes, chance disposes. Even
-to-night I intended to pluck out only one remembrance, but I have been
-overpowered.
-
-When I was thirty years of age I was taken into partnership, and five
-years afterwards my partner died, and I was sole master. Before I was
-taken into partnership I had been a machine, paid to perform certain
-duties; but when I was a partner I considered myself responsible for
-the nature of the business we undertook, and I purified the office,
-sending all clients away who came with a dishonest intent. This change
-resulted, strangely enough, to my advantage, and the business
-increased. I conducted it steadily, without in any respect changing my
-mode of life. The money I was making was in every way valueless to me.
-I had no one to whom I cared to leave it, and no pet scheme which I
-wished to be carried out after my death. I remember thinking that it
-would be a fine thing to fling the money into the sea before I died.
-
-I come now to the most eventful page in the history of my life. If I
-could blot out the record, and could stamp it into oblivion, I would
-gladly do so; but it is out of my power, and I can only look upon it
-with wonder, and upon myself with contempt for the part I played in
-it.
-
-It was a cold day in November, and a miserable sleet was falling. I
-was sitting alone in my private office, looking over some papers, when
-my clerk announced a Mr. Richard Glaive, who had written that he
-wished to consult me upon his affairs. He entered--a tall sleek man,
-well fed, well dressed, about fifty years of age--a man, I judged, who
-had seen but little of the troubles of the world. But there was
-trouble in his face on the occasion of my first introduction to him.
-With the air of one who was suffering from a deep injustice, he
-explained to me the nature of his inheritance. I learnt that he was,
-as I had supposed, a man who had never worked, who had never done
-anything useful, and who had lived all his life upon a moderate income
-which he had inherited. Wishing to increase his income, for the
-purpose, as I understood, of being able the better to enjoy
-life--'surely an innocent and laudable desire,' he said--he had been
-tempted to take a large number of shares in a company which had been
-established with a great flourish of promises--had been tempted to
-become a director for the sake of the fees; 'nothing to do, my dear
-sir,' he explained to me, and so much a year for it; the very thing to
-suit a gentleman.' His money hitherto had yielded five per cent,
-invested in safe securities; the new company promised from twenty to
-thirty. The temptation was too great to be resisted, and, blinded by
-his cupidity, he had walked into the pit. As was to be expected, the
-company was a bubble, the crash came, and the gulls were swooped upon
-by the creditors. Lawyers' letters were pouring in upon him, and
-actions were about to be taken against him. There were other
-complications, also, in the shape of long-standing debts upon which he
-had been paying interest, but a full settlement of which was now
-demanded. There was a manifest sense of injury in his tone as he spoke
-of these debts--'youthful follies,' he called them; adding
-immediately, with an easy smile, 'youth must have its fling;'
-conveying the idea that he did not consider himself responsible for
-them, for the reason that they had been so long standing. Altogether
-the case was a common one enough, and when he had concluded the
-catalogue of his embarrassments, I said that the first thing to be
-done was to prepare a statement of his affairs from his papers, so
-that he might really see how he stood with the world. He thanked me
-effusively, as though I had suggested something which would not have
-occurred to an ordinary mind, and said that he had been advised to
-consult me, as I should most certainly be able to steer him safely
-through his difficulties. I replied that I would do the best I could,
-and on the following day he brought to the office a mass of papers,
-letters, and accounts. He had received other threatening letters since
-our first interview, and he was in a fever of perplexity. 'I depend
-entirely upon you, my dear sir,' he said. I suggested that I should
-write to his creditors to the effect that he had placed his affairs in
-my hands, and that in a short time he would be able to make a proposal
-to them, asking them to be patient in the mean while. He assented,
-saying, in words which sounded queerly in my ears, that all he wanted
-was to be relieved of his liabilities, and to be allowed to go on
-enjoying life in his old way; and before he left he asked me not to
-intrust the business to the hands of my clerks, but to undertake it
-personally myself. I promised that I would do so, and in a week I had
-the statement prepared--a statement which showed his affairs to be in
-the worst possible condition. He was insolvent to the extent of not
-being able to pay one quarter of what he owed. I was surprised at this
-result, for I had expected something very different from his manner
-and statements. On the morning of the day on which it had been
-arranged that Mr. Glaive should call, I received a note from him,
-saying that he was very unwell, and that he would regard it as a
-favour if I would come to his house and explain matters to him. In the
-ordinary course of business I should have sent a clerk with the
-statement; but I could not do so in this instance, as it was necessary
-I should tell him what course he had best pursue. At seven o'clock in
-the evening I was at his house, a pretty little villa in the suburbs
-embedded in a garden. I was shown at once into what Mr. Glaive called
-his study, where he sat expecting me. He glanced carelessly down the
-columns of figures in the statement.
-
-'I don't understand figures,' he said; 'will you please explain them
-to me?'
-
-I commenced an explanation of the statement, line by line, when he
-interrupted me, saying,
-
-'Pray forgive me, but I can't keep these details in my head. Tell me
-the result.'
-
-I told him in one word--ruin. Hitherto his manner had been so
-indifferent that one might have supposed we were speaking of business
-which did not concern him, but on mention of the word 'ruin,' a
-deathly paleness came into his face. Before he had time to speak the
-door opened, and a young man entered the room with the air of one who
-was privileged in the house.
-
-'Uncle,' he said, 'Fanny told me--'
-
-'Don't you see that I'm engaged, Ralph?' cried Mr. Glaive. 'I can't be
-disturbed. Go and wish Fanny good-night.'
-
-The young man muttered a word or two of laughing apology, and retired.
-I saw him no more on that night, but, in the brief glance I cast at
-him, I saw that he was singularly handsome.
-
-'Now tell me,' said Mr. Glaive, breathing quickly, 'what is your
-meaning?'
-
-'My meaning is clear enough,' I answered. 'If these claims against you
-are pressed--and they will be--your entire property will not be
-sufficient to pay one-fourth of them.'
-
-'But why should the claims be pressed?' he asked, with a helpless
-look.
-
-I almost laughed in his face.
-
-'You owe the money,' I said; 'that should be a sufficient
-explanation.'
-
-'Do you mean to tell me,' he asked, 'that they would turn me out of
-house and home?' And he looked around his comfortably-furnished room.
-
-'It is more than probable,' I replied. 'I know the lawyers with whom
-you have to deal. This house is your own freehold, and its value is
-included in the statement.'
-
-He clasped his hands despairingly; I was silent, despising his
-weakness.
-
-'Can't you advise me?' he cried. 'If ruin came to you, what would you
-do?'
-
-'Bear it,' I replied. I was growing weary of him.
-
-'Have you any children?' he asked.
-
-'No,' I replied.
-
-'Nor wife perhaps?' he continued.
-
-'Nor wife, nor child, nor friend,' I said, rising.
-
-'What are you going to do?' he cried. 'For God's sake, don't leave me!
-You have undertaken the conduct of my affairs, and you will surely not
-desert me when your services are most needed?'
-
-The observation was a just one, and I resumed my seat. I should not
-have attempted to leave so abruptly had it not been that his manner of
-addressing me had irritated me. He had spoken to me as though our
-positions were not equal, almost as though I were a dependent, and it
-was because of this that I had answered him roughly. His manner was
-now changed; it became almost servile. He implored me to suggest a
-plan by which he could be released from his liabilities, and he
-revealed sufficient of his true nature to convince me that he would
-have shrunk from no meanness to accomplish his desire. Perhaps,
-however, I do him injustice; perhaps I should rather say that he
-convinced me he had no sense of moral responsibility in the matter. I
-resolved to come to the point at once, and I told him that I saw
-absolutely no way but one in which he could free himself from his
-liabilities, and that even that way, supposing his creditors were
-hard, would be difficult and harassing. It was by offering to give up
-the whole of his property on the condition of obtaining a clear
-release.
-
-'But then I shall be beggared,' he exclaimed, pressing his hand to his
-heart. 'It is cruel--merciless!'
-
-'It is just,' I said sternly. 'Your creditors have more right to
-complain than you. 'There is another plan, certainly, by which you
-might be enabled to keep possession of your house.'
-
-He asked me eagerly what it was, and I said that if he had a friend
-who would come forward and advance the necessary sum, his creditors
-would almost certainly accept it; but he informed me that he had no
-such friend, and that he and his daughter were alone in the world.
-Upon mention of his daughter, as if he had conjured her up, she
-entered the room. I do not know how to describe the effect of her
-appearance upon me. It was like the breaking of the sun upon one who
-had lived in the dark all his life. Mr. Glaive, clutching my arm, drew
-me close to him, and whispered to me that _that_ was the reason he
-could not contemplate the ruin before him with a calm mind.
-
-
-(Uncle Bryan paused. Hitherto he had spoken in a cold and measured
-tone; when he resumed his story his voice was no longer passionless,
-and he did not seek to hold it in restraint.)
-
-
-As Mr. Glaive introduced me to his daughter I rose to go, and bowing
-to her and saying that I would see him again, was about to take my
-departure, when Miss Glaive said she hoped she had not frightened me
-away. Not her words, nor the effect of her appearance upon me, but her
-voice, arrested my steps; it was so exactly like the voice of the poor
-girl of whose last agony I had been the only witness, that I turned
-and looked steadily at her. There was no resemblance between them--my
-lost friend was dark, Miss Glaive was fair.
-
-'You look at me,' said Miss Glaive, 'as if you knew me.'
-
-I managed to say that her voice reminded me of a dear friend.
-
-'Dear!' Miss Glaive exclaimed archly; 'very dear?'
-
-'Very dear,' I said gravely.
-
-'A lady friend?' she asked, with smiles.
-
-'She of whom I speak,' I said, 'was a woman.'
-
-'Was!' echoed Miss Glaive.
-
-'She is dead,' I explained.
-
-'I am sorry,' said Miss Glaive very gently; 'I beg your pardon.'
-
-I was strangely stirred by her sympathising words. There was a little
-pause, and I moved again, towards the door, not wishing to leave, but
-finding no cause to stay. Again her voice arrested me.
-
-'If you go now,' she said, 'I shall be quite sure that I _have_
-frightened you away. Papa declares that no one makes tea like me; I
-tell him he knows nothing about it. Do you drink tea, Mr. Carey? You
-shall be the judge.'
-
-'And after tea,' added Mr. Glaive with an observant look at me--he had
-grown calmer while his daughter and I were speaking--'Fanny will give
-us some music.'
-
-Miss Glaive did not ask for my verdict upon her tea-making, and soon
-sat down to the piano and played. In this quiet way an hour must have
-passed without a word being spoken. It was a new experience to me, and
-it took me out of myself as it were. The peaceful room, the presence
-of this graceful girl, and the sweet melodies she played, softly and
-dreamily, seemed to me to belong to another and a better world than
-that in which I was accustomed to move. It was strangely unreal and
-strangely beautiful. The music ceased, and Miss Glaive came to my
-side.
-
-'Papa is asleep,' she whispered; 'we must be very quiet now.'
-
-There were books on the table, and I turned the leaves of one without
-any consciousness of what I was gazing upon. It did not occur to me
-that this was the proper time for me to leave; I was as a man
-enthralled. A movement made by the sleeping man (did he sleep? I have
-sometimes wondered in my jealous analysis of these small details)
-aroused me from my dream, and I wished Miss Glaive good-night. She
-accompanied me to the street-door.
-
-'Papa is in trouble,' she said; are you going to assist him?'
-
-'He has asked for my advice,' I replied.
-
-'We must not talk now,' she said, 'for fear he should wake up and miss
-me; he is irritable, and has heart-disease. May I call and see you
-to-morrow? I know where your office is. I wrote the notes you received
-from papa.'
-
-'I shall be glad to see you,' I said.
-
-'At three o'clock, then,' were her last words, and we shook hands and
-parted.
-
-A heavy rain had set in during my visit, but I was scarcely conscious
-of it as I walked into the town. Late as it was, I went to my office.
-For what purpose do you think? To get the notes which I had received
-from Mr. Glaive--the notes which now were precious to me because she
-had written them. I took them home with me and read them, and studied
-the delicate writing with senseless infatuation, and then placed them
-under my pillow for a charm, as a schoolgirl might have done. At the
-office the next morning I made another and a closer examination of Mr.
-Glaive's affairs, with the same result as I had previously obtained.
-Ruin was before him--before her. Punctually at three o'clock Miss
-Glaive arrived. I met her at the door, and conducted her to my private
-room. My impressions of the previous night were deepened by her
-appearance; she was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen, and her
-charm of manner was perfect. It would be useless for me to attempt to
-describe the feelings with which she inspired me; I have often
-endeavoured to account for them and understand them, and have never
-succeeded.
-
-'Papa is very ill to-day,' she said; 'the doctor has been to see him,
-and says that he is suffering from mental disorder, which may prove
-dangerous. I have come to you to ask you the nature of his trouble.'
-
-'Do you not think,' I asked, 'that he would be angry if he knew I had
-made any disclosure of his private affairs?'
-
-'But he need not know,' she replied; 'I shall not tell him. Let it
-be a confidence between us. I saw some papers which you brought last
-night, but I do not understand them any more than papa does.'
-
-I could not resist her pleading, and I told her, awkwardly and
-hesitatingly, what I had told her father.
-
-'And all this trouble is about money,' she said with smiles; 'I was
-afraid it was something worse.'
-
-I told her that it could not well be worse, unless she knew where
-money was to be obtained. She answered that she did not know, but that
-she supposed it would be got somewhere.
-
-'You don't understand these matters of business,' I said; 'it is
-perhaps better for you.'
-
-'That can't be,' she exclaimed; 'if I knew anything of business I
-should know where to get the money from, and I would get it That is
-what business men are for, is it not?'
-
-Charmed as I was by her simplicity--a simplicity which was utterly new
-to me, and which it was delightful to hear from her lips--I deemed it
-my duty to explain matters clearly to her. Steeling my heart, I did so
-in plain terms, and showed her the position in which her father would
-be placed within a very few days.
-
-'You frighten me!' she cried, as my words forced conviction upon her;
-and overcome by the news or by my manner of telling it, she fainted.
-If she had been fair before, how much fairer was she now as she lay
-before me? Her childlike ways, her beauty, her helplessness, made a
-slave of me. I feared at first that I had killed her, and I reproached
-myself bitterly. Timidly I bathed her forehead with water, and when
-she opened her eyes, and looked at me in innocent wonder, a feeling
-that might have been heaven-born--to use a phrase--so fraught was it
-with thankful happiness, took possession of me. I explained to her
-what had occurred, and she lowered her veil to hide her tears. As I
-witnessed her grief, it seemed to me as if I were the cause of her
-father's misfortunes.
-
-'And there is absolutely no hope for us?' she sobbed.
-
-'There is only the hope,' I replied, 'as I explained to your father,
-that some friend will come forward and serve him in this strait.'
-
-'Papa has no such friend that I know of,' she said.
-
-I thought of the young man whom I had seen at Mr. Glaive's house on
-the previous night, and I mentioned him.
-
-'Ralph,' she said, 'my cousin. No, he is very poor.' She turned to me.
-'I had a fancy last night that you were our friend.'
-
-I answered in a constrained voice: 'I never saw Mr. Glaive until a
-fortnight ago; he called upon me only in the way of business.'
-
-'Forgive me,' she murmured; 'I was wrong to come, perhaps--but I did
-not know.'
-
-'If I could serve you--' I said, and paused. The words came to my lips
-and were uttered almost without the exercise of my will; not that I
-repented of them. She threw up her veil, and moved towards me.
-
-'_If!_' she echoed. 'You could if you pleased, could you not? _You_ are
-rich?'
-
-'I am not a poor man,' I said.
-
-'Help us,' she pleaded, holding out her hands to me. 'Be my friend.'
-
-I murmured something--I did not know what--and she clasped my hand;
-the warm pressure of her fingers upon mine thrilled my pulses. The
-next minute I was alone. I strove to concentrate my thoughts upon
-certain matters of business which claimed my attention, but I found it
-impossible to do so. I could not dispossess myself of the image of
-Frances Glaive. In an idle humour I wrote her name, Frances Glaive,
-over and over again; if I had been a boy, with all a boy's enthusiasm,
-instead of a man hardened and embittered by cruel experience, I could
-not have behaved more in accordance with established precedent. I saw
-Frances Glaive sitting in the vacant chair at my table; I heard her
-sweet voice; I gazed upon her face as it lay, insensible and
-beautiful, before me. 'Be my friend,' she had said. I could serve her;
-it was in my power to make her happy. I took out my bank-book and the
-private ledger in which I kept the record of my worldly progress; I
-was rich enough to pay all Mr. Glaive's liabilities, and still have a
-considerable sum left; but I need not pay them in full. I knew that I
-could easily settle with his creditors for a trifle over the value of
-his estate. I did not value money, and yet I decided upon nothing; I
-could not think calmly upon the matter; I thought only of Frances
-Glaive, knowing full well that she, by a word, by a look, by a smile,
-could make me do any wild or extravagant thing against all reason and
-conviction. I craved to see her again, and so strong was this craving
-that in the evening I found myself walking in the direction of Mr.
-Glaive's house. I can recall the manner of that walk; I can recall
-how, governed by an impulse stronger than reason, I still was
-conscious of a curious mental conflict which was being waged within
-me, independent of my own will as it seemed, and the most powerful
-forces of which strove to pull me back, while I was really walking
-along without hesitation. I _did_ hesitate when I stood before Mr.
-Glaive's house, but only for a very few moments. Frances Glaive came
-into the passage to receive me.
-
-'I thought you would come,' she said, her face lighting up.
-
-'And you are glad?' I could not help asking.
-
-'Very, very glad. Papa is in the study; he is dreadfully weak and ill,
-and I have been counting the minutes. May I tell him that I have
-brought him a friend?'
-
-'Yes,' I answered; 'a friend of yours.'
-
-All this while she had not relinquished my hand; and I too willingly
-retained hers in mine. Well, well--at that time I would have thought
-no price too heavy to pay for such precious moments.
-
-I will not prolong my story more than I can help; already it has far
-exceeded the limits I proposed to myself; but when the floodgates are
-opened, the tide rushes in. You can guess what followed; you can guess
-that I served Mr. Glaive for the sake of his daughter. In a short time
-he was a free man, and I was his only creditor. I grew to love Frances
-Glaive most passionately, and her father saw and encouraged my
-passion. My character underwent a wonderful change. Love transformed
-all things. Through Frances Glaive's innocence and artlessness the
-world became purified; through her beauty the world became beautiful
-to me. By simple contact with her nature all the bitterness in my
-nature was dissolved. The scales fell from my eyes, and I saw good
-even in things I had most despised. The days were brighter; the nights
-were sweeter. Life was worth having. Say that a man who had been born
-blind, and who had no knowledge of the beauties of nature, is suddenly
-blessed with vision; a new world is open to him, and he appreciates,
-with the most exquisite enjoyment and sensibility, the light and
-colour and graceful shapes by which for the first time he sees
-himself surrounded. The spring buds, the bright sunshine of summer,
-the russet tints of autumn, the pure snow with its myriad wonders, as
-it lies on the hills, as it floats in the air, as it fringes the bare
-branches--not alone these, but the tiniest insect, the smallest
-flower, are revelations to him. It was thus with me, and all the fresh
-feelings of youth came to me when I was a middle-aged man.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-UNCLE BRYAN CONCLUDES HIS STORY.
-
-
-I became a frequent visitor at Mr. Glaive's house. Three or four times
-every week I spent my evenings there, and I was always welcomed with
-smiles and good words. Mr. Glaive and his daughter had never mingled
-in the gaieties of the city; neither had I. One night we were speaking
-of a concert that was to be given at the largest public hall in the
-city; a royal prince had promised his patronage, and Frances Glaive
-was eager to see him.
-
-'I should like to go so much,' she said; 'I think I would give
-anything to go.'
-
-'I would take you with pleasure,' said her father; 'but there are two
-obstacles. One is the expense--that could be got over, I daresay; but
-the other is insurmountable. The excitement would be too much for my
-heart.'
-
-His heart was a favourite theme with him; he was not to be troubled or
-irritated or excited because of it; he was to be petted and humoured
-because of it. It enabled him to live the life he loved best--a life
-of perfect indolence.
-
-The next time I visited them, I presented Frances Glaive with tickets
-for the concert. It required courage on my part, for it was the first
-step in a new direction.
-
-'What am I to do with them?' she asked. 'You are very good, but I have
-no one to take me.'
-
-'I was going to ask Mr. Glaive,' I said, 'if he would intrust you to
-my care.'
-
-Mr. Glaive replied in his heartiest manner, and his daughter was wild
-with delight. If anything had been needed to complete the spell,
-Frances Glaive's appearance on that night would have supplied it. For
-beauty, for grace, for freshness, there was not a lady in the hall who
-could compare with her. I experienced a new feeling of happiness as I
-witnessed the admiring glances of the assembly, and Frances Glaive
-herself was no less happy in the admiration she excited. From that
-night we drifted into the gaieties of the city, and I became her
-constant companion--necessarily, because I supplied the means.
-
-I must mention here that her cousin Ralph was also a constant visitor
-at the house; but although he was on terms of affectionate intimacy
-with Frances--which I set down, not without jealous feeling, to their
-cousinship and to their having been much together during their
-childhood--Mr. Glaive did not seem to care for his presence at that
-time. I heard Ralph say to Frances at one time, when she spoke of an
-entertainment to which we were going,
-
-'I would take you if I had money.'
-
-'Get rich, then,' she replied, 'like Mr. Carey; but you are too idle
-to work.'
-
-I believed this to be pretty near the truth, although he chose to put
-another construction upon his indolence by saying that it was his
-misfortune to have been born a gentleman. He was barely twenty-two
-years of age at the time, but he had learnt that fine lesson
-perfectly. I came upon them then, and Frances Glaive said that she had
-just told her cousin that he was too idle to work, and that he had
-pleaded as an excuse that he had been born a gentleman. How I loved
-her for her frankness and truthfulness! Ralph turned very red, and
-said that he would work if he could obtain anything suitable. A little
-while after this conversation, at the intercession of his cousin, I
-obtained a situation for him, but he did not keep it many weeks. He
-was altogether too fine for work. As I have said, I had a jealous
-feeling towards him with reference to Frances Glaive; his youth, his
-comeliness, his gayer manners made me uneasy sometimes, and my intense
-love often magnified this feeling until it became torture. Was not
-this pearl of womanhood too precious for me to hope to win? On one
-side there was light; on the other, darkness. There was no medium.
-Without her love, it was blackest night; with her love, it was
-brightest day. I determined to know my fate, and soon; but before I
-had mustered sufficient courage to speak, Mr. Glaive anticipated me.
-My attentions to his daughter, he said, were becoming conspicuous; as
-her only protector--a poor and helpless one, he added, with his
-heart-complaint, which prevented his guarding her and watching over
-her as he should--he was naturally anxious as to her future. I took
-advantage of a pause to ask nervously if my attentions were
-displeasing to him. Not at all, he answered eagerly; but as a father
-he was bound to ask the precise meaning that was to be attached to
-them. If ever I had a child of my own, I should be able to understand
-his anxiety. He put his handkerchief to his eyes, and waited for me to
-speak. A thrill of unspeakable happiness set my pulses quivering with
-sweet music. A child of my own--of hers! If such a solemn charge were
-given into my hands, how sacredly, how tenderly would I guard it! I
-replied to Mr. Glaive, that my attentions could have but one meaning,
-and that it was my dearest hope to make Frances Glaive my wife. Then
-ensued a business conversation as to my means, as to how he himself
-was to live, and other details. My answers must have satisfied him,
-for he told me that the day on which I became his son-in-law would be
-the happiest day in his life.
-
-'Take an early opportunity,' he said, 'of seeing Frances, and speak
-for yourself.'
-
-'I would have spoken to her at once; but he told me that she was not
-at home, and that he had designed this interview while she was out
-lest we should be disturbed, or lest he had misunderstood the
-attention I had paid to her. I appreciated the delicacy of his design,
-and I waited until the following day. I was not destined to be
-disappointed; Frances Glaive accepted me for her husband. I scarcely
-dared to ask her if she loved me, but when she placed her hand in
-mine, was it not sufficient? I bought the house which pleased her
-best, and left her to furnish it according to her taste. It delighted
-me to humour her in all her whims; nothing that she did, nothing that
-she said, could be wrong. I changed my mode of life to please her; I
-dressed to please her. What was right in her eyes was right in mine.
-There was no questioning on my part. I had found my teacher, and I was
-supremely satisfied to be led by her who had brought sunshine into my
-life. She furnished the house with, exquisite taste; it cost three
-times the money I had anticipated, but she said,
-
-'What does it matter? You are rich.'
-
-What _did_ it matter? What consideration of money could influence me
-when I would have given her my heart's blood had she asked for it?
-
-Well, we were married. On the wedding-day I gave Mr. Glaive a full
-release of what he owed me.
-
-'My father-in-law must not be my creditor,' I said.
-
-For a time I was very, very happy, and Frances herself seemed to be
-so. If indulgence in every whim, in every desire, can produce
-happiness, she must have been in possession of it, for I grudged her
-nothing. It was very sweet to be led, and I did not count the cost.
-Ralph, her cousin, lived almost entirely at our house. I found it
-difficult to enter thoroughly into my wife's enjoyments, although I
-strove honestly to do so. She was fond of society, fond of dress, fond
-of being admired; if, now and then, a thought intruded itself that
-there was frivolousness in her fancies, I crushed it down. What right
-had I to judge? My life had been until now a life of misery, because
-of my belief in my own convictions, because I had judged everything by
-hard stern rules; and now, when happiness was in my possession, and I
-had discovered the folly and the error of my ways, I would not allow
-myself to relapse into my old beliefs. We were living at a rate that
-outstripped my means, but it did not trouble me much. Money would make
-no difference in our feelings: if we grew poor, it would be a good
-test for our affection. I happened to mention casually to Mr. Glaive
-that we were living at a high rate.
-
-'You surely do not mean to retrench!' he exclaimed.
-
-'I certainly have no such intention,' I replied, smiling, 'unless
-Frances wishes it. She knows my position, and I am entirely satisfied
-to be led by her.'
-
-'Quite right,' said my father-in-law, regarding me somewhat
-thoughtfully I fancied; 'women know best about these matters--though
-Frances after all is a mere girl, twenty years your junior at least,
-eh?'
-
-'That is so,' I said, angry with myself for feeling uneasy at the
-remark.
-
-'Yes, yes,' he continued; 'it would break her heart to give up any of
-her little whims--she is like a child. The dear girl _must_ enjoy
-life--now is her only time. By and by, when she becomes a mother,
-perhaps--'
-
-I turned from him; it was my dearest hope, but it was fated not to be
-gratified.
-
-'I tell you what it is, Bryan,' he said, 'you do not make a proper use
-of your opportunities; were I in your position, I would treble my
-income.'
-
-'By what means?' I asked.
-
-'By speculating, my dear Bryan; by speculating judiciously, as with
-your abilities you would be sure to do. Think of the additional
-pleasures you could offer my dear girl, and of the thousand ways in
-which you could add to her enjoyment of life.'
-
-Money had never presented itself to me in this light before; Mr.
-Glaive was right; it was a thing to be desired for what it would
-purchase. I took heed of his counsels, and became a speculator. The
-words he had spoken to me bore other fruit besides--bitter fruit, from
-the distress they caused me. I was twenty-five--not twenty--years
-older than Frances, and gray hairs were multiplying fast on my head.
-The thought that in a very few years my hair might be quite white,
-while Frances would be still a girl, gave me unutterable pain; but I
-strove to banish it from my mind. We had been married nearly six
-months, and with the exception of my own self-torturings, no cloud had
-appeared to darken our lives, when a circumstance occurred. As
-I was going home one evening, a woman stopped me--a poor ragged
-creature--and addressing me by name, begged me to assist her. During
-those few months I never paused to inquire into the merits of an
-appeal for charity--my own happiness pleaded for the applicants, and I
-gave without question. I gave this woman a shilling, and she accepted
-it thankfully enough, but with the mournful remark that it would be
-gone to-morrow. That, and the circumstance of her addressing me by
-name--I having no knowledge of her--interested me, and I questioned
-her. She was a stranger, she said, and had but newly arrived, having
-walked many weary miles. Where did she come from? I asked; and she
-mentioned the town where I had first tarried and suffered after
-leaving my home. She told me that she saw my name over my place of
-business, and had recognised it as belonging to one who had been most
-kind to a young friend she knew years and years ago, and then she
-mentioned the name of the girl who had died in my arms.
-
-'What were you?' I asked. 'I have no remembrance of you.'
-
-'Don't ask me what I was or what I am,' she faltered; 'but if you can
-assist me to lead an honest life, do so for pity's sake.'
-
-In memory of the poor girl whom she had known, I determined to assist
-this unfortunate creature--at this time a middle-aged woman--and I
-obtained a respectable lodging for her at once. I told her that we
-would never refer to the past, but that she should commence a new and
-better life at once. And she did; and honestly fulfilled its duties.
-
-Everything seemed to be going on well and happily at home, and I was
-in the full enjoyment of my fool's paradise, when I received a shock
-which almost turned the current of my blood. It took place on a day
-when I had been occasioned much annoyance by the circumstance of my
-father-in-law drawing upon me, without my permission, for a sum of
-money which was of consequence to me. It was not the first time he had
-done this, and I had paid his drafts with but slight reluctance, for
-they were for small amounts. But the amount of the present bill was
-serious, and it came at an inconvenient time. I was so much annoyed
-that, knowing Mr. Glaive to be at my house spending the evening, I
-determined not to go home until late, for fear that angry words might
-pass between us in the presence of Frances. So I sent a note to my
-wife, saying that business detained me at the office; and I idled away
-the time until ten o'clock, when I walked slowly home. My wife was not
-in the usual room in which we sat of an evening, and I went to a
-little room of which she was very fond, and which she called her
-sanctuary. I heard voices there, hers and her cousin Ralph's, and the
-words that he was addressing to her arrested my steps. I was guilty
-then of the first mean action in my life--I listened. What I heard I
-cannot here repeat, but I heard enough to know that I had been cheated
-and cajoled. I did not wait for the end, but I stole away with a
-desolate heart. My dream was over, and I was awake again, with a
-desolate heart, and with all my old opinions and old convictions at
-work within me in stronger force than ever.
-
-I said nothing; certain as I was of the ugly bitter truth, I resolved
-to be still more certain of it, not from my own impressions, but from
-outward evidence. I discovered to my astonishment that my wife's
-vanity, her fondness for display, her love of the admiration of men,
-her frivolity, her flirtations with her cousin Ralph, and my own
-ridiculous infatuation and blindness were matters of common
-conversation. Fool that I was to believe in goodness! I cast aside all
-weakness, and resolved never to be deceived again. My heart was like a
-withered leaf; and all the foolish tenderness of my nature died an
-unredeemable death. Towards one person, and one alone, did I entertain
-any feeling of kindness; that was the woman who had solicited my help,
-and who had known the poor lost girl-friend of my younger days. I was
-sick almost to death of my home; the sight of my wife's fair face was
-unutterably painful to me; I was sick of the place in which I had been
-worldly prosperous. I yearned to fly from it, and to find myself again
-among strangers. The events that brought about the accomplishment of
-this desire came quickly. Some of the speculations I had entered into
-turned out badly; I could have saved myself from loss had I exercised
-my usual forethought; but I was reckless and despairing, and it was
-almost with a feeling of joy that I found, upon a careful examination
-of my affairs, that I had barely enough to settle with my creditors. I
-called them together secretly, letting neither my wife nor Mr. Glaive
-know of my position. I enjoined secrecy upon those to whom I was
-indebted, and made over to them everything I possessed in the world.
-Upon that very day Mr. Glaive took me to task for my treatment of his
-daughter, for my neglect of her. I listened to him calmly, and told
-him I had good and sufficient reasons for my conduct. It was an angry
-interview, and I ended it abruptly upon his saying that his daughter's
-happiness would have been more assured if he had given her to one who
-was more suitable to her. That same night a meeting of another
-description took place between Ralph and myself. He was talking of his
-pretty cousin in public, and of me in offensive terms. I have always
-regretted that I took notice of him on that occasion, for he was in
-liquor; but I was not master of myself. I left him after hot words had
-passed between us, and went to my office. He sought me there, and
-continued the quarrel, and boasted to my face that my wife loved him,
-and would have married him but for my stepping between them.
-
-'You fool,' he said scornfully; you bought her!'
-
-It was a bitter truth. Had I been a poor man, Frances Glaive would
-never have become my wife. But when he said that it was a bargain
-between me and her father, I thrust him from the office, and shut the
-door in his face. Everything was clear to me now, and I looked with
-shame and mortification upon my childish folly; but I was justly
-punished for it. I made my arrangements for departure, for I resolved
-never to live with my wife again, never even to see her, for fear that
-her fair false face should turn my senses again. The news of my
-failure must soon become known, and I did not intend to remain a day
-after its announcement. I wrote a letter to my wife, telling her that
-I had discovered all, and that I could no longer live with her. I told
-her that I was ruined, and that I was going to London to bury myself
-in a locality where there was the least possibility of my becoming
-known, and that it was useless her seeking me or sending to me, after
-the shame and disgrace she had brought upon me. 'If,' I concluded, 'I
-could make you a free woman, so that you might marry the man you love,
-I would willingly lay down my life; but it cannot be done. The only
-and best reparation I can offer is to promise, as I do now most
-faithfully, to wipe you out of my heart, so that you may be free from
-me for ever.' I had some small store of money by me, half of which I
-enclosed in the letter. I knew that she was in no fear of want, and
-that she would find a home if she wanted it in her father's house.
-Before I left the town I went to see the woman I had befriended, and
-to bid her farewell; she was earning her living by needlework. I gave
-her some of the money I had left, and I might have been tempted to
-believe, if I could have believed in anything good, that she at least
-was grateful to me for the assistance I had rendered her. When I came
-out of the house in which she lived, I saw Mr. Glaive and Ralph,
-arm-in-arm, on the opposite side of the way. I avoided them, and the
-next morning I shook the dust from my feet, and started for London. I
-never saw them again. I came to this part of London, where there was
-the least chance of my being discovered; shortly afterwards I learnt
-that this business was for sale, and I found I had just sufficient
-money to purchase it. You know now, thus far, the leading incidents of
-my life, and that its crowning sorrow and bitterness arose from my
-senseless worship of a vain, frivolous, and beautiful woman. I have
-only a few words to add, and they refer to Jessie.
-
-I had no knowledge whatever of her, but on the first night of her
-arrival something in her face, something in her ways, reminded me of
-my wife. On the following morning she gave me a letter. It was from my
-wife, and was dated six years ago. How she discovered my address I
-cannot tell. It was to the effect that I should read it when she was
-dead, and it asked me simply to give a home to the friendless child
-who presented it. You can understand the effect it had upon me;
-questioning Jessie privately, I learned from her that she was indeed
-friendless and an orphan. I ascertained the place she came from, and
-was relieved to know that it was not the town in which I had been
-married. She had been stopping at an ordinary lodging-house, and I
-wrote to the address she gave me, but received no answer. In the mean
-time I feared that the quiet routine of the life I had led, and which
-suited me, was likely to be interrupted by the introduction into the
-house of another inmate. I resolved to take Jessie back to the friends
-she had been stopping with before she came here, and to arrange for
-her residence with them, undertaking to pay the expenses of her
-living, although, as you are aware, I could ill afford it. On the
-morning I took Jessie away, I gave her to understand that she would
-not return; but when I reached the place I found that her friends had
-left; I was told they had emigrated, and I made sure of the fact. It
-does not come within the scope of what I intended to relate to you to
-state why I was absent from home longer than I anticipated, nor what
-consideration influenced me in bringing Jessie back with me. But it is
-pertinent to say that I see in her the same qualities, the same
-frivolities and vanities which I know existed in my wife, and which
-entailed upon me the most bitter sorrow it has ever fallen to the lot
-of man to suffer. She is here, however, for good or for ill; if it
-turn out for good, it will be due to but one influence.
-
-I have nothing more to add except to exact from you the condition that
-not one word of what I have said shall ever be told to Jessie.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-I RECEIVE AN INVITATION.
-
-
-Thus abruptly uncle Bryan concluded his story. Some parts of it had
-moved me very deeply with sympathy for him; but the latter part, where
-he spoke of Jessie in such a strangely unjust and inexplicable manner,
-filled me with indignation. I had no time, however, to think about it,
-for almost immediately upon the conclusion of his story, Jessie came
-home, flushed and radiant, from her visit to the Wests. Our grave
-faces checked her exuberant spirits, and, looking from one to another,
-she sought for an explanation.
-
-'Are you angry with me for going out?' she asked, divining that she
-was the cause of all this seriousness.
-
-'No, my dear,' replied my mother; 'no one is, I am sure. I hope you
-enjoyed yourself.'
-
-'I always do,' said Jessie, her face clouding, when I go to the Wests.
-Has anything disagreeable occurred?'
-
-'No, Jessie, nothing.'
-
-Jessie had a habit of shaking her head at herself when she was not
-satisfied with things; it was the slightest motion in the world, but
-there was much meaning in it. On the present occasion it expressed to
-me very plainly, 'I know that you have been talking of me, and that I
-have done something wrong which I am not to be told of.' My mother
-understood it also, for with expressive tenderness she assisted Jessie
-to take off her bonnet and mantle, and smoothed Jessie's hair in fond
-admiration. I could have embraced my mother for those marks of
-affection towards Jessie; they were an answer to uncle Bryan's unjust
-words.
-
-'I think,' said Jessie, looking into my mother's face, that _you_ are
-fond of me.'
-
-'My dear,' responded my mother, kissing her, 'I regard you almost as
-my daughter.'
-
-'I like to be loved,' murmured Jessie, almost wistfully, with tender
-looks at my mother, and keeping close to her as if for shelter from
-unkindness.
-
-'Which would you rather have, Jessie,' I asked most suddenly, 'love or
-money?'
-
-Heaven only knows how the words came to my tongue! They certainly were
-not the result of deliberate thought. Perhaps it was because of some
-unconscious connection between the words Jessie had just spoken and
-those which she had spoken to me a little time before: 'Chris, I think
-I would do anything in the world for money.' The words were often in
-my mind, or perhaps they were prompted by an episode in the story I
-had just heard. Uncle Bryan's keen eyes were turned upon Jessie
-immediately the question passed my lips, and his scrutiny did not
-escape Jessie's observation.
-
-'Ask me again, Chris,' she said, with a sudden colour in her cheeks.
-
-'I said, which would you rather have--love or money?'
-
-'How much money--a great deal?'
-
-'Yes, a great deal.'
-
-'What a question to ask! What does uncle Bryan say to it?'
-
-'Uncle Bryan is too old for such follies,' he replied roughly.
-
-'That is a crooked way of getting out of an argument,' she said
-defiantly, as if being provoked herself, she wished to provoke him.
-'Money is not a folly, and money can buy anything. So, Chris, I think
-I would rather have money; for then,' she continued, with a disdainful
-laugh, 'I could buy new dresses and new bonnets, and everything else
-in the world that's worth having.'
-
-I listened ruefully, hoping she did not mean what she said, for she
-spoke mockingly. My mother, seeing that the conversation was taking an
-unfortunate direction, turned it by speaking of the West family, and
-Jessie entertained us with lively descriptions of her friends,
-throwing at the same time an air of mystery over them, which
-considerably enhanced my curiosity concerning them. Soon afterwards
-all in the house had retired to rest.
-
-But I knew that my mother would come down for a few minutes' quiet
-chat, and that we should have something to say to each other about
-uncle Bryan's wonderful story. It was in every way wonderful to me. I
-had always imagined that he had led a quiet uneventful life, and
-suddenly he had become a hero; but I could not associate the uncle
-Bryan I knew with the man who had fallen in love with Frances Glaive,
-and so I told my mother as we sat together half an hour later in my
-quiet little bedroom.
-
-'His life has been a life of great suffering,' my mother said, 'and we
-can never feel too kindly towards him. He has shown us his heart
-to-night; and yet, my dear, I think I understand him better than you
-do.'
-
-'I daresay, mother; that's because you _are_ better than I am.'
-
-'No, no, my dear,' she replied. 'Who can be better than my darling
-boy? It is because I have more experience of the world. Chris, my
-heart melted to him to-night more than it has ever done. I had a
-curious fancy once when he was speaking. I wished that he had been a
-boy like you instead of an old man, for I yearned to take him in my
-arms and comfort him.'
-
-'But what person in the world,' I thought, 'would she not wish to
-comfort if she knew that they needed it?' And I said aloud: 'If he had
-had a mother like mine, it would have been different with him.' (Such
-words as these were the natural outcome of my affection for this
-dearest of women, and I did not know then, although I believe I have
-learnt since, how sweet they were to her.) 'But, mother, I can't think
-of him as you do, when I remember what he said about Jessie. And tell
-me--would you like me to look on things as uncle Bryan does?'
-
-'God forbid, child!' she exclaimed warmly. 'It would take the
-sweetness out of your life; but I pray that you may never be tried as
-he has been. All that I want to impress upon you is to be tolerant to
-him and kind, because of his great trials and troubles. And now, my
-dear, I have something to tell you that you will be glad to hear.
-Jessie, before she went to sleep, asked me not to believe what she had
-said about money. "I couldn't help saying it," she said; "but I would
-rather be loved than have all the money there is in the world." Jessie
-puzzles me sometimes, my darling; but I have seen nothing in her
-nature that is not good.'
-
-And with these sweet words of comfort my mother left me to my rest.
-
-The battle between Jessie and me with respect to the Wests still
-continued. Jessie, standing upon her dignity, as she had declared she
-would, did not ask me again to call for her when she visited them, and
-as her visits were growing more frequent, my sufferings were
-proportionately intensified. I felt that I could not hold out much
-longer, and I was on the point of giving way and sacrificing my
-manliness, when the difficulty was resolved for me by the following
-note, which my mother placed in my hands with a smile:
-
-'Miss West presents her compliments to Mr. Christopher Carey, and will
-be happy to see him at nine o'clock to-night.'
-
-I was greatly delighted, and I congratulated myself upon my powers of
-endurance, thinking, naturally enough, that I had Jessie to thank for
-the invitation. In obedience to the summons, and feeling really very
-curious about the Wests--and most anxious also, I must confess, to be
-where Jessie was--I presented myself at the house at the hour named to
-the minute. There was no need to knock at the street-door, for it was
-open. I tapped on the wall of the dark passage, and waited for an
-answer. There was a great deal of laughter below, and my soft tapping
-was not heard, so I advanced two or three steps, and knocked more
-loudly.
-
-'Who's there?' a voice cried, and the laughter ceased.
-
-'It's me,' I answered; and I was about to announce myself more
-explicitly, when my words were taken up mockingly.
-
-'Oh, it's Me, is it? Well, come downstairs, Mr. Me. Flora child, open
-the door. Take care! Mind your head!'
-
-The warning came too late. I knocked my head smartly against a beam in
-the ceiling, and stumbling down the stairs, entered the kitchen--the
-door of which was opened, by Flora I presume, just in time to receive
-me--in a very undignified manner. Screams of laughter greeted me as I
-picked myself up, very hot and red at my loss of dignity.
-
-'Be quiet, children!' cried the voice which I had first heard. 'I hope
-you haven't hurt yourself, Mr. Me! Come along and shake hands. Very
-glad to see you. "And Jack fell down and broke his crown."'--This
-quotation because I was rubbing my head, which I had bumped severely.
-
-'I am not hurt much, thank you,' I said, as I walked towards the
-speaker, who was either a girl or a woman, or both in one, for I could
-not guess her age within ten years. She was sitting on a bench before
-a table; and as I gave her my hand, she placed her fingers to her
-lips, and glanced expressively towards a curtain, made of two
-patchwork quilts, which partitioned off a part of the kitchen. There
-was something going on behind this curtain, for there was a shuffling
-of feet there, and I heard low voices.
-
-'Don't speak loud,' said my hostess, as I guessed her to be. 'I'm Miss
-West. Jessie's behind there; you'll see her presently. Don't let her
-know you're here.'
-
-'Why, doesn't she know?' I exclaimed, in a maze of bewilderment.
-
-'Bless your heart, no! _I_ sent you the note without her knowing
-anything of it. I thought you'd be glad.' As Miss West made this
-remark she gave me a sharp look.
-
-'I _am_ glad,' I said.
-
-'I knew you would be. Rubbing your head again! Well, you _have_ raised
-a bump! Shall I brown-paper-and-vinegar you?'
-
-'No, thank you,' I said, laughing; and then I looked round in wonder
-upon the strange scene.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-I AM INTRODUCED TO A THEATRICAL FAMILY.
-
-
-I think if I had been suddenly plunged into Aladdin's cave, I should
-not have been more amazed. There I should have expected to see the
-rich treasures of gold and precious stones and the magic fruit growing
-on magic trees with which that cave is filled, but for the strange
-wonders by which I was here surrounded I was totally unprepared. These
-loomed upon me only gradually, for the two tallow candles which threw
-light upon the scene were but a dim illumination. The kitchen, which
-comprised nearly the whole of the basement, was irregularly shaped,
-and so large that the distant corners were almost completely in shade.
-Lurking, as it were, in one of these distant corners was a man
-strangely accoutred, whom I expected would presently step forward and
-join our party, but not a motion did the figure make. I subsequently
-discovered that it was a dummy man, in chain armour, which had once
-played a famous part (the armour, not the man) in a famous drama of
-the middle ages. Hanging upon the walls were numberless articles of
-male and female attire, some mentionable, some un-ditto; but with rare
-exceptions the dresses were not such as I was accustomed to rub
-against in my daily walks. These that I saw hanging around the room,
-covering every inch of available space from ceiling to floor, were
-theatrical dresses of different fashions and degrees; many were of
-silk and satin, very much faded, for persons of quality, and some were
-of commoner stuff for commoner folks--which latter, from their
-appearance, seemed to have worn better. Here the dress of a noble
-Roman fraternised with the kilts of a canny Scotchman, and here the
-satin cloak and trunks of a fashionable melodramatic nobleman
-contemplated (doubtless with sinister designs) the modest bodice which
-covered the breast of female virtue. High life and low life, in every
-description of ancient, mediæval, and modern fashion, were here
-represented, and to an eye more practised and fanciful than mine, the
-room might have been supposed to be furnished with all the cardinal
-vices and virtues in allegory. Here were long boots whose character
-could not be mistaken--they represented villainy of the very deepest
-dye, and they frowned upon the heavy hobnails of a model peasantry.
-Here were the woollen garments and broad-buckled belt which had played
-their parts in a hundred smuggling adventures; and here the breeches,
-stockings, and natty shoes which had danced hundreds of jigs amidst
-uproarious applause. Here was a harlequin's dress ready to flash into
-life and play strange antics at the mere waving of the wand which hung
-above the mask; and clinging to it on either side, as if in fond
-memory of old triumphs, were the short skirts of dainty columbines.
-Here was the dress of Wah-no-tee, feathers, bald scalp, moccasins, and
-hatchet, all complete, side by side with the fripperies of my Lord
-Foppington. Among the pots and pans on the dresser were polished
-breastplates and gauntlets and shields of various patterns. There were
-other dresses, very much bespangled and be-jewelled, and pasteboard
-helmets and crowns of priceless value, and masks that had had a hard
-life of it, being dented here and bulged there and puffed up and
-bunged up in tender places, worse than any prizefighter's face after
-the severest encounter. A donkey's head and shoulders hung immediately
-above me, and by its side the plaster cast of a face without the
-slightest expression in it, and which is popularly supposed to
-represent an important branch of the histrionic art. Whichever way I
-turned, these and a hundred other strange articles most incongruously
-mixed together met my gaze.
-
-'Well, what do you think of us?' asked Miss West. 'We're a queer
-bunch, ain't we?'
-
-'It's a strange place,' I said, thinking it best to avoid
-personalities. 'I never saw anything like it.'
-
-'We're a theatrical family, my dear,' said Miss West complacently,
-'born in the profession every one of us. Are you fond of theatres?'
-
-As a matter of fact, I had only been twice to a theatre, but it was a
-place of enchantment to me, and I said as much to Miss West.
-
-'Ah!' she mused. 'It looks so from the front, I daresay; and a good
-job for us that it does. But it is bright, and it _does_ carry you
-away.'
-
-A familiar voice behind the curtain caused a diversion, and I turned
-eagerly in that direction. Miss West gave me another of her sharp
-looks.
-
-'Don't you wish you had eyes in your ears?' she said. 'You're one of
-the bashful ones, I can see. Could you play the part of the Bashful
-Lover do you think?' (This question was accompanied by a significant
-dig in the ribs and a merry laugh.)
-
-'I don't think,' I stammered, very red and confused, 'that I should
-ever be able to act.'
-
-'Not _that_ part!' exclaimed my good-natured tormentor. 'Well, then,
-you _could_ play "The Good-for-nothing."'
-
-Which was an allusion I did not at all understand. Miss West
-proceeded:
-
-'All you've got to do, my dear, is to stick to nature. Turk gets mad
-with me when I tell him that. "Stick to nature!" he cries. "Why, then
-every fool could act." I say to him, every fool _could_ act if he
-stuck to nature. Then he rolls his eyes and glares, does Turk.'
-
-'Why does he do that?' I inquire.
-
-'He plays the heavy villains, my dear, at the Royal Columbia Theatre;
-and what's a heavy villain without his glare? You should see him in
-_The Will and the Way!_ It's a sight.'
-
-'I should like to see him; but you haven't told me who Turk is.'
-
-'Turk is my brother.'
-
-'He is not here?' I ask, with another glance at the curtain.
-
-'Oh, no; he is playing a new part to-night Poor Turk! the new school
-of acting depresses him. Say, O.'
-
-'O,' I said, with a smile.
-
-'Ah, you should hear Turk say it! It would fill a large page. Do you
-remember when you first learnt to write?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'And how, with your left arm sprawling over the table, and your left
-ear listening for something you never heard, and your eyes as staring
-wide open as ever they could be, and your tongue half out of your
-mouth, you dug your pen into the copy-book to produce your first O,
-which took about five minutes in the making, and then came out
-squabbled? That's the way Gus says his O's. He takes a long time over
-them. Now Brinsley's different.'
-
-'Brinsley?'
-
-'My brother. He's sensible. He plays walking gentlemen in the new
-style, and rattles off what he has to say quite in the elegant way--as
-if he didn't care a bit for it, you know. Turk sneers at him
-(dramatically, my dear), and says that the new school of acting is the
-ruin of the profession. But to come back to the Bashful Lover. You
-shall play it, my dear. Gus shall write the piece.'
-
-'Gus?'
-
-'One of my brothers. Gus can write anything--tragedies, melodramas,
-farces--and he shall write _The Bashful Lover_, after the style of
-_The Conjugal Lesson_. One scene, and only two performers--you and
-Jessie. That would be nice, as Jessie says. You shall quarrel, of
-course, and make it up, and quarrel again, and snub each other, and
-sulk, and say spiteful things (Gus will see to all that), but--don't
-look so glum!--it shall all come right in the end. You shall drop into
-each other's arms and kiss, and while you are folding her to your
-heart (that's the style nowadays, my dear), the curtain shall fall.
-We'll have a select audience--none of the boys, for that would spoil
-it, eh? but Gus--he must be present as the author. There'll be me, and
-Florry, and Matty, and Rosy, and Nelly, and Sophy, and we'll all
-applaud at the right places, you may be sure.'
-
-Miss West counted the names on her fingers as she went over them; the
-young ladies who bore them were all seated round the table and about
-the room, engaged in various ways. One was cutting-out stars of paper
-tinsel, and gluing them on to a gauze dress; another was making
-dancing shoes; another was amusing herself with a cardboard stage and
-cardboard characters, which she drew on and off by means of tin
-slides. Miss West, who also had an article of female attire, in an
-unfinished state, in her lap, which she worked upon in the intervals
-of her conversation, called these young ladies by name, one by one,
-and desired each to perform a magnificent curtsy to me, which the
-little misses, the eldest of whom could not have been more than
-fourteen years of age, did in grand style, worthy of the finest ladies
-in the land. I was somewhat bewildered at the extent of Miss West's
-family, and I asked if there were any more of them.
-
-'Heaps, my dear,' she complacently replied; 'there are nineteen of us
-altogether--eleven boys and eight girls, and all straight made, with
-the exception of me. I'm crooked. My legs are wrong. But I've been on
-the stage too. I played an old witch for an entire season, and got
-great applause. People in the house wondered how I could keep doubled
-up almost for such a long time together; I was on in one scene for
-twenty minutes; they didn't know I was doubled up naturally.'
-
-In proof of her words Miss West rose, and hobbled to the end of the
-kitchen as if in search of something, and hobbled back, the most
-genial and good-humoured of old witches. She was barely four feet in
-height, and was a queer little figure indeed, but her face was bright,
-and her eyes were bright I could not help liking the little woman, and
-I told her so.
-
-'That's right, Master Christopher. We'll be friends, you and me. Well,
-but to come back.' (This was evidently one of her favourite figures of
-speech.) got two pound five a week for playing the old witch; it
-lasted for twenty-two weeks, and it was almost the death of me. I had
-to do it though.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-Her voice grew quieter and she spoke in subdued tones, so that the
-little misses should not hear.
-
-'Mother and father died within a month of each other, and there were
-the doctor's bills and the funeral expenses to be provided for. Then
-there's a large family of us, Master Christopher, and taking us
-altogether in a lump, we're no joke. The boys wouldn't hear of my
-going on the stage again, and I don't see myself how I could do it
-regularly, for there's a deal of business to look after indoors,
-letting alone the household affairs. Though I like it! If
-anybody--that is, anybody who's somebody--would write me a strong
-one-part piece, I could make a big hit with my figure. 'Tisn't every
-day you see such a figure as mine; it's worth a mint of money on the
-stage if it was properly worked. They're all on the stage but me;
-little Sophy there--she's the youngest, four years--spoke two lines in
-the pantomime last year to rounds of applause. The people love to see
-a clever child on the stage, though the papers write against it. But
-what are the papers? as Turk says, with a glare.'
-
-'Of course,' I repeated, with a foolish air of wisdom, 'what are the
-papers?'
-
-'Turk says, if they were what they ought to be, somebody that he knows
-(that's himself, my dear) would be at the top of the tree.'
-
-'Turk is very clever, then?'
-
-He's the best murderer to slow music that _I've_ ever seen. But Gus is
-the genius of the family. In the matter of that, we're all geniuses.
-But blighted, my dear, blighted!'
-
-She gave me the merriest look, as little like a blighted being as can
-well be imagined.
-
-'We're all of us very conceited, my dear, and very vain. What was that
-thing in the fable that tried to blow itself out, and came to grief?'
-
-'The frog.'
-
-'We're all of us frogs, my dear. If people would only give us as much
-room as we think we ought to have, the world wouldn't be big enough
-for a quarter of us. And of all the conceited creatures in this
-topsy-turvy world, actors and actresses are the worst. We're good
-enough in our way, but we _do_ think such a deal of ourselves.'
-
-'Is Mr. Gus a good actor?'
-
-'Plays leading business; he's out of an engagement just now, He's
-behind the curtain with Jessie.'
-
-I was burning to ask what they were doing there, but the words hung on
-my tongue, and an inquiry of another description came forth. It was
-concerning the wonderful collection of dresses and theatrical
-properties with which the kitchen was filled. I wanted to know if they
-were used solely for the adornment of the persons of the Wests.
-
-'Bless your heart, my dear, no,' was the reply. This is the
-'stock-in-trade of our theatrical wardrobe business. We lend them out
-for private theatricals and bal masques. It was a good business once,
-but it has fallen off dreadfully. When bal masques were in fashion,
-mother used to lend as many as twenty and thirty dresses a night
-sometimes. If ever you want a dress for a bal masque--though there's
-scarcely one a year now, worse luck!--come to me, and make you a
-nobleman, or a chimney sweep, or a brigand, or the Emperor of
-Russia, in the twinkling of a bedpost, and all for the small charge
-of--nothing, to you. But to come back. You wanted to ask just now what
-Gus and Jessie are doing behind that curtain. They're rehearsing a
-scene, my dear, out of _As You Like It_. Not that she wants teaching;
-Jessie's a born actress, and if she were on the stage, she'd make a
-fortune with her face and voice. And as for her laugh--there, listen!
-I never _did_ hear Mrs. Nesbit laugh--I'm not old enough to have seen
-her act, my dear--but if her laugh was as sweet and musical as
-Jessie's, I'll eat my stock-in-trade down to the last feather. And
-there's another reason, Master Christopher--Gus is in love with her.
-Bless my soul! how the boy changes colour! Why, they're all in love
-with her. Turk is mad about her, and Brinsley is pining away before
-our eyes. He doesn't mind it so much, because a slim figure suits his
-line of acting. It wouldn't do for a walking gentleman to be fat.'
-Miss West placed her hand upon mine, and said, with sagacious nods,
-'My dear, if Jessie was on the stage, she would have ten thousand
-lovers. Hark! there's the bell. They're going to play the scene. Are
-you ready, Jessie?'
-
-'Yes,' cried Jessie, 'but we want some one for Celia; she only speaks
-twice.'
-
-'Florry will do Celia,' replied Miss West. 'Go behind, Florry; we'll
-commence the scene properly, and I'll read Jacques. Now, then. Act
-four, scene one: The Forest of Arden. Up with the curtain.'
-
-The curtain was drawn aside, and disclosed a roughly constructed
-stage, and absolutely an old scene representing a wood.
-
-'We have three scenes,' whispered Miss West: 'a chamber scene, a
-street scene, and a wood. You'll see how beautifully Gus will play
-Orlando. He'll be dressed for the part. Enter Rosalind, Celia, and
-Jacques. Look over the book with me. Florry knows her part. I
-commence: "I prithee, pretty youth--"'
-
-I looked up, and saw Jessie and Florry on the stage. Jessie, looking
-towards us, did not appear to recognise me; her face was flushed, and
-her eyes were brilliant with excitement.
-
-Miss West (as Jacques): 'I prithee, pretty youth, let me be better
-acquainted with thee.'
-
-Jessie (as Rosalind): 'They say you are a very melancholy fellow.'
-
-Miss West: 'I am so; I do love it better than laughing.'
-
-Jessie: 'Those that are in extremity of either are abominable fellows,
-and betray themselves to every modern censure worse than drunkards.'
-
-Miss West: 'Why, 'tis good to be sad and say nothing.'
-
-Jessie: 'Why, then, 'tis good to be a post!'
-
-The raillery of the tone was perfect, and I was aglow with admiration.
-I had never in my life heard anything more exquisitely intoned, and
-this was but a foretaste of what was to follow.
-
-Jessie (to Miss West): 'A traveller! By my faith, you have great
-reason to be sad: I fear you have sold your own lands to see other
-men's; then, to have seen much, and to have nothing, is to have rich
-eyes and poor hands.'
-
-Miss West: 'Yes, I have gained my experience.'
-
-Jessie: 'And your experience makes you sad: I had rather have a fool
-to make me merry than experience to make me sad; and to travel for it,
-too!'
-
-Here Gus West entered, dressed as Orlando. Very noble and handsome he
-looked, and in the love scene that followed between him and Jessie, he
-played much too well for my peace of mind. When Jessie said, 'Ask me
-what you will, I will grant it;' and he answered, 'Then love me,
-Rosalind,' he spoke in so natural a tone, and with so much eagerness,
-that I could not believe he was acting, especially with Miss West's
-words in my mind that he really was in love with her. I was heartily
-glad when the scene was at an end. But I was somewhat comforted at
-Jessie's unfeigned delight that I had at last found my way to the
-Wests'.
-
-'I thought at first that I had you to thank for being here,' I said;
-'but Miss West sent me an invitation without you knowing anything of
-it, it seems.'
-
-'Miss West is a meddlesome--dear delightful creature! She's as good as
-gold! And I'm a little bit glad that it has happened so; it was manly
-in you not to give in, and I had a good mind to commence coaxing you
-again to come.'
-
-'And I was beginning to be so miserable,' I said, adding my confession
-to hers, 'at not being able to be where you were, that I was on the
-point of giving way myself, and asking you if I might come without an
-invitation.'
-
-'So the best thing you can do,' cried Miss West, who had overheard us,
-'is to kiss and make friends.'
-
-Jessie laughed, and said, 'I didn't see you while I was acting, Chris.
-I was so excited that I couldn't see a face in the room.'
-
-Not even Orlando's?' I suggested, with a furtive look at Jessie.
-
-'Oh, yes; his of course, but then we were acting to each other.'
-
-'Only acting, Jessie?' I inquired, with much anxiety.
-
-'Only acting, Jessie!' mimicked Miss West, whose sharp ears lost
-not a word. 'Why, what else _should_ it be? Or else she's married to
-Gus--Scotch fashion, my dear. "I take thee, Rosalind (meaning Jessie),
-for wife," says Gus. "I do take thee, Orlando (meaning Gus), for my
-husband," says Jessie. But she'd say that to any man who played
-Orlando as well as Gus does--wouldn't you, Jessie?'
-
-'Of course I would,' replied Jessie, entering into her friend's
-humour.
-
-'Why, my dear, I knew a young lady who was married a dozen times a
-week (in two pieces every night) for more than six months. And her
-sweetheart was the stage carpenter, and saw it all from the
-wings--imagine his sufferings, my dear! Ah, but such marriages are
-often a good deal happier than real ones; there's more fun in them,
-certainly. Jessie, there's ten o'clock striking; it's time for you to
-go. Now mind,' concluded Miss West, addressing me, 'no more standing
-on ceremony; you're welcome to come and go when you like; we shall
-look on you as we look on Jessie, as one of the family.'
-
-I promised to come very often, and Miss West said I could not come too
-often. There was no mistaking the hearty sincerity of the invitation.
-Jessie and I walked very slowly home, and she listened delightedly to
-my praises of her acting.
-
-'I don't want them at home to know about it, Chris,' she said; 'at
-least, not till I tell them.'
-
-'Very well, Jessie;' and we entered the little parlour together in a
-very happy mood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-THE SUNDAY-NIGHT SUPPERS AT THE WESTS'.
-
-
-In due time I was introduced to other members of the West family, and
-grew so much attached to them, and so enamoured of their ways, that I
-spent nearly all my leisure in their company. Uncle Bryan seemed to
-resent this, growling that 'new brooms swept clean,' and asking me
-sarcastically if I intended to adopt the fashion through life of
-throwing over old friends for new ones. Jessie stepped in to defend
-me, and said boldly that uncle Bryan was not so fond of our society as
-to have reasonable cause to grumble at our absence.
-
-'How do you know that?' asked uncle Bryan sharply. 'You want people to
-be like peacocks or jackdaws, always showing their feathers or
-chattering about themselves.'
-
-The cause of this little disturbance was that we often stayed at the
-Wests' until eleven or past eleven o'clock at night.
-
-Now that I have you to take care of me, Chris,' said Jessie, we need
-not be so particular.'
-
-'You had better live with your new friends altogether,' observed uncle
-Bryan.
-
-'I will, if you wish me to,' replied Jessie indignantly; 'I know that
-I'm a burden to you.'
-
-'No, no, my dear,' interposed my mother; 'uncle Bryan does not mean
-what he says.'
-
-And indeed uncle Bryan was silent, and retired from the contest. These
-little quarrels were always smoothed over by my mother, and Jessie
-herself not unfrequently played the penitent, and atoned indirectly to
-uncle Bryan for the sharp words she used. It is needless to say that I
-took sides with Jessie in the sometimes noisy, but more often quiet
-warfare, which existed between her and uncle Bryan. As I grew older, I
-recognised the helplessness of her position in uncle Bryan's house,
-and I found bitter fault with him for his manner towards her. It was
-wanting not only in tenderness, but in chivalry, and were it not for
-the respect and consideration he showed for my mother, I have no doubt
-I should have quarrelled with him openly. As it was, I looked forward
-to the time when I should be able to offer my mother a home of my own,
-where she and Jessie and I could live together in harmony. With the
-Wests I became a great favourite. My talent as an artist contributed
-to this result, and I drew innumerable sketches of them in their
-various capacities. Miss West's Christian name was Josey (short for
-Josephine), and by that familiar title she insisted that I should
-address her. So it was Jessie and Josey, and Turk and Brinsley and
-Chris, with us in a very short time, as though we had been on the most
-intimate terms for years. The walls of all the rooms in the house,
-with the exception of the kitchen, were soon adorned with portraits
-and character sketches, with the artist's initials, C. C., in the
-corner. The portrait of Josey West, as the Witch of the Blasted Heath,
-as played by her &c. &c.; the portrait of little Sophy West, as
-Celandine, in the _Fairy Dell_, as played by her &c. &c.; the portrait
-of Augustus West, as Claude Melnotte (I would not take him as
-Orlando), as played by him &c. &c.; the portrait of Brinsley West, as
-Tom Shuffleton, as played by him &c. &c.; the portrait of Turk West,
-as The Thug, as played by him &c. &c.; and numberless others, were
-shown to admiring visitors, and contemplated by the admiring
-originals, to the glory of 'the eminent young artist,' as Miss West
-called me. It is necessary to add that in most of the superscriptions
-at the foot of the pictures the word 'eminent' did good service. It
-was the eminent tragedian, the eminent comedian, the eminent character
-actor; and so on. Certainly the name of the West family was legion.
-Three of them were married, and seemed from appearances to be
-emulative of the example of their parents in the matter of children.
-Sometimes on a Sunday evening the entire family would be assembled in
-the one house, and as the married folk brought their broods with
-them--the youngest three of which invariably were babies in arms--the
-total number of brothers and sisters and uncles and aunts was
-something alarming. The house was overrun with them.
-
-'If we go on like this for a hundred years,' Miss West said to me, in
-confidence, 'we shall become an institution. Sheridan has seven
-already, and his wife is quite a young woman; J. H. has five, and
-Clarance four--and more coming, my dear!'
-
-That was the chronic condition of the wives. There were always more
-coming. Sheridan, J. H., and Clarance were the eldest of Josey West's
-brothers, and were well known to the British theatrical public in our
-quarter of London. In the commencement of our intimacy the constant
-introduction of members of the family, of whose existence I had been
-previously ignorant, was very confusing to me, especially as Miss
-West, without preliminary explanation, spoke of all her relatives by
-their Christian names, and placed me on a footing of personal intimacy
-with them. I used to write lists of the names, with descriptions
-appended, and privately study them, so that I might not make mistakes
-in addressing them, but some of them were always in a tangle in my
-mind. The Sunday-night suppers were things to remember; every
-available article of crockery in the house was pressed into service,
-and as even the youngest members of the family were accustomed to late
-hours and late suppers, the result may be imagined. Those for whom
-there was no room at the table had their supper on chairs, on stools,
-or on their laps as they sat on the ground. It was very rough and
-undignified, but it was delightfully enjoyable. The chatter, the
-laughter, the ringing voices of one and another trying to make
-themselves heard, the good humour, the free-handed and free-hearted
-hospitality of those merry meetings are present to me, as I recall the
-reminiscence. There was always plenty to talk about, and plenty of
-words spoken that were worth listening to. A theatre in which one of
-the family was engaged was doing a bad business, and the actors were
-compelled to work on half salaries; one or two others were going on a
-provincial tour; another was out of an engagement; a manager had
-failed and the theatre was closed; and so on, and so on.
-
-'There's always something,' said Miss West. Directly one saves
-a bit of money--it's precious little one has the opportunity of
-saving--something happens that sucks it up. But, bless your heart!
-what else can be expected with such swarms of children as we've got in
-the family!'
-
-'If a legitimate actor,' said Turk moodily, 'could be certain of a
-regular engagement, it would be all right; but the public taste is
-vitiated--vitiated! They want novelty; they're not satisfied with
-legitimate business. Why, if any one of us had happened to be born
-covered from head to foot with red pimples, with a green sprout
-sticking in the middle of each of them, he could command his fifty
-pound a week, while a man of sterling talent is compelled to vegetate
-on a paltry fifty bob!'
-
-This sally was received with screams of laughter, and cries of Bravo,
-Turk!'
-
-'I've got an idea,' cried Josey West; 'why don't we start a theatre
-ourselves, on the sharing principle? Here we are, all ready-made:
-leading man, walking gentleman, low comedy, genteel comedy, new style
-of acting, old style of acting, old men and women, heavy villain' (a
-general laugh at Turk, who joined in it readily), 'chambermaids, and
-ballet, all complete.'
-
-'It's all very well,' interposed Gus West, but where's the theatre?'
-
-'It's all very well,' added Turk, but where's the capitalist?'
-
-'Advertise for one,' said Miss West. '"Wanted, a capitalist with five
-thousand pounds to undertake the management" (tickle him with that,
-eh, Turk?)--"to undertake the management of a highly talented
-theatrical family, nearly forty in number (and more on the road), who
-can play tragedy, comedy, melodrama, farce, ballet, burlesque,
-and pantomime in an unrivalled manner. They are furnished with
-well-stocked wardrobes, including wigs, and they will be happy to give
-private exhibition of their abilities, in proof of their competency.
-Included in their number is a dramatic author, who will be willing to
-supply new pieces, if desired, to suit the capacity of the company. As
-a proof that they are not pretenders, they have all been born in the
-profession" (listen to that, Turk)--"they have all been born in the
-profession. No objection to travel. In India and Australia they would
-astonish the natives, and would be sure to create an immense
-sensation. A certain fortune. Competition invited and defied." There!
-would that catch a capitalist?'
-
-'And what should I do,' asked Jessie, laughing, if the capitalist were
-to come and carry you all away?'
-
-'Come out with us as leading lady, to be sure,' replied Josey West
-promptly; 'and Chris can come as scene-painter, and there we are, all
-complete. Quite a happy family, my dear!'
-
-We made very merry over the fancy, and extracted many amusing pictures
-from it. I was sorry when Josey West called to us that it was late and
-time for us to go. It was a fine night, very quiet and very still, and
-Jessie and I lingered and talked of the Wests and their merry
-light-hearted ways.
-
-'They have plenty of trouble, though,' said Jessie; 'all that glitters
-isn't gold.'
-
-'I have never seen any one happier than they are,' I said. 'Suppose
-they had all the money in the world, could they have spent a merrier
-evening?'
-
-'What makes you mention money, Chris?'
-
-'I don't know exactly, except that it came into my head to-night, that
-if everybody had just a little more, everything would be right. But
-then I suppose when they had just that little more, they would want
-just a little more?'
-
-'That is in uncle Bryan's style. Chris, I think you are clever!'
-
-'I don't know, Jessie; Mr. Eden is pleased with me, and says I shall
-get along very well. I would like to; I would like to be rich.'
-
-She mimicked uncle Bryan: 'You would like to be rich! You would like
-the moon! Open your mouth, and what you would like will drop into it.'
-
-I laughed at the imitation, which was perfect, and said, 'Well, I
-suppose it is all nonsense--wishing, wishing! Uncle Bryan would be
-right if he said that, Jessie, and it's just what he _would_ say, if
-he had the opportunity. Most of the great men I've read about had to
-work and wait for success. The other night, when uncle Bryan was in
-one of his amiable moods, he said that success was like the robbers'
-cavern in _The Forty Thieves_, and that there was one magic key which
-would always open it. When I asked him what that key was, he said,
-Earnestness.'
-
-'That's one of the things that uncle Bryan would never give me credit
-for.'
-
-'Uncle Bryan is very unjust and very unkind. Let us turn back and walk
-a little. The night is so beautiful and I feel so happy at this minute
-that I should like it to last for ever.' Jessie's hand stole into
-mine, and I held it close; the silence that followed was broken by
-Jessie.
-
-'Why would you like to be rich, Chris?'
-
-'For your sake, Jessie, more than for my own. If I could give you all
-that you desired, I shouldn't wish for anything more.'
-
-'You are very good to me, Chris. Why?'
-
-'Because I love you, Jessie,' I replied.
-
-'Really and truly?' she exclaimed, half tenderly, half tantalisingly.
-
-'With all my heart and soul,' I said, in a low passionate tone.
-
-'When one loves like that' (she was speaking seriously now), 'what
-does it really mean?'
-
-'I can only speak of myself, and I know that there is no sacrifice I
-would not make for you. I am sure there is nothing you could ask me to
-do that I would not do; if I could die to make you happy, I would do
-so gladly, Jessie.'
-
-'But I don't want you to die, Chris; what should I do without you?
-Then when one loves really and truly, and with one's heart and soul,
-there is no selfishness in it? One doesn't think of oneself?'
-
-'I think of nothing but you, Jessie. I should like to be successful,
-for your sake; I should like to be rich, for your sake. Now do you
-understand?'
-
-She did not reply, and when presently I ventured to look into her
-face, I saw that there were tears in her eyes.
-
-'You are not angry with me, Jessie?'
-
-'I should be an ungrateful girl indeed, if I were. No, Chris. I love
-to hear you speak to me as you have done. I was only thinking that I
-wished others were like you.'
-
-'You mean uncle Bryan,' I said, with a quick apprehension of the
-direction of her thoughts. 'But he takes pains to make people dislike
-him. Besides, he is at war with everything--he is, Jessie! He never
-goes to church; he never opens a Bible. I believe,' I added, my voice
-sinking to a whisper, 'that he is an atheist.' (And I said to myself
-mentally, as I gazed into Jessie's sweet face, If he does not believe
-in God, it is less strange that he does not believe in you.')
-
-I had given no thought to time, and now, when the church bells struck
-one o'clock, I was startled at the lateness of the hour. With a guilty
-look at each other, Jessie and I hurried home; before I could knock at
-the street-door, it was opened for us by my mother. She put her finger
-to her lips.
-
-'I heard your steps, my dear,' she said, with anxious tenderness;
-'hush, don't make a noise. You might wake your uncle.'
-
-'We had no idea of the time, mother,' I said; 'it isn't Jessie's
-fault. I kept her talking, and really thought it was no more than
-eleven o'clock. I am so sorry we have kept you up! See what a lovely
-night it is.'
-
-We stood at the door for a little while, my mother in the centre,
-with her arms round our waists. When she kissed me and wished me
-good-night, I saw that she had been crying; but her pale face
-brightened as I put my arms about her neck, and held her to me for a
-few moments. When I released her, I found that we were alone; Jessie
-must have stepped upstairs very quietly, for I did not hear her leave
-the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-TURK, THE FIRST VILLAIN.
-
-
-Of all the male members of the West family, Turk was the one I liked
-best. Our intimacy soon ripened into friendship, and he made me the
-confidant of his woes, and as I was a good listener, we got on
-admirably together. It seemed that he had never had 'a chance,' as he
-termed it, and that he had been condemned by fate to act a line of
-business which he declared was distasteful to him--although I must
-confess that my after experience of him convinced me that it was
-exactly suited to him, and he to it--and in theatres where the
-intellectual discernment of the audiences was proverbially of a low
-standard.
-
-'Perhaps you will tell me,' he said to me, in one of our private
-conferences, 'what there is in my appearance that I should have been
-selected to play the first villain almost from my birth--from my
-birth, sir, Chris, my boy. Do I look like a murderer? Do I look like a
-man who had passed through a career of the deepest-dyed ruffianism,
-and was eager to go on with it? Speak your mind--it won't hurt me; I'm
-used to criticism, and I know what value to place upon it.'
-
-Turk was really a slight-made man, and as I had not seen him act at
-the time of these utterances, I could not understand his sister's
-praises of him as the best murderer to slow music that she had ever
-seen. His appearance in private life was, to say the best of it,
-insignificant, and as utterly opposed to that of a deeply-dyed ruffian
-as can well be imagined. The only likeness to the description Josey
-West had given of him that I could see was his 'glare,' and he
-certainly did roll his eyes as he spoke, with an effect which was
-nothing less than tremendous. I mentioned to him that I had heard the
-greatest praises of his acting, and that he played the villain's part
-to the life.
-
-'And what does that prove?' he asked, with an oratorical flourish.
-'Does it prove that I am fit for nothing better, or that I am a
-conscientious actor? When I have a part to play, I play it; I don't
-play Turk West every night. See me play the Thug, and I defy you to
-recognise me; see me as the First Murderer in _Macbeth_, and I defy
-you to recognise the Thug. When I first played the Thug, my own mother
-didn't know me; "That's something like acting," she said; and she
-ought to have known, rest her soul! for she played a baby in arms
-before she was out of long clothes, and spoke lines on the stage when
-she was three years old. Why, sir, my struggle with old Martin, in
-_The Will and the Way_, was said to be the most realistic thing ever
-seen on the stage--and do I look as if I would murder a man? It was
-art, sir, pure art. I am a conscientious actor--a conscientious actor,
-sir, Chris, my boy--and what I have to play, I play. Give me a strong
-leading part in a good piece, in a good theatre in the West-end--in
-the West-end, sir, Chris, my boy, not in this heaven-forsaken
-quarter--and then see what I can do! Why, sir, there are men occupying
-leading positions in our best theatres who can't hold a candle to Turk
-West--I'm not a vain man, and I say they can't hold a candle to Turk
-West! There are men--whose names I'll not mention, for I'm not envious
-and I only speak in the interests of art--men on the boards on the
-other side of Temple Bar--where I've never been seen--who are drawing
-large screws, and who have as much idea of acting as a barn-door fowl.
-What do they play? They play _themselves_, never mind what characters
-they represent. Dress doesn't make a character--it's the voice, and
-the manner, and the bearing. Why, look at----never mind; I said I
-wouldn't mention names. Directly he comes on the stage--whether he
-plays a young man or a middle-aged man or an old man, a man of
-this century or a man of the last century, or farther back if you
-please--everybody says, "Ah, there's old So-and-so!" And he uses the
-same action and the same leer and the same walk, as if the hundreds of
-characters he has played in his time were written to represent _him_,
-not as if, having taken to the stage, it was his duty to represent
-_them_. Call that acting! It's death and destruction to art, that's
-what it is. And the public stand it--stand it, sir, Chris, my
-boy--being led by the nose, as asses are, by critics who have reasons
-of their own for not putting their thumbs down on such incompetency.
-That's the word, sir, Chris, my boy, that's the word--incompetency.
-But wait-till I come out; wait till an author that I have in my eye--
-yes, sir, I have him; I know him, and he believes in me, and I believe
-in him; we fight a common cause--wait till he has finished the piece
-he is writing for me, a piece representing two passions; one is not
-enough for Turk West. When that piece is performed at one of the
-West-end theatres, with Turk West in the leading character, you may
-mark a new era in the history of the stage. But mum, Chris, my boy,
-mum! Not a word of this to any of my relations.'
-
-My acquiescent rejoinders were very pleasing to him, and he expressed
-a high opinion of my judgment.
-
-'You shall come and see me play to-morrow night,' he said, 'at the
-Royal Columbia. I'm engaged there for the heavy business. Can you get
-away from work at half-past five o'clock? I'll come for you, if you
-like, and we'll walk together to the shop' (thus irreverently
-designating the Temple of Thespis).
-
-I said I thought I could get away, and he promised to call for me.
-
-'You will see, sir, Chris, my boy, the most villainous and
-incomprehensible blood-and-thunder melodrama that ever was presented
-on the stage--it is called _The Knight of the Sable Plume, or The
-Bloodstained Banner_. Isn't the very title enough to drive intelligent
-persons from the doors? But, sir, Chris, my boy, we play to a twopenny
-gallery, and the twopenny gallery will have blood for its money, and
-plenty of it. _The Bloodstained Banner_ is a vile hash put together
-for a "star"--an arrant impostor, sir--who plays the leading part.
-I'll say nothing of him--you shall see and judge for yourself. I play
-Plantagenet the Ruthless; I don't slur my part because it's
-impossible, absurd, and ridiculous--you'll find no shirking in Turk
-West; he knows what duty is, and he does it. If I have lines given me
-to speak in which there isn't an atom of sense, it isn't my fault; I
-speak them because I'm paid to speak them, and I do my best to
-illuminate--that's the word, sir, Chris, my boy--to illuminate a
-character which is an insult to my intelligence. Necessity knows no
-law, and if I'm compelled to knuckle-down to fate to-day, I live in
-hopes that the sun will shine to-morrow.'
-
-I said that I sincerely hoped the sun would shine to-morrow, and that
-it _would_ shine brightly for him; and Turk West wrung my hand, and
-said that he wished the audiences he had to play to were as
-intellectually gifted as I was, adding that then there would be hope
-for the drama.
-
-I obtained permission to leave on the following evening at the time
-mentioned by Turk, who was as good as his word in coming for me, and
-we walked together to the Royal Columbia Theatre.
-
-'Prepare yourself, my boy,' he said, in the tone of one who was about
-to initiate a novice in solemn mysteries; 'I am going to take you
-behind the scenes.'
-
-I was duly impressed by the great privilege in store for me, and I
-walked by the side of Turk West, glorified in a measure by his
-importance. The theatre was not yet open, and a large number of
-persons was waiting for admittance, some of whom, as regular
-frequenters, recognised Turk and pointed him out to their companions,
-who regarded him with looks of awe and wonder; others, unaware of the
-great presence, were kicking vigorously at the doors. After lingering
-a little and looking about him with an unconscious air (really, I now
-believe, to enjoy the small tribute of fame which was descending upon
-him; but I did not suspect this at the time), Turk preceded me down an
-unobtrusive narrow passage, the existence of which could have been
-known only to the initiated. This led to the stage-door, which to my
-astonishment was the meanest, shabbiest, and most battered door within
-my experience. We plunged at once into the dark recesses of the
-theatre; and after bumping my head very severely against jutting
-beams, and nearly breaking my neck by falling up and down unexpected
-steps, which were nothing more nor less than traps for the unwary, I
-found myself in a long barn-like room, full of draughts (which latter
-feature, indeed, seems to be the chronic complaint of all theatres,
-before and behind the curtain), and with a very low ceiling, which
-Turk informed me was the principal dressing-room for the gentlemen of
-the company. Therein were congregated seven or eight individuals,
-making-up for the first piece; some were rubbing themselves dry with
-dirty towels, some were dressing, some undressing, some painting their
-faces. One, whom I afterwards discovered was the low-comedy man, was
-sticking pieces of pluffy wool upon his nose and cheeks, and dabbing
-them with rouge, with which he was also painting his eyebrows, so that
-they might match his close-cropped, carroty-haired wig. Turk was
-familiarly and merrily greeted by all these brothers-in-arms, who all
-addressed him as 'Cully;' and as he returned the compliment and
-'cullied' them, I presumed it was a family name which they all
-enjoyed. Turk proceeded at once to disrobe himself, and I, filled with
-wonder at the mysteries of which I was, for the first time, a
-privileged observer, turned my attention to the other members of the
-company. The room adjoining was also occupied, by the ladies of the
-company, to judge from their voices; they were in the merriest of
-spirits, and a smart rattle of jokes and saucy sayings passed from one
-room to another. Turk was evidently a favourite with the ladies, who
-called out 'Turk, my dear' this, and 'Turk, my dear' that, he
-returning their 'dears' with 'darlings,' as became a man of gallantry.
-When, after the lapse of a few minutes, I looked towards the place
-where Turk was, I discovered in his stead an imposing individual with
-a pair of magnificent moustaches on his lips, and such a development
-of calf to his legs as I certainly never should have given Turk credit
-for without ocular proof. I gazed at him in doubt as to whether it
-really was Turk I saw before me, and his voice presently convinced me
-that it was Turk, and no other. Over his herculean calves he drew a
-pair of doubtfully-white cotton tights, and over these a pair of
-yellow-satin breeches, rather the worse for wear; around his waist (no
-longer slim, but bulky, as became the 'heavy man') he drew a flaming
-red-silk sash, with enormous fringes, and a broad black belt, in which
-were ominously displayed two great knives and three great pistols.
-Then came a ballet shirt which had seen better days (or nights), then
-a blue-velvet jacket, with slashed sleeves and large brass buttons,
-and he completed his attire by throwing carelessly upon his head--
-which was framed in a wig of black ringlets--a peaked black hat, with
-a stained red feather drooping over (I feel that I ought to say o'er')
-his brow.
-
-'This is the regulation kind of thing, Chris,' he said to me in a low
-voice--'this is the stuff that draws the twopenny gallery.'
-
-And he turned, with much affability, and accepted a pewter-pot offered
-to him by a brother with a 'Here, Cully!' and drank a deep draught.
-Then he took me into the passage, and asked some person in authority
-to pass me into the theatre. The people were pouring in at all the
-entrances, and in a short time the house was completely filled. They
-were fully bent upon enjoying themselves, and began to kick and
-applaud directly they were seated. When the lights were turned up and
-a bright blaze broke upon the living sea of faces, there was a roar of
-delight; and as the musicians straggled into the orchestra, they were
-greeted with applause and exclamations of familiarity, which fell upon
-ears supremely indifferent. I was placed in a good position, where I
-had a capital view of the stage, and having purchased a playbill, I
-began to study it. The programme was an imposing one, and the
-occupants of the twopenny gallery could certainly not complain that
-they did not have enough for their money. First, there was the
-romantic melodrama of _The Knight of the Sable Plume_, in which that
-distinguished actor, Mr. Horace Saint Herbert Fitzherbert (pronounced
-by the entire press to be superior to the elder Kean, and to surpass
-Garrick), would sustain the principal character. To be followed by the
-thrilling drama of _The Lonely Murder at the Wayside Inn_. After
-which, a comic song by Sam Jacobs, entitled the 'Jolly Drunken
-Cobbler,' and the clog hornpipe, by Mr. Dicksey. The whole to conclude
-with the stirring domestic drama of _The Trials and Vicissitudes of a
-Servant-Girl_; winding up with a grand allegorical tableau in coloured
-fires. The appetite that could have found fault with the quantity must
-surely have been unappeasable. In due time the music ceases, a bell
-rings, there is a moment's breathless expectation in the house, and
-the curtain rises on _The Knight of the Sable Plume_. Scene the first:
-A wood. In the distance, the battlemented castle of Plantagenet the
-Ruthless. (So says the programme, but I cannot see the battlemented
-castle, although I strain my eyes to discern it, being interested in
-it as the family residence of my friend Turk.) Enter two ruffians in
-leather jerkins and buff gloves. Times are very bad with them. They
-want gold, they want blood, and--ahr! they want revenge (with a
-redundancy of _r_'s). They roll their eyes, they gnash their teeth.
-Yonder is the castle of Plantagenet. There sits the lordly tyrant who
-grinds his vassals to the dust. Shall he be allowed to go on in his
-ruthless course unchecked? No! Hark! a thousand echoes reiterate the
-declaration. (I fancy the echoes.) No no! no! They kneel, and swear
-revenge in dumb show. Who comes here? As they live, it is the lovely
-Edith, the heiress to those baronial halls. The Fates are propitious.
-They'll tear her from the domestic hearth, and bear her senseless form
-to mountains wild. Exit ruffians elaborately. Enter Edith pensively.
-She is pretty, and she receives a round of applause from all parts of
-the house. She bows, and tells the audience that she has just
-dismounted from her snow-white palfrey outside. This accounts for her
-coming in without a hat, and with her hair hanging down her back over
-a white-muslin frock. The sparkling foliage of the trees tempted her
-to stroll along the mossy sward. She sighs. Who is the stranger she
-met nine days ago upon this very spot? She did not speak to him, she
-did not see his face, but the beating of her heart, the clouds athwart
-the sky, the dew upon the grass, the whisper of the breeze, the
-beauteous birds that warble delicious notes to scented flowers, all,
-all whisper to her that she loves him. Ah, yes, she loves him! Could
-she but see once more his manly form, she'd die content. Cue to the
-musicians, with whose assistance Edith sings a plaintive song
-expressive of her wish To quit the sordid world, And with her love be
-whirled To other lands. On sorrow bent (she sings), I'd die content If
-he were by my side. Oh, take me, love, To realms above, And let me be
-thy bride. The ruffians enter at the back of the stage, and roam about
-with stealthy steps. They draw their knives, and breathe upon them.
-Expectation is in every eye. The ruffians advance. The high-born
-maiden continues her song. The ruffians retreat. The high-born
-concludes her song with a tra-la-la. The ruffians, having just made up
-their minds at that point, advance again, with a quick sliding
-movement. Seize her! Oh, spare me, spare me she cries. Spare you,
-daughter of Plantagenet the Ruthless! spare you! Never! Did thy gory
-sire spare my white-haired parent when, with his bloody sword, he
-clove him from head to foot, and laid him writhing in the dust? Spare
-you! Not if lightnings flashed and thunders rolled, not if all the
-powers of earth and air interpose their forms protecting, shall you be
-spared! Revenge! The music is worked up terrifically during the scene.
-The ruffians drag the maiden this way and that, evidently undecided as
-to which road they shall take to their mountains wild. They seem bent
-upon rending her lovely form into small pieces and running off the
-opposite sides of the stage with the fragments. Help, oh, help me! she
-cries. A sudden tumult is heard without. Make way there, make way! is
-heard, at least two yards from the spot. She shrieks more loudly. I
-hear his lovèd step without! she cries. And the next moment a figure
-clad in armour rushes in, and with one blow lays the two ruffians dead
-upon the stage. His visor is down, and towering in his helmet is a
-sable plume. It is he, the Knight of the Sable Plume! He supports
-Edith on one arm; he raises the other aloft to the skies, and the
-curtain drops upon the picture amidst the admiring plaudits of the
-audience. Vociferous cries for Fitz! Fitz! bring that hero to the
-front of the curtain, where he gracefully bows, and wipes his brow
-languidly with a cambric handkerchief The second act introduces my
-friend Turk West, in the character of Plantagenet. I am glad to find
-that he is a favourite with the audience, who clap their hands, and
-two or three profane ones cry out, 'Bravo, Turk! Go in and win!' I am
-not aware whether this is a stimulant to him, but he certainly 'goes
-in' with vigour. The scene in which he appears is described as the
-grand hall in the castle, and its appointments are two chairs and a
-brown wooden table of modern manufacture. Very ruthless and very
-fierce indeed does Turk look, and he is accompanied by the pair of
-dead ruffians, who now appear as retainers: I recognise them by their
-buff boots. It is in vain that I endeavour to unravel the plot; the
-threads slip from me directly I attempt to gather them together. From
-a lengthy soliloquy indulged in by Plantagenet, I learn that he is not
-the rightful owner of the battlemented castle. Seventeen years ago he
-killed a noble prince in cold blood (which popular phrase cannot be a
-correct one), and murdered his beautiful child, the last, last scion
-of a noble race. (Here Turk grows magnificent, and 'goes in' with a
-will.) Oh, agony! He beholds once more their mangled corpses, he sees
-the death-sweat br-reaking on their brows! The demon of remorse is
-tearing at his vitals. Oh, would he could recall the past, and restore
-the two wooden chairs and the table to their rightful owner! During
-the applause that follows, Turk winks at me, and I am delighted. The
-low-comedy man and a waiting-maid in short petticoats and wearing an
-embroidered apron, as was the fashion with waiting-maids in the days
-of chivalry, play important comic parts in the piece, and send the
-audience into convulsions of laughter. But the plot has quite baffled
-me, and I have given up all hope of unravelling it. The Knight of the
-Sable Plume has been thrown into prison by Plantagenet, after a
-desperate fight with eight retainers (in slippers), and is released by
-the hand of the lovely Edith, to whom he swears eternal fealty. The
-last scene is the same as the first--a wood, with the (invisible)
-battlemented castle in the distance. Plantagenet the Ruthless enters.
-He is mad with rage. His prisoner has escaped. He gnashes his teeth.
-He'll search the wide world through but he will find him. Usurper! ye
-search not long. Behold him here! He enters, the Knight of the Sable
-Plume. At length we stand front to front! Back to thy teeth thy lying
-words! Villain! Defend thyself! They fight to music. One, two, up;
-one, two, down; one, two, three, four, sideways. They turn round, and
-when they are face to face, they clash their swords terrifically. They
-lock their arms together, and fight that way. The gallant knight is
-getting the worst of it. He is forced first upon one knee, then upon
-the other. He fights round the stage in this position. By a herculean
-effort he gains his feet. The swords flash fire. Ah, the usurper
-yields! He stumbles. He lies prostrate on the ground. Over him glares
-the knight. Recreant, beg thy miserable life! Never! Die, then,
-remorseless tyrant! With a piercing shriek Edith rushes in, and cries,
-Spare him, oh, spare him; he is my father! The Knight of the Sable
-Plume is softened; his sword drops from his grasp. He kneels, and
-supports the head of the Ruthless. It is too late; Death has marked me
-for his own, says Turk. The knight raises his visor. Ah! what is that
-scar upon thy brow? cries Turk. Avenging heaven! it is _his_ child.
-These possessions are thine. Take them. Take my daughter. Her love
-will compensate for her father's hate. He joins their hands, and
-turning up the whites of his eyes (which elicits from the gallery
-cries of 'Bravo, Turk!') and saying, 'I die hap-pappy!' proceeds to do
-so in the most approved corkscrew style. Thus ended _The Knight of the
-Sable Plume_, by far the most incomprehensible piece of romance it had
-been my good fortune to witness. Mr. Horace Saint Herbert Fitzherbert
-was called before the curtain at the end of the drama, and appeared;
-there were calls also for Turk, but he did not appear. He gloomily
-informed me, when the performance was over, that Fitzherbert was on a
-'starring' engagement, and that it was in the agreement that in his
-own pieces nobody should be allowed to appear before the curtain but
-himself. On reference to the playbill, I found that in _The Lonely
-Murder at the Wayside Inn_ Turk was the murderer, and I am afraid to
-say how many times he deserved to be hanged for the dreadful crimes he
-performed in _The Trials and Vicissitudes of a Servant-Girl_. In the
-last piece the allegorical tableau in coloured fires may have conveyed
-a good moral, but the smell was suggestive of the lower regions, where
-good morals are not fashionable.
-
-Following out the instructions given to me by Turk, I made my way,
-when the curtain fell for the last time, to the dressing-room at the
-back of the stage, and whispered my praises of my friend's acting.
-Before we went home, he and a number of his professional brethren
-'looked in' at a neighbouring bar, where pewter pots were freely
-handed about. There was no lack of animated conversation, and the
-subject of course was the drama. One man, who had played a small
-character in _The Knight of the Sable Plume_, and played it well, was
-holding forth to two or three unprofessional friends on the peculiar
-hardship of his case. As he had not played in the last piece, I
-inferred from his condition that he had been regaling himself at the
-bar for some time before we entered. He was an elderly man, and Turk
-whispered to me that he had once been leading man in the theatre, but
-that he had come down in the world. Those who addressed him by name
-called him Mac.
-
-'Ah, Turk, my boy,' he said, giving Turk a left-handed grasp; his
-right hand held his glass of whisky-toddy--'ah, my sons, come in to
-drink? That's right. Drown dull care.'
-
-'You've tried to do that for a pretty considerable time, Mac,' said
-Turk good-humouredly. 'Take a pull at the pewter, Chris.'
-
-'I have, my boy, I have,' returned Mac; I'm an old stager now, but,
-dammee! there's life in the old boy yet. I'll play Claude Melnotte
-with the youngest of you. I'm ready to commence all over again. Show
-me a more juvenile man than I am on the boards, and dammee! I'll stand
-glasses round I will--and pay for them if I can borrow the money!'
-
-A volley of laughter greeted this sally, in which Mac joined most
-heartily.
-
-'Drown dull care!' he continued. 'I've tried to do it for a
-pretty considerable time, as Turk says--dammee, my sons! I've
-it all my life, and I'd advise you to do the same. Care killed a
-cat, so beware. Before you came in, my sons, I was speaking to these
-gentlemen'--indicating his unprofessional friends--'who kindly asked
-me to take a glass with them--thank you, I don't mind; my glass _is_
-empty; another whisky-toddy--The cry is still they come! eh, my
-sons?--I was speaking to these gentlemen, whose names I have not the
-pleasure of knowing, but who take an interest in the profession. I was
-speaking to them of myself, in connection with the noble art. I was
-saying that I act for my bread----'
-
-'And sack,' interrupted a member of the company. 'And sack. Mac.'
-
-'Hang it, no, my son!' exclaimed the old actor, with a capital mixture
-of humour and dignity. 'I act for my bread; I let my friends pay for
-the sack. I may, or I may not, be an ornament to my profession; that
-is a matter of public opinion and public taste; but whether I am or am
-not, I am not ashamed to say I act for my bread. I was speaking to
-these gentlemen also--your healths, gentlemen--of the decadence of the
-drama. In the halcyon days of youth, in the days of the great Kemble
-(I made him my model; I trust I do not tarnish his fair fame), the
-drama was worth something. But now, when a fellow like this
-Fitzherbert--a man who has been pitchforked, so to speak, into the
-profession--comes in and takes all the fat of the piece, and when he
-is puffed and posted and advertised into a successful engagement, and
-when every other worthy member of the company is pushed into a corner,
-and compelled, so to speak, to hold a variety of lighted candies to
-show off his spurious brightness, it's an infernal hard thing to each
-of us as individuals, and a degradation to the drama as an art.'
-
-'Bravo, Mac!' said one and another, some in sincerity, some to humour
-the old actor.
-
-'You are certainly right, sir,' said one of the strangers, speaking
-with the deference due to so eminent an authority. Your glass is
-empty; will you fill again?'
-
-'Ay, till the crack of doom,' was the ready reply. 'Right, sir! of
-course I'm right.'
-
-'But,' said another of the strangers, not quite so deferential as the
-former speaker, some one must play second fiddle.'
-
-'Second fiddle, sir! Yes, I admit it, sir. Some one _must_ play second
-fiddle--and third fiddle too, if you like. But let the man who plays
-second fiddle _be_ a second fiddle, and not a first fiddle.'
-
-'Who is to blame for all this?' asked the deferential stranger.
-
-'Who's to blame, sir! The public, sir--the public. But what
-consolation is that to me? I must live, sir, I suppose. I must feed my
-family, or answer for it to the beak. Here am I, who will place my
-Macbeth in comparison with any man's--who can play Hamlet, Lear,
-Othello, Brutus, in a masterly manner--I don't say it _of_ myself; it
-has been said of me--here am I compelled to knuckle-under to a man
-young enough to be my son, and with not a tenth part of my brains or
-experience. And what's the consequence? I haven't had a call for six
-months, while he gets called on three times a night. Why, sir, I
-remember the time when a discriminating audience called me on six
-times in one piece! I've had a dozen bouquets thrown to me in one
-night! And now, sir, these things are forgotten, and old Mac is
-shelved, sir, shelved!'
-
-'The public ought to be ashamed of themselves,' said the deferential
-stranger.
-
-But the public's not all to blame.. It's the managers, who allow
-themselves to be led, like tame sheep, into the trap; they haven't the
-moral courage to stand up against it. And what's a man, or a manager,
-without moral courage? I wouldn't mind it so much, but what's the
-consequence? A star is engaged upon shares, at an enormous screw, and
-to make this up, all _our_ screws are reduced. That's where it comes
-hard. I pledge you my dramatic word, my screw isn't so much by
-seven-and-sixpence a week as it was six months ago. Who gets my
-seven-and-six? Why, who but the star? And my poor children must starve
-and perish, or go on the parish, if they hadn't a self-denying parent,
-who would pawn his shirt before they should come to want. I'll take
-another glass of whisky-toddy--my last, sir, my last to-night. Old Mac
-knows when he's had enough. Turk, my son, a word in your ear.'
-
-Turk went aside with him, and I heard the jingling of coin.
-
-'He's a rum old fellow,' said Turk to me, as we walked home; 'a good
-actor too, and might have got on well if he hadn't been so much
-engaged all his life in drowning care.'
-
-'You gave him some money?' I said.
-
-'Lent it to him, Chris; only fourpence halfpenny. The old fellow never
-borrows even money; it's always an exact sum for an exact purpose that
-he wants--fourteenpence, or eightpence halfpenny, or sevenpence, or
-some other odd amount. He was never known to borrow a shilling or a
-half-crown. There's a good deal of truth in what he says, Chris.'
-
-'I am sorry for his wife and children,' I said.
-
-'The best of it is,' replied Turk, laughing, 'that the old fellow has
-only two sons, and the youngest is thirty-four years of age, and in a
-very good way. But it pleases old Mac to talk like that, and he has
-talked like it so long, that I've no doubt he really believes that he
-_has_ a destitute family somewhere, who would starve if he couldn't
-borrow his fourpence-halfpennies and his sevenpences now and then.
-It's one of the best things I know.'
-
-Altogether this night's entertainment was a most enjoyable one to me,
-and gave me much food for reflection.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-HOLDING THE WORD OF PROMISE TO THE EAR.
-
-
-So far as I could judge from outward appearances, the coldness between
-uncle Bryan and Jessie increased with time, rather than lessened.
-Their natures seemed to be in direct antagonism, and every effort to
-make things pleasant between them completely failed. My mother often
-made such efforts in her quiet loving way; Jessie herself wooed him,
-after her fashion, when the humour was on her; but he was implacable,
-except on one occasion to which I shall presently refer.
-
-'He ought,' said Jessie to me, 'to be at the head of a monastery of
-monks; he thinks it is a crime even to laugh. What sort of a young man
-was he, I wonder?'
-
-I could have told her, but the seal of secrecy was on my tongue. I
-need scarcely say that all my sympathies were with Jessie. I was an
-attentive observer of the state of things at home, and I had many
-confidential conversations with my mother concerning matters. Loving
-Jessie as I did, I could not, in my heart, be tolerant and kind to
-uncle Bryan, as she begged me to be; the hard and stern rules which he
-had set down for himself, the following out of which by us might
-possibly have won his favour, would have made life a burden. I applied
-these rules to himself, and his own life was his own condemnation.
-There was no question in my mind as to whether he was right or wrong.
-But I could not win my mother to my way of thinking; nor did I
-endeavour after a little while, for I saw that it gave her pain. Never
-did a hard word pass her lips concerning him; she had affectionate
-excuses for him in every fresh difference between him and Jessie. I
-thought she was wrong, but I did not tell her so, nor did I distress
-her by endeavouring to explain to her that her own conduct was a
-contradiction to her words. That she never missed an opportunity to be
-tender and gentle to Jessie was a sufficiently strong argument against
-uncle Bryan. In her love for my mother Jessie never wavered; it seemed
-to me to grow stronger every day. Sometimes when we were at home
-together--it was not a very frequent occurrence now, for Jessie and I
-were generally out of an evening at the Wests', or at a theatre for
-which orders had been given to us--I observed Jessie watching us; but
-when she saw my eyes upon her, she would turn hers away thoughtfully.
-One night we had come home late; uncle Bryan was abed; my mother had
-prepared supper for us. We sat down, and after supper fell into
-silence; I do not know what I was thinking of, but we remained silent
-for many minutes. Happening to look in the direction of my mother, I
-saw her wistful eyes upon me, and at the same moment Jessie rose, and,
-kneeling before my mother, drew her face down, and kissed it. I was by
-their side in an instant, and the three of us were clasped in one
-embrace; but Jessie quickly released herself, and left me and my
-mother together.
-
-Time went on and there was no change, except that we were growing
-older, and that Jessie was growing more and more beautiful. I was
-getting along well, and as I was earning fair wages, I contributed,
-with pride, a fair sum towards the expenses of the house. I was
-enabled to make my mother and Jessie many little presents now, and I
-sometimes coaxed my mother to buy Jessie a new dress or a new hat, and
-not to let her know that they came from me. On the anniversary of my
-twenty-first birthday we had a party at home, the four of us, and were
-happier and more comfortable in each other's society than we had been
-for a long time. Even uncle Bryan softened--not only towards me, but
-towards Jessie.
-
-'Your boyhood is over,' said uncle Bryan; 'you are now a man, with a
-man's responsibility, and a man's work to do in life. Do it well.'
-
-'I will try to, uncle,' I replied.
-
-'To perform one's duties,' continued uncle Bryan, 'taxes a man's
-judgment very severely, and as a man's judgment is generally the slave
-of his inclination, it is seldom that he can look back upon his life
-with satisfaction.'
-
-'I don't quite understand that,' I observed; 'if a man's inclinations
-are good----'
-
-Uncle Bryan interrupted me, for I had paused. He took up my words.
-'Inclination is an idle selfish imp. Life is full of temptations, and
-inclination leads us to them; we follow only too readily.'
-
-'All that we can do,' said my mother, caressing me fondly, 'is to do
-our best; we are often the slave of circumstances, Bryan.'
-
-'In many cases,' he replied, 'not in all, a man can rise above them.
-We do not exercise our reason sufficiently. We cry and fret like
-children because things are not exactly as we wish.'
-
-'Do you?' asked Jessie quickly. He answered her evasively. 'I have my
-sorrows.'
-
-'I am glad of that,' said Jessie, in a low tone.
-
-'There is more wisdom in your remark,' he said, with a thoughtful
-observance of her, 'than you probably imagine. I give you credit for
-using it in the best and kindest sense.'
-
-'I meant it in that sense,' said Jessie gently, drawing a little
-nearer to him.
-
-'Will you tell me why you are glad that I should have sorrows?'
-
-'For one reason----'
-
-'Well?'
-
-'It does not remove you so far from us,' said Jessie, with less
-confidence than she usually exhibited.
-
-'I try to do that?' he asked. 'I try to remove myself from you?'
-
-'I think so,' she answered. 'You are not angry with me?'
-
-'No, child,' he said, and the gentleness of his tone surprised me.
-
-'But for sorrow and trouble,' mused my mother, the tenderest qualities
-of our nature would never be shown. God is very good to us, in our
-hardest trials. Dear Bryan! I am thinking of the time when Chris and I
-were in London without a friend. As I look upon my darling boy now,
-and think of the happy future there is before him----' She did not
-complete her sentence, but she went towards uncle Bryan, and stooped
-and kissed him.
-
-'Say no more, Emma,' he said huskily; you do not know how vastly the
-balance is in your favour.'
-
-'Notwithstanding your sorrows? questioned Jessie.
-
-'Yes,' he replied, with an approving nod, notwithstanding my sorrows.
-You are sharp-witted, Jessie.'
-
-'Thank you, uncle,' she said merrily.
-
-It was almost like the commencement of a new and more harmonious era
-in our relations with one another.
-
-'How old are you, Jessie?' I asked.
-
-'I shall be eighteen in a little more than three months. A girl
-becomes a woman at eighteen, I am told. I shall expect to be treated
-with dignity then, Chris.'
-
-The greatest wonder of the evening was reserved for its close. Uncle
-Bryan was the first to rise and wish us good-night. He grasped my hand
-warmly, and kissed my mother. He did not offer to shake hands with
-Jessie, but wished her good-night, and lingered at the door, waiting
-for her response; but it did not come. He turned to go, but before he
-could leave the room, she was by his side.
-
-'Why are you so kind to others,' she asked, and so cold to me?' He
-stood silent, looking upon the ground. I want to love you if you will
-let me; I want you to love me. Say "Good-night, dear Jessie," and kiss
-me.'
-
-He did exactly as she desired. 'Good-night, dear Jessie,' he said, and
-they kissed each other. He drew his arm round her, and I saw a tender
-light flash into his face, and rob it of its habitual sternness of
-expression. But it was gone in a moment, and he with it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-WE ENJOY A DECEITFUL CALM.
-
-
-The harmonious relations between uncle Bryan and Jessie which my
-birthday seemed to have inaugurated continued for more than a
-fortnight, a result entirely due to Jessie's untiring efforts to
-conciliate him, and to 'keep him good,' as she expressed it. On the
-day following that on which I came of age, he showed symptoms of
-irritability at the tenderness into which he had been betrayed--for
-that undoubtedly was the light in which he viewed it; he had a
-suspicion that he had been played upon, and he was annoyed with
-himself for his weakness. Having, I doubt not, thought the matter well
-over during the night, and having quite made up his mind to vindicate
-himself, he came down in the morning more than usually morose and
-reserved, and received Jessie's affectionate advances in his coldest
-and most repellent manner. But Jessie would not permit him to relapse
-into his old cross humour; she charmed it out of him by a display of
-wonderful submission and tenderness, and by answering his snappish
-words with gentleness. In this way she disarmed him, and he, after
-some resistance, and with a singular mixture of pleasure and
-ungraciousness in his manner, allowed himself to be beguiled by her.
-The truth of the proverb that 'a soft answer turneth away wrath' was
-never better exemplified. If, when she had wooed him into a kinder
-mood, she had shown any signs of triumph, her influence over him would
-have come to an end immediately; he watched furtively for some such
-sign, and detecting none, resigned himself to this new and pleasant
-beguilement. Whether Jessie's conduct sprang from impulse or reason,
-she could not have behaved more wisely.
-
-My mother was greatly rejoiced, and told me from day to day all that
-passed between these opposite natures. That the links of home love
-which bound us together were being strengthened was a source of
-exceeding delight to her.
-
-'And it is all Jessie's doings, mother.'
-
-'It is, my dear. I scarcely believed her capable of so much gentleness
-and submission.' (Here I thought to myself, 'I believe no one but I
-knows of what Jessie is capable.') 'When your uncle is most
-trying----'
-
-'As he often is,' I interrupted, 'and without cause.'
-
-'Well, my dear, if you will have it so. When he is most trying, she is
-most gentle, and she wins him to her side almost despite himself. And,
-Chris, I really think he likes it.'
-
-'Who would not,' I exclaimed, 'when wooed by Jessie?'
-
-'It is in her power,' said my mother, with a sweet smile of
-acquiescence, 'to make a great change in him. There is an undercurrent
-of deep tenderness in your uncle's nature, and Jessie is reaching it
-by the most delicate means. If she will only have patience! for it
-will take time, my dear.'
-
-But these fair appearances were treacherous. Neither my mother nor I
-saw the clouds that were gathering, and when the storm burst I was
-impressed by the unhappy conviction that I, and I alone, was the
-cause. How little do we know of the power of light words lightly
-spoken! But for certain inconsiderate words which I had used, there
-would certainly have been sunshine in our house for a much longer
-time. As it was, this better aspect of things was destined soon to
-come to an end, and to come to an end in a way which introduced not
-only a more bitter discord between Jessie and uncle Bryan, but imbued
-us insidiously with a want of faith in one another. The storm broke
-suddenly, and without forewarning to uncle Bryan and my mother. But in
-the mean time the harmony was almost perfect. Jessie, when she went to
-bed, no longer parted from uncle Bryan with a careless 'Good-night,'
-but kissed him regularly every morning and every night, and he
-submitted to the caress without, however, inviting it by look or word.
-But even that wonder took place on a certain evening when Jessie, with
-a touch of her old ways upon her, wished us all good-night in a
-careless tone, and without kissing uncle Bryan. She opened and closed
-the door, but did not leave the room, and placed her fingers on her
-lips with a bright eager look in our direction, warning us not to
-betray her. Uncle Bryan's back was towards us, and he made no motion
-at first. Jessie stole quietly behind his chair, and stood there in
-silence. Presently, uncle Bryan turned his head slowly to the door,
-with something of a yearning look of regret in his face, and at the
-same instant Jessie's arms were round his neck, and her lips were
-pressed to his.
-
-'Don't be angry with me,' she said.
-
-'Angry, Jessie! I thought you had forgotten me. But you are as full of
-tricks as Puck was.'
-
-'I can't help it, uncle Bryan. Good-night!'
-
-'Good-night, my dear.'
-
-And Jessie went to bed with a very light heart, and left light hearts
-behind her. It was apparent that these enchanting ways were pleasant
-to uncle Bryan, and I told Jessie so.
-
-'It softens him, Jessie.'
-
-'It takes a long time to soften a rock,' she observed, with a
-thoughtful smile.
-
-'If anybody can do it, you can, Jessie.'
-
-'You think nothing but good of me, Chris.'
-
-'I only say what I feel. And you really want uncle Bryan to love you?'
-
-'Yes--more than I can say--and I can scarcely tell why.'
-
-'Except,' I said, with a foolish hesitation, 'that you like to be
-loved by everybody.'
-
-'Perhaps it is because of that, Chris. I _do_ like everybody to love
-me. It is much nicer so.'
-
-If I wanted any consolation I supplied it by observing: 'To be sure,
-there are different kinds of love.'
-
-'Indeed!' exclaimed Jessie tantalisingly. 'Is it like uncle Bryan's
-sugar, of different shades and different degrees of sweetness? Some of
-it tastes very sandy, Chris.'
-
-'Ah, now you are joking, Jessie!'
-
-'I am not in a joking humour. I want to speak seriously. Chris, I have
-sometimes wondered that you have never asked me questions about
-myself.'
-
-'In what way, Jessie?'
-
-'About myself, before I came here. When one likes any one very much,
-one is naturally curious to know all about one.'
-
-'I had my reasons, Jessie. When you first came, mother wished me not
-to ask you any questions. She said it would be like an attempt to
-steal into uncle Bryan's confidence. He might have secrets, she said,
-which he would not wish us to know.'
-
-'Secrets!' she mused. 'What can I have to do with them? And yet, it is
-strange, now I think about it.'
-
-'I should like you to tell me all about yourself,' I said; 'it doesn't
-matter now that you have spoken of it first yourself.'
-
-'I was thinking of a secret that I have, Chris.'
-
-I composed myself to receive her confidence.
-
-'But I don't know what it is myself, yet. It is in a letter;
-perhaps----'
-
-'Well, Jessie?'
-
-'Perhaps nothing. It is only a letter that I am not to open until I am
-eighteen years of age. That will not be long, Chris. We will wait
-until then, and then I will tell you all I know. Let us blow it away
-till that time comes.' She blew a light breath. 'I wanted to make you
-a present on your birthday, but I did not have money enough then.
-Shall I give it to you now?' I held out my hand eagerly, and Jessie
-took from her pocket a small card-box. 'It is in this. What do you
-think it is?' I made a great many guesses, but she shook her head
-merrily at all of them. 'I went to look at it every day in the
-shop-window, afraid that some one might buy it before I had saved up
-money enough.'
-
-I opened the box, and took from it a small silver locket,
-heart-shaped, with the words engraven on it, 'To Chris, with Jessie's
-love.' Unspeakable happiness dwelt in my heart as I gazed upon the
-emblem. As I held it in my hand tenderly, it seemed to me a living
-link between Jessie and me--an undying assurance of her love. Nothing
-so precious had ever been mine. My looks satisfied Jessie, and she
-clapped her hands in delight.
-
-'So you like it, Chris?'
-
-'I will never, never part with it, Jessie. But I want a piece of
-ribbon; may I have that piece round your neck?
-
-'Take it off yourself, Chris.'
-
-What a bungler I was, and how long it took me to remove the piece of
-simple ribbon, need not here be described. I know that while my
-trembling fingers were about her neck, Jessie, in reply to a look,
-said, 'Yes, you may, Chris;' and that I kissed her.
-
-'And now, Chris,' she said, 'I want to speak to you about something
-that is troubling me very much. When you said the other night that
-uncle Bryan was an atheist, were you in earnest?'
-
-'I said what I believed,' I answered with an uneasy feeling.
-
-'And he _is_ an atheist?'
-
-'I am afraid he is, Jessie.'
-
-'Has he ever told you so?'
-
-'Oh, no; there are some things that one scarcely dares to speak of.'
-
-'That is if one is weak and a coward. I am not that, and I don't think
-you are, Chris. Then I suppose you have never spoken to uncle Bryan
-about religion?'
-
-'Not a word has ever passed between us upon religious matters.'
-
-'An atheist is a person who does not believe in God, is he not,
-Chris?'
-
-I was sensible that the discussion of so solemn a subject might lead
-to grave results, and I wished to discontinue it; but Jessie said:
-
-'Don't be weak, Chris; I think I ought to know these things, and if we
-can't speak together in confidence, no two persons in the world can.
-Of course I can easily find out what I want to know; Gus West will
-tell me everything; but I came to you because we are nearer to each
-other.'
-
-'Nearer and dearer, Jessie.'
-
-'Yes, Chris; and now tell me what you know.'
-
-I told her all that I knew concerning atheism, and all that I knew
-concerning uncle Bryan in connection with it. 'When I was a boy,
-Jessie, scarcely a week after we came to live with uncle Bryan, I
-heard him say that life was tasteless to him, and that he believed in
-nothing. I thought of it often afterwards.'
-
-'Life was tasteless to him _because_ he did not believe in anything;
-that is the proper view to take of it. If a person does not believe in
-anything, he cannot love anything. Can you imagine anything more
-dreary than the life of a person who does not love anybody, and who
-has nobody to love him? I can't. A person might as well be a stick or
-a stone--better to be that, for then he couldn't feel. But the words
-that uncle Bryan used may not have meant what you suppose, Chris.'
-
-'They came in this way, Jessie. On the first Sunday we were here,
-mother asked uncle Bryan if he was going to church. He said that he
-never went to church. Mother was very sorry, I saw, but she did not
-say anything more. On that same night, uncle Bryan was reading a book,
-and he read aloud some passages from it. Mother asked him what was the
-name of the book, and he answered, _The Age of Reason_. When he laid
-the book aside, mother took it up, and looked at it; and then she sent
-me upstairs for the Bible. That was all; but I didn't quite know what
-was the real meaning of it until a long time afterwards, when I found
-out what kind of a book _The Age of Reason_ is.'
-
-'Tell me what it is.'
-
-'It is a book written by an atheist for atheists; it might almost be
-called the Atheist's Bible, Jessie.'
-
-'And did you never speak to your mother about uncle Bryan's religion?
-
-'I have tried to, but mother is like me; there are some things she
-does not like to speak of.'
-
-'And this is one of them,' said Jessie, following out her train of
-thought; 'and out of your love for her, when she said, "Let us talk of
-something else, my dear," you have talked of something else.'
-
-'That is so, Jessie. It is almost as if you overheard what we said.'
-
-'It is easy to see into your mother's heart, Chris. She did not like
-to speak about uncle Bryan's religion, because she loves him, and
-because she wants you to love him. Now, if it had been anything that
-would have made uncle Bryan stand out in a good light, she would have
-encouraged you to speak about it.'
-
-'That is true enough, Jessie.'
-
-'Chris, your mother is all heart.'
-
-'She is everything that is good, if you mean that?'
-
-'I do mean that; she is the best, the sweetest, the dearest woman in
-the world. Ah, if I were like her! But I am very, very different. What
-I say and what I think comes more often out of my head than out of my
-heart. Chris, it is impossible for an atheist to be a good man!'
-
-I saw the pit we were walking into, but I had not the skill to lead
-Jessie away from it.
-
-'A man who does not believe in God,' she exclaimed, 'cannot believe in
-anything good. No wonder that he is what he is. I am not satisfied--I
-am not satisfied! It is shocking--shocking to think of!' She shook her
-head at herself, and I listened to her words in no pleasant frame of
-mind. She was showing me an entirely new phase in her character. It
-was Jessie reasoning, and reasoning on the most solemn of subjects.
-'Why,' she continued, 'God made everything that's good, and if uncle
-Bryan is an atheist, he is a bad man. And yet your mother loves him.'
-
-'That she does, Jessie, with all her heart.'
-
-'She couldn't love anything that's bad. If you were an atheist, Chris,
-I should hate you.'
-
-'Thank God, I am not, Jessie; even if I were, you could make me
-different. But I don't like to hear you speak like this,' I said,
-reproaching myself bitterly for having been the cause of this
-conversation; for when I had told Jessie that uncle Bryan was an
-atheist I had spoken with a full measure of dislike towards him.
-'Mother does not reason as you do. After all, I may be mistaken,
-Jessie, and we maybe doing him a great injustice. I know so much that
-is good of him--more than you possibly imagine.'
-
-And then I told her what, from a false feeling of shame, I had
-hitherto withheld from her--the story of my mother's hard battle with
-the world when we came to London, and of uncle Bryan's noble behaviour
-to us when we were sunk in the bitterest poverty.
-
-'All the time I have known him, Jessie, I have never known him to be
-guilty of an unjust action. He is as upright and honest a man as ever
-lived. Can such a man be a bad man?'
-
-'Upright, honest, and just!' she repeated my words in a musing tone.
-'It is an enigma.'
-
-'He would die,' I continued warmly, 'rather than be guilty of a mean
-action. Now that we are speaking of him in this way, I am ashamed of
-myself for ever thinking ill of him. Mother was right, from the very
-first--she was right about him, as she always is about everything. If
-he were not so hard----But you don't know what trials he has gone
-through in his life.'
-
-'Do you?'
-
-'I know some of them, but I am pledged not to speak of them to any
-one--not even to you. One thing happened to him--never hint, for my
-sake, Jessie, that you even suspect it--one thing happened to him so
-terrible and so dreadful that it is no wonder he is hard and cold and
-morose. Many and many a time mother has entreated me to be kind and
-charitable in my thoughts towards him, and instead of doing so I have
-repaid all his kindness by the basest of ingratitude.'
-
-'How have you done that, Chris?'
-
-'By saying anything to you to cause you to dislike him. Ah, you may
-shake your head, but it is so, Jessie. If he were in my place, and I
-in his, he would come to me and ask me to forgive him; but I haven't
-the courage and fearless heart that he has, and I shouldn't know how
-to do it without giving him pain.'
-
-I was really very remorseful, and sincerely so; but Jessie said
-nothing to comfort me.
-
-'Have I had no reason of my own, until the last few days, to dislike
-him? Has he behaved quite kindly to me? Chris, is it possible that I
-am wrong in nearly everything that I have done? How many times have I
-tried to conciliate him, and how many times has he answered me with
-unkind words! There is some reason for it--there is some reason for
-it.'
-
-'And yet remember, Jessie,' I said, without thinking, 'that he
-has given you a home, as he gave one to us, never asking for a
-return--never expecting one.'
-
-Her face turned scarlet.
-
-'Would _he_ have said that?' she asked, and left me without another
-word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-THE STORM BREAKS.
-
-
-Jessie's moods were sufficiently variable and perplexing to cause me
-serious uneasiness, but I had no suspicion of what was in her mind
-when she spoke of uncle Bryan and his religious opinions, or I should
-have used my strongest efforts to avert the storm. Even when she made
-her first open move, which she did on the evening of the same day on
-which we had the conversation just recorded, I did not suspect her;
-truth to tell, my mind at that time was almost completely occupied by
-one theme--the locket which Jessie had given me, and its significance.
-As a charm, it was most potent in its power of bringing happiness to
-the wearer; I felt that while this locket was in my possession, it
-would be impossible for a cloud to shadow my life. But clouds came all
-too quickly.
-
-We were sitting together in the evening, in the most amicable of
-moods. Suddenly Jessie addressed uncle Bryan.
-
-'Uncle Bryan, who teaches the young?'
-
-He looked inquiringly at her.
-
-'Well,' she continued, understanding that an explanation was expected
-of her, 'one has to learn things; knowledge doesn't come of itself.'
-
-'Assuredly not,' he said, with evident pleasure and curiosity; 'even
-parent birds teach their brood the use of their wings, and how to
-build their nests.'
-
-'I did not know that; but it is of men and women I am speaking. They
-are higher than birds and beasts.'
-
-'Yes,' he said, in a reflective tone; 'it is so.'
-
-'If the world were filled with nothing but old people, I wonder what
-sort of a world it would be!'
-
-'It would soon be no world at all,' he said; and added, with
-good-humoured depreciation, 'and while it lasted it would be a very
-disagreeable world, if the inhabitants in any way resembled me.'
-
-'Never mind that, uncle Bryan; perhaps some people try to make
-themselves out a great deal worse than they are. So, then, there
-_must_ be young people; that is a necessity.'
-
-'As much a necessity as the seasons; it is the law of nature.'
-
-'A good law?'
-
-'Undoubtedly, young philosopher.' His manner was almost blithe.
-
-'Well, then, to come back, as a friend of mine says. The young do not
-know what is right and wrong, and knowledge does not come of itself.
-Who teaches them?'
-
-'The old,' he replied readily.
-
-'Because they are more likely to know what is right and wrong.'
-
-'For that reason, I should say. They have had more time to learn, and
-they have had more experience of the world.'
-
-'Of course,' she said, 'and experience means wisdom. The old _must_
-know better than the young.'
-
-'Naturally.'
-
-'And young people should be guided by old people?'
-
-'It would be better if that were more generally done.'
-
-'That is all I wanted to know.'
-
-Before many days were over, Jessie made her meaning apparent. She
-always accompanied my mother and me to church, and on the Sunday
-following this conversation she unmasked her battery.
-
-'Uncle Bryan,' she said, while we were at breakfast, 'I want you to
-come to church with us this morning.'
-
-A startled look flashed into my mother's eyes; uncle Bryan stared at
-Jessie, and bit his lips. He did not reply immediately.
-
-'Young ladies have many wants,' he said.
-
-'But this is a good want,' she pleaded. There was nothing saucy or
-defiant in her tone or manner; both were very gentle. 'But this is a
-good want. You will come with us?'
-
-'I will not come with you,' he replied sternly.
-
-'Do you never go to church?
-
-'Never.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'That is my affair.' The corners of his lips began to twitch.
-
-'Is it not good to go to church?' she asked, still in a gentle tone,
-her colour beginning to rise. I noted with consternation these
-familiar signs of the coming battle. The shock was the more bitter
-because, to all outward appearance, everything had been fair between
-them until this moment. Only the night before we had stopped up half
-an hour later than usual, because the time was passing very pleasantly
-to all of us.
-
-'My dear,' said my mother, with a sweet smile, taking Jessie's hand in
-hers; 'my dear, you forget!'
-
-'Forget what, mother?' asked Jessie; she sometimes addressed my mother
-thus. 'Am I doing anything wrong?'
-
-Even I could not help acknowledging to myself that Jessie, by a
-literal acceptation of my mother's words, was wilfully misinterpreting
-the nature and intent of her remonstrance; but I found justification
-for her.
-
-'Uncle Bryan is the best judge,' said my mother.
-
-'I know he is,' said Jessie.
-
-'Let her go on,' cried uncle Bryan.
-
-The old stern look was in his face, and his voice was very harsh. I
-was the more unhappy, because I alone held the key of the situation.
-Jessie repeated the question, addressing herself to uncle Bryan.
-
-'Is it not good to go to church?'
-
-'I do not say that,' was his reply.
-
-'But I want you to say one way or the other. It _must_ be either good
-or bad. You will come with us!'
-
-'I will not come with you.'
-
-The high tone in which he spoke put a stop to the discussion, and we
-finished the breakfast in the midst of an unhappy silence. Indeed, we
-all seemed too frightened to speak. At the proper time my mother and I
-were ready for church, and were waiting downstairs for Jessie, whom
-my mother had left in their room dressing. But Jessie was somewhat
-more dilatory than usual. My mother went to the stairs, and softly
-called out,
-
-'Now, my child, be quick, or we shall be late!'
-
-It was the first time I had ever heard my mother call Jessie her
-child, and I pressed her hand fondly for it. She returned the
-pressure, almost convulsively, and presently Jessie came slowly
-downstairs. She was dressed with unusual care in a pretty new soft
-dress, concerning the making of which there had been great excitement;
-but her head was uncovered.
-
-'Get on your hat quickly, my dear,' said my mother; 'we shall have to
-walk fast.'
-
-'I am not going to church,' said Jessie, in a low tone, in which
-I--and I alone, I believe--detected a tremor.
-
-'Jessie!' cried my mother, in a tone of suffering; 'Jessie, my dear
-child!'
-
-She stepped to Jessie's side, trembling from agitation. Jessie stood
-quite quietly by the table, and repeated, in a tone which she strove
-in vain to make steady,
-
-'I am not going to church this morning.'
-
-Uncle Bryan was in the room, but spoke not a word.
-
-'Are you not well, my dear?' asked my mother.
-
-'I am quite well.'
-
-'Then why will you not come with us?'
-
-'I am not sure that it is right to go to church.'
-
-'My dear, if I tell you that it is'
-
-'Uncle Bryan is older than you--twenty years older--and has had more
-experience of the world; therefore he must know better than you. If it
-were right to go to church, he would go, for I am sure he is an
-upright and just man.'
-
-At this direct reference to him uncle Bryan raised his head, and gazed
-fixedly at Jessie, and at her latter words something like a sneer
-passed into his face. My mother looked helplessly from one to another.
-
-'I know,' said Jessie, 'that I am the cause of this trouble, and I
-wish--oh, I wish!--that I had never come into the house! No, I don't
-wish it, for then I should never have known you!' She stood very
-humbly before my mother. 'I feel how ungrateful I am: to uncle Bryan
-for giving me a home'--(how these words stung me!)--'and to you for
-giving me a love of which I am so undeserving.'
-
-The tears came into her eyes, and I went towards her, but she moved a
-step from me; and thus apart from each other we four stood for a few
-moments in perfect silence--a house pulsing with love and tenderness,
-but divided against itself. Then Jessie said suddenly:
-
-'Uncle Bryan, if I go to church this morning, will you come with us
-some time during the year?'
-
-'No,' he replied sternly and firmly.
-
-'I have asked you in the wrong way, perhaps,' she said; 'but that
-would not alter the thing itself.'
-
-'Whichever way you asked me, my answer would have been the same, young
-lady.'
-
-'If you tell me to go now, I will go.'
-
-'I will tell you nothing. You are your own mistress.'
-
-'How are the young to be taught, then, if the old will not teach
-them?'
-
-In the presence of my mother's distress he had no answer to make, and
-I felt that it was out of consideration for her, and not from any
-desire to spare himself, that he went into the shop and left us to
-ourselves.
-
-Then Jessie to my mother:
-
-'I hope you will forgive me, but if I knew I should have died for it I
-could not have helped doing what I've done. Don't be grieved for me; I
-am not worth it. I am going to spend the morning with Miss West.'
-
-My mother and I went to church by ourselves; but I fear that my mood
-was not a very devout one. My mind was filled with what had taken
-place at home, and its probable consequences.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-COLOUR-BLIND.
-
-
-The consequences were more serious than any one of us could possibly
-have imagined, with the single exception of uncle Bryan; where we
-hoped, he reasoned, and reasoned with bitterness against himself.
-There are in the world a sort of men with whom you are for ever at a
-disadvantage--men who from various motives are strangely, and ofttimes
-cruelly, reticent as regards themselves, their thoughts, and their
-actions. These men receive your confidences, but do not confide in you
-in return; they listen to your schemes, your hopes, your fears, but
-say not a word concerning their own. You wear your heart upon your
-sleeve; they lock up theirs jealously, and place upon them an
-impenetrable seal, which perhaps once or twice in a lifetime they
-remove--perhaps never. Uncle Bryan was one of these men. Scarcely by a
-look had he ever shown us his heart, and it required a nature not only
-more noble and generous, but more self-sacrificing, than mine not to
-misjudge him--to be even tolerant of him.
-
-All our hopes of a more harmonious feeling between him and Jessie were
-utterly shattered, and my birthday, instead of being the commencement
-of a brighter and better era in our home relations, inaugurated an era
-of much unhappiness and discomfort. In the most unfortunate, and yet,
-as it seemed to me, in the most natural way, we were placed in a
-painfully-delicate position of antagonism. Who was to blame for this?
-I found the answer to this question without difficulty. Who but uncle
-Bryan was to blame? The part which Jessie had taken in the
-conversations between them was dictated by the best of feelings--was
-good and tender--and I admired her, not only for her courage, but for
-the affection she had displayed towards him, and for her efforts to
-wean him from his moroseness and infidelity. That she had failed was
-no fault of hers. The fault lay entirely in himself, and in his
-insensibility to softening influences. That, if she had succeeded, the
-result would have been both good and beautiful, was incontrovertible.
-I argued the matter very closely in my mind, for, notwithstanding my
-love for Jessie, I was anxious not to do uncle Bryan an injustice, and
-I could come but to one conclusion. What home could be happy with a
-master who possessed such a nature as his? He was like a dark shadow
-moving among us, and turning our joy into gloom.
-
-These were partly the result of my reflections. Other considerations
-also arose. We were all bound to one another by ties of affection.
-That was a certainty, in the first blush of my reflections; but
-afterwards a doubt occurred to my mind. By what tie of affection was
-Jessie bound to uncle Bryan? He himself, when he told my mother and me
-the story of his life, had confessed it: by none. The charge of Jessie
-had almost been forced upon him, and his sense of duty had compelled
-him to accept it. It was not humanity that had impelled him to give
-Jessie a home. And if, after she came among us, she had failed to win
-his love, it was because his heart was hard and cold, and incapable of
-tenderness. I recalled a hundred little ways in which she had wooed
-him, and every one of them was an argument against him. Then I thought
-of her helpless dependent position, and my love for her and my anger
-against him grew stronger. That he was hard to her was an additional
-reason why I should show her openly, and without false weakness, that
-in me she had a champion and a friend who would be true to her until
-death. Even if I did not love her, I argued, this championship of one
-who was cast as a stranger amongst us would have been demanded of my
-manliness.
-
-All these things were settled in my mind before my mother and I
-returned home from church on that memorable Sabbath, but not a word
-passed between us on the subject. I was silent out of consideration
-for my mother; she was silent out of the exquisite tenderness of her
-nature. Over and over again had she played the part of the Peacemaker
-between uncle Bryan and Jessie; but knowing uncle Bryan as she did,
-she felt that in this crisis she was powerless. The day passed quietly
-and unhappily. Jessie joined us as we passed the house of the Wests,
-and walked home with us; but during the whole of the day neither uncle
-Bryan nor she addressed each other, nor made any conciliatory movement
-towards each other. Once or twice she looked towards him, and the
-slightest look of kindness from him would, I knew, have brought her to
-his side. But although he was conscious of her gaze, he carefully
-avoided meeting it, and she, instinctively aware of his intention,
-looked towards him no more. It had been arranged that we should go to
-the Wests on this night; our visits there during the past fortnight
-had not been so frequent as usual; but as the time drew near, Jessie
-whispered to me that she intended to stop at home.
-
-'I will run round,' she said, 'and tell Josey that I can't come; but
-you can go.'
-
-'I shall do as you do, Jessie,' I said.
-
-I thought afterwards that it was a great pity we stopped at home, for
-we were anything but lively company. Uncle Bryan might have been made
-of stone, so silent was he; Jessie rejected all my sympathising
-advances towards her; and even my mother was at a loss for words. I
-was curious about the 'good-night' between uncle Bryan and Jessie when
-bedtime was near; it occupied Jessie's thoughts also; but he settled
-it by lighting his candle and going to bed without bidding any one of
-us good-night. It was evident from this and from uncle Bryan's
-behaviour during the week that followed that all harmonious relations
-between him and Jessie were at an end. On the next Sunday Jessie came
-to church with us as usual.
-
-I fully expected that she would take an opportunity of speaking to me
-on the subject of her difference with uncle Bryan; but as the time
-passed, and she did not speak of it, I approached the subject myself.
-I told her my opinion, and praised her for her courage.
-
-'You are speaking against uncle Bryan,' she said.
-
-'I can't help it, Jessie; 'he brings it on himself by his tyranny.'
-
-'Tyranny!' she exclaimed. 'Do you forget what you said, and what I
-believe--that he is upright, honest, and just?'
-
-'In other things he is; but not in this. He is like a man who can see,
-and who is colour-blind.'
-
-'That is,' she said, with a deprecatory shake of the head, 'that he is
-Jessie-blind. Ah, Chris, if he is blind to what there is good in me,
-are you not blind to what there is bad?' I was about to expostulate,
-but she stopped me: 'I am not quite satisfied with myself; I don't
-know that it would not have been better for me to have held my tongue.
-And another thing, Chris: I am not sure whether I am glad that you
-think I was right.'
-
-'Why, Jessie, what things you are saying!'
-
-'I must say them, Chris, for I know what is in my mind. Answer me this
-question. Supposing you were not fond of me, as I know you are--I
-don't mind saying it now, for I am speaking very seriously--would you
-think then that I was right? Do you side with me out of your head or
-out of your heart?'
-
-'My reason approves of what you did,' I said earnestly; 'I want you to
-believe that, Jessie. Say that you do believe it.'
-
-'I do, Chris.'
-
-'Then you must be glad to know that I am certain you are not to
-blame.'
-
-She shook her head again, and said:
-
-'Perhaps it would have been better if all of you had been against me.'
-
-'But who _is_ against you, Jessie?' I persisted. 'Mother is not, and I
-am not.'
-
-'Never mind that now, Chris. I can see things that you can't see,
-because----'and she took my hand, and looked straight into my eye.'
-
-'Because what, Jessie?'
-
-'Because you are colour-blind, my dear,' she replied, half gravely,
-half sportively, in unconscious imitation of Josey West.
-
-From this time her visits to the Wests grew even more frequent than
-they used to be. She was there not only in the evening--on which
-occasions I was always with her--but very often also in the day. My
-mother spoke of this to me regretfully, and said she was afraid that
-Jessie mistrusted her.
-
-'Mistrust the sweetest woman in the world!' said Jessie. 'No, indeed,
-indeed I do not! But can't you see, Chris, that I am better away?'
-
-'No, I can't see it, Jessie--not that I have any objection to the
-Wests; you know that I am very fond of them.'
-
-'Still colour-blind, Chris? you still can't see what I can see?'
-
-'You seem to be putting riddles to me, Jessie,' I said.
-
-'Well, you must find the answers without my assistance; and as to my
-going to the Wests so often in the daytime, what comfort do you think
-I find at home?'
-
-None, I was compelled reluctantly to confess.
-
-'Have you heard uncle Bryan complain of my absence?' continued Jessie.
-'Does he say that I am too often away?'
-
-'No, Jessie, he has said nothing, to my knowledge.'
-
-'Because he sees nothing to regret in it.'
-
-'But mother does, Jessie.'
-
-'Chris,' said Jessie, with tearful earnestness, 'if I had a mother
-like yours I should thank God for her morning, noon, and night; and if
-I ever wavered in my love for her, in my faith in her, if I ever did
-anything to give her pain, I should pray to die!'
-
-'You speak out of _my_ heart, Jessie, as well as out of your own.'
-
-She gazed at me sadly and affectionately, and with something of wonder
-too.
-
-'Well, well, Chris,' she said, 'I have my plans; let me go my way.'
-
-I was content that she should, having settled in my mind that her way
-was my way, and that her way was right. I had my plans also, which I
-did not disclose to Jessie. I was improving my position rapidly, and I
-knew that the day was not far distant when I should be able to support
-a home by my own labour--nay, I was at the present time almost in a
-position to do so. But there were things to be seen to and provided
-for--furniture and that like; and I was saving money for them
-secretly. I looked forward with eagerness to the accomplishment
-of my scheme, and I worked hard to hasten its ripening. The sweet
-pictures of home-happiness which I conjured up were sufficient
-incentives--pictures from which neither Jessie nor my mother was ever
-absent. 'Then,' I thought, 'Jessie will not be a dependent upon one
-who is filled with unkind and uncharitable feelings towards her.' It
-was on my tongue a dozen times to tell Jessie how I was progressing in
-my scheme, but I restrained myself. 'No,' I said, 'I will not say
-anything to her about it until I am quite ready. Then I will speak
-openly to her. She knows that I love her, and that I am working for
-her.'
-
-But I could not keep my plans entirely to myself. I unfolded them to
-my mother, who sat silent for a little while after I had finished.
-Then she said:
-
-'Have you not forgotten something, my dear?'
-
-'No, mother, not that I know of.'
-
-'Or some one, I should rather say--your uncle Bryan.'
-
-I returned a disingenuous answer. Uncle Bryan would never leave his
-shop. What would he find to do in a place where there were no
-customers to serve, and no business to look after?' (I added mentally,
-and where he was not master and tyrant?')
-
-'Chris, my dear child,' said my mother humbly and imploringly, 'do not
-hide your heart from me!'
-
-'Mother!' I cried, shocked at myself.
-
-'Dear child, forgive me! It was forgetfulness on your part, I know,
-and unkind of me to put such a construction upon it. My boy could not
-be ungrateful. He knows how I love him, how proud I am of him. How
-well I remember his promise to me one night--in the old times, my
-darling, when I used to take in needlework for a living--that he would
-try to grow into a good man; and how grateful I am to the Lord to see
-him after all these years a good and clever man, the best, the dearest
-son that mother was ever blessed with!'
-
-The old times came vividly before me, and a strangely-penitent feeling
-stirred my heart as I looked into my mother's face, with its
-expression of yearning love, and thought of the road I had traversed
-from boyhood to manhood. Bright and beautiful was this road with
-flowers of sweet affection; a heart whose tenderness time nor trouble
-could not weaken had cheered me on the way, and unselfish hands had
-made it smooth for me. The faithful mother who had strewn these
-flowers was by my side now, shedding the light of her sacred love upon
-me. She was unchanged and unchangeable, but I---- Ah, me! Let me not
-think of it. Let me kneel, as I used to kneel with my head in her lap
-when I was a boy, and when we were all in all to each other. Let me
-kneel and think of the long, long nights during which my mother used
-to work for bread for me; the trials, the disappointments, and the
-cheerful spirit bearing up through all, because a life that was dearer
-than her own was dependent upon her. The intervening years melted like
-a dream, and for a little while I was a boy again, and my heart was
-overflowing with tenderness for this dearest, best of women.
-
-'I remember that night too, mother,' I said, raising my head from her
-lap; 'I have been looking at it again. I lay awake for a long time
-watching you; you were sighing softly to yourself, and did not know
-that I was awake.'
-
-My mother smiled, and sang, as softly now as then, and as sweetly, the
-very words she had sung on that night.
-
-'You forget nothing, mother.'
-
-'Nothing that is so near to my heart, my dear. Nor would I have you
-forget Chris, to whom it is we owe our release from the dreadful
-difficulties that once threatened to overwhelm us; for I was getting
-very ill, you recollect, when your uncle's letter came to us, and I
-felt that my strength was failing me. We owe all to him, my dear;
-wherever our home is he must share it. We must never leave him--never;
-the mere contemplation of it, after all these years, makes me very
-unhappy.'
-
-Delicate as was the manner in which my mother had set my duty before
-me, she had made it quite clear to my mind; but love and duty were at
-war with each other. All my visions of home-happiness were darkened
-now by the shadow of uncle Bryan. Whichever way I turned his image
-seemed to stand, barring my way to the realisation of my dearest
-hopes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-PREPARATIONS FOR AN IMPORTANT EVENT.
-
-The coldness between uncle Bryan and Jessie did not diminish with
-time. As a matter of necessity they were compelled to speak to each
-other occasionally, but they did so with coldness and reluctance, and
-a distinct avoidance of the subject which had broken the bond between
-them. I say that they were compelled to speak to each other as a
-matter of necessity, but I may be mistaken; they may have spoken not
-out of consideration for themselves, but for my mother. Thinking over
-the matter since that time, I have understood how those two, if they
-had been alone, might have lived in the same house for years, and
-might have performed their separate duties conscientiously, without a
-word passing between them. For the sake of peace Jessie would have
-yielded, but uncle Bryan would have remained implacable. Results
-proved this. In vain did my mother strive to bring them together in a
-more amiable spirit; in vain did she speak separately to each of the
-other's good qualities, magnifying their merits, ignoring their
-faults. Her labour upon uncle Bryan was entirely lost; but it was
-different with Jessie, not because she thought she was wrong, nor for
-uncle Bryan's sake, but out of her love for my mother.
-
-'You are a child, my dear,' said my mother to her, 'and he is an old
-man. If for that reason alone, you should yield.'
-
-'It would be useless,' was Jessie's rejoinder; 'I have known him for a
-much shorter time than you, but I know his nature better than you do.
-I judge of it by my own.'
-
-'You do both him and yourself injustice, my dear,' pleaded the
-peacemaker; 'if he were all wrong and you were all right, it would be
-your duty to give in.'
-
-'Love and duty do not always go together,' said Jessie obstinately.
-
-'But we must make sacrifices, my child; what a miserable thing this
-life would be if some of us did not yield!'
-
-'If I thought,' said Jessie, softening, 'that I should not be insulted
-I would do as you wish willingly, most willingly--not for my sake, but
-for yours.'
-
-'Try, then, for my sake.'
-
-'I will; and you will see what will come of it.'
-
-And Jessie tried, in her best manner and in good faith, with the
-result for which she was prepared.
-
-'Can you not see now how it is?' she asked, with tears in her eyes. 'I
-have brought trouble into this house. How much better would it have
-been for you if I had never entered it! But it wasn't my fault. Ah, if
-I were a man I wouldn't stop in it for another hour! But I have no
-friends; and if it were not that I love to live, I might wish that I
-had never been born.'
-
-'Then you do not regard me as a friend, my dear child?'
-
-But Jessie, with cruel determination, refused to respond to the tender
-appeal, and turned rebelliously away. All this I learnt from my
-mother, who hid nothing from me, and it did not tend to make me
-happier.
-
-'Be patient, my darling,' my mother said; 'all will come right in the
-end.'
-
-'Did anything ever come right with uncle Bryan?' I fretfully asked.
-'Think of the story he told us! I remember too well what you said when
-I asked if you would have me look on things as he does. You said it
-would take all the sweetness out of my life; and you were right. He
-has taken the sweetness out of it already.'
-
-I did not consider that it was the very refinement of cruelty to bring
-her own words in judgment against herself. On such occasions she would
-tremble from sheer helplessness; but with unwearied patience she would
-strengthen her soul, and strive, and strive, for ever with the same
-result. So wrapt was I in my own unhappiness, that it was only by fits
-and starts I gave a thought to hers; even that she was growing thinner
-and more sad, with this inward conflict of her affections, escaped me.
-Others saw it, but at that time the selfishness of my own grief made
-me blind.
-
-But there were bright spots in my life during these days, even in the
-midst of these unhappy differences, in every one of which Jessie was
-the central figure. All that seemed to me worth living for was centred
-in Jessie; and she was never absent from my mind. She passed nearly
-the whole of her time with the Wests now--naturally enough, finding so
-little comfort at home--and as I was not happy out of her society, all
-my leisure was spent with her. This circumstance was introduced
-unpremeditatedly one evening when Jessie and I were preparing to go
-out. My mother, to tempt us to stop at home, had promised some little
-delicacies for supper, and mentioned it incidentally, when Jessie said
-that she should not want any supper when she came home.
-
-'I am sure to have supper with Josey West,' she said.
-
-'You go there a great deal, Jessie,' remarked my mother, with an
-anxious look.
-
-'I am happy there,' was Jessie's terse reply; 'but I don't want to
-take Chris away.'
-
-'You don't want the sunflower to turn to the sun,' sneered uncle
-Bryan, with his usual amiability.
-
-'I will not thank you for the compliment,' said Jessie, 'for it isn't
-meant for one. Chris,' she exclaimed, turning suddenly to me, 'is the
-sun the only bright thing in the heavens? Is not the moon as lovely,
-and are not the stars the loveliest of all?'
-
-Uncle Bryan took up the theme, continuing it to her disadvantage.
-
-'But one loses sight of these loveliest things of all when the glare
-of the sun is in his eyes.'
-
-Jessie bit her lips.
-
-'Am I to blame for going where my best friends are?' she asked.
-
-'You go where your wishes take you. We are certainly not good enough
-for such a young lady as you.'
-
-'Perhaps not,' said Jessie defiantly, as she left the room.
-
-This was her custom, after all her attempts at conciliation had
-failed. Sometimes she would be silent; at others she would answer
-pithily and bitterly, and without thought, perhaps; but she always
-retired when she was becoming the subject of conversation. The old
-days of light skirmishing were at an end. Short and bitter battles of
-words, in which there was much gall, were now the fashion.
-
-I was aware that for some time preparations were being made for an
-important evening at the Wests'. I was very curious about it, but
-Jessie would not allay my curiosity.
-
-'You shall know all at the proper time,' she said; 'in the mean time
-you can help me if you like.'
-
-'Of course I will. What is that paper in your hand?'
-
-'This is one of my characters, Chris. See here. Pauline--I'm to play
-Pauline. And here's another--Mrs. Letitia Lullaby--that's me again. I
-must learn every word of the parts, and you can help me in them.'
-
-'I know what you want, Jessie; I've heard Turk go through some of his
-parts.'
-
-Thus it fell to my lot to hear Jessie repeat from memory all that
-Pauline and Mrs. Letitia Lullaby have to say, giving her the cues, and
-correcting her until she was, as she said, 'letter perfect.' But as
-she continued to tease me, and would not let me into the secret of all
-this preparation, I applied to Josey West for information. The
-good-natured creature seldom refused me anything.
-
-'We are going to have a grand dress performance, my dear,' she said,
-'and Jessie will play the principal characters in two pieces.'
-
-'In dress?' I asked, in some amazement.
-
-'In dress, my dear. The pieces are _Delicate Ground_, and _A Conjugal
-Lesson_; three characters in the first, and two in the second. Gus
-will play Mr. Simon Lullaby, Jessie's husband, in one piece, and
-Citizen Sangfroid, Jessie's husband, in the other. Brinsley, who is
-out of an engagement, has condescended--that is the word, my
-dear--condescended to play Alphonse de Grandier in _Delicate Ground_
-for one night only, by special request of a lady.'
-
-'Jessie?' I said.
-
-'She is the lady referred to; the part is far beneath him, of
-course--these parts always are, my dear, unless they are the principal
-parts--but he'll play it very well; I shouldn't wonder if he doesn't
-try to cut Gus out, so that we are sure to have some good acting.
-Between the pieces there will be some dancing by Sophy, and Florry,
-and Matty, and Rosy, and Nelly--it's good practice for them--and as
-there's a change of performance at the Royal Columbia, Turk hopes to
-be able to get away in time to see the last piece, and to recite "The
-Dream of Eugene Aram." He wished very much to recite another piece, as
-he was sick of committing murders, he said; but he does Eugene Aram
-also by special request of a lady. He does it very finely too; one
-night at a benefit two ladies went into hysterics in the middle of it,
-and had to be carried out of the theatre. There was a paragraph in the
-_Era_ about it, and it was put in some country papers as well. Turk is
-very proud of that; he often speaks of it as a triumph of art. I ought
-to play something as well, oughtn't I, my dear, on Jessie's night? But
-I shall have enough to do as acting-manager.'
-
-'Why do you call it Jessie's night?'
-
-'Because it's the first time she ever dressed to act. Why, Turk has
-got some bills printed!--he's a good-natured fellow, is Turk, the best
-in the whole bunch, my dear! Here's one; but you mustn't say you've
-seen it. Jessie doesn't know anything about it yet.' And Josey West
-produced a printed bill, which read as follows:
-
-
-Theatre Royal, Paradise Row.
-Lessee: Miss Josey West.
-
-****
-
-_ENORMOUS ATTRACTION FOR
-THIS NIGHT ONLY_.
-
-FULL DRESS REHEARSAL,
-FOR THE BENEFIT OF
-MISS JESSIE TRIM,
-Who will make her First Appearance on any stage,
-Supported by those eminent Tragedians and Comedians,
-MR. AUGUSTUS WEST
-AND
-MR. BRINSLEY WEST.
-
-****
-
-On this occasion will be presented the comic drama of
-
-Citizen Sangfroid Mr. AUGUSTUS WEST.
-Alphonse de Grandier Mr. BRINSLEY WEST
-Pauline Miss JESSIE TRIM.
-
-_To be followed by a_
-GRAND BALLET
-AND
-TERPSICHOREAN REVEL,
-In which Mdlles. Sophy, Florry, Matty,
-Rosy, and Nelly will appear.
-
-_After which_ (_by special request_).
-
-The Eminent Mr. Turk West (the Original Thug)
-will give his celebrated Recitation of
-THE DREAM OF EUGENE ARAM.
-
-_The whole to conclude with the comedietta
-entitled_,
-A CONJUGAL LESSON.
-Mr. Simon Lullaby Mr. Augustus West.
-Mrs. Simon Lullaby Miss Jessie Trim.
-Stage Manager, Mr. Augustus West.
-Acting Manager, Miss Josey West.
-_Free List suspended. Press excepted_.
-
-******
-
-
-In consequence of the great attraction, the
-entire Theatre has been converted into
-Stalls, the price of which will be One Guinea,
-or by special order, to be obtained of the
-Acting Manager. On this occasion babies
-in arms will be admitted, on the condition
-that their mothers accompany them, and
-that the baby-bottles are fully charged.
-
-
-Josey West drew my particular attention to various parts of the
-programme, such as the price of the stalls. 'In a fashionable theatre,
-my dear, such as this is,' she said, with a whimsical look,' you
-can't make the stalls too high;' and the notice about babies in
-arms--'You know what a famous family we are for babies, my dear;'
-especially to the words, 'Free list suspended, press excepted.'
-
-'But you don't expect the press,' I said.
-
-'Not exactly the press; but somebody of as much importance as a critic
-may honour us with his company. But never mind him just now. Isn't the
-programme splendid? It was Turk's idea, and he drew it up, and had it
-printed, all out of his own pocket. No one knows anything of it but
-you and me and him, so you must keep it quiet--we want to surprise
-Jessie with it when the night comes. Turk says that when Jessie is a
-famous actress this playbill will be a great curiosity.'
-
-'When Jessie becomes a famous actress!' I repeated, with a sinking
-heart.
-
-'Yes, my dear; and she will be if she likes. Do you know, Chris, that
-if I were you--I really think if I were you'--and she paused, and
-looked at me kindly and shrewdly--'that I would buy two of the nicest
-bouquets I can see to throw to Jessie when she is called on at the end
-of the pieces. We'll manage between us, you and me, that no one shall
-see them until the proper moment; you buy them, and give them to me on
-the sly before the audience arrives, and I'll place them under your
-seat, so that no one shall know. And now, my dear, I want you to tell
-me something. If you don't like to, don't; and if I am asking any
-thing that I oughtn't to ask, all you've got to do is to tell me of
-it, and I'll drop it at once. Is Jessie comfortable at home? Ah, you
-hesitate and turn colour; if you speak, you'll stammer. Don't say a
-word; I'll drop the subject.'
-
-'No, why should you?' I said. 'You are a good friend, and you have a
-reason for asking.'
-
-'I am as good a friend, my dear, to you and Jessie as you'll find in
-all your knockings about in the world. Mind that! Don't you forget it,
-or you'll hurt my feelings, as the Kinchin says. You've only got one
-better friend, and that's that dear mother of yours, that I'd like to
-throw my arms round the neck of this minute, and hug.'
-
-'Why, you've never spoken to her, Josey!'
-
-'What of that? I've heard of her, and that's enough for Josey West.
-And a good mother makes a good son. I like you first for yourself, and
-I like you second for your mother (_not_ out of a riddlebook, my dear,
-though it sounds like it)! As for my reasons, why, yes, I have my
-reasons for asking, or I shouldn't ask.'
-
-'Jessie does not make a confidant of any one but you, I suppose,
-Josey.'
-
-'Of no one but me, my dear, and I know what I know, and suspect a
-great deal more.'
-
-'If Jessie confides in you, I may. She is not so happy at home as she
-might be and as she deserves to be.'
-
-'Thank you, my dear; I only wanted to make sure. Now we'll drop the
-subject.' She went through some comical pantomime, as though she were
-sewing up her lips. 'Stop and see the girls go through their ballet.
-Come along, Sophy and Florry and all of you; the bell has rung for the
-curtain.' And she began to sing, first, however, whispering to me that
-we should have real music on _the_ night. 'No expense, my dear; it's
-all ready to hand in the family.'
-
-Then the children arranged their figures and positions to Josey West's
-singing, and rehearsed the ballet with the seriousness of grown-up
-people.
-
-Neither uncle Bryan nor my mother knew anything of Jessie's passion
-for acting. Jessie held me to my promise of not saying anything about
-it at home; and on occasions when I urged her to let my mother know of
-it, she refused in the most decided manner, and said she had her
-reasons for keeping it a secret.
-
-As for myself, I found myself in a labyrinth. So conflicting were the
-influences around me, that I scarcely dared to think of the plans I
-had cherished but a little while since, and hoped to see fulfilled. I
-could only hope and wait.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-JESSIE'S TRIUMPH.
-
-
-The eventful evening arrived. It had been a difficult matter with me
-to keep the knowledge of the affair to myself, for I was in a state of
-great excitement, and my mother noticed it; but she did not seek my
-confidence except by kind looks of interest and curiosity. During the
-day, in accordance with Josey West's advice, I bought two handsome
-bouquets, which I conveyed to Josey secretly, and which she hid under
-my seat in the kitchen. Great pains had been taken with the room,
-which, with benches and chairs properly arranged, and the stage
-curtain, and a row of stagelights with green shades to them, really
-presented the appearance of a miniature theatre. It was rather gloomy,
-certainly, for all the candles were required for the stage, but that
-was a small matter. The room was filled chiefly by the West family, of
-whom every available member was present, down to the youngest baby in
-arms, and among the audience were a few persons with whom I was not
-acquainted, but whose appearance, with one exception, clearly denoted
-that they belonged to the dramatic profession. Two male and two
-female Wests, of tender age, comprised the band; the girls played
-the violin, and one of the boys played the flute, and the other the
-cornopean--which latter instrument ran short occasionally in the
-matter of wind. Everybody was very excited and very merry, and Josey
-West's queer little figure was continually darting before and behind
-the curtain.
-
-'Would you like to see her?' the good-natured creature whispered to
-me. 'Of course you would. Come along, then. She's dressed for
-Pauline.'
-
-I went with Josey behind the scenes to Jessie's dressing-room, which
-had been built for the occasion with shop-shutters, and blankets, and
-odds and ends. Jessie looked wonderfully fascinating and beautiful in
-her fine dress, and a painful feeling of inferiority came upon me in
-the presence of so much grace and loveliness.
-
-'And how do I look, Chris?' she asked, as she stood before me, with
-flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes.
-
-I sighed as I told her that I had never seen any one look more lovely.
-
-'_She'll_ never want a wig, my dear!' said Josey West admiringly, as
-she ran her fingers through Jessie's beautiful hair. 'Did you ever see
-such hair and such a complexion? All her own, my dear--scarcely a
-touch of the hare's foot. But, bless the boy! he looks as if he was
-sorry instead of pleased. That's not the way to make her act well.
-There! kiss her, and go back to your seat. The music's beginning.'
-
-My cheeks were as red as Jessie's as Josey West pushed me towards
-Jessie, and turned her back; but my arm was round Jessie's waist
-nevertheless, and Jessie, moved by a sudden impulse, kissed me very
-affectionately. It was the first time our lips had ever met.
-
-'Done?' cried Josey West. 'There! I'm sure you feel more comfortable
-now. Now run away, or I shall have you turned out of the house.'
-
-In a very happy frame of mind I took my seat among the audience, whose
-enthusiasm was unbounded. The stage management was simply perfect;
-there was not a hitch in the entire performance. Directly the music
-ceased, amidst a general clapping of hands and stamping of feet--our
-satisfaction was so complete that we wanted everything done over
-again--a bell tinkled for the curtain, which was promptly drawn aside,
-and the comic drama of _Delicate Ground_ commenced. General interest
-of course centred round Jessie, who at first was slightly nervous, but
-she grew more confident as the scene progressed. To say that she
-played well is to say little; her acting on that night is fixed in my
-mind as the most perfect and beautiful I have ever seen. It was not
-only my opinion, it was the opinion of all, and the applause that was
-bestowed upon her was astonishing in its genuineness and heartiness.
-'By heavens, sir!' I heard one of the visitors with whom I was not
-acquainted say to another--'by heavens, sir, she's peerless--peerless!
-She'll make a sensation when she comes out.' There was an entire
-absence of envy in the praise that was given to her; and the women, as
-well as the men, were extravagantly enthusiastic in their
-demonstrations. I heard remarks also passed from one to another, to
-the effect that Gus and Brinsley never acted better in their lives;
-they certainly, after the fashion of Turk, 'went in' with a will, and
-it was difficult to say which of them deserved the palm of victory. I
-liked Brinsley best, because he did not play the part of Jessie's
-husband, but this view I kept to myself. Had it not been for the kiss
-Jessie had given me, the memory of which made me triumphantly happy
-during the whole of the night, I might have been rendered uneasy by
-the passion which Gus West threw into the last lines of his part: 'You
-_have_ no rival. You have been, and are, sole mistress of this my
-heart. You have been, and will be, sole mistress of this my house.'
-But even these words, and the passion with which they were spoken, did
-not disturb me, and when the curtain fell upon the scene, my only
-feeling was one of pride in Jessie's triumph. There were loud calls
-for Pauline; and Turk, who came in just as the curtain fell, joined
-vehemently in the applause, although he had seen nothing of the piece.
-He was accompanied by the old actor, whom I knew as Mac, and whose
-acquaintance I had made on the memorable night I spent at the Royal
-Columbia. When Jessie, led on by Gus and Brinsley West, came before
-the curtain and curtsied her acknowledgments, and when I threw my
-bouquet at her feet, the cheers were redoubled again and again; and
-all acknowledged that there could not have been a greater success.
-Then there was a merry interval, which was occupied by gossip and
-refreshments; and then the ballet and terpsichorean revel by Josey
-West's sisters, towards whom the audience were disposed to be more
-critical. The young misses acquitted themselves admirably, and were
-followed by Turk West, whose 'Dream of Eugene Aram' was a most
-tremendous elocutionary effort. To me it was terribly grand, and the
-intense earnestness of Turk made a deep impression upon me. He was
-rewarded by unanimous cries of 'Bravo, Turk!' 'Well done, old fellow!'
-and a call before the curtain, which he acknowledged in his best
-manner. Jessie's appearance in _The Conjugal Lesson_, as Mrs. Simon
-Lullaby, was, if possible, more successful than her Pauline; but Turk,
-who found a seat next to me, was somewhat sarcastic on his brother
-Gus. Perhaps he was jealous too; at all events, he whispered to me
-that he wished _he_ had had the opportunity of playing Mr. Simon
-Lullaby; 'then you would have seen a piece of acting, Chris, my boy,
-which you would not easily have forgotten.' It was late when the
-performances were over. Jessie was of course called on again, and
-received my second bouquet, and then the company prepared to depart.
-But Josey West cried out from behind the curtain that they were all to
-stop to supper, and in a short time these male and female Bohemians,
-the merriest and best-hearted crew in the world, were regaling
-themselves on bread-and-cheese and pickles and beer, amid such a din
-of joviality that you could scarcely hear your own words. I went
-behind to Jessie's room, and waited until she was dressed; Josey West
-heard me walking restlessly about, and called to me when Jessie was
-ready.
-
-'And what do you think of us now?' she asked.
-
-I did not stint my measure of admiration, and I told them what
-I had heard one of the visitors say, that Jessie's acting was
-peerless--peerless.
-
-'And so it was,' said Josey West. 'Which one was it, my dear, who said
-that--a tall thin man, with a sandy moustache?'
-
-'No; but he was sitting near, and I saw him nodding his head, and
-clapping, as though he was very pleased.'
-
-'That's a good sign; he's a fine judge of acting. He'll want to be
-introduced to you, Jessie; so will they all. I shouldn't wonder----'
-
-'What?' I asked.
-
-'Nothing, my dear, unless you can make something out of the
-circumstance that that gentleman's name is Rackstraw, and that he
-prepares young ladies for the stage. That was a good thought of yours,
-my dear, bringing these bouquets. Such beautiful ones, too! I wish I
-had such a prince!'
-
-Jessie laughingly bade Josey West hold her tongue, and I saw with
-delight that she had placed in her bosom a flower from one of the
-bouquets.
-
-'It was very kind of you, Chris,' said Jessie, giving me her hand,
-which was burning with excitement.
-
-'You must be tired, Jessie.'
-
-'I could go all through it again,' she replied.
-
-'That's the way with us excitable creatures,' observed Josey West
-complacently; 'we're like thoroughbred race-horses, we can go on till
-we drop. Now, Jessie, come along and be praised.'
-
-The praises she received were sufficient to turn any one's head; she
-was surrounded and kissed by all the women, and the men could not find
-words sufficiently strong to express their gratification. Mr.
-Rackstraw, the gentleman who prepared young ladies for the stage, was
-very eulogistic and very inquisitive, asking personal questions with a
-freedom which did not please me. But neither Josey West nor Jessie
-shared my feeling in this respect--Josey especially taking great
-interest in what he said.
-
-'And you think she would succeed?' said Josey West.
-
-'I am sure of it, Josey,' he answered.
-
-He addressed all in the room by their Christian names, and was
-evidently regarded as a man of importance.
-
-'But there is a great deal to be learnt?' asked Jessie; 'is there
-not?'
-
-'Yes, assuredly, my dear.' (Another sign of familiarity which
-displeased me. I did not mind it from the members of the West family;
-there was a homely and honest ring of affection in the term as they
-used it, but it sounded quite differently from Mr. Rackstraw's lips.)
-'A great deal.'
-
-'And it would cost money?'
-
-'Well, yes,' he said promptly, 'it would cost money--but not much, not
-much. Josey, I took the liberty of bringing a friend with me--Mr.
-Glover.'
-
-Mr. Glover, the best-dressed man in the room, tall and dark, and
-between forty and fifty years of age, was the gentleman I had noticed
-who, alone among the audience, did not appear to belong to the
-dramatic profession. I had not paid any attention to him during the
-evening, but upon this direct reference I turned towards him, and saw
-at a glance, in my closer observance of him, that his station in life
-was higher than ours. Being introduced to Jessie, he thanked her for a
-most pleasant evening.
-
-'I am not a frequenter of theatres,' he said, 'but if you were upon
-the stage, I think I should be tempted to come very often to see you.'
-He spoke well and slowly, and with the manner of a person who was
-accustomed to reflect upon each word before it passed his lips. When
-he and his friend were gone, Josey West informed us that Mr. Rackstraw
-was a person of the greatest influence. Not only did he prepare young
-ladies for the stage, she said, but he was in connection with a
-theatrical agency, where important engagements were effected. Gus's
-name was down upon the books of this agency, and having in this way
-made Mr. Rackstraw's personal acquaintance, he had induced him to come
-down and see Jessie act. Josey was in high spirits because everything
-had gone off so well.
-
-'It is a real, complete, and splendid success,' she said, 'and ought
-to be repeated every evening until further notice. Hark--old Mac's
-going to speak!'
-
-The old actor had risen, glass in hand, and had expressed his wish to
-address a few words to the company--an intimation which was received
-with vociferous and lengthened applause.
-
-'Brothers and sisters in the noblest of all noble professions,' he
-said, 'this reception is not only cheering, but, coming upon me when I
-am in the sere and yellow----'(Here there were cries of 'No, no, old
-fellow; you've a good twenty years before you yet!')--'I use the
-language of those base and envious detractors who say it is time the
-old actor was laid on the shelf. Using their words, then, which Avon's
-Swan never thought would be so misapplied, this reception coming upon
-me when I am in the sere and yellow, is not only cheering but
-affecting. It recalls the memory of times when the humble individual
-before you never stepped upon the boards without one, and when old
-Mac's place--his proper and legitimate place in the ranks, won by the
-force of genius and hard study----'(Cries of 'Bravo, Mac! Go it!')--'I
-mean to--when his legitimate place, won, as I have said, by the force
-of hard study and genius, was not occupied by pretenders. But tempora
-mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis----' (The applause here lasted for
-full a minute) 'O yes, old Mac can show these pretenders the way to
-go! Tempora mutantur, et cetera, my sons, and may you never find it
-out in the same way as the humble individual who stands before you
-has! But it was not to speak of myself that I rose--the old actor
-never cares to thrust himself forward'--(general and good-humoured
-laughter)--'knowing as he does that the subject is weary, stale, and
-unprofitable. He knows that he is but "a poor player, that struts and
-frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more!" But damme,
-my sons, the poor player is happy to know that in his old age he has
-honour, love, and, if not obedience, troops of friends.' ('So you
-have, old boy! Go on!') 'I intend to. I drink to you. Give me the cup.
-Nay, I have it'--(with a humorous look)--'not sparkling to the brim,
-but 'twill serve. "Let the kettle to the trumpet speak. The trumpet to
-the cannoneer without. The cannons to the heavens, the heavens to
-earth." Old Mac drinks to those he loves!' (As the speaker drained his
-glass, the youngster who played the cornopean performed a flourish
-upon the instrument, and the other members of the company did their
-best to produce an appropriate demonstration.) 'But to the point. We
-have witnessed to-night a most remarkable performance by a young lady,
-who I am informed has never appeared upon the boards--a young lady who
-is destined to occupy a distinguished position--mark me, a
-distinguished position--and may old Mac live to see it! She has youth,
-she has grace, she has beauty, she has genius. In her presence I say
-it, my sons. The old actor knows a pretender when he sees him, and he
-knows genius when he sees it; he sees it here. In proposing the toast
-of this young lady's health' (Mac placed his glass upon the table, and
-waited until it was refilled), 'and in wishing her the success that
-always should, but sometimes doesn't, wait on merit, old Mac knows
-that he is performing a task which every one of you would like to have
-performed in his place. But damme, my sons, while old Mac lives, the
-old school of gallantry will never die out.'
-
-How the toast was received, and with what enthusiasm it was drunk; how
-they all surrounded Jessie and petted her and complimented her; how
-she blushed and trembled at the praises which were showered upon her;
-and how these honours seemed to remove her farther and farther from
-me,--I have not the power to describe. It was two o'clock in the
-morning before the company broke up, and Jessie and I walked home. My
-heart was full almost to bursting, and I could not trust myself to
-speak. Not a word passed between us, but with Jessie's arm closely
-entwined in mine, and with her hand clasped in mine, I felt that
-without her I would not wish to live. When we reached home, I knocked
-softly at the street-door, but no answer came. I knocked more loudly,
-but still there was no answer. Surprised that my mother was not
-waiting up for us, I tried the handle of the door, and found that it
-was unlocked. I closed the street-door, and we entered the
-sitting-room, where a candle was burning. My mother was there, sitting
-by the table, with her head on her arm. I approached her in some
-alarm, and saw that she was asleep; her dreams must have been
-distressing ones, for she was sobbing bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-MY MOTHER EXPRESSES HER FEARS CONCERNING JESSIE.
-
-
-One evening, as I was smartening myself up in my room, preparatory to
-going to the Wests', my mother entered, and said, almost humbly,
-
-'My dear, can you spare me a few minutes?'
-
-'Certainly,'I replied. 'Jessie is at the Wests', isn't she?'
-
-'Yes, my dear. I'll not keep you long. I want to speak to you about
-her.'
-
-'Go on, mother,' I said, in a tone of satisfaction, for that was the
-subject I loved best to converse upon.
-
-'How you have grown, my darling! You are the image of your father, who
-was a fine handsome man. How proud I am of my son!'
-
-I looked in the glass, without any feeling of vanity. I always took
-pains with my appearance when I was about to present myself to Jessie,
-but I had no high opinion of myself, and I was never quite satisfied
-with the result.
-
-'You do your best to spoil me, mother,' I said, submitting myself to
-my mother, whose fond fingers were about my neck. 'Go on, about
-Jessie.'
-
-'You are in her confidence, my dear?'
-
-The words were used in the form of a question; and I was immediately
-conscious that they were the prelude to something of importance, for
-there was trouble in my mother's face. I also was troubled; a new
-sorrow had entered into my life, a sorrow with which of course Jessie
-was connected. All that there was for me of joy and pain in the world
-was associated with her.
-
-I hesitated in my answer. Jessie had pledged me to secrecy with
-reference to the peculiar nature of her intimacy with the Wests and to
-her passion for acting, and I would not betray her, not even to my
-mother. There were confidences between Jessie and me which even she
-could not share. My mother and I had but few opportunities for
-conversation during this time, for very little of my time was spent at
-home. Wherever Jessie went I was bound to follow. It did not
-matter--except in the sorrow that it caused me--that she gave me less
-encouragement than formerly; it did not matter that certain
-undefinable signs from her, which I had hitherto treasured in my heart
-of hearts as proofs of her love, came rarely and more rarely; the
-rarer they were the more precious they were. I found excuses for her:
-in my own inferiority, which hourly and daily impressed itself more
-painfully upon me; in my being poor; in her being so beautiful and so
-far above me. I could not see, I dared not think, how it was to end;
-but I followed her blindly, clung to her blindly.
-
-My mother observed my hesitation, and divined the cause.
-
-'Nay, my dear,' she said, in a sad and gentle tone, 'I do not ask you
-to tell me anything you think you ought to keep to yourself. I have
-not forfeited _your_ confidence, have I, my darling?'
-
-Before I could reply, she placed her hand to her heart, and uttered an
-exclamation of pain.
-
-'Mother!' I cried.
-
-'It is nothing, dear child,' she said; 'it is only a pain in my side
-that has come once or twice lately. Put your arms round my neck, my
-darling; it will pass away directly.'
-
-She rested her head upon my shoulder and closed her eyes, holding me
-tightly to her.
-
-'I am better now, dear child,' she said presently, with a sweet smile.
-
-Could I see nothing in her face but physical pain? No, nothing. The
-old patient look was there, the old tender love was there. What more
-_could_ I have seen, had I not been blind?
-
-'You ought to get advice, mother. Promise me.'
-
-'I will, my dear; but it is nothing. I am not growing younger, Chris.'
-
-'You were speaking of Jessie, mother.'
-
-'Yes, my dear. I was about to say that Jessie has no one to look after
-her but me.'
-
-'And me,' I added proudly.
-
-'And you, my dear. I know what your feelings are towards her, but you
-are away at your work all the day, and then the duty devolves upon me
-alone.'
-
-'Well, mother?'
-
-'Jessie is a little different to me from what she was; I am beginning
-to think--sorely against my will, dear child--that she mistrusts me. I
-know that she is not happy, but I could comfort her if she would let
-me. It might be better for all of us if she would confide in me.'
-
-'I am sure it would be, mother.'
-
-'She does not repulse me, Chris; she avoids me. When I have it in my
-mind to speak to her seriously, she seems to know what I am about to
-say--she is very bright and clever, my dear--and she obstinately
-refuses to listen; runs away, or turns me from my purpose by some
-means. I am very anxious about her.'
-
-'Jessie can take care of herself,' I said, assuming an easiness I did
-not feel; she is not happy at home, as we know; but we know, also, who
-is to blame for that. I suppose she refuses to listen to you because
-she feels that the subject you wish to speak to her upon is a painful
-one. I should do the same in her place.'
-
-'I don't blame her, my dear; don't think that I blame her. But I must
-not forget my duty. She has no mother; do not I stand in that relation
-to her?'
-
-I kissed my mother for these words.
-
-'Then, knowing that I wish her nothing but good, why does she avoid me
-so steadily? O Chris, my child! greater unhappiness than all may come
-from her distrust of me.'
-
-A tremor ran through my frame. Not love alone, but pity, was expressed
-in my mother's face and tone.
-
-'I don't quite understand you, mother,' I said.
-
-'Where does Jessie go to in the day, my dear?'
-
-'Where does Jessie go to in the day!' I repeated. 'Does she go
-anywhere?'
-
-'Then you do not know, my dear; she hides it from you as well. For the
-last fortnight she has gone out every morning at eleven 'o'clock, and
-has not returned until four. I have put her dinner by for her every
-day, but she will not eat it, and she refuses to say where she has
-been.'
-
-I considered for a few moments, and soon arrived at a satisfactory
-conclusion.
-
-'It is very simple. She goes to Miss West's, and she does not eat her
-dinner because she knows she is not welcome to it. It is uncle Bryan's
-dinner, and this is uncle Bryan's house. Jessie is very proud.'
-
-My mother shook her head. 'She does not go to Miss West's. I have not
-watched her, because I know that she would discover me, and that it
-would turn her more against me. But three mornings ago I saw her get
-into an omnibus which goes to the West-end. What friends can she have
-there, Chris? And if she has friends, should we not know who they
-are?'
-
-'If she has friends!' I exclaimed, putting a brave face on the
-disclosure, although I was inexpressibly hurt at the knowledge that
-Jessie was keeping a secret from me. 'Do you suspect she has?'
-
-'She must have, Chris.'
-
-I looked at my mother; there was more in her tone than her words
-implied.
-
-'Go on, mother. You have something more to tell me.'
-
-'It is best you should know, my darling,' said my mother in a tone of
-inexpressible tenderness, encircling my waist with her arm; it is best
-you should know, for you are in Jessie's confidence, and she will
-listen to you when she would not heed me. Yesterday afternoon, as I
-was walking home--I had been out on an errand for your uncle--a cab
-passed me, with two persons in it. One was a gentleman, the other was
-Jessie. Nay, my dear, don't shrink. There is no harm in that; the harm
-is in keeping it from us, her dearest friends, and in making a secret
-of it.'
-
-I controlled my agitation, foolishly believing that I could deceive
-this fondest of mothers.
-
-'Did the cab come to our door?' I asked.
-
-'No, my dear; it did not come down the street. It stopped a few yards
-in front of me, and the gentleman assisted Jessie out----'
-
-'Don't hide anything from me, mother; of course I shall speak to
-Jessie about it. Tell me exactly what you saw and heard.'
-
-'I heard nothing; I shrank away, so that Jessie should, not see me.
-The gentleman said something to her, but she shook her head, and then
-he bade her good-bye and drove away. That is all.'
-
-It was enough to make me most unhappy, but still I strove to conceal
-my feelings. I endeavoured to make light of the circumstance, and I
-asked my mother in a careless tone whether she was sure it _was_ a
-gentleman who accompanied Jessie. She said she was sure of it.
-
-'What was he like?'
-
-'Tall and dark, and very well dressed.'
-
-'Young?' I asked.
-
-'No,' she answered, and I could not help feeling relieved at the
-information; nearer fifty than forty, I should say.'
-
-I could not at the moment call to mind any person whom the description
-fitted, and I promised my mother that I would speak to Jessie about
-it.
-
-'Ask her to confide in me, my dear,' my mother said.
-
-'I will, mother.'
-
-As I walked towards the Wests', my mind was filled with what my mother
-had told me. I held the clue which would have led me to the truth, but
-I juggled with myself, and rejected it because the result was
-displeasing to me. I had never yet mustered sufficient courage to
-speak to Jessie plainly concerning her passion for acting, and what it
-was likely to lead to. Many and many a time had I thought of Josey
-West's words, 'when Jessie becomes a famous actress,' and of old Mac's
-remark that Jessie was destined to occupy a distinguished position on
-the boards. These utterances, coupled with the conversation that took
-place between Mr. Rackstraw and Jessie on the night of the
-performance, were surely sufficient to convince me that Jessie's
-visits to the West-end had something to do with her desire to become
-an actress; but I would not be convinced, simply because I did not
-wish to believe it. Say that Jessie did appear upon the public stage,
-and became famous--as I was sure she would become--she would be
-farther than ever from me. I caught at one little straw that lay in
-the way of the result I dreaded. Mr. Rackstraw had said that there was
-a great deal to be learnt, and that it would cost money. Well, Jessie
-did not have any money. I magnified this straw into an insurmountable
-obstacle which it was impossible for Jessie to get over, and so I
-played the fool with my reason.
-
-I found the Wests busy as usual. Jessie was there, learning some
-dancing steps from one of the young misses; she blushed as I entered,
-and the lesson was discontinued. I had intended to speak privately to
-Josey West about Jessie, but within a few minutes of my arrival, Gus
-West came in, and I had not the tact to make the opportunity. Josey
-informing Gus that Jessie had been taking a dancing lesson, he
-proposed that they should go through a minuet; and he and Jessie and
-two of the girls performed the old-fashioned dance most gracefully,
-Josey West humming the minuet de la cour, while I sat in the corner,
-the only serious person in the room. When the minuet was finished,
-Josey West called me to her, and addressing me quietly as Mr. Glum,
-said she was afraid I was of a sulky disposition. I said I did not
-think I was sulky, but that I was very unhappy.
-
-'About her?' questioned Josey, with a sharp look in the direction of
-Jessie; but before I could answer, Jessie came towards us, and said
-she was ready to go home.
-
-'I did not wish to go,' she said to me, on our way, 'but I saw that
-you had something to say to me.'
-
-I answered, yes; that I did wish to speak to her.
-
-'And about something unpleasant, I can see,' she said; 'make it as
-short as you can, Chris.'
-
-She was toying with a flower which Gus West had worn in his coat when
-he came in. I did not see him give it to her, but that she had it, and
-seemed to value it, was like a dagger in my heart.
-
-'Jessie,' I said disconsolately, 'you know how I love you!'
-
-'If any person on the stage,' she answered lightly, 'spoke of love in
-that tone, the whole house would laugh at him.'
-
-'That is the only thing that runs in your thoughts now,' I said
-gloomily.
-
-'What?' she exclaimed. 'Love? I meant the stage. You think of nothing
-but acting.'
-
-'Well--perhaps! What else have I to think of that brings any happiness
-to me?'
-
-'I thought you loved me, Jessie.'
-
-'So I do, Chris,' she said in careless fashion, still toying with the
-flower.
-
-'And others, too,' I added.
-
-'Well, yes--if you please. There are always more than two persons in
-the world.'
-
-'Jessie!' I implored. 'It hurts me to hear you speak in that careless
-way. I cannot believe that it is in your nature to think and speak so
-lightly of what is most precious.'
-
-'Why cannot you believe so?' she asked, somewhat more seriously. 'Am I
-the only one who lightly regards a precious gift--am I the only one
-who does not know the value of love?'
-
-'I at least know the value of it, Jessie. Ah, you would believe me if
-you knew what I would do for you.'
-
-'I think you love me, Chris.'
-
-'With all my heart, Jessie; with all my soul!'
-
-She trembled a little at the passion of my words.
-
-'Tell me,' she said, averting her head, 'what would you do for me?'
-
-I answered that there was no sacrifice that I would not willingly,
-cheerfully make for her sake; that I thought of none but her, that I
-loved none but her; that if all the world were on one side, and she
-alone on the other, I would fly to her, and deem myself blessed to
-live only for her. This, and much more that has been said a myriad
-times before, and will be said a myriad times again, I said
-passionately and fervently. She listened in silence, and then, after a
-pause, told me she believed I had spoken the true feelings of my
-heart, and that she was sure I had meant every word I had uttered. And
-then she pinned Gus West's flower to the bosom of her dress, and asked
-me if it did not look well there. Miserably, I answered Yes, and felt
-as though all the brightness were dying out of the world.
-
-'But you have something else to say to me,' Jessie presently remarked;
-'what you have already said is very pleasant to me. Now for the
-unpleasant thing.'
-
-The conversation with my mother, which in the heat of my declaration
-had slipped out of my mind, now recurred to me, and I told Jessie that
-my mother was very anxious about her.
-
-'In what way?' she asked.
-
-'Where do you go to every day, Jessie? Mother tells me that you go out
-regularly at eleven o'clock every morning, and that you do not return
-until four in the afternoon, and that you don't spend that time at the
-Wests'.'
-
-'Has she been watching me?'
-
-'No, Jessie.'
-
-'Have you?'
-
-'No,' I replied, very hurt at the question; 'you don't think I would
-play the spy upon you!'
-
-'Oh, I don't know,' she said, with a toss of her head; 'persons do
-strange things when they are in love.'
-
-'You seem to know a great deal, Jessie.'
-
-She appeared to be both pleased and discontented at this remark.
-
-'When girls get together, Chris, they _will_ talk; and Josey West and
-I don't sit in the corner, mumchance, with our mouths shut, as you sat
-to-night. Have you anything else to tell me?'
-
-'Yes,' I said, 'and I wouldn't speak of it if I hadn't promised mother
-that I would do so. Yesterday she saw you riding in a cab with a
-gentleman.'
-
-'That is quite true,' said Jessie simply, before I could proceed
-farther; 'but why didn't she speak to me about it?'
-
-'Rather say, Jessie, why did you not speak to her. But mother is
-afraid that you mistrust her; she says that you avoid her when she has
-it in her mind to speak seriously to you.'
-
-'She told you that?'
-
-'Yes, Jessie.'
-
-'She is not wrong, Chris,' said Jessie, with a sigh; 'but we all seem
-to be playing at cross purposes, and not one of us seems to understand
-the other.'
-
-'I think I understand you, Jessie.'
-
-'Do you, Chris?' she asked, in a tenderer tone.
-
-'If others mistrust you, I don't. I know that everything you do is
-right.' She shook her head gently. 'No, you shall not make me think
-otherwise, Jessie. You and I will stand together, come what will.'
-
-'Against all the rest of the world,' she said, quoting my words.
-
-'Yes, against all the rest of the world, Jessie,' I replied eagerly.
-
-'It will never be, Chris; I would not accept such a service from you
-if the whole happiness of my life depended upon it. Ah me! Often and
-often I think what an unhappy day that was for all of us when I came
-among you.'
-
-'You said so on the Sunday morning that you asked uncle Bryan to come
-to church with us; but you repented immediately afterwards, if you
-remember, and said you were not sorry, for if it had happened so, you
-would not have known mother.'
-
-'I have learnt something from her, Chris--something good, I hope.'
-
-'You could learn nothing from her that was not sweet and good,' I
-said.
-
-These last words were spoken on the threshold of our home.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-JESSIE MAKES AN EXPLANATION.
-
-
-Jessie walked straight into the parlour, where both uncle Bryan and my
-mother were sitting.
-
-'You are anxious to know,' she said, addressing my mother, 'where I go
-to of a morning.'
-
-'Yes, my dear,' answered my mother.
-
-I saw that uncle Bryan was listening, and I saw also by the expression
-in his face that the matter was new to him; my mother had not
-complained to him of Jessie.
-
-'Chris has been speaking to me about it,' said Jessie, 'and I thought
-it best to tell you myself. I go to Mr. Rackstraw's.'
-
-'Who is he, my dear?' asked my mother.
-
-'He is a gentleman who teaches young ladies--I beg your pardon'--(with
-the slightest possible glance at uncle Bryan)--'young women how to
-act; he educates them for the stage.'
-
-'But surely, my dear,' remonstrated my mother, 'you have no intention
-of becoming an actress.'
-
-'Why not? I am not wise, I know, and I am very wilful, and passionate,
-and unreasonable.' She resolutely moved a step from my mother, who was
-approaching her tenderly. 'But I have sense enough to think of my
-future, and I do not see what I could do better. I have been acting
-for a long time at Miss West's; we have often had little private
-performances there--Chris has seen them.' There was grief, but no
-reproach, in my mother's eyes as she looked at me. 'When I first
-commenced to act, I did it purely out of fun, and I had no serious
-intention of taking to the stage; but when I grew so unhappy here as
-to know that I was bringing discord among those who loved each other,
-and to whom I was in a certain sense a stranger, and when day after
-day the feeling grew stronger that I was not welcome in this house, I
-thought of what was before me in the future. It must be very sweet, I
-think, to be dependent upon those who love you; it is very bitter, I
-know, to be dependent upon those who hate you.'
-
-'Stop!' cried uncle Bryan, in an agitated tone. 'I say nothing as to
-whether you are right or wrong in your construction of the feelings
-entertained towards you here. You are a woman in your ideas, although
-almost a child in years, and you have evidently settled with yourself
-that you will not be led----'
-
-'Who is to lead me?' said Jessie, pale and trembling. 'I have asked to
-be led, and _you_ know the result. Not quite out of hard-heartedness,
-but with some shadow of good feeling--though perhaps you will not give
-me credit for being capable of anything of the sort--I have asked to
-be shown what is right and what is wrong; and if I, somewhat wilfully,
-preferred to be shown by example and not by words, was I so very much
-to blame, after all?'
-
-'You are clever enough,' he said, 'to twist things into the shape you
-like best----'
-
-'No,' she exclaimed, interrupting him again; 'be just. You know what I
-refer to, and you know I have spoken exactly the truth. Do not say I
-have misrepresented it.'
-
-'I beg your pardon,' he said, in a manly tone, and with a frankness
-which compelled admiration. I was wrong. You have stated exactly the
-truth, and in a truthful way. But if you really wished to be taught,
-what better teacher could you have than the one before you?'--with a
-motion of his hand towards my mother--'if you had doubts, where could
-you find a better counsellor?'
-
-'You are master,' said Jessie, firmly and gently; 'you gave me shelter
-and protection. Chris reminded me of that a little while ago when we
-were speaking of you, and I was angry with him for it--unreasonably
-angry. It is not to be wondered at that I should look to you for
-counsel.'
-
-'If there were two roads before you,' he said, 'one, dark and bleak
-and bare'--he touched his breast'--the other, fair and bright and
-sweetened by most unselfish tenderness'--he laid his hand upon the
-hand of my mother--'which would you choose?'
-
-'I cannot answer you; you are wiser than I am, but I do not think you
-can see my heart.'
-
-'I see,' he said, with a glance at my mother's white face, 'things
-which you do not seem to comprehend.'
-
-'The time may come,' she retorted, 'when you will be more just towards
-me, and I must wait until then.'
-
-'Well, well,' he said, with a sigh; 'you say it is bitter to be
-dependent upon those who hate you. Leave me out of the question. My
-sister loves you; Chris loves you. Can you not be content with this,
-and let me go my way?'
-
-'No; for I have been dependent upon you, not upon them.'
-
-'Have I ever said a word which led you to believe I begrudged you
-shelter here?'
-
-'Never; but we do not judge always by words.'
-
-She seemed to have caught uncle Bryan's talent for short crisp
-sentences, in which there was much truth.
-
-'Go on with your explanation,' he said.
-
-She turned to my mother.
-
-'You saw me yesterday in a cab with a gentleman. His name is Mr.
-Glover, and he is a friend of Mr. Rackstraw. He offered to see me
-home, and wanted to come to the door with me, but I thought uncle
-Bryan would not approve of it.'
-
-'I should not have approved of it,' said uncle Bryan, 'and I do not
-approve of any person seeing you home in a clandestine way.'
-
-'And, my dear child,' added my mother, 'he is a stranger to us, and
-must be almost a stranger to you.'
-
-'He is a gentleman,' said Jessie.
-
-'A gentleman!' repeated uncle Bryan scornfully.
-
-'That is nothing against him. I like gentlemen. Mr. Rackstraw tells me
-that Mr. Glover can help me to get an engagement on the stage, and I
-must consider that. He treats me with the greatest respect.'
-
-'Who pays this Mr. Rackstraw,' asked uncle Bryan, 'for the lessons he
-gives you? His business is not entirely philanthropic, I presume, and
-he does not teach young ladies for nothing.'
-
-'Of course I have no money to pay him; I am to pay him by and by, out
-of any money I may earn.'
-
-'You are determined, then, to become an actress?'
-
-'I am determined to get my own living, and I believe I shall do well
-on the stage. I cannot continue to live in a state of dependence. If I
-had a mother or a father, or if I were happy here, it would be
-different.'
-
-'I suppose you can be made happy,' said uncle Bryan, 'by being
-indulged in all your whims and caprices, and by being allowed to act
-and think exactly as you please, without restraint.'
-
-'No,' replied Jessie tearfully, 'I only want kindness; I cannot live
-without it.'
-
-She turned to leave the room, with signs of agitation on her face,
-when uncle Bryan desired her to stay.
-
-'There is something more,' he said. 'In the event of this
-gentleman--Mr. Glover--seeing you home again, he must not do so
-clandestinely. I owe a duty to you which I must perform, however
-distasteful it may be to you.'
-
-'It is not distasteful to me,' she replied. 'Mr. Glover would have
-seen me to the door yesterday but for my refusal to allow him. I am
-truly anxious to do what is right.'
-
-My uneasiness with respect to this discovery would have been
-unbearable but for a change in my circumstances which placed the day
-more at my own disposal. I had advanced steadily in my trade, and was
-by this time a thoroughly good engraver. I think I brought into my
-work more than mere mechanical exactness, and some blocks of my
-engraving which went out of Mr. Eden's office attracted meritorious
-attention. I knew of men who were earning good wages--far higher than
-I was receiving--by taking work from master engravers, and executing
-it at home. Why could I not do the same? I should not then be so tied
-down as not to have an hour or two in the middle of the day to myself;
-and in the event of my availing myself of the opportunity, I could
-easily make up for lost time by working an hour or two later in the
-night. I mentioned this to Jessie, and said that then I could come to
-Mr. Rackstraw's, and bring her home of an afternoon--instead of Mr.
-Glover, I added.
-
-'I would sooner,' said Jessie, 'that you saw me home than Mr. Glover.
-I believe you are jealous of him, you foolish boy! You have no
-occasion to be.'
-
-Such a crumb of comfort as this would console me for days.
-
-'And then I shall be my own master,' I said to myself proudly.
-
-My employer anticipated my wish; he was a generous conscientious man,
-and I had earned his respect. He called me into his office, and,
-almost in the exact words I have set down, proposed that I should do
-as I wished.
-
-'You will not only be able to earn more money,' he said, but in a few
-years you may be able yourself to set up as a master, and take
-apprentices of your own. I shall be able to give you plenty of work,
-and you will find that your time will be as fully occupied as you can
-desire it to be. Let me give you one piece of advice: never promise
-what you cannot perform; if you say you will deliver a block at a
-certain time, keep your word, if you have to sit up all night to
-finish your work. Let it get to be known that you are a man whose word
-can be depended upon, and you are sure to be prosperous.'
-
-I thanked him, and commenced almost immediately on the new system,
-with my hands full of work. So behold me now, with my bedroom, in
-which there was a good light, fitted up with table and bench, working
-steadily at home, to my mother's great delight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-MR. GLOVER.
-
-
-I soon made the acquaintance of Mr. Glover. In pursuance of my plans,
-I presented myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office every day at a certain
-hour, for the purpose of seeing Jessie home. I had of course
-previously consulted Jessie, and she had acquiesced in the
-arrangement. It was a serious encroachment upon my working hours, but
-I made up for it in the night, and between sunrise and sunrise I
-always performed a fair day's work. On the very first occasion of my
-presenting myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office, I found Mr. Glover there.
-Having sent in my name to Jessie, I waited in an outer room, the walls
-of which were lavishly decorated with paintings and photographs of
-actors and actresses, in the proportion of about one of the former to
-twenty of the latter. As I was studying these, Jessie made her
-appearance, followed by Mr. Glover; she was waving him off lightly,
-and saying as she entered,
-
-'No, thank you; I will not trouble you to-day. Chris has come to see
-me home.'
-
-'Oh,' he answered, without casting a glance in my direction. 'Chris
-has come to see you home! Is Chris your brother?'
-
-'No,' she said, 'I haven't a brother or a sister in the world.'
-
-He condescended to look at me after this, and held out his hand to me
-with smiling cordiality. I took it awkwardly, for I felt myself but a
-common person by his side.
-
-'Chris and I must become better acquainted,' he said. 'I remember now;
-I saw this young gentleman at Miss West's on the night of your
-performance there. He threw you two bouquets.' Jessie nodded. 'And
-very handsome bouquets they were,' he continued; 'he eclipsed us all
-by his gallantry; but I had no idea I was to have the pleasure that
-night of making your acquaintance, Jessie, or I might have entered the
-field against him. Any friend of yours _must_ be a friend of mine.'
-
-Then he bade us both good-day, without any attempt to press his
-attentions upon Jessie. Jessie asked me what I thought of him, and I
-could not help answering that he seemed to be a gentleman, but made
-some demur to his addressing her by her Christian name.
-
-'Oh, that is the fashion in the profession,' said Jessie carelessly;
-there is nothing in that.'
-
-'He is not an actor, is he, Jessie?'
-
-'No; he is something in the City.'
-
-This vague definition of many a man's occupation, common as it is, was
-new to me, and I inquired what the 'something' was. Jessie could not
-enlighten me. I continued my inquiries by asking her how she knew that
-he was something in the City. He himself had told her, Mr. Rackstraw
-had told her, and young ladies whose acquaintance she had made at Mr.
-Rackstraw's had also told her.
-
-'He is at Mr. Rackstraw's every day, Jessie?' I said.
-
-'Nearly every day, Chris,' she answered, and closed the subject of
-conversation by saying that, at all events, Mr. Glover was a perfect
-gentleman.
-
-I did not find him to be otherwise; he was uniformly courteous to me,
-and I could not make open complaint against him because his courtesy
-was of a kind which a superior yields to an inferior. He was a
-gentleman, and I was a common workman; I chafed at it inwardly,
-nevertheless. I would have avoided him if I could, but he would not
-allow me to do so. The second time I walked into Mr. Rackstraw's
-office I met him at the door, and he fastened on to me. I had come for
-Jessie? Yes. Was I coming every day for Jessie? Yes. I had plenty of
-spare time then? Yes. I was fond of Jessie, he supposed? I answered as
-briefly as was consistent with bare civility, but I made no reply to
-his last question. He was neither surprised nor exacting. As I did not
-answer the question, he answered it himself. It was natural that I
-should be fond other; we had been brought up together as brother and
-sister, he had been given to understand; yes, it was natural that I
-should be fond of her in that way--natural, indeed, that we should be
-fond of each other in that way. He had been given to understand, also,
-that we were not in any way related to one another; but he could see
-that in an instant, without being told. Jessie was a lady, evidently;
-I might tell her he said that, if I pleased, for he was never ashamed
-of what he said or did; Jessie was a lady in her manners, in her
-speech, in her ideas; and these things do not come to one by instinct,
-or even by education; they must be born in one.
-
-This and much more he said; conveying by implication (what indeed I
-knew already) that Jessie was far above me, and (what I could not
-doubt) that he was a gentleman, and I was not. He had a trick of
-playing with his moustaches, which he continually curled into his
-mouth with his fingers as he spoke; and even at that early period of
-our acquaintanceship, I, in my instinctive dislike of him, thought
-there was something stealthy in the action. Standing before me, with
-his fingers to his mouth, Mr. Glover there and then commenced to
-expatiate upon a theme of which I heard a great deal afterwards from
-his lips: this theme was his good name, of which he was evidently very
-proud. There was not a stain upon it, nor upon that of any of his
-connections; he had never harboured a thought to tarnish his
-character, which was above reproach. He did not express these
-sentiments in the words I have used, but these were the pith of them,
-and there was a distinct assertion in his utterances that he was much
-better than his fellow-creatures. I, listening to him, understood
-exactly what he meant to convey to my comprehension: that even if we
-twain had been equal in station, his high character and stainless name
-would have placed him far above me.
-
-In a week from this time Jessie told me that Mr. Glover had made
-closer inquiries about me, and hearing that I was a wood engraver, had
-expressed his intention of interesting himself in my career. I was not
-pleased at this; I did not wish to be placed under an obligation to
-Mr. Glover, and I muttered something to this effect to Jessie. She
-seemed surprised, but made no comment upon it. Mr. Glover, however,
-was as good as his word. I received a letter from a master engraver,
-desiring me to call upon him, with reference to some work he wished to
-give me. The hour fixed for the appointment was the hour at which I
-was due at Mr. Rackstraw's. I had no choice but to comply; and I made
-arrangements that afternoon, not only to engrave some blocks of a
-superior description, but to submit sketches of my own, upon wood, for
-a Christmas story which was to be published that year. The interview
-was a long one, and when I arrived home, I was not pleased to find Mr.
-Glover chatting to my mother in our sitting-room. He had seen Jessie
-home, and, in compliance with uncle Bryan's desire, had brought her to
-the door. An introduction to uncle Bryan and my mother naturally
-followed, and thus he was introduced to the house. He asked me
-pleasantly whether I had made satisfactory arrangements, and confessed
-that he had been the means of introducing this better kind of work to
-me. He received my mother's thanks graciously, and it made me mad to
-see that she thought it was a stroke of great good fortune to have won
-such a patron. What could I do but thank him also for the
-introduction? That I did so in an ungracious and even in a sullen
-manner did not seem to strike him; Jessie noticed it, however.
-
-'You don't seem pleased, Chris,' she said, following me out of the
-room.
-
-'I don't know what my feelings are,' I replied; from any other hands
-than his, the work that I have received to-day would have delighted me
-beyond measure. But I had better not speak; it will be best for me to
-hold my tongue.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Because I seem never to dare to say what I think; and I don't like to
-play the hypocrite.'
-
-'You don't say what you think,' Jessie said, 'because you are
-conscious that your thoughts are unjust.'
-
-'Perhaps it is so; but I can't make myself believe that they are.'
-
-'You haven't a good opinion of Mr. Glover.'
-
-'I am not grateful for his patronage; I don't mind saying that.'
-
-It would have been more truthful in me to have said that the
-instinctive aversion with which he had at first inspired me was fast
-changing to a feeling of hatred. I hated him for his smooth manner,
-and hated him the more for it because it was impossible to find fault
-with it; I hated him for his civility to me, and hated him the more
-because he refused to notice that my manner towards him, if not the
-words I used, plainly showed that I did not desire his friendship or
-patronage. But I could have multiplied my reasons, which might have
-all been summed up in one cause of dislike--his attentions to Jessie.
-
-'Don't come to the Wests' for me to-night, Chris,' Jessie said, after
-a little quiet pondering.
-
-'Why not, Jessie?' I asked, with a sinking heart.
-
-'Because I don't want to be made more unhappy than I am already.
-Besides, you must devote your attention more to your work, and less to
-me. I am not the most important thing in the world to you.'
-
-'You are,' I said gloomily; 'how often have I told you so! You don't
-believe what I have said, then!' I turned from her in sorrowful
-passion.
-
-'Chris, Chris,' she said, 'I am not, I must not be, your only
-consideration. You have other duties before you, and you must not
-forget them or neglect them, as you have hitherto done.'
-
-I thought she referred to my work, and I answered that I did not
-neglect it, and that I could perform great things if she were kinder
-to me.
-
-'Am I not kind to you?' she exclaimed. 'Is it my fault that you are so
-wrapt up in your own feelings that you are regardless of the feelings
-of others? If you are blind, I am not. If you are selfish, I am not.
-If you forget your duty, I shall not forget mine.'
-
-These were the unkindest words she had ever spoken to me, and they
-were a terrible torture to me.
-
-'Do I show myself to be blind and selfish,' I said, 'and do I forget
-my duty in loving you as you know I love you, and in wishing to be
-where you are?' She did not reply. 'But perhaps,' I added bitterly,
-'you have another reason for not wishing me to come to the Wests'
-to-night.'
-
-'What other reason?' she asked quietly.
-
-'Perhaps Mr. Glover is to be there;' and the next moment I would have
-made any sacrifice to have recalled what I had said. But it was too
-late. How often do we plunge daggers into our hearts by inconsiderate
-words, rashly spoken, as these were!
-
-Jessie looked at me swiftly, with a fire in her eyes which I had never
-seen there before, and with hot blood in her face; but in another
-moment she was as white as death.
-
-'Jessie!' I cried repentantly, seizing her hand.
-
-She tore it from me indignantly.
-
-'I will ask him to come!' she said, and left me, ready to kill myself
-for my cruel injustice.
-
-That night I watched outside the house of the Wests', and made false
-the words I had spoken to Jessie but a short time since, when I asked
-her if she thought I would play the spy upon her. I was careful that
-she should not see me, for, if she did, I felt that I should never
-have been forgiven. If I proved my words false, Jessie proved hers
-true. Mr. Glover was at the Wests', and walked home with her. I waited
-until she was in the house, and then I followed Mr. Glover at a
-distance. I had no distinct intention in my mind; I simply felt that I
-_must_ follow him; he seemed to draw me after him. I have no doubt
-that, if a clear meaning could have been evolved from my whirling
-thoughts, and had been shown to me, I should have been shocked at it.
-He walked for a couple of miles, and then hailed a cab; after that I
-wandered about miserably, without thinking where I was walking,
-without thinking of the time. It was only when I found myself on a
-bridge six miles from Paradise-row, and heard the hour strike, that I
-awoke to consciousness as it were and walked slowly home. The faithful
-mother was sitting up for me.
-
-'My darling child,' she said, with a sob of grief at the misery she
-saw in my face, 'where have you been? What has kept you out so late?'
-
-I put her from me in silence, and went into my room, and locked the
-door. As I did so, I thought I heard the door of my mother's bedroom
-above open and close. But I dismissed the fancy, and went to bed with
-a heavy heart.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-TURK WEST'S APPEARANCE AT THE WEST-END THEATRE, AND ITS RESULTS.
-
-
-Early in the morning I watched for an opportunity to endeavour to make
-peace with Jessie. My mother had been in great anxiety about me during
-the night, and had come down to my bedroom three or four times,
-whispering my name at the door; but I pretended to be asleep, and as
-the door was locked, she could not enter the room. I passed a
-sleepless night, and tossed about in bed, longing for daylight. When
-it came, I rose and commenced to work, and even in the midst of my
-great unhappiness I found comfort in it, for I loved it. At seven
-o'clock I heard my mother calling to me, and I opened my door.
-
-'At work so soon, my dear!' she said, in a tone of exquisite
-tenderness.
-
-I answered that I had a great deal of work in hand, and that it would
-not do for me to be idle. She sat by my side, and was saying meekly
-that her boy must not work too hard, but must take proper rest, when
-she broke down. Looking at her, I saw an expression of such yearning
-devotion in her pale face, such sweet and wistful love, that, softened
-for a moment, I laid my head on her shoulder, and sobbed quietly. Her
-tears flowed with mine.
-
-'Ill could help you, dear child!' she murmured.
-
-You cannot--you cannot,' I murmured in reply. Mother, Jessie must not
-go out this morning without my seeing her. I _must_ speak to her
-alone.'
-
-Soon after breakfast, when uncle Bryan was in the shop, I heard her
-tell Jessie to wait in the parlour for a minute or two, and then I
-knew that Jessie was alone. I immediately opened my door, which led
-into the parlour, and stepped to Jessie's side. She did not look at
-me.
-
-'I have come to ask you to forgive me,' I said.
-
-'What have I to forgive?' she asked.
-
-'You know,' I answered. 'What I said yesterday about Mr. Glover. I did
-not mean it, Jessie; I spoke in passion. It was cruel of me. Say that
-you forgive me, Jessie.'
-
-'It was unjust as well as cruel,' she said; but I am not the only
-person you are cruel to. Do you know what time your mother came to bed
-this morning?'
-
-'It was very late,' I said remorsefully.
-
-'Have you any idea what she suffered while she waited up for you,
-Chris? Because you and I have quarrelled, is that a reason why you
-should be cruel to her?'
-
-'I have been doubly wrong,' I said, 'but I have made my peace with
-her.'
-
-'Yes, that is easy with such a nature as hers; mine is harder.'
-
-'Still you forgive me; say that you forgive me, Jessie.'
-
-'Yes, I forgive you,' she said coldly; 'not because you were unkind to
-me, for I deserve that, perhaps, but because you were unjust to me.'
-
-I could extract nothing more than this from her, and I was fain to be
-satisfied. But I saw clearly enough that she was less cordial towards
-me than heretofore. The spirit that animated and sweetened our
-intercourse in the dear old days seemed to have fled, never to return.
-But I had something in my mind which, when carried out, might, I
-thought, be the means of reëstablishing myself in Jessie's favour. Her
-birthday was approaching; in a fortnight she would be eighteen years
-of age. From the day on which Jessie had given me, as a birthday
-present, the silver locket, with the words engraven on it, 'To Chris,
-with Jessie's love,' I had had many anxious consultations with myself
-as to what kind of gift I should give her on her birthday, and I had
-resolved that a gold Geneva watch and chain would be appropriate and
-acceptable. I had seen the very thing I wanted in a jeweller's shop,
-and the price asked for the pretty ornament--seven pounds--was not
-beyond my means, for I had been saving money for some time, and was
-now earning more than two pounds a week. On the very day on which
-Jessie and I made up our quarrel, I went to the jeweller's and
-purchased the birthday gift, and gave instructions that on the inside
-of the case should be engraven, From Chris to Jessie, on her
-eighteenth birthday. With undying love.' In my state of mind nothing
-less fervent would satisfy me. Being attracted by a plain ivory
-brooch, in the form of a true lover's knot, I purchased that also, and
-felt, as I did so, that that would complete our reconciliation. As I
-sat at my work after the transaction of this business, I thought of
-what had passed between me and Jessie when she gave me the silver
-locket, and I reproached myself very strongly for having uttered a
-word to give her pain. Was not the inscription, 'To Chris, with
-Jessie's love,' sufficient? I decided that it was, and I resolutely
-refused to harbour the words of Mr. Glover which came to my mind, to
-the effect that Jessie and I had been brought up as brother and
-sister, and that it was natural we should be fond of each other in
-that way. How, thought I, could I ever have been so mad as to
-entertain a doubt of Jessie? She was better than I, cleverer than I,
-and she saw faults in me which she wished to correct, and she was also
-naturally hurt at my suspicions of her. Well, I would never again
-suspect her; from this moment I would have the fullest faith in her
-goodness, her purity, her love. It was in this mood that I presented
-myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office, somewhat doubtful of the manner in
-which Jessie would receive me, but resolved to show her in every
-possible way how truly I loved her and what faith I had in her. Mr.
-Glover was there of course, and we all three walked together from the
-office. That I abased myself before him is true, and it is quite as
-true, notwithstanding the resolution I had formed, that I despised
-myself for so doing. Jessie looked at me thoughtfully, and seemed to
-be considering within herself whether she approved of my new mood. For
-this reason Mr. Glover found her a somewhat inattentive listener to
-his confidential utterances, the intervals between which he improved
-by talking to and at me on his pet theme--his character and good name.
-Before we had walked a mile, Jessie proposed that she and I should
-take an ..omnibus home, as she was tired, and Mr. Glover left us. On
-our way she told me that Mr. Rackstraw had offered her an engagement
-on the stage. Did she intend to accept it? I asked; and she said that
-she had deferred her answer until after her birthday.
-
-'I wish with all my heart,' I said, that you were not going on the
-stage; not that there is any harm in it, Jessie, nor that there could
-be harm in anything you do, but because it seems as if it will take
-you away from us.'
-
-'Do you think,' was the reply, 'that a woman has not an ambition as
-well as a man? If I have a talent--and I really think I have,
-Chris--why should I not turn it to good account? Besides, I have my
-plans. I owe money, Chris.'
-
-To Mr. Rackstraw for your lessons. Well, I can pay that, Jessie. All
-that I have is yours, and you don't know how rich I am growing.'
-
-'You are too good to me, Chris,' she said, giving me her hand, which I
-took and held close in mine beneath her mantle; in that moment all my
-trouble vanished, and a feeling of ineffable delight brought peace to
-my heart once more. Will nothing cure you?'
-
-'Nothing will ever cure me of loving you,' I said, in a glad whisper.
-'You would not wish that.'
-
-She turned the subject.
-
-'I owe other money as well. I owe a great deal to uncle Bryan; he is
-poor, and I should like to pay him. But we'll not talk of this any
-more just now, Chris; wait till my birthday comes.'
-
-'You will have a secret to tell me then, Jessie.'
-
-'Yes; I have thought a great deal lately of the letter I am to read
-for the first time on that day.'
-
-'And you have never had the curiosity to open it, Jessie?'
-
-'Oh yes, I have; but I have never opened it. I can be steadfast and
-faithful, Chris, as well as other people. Let us call in together and
-see Josey West.'
-
-'Ah,' said that little woman, with a shrewd glance at us as we
-entered, so you two lovers have been making it up?'
-
-'Don't be foolish, Josey,' exclaimed Jessie.
-
-'How do you know we ever quarrelled?' I asked, in high spirits.
-
-'How do I know that it will be night to-night, you meant to ask.
-
-Because I'm crooked, you think I can't see things perhaps. Have you
-seen Turk?'
-
-'No,' I answered.
-
-'He has gone to your house to tell you something. I dare say he is
-waiting there for you. Here is a rose for you.'
-
-I took and dropped it.
-
-'Ah,' said the queer little creature, 'because a rose is pretty and
-fresh, and smells sweet, you think it can't prick you! There, get
-along with you, Mr. Wiseacre, and mind how you handle your roses for
-the future.'
-
-Turk had great news to communicate. His chance had come. By a
-fortunate combination of circumstances, an opening had occurred in a
-West-end theatre, and he was to make his first appearance there on the
-ensuing Saturday night in the new play that had been written for him.
-
-'It's a fluke, Chris, my boy, a fluke,' he said, walking up and down
-the room excitedly; 'a sensation piece that the lessee thought would
-be a great draw is a most complete failure, as it deserves to be. He
-must either fill his house with paper or play to empty benches, so he
-withdraws his sensation piece, and gives me a show. We came out
-without much of a flourish; but we shall astonish them, Chris, my boy.
-The simple announcement of a new play and a new actor at that theatre
-is sufficient to draw all the critics, and we shall have a great house
-and a great triumph. You shall come, Chris, my boy; you shall come to
-witness the effect I shall produce. You shall go into the pit; here is
-an order for you. I don't ask you to take a big stick with you--I
-scorn to solicit undeserved applause; but at the same time every
-friend is a friend, and what's the use of a friend if he isn't
-friendly, eh, Chris, my boy?--a word to the wise; you understand;
-there's no need of anything more betwixt _us_. The piece will be
-wretchedly put upon the stage; there will be no scenery to speak of;
-the stock actors who play the other parts will be--well, no better
-than they should be, Chris, my boy, and, in addition, they will not be
-disposed to regard with favour a man who is an actor, Chris, my boy,
-and who comes to break down vicious monopolies and vicious systems.
-But what matter these small drawbacks to Turk West? They daunt not
-him! Resolved to conquer, he goes in and wins. Turk's sun will rise on
-Saturday night, Chris, my boy, and ever after it will blaze--that's the
-word, sir, Chris, my boy--blaze refulgent, and all the lesser suns
-shall pale before it.'
-
-'But if you should fail,' I suggested.
-
-He glared at me in incredulous astonishment.
-
-'There's no such word in Turk's vocabulary, Chris, my boy. The man who
-goes in with an idea that he will fail generally does fail, and
-deserves to fail. Is there any want of pluck in Turk West? Is there
-any want of stamina in him? No, no. It's no game of chance that he
-plays. On Saturday night next he throws double sixes. And after that
-he'll be able to serve his friends.'
-
-Did his family know of it? I asked.
-
-'Yes, they know of it,' he replied, and those who can come will be
-there--in different parts of the theatre, Chris, my boy, strangers to
-each other. And old Mac will be there, with an oak stick; it's an off
-night with him. Here are a couple more orders which you may like to
-give to _friends_,' with most significant emphasis on the last word.
-
-I fully understood his meaning, and I gave the orders to persons who
-promised to applaud Turk on every available opportunity, and who, I
-have good reason for believing, basely betrayed their trust; but there
-are not more ungrateful persons in the world than those who go to a
-theatre without paying. The receipt of an order has a baleful effect
-upon them; it deadens their sense of enjoyment, and makes them
-miserably hypercritical. On the following Saturday I made my way to
-the West-end theatre in a state of great expectation and excitement.
-Meeting with a man in the streets who sold walking-sticks, I purchased
-the stoutest in his collection, and, thus armed, seated myself in the
-front of the pit, half an hour before the curtain rose. The theatre
-was quite filled before the performances commenced, and a fashionable
-company was assembled in the stalls and private boxes. I recognised
-several members of Turk West's family in different parts of the house,
-who stared at me stolidly, and made no response to my familiar nods.
-Debating with myself upon the reason of this, I came to the conclusion
-that they had resolved not to know any person on that night lest they
-might be set down as partisans of Turk, and thus tarnish the
-genuineness of his triumph. The conclusion was strengthened by the
-circumstance which I noted, that they seemed to be perfectly oblivious
-of each other's existence; but there was certainly a family likeness
-in the sticks they carried. Studying the playbill, I found that a
-piece of some importance would be played first, and that Turk would
-not make his appearance until past nine o' clock. I paid but little
-attention to the drama in which Turk was not; my stick was as
-indifferent as myself; and the other sticks witnessed this part of the
-performance in mute inglorious ease; nevertheless there was a good
-deal of applause when the curtain fell. About this time there
-straggled into the stalls and private boxes certain persons whom a
-communicative stranger who sat next to me, and who appeared to be a
-wonderful authority on all matters connected with the drama, pointed
-out as notabilities.
-
-The critics were the most interesting persons in my eyes, and I stared
-at them with interest, and with some feeling of disappointment because
-they were so like ordinary mortals. I asked my neighbour what he
-thought of Mr. Turk West as an actor--when I mentioned the name of my
-friend, I consulted my playbill with the air of one to whom he was a
-stranger--and I learnt to my mortification that he had never heard of
-him. He did not seem to be very sanguine of the success of the new
-play or the new actor, and I was mean enough to agree with him. The
-title of the play was _Twice Wedded, or Torn Asunder_; and in due time
-the curtain rose for its introduction to the audience. I cannot
-undertake to describe it, for the reasons that a good deal of it was
-not heard, that the actors and actresses were imperfect in their
-parts, and that the story was so involved and mysterious as to baffle
-description. The heroine, it appeared, had been twice married--once,
-many years ago to Turk, who had been torn from his wife, for no
-assignable reason, on the wedding-day, and who was supposed to have
-died in battle (what battle, and why he went to battle, were not
-explained); and afterwards to a person whose identity I was not
-successful in discovering. Turk played two characters, an Irish
-servant and the first husband, who instead of dying in battle, as he
-should have done, had been confined in a madhouse, from which he had
-just made his escape. After a comic scene as the Irish servant, which
-was mildly tolerated by the audience, Turk came on in a high-peaked
-hat, a long cloak, and hessian boots, and hearing that his wife had
-married again, behaved in so mad a manner as to fully justify his long
-incarceration. Being a very short man, Turk's appearance in this
-costume was even in my eyes most ludicrous; no effort of imagination
-could have made a hero of him, and as (for the sake of contrast, I
-suppose, with his other character) he spoke in the most lugubrious
-tone, the audience went through various transitions of feeling. First,
-they were, as I have said, mildly tolerant; then they became
-impatient, then indignant, and then, there was something so really
-comic in the little man's despair, they hooted and laughed at him.
-Directly the feeling of derision came into play, even I knew that both
-Turk and his new and original drama were, in dramatic parlance,
-'damned.' An unfortunate word which Turk used was taken up as a
-catchword by the audience, and they flung it at him with merciless
-enjoyment. They literally screamed with laughter when he was most
-serious, and even the critics threw themselves back in their seats and
-showed by their merriment (for critics are rarely merry) that they
-were tasting a new sensation. In vain the sticks rapped approval; in
-vain did Turk's friends endeavour to stem the current. The knowing man
-who sat next to me declared, as he wiped his eyes, that he would not
-have missed this first night for anything. It's the richest thing I've
-ever seen,' he said; and, like a coward as I was, I flung away Turk's
-colours, and basely murmured that it was the richest thing _I_ had
-ever seen. I was very sorry for poor Turk, and more so because he was
-so brave all through. He did not exhibit the slightest sign of
-discomposure at this miscarriage of his ambition, but faithfully spoke
-every word of his part, until the curtain finally fell amidst peals of
-laughter; and then the stage-manager came forward and stated that the
-new drama would _not_ be played again.
-
-When I was out of the theatre, I was almost inclined to run away, for
-I felt that the verdict was a just one, and I was afraid that Turk
-might wish me to declare otherwise; but I liked him too well to desert
-him. I waited for him near the stage-door, and so did a few other of
-his friends, who seemed to regard their big sticks, as I did mine,
-with gloomy disgust. Turk soon made his appearance, and, to my
-surprise, with a cheerful countenance. Not a word was said about his
-failure. We adjourned to a neighbouring tap, and talked of anything
-but the drama. Old Mac was there, enjoying his toddy, but he did not
-at first join in the conversation. Turk, also, was silent. Suddenly
-old Mac burst out:
-
-'Hang it, my sons, let's speak! Turk, you acted bravely. I was never
-prouder of my profession than I was to-night when I saw you go
-manfully and artistically through your part in defiance of the
-senseless howlings of the envious crew. If I could have broken all
-their heads with one blow of my stick--did you hear it going, Turk? I
-stuck to you, my son; I stuck to you like a man--I'd have done it!
-Dammee, I'd have done it, to see where the brains were. I'd have made
-a quarry with thousands of these quartered slaves as high as I could
-pick my lance! Thank you; I will. Another glass of whisky-toddy,
-miss--as before. As before!' Here old Mac drew the back of his left
-hand across his eyes, and holding out his right sympathisingly, said:
-'Turk, my boy, drown dull care! A small piece of lemon, if you please,
-miss. Here's confusion to the rabble!'
-
-'Now what's the use of beating about the bush?' demanded Turk, a
-little huskily. 'I'm not such an ass as not to see that I've made a
-failure. Is Turk West going to bury his head in the sand, like an
-ostrich, and refuse to see it? Not he! Well, I'm not the first, and
-sha'n't be the last. Pass me the pewter, Chris. It served me right. I
-ought to have taken more time; I ought to have gone on by degrees; I
-ought to have stuck to my last. I've had my lesson, and I mean to
-profit by it. Mac, old boy, you and I will never meet again at
-Philippi. I've had my dream, and it's over.'
-
-'The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces!' murmured old Mac.
-
-'It was all the fault of the piece,' said one. 'What audience could be
-expected to stand such a hash?'
-
-'It wasn't all the fault of the piece,' retorted Turk manfully. 'We
-were both to blame. It isn't a first-rate piece. I can see that now;
-but there's merit in it, merit, my boy, although the subject is an
-unfortunate one. I've brought desolation upon more than one breast
-to-night.' He beat his own, and the action would have been ludicrous,
-but for the genuine tone in which he spoke. 'The author had set his
-all upon the hazard of the die, and I saw him rush from the side-wings,
-with the salt tears running down his face. What did I say I'd
-throw to-night, Chris, my boy? Double sixes? Well, I threw for both,
-and threw double blank. A nice bungler I am I! My mind's made up.
-Othello's occupation's gone! Turk West acts no more.'
-
-'Nonsense, old fellow, nonsense!' his friends remonstrated. 'You'll
-think better of it.'
-
-'I've said it,' cried Turk, with stern resolve. 'I act no more.'
-
-'In that case,' said old Mac, in a tone of gloomy desperation, 'I'll
-take another glass of whisky-toddy. Little does the English stage know
-what it has lost this night!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-JESSIE'S BIRTHDAY.
-
-
-The morning of Jessie's birthday rose bright and clear. How well I
-remember it, and every trivial feature connected with it, which,
-apparently but little noted at the time, impressed itself indelibly
-upon my mind! Often afterwards, in thinking of that day--and how many,
-many times have my thoughts dwelt upon it I--a rift of light has
-pierced the black cloud which overshadowed it, and I have seen myself,
-as I stepped into the street soon after sunrise, stooping to pick up a
-pin which lay on the pavement. I have awoke in the night, sobbing in
-bitterest grief, and this smallest and most uneventful of incidents
-has been the clearest thing I have seen in connection with that day.
-Other incidents as trivial are clear to me--a costermonger wheeling
-his barrow, loaded with fruit; a policeman standing by a lamp-post
-chewing a piece of straw; a woman who brushed past me humming a line
-of a song. I see the exact arrangement of the fruit in the
-costermonger's barrow; the face of the policeman is as familiar to me
-as if he had been an intimate friend; I hear the few words the woman
-hummed, with the precise and delicate intonations she gave to them.
-And yet, had these incidents occurred at the North Pole, they could
-not have been more utterly disconnected from the great and sorrowful
-event which made the day memorable to me.
-
-My mother had not been well during the past week, and for a day or two
-had been compelled to keep her room. On one of these days I had gone
-to Mr. Rackstraw's office for Jessie, and had learned that she had
-left an hour before my arrival. Hastening home, I found her by my
-mother's bedside, nursing my mother. Hearing my step on the stairs,
-Jessie had come to the bedroom door, and had whispered to me
-indignantly:
-
-'If I had been in your place I think I should have stopped at home
-with my mother, knowing what a comfort my presence was to her, instead
-of running after a foolish wilful girl.'
-
-Before I had time for reply, my mother had called out, in her thin
-sweet voice:
-
-'Jessie, what are you saying to Chris?'
-
-Then Jessie had left us together, and my mother, drawing my head on
-her pillow, told me how kind and gentle Jessie had been to her, and
-made my pulses thrill with delight by her praises of the girl whom I
-loved with all my soul. Something noticeable had occurred within an
-hour after that. Going into the parlour downstairs, I noticed that
-Jessie had a pair of new gold earrings in her ears. Now I was sure
-that she had not worn them when she met me at the door of my mother's
-bedroom. They were of a pretty and graceful pattern, and became her. I
-had not given them to her; who had? I looked towards uncle
-Bryan----but, no; he was not the giver, for his eyes were fixed upon
-them suspiciously and disapprovingly. It hurt me to see them in her
-ears, but I would not ask her about them, preferring the pain which
-lay in ignorance. Besides, I would show Jessie what confidence I had
-in her, by waiting until she chose to tell me of her own accord who
-was the giver. But Jessie said not a word on the subject.
-
-On Jessie's birthday my mother was better, although not quite well. We
-had arranged between us that there should be a little feast at home in
-the evening, in honour of Jessie, and that Jessie should not be told
-of it beforehand. I contemplated another surprise for Jessie, and I
-consulted my mother concerning it.
-
-'Nothing would please Jessie so much as having one of her friends at
-our little party.'
-
-My mother looked doubtfully at me. Since we had lived in uncle Bryan's
-house, no stranger had ever sat down at our table.
-
-'I don't think uncle Bryan can possibly object,' I said. 'It is only
-Josey West, Jessie's best friend, and one of the kindest-hearted
-creatures in the world. Before you knew her five minutes you would
-love her, and I believe she would even take uncle Bryan's fancy,
-strange as he is.'
-
-'Will you ask him, or shall I, my dear?'
-
-'You had better,' I answered; 'you have more patience with him than I.
-If he refused me, I should quarrel with him perhaps. Tell him she's
-deformed, and as good as gold.'
-
-A few hours afterwards my mother said,
-
-'Your uncle says we can do as we please. He consents, my dear.'
-
-'Ungraciously, of course,' I added; 'but never mind, so long as Josey
-is here. Not a word to Jessie, mother.'
-
-I enjoined secrecy also on Josey West, who was really glad of the
-opportunity of making my mother's personal acquaintance.
-
-'I shall throw my arms round her neck,' said Josey, and kiss her the
-moment I see her. And as for you,' she added, with a fair disregard of
-sequence in her speech, 'you are a wise young man. Now what made you
-think of me at all?'
-
-'Because I knew it would please Jessie,' I answered honestly, 'and
-because I want to make Jessie's birthday the happiest day in her life
-and mine.'
-
-She pinched my cheek merrily, as though she understood my meaning.
-
-I had fully resolved that on that day I would ask Jessie to be my
-wife. Tortured almost beyond endurance by the doubts and difficulties
-which surrounded me, I had in some way gathered courage to look my
-position steadily in the face, and the moment I did so, the way seemed
-clear before me. I became strengthened immediately, and the fair
-promise which hope held forth appeared realised in anticipation. I set
-aside all obstacles for future consideration, and mentally leaped out
-of the entanglement of feeling which had brought so much discomfort
-into our lives. 'It is for me to speak,' I thought, 'and to speak
-plainly and manfully.' I painted the future in the fairest colours. My
-prospects of success were growing brighter and brighter; my sketches
-for the Christmas story which had been intrusted to me to illustrate
-were approved of by the author and the publisher, and I felt I only
-wanted opportunity to rise far above the sphere of life which, in the
-natural course of things, I could have expected to occupy. 'Jessie's
-love for the stage,' I thought, 'and her wish to become an actress,
-only arise from her thoughtfulness of her future, and from her state
-of dependence on uncle Bryan. Well, I can clear away all doubt; I can
-offer her a good home; and I can release her from uncle Bryan, and, if
-she wishes, can pay him what she thinks she owes him.' I resolutely
-closed the eyes of my mind on my mother's declaration, that wherever
-our home was, uncle Bryan must share it. I knew too well that it would
-be impossible for Jessie and me to be happy together, with him as a
-member of our household. All these things could be considered and
-settled by and by, when Jessie had promised to be my wife. I
-reproached myself that I had not spoken plainly to her before now; I
-had, as it were, driven her by my faint-heartedness to do what she
-might not have done, if she had had a protector whom she loved and who
-loved her. All this and other reasoning of the same nature I carried
-out exactly in the way which best suited my hopes, and at length I lay
-in my cloud-built castles at peace with myself; for it was not to be
-doubted that my dearest wishes would now be surely realised. I had an
-instinctive consciousness that Josey West was thoroughly acquainted
-with the position of affairs between Jessie and me, and knowing her to
-be my friend, I was convinced that she would have warned me if she had
-had any doubt of Jessie's affection for me.
-
-So that it was all clear sailing. What would come, would come, but the
-bliss which I should presently taste of, knowing Jessie to be mine and
-mine only--the bliss which I was enjoying already in anticipation--was
-all sufficient. Outside our own two personalities there was nothing
-else to be considered. Nothing else? No one else? No; for this one
-greatest of all joys secured, all difficulties which once seemed to
-threaten to mar its fulfilment _must_ melt away, as surely as snow
-melts before the sun. I pleased myself with this commonplace metaphor,
-and utterly overlooked the common sense of things (common sense,
-indeed, in this case being the very slave of sentiment)--utterly
-overlooked the possibility that the current of others' feelings, of
-others' likes and dislikes, of others' ideas of right and wrong, could
-run in a different direction from that down which I was sailing with
-my hopes realised. It is thus, I suppose, sometimes with other selfish
-natures than mine.
-
-I was up and out early in the morning. I could not sleep the night
-before, and wishing to give Jessie a bouquet of fresh flowers, I had
-determined to walk to Covent-garden to buy them. I had a bouquet made
-of the sweetest and loveliest flowers, and I took it to our house by
-the back way, and hid it in my workroom. How many times I looked at
-it, and how in every delicate leaf I found a sentiment which formed a
-connecting link between me and Jessie, it is unnecessary here to
-describe. In the afternoon I had to go to the jeweller's for the watch
-for Jessie, the inscription on which could not be completed before;
-and when I held it in my hand and read the words, 'From Chris to
-Jessie, on her eighteenth birthday. With undying love,' I saw Jessie's
-beautiful eyes looking into mine, and I uttered an exclamation of
-delight which must have satisfied the jeweller that his work was
-approved of. Then there was the ivory brooch shaped in the form of a
-true lover's knot. Perhaps Jessie would allow me to fasten it in the
-bosom of her dress, as she had allowed me to take the ribbon from her
-neck, which was now round mine, with the locket she had given me on my
-birthday. No one but I had yet seen or knew of these offerings of
-love. It was to be a day of delightful surprises.
-
-I was at home with my flowers before breakfast.
-
-'What made you go out so early this morning, Chris?' Jessie inquired
-over breakfast.
-
-'That's a secret,' I answered gaily; 'you shall know to-night.'
-
-My mother had already questioned me in private, and I had easily
-satisfied her. Something unusual occurred when we had finished
-breakfast. Jessie went to uncle Bryan's side, and spoke to him.
-
-'Do you know it's my birthday to-day, uncle Bryan?'
-
-'I have heard so.' Then after a short pause: 'May it be a day of good
-remembrance to you!'
-
-Nothing more; not a kiss, not even a hand-shake. And yet she invited
-it in the tenderest manner, as she stood before him, bright and
-beautiful, in a new light print dress, with a small lilac flower. I
-never see a dress with such a pattern without an odd sensation at my
-heart. She did not move from the spot until he, after some mental
-communing, I think, turned from her and went into the shop. I
-experienced a feeling very much like hatred towards him for his
-hardness and insensibility.
-
-My mother took Jessie's hand.
-
-'May your life be bright and happy, dear child!'
-
-She hid her face in my mother's bosom for a little while in silence;
-then she raised her face, and they kissed each other. Ah, the world
-was bright with such a flower in it!
-
-'And you, Chris?' she said presently, holding out her hand to me.
-
-'I shall wish you nothing until to-night,' I said, with an effort of
-great self-restraint, 'except in my heart.'
-
-She nodded, and smiled, and then busied herself about the room,
-insisting that my mother should sit and rest while she did the work of
-the house. But my mother, laughing, said that she could not allow it,
-as Jessie would find out all her secrets; then ensued fond coaxing and
-teasing, which ended, as I was afraid it would do, in my mother
-whispering to Jessie that we were going to have a little feast that
-night in her honour, and that Josey West was coming to spend the
-evening with us.
-
-'A nice one you are to keep a secret,' I called merrily after them as
-they went out of the room with their arms around each other's waist,
-like mother and daughter; 'it's a good job I didn't tell you
-everything.'
-
-What with my work and other duties, I saw but little of Jessie during
-the day; and in the evening I dressed myself in my best, and went for
-a walk, with the intention of not coming home until past eight
-o'clock, when Josey West would be at our house, and when everything
-would be prepared to celebrate Jessie's birthday in a befitting
-manner. I carried out my programme faithfully, and entered the parlour
-with a beating heart and flushed face. The room was very bright. My
-mother had on her best cap and dress, and in the rapid glance I cast
-at uncle Bryan, who was behind the counter, as I walked through the
-shop, I fancied I detected some change for the better in his
-appearance; I fancied also that he expected to see some one with me.
-Josey West was in the parlour, and the dear little soul was holding my
-mother's hand in hers with tender feeling. They were already the best
-of friends. My mother stood on tiptoe to look over my shoulder.
-
-'Whom for, mother?' I asked.
-
-'I was looking for Jessie, my dear. Has she not been out walking with
-you?'
-
-'No, mother.'
-
-'Ah,' exclaimed Josey West briskly, 'she'll be in presently. I dare
-say she is going to surprise us with something.'
-
-Unable to keep my secret any longer, I said that I had something to
-surprise Jessie with when she came in; and I brought the flowers from
-my workroom, and placed them on the table. Then I showed them the
-brooch and the watch; before I knew it, Josey had opened the case, and
-read the inscription, and pointed it out to my mother.
-
-'And is it so, really?' Josey asked tantalisingly.
-
-'Why, you knew it was so,' I answered, very hot and red.
-
-And my mother left Josey, and came and pressed me fondly in her arms.
-
-But where was Jessie? She was nowhere in the house.
-
-'Perhaps she's at mine,' suggested Josey; 'run round, and bring her. I
-dare say she's waiting for you there.' This with the wickedest of
-laughs.
-
-But Jessie was not at Josey West's house, nor was she at home when I
-returned. Our perplexity soon turned to alarm. We looked at each
-other, to see whether any one of us held the key of Jessie's absence;
-my suspicions lighted on Josey West, but a frank look assured me that
-I had no right to suspect her. For an hour I walked about the street
-watching for Jessie.
-
-'Can anything have happened to her?' my mother asked.
-
-Uncle Bryan was in the room when my mother spoke. He also, in his own
-way, shared our alarm.
-
-'Mother,' I said, inspired by a sudden thought, if Jessie comes while
-I am away, do not let her go out again. I shall not be long.'
-
-My thought was to go to Mr. Rackstraw's office to make inquiries,
-although I knew full well that the office was closed hours ago. But I
-could not remain still. As I turned to go from the room, a boy's voice
-in the shop arrested my steps. He was inquiring for Mr. Bryan Carey
-and my mother. Uncle Bryan, answering the lad, came in with a letter,
-addressed to my mother. I saw that the writing was Jessie's, and I
-took the letter from his hand.
-
-'I _must_ open it, mother,' I said. The letter contained these words:
-
-
-'I have gone away, and shall not return. Forgive me for all the
-trouble I have brought among you, but I think I have not been entirely
-to blame. Do not be sorry that I have gone; I have caused you too much
-pain already. It will be useless, if you find where I am, endeavouring
-to prevail upon me to return. I would starve rather than enter the
-house again.
-
-'JESSIE.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-I SPEAK PLAINLY TO UNCLE BRYAN.
-
-
-The paper which I held in my hand became blurred in my sight, and for a
-few moments the only thing that was clear to me was that Jessie was
-lost to me, and that all possible happiness had gone out of my life.
-
-There was no mistaking the meaning of Jessie's letter to my mother. It
-was intended to snap at once and for ever the bonds which united us.
-She had set herself free from her miserable thraldom, and she was not
-to be wooed back. 'It will be useless, if you find where I am,
-endeavouring to prevail upon me to return. I would starve rather than
-enter the house again.' I heard her speak these words in sharp
-incisive tones, and I knew too well that she was not to be turned from
-her purpose. All was over between us, and this day, which I had fondly
-imagined was to be the happiest in our lives, had sealed the
-destruction of all my hopes.
-
-Two trivial circumstances recalled me to the realities of the scene.
-One was the ticking of the watch which I had intended as a birthday
-present for Jessie; the other was a slight rustling of paper. I had
-observed, when uncle Bryan entered the room with the letter for my
-mother, that he held another paper in his hand, which must have been
-addressed to himself. It was the rustling of this paper which now
-attracted my attention. Uncle Bryan had opened it, and was reading it.
-He could have read but a very few lines when a ghastly pallor
-overspread his features, and his hands trembled from excess of
-agitation. Every muscle in his face was quivering, and even in the
-midst of my own suffering these signs of suffering in him did not
-escape me. They did not move me to pity; they stirred me rather to a
-more bitter resentment against him. He, and he alone, was the cause of
-all my misery; he, and he alone, had brought this blight upon my life.
-
-I did not know, until I attempted to move towards him, that my
-mother's arms were round me. I had no distinct intention of raising my
-hand against him, but it might have occurred, and my mother feared it
-and clung to me convulsively. I released myself from her arms, and I
-stood before him, barring the way, for I detected in him a desire to
-leave the room unobserved. He gazed at me in a weak uncertain manner;
-all his old strength and sternness of character seemed to have
-deserted him, and he was suddenly transformed into a weak and worn old
-man. That his sorrow-stricken face should have won sympathy from my
-mother and Josey West--as I saw clearly it had--I construed into an
-additional wrong against myself, committed not by them, but by him. It
-inflamed me the more; I felt that my passion must have vent, and that
-it was impossible for me to be silent.
-
-'Let me pass.'
-
-I did not hear the words, for his throat was parched, and refused to
-give them utterance; but I knew that he had striven to speak them.
-
-'Not till you have heard what I have to say,' was my reply, as I stood
-before him.
-
-My mother crept to my side, but I was not to be turned from my
-purpose. I could hear and feel the rapid beating of her heart against
-my hand, which she had taken in hers and pressed to her bosom, but the
-selfish intensity of my own grief made me deaf and blind to everything
-else. Uncle Bryan did not answer me; he strove feebly to pass me
-again, but I prevented him from doing so. Something in my attitude
-caused Josey West to place herself between us.
-
-'I hope you are satisfied,' I said. 'You have driven her from us. What
-is the next thing you intend to do?'
-
-I paused for his reply, but he did not speak.
-
-'I intended to ask Jessie to-night to be my wife. I don't know what
-her answer would have been, but I think I know what it might have been
-but for your systematic cruelty. Will it add to your satisfaction to
-know that I had set all my hopes of happiness upon her, and that you
-have driven these from my heart, as you have driven her from your
-door? I loved her with all my soul. I was not worthy of her; she is
-far above me and every one here; but I loved her most truly and
-sincerely, and you have stepped between us and parted us for ever.
-Does it please you to be assured of this?----Nay, mother, I will
-speak. I have been silent until now, out of my love for you, and
-because I knew that you had given even him a place in your tender
-heart. He has requited you nobly for it. If I had spoken openly before
-now, things might have been different, but I held my tongue, like a
-coward, and because I had some latent notion that he deserved respect
-from me. I think so no longer. On my last birthday,' I continued,
-addressing him, 'you gave me certain advice which I believed to be
-good; among other things you said that it is seldom a man can look
-back upon his life with satisfaction. You drew that from your own
-experience. With what kind of satisfaction do you look back upon your
-own life? A man with any tenderness for others in his nature would
-shrink with horror from the contemplation of such a life as yours. But
-perhaps you find it a pleasant task to blight the hopes and happiness
-of those who have the misfortune to come in contact with you. Having
-no children of your own upon whom you could practise in this way, you
-turned your attention to others, and you have succeeded most
-thoroughly. You said to me, when I was of age, that I was a man, with
-a man's responsibility, and a man's work to do, and you bade me do it
-faithfully. I have tried to do it--my mother knows that, and so does
-Miss West, I think--in the hope that it would lead to a good result.
-But when you addressed those words to me, did you think of yourself,
-and the example of your own life? They sounded well, but did you think
-of your own responsibility--or did you think that _you_, apart from
-all other men in the world, had no responsibility which it behoved you
-to look to? You brought Jessie here, a friendless, helpless girl--a
-girl whom nobody but you could help loving for the goodness that is in
-her. She brought sunshine into this house, which was gloomy enough
-without her. She had no mother, no father, no friends, and you were
-her only protector. How have you fulfilled your duty towards her?
-Shall I answer for you? You have behaved like a tyrant, in whom all
-human feeling was deadened. When she strove to love you, you compelled
-her, by harsh words and cold looks and repellent acts, to hate you.
-She has good cause for her feelings towards you now, for you did your
-best to make every hour and every day of her life a misery to her. She
-told me herself that she was only happy out of the house; so that you
-did your work well. If you saw faults in her which no one else saw,
-and which had their birth in your own hard unfeeling nature, what
-right had you to torture her in the way you did? She was but a child,
-and you are an old man. Why could you not have dealt tenderly and
-gently by her? Ask my mother--ask Miss West--ask any of her
-friends--if there is anything in her character that might not be
-turned to good account? But you could not see it. Lightheartedness and
-an innocent flow of spirits are crimes in your eyes. You made her pay
-bitterly for the shelter you gave her; you have shown the generosity
-of your nature in its fullest light by making her say, after a long
-experience of you, that she would starve rather than enter your house
-again. When you told us the story of your life, you said you wished me
-to hear it because I might learn something from it. I have learnt
-something--but not the lesson you wished me to learn. I have learnt
-that such a life as yours, such a nature as yours, brings desolation
-upon every life and nature within its influence, and that it would be
-a happier fate for me to drop down dead this minute than live as you
-have lived, a torture to all around you.'
-
-'Chris, Chris!' implored my mother, with streaming eyes, and with a
-gesture of entreaty towards uncle Bryan, who sat before me now, with
-his head bowed upon his hands. Remember, my dear child, remember!'
-
-'Remember what, mother?' I cried pitilessly. 'That he has robbed me of
-all that can make life dear to me--of all that _is_ dear to me? You
-should ask me rather to forget when you point to him, whom I would
-teach a different lesson if he were not an old man, with one foot in
-the grave. Shall I remember that he has no belief in goodness here or
-hereafter--that he believes neither in God nor man? Will such
-remembrances as these plead in his favour? One thing I will and do
-remember--that I owe him money for the food he has given me and you.
-But I will pay him to the last farthing, so that nothing may remain
-between us but what I owe him for having brought misery into my life.
-That is a debt that can never be wiped out. And Jessie will pay him
-also; she told me she would. But for that resolve she would not, for a
-long time past, have eaten a meal at his expense. Are these the things
-you wish me to remember?'
-
-I knew that I was striking him hard with every word I uttered, but I
-would not spare him. I ransacked my mind to hurt him.
-
-'And you, mother,' I said pitilessly, do you think you are just to me
-in pleading for him, and in disguising the opinion you have of him?
-When, knowing that all my hopes were set on Jessie, and that it was
-impossible for her and him to live happily in the same house, I
-proposed to make a home elsewhere where we could live in happiness
-without him, did you show your love for me by saying that we must
-never leave him, and that, wherever our home was, he must share it?
-When he told us his story, for the purpose, as I now see, of setting
-us more and more against Jessie, and I asked you afterwards if you
-would like me to look on things as he does, what was your answer? "God
-forbid!" you said; "it would take all the sweetness out of your
-life."' (Uncle Bryan removed his hand from his eyes at this, and
-raised them for one moment to my mother's white face; there was no
-reproach in them, but a look of humble grateful affection.) 'In what
-was Jessie wrong that she should have been driven from us? In wishing
-him to go to church with us? Ask your own heart, mother, for an answer
-to that, and remember what occurred on the first Sunday night we were
-in this house. If I had known then what I know now, I would have
-starved rather than have accepted the shelter of his roof. Remember
-how, for days and weeks together, Jessie has been submissive and
-tender to him, striving by every means in her power to win his
-affection; and remember how her efforts were received and rewarded.
-But for him Jessie might have been my wife; you loved her, and she
-loved you. How often have you told me that you saw nothing in her but
-what was good! I think at one time she would have consented to share
-my lot, but that dream is over now. There was an influence strong
-enough to turn love into hate, and to poison all our lives. I will
-remember that to my dying day, which I hope may not be far off. I have
-nothing worth living for. But one thing I am resolved upon--that while
-I live, those who love me shall choose between me and him.'
-
-Josey West caught my arm suddenly and sharply.
-
-'Are you mad?' she cried. 'Learn the lesson you want to teach others.
-Look at your mother.'
-
-She let go my arm, and stepped swiftly to my mother's side, in time to
-save her from falling to the ground. Uncle Bryan made a movement
-towards her, but I stood before him, and he shrank back. My mother's
-strength had given way, and she had fainted. I supported her in my
-arms, while Josey West loosened her dress and bathed her face. She
-opened her eyes presently, and, recognising me, pressed me
-convulsively to her breast.
-
-'O my child, my child,' she sobbed, 'my heart is almost broken!'
-
-I looked round for uncle Bryan; he was gone.
-
-'What I did,' moaned my mother, 'I did for the best. I prayed and
-hoped that time would set all things right. I see now that it was
-impossible, and that I was a weak foolish woman. But I loved you, my
-darling, and I would shed my heart's blood for you. What sin have I
-committed that I should be punished by the loss of my dear child's
-love?'
-
-'No, no, mother,' I cried remorsefully, 'you must not say that. You
-have not lost it. God forbid that it should ever be so!'
-
-I think she did not hear me, for she slid from my arms and knelt
-before me, imploring me with sobs and broken words to forgive her.
-Many minutes passed before I succeeded in calming her, and then Josey
-West and I assisted her upstairs to her room, to the room which Jessie
-had made bright by her innocent devices.
-
-'Jessie will never sleep here again,' I thought, with a choking
-sensation in my throat. This was _her_ room, Josey,' I said aloud.
-
-Josey nodded gravely, and whispered to me that my mother must go to
-bed, and that she ought to see a doctor. 'I hope she will not have a
-fever,' said Josey.
-
-My mother's eyes were wandering around her in a strange way; once or
-twice she looked at me as if she did not know me. The simple sound of
-my voice, however, recalled her to herself.
-
-'Yes, dear child,' she said, with a smile so sad and sweet as to bring
-the tears into my eyes.
-
-'Mother,' I whispered, 'you know what has occurred?'
-
-She considered for a moment or two; I assisted her memory.
-
-'Jessie,' I said.
-
-'I know now,' she replied, with a look of distress. 'Jessie has gone.'
-
-'Will you be strong for my sake, mother?'
-
-'I will do anything you tell me, my darling child,' she said humbly.
-
-'First I will go and send a doctor to you. Then I want to try and find
-Jessie.'
-
-'Dear child, do you know where she is?'
-
-'No; and I have no hope of inducing her to return. I know she will
-never come back, but I cannot rest without doing something. I shall go
-mad if I stop in the house all night and make no effort to discover
-her.'
-
-'Go, then, dear child,' she said; and added imploringly, You will come
-back, my darling, will you not? You will not desert me after all these
-years?'
-
-'How can you think it, mother? I will come back, but it may be late.'
-
-'I will keep awake for you, my darling. Say nothing more to your
-uncle. Promise me that, dear child.'
-
-'I will not speak another word to him.'
-
-I turned to Josey West; she divined what I was about to say.
-
-'I'll stop with your mother, if you _must_ go. Run round to my house
-first, and say I sha'n't be home to-night. And look here. If Turk's
-there, you'd best take him with you. I suppose you are going to Mr.
-Rackstraw's?
-
-'That was my intention,' I said.
-
-'Of course you know the office will be closed; but I daresay it will
-relieve your feelings to thump at the door.' She spoke fretfully; but
-her tone changed when she said, 'Don't think only of yourself. Have
-some thought for your mother.'
-
-'One word, Josey. _You_ have no idea where Jessie is?'
-
-'Not the slightest,' she replied. 'And you didn't know she was going
-away?'
-
-'I had no more idea of it than you had.'
-
-'That night,' I said hesitatingly, 'when Mr. Glover was at your
-house----'
-
-'Oh,' she interrupted in a sharp tone, Mr. Glover! Well, what night?'
-
-'A little while ago, when Jessie was there, and I was not. Did he pay
-her great attention?'
-
-'Of course he did.'
-
-'Did he seem fond of her?'
-
-'It wouldn't have been natural otherwise,' she replied, with a
-suspicious look at me. 'Of course he seemed fond of her. Anything
-more?'
-
-'No,' I said, with a sigh; 'that's all.'
-
-I kissed my mother, and left the room. Her loving eyes followed me to
-the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-TURK MAKES A CONFESSION.
-
-
-I found Turk at his sister's house. He jumped up at once on my
-proposing that he should take a walk with me.
-
-'I am glad of the opportunity, Chris, my boy,' he said; 'for I want to
-talk to you.'
-
-I answered, in as lively a tone as I could command, that I was at his
-service.
-
-'Like a true friend as you are. The subject I want to talk about is
-spelt with four letters--s-e-l-f. Such a subject needs no overture; up
-with the curtain, then. I start with a self-evident proposition. A man
-must live. What do you say to that?'
-
-I had nothing to say in contradiction.
-
-'Very well, then. To live, one must have money; to have money (barring
-the silver spoon), one must work for it. Granted?'
-
-'Granted,' I assented listlessly. He looked at me in surprise at my
-despondent tone.
-
-'Ah,' he said, 'there's more in that than meets the eye.'
-
-'More in what, Turk? In your proposition?'
-
-'No, Chris, my boy. In your face. You are in trouble.'
-
-'I am, Turk; in the deepest, most terrible trouble. I am utterly,
-utterly wretched. I have nothing in the world worth living for.'
-
-'It's bad when it comes to that,' he said, with an expression of deep
-concern. 'Money?'
-
-'No, Turk.'
-
-'Heart?'
-
-My silence was a sufficient answer.
-
-Is the trouble of such a nature that it may be confided to a
-friend--to a friend with a kindred soul, Chris, my boy?'
-
-'I will tell you about it presently, Turk. Go on with your own story
-first.'
-
-'In one act, then. Without detail. Since that ever-to-be-remembered
-night when a strong verdict was pronounced against me on the other
-side of Temple Bar--in which direction, by the bye, I see we are
-walking now--and when I determined to relinquish the profession in
-which I glory--I do, Chris, I glory in it; and you can hardly have an
-idea of the sacrifice I have made in giving it up--I have been looking
-about me. Not having been born with that silver spoon in my mouth, I
-can't afford to be idle. Well, to be brief, something that will suit
-me has come in my way, and I have snatched at the chance. The affair
-will be settled to-morrow. Near the theatre in which I made my first
-and last appearance in the new and original drama which was played for
-the first and last time is a theatrical wig and hair shop, with a
-shaving connection attached. To-morrow that shop and that connection
-will be mine. That's the head and front of my story. But there's
-something more. I have a friend of yours to thank for it all.'
-
-'A friend of mine!'
-
-'Two, I may say--one fair, one dark. I do perceive here a divided
-duty. But we'll speak of that anon.'
-
-'No; tell me now. What friends do you mean? I haven't many.'
-
-'You have one who stands for a host. If she were such a friend to me,
-I wouldn't call the king my uncle.'
-
-'She!'
-
-'I see you must hear it. Briefly, then, this was the way of it. The
-business was for sale, Chris, my boy. Money had to be paid for it--not
-much, but too much for a poor actor whose purse has always resembled a
-sieve. I had saved a little, but not more than half what was required
-for the purchase of the goodwill. I mention this in the presence of
-these friends of yours----'
-
-I interrupted him.
-
-'Don't let us have any mystery, Turk. Who are they?'
-
-'Jessie the peerless and Mr. Glover.'
-
-I started. Turk continued:
-
-'I mention this in their presence, and lament my impecuniosity. Jessie
-sympathises with me--wishes that she had money, so that she might help
-me. She has a heart of gold, Chris, my boy, a heart of gold. Two or
-three days afterwards, Mr. Glover sends for me--says he has been
-considering the matter, and that he is disposed to assist me. He goes
-further than being disposed to do it--he does it. In short, he
-provides half the purchase-money, and there we are. It is a matter of
-business, Chris, my boy. I asked him to make a matter of business of
-it, and he said he intended to do so; and he has. Mr. Glover is a
-moneylender, and he lends me the money at ten per cent. But there's
-one thing I'm certain of. He wouldn't have done it but for Jessie.'
-
-I reflected with some bitterness on this information.
-
-'Are you certain of that, Turk?'
-
-'Morally certain, that is all. For when I thanked Jessie, she modestly
-averred that all that she did was to express a wish that she had a
-friend who would assist me. And now, Chris, my boy, unbosom yourself.
-What's your trouble?'
-
-'Jessie has left our house, Turk.'
-
-He gave me a look of deep concern. 'What do you mean by that, Chris,
-my son?'
-
-'She has left us, never to return--left us suddenly, without
-explanation.'
-
-And then I narrated to him, in detail, all that had occurred, omitting
-only what had passed between me and uncle Bryan. Still when I
-mentioned his name, which was necessary several times in the course of
-my narration, I spoke of him with sufficient bitterness to make Turk
-aware of the terms upon which we stood to each other.
-
-Turk, growing more and more serious as I proceeded, listened to me
-without interruption, and pondered deeply. By the time I had finished
-he had become very serious indeed, and there was an air of gloom upon
-him which somewhat soothed me.
-
-'There is more in _this_ than meets the eye,' he said; and added,
-somewhat unnecessarily as I thought, 'Bear with me a little while,
-Chris, my boy,' for I felt that such a request more properly belonged
-to me than to him. But he explained his meaning presently.
-
-'You have given me your confidence, Chris, my boy, and you want me to
-stand by you.'
-
-'I do, Turk.'
-
-'And I _will_ stand by you, as you have stood by me--I don't forget
-the big stick you bought, Chris, to assist me on a certain eventful
-night'--(here I was stung reproachfully by the remembrance of my
-cowardly behaviour on that night); 'nor other occasions at the Royal
-Columbia when you led the applause like a true friend. I'll stand by
-you, my boy, but you must first hear my confession.'
-
-I did not wish to hear his confession; I wished to continue talking
-only of myself and Jessie, but I was bound to listen.
-
-'As before, Chris, in a very few words. I knew that you loved Jessie,
-but I scarcely thought that your passion was as strong as it is--as
-powerful, as deep----'
-
-'No words can express its strength and depth, Turk,' I said, in a tone
-of gloomy satisfaction.
-
-He nodded, as if he fully understood me, and continued: Well, others
-may love as well as you, Chris.' I looked at him in jealous curiosity.
-'I shouldn't be true to you nor to myself if I didn't confess it
-before we proceed to the consideration of the state of affairs. _I_
-love her, also.'
-
-I started, and let go his arm.
-
-'Don't do that, Chris, my boy,' said the honest fellow; 'it's nobody's
-fault but my own. I know that I can't stand in comparison with you.
-You are ten years younger than I am--you are handsome, clever, bright;
-and I--well, I am a failure. That's what I am, Chris; a failure. Even
-if you were out of the way, which I don't for one moment wish, curious
-as it may sound, I think I should stand but a poor chance with such a
-beautiful creature as she is. I am not a hundredth part good enough
-for her.'
-
-'No one is, Turk,' I said, somewhat mollified.
-
-'No; I won't say that. I think that some one whom I know _is_ good
-enough' (he pressed my arm sympathisingly); 'and besides, you have a
-claim upon her. You mustn't be surprised or hurt at my loving her,
-Chris; I could mention half a dozen others who are in the same boat.
-You see, one can't help loving her, she is so bright and winsome. Why,
-if she were mine--which she isn't, and never will be--I think I should
-take a pride in knowing it, for it would make her all the more
-precious to me. That is how the matter stands with me, Chris, and I
-think it's right that you should know it. I give her up, not without a
-pang, my boy, but freely; I am used to disappointments, and I shall
-bear this as I have borne others.'
-
-'But you never had any hope, Turk,' I said, disposed, after his
-magnanimous conduct, to argue the matter with him.
-
-'No, not to speak of,' he replied, with a melancholy sigh. 'If I can't
-be Jessie's lover--don't be angry with me for using the word--I can be
-her friend, and yours. It rests with you to say the word. If you know
-enough of Turk West to trust him, say so, Chris, and he pledges
-himself to act faithfully in your interest. He may be of more use to
-you than you imagine. Well?'
-
-'I should be an ungrateful brute not to say that I accept your offer
-thankfully, Turk.'
-
-'That's settled, then. Shake hands on it. And now, Chris, we'll be
-silent for just two minutes, and then we'll go into the matter.'
-
-At the end of that time he resumed.
-
-'I said that there was more in your story than meets the eye, Chris,
-my boy; and there is. Jessie disappears on your birthday, suddenly,
-without any forewarning. This morning everything was nice and pleasant
-with all of you at home.'
-
-'With the exception of uncle Bryan,' I interrupted; 'you mustn't
-forget that.'
-
-'I don't forget it, but then he is the same as he usually is, and
-there's nothing unusual in that. She is affectionate to you; she is
-affectionate to your mother; and I think that she couldn't have
-avoided seeing that there was to be a little celebration of her
-birthday to-night. Well, it is plain to me that this morning she had
-no idea of going away. Now what has occurred since this morning to
-cause this sudden change in her? That's the first thing to consider.'
-
-I could not think of anything. Jessie had not been out of our house.
-
-'There's something I have not told you, Turk, but I don't see what it
-can have to do with Jessie's going from us. We were talking together
-once, when Jessie said that she wondered that I had never asked her
-any questions about herself--she meant about herself before she came
-to live with us. I answered that mother had desired me not to do so,
-because uncle Bryan might not like it.'
-
-'What had he to do with it? asked Turk.
-
-'I don't know, but mother said he might have secrets which he would
-not wish us to discover. When I told this to Jessie, she said that she
-had a secret, but didn't then know what it was. It was in a letter
-which she was not to open until she was eighteen years of age--until
-to-day. Then she said she would tell me everything.'
-
-'There's a mystery somewhere,' said Turk, pondering; in that letter
-perhaps.'
-
-But I could not agree with him. Eager as I was to receive any
-impressions which would divert my suspicions from the current in which
-they were running, I could not see the slightest connection between
-the circumstance I had just mentioned and Jessie's absence. By this
-time we were at Temple Bar.
-
-'Where are we going?' asked Turk.
-
-'To Mr. Rackstraw's,' I answered. 'Jessie has been taking lessons of
-him, you know. He may be able to tell us something about her.'
-
-Turk shook his head. 'There are two strong reasons against the
-realisation of that expectation, Chris. First, Jessie has not been
-there to-day, according to your own statement; second, Mr. Rackstraw's
-office closes at five o'clock.'
-
-But we may be able to discover where Mr. Rackstraw lives.'
-
-'Well?'
-
-'Well?' I echoed, irritated at his seeming discouragement of my plan.
-'Turk, can't you see that I'm almost mad with misery. I thought you
-were a friend----'
-
-'And am I not? That's news to Turk. What good can you do by finding
-out Mr. Rackstraw's private address?'
-
-'He may tell me where Mr. Glover lives.'
-
-'And then?' demanded Turk, in a grave and sorrowful tone.
-
-I turned from him petulantly. 'If you do not care to understand me,' I
-said, 'I had best go alone.'
-
-I walked swiftly onwards towards Mr. Rackstraw's office, Turk
-following me at a distance of a few paces.
-
-Mr. Rackstraw's office was situated in a quiet narrow street in the
-rear of Covent-garden. It was closed, as I expected it would be, and
-although I rang all the bells on the door for fully ten minutes, I
-received no answer. Turk stood quietly near me, without speaking. I
-was heartily ashamed of myself for my treatment of him, and I made an
-attempt at reconciliation by holding out my hand to him as I turned
-disconsolately from Mr. Rackstraw's door. He took my hand with
-affectionate eagerness.
-
-'I can't find it in my heart,' he said with rough tenderness, 'to be
-angry with you; but I ought to be.'
-
-'I _am_ ashamed of myself for behaving so badly to you, Turk, but I
-couldn't help it. I think I am ready to do any mad or foolish thing.'
-
-'Oh, I don't care about myself. I have a stronger reason for being
-angry with you. Who of we two should be Jessie's champion? You, I
-should say. Yet I am obliged to defend her from your suspicions. If
-you were ten years older than you are, I should quarrel with you,
-Chris; I would with any other man who dared to say a word against
-her.'
-
-'Who has said anything against her?' I demanded hotly.
-
-'You, in coupling her name with Mr. Glover--you, even in the
-expression of the idea that Mr. Glover has had anything to do with her
-disappearance. I don't want you to be ashamed of yourself for treating
-me badly, but you ought to be for your suspicions of her.'
-
-'You don't know what I know, Turk. I am bringing no charge against
-Jessie--God forbid that I should; I love her too well, and think of
-her too highly. But Mr. Glover has been paying court to her from the
-first day he set eyes on her.'
-
-'What if he has? Is that her fault? Aren't you old enough yet to know
-that there are hundreds of men always ready to run after a pretty
-girl? Now, I daresay it has hurt you to hear that Mr. Glover has
-helped me into my new business because Jessie expressed a wish that
-she had a friend who would assist me. Why, what was more natural than
-that she should say so, out of her kind heart, and what was more
-natural than that he should be glad of the opportunity of obliging
-her, and of doing a fair stroke of business at the same time? It isn't
-a large sum that he advances--a matter of seventy-five pounds only,
-and he has a bill of sale, and goodness knows what, all for security.
-Now you are better satisfied perhaps. I can't say that I am over-fond
-of Mr. Glover, but he is said to be an honourable, straightforward
-man. I'll tell you what I'll do, if you must see him----'
-
-'I must,' I said firmly.
-
-'I don't know where he lives, but I'll take you to a theatre that he
-often pops into of an evening; he may be there. The acting-manager is
-one of my new friends, and will pass us in, I daresay, or will be able
-to tell us if Mr. Glover is in the theatre.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-MR. GLOVER DECLINES TO SATISFY ME.
-
-
-The friend to whom Turk referred was, fortunately for us, in the lobby
-of the theatre, and as the two were engaged in conversation, the man I
-came to seek lounged towards us. He seemed surprised to see me, but
-approached me quite affably, and asked what I was doing in _his_ part
-of the world so late in the night. I made some sort of awkward,
-bungling answer, and then he recognised Turk.
-
-'You, too, Turk,' he said in his slow way; 'but that is natural, for
-these are your quarters now. Let me see. You take possession
-to-morrow?'
-
-'Yes,' Turk answered, everything was settled, and he went into his new
-place of business early in the morning.
-
-'And how is business with you?' asked Mr. Glover, directing his
-attention to me again.
-
-I answered that it was very good, and that I had nothing to complain
-of in that respect.
-
-'You have nothing to complain of in that respect,' he said, glancing
-from me to Turk and from Turk to me, and appearing to be seeking for
-some solution of the circumstance that we were in company together.
-When he was in any doubt, he had an irritating habit of repeating the
-last words spoken by the person he was conversing with, which gave him
-time to think of his own words in reply. 'That must be very
-satisfactory. I hear good accounts of you. You will get on, I should
-say, if you are steady and straightforward, and if you keep a good
-name. That is everything in this world. A good name--a good name. But
-what brings _you_ out to-night? Have _you_ business in this quarter
-too?'
-
-'No,' I said; 'I did not come out for business.'
-
-'You did not come out for business. For pleasure, then. Well, young
-men will be young men.'
-
-'To tell you the truth, sir,' I said----
-
-'That's right, always tell the truth,' he interrupted, speaking from a
-height, slowly, and coolly, and patronisingly, as though he were
-truth's conservator, and was glad to hear that it was being practised.
-'Yes, to tell me the truth----'
-
-'I came out partly for the purpose and in the hope of seeing you.'
-
-With his hand playing with his moustache, he looked not at me, but at
-Turk, for an explanation. Turk, however, had nothing to say.
-
-'You came out for the purpose and in the hope of seeing me. Yes. Have
-you brought me any message?'
-
-'Did you expect one, sir?' I asked quickly.
-
-'Did I expect one? No, I cannot really say that I did; but I should
-not have been surprised. Go on,' he said, with gentle encouragement.
-
-There were some persons passing us occasionally, and I moved to a more
-retired spot. I saw that he was curious, and I saw that his curiosity
-increased at this movement.
-
-'You seem agitated,' he said. 'Turk, our young friend here seems
-agitated. Take your time--take your time. If you are going to beg a
-favour, I shall be glad to assist you in any way in my power--in any
-way in my power.'
-
-'I have not come to beg any favour of you, sir. I only came to
-ask----'
-
-But I hesitated here; the justice of Turk's reproach came upon me with
-great force, and I was conscious that the words I was about to utter
-might be construed into an ungenerous suspicion of Jessie. If they
-reached her ears from the lips of one who was not well disposed
-towards me, I should sink for ever in her esteem.
-
-'Take time--take time,' said Mr. Glover, outwardly quite at his ease.
-
-Turk came to my rescue here. He divined my thoughts, and the cause of
-my hesitation.
-
-'Perhaps, Mr. Glover,' said Turk, 'if you would not mind regarding
-what passes as confidential, and not to be mentioned to any one else,
-Christopher would be more at his ease.'
-
-I gave Turk a grateful look.
-
-'Christopher would be more at his ease,' repeated Mr. Glover. 'This
-really is very mysterious. I don't see any objection. Then you know
-what he is going to say?'
-
-'I know the subject he wishes to speak upon--but I was not aware of it
-when I first came out with him to-night.'
-
-'Is it such a subject as ought to be spoken of in confidence between
-us?'
-
-He totally ignored me, as if my opinion on the point were of the
-smallest possible value.
-
-'I think so,' replied Turk, 'if it be spoken of at all.'
-
-'You have your doubts as to the judiciousness of the communication our
-young friend is about to make?'
-
-'I have; and I have told him so.'
-
-'Oh, you have told him so.'
-
-He appeared to me to debate within himself whether, under such
-circumstances, he should listen any further; but his curiosity
-overcame his evident wish to baulk me.
-
-'You may go on,' he said to me, with a condescending wave of his hand.
-
-'It is understood, then,' I said, somewhat more boldly, 'that what we
-say to each other is quite private and will not be repeated?'
-
-He stared at me very haughtily, and bent his head, and stood before
-me, with his fingers to his lips, waiting for me to speak. A singular
-fancy occurred to me at this moment as I gazed at him--a fancy which
-need not here be mentioned; it lingered in my mind then and
-afterwards, although I strove to dismiss it on this occasion as being
-utterly wild and out of all reason. But, in conjunction with another
-circumstance, which came to light in the course of time, it led to a
-strange discovery.
-
-'I have not come to make any communication,' I said; 'I have only come
-to ask a question. I can speak more freely now, as you are a
-gentleman, and as what I say will not reach her ears.' (His lips
-repeated 'Her ears,' but he did not repeat the words aloud.) 'It is
-about Miss Trim'----
-
-'About Jessie,' he said, in a lighter tone. 'Yes; what about her?'
-
-'Do you know where she is?'
-
-His looks were disturbed now, although he strove to be cool.
-
-'Do I know where she is?' he repeated, with a contraction of his eyes.
-
-'That is what I have come to ask.'
-
-'Oh, that is what you have come to ask.'
-
-'There is no need for me to repeat the question, I suppose,' I said,
-controlling my desire to strike at him, for his manner was in the last
-degree contemptuous, notwithstanding that the interest he took in the
-conversation was evidently strengthened.
-
-'No; I understand the English language, and _you_ will be kind enough
-to understand that I am not in the habit of being questioned. There is
-no need for you to repeat the question, but there is a need for my
-asking why it is put to me.'
-
-'Then you do not know?'
-
-He would not give me the satisfaction of a simple answer.
-
-'Let me see,' he said, in a musing tone, 'to-day is her birthday.'
-
-'You do know that.'
-
-'She told me herself; these things are not guessed at.'
-
-'You have not answered my question,' I said, trembling from passion
-and from a sense of helplessness.
-
-'You have not answered mine,' he replied. 'I ask you why you put it to
-me?'
-
-Turk motioned to me that I ought to tell him, but I could not speak.
-
-'Perhaps I had best explain,' Turk then said. 'This is Jessie's
-birthday, as you know, and Christopher and his mother had prepared a
-little feast in honour of it.'
-
-'After the manner of such people,' observed Mr. Glover, with a sneer
-and a laugh, which set my pulses beating more quickly. Turk took no
-notice of the observation.
-
-'My sister Josey was invited, to please Jessie, and Chris had a little
-present to give her----'
-
-'Exceedingly pretty and pathetic,' interrupted Mr. Glover. 'It would
-make a charming domestic scene in poor life, if it was placed on the
-stage. These commonplace circumstances tickle the fancy, and please
-sentimental persons, whenever they are presented in an unreal form. In
-real life, of course, there is nothing very attractive in them--often
-the reverse, I should say. But the picture you have drawn would be a
-failure even on the stage, if there was nothing exciting to follow. We
-want a "situation," Turk.'
-
-'We have one ready,' responded Turk. 'Without warning, and most
-strangely and suddenly, Jessie leaves her home. Her friends suppose
-she has gone out for a walk, and are waiting for her with uneasiness,
-which grows stronger as the time goes on and Jessie does not return.
-While they are waiting, a letter comes----'
-
-'Are you concocting a plot?' asked Mr. Glover.
-
-'I am telling you exactly what has occurred. A letter is received from
-Jessie, in which she says that she has gone away, and never intends to
-return. Chris, in his anxiety, has come to see you, in the hope--or
-the fear--of hearing some news of her.'
-
-I had been watching Mr. Glover's face all the time Turk was speaking,
-but it was impossible for me to decide whether he was acting or not.
-The only change I observed in him occurred during Turk's last words;
-then a little light came into his eyes, which might have been
-construed into an expression of triumph.
-
-'And Chris, in his anxiety,' he said, has come to see me in the
-hope--or the fear--of hearing some news of her. Which is it?' he
-asked, turning to me; 'hope or fear?'
-
-'Fear,' I replied unhesitatingly.
-
-'What do you suspect me of?' he continued politely; 'running away with
-her? You don't answer. Afraid to put it into words. But that's the
-plain English of it, isn't it? You did a wise thing in stipulating
-that what passes between us is to be kept private, or I might have
-been tempted to tell the young lady in question something which would
-not be pleasant for her to hear. Had you known what is due to a
-gentleman from one in your station of life, I might have been induced
-to satisfy your inexplicable anxiety concerning her; as it is, I
-decline to do so. She would be both amused and angry to learn that you
-have set up some sort of a claim upon her, as if there could be any
-community of feeling between you. You seem to forget that she is a
-lady, and that you--well, that you are not a gentleman. Take this
-piece of advice from one who is competent to give it--go home and
-stick to your bench, and don't presume to cast your thoughts on what
-is not only beyond your reach, but immeasurably above you. Good-night,
-Turk.'
-
-And with a contemptuous glance at me, Mr. Glover walked away in a very
-leisurely manner.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-A NEW FEAR.
-
-
-I walked home in the most sorrowful of moods. Turk accompanied me part
-of the way, but when he began to speak in Mr. Glover's favour, I said
-that I would prefer to walk by myself. The good fellow took the hint,
-and would not notice my churlishness.
-
-'I know, I know, old fellow,' he said, shaking hands with me; 'but you
-might count me as nobody. Never mind, Chris, my boy, you won't find
-many better friends than Turk West; and he's not to be shaken off, let
-me tell you.'
-
-I reflected with bitterness that I had not one friend who thought as I
-thought. Everybody was against me, and I was distrusted and
-misunderstood even by those who should have held to me most closely. I
-walked for miles out of my way, almost blindly, seeing nothing,
-hearing nothing, feeling nothing, but my own despair and grief. The
-streets were very still as I approached our house, and I lingered
-about the spots where Jessie and I had lingered and talked in the days
-that were gone.
-
-Josey West opened the door for me. Her face was very grave.
-
-'Well?' she said.
-
-'I have heard nothing, Josey. She has not come home?'
-
-'No.'
-
-A peculiar accent in her voice struck me.
-
-'How is mother?' I asked.
-
-She closed her lips firmly, and looked at me seriously and
-reproachfully. I rebelled against that look; my heart was full almost
-to bursting.
-
-'Why don't you and those who were my friends say what you think of
-me?' I demanded bitterly. 'Why don't you say at once that I am to
-blame for all that has occurred, and that I, and I only, am the cause
-of all this misery?'
-
-'I don't say so,' she replied gently, 'because I don't think so.'
-
-'But you look at me as if it were so,' I said loudly; 'you and all the
-others. You have fair words and fair excuses for every one but me----'
-
-She placed her fingers on her lips. 'Hush!' she said; 'don't be cruel
-as well as unjust.'
-
-Her hand was on my arm, and I shook it off roughly. 'Who is the just
-one? Uncle Bryan? I will talk to you no more. How is mother?'
-
-'Go up and see; but tread softly. You are not the only
-sufferer--remember that.'
-
-I went upstairs, and into my mother's room, softly. Josey West
-followed me.
-
-'Mother,' I said.
-
-She opened her eyes and looked at me vacantly. She did not know me;
-even when I took her hand, and fondled it in mine, she showed no sign
-of recognition. Then a feeling of desolation, more terrible than any
-pain I had yet suffered, entered my heart, and I fell on my knees by
-her side. Was I to lose her next? It seemed so. Her white pitiful
-face, her parched restless lips, her mournful eyes gazing on vacancy,
-her hot skin, were like so many tongues reproaching me for my
-selfishness.
-
-'For God's sake tell me, Josey,' I whispered, 'how long has she been
-like this?'
-
-'The change came a little while after the doctor left. She bore up
-while he was here, and tried to answer him cheerfully; but when he was
-gone, she broke down.'
-
-'Did she speak, Josey.'
-
-'A little at first.'
-
-'What about?'
-
-'Only about you, Chris; but I cannot tell you what she said. They were
-only broken words of tenderness----' Josey turned from me, and could
-not continue for her tears.
-
-'Did you not go for the doctor again, Josey?'
-
-'I could not leave her, Chris.'
-
-'Uncle Bryan might have gone--'
-
-I knocked at his door, and called him again and again; but I got no
-answer.'
-
-I went at once to his room, and knocked, but no answer came. I tried
-the handle, and found that the door was unlocked. I entered the room,
-and struck a light. Uncle Bryan was not there, and his bed had not
-been lain upon. I went downstairs into my own bedroom, and searched
-the house swiftly; uncle Bryan was not in it.
-
-Did you see him go out, Josey?'
-
-'No; I have not seen him since you left.'
-
-'I must run for the doctor. Will you stop here?'
-
-'I'll stop, Chris, and do all I can to help you.'
-
-I pressed her hand, and within half an hour the doctor was at my
-mother's bedside. I waited below until he came down.
-
-'If you will walk back with me,' he said, will give you some medicine
-for your mother.'
-
-'Is she very ill, sir?'
-
-'Very.'
-
-My heart sank as I asked, 'Dangerously?'
-
-'I think so, but we shall know more in a day or two.'
-
-'Then there is no immediate danger, sir?'
-
-'I think not--I think not; but we must be prepared for the worst.' He
-said something more than this, but I did not hear him. A mist stole
-upon my senses, for his quiet tone portended the worst. 'Bear up, Mr.
-Carey,' he said; 'you must not give way. We will do our best. A great
-deal will depend upon good nursing. That is a sensible little woman
-who is with her now.'
-
-This doctor was a man who was deservedly worshipped by the poor in our
-neighbourhood; his life was really one of self-sacrifice, for he was a
-capable man, was paid badly, worked hard, and did his duty bravely.
-
-'Can you tell me what she is suffering from, sir?'
-
-'I was about to ask you that question Mr. Carey,' was his reply. 'All
-that I know at present is that she is in a high state of fever, that
-her blood is thin and poor, and that she is as weak as a human being
-dare be who requires strength to battle successfully with disease. It
-appears to me that she must have been suffering for some time, for a
-very long time probably--but I am in the dark as to that--and that she
-has at length given way. If you put upon a beam a pressure greater
-than it can bear, the beam must break.'
-
-'But I do not think my mother has worked too hard, sir.'
-
-The mind has acted upon the body. Hard physical work itself seldom, if
-ever, kills. In the case of this beam----you follow me?'
-
-'Yes sir.'
-
-'In the case of this beam, there have been secret inroads upon its
-power of resistance, and the wood has rotted. I have seen stout planks
-cut through, and colonies of little insects bared to the light which
-have been steadily and surely eating away its strength. I am speaking
-plainly, because I think it is the best course in all these cases, and
-when I am speaking to a sensible man.'
-
-'Thank you, sir; I should prefer to hear the truth, terrible though it
-be.'
-
-'Outwardly, these planks seem capable of bearing any pressure, but
-when a great trial comes, they must give way. There are thousands and
-thousands of human beings walking about, in seemingly good health, in
-precisely the same condition. Has your mother suffered any great
-trouble?'
-
-'A great trouble has come upon us within the last few hours.'
-
-'An unexpected trouble?'
-
-'Totally unexpected, sir.'
-
-'For which you were quite unprepared?'
-
-'Quite, sir.'
-
-'That may be the immediate, but is not the direct, cause of your
-mother's illness. She has been enduring a long strain, as I have said,
-and has at length broken down under it.' By this time we were in his
-shop, and he was preparing the medicine. 'You look ill yourself. Let
-me feel your pulse.' He looked me steadily in the face. 'You are your
-mother's only child, I believe. Miss West led me to infer as much.'
-
-'She was right, sir.'
-
-'Well, then,' he said, giving me a rough and kindly shake, 'your
-mother's ultimate recovery may depend--I only say _may_--upon you.
-Think of that, and don't be falling ill yourself.'
-
-'I'll try not to,' I murmured, for I felt sick and faint.
-
-'Drink this,' he said, pouring out a draught for me; it will revive
-you. You will try not to? Nay, you must make up your mind not to, for
-your mother's sake. We never know what we can do. Why, we can conquer
-pain, if we are strong-willed enough. I was explaining about your
-mother. She is so delicately and exquisitely susceptible, that to have
-those about her whom she loves may contribute more to her recovery
-than anything all the doctors in London could do. She is in a state of
-delirium at present; under the most favourable circumstances, she is
-likely to remain in this state for a week or two, probably for longer.
-If, when she recovers her senses, the first face she looks upon and
-recognises is a face that she loves, it may not only contribute to her
-recovery, it may accomplish it. On the other hand, if she misses a
-face that is dear to her, and that she has been accustomed to see
-about her, it may cause a relapse, and prove fatal. I have tried to
-make myself clear, and to give you a good reason why you must keep
-well. Don't mope. If you have any private grief of your own, keep it
-under until this peril is past.'
-
-I thanked him, and left him. I told Josey West exactly what the doctor
-had said, and she returned the compliment he had paid her of calling
-her a sensible little woman by saying that he was a sensible man.
-
-'And now, Chris,' she said, 'you must go to bed.'
-
-I said that I would sit up with my mother, and tried to persuade Josey
-to lie down; but she refused, saying rest was more necessary to me
-than to her.
-
-'In the first place, you have your work to do; that must not be
-neglected for all the Jessie Trims in the world. Oh, yes, my dear. You
-may shake your head, but I've been remarkably quiet all through, and I
-think I'm entitled to say a few words.'
-
-'I'll not stop to hear anything spoken against her,' I said.
-
-'That's right. Fly up. You think you're fonder of her than I am. That
-you can't be. But I'm not satisfied with her, and I sha'n't be until I
-get all this explained. There's something behind it that neither you
-nor I suspect, or my name isn't Josey West.'
-
-'That's what Turk says,' I interposed.
-
-'I expect you've been leading him a fine life to-night. Poor Turk!
-Why, he worships the ground she walks upon. I tell you what it is, my
-sweet child,' she said sarcastically, there's more lessons than one
-you've got to learn. But to come back. There's some mystery behind all
-this; but it might be one thing, and it might be another. I'm in a
-whirl, that's what I am, my dear.'
-
-I really think Josey administered these words to me as a kind of
-medicine. But she could not deceive me as to the feelings she
-entertained for Jessie. If any person had dared in her presence to say
-a word against her friend, she would have been the first to defend
-her.
-
-'Josey,' I said, 'I shall feel much relieved if you will promise me
-one thing.'
-
-'That depends. I'm not going to open my mouth and shut my eyes.'
-
-'If Jessie tells you the reason of her going away----'
-
-'Which she's sure to do. Oh, I shall know all about it.'
-
-'And if the knowledge does not come to me in any other way, will you
-tell me?'
-
-'Upon my word! Me tell a secret? Not for all the world, master Chris.'
-
-'But if it's not a secret?'
-
-'Then of course you'll hear it.' We spoke in an undertone, so as not
-to disturb my mother, who lay unconscious of what was going on around
-her. But here you are stopping up,' continued Josey fretfully, when
-every minute's rest is precious to you and all of us. I have only told
-you one of my reasons why you _must_ be fresh in the morning--and mind
-you sleep, master Chris, when you get to bed. I'll tell you another.
-There'll be the shop to look after.'
-
-'That's uncle Bryan's business,' I replied, flushing with anger. The
-mere mention of his name aroused all my bitterness against him. 'If
-mother could be moved from this house to-morrow with safety, I'd take
-her out of his sight without a moment's delay.'
-
-'You'll not see your uncle Bryan again in a hurry,' said Josey. 'You
-mark my words--he's gone for good.'
-
-I did not stop to discuss the point, but went to the bedside and
-kissed my mother. As I leant over her, I could scarcely hear her
-breathing, and but for a light convulsive sob which rose to her throat
-every now and then, and which she seemed to make an effort to check,
-it would have been difficult to detect any sign of life in her. The
-doctor's words dwelt in my mind as I gazed at her beloved face, and
-for the first time in my life I appreciated at their proper worth the
-sacrifices which this dearest of women had made for one so unworthy as
-I. I knelt at her bedside, and prayed that her life might be spared to
-me--prayed with humble heart--and my tears flowed freely.
-
-Josey was outside on the landing.
-
-'Good-night, my dear,' she said; 'give me a kiss.'
-
-Mine were not the only tears on my face as I walked downstairs.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-WHAT THE NEIGHBOURS SAID.
-
-
-Josey West's prediction proved to be right. When I rose the next
-morning uncle Bryan had not returned. Josey, looking as fresh as
-though she had had a good night's rest, told me that there had been no
-change in my mother's condition--that only a few words had passed her
-lips, and that those words were about me.
-
-'There's a lot to do,' she said; you've got your work to look after,
-the shop must be attended to, and there's your mother to nurse. I
-really think, my dear, that if your uncle doesn't make his appearance,
-we had best take possession of the place. Two things we must be
-careful of--we mustn't let the business be ruined, and we must try to
-keep the neighbours from talking of what has occurred. When a lot of
-gossiping women get hold of a woman's name, with a story attached to
-it, they tear that woman's name to pieces with as much pleasure as
-they would eat a good dinner; and as for the story, my dear, when you
-hear it the next day you wouldn't know it, they twist and mangle it
-so. Stop here while I run round to my house; I sha'n't be gone ten
-minutes.'
-
-During Josey's absence the doctor came.
-
-'Your mother is no worse,' he said, after his examination; 'but I am
-not satisfied with her condition; it puzzles me. I can say nothing at
-present except that rest and freedom from agitation are imperative;
-there must be no noise in the house, no voices raised in anger,
-nothing that can in any way disturb her. Her life may depend upon it.'
-
-By this I knew that he must have heard something more of what had
-taken place than what I had told him. Indeed, the gossips of the
-neighbourhood had commenced their work. I have puzzled my head many
-times to discover by what means they knew what they knew, but it was
-and is a mystery to me. They were familiar with matters which I had
-supposed no person outside our little circle could possibly be
-acquainted with. They knew that uncle Bryan and I were at daggers
-drawn, and that there had been a desperate quarrel between us; they
-knew that he had left the house, that Jessie had run away on her
-birthday, and that my mother was lying dangerously ill. Being in
-possession of these bare bones, they put them together with amazing
-ingenuity, and produced the most astounding results. The first thing
-they settled was, that uncle Bryan and I had quarrelled not alone with
-our tongues, but with our hands; and one of the pictures which grew
-out of the story as it was related by one to another represented uncle
-Bryan lying on the ground and me standing over him with a knife, while
-Josey West was rushing between us to prevent murder being done.
-Another picture represented uncle Bryan packing up in a handkerchief
-all his treasure in money (for, strange to say, I now learned for the
-first time that he bore the reputation of a miser, and that it was
-generally supposed he had large sums of money concealed), and stealing
-off in the dead of night in fear of his life. Another, and the worst,
-picture concerned Jessie and Mr. Glover. Mr. Glover, an enormously
-rich gentleman, had fallen desperately in love with Jessie, and she
-had consented to elope with him. The gossips gloated over the details.
-A carriage with a pair of gray horses was waiting at the corner of a
-certain street (name given) about a quarter of a mile away; Mr.
-Glover, in a large cloak, was on the watch at the appointed time;
-Jessie made her appearance, with a small bundle in her hand wrapped in
-a handkerchief; Mr. Glover lifted her into the carriage, jumped in
-after her, and away they whirled. Even if they had been inclined to
-doubt the truth of this story (which they were not), it was impossible
-for them to do so because of the exact and wonderful details which
-accompanied its relation. There were a coachman and a footman dressed
-in such and such a way, down to their very buttons; the carriage was
-painted blue, with edgings of yellow; Mr. Glover wore a smoking-cap,
-and his cloak had a fur collar, and two gold tassels attached to it.
-This cloak gave an air of mysterious romance to the picture, and added
-much to the enjoyment of it. It is worthy of notice that both uncle
-Bryan and Jessie left our house with something done up in a
-pocket-handkerchief. This occurs to me as an arbitrary feature in the
-painting of such pictures; and I have no doubt that, had a dozen
-persons been missing, each would have been portrayed as stealing away
-with something done up in a pocket-handkerchief in his hand.
-
-Before the day was out, the whole neighbourhood was busy talking over
-these stories, and discussing their probable results.
-
-Josey had returned within the ten minutes, and brought with her Matty
-and Rosy. The shop was opened, and a more than usually brisk business
-was done, in consequence of the gossips dropping in to pick up
-information; but I resolutely refused to go behind the counter. I
-would have nothing to do with it. I had already saved a little purse
-of money, and my earnings were good. I was determined to have no
-further connection with uncle Bryan in any shape or way whatever.
-
-'Then I _must_ take possession,' observed Josey, after listening to my
-views, which I expressed in most unmistakable terms. It would be a
-pity to let such a business go to rack and ruin. If your uncle Bryan
-returns, I shall be able to render a proper account.'
-
-She entered upon this as she entered upon everything else, with
-intense and thorough earnestness, and the business was carried on, and
-the duties of the house performed, as though nothing of importance had
-occurred to disturb them. She might have been born a grocer for the
-intimate knowledge she displayed of the requirements of the trade.
-When I expressed my astonishment, she said philosophically:
-
-'My dear, nothing's difficult. One can do anything if one makes up
-one's mind to do it. All one has got to do is to go about it
-willingly.'
-
-In the mean time I looked out anxiously for news of Jessie, but on the
-first day of her absence I learnt nothing. I went to Mr. Rackstraw's
-in the afternoon to make inquiries, but he received me coldly, and
-desired me not to call again--in such terms that I was certain Mr.
-Glover had made him my enemy. Then I went to Turk's new shop, and
-found him very busy, and sanguine of his prospects. But as he had no
-news of Jessie I listened to his relation of his plans with small
-interest.
-
-'I shall be able to serve you, Chris,' he said, before I went away; 'I
-shall keep my eyes open.'
-
-That night I sat up with my mother until three o'clock, when Josey
-relieved me. My mother did not know me, and although I strove hard to
-make her recognise me, her eyes dwelt on my face as they would have
-done on the face of a stranger. What pain and grief this brought to me
-I cannot describe.
-
-There was something different in the arrangement of the room, and I
-made a remark concerning it to Josey. The room was clearer, lighter.
-Josey explained it to me in a sharp tone, as though she desired not to
-be questioned.
-
-'The doctor said the room must be made as airy as possible; he doesn't
-want a lot of lumber about.'
-
-But the next morning it occurred to me that the box in which Jessie
-kept her clothes and nicknacks had been taken out of the room. I
-looked about the house for it, but could not find it.
-
-'Where is Jessie's box, Josey?' I asked.
-
-'Gone,' was the short and snappish reply.
-
-'Gone where?'
-
-'Well, I suppose you must be told. While you were away yesterday,
-Jessie sent for it.'
-
-'Then you know where she is,' I cried excitedly, jumping to my feet,
-and tearing off my working-coat.
-
-'Yes, I know where she is.'
-
-I waited, but Josey did not volunteer further information. I looked at
-her reproachfully.
-
-'I'll just tell you as much as I'm compelled to, master Christopher,
-and no more. I had a letter from Jessie yesterday---O, no; you'll not
-see it! It was meant for my own eyes, and no others. I said that
-Jessie would tell me the reason of her going away, and she has done
-so; and I know where she is, and I've sent her clothes and all her
-things to her. And that's all, master Christopher.'
-
-'No, it isn't all, Josey. You will tell me something more. If I'm not
-to know where she is----'
-
-'Which you are not,' Josey interrupted; 'not from me at least.'
-
-'I may know whether she is well.'
-
-'Yes, she is well in health.'
-
-'And happy?'
-
-'I don't know; I can't tell.'
-
-'Did she do right in going away?'
-
-She answered me in precisely the same words.
-
-'I don't know; I can't tell.'
-
-'Is she stopping with friends?'
-
-'Yes, she is stopping with friends.'
-
-'But what friends can she have that we don't know of?'
-
-'Ah,' exclaimed Josey, more snappishly than before, 'what friends, I
-wonder?'
-
-'Josey,' I said coaxingly, putting my arm round her waist----
-
-'I tell you what it is, master Christopher. If you ask me many more
-questions, I shall run away;' but in spite of her assumed severity,
-her tone softened.
-
-'I won't ask you many more, Josey,' I said, and I felt the tears
-rising to my eyes, 'but you might have some pity for me.'
-
-'Bless the dear child!' she said, with a motherly air, I _have_ some
-pity for you! Why, you stupid boy, I'm as fond of you as though you
-were my own brother!'
-
-'Then tell me if it was because of me Jessie went away.'
-
-'You had nothing to do with it.'
-
-It was a relief to me to hear this, for I had in some way got it in my
-mind that Jessie had run away to escape the proposal she suspected I
-intended to make to her. I approached a more delicate subject.
-
-'You have heard the stories the neighbours are telling each other,
-Josey, about Jessie and Mr. Glover.'
-
-'Oh, yes, I've heard them! The scandal-mongers! I'd like to wring
-their ears for them.'
-
-That was sufficient for me; a great weight was lifted from my heart.
-There was another question that I must ask.
-
-'Did Jessie in her letter say anything about me? Did she send me any
-message?'
-
-'She did, and I wasn't to give it to you unless you asked for it.
-Perhaps I'd better read it.' She took the letter from her pocket and
-read: '"Chris will be sure to miss my box"--you see,' said Josey
-interrupting her reading, 'Jessie sent the letter to my house; she
-didn't know I was here; and I was to ask your mother to let me have
-her box, so that I might send it to Jessie without your knowing.'
-
-'Then there's a message to mother in that letter?'
-
-'There is, but I can't give it to her, poor dear!'
-
-'Go on with what Jessie says about me, Josey.'
-
-'"Chris will be sure to miss my box, and if he asks you if I have sent
-him any message, say that I hope he will not try to discover where I
-am, and that I hope also he will not think worse of me than I am. If
-we meet again----"' here Josey broke off with, 'But that's not for
-you, I should say.'
-
-'It _must_ be for me, Josey. You have no right to keep it from me.'
-
-'Well, if you will have it. "If we meet again, it must be at my own
-time and in my own way. Whether I am right or wrong in what I have
-done and what I intend to do, I have quite made up my mind, and no one
-can advise me." Now I hope you are satisfied.'
-
-I was compelled to be. There were both balm and gall in the
-letter--balm because the tales that slanderous tongues were
-circulating were false, and gall because Jessie had written in such a
-manner as to give me but little hope that she reciprocated my love. If
-she loved me, she would have confided in me. Is it possible, I
-reflected with bitterness, that she could have led me on, knowing my
-feelings towards her, and making light of them? But the thought was
-transient; I would not entertain it. It would be a shame on my manhood
-to doubt her. What if she were not for me--would that prove her
-unworthy? But it was bitter to bear, and the scalding tears ran from
-my eyes as I laid my head on my mother's pillow. My sobs disturbed
-her, and she moved her fingers feebly towards my neck. It was the
-first sign of recognition she had displayed since her illness. I
-fondled her poor thin hand, and kissed it, and moved close to her
-lips, for she was murmuring faint words. But these words were
-addressed not to me, but to my father, who had been dead for so many
-years. She was speaking to him of their darling boy, and of the
-happiness he would be to them when he grew to be a man. I listened
-sadly; every soft word she murmured was a dagger in my heart, for I
-was beginning to learn the strength of her love and the weakness of
-mine. Heavy as was the blow which had fallen upon me, I felt that
-there might be comfort and peace even yet for me, if my mother lived
-to enjoy the outward evidences of my penitence and love, and that a
-curse indeed must fall upon my life if she died without blessing me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-JOSEY WEST DECLARES THAT SHE HAS GOT INTO HER PROPER GROOVE.
-
-
-A week had passed, and there was still no change in my mother's
-condition. Every time the doctor visited her, his manner became more
-serious. The shadow of death seemed to hang already over the house.
-
-'Her strength will not hold out for another week, I am afraid.' He
-spoke these words to Josey West, out of my hearing as he thought.
-
-I followed him from the house.
-
-'I heard what you said to Miss West,' I said to him. 'Is all hope
-really gone? Can nothing be done?'
-
-He did not reply immediately, and before he spoke he took my arm
-kindly.
-
-'This is one of the cases outside my experience. Your mother has
-nothing that a physician can grapple with. She has no organic disease
-that I can discover, and although physically she is fearfully weak, it
-is mental suffering that is killing her. It is not usual for a doctor
-to speak as plainly as I am speaking to you, but it is best to do so.
-I have heard so much that is good and noble in your mother's life,
-that it would rejoice me exceedingly to see her rise from her bed in
-health.'
-
-'No one but I can know how tender and beautiful her life has been,' I
-said, with sobs. 'If I could give my life for hers, I would resign it
-with cheerfulness.'
-
-'But I suspect,' said the doctor, with a curiously-observant air upon
-him, 'that that is just the thing that would be most effectual in
-killing her. Come, now, recover yourself: I have something to say to
-you. I shall count a hundred, and then I shall go on. . . . When you
-first consulted me, and I asked you what your mother was suffering
-from, I seriously meant it. I want to cure your mother, or at all
-events to show you the way to do it, for I have an idea that you, not
-I, must be the doctor. I will make you a present of all my little fees
-in this case if I am successful. That ought to assure you of my
-earnestness.' He smiled gently as he said this. 'Knowing full well, as
-you say, that you would treble them if we happily succeed. I will give
-you another proof of my earnestness. I loved my mother. Have I won
-your confidence? Well then, I can grapple with physical disease with
-fair success; give me the opportunity of grappling with the mental
-disease which is killing your mother. I have an hour, perhaps two, to
-spare. Tell me, unreservedly, the story of your mother's life, in
-which of course yours will be included. Conceal nothing, and be
-especially explicit in every incident where the feelings are brought
-into play. If you understand me, and are willing to trust me, commence
-at once.'
-
-I told him all, freely and without reservation, from my first
-remembrance in connection with my mother, to the time--but a few days
-past--when I heard her in her delirium speaking to my father about me
-and my future. Many times during the recital I was compelled to pause
-from emotion, and when I finished his eyes also were suffused with
-tears.
-
-'I know now,' he said softly, what will kill your mother if she dies.
-It will shock you to hear it, and you must not think me cruel for
-telling you. When your mother, in the night she was taken ill, cried
-to you that her heart was almost broken, it was no mere phrase that
-she uttered--it was a cry from her soul, and the words exactly
-represented her condition. If she dies, it will be because her heart
-_is_ broken. And you will have broken it. Ay,' he continued gently, as
-I started in horror from him, 'and so would your mother start from me
-if she had strength and sense to hear and understand. She would think
-me the cruelest monster. But what I have said is true nevertheless.
-Your mother's life has been bound up in yours. No woman, unsustained
-by most perfect and most unselfish love, could have held up against
-such trials as hers; where she has had doubts she has thrust them from
-her, and her deep affection has given her strength to bear her
-sufferings. For a long time there has been raging within her a mental
-conflict, the torture of which only those can understand who love as
-she loves, and only those can feel whose natures are as delicately
-sensitive as hers. Even I, until now a stranger to her and to you, can
-see the fire which has been consuming her gentle spirit. And when the
-final blow came, and she was made to feel by your words that she had
-wrecked your happiness and had lost your love (for she _must_ have
-felt then what she had long feared), she sank beneath it. I have,
-thank God, through all my life reverenced woman's character, but I
-never reverenced it so thoroughly as I do now, after hearing your
-story. You ask me if all hope is really gone, and if nothing can be
-done? Well, I see a way. What can kill can cure. I warn you that the
-chance is a slight one, but it must be tried. Can you afford to go
-away from London for a time?'
-
-'Yes, I have money saved; and I think I could arrange to take work
-with me, and do it in the country.'
-
-'That is well. If you will take your mother away from London, say to
-the scenes with which you were familiar when you were a child, and
-attend to her yourself, and make her feel and understand that you love
-her as she deserves and yearns to be loved, she may recover. That is
-the only chance. She is almost certain to have conscious intervals. If
-you have tact enough to be alone with her, as you were in the old
-days, when her consciousness first returns, it may prove the
-turning-point towards convalescence. I cannot explain myself more
-fully; I will give you a simple strengthening medicine with you, and
-all necessary directions as to diet. When will you go?'
-
-I arranged to go on the following day, and Josey West said that,
-notwithstanding what the doctor had said, it was impossible that I
-should go alone. Her sister Florry, who was nearly sixteen years of
-age, should accompany us.
-
-'If your mother asks who she is,' said Josey, 'you can say she is the
-maid.'
-
-So it was settled, and Florry, a pretty good girl, who was wild with
-delight at the idea of going into the country, promised to do her
-best.
-
-No news had been heard of uncle Bryan. I cannot say that, after my
-anger had cooled, I was not anxious about him. It was impossible for
-me to be indifferent as to his fate, and I made inquiries quietly, but
-without result. He had disappeared most effectually, and had left no
-trace behind. My principal reason for wishing to find him was to let
-him know that we were leaving his house, and that we should not
-return; I had made up my mind on this point. Josey West and I had a
-long conversation about him.
-
-I believe he will never come back, my dear,' said Josey, 'never, under
-any circumstances. Of course you have heard what some of the
-neighbours say--that he has made away with himself; but that's all
-nonsense. He's not a man of that sort. He'll rub on grimly and grumly
-to the end. Why, my dear, if it was to happen that he was to starve to
-death--which he wouldn't do willingly, and without trying to get
-bread--he'd starve quietly and without a murmur. Ah, he's a wicked old
-man, I daresay, and I know that you have cause to hate him, but I
-can't help liking him a bit for all that. What I shall do about the
-shop is this, unless you object. I shall shut up our house--there's no
-business doing, my dear; I don't lend out a wardrobe a month--and all
-the children shall come round here to live. It will be good fun for
-them. I shall keep the accounts as square as I can, although the
-figures are getting into a mess already, and I'm beginning to be
-bothered with them--but never mind, there's the money, so much paid
-out, so much coming in; it'll be simple enough to reckon what's left.
-And if I _do_ hear anything of your uncle, I'll be off to him at once,
-and bring him back, tied up, if he won't come any other way.'
-
-I could see no better plan than this, and I thanked Josey cordially.
-
-'Where are you going to first?' she asked, interrupting me abruptly.
-
-'To Hertford, where I was born,' I replied.
-
-She nodded, and said she thought it was the best place, and that I
-must be sure and keep her informed of my whereabouts, as she would
-want to write to me regularly. The next morning we were off.
-
-We reached Hertford by easy stages. Josey was quite right in insisting
-that I should take Florry with me. I soon learnt that I could not have
-done without some one, and I found Florry to be so quietly and
-unobtrusively useful that I grew very fond of the little maid. I took
-lodgings in a pleasant suburb, from the windows of which we could see
-the river Lea, and the barges gliding indolently along. Florry said it
-was heavenly. My mother bore the journey well, and was no worse at the
-end than when we started. I was very thankful for that, for I feared
-she might not be strong enough to bear it; but we were very careful of
-her, and if she had been my sister Florry could not have been more
-attentive and affectionate. But my mother knew no one, and saw only
-the pictures and figures which her fevered imagination conjured up. I
-selected for her bedroom a large room on the first floor, and placed
-her bed so that she could see the river from it. I fixed my table for
-work so that when she opened her eyes, and looked towards the river,
-she could see me also. I had been fortunate enough to obtain
-sufficient work to last me for three or four weeks, and I was sure of
-more to follow.
-
-On the very first day I observed what I thought was a favourable
-change in my mother. Awaking from a restless sleep she opened her
-eyes, and saw a white sail passing along the river; she watched it
-quietly until it was out of sight, and then closed her eyes and slept
-again, but more peacefully than before. She did not seem to see me,
-although I turned my face to her and smiled. It was soon evident that
-she took pleasure in the prospect of the river, for before two days
-had passed I observed her lie and watch it restfully. It appeared to
-act like a charm upon her, bringing peace to her troubled heart in
-some strange way. In London, during her illness, scarcely an hour had
-passed, day and night, without her rest being broken by sobs; but here
-in Hertford, after she grew accustomed to the sight of the river, her
-days were quiet and peaceful, and it was only in the night that she
-was disturbed. During the first week I left her but twice; once to go
-to the house in which I was born, and once to visit the old churchyard
-in which my father was buried. The house was the same as I remembered
-it, and the churchyard had a few new gravestones in it; there was no
-other change. All my childish experiences came vividly to my mind, and
-I should scarcely have been surprised, as I peeped through the
-parlour-window, where I used to sit in my low armchair with my
-grandmother, listening to her monotonous heavy breathing, to see her
-sitting in state, in her silk dress, with her large fat hands folded
-in her lap! I _did_ see a woman who reminded me of Jane Painter, our
-servant, and I crossed the road quickly and walked away from her. In
-the churchyard, I went to my father's grave, and then to the grave of
-Snaggletooth's little daughter. I found it quite easily, but the
-inscription upon it was no longer discernible. I remembered so well
-every incident of that day that I could see myself carried out of the
-churchyard in Snaggletooth's arms, and I closed my eyes as I thought
-how I fell asleep there.
-
-These scenes and remembrances soothed and consoled me; I seemed to be
-lifted out of a fever of unrest.
-
-Gradually my mother's eyes grew accustomed to see me working always at
-my table, and they began to dwell on me, at first unconcernedly, but
-presently with a kind of struggling observance in them. I hailed this
-change with gladness, and waited and hoped, and prayed humbly night
-and morning. Josey West wrote to me regularly, and one day this letter
-came:
-
-
-'My dear Chris,--Don't open the packet enclosed in this until you read
-my letter. If you do, I'll haunt you, and you shall never have a
-minute's rest again. You told me once that every person in life has a
-proper groove. I think it very hard that I should have lived all these
-years without, until now, falling into _my_ proper groove; I am in it
-at last, but I am ready to slap all the children's faces to think that
-so many years have been wasted. I was born to be a grocer, and at last
-a grocer I am. If you can find me a better one than I am, show him to
-me, and I'll resign. I've been looking over your uncle's books, and,
-as true as I'm a living woman, I'm taking more money than ever he
-took, if his figures are right. Every day I make a new customer.
-There's Mrs. Simpson, the bricklayer's wife, at No. 9. If she's been
-in the shop once, she's been in it a dozen times to-day and yesterday:
-all the years the old gentleman kept the shop she didn't spend
-two-and-twopence in it--that's the sum she mentioned, and as I'm a
-woman of figures now, I must be precise. She does so like a gossip,
-she says, and she don't mind getting short weight, she says, so long
-as she can have a friendly word with her quarter of a pound of moist,
-and her two ounces of the best mixture. She tried all she knew to get
-the old gentleman to gossip with her, and as he wouldn't, she wouldn't
-deal with him. Mrs. Simpson is not the only one. There's Mrs.
-Primmins, and Mrs. Sillitoe, the butcher's wife, and Mrs. Macnamara,
-who takes snuff. They all like a gossip, and they all come to have it,
-and so long as they buy their groceries of me, I shall encourage them.
-Why, you'd be surprised to see the old shop sometimes! It's quite an
-Institution.
-
-'Well, I've got along very well with everything, from the figs to the
-brickdust; but one thing puzzled me. If you have any love for me, my
-sweet child, don't betray me, for I'm not at all sure they couldn't
-hang me for it; but it pays, my sweet child, and it doesn't do any one
-any harm, and I shall go on doing it, and risk the consequences. Well,
-it's this. On the first Saturday I was here, the people came in for
-uncle Bryan's pills and uncle Bryan's mixture. Well, there was a
-supply in the drawers, and I served the customers. If there was one of
-them, my dear, there was fifty, and every one spent his penny or
-twopence, and a few threepence. Well, during the early part of the
-week I ran short of the pills and the mixture, and I was puzzled about
-another supply. I knew that the old gentleman made his own medicine,
-and I looked about for the prescription, but couldn't find it. Now,
-for all I knew, the success of the business might depend upon these
-pills and mixtures, which some of the neighbours are ready to swear by
-as being able to cure asthma, and consumption, and indigestion, and
-bronchitis, and dysentery, and flushings, and palpitation, and wooden
-legs, and sprains, and bruises, and pains in the bowels, and headache,
-and too much brandy, and low fever, and high fever, and jaundice, and
-warts, and scrofula, and coughs, and colds, and the chills, and I
-don't know what all besides. And if you knew the trouble I've taken to
-put all these things together, you'd cry out, "Bless the little woman!
-What a painstaking creature she is!" But to come back. Well, for all I
-knew, if the customers couldn't get these wonderful pills at our shop,
-they might go elsewhere to buy their tea and sugar, and that would
-never do. I was in a pucker, and Turk came in last Tuesday night, and
-I told him my trouble. Says Turk, "How many pills and how many bottles
-of mixture have you got left?" I counted them. Fourteen bottles of
-mixture, and eleven boxes of pills, large and small. "And what do they
-cure?" says Turk. I went over all those things that I've written at
-the top of this sheet. "I don't feel as if anything particular is the
-matter with me," says Turk; "how do you feel, Josey?" I told him that
-I felt the same. "Then," says Turk, "it's quite necessary that you and
-I should take a bottle of that mixture, and six pills, without one
-moment's delay. Else it might prove fatal." And would you believe it,
-my dear? Before I knew where I was, Turk had poured one of the bottles
-of the mixture down my throat, and another down his own, and made me,
-willy nilly, swallow pill for pill with him until we had each
-swallowed half a dozen. "And now," said Turk, "if we die, we'll perish
-in one another's arms; and I'll come to-morrow night and write our
-epitaphs. We'll be buried in one grave, and all the neighbours will
-come to the funeral." I didn't like it, I tell you, and I kept awake
-all night, fancying I had pains; but I ate a very good breakfast the
-next morning, and everything inside of me went on as usual. Turk came
-in the evening, and we compared notes, as he said. He said then that
-it was a very bad case indeed, and we must take another bottle of
-mixture and six more pills each of us. I said I wouldn't; he said I
-should, and that he wouldn't die without me; and as I'm a living
-woman, he held my head and poured the mixture down my throat. After
-that, I thought I might as well take the pills, especially as Turk
-said I'd have to. One may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb, you
-know. They didn't have the slightest effect upon us for better or
-worse (and the sooner that day comes for me, and the man with the
-ring, the better I shall like it, my sweet child, and that's plain
-speaking), and Turk said it was the most wonderful cure that ever was
-known of the most wonderful complication of diseases that ever was
-heard of. Now if you can guess what Turk did next, you're a clever
-boy; but as you never _would_ guess, I'll tell you. He set to work
-making bread pills by the thousand (we found the board your uncle used
-to make them with), and he made a great basin of mixture, that tasted
-for all the world like the mixture in your uncle's bottles. You know,
-there scarcely _is_ any taste at all in it. He coloured the water, and
-then we filled all the empty bottles and pill-boxes, and had stock
-enough to last a month. You would have laughed if you had seen us
-making the medicine. It was done after the shop was shut and all the
-children were in bed. We locked the doors, and put something over all
-the windows and keyholes, and every minute or two Turk wriggled to the
-door, to slow music, to listen if anybody was outside. We were like
-conspirators. We had a great run on the pills and mixture on Saturday
-night, and my heart felt as if it was sinking into my shoes every time
-I served a box or a bottle; but I was obliged to put a brave face on
-it, and I served them over the counter as if they were the "real
-grit," as the Yankees say. When I went to bed, I wondered how many
-murders I had committed, and how many times I could be hanged. I felt
-worse on Monday morning when I stood behind the counter; but as the
-day went on, and I didn't hear of any persons in the neighbourhood
-dying in convulsions, and as I didn't see any undertaker's men about,
-I began to get a bit relieved in my mind. And when Mrs. Huxley came
-in--Mr. Huxley is besieged by a regular army of diseases, asthma, and
-rackets, and "ketches in the side," as his wife calls them--well, when
-she came in, and told me how ill her poor dear man was on Saturday
-night before taking the pills and mixture, and how well he was on
-Sunday after he'd swallowed two big doses, I began to think better of
-them. I plucked up courage to ask one and another how everybody was
-who had taken the physic, and would you believe it, my sweet child,
-none of them were ever better in their lives. And a story has got
-about that your uncle Bryan has gone to some place to make the pills
-and mixture in secret, so that no one shall find out what is in them.
-_I_ say nothing, except "Oh," and "Ah," and "Indeed," very
-mysteriously, and as if I didn't know anything about it (as how should
-I?), and the effect of these "Ohs" and "Ahs" and "Indeeds" is so
-extraordinary, that if I stood in a wagon, and talked by the hour
-together, with music playing all about me, and all the young ones
-dancing and posing, the thing couldn't work better. People are
-beginning to do what they never did before--they are buying the
-medicine in the middle of the week; and two strangers have already
-come in from a long distance for two boxes of the wonderful pills, one
-to cure palpitation and the other for the jaundice.
-
-'Turk is getting along famously. He is a real good fellow, and
-everybody likes him. He is making heaps of new friends, and is doing a
-fine business. He sends his love to you, and says he will have plenty
-to tell you when you come home.
-
-'Gus is going to India and Australia with a company; he plays leading
-business, and has a three years' engagement at twelve pounds a week,
-and all his travelling expenses paid. Not so bad for Gus; but then
-he's a genius, my dear.
-
-'I hope Florry is behaving herself; but I am only joking when I say
-that. Don't you let her fall in love with you, and then break her
-heart; I'm joking again. When you come to think or us altogether,
-master Christopher, don't you think we're a _re-_markable family? If
-you don't, I do. You'd find it hard to beat us. You should read the
-letters Florry writes to us; they are perfect gems. Where we all got
-our cleverness from is a perfect puzzle; but it runs in some families.
-I'm glad Florry is with your mother; it will do her good. Ah, my dear,
-do you know I pray every night that you may bring your dear good
-mother home to us strong and well? I do, my dear, and it does me good.
-
-'The letters that are in the enclosed packet came to the shop this
-morning. One of them is very heavy. I know your uncle's writing from
-the account-books he left behind him, and I see that it is his writing
-on the envelope. If there's any address inside, let me know, and I'll
-go and drag him home, although it will be the ruin of a fine business
-I see looming in the future in bread pills and the famous mixture made
-of coloured water.
-
-'And now, my dear, I must leave off. This is the longest letter I ever
-wrote in my life, and if anybody had told me that I could have written
-it, I shouldn't have believed him. All the children send their love
-and kisses, and I send mine, and six kisses for your mother. When you
-give them to her, whisper that they're from a queer little woman in
-Paradise-row who loves both of you very much. Now don't you run away
-with the idea that _I'm_ going to break my heart over you.
-
-'Oh, I almost forgot to say that the doctor was here to-day. He hasn't
-time to write, but he says he has read your letter carefully, and he
-thinks that your mother is going along well. He expects a change very
-soon for the better. He gave me another prescription for you, which I
-send in this.
-
-'I never thought much of it till lately, my dear, but really there are
-a great many good people in the world--But there! if I don't stop at
-once, I shall go rambling on all night, and there's some one tapping
-at the door. Come in! Only think, I've written it instead of saying
-it--Your affectionate friend,
-
- 'Josey.'
-
-
-I untied the packet which Josey had enclosed, and found two letters in
-it--one, very bulky, in uncle Bryan's handwriting, the other written
-by Jessie. How my heart beat as I gazed at the latter! Both were
-addressed to my mother.
-
-It was a fine clear night, and a sweet soft air was stirring--so sweet
-and soft that I was sitting at my work-table with the window open.
-Florry had gone to bed; my mother was asleep. I had always opened my
-mother's letters, and I reflected whether I was justified in opening
-these. After a little while I decided to read uncle Bryan's letter,
-for the reason that it would probably inform me where he was staying;
-in which case I should be able to rid myself of the responsibility of
-his business. Jessie's letter I would not read--at least for the
-present; she may have written in it what she might not wish me to see.
-I laid it aside, and unfastened the envelope of uncle Bryan's letter.
-It contained many sheets of manuscript, methodically arranged, some in
-uncle Bryan's handwriting, some in a writing which was strange to me.
-I give them in their order. The first was from uncle Bryan to my
-mother:
-
-
-'Dear Emma,--I will not speak of my reasons for leaving you. Perhaps
-you may be able to guess them. I did it for the best. My absence may
-bring peace and happiness into your home, for it is yours. I
-relinquish all claim to it. When I tell you that I shall never return,
-you will know that I shall not set foot inside the shop again. I
-cannot have many years longer to live, and I shall do well enough, so
-do not give yourself any anxiety about me. I shall always be able to
-get my bread, and I shall wait patiently for death, and shall be
-grateful when it comes, but I shall do nothing to hasten it. Life has
-been a weary load to me, and I shall be glad to shake it off. This
-impatience would change to resignation and to gratitude, not for
-death, but for life, if it were possible for one thing to happen; but
-it is utterly, utterly impossible, and it is just and right that it
-should be out of my reach.
-
-'I have a distinct purpose in writing to you, apart from any selfish
-words which fall from my pen. It is this: In telling you and my nephew
-the story of my life I threw blame upon my dead wife. I did worse than
-this--I slandered her memory. That I spoke what I believed is no
-excuse for me. I created for myself, out of my blindness and fatal
-imperiousness of self, a delusion and a lie which have embittered my
-life. I could bear this with calmness if the consequences had fallen
-only on myself; but I see now, when it is too late, how I have made
-others suffer. The bitterest punishment that could fall upon me would
-not serve to expiate my deadly sin. I do suffer bitterly, keenly, and
-my soul writhes from pain and shame.
-
-'Can I speak more strongly? And yet these words are weak. Too late I
-see my folly and my crime. Many things that Christopher said to me
-were true. I humbly ask his forgiveness, and I humbly pray that the
-happiness he said I did my best to destroy may yet fall to his lot. If
-he will picture me an old man with a bleeding heart into whose life
-few rays of sunshine have passed, pleading to him, he may soften
-towards me. Perhaps he may believe that I loved him; if he does
-believe it, he will believe the truth.
-
-'The letter I send with this is from my dead wife; it will explain
-itself. I received it at the same time the letter came to you from
-Jessie. Merely looking at her name upon paper, now that I have written
-it, deepens my anguish, my shame, and my remorse. It will never fall
-to my lot to ask her forgiveness, as I ask yours and your son's. I put
-myself in her place, and I know what her feelings are.
-
-'Let Christopher read this and my wife's letter.
-
-'Good-bye, Emma. For your unwavering kindness and gentleness to me,
-who have repaid you so badly, receive the humble heartfelt thanks of
- Bryan Carey.'
-
-
-Then followed the letter from his wife.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-FROM FRANCES TO HER HUSBAND, BRYAN CAREY.
-
-
-I address you from the grave, and I pray that what I write may never
-reach your hands. If, unhappily, you are fated to read these words,
-they will bring their own punishment with them.
-
-Do I hope, then, that you may be dead on the day that this letter
-shall be opened or destroyed, unread? No. But rather than you should
-receive it, it would be better that the earth covered you, as it has
-covered me these many years. You will understand my meaning before you
-have finished reading. I write in no vindictive spirit. All bitter
-feeling has left me; although even yourself may acknowledge that I
-have good cause for feeling bitterly towards you. But I am resolved
-that you shall not blight another life as you blighted mine. Another
-life so dear to me! that should be so dear to you! Another life that
-has been some comfort to me in the midst of my sorrow and affliction;
-and that I hope may be long spared for happiness.
-
-It is not a giddy girl who is writing to you. It is a woman who has
-learned to look upon things with fair judgment, notwithstanding that
-she has suffered deeply from a cruel wrong inflicted upon her.
-
-When you first came to me I was a child almost in years. I had had no
-opportunity of knowing the world, or of gaining that experience which
-is necessary to those who move in its busy quarters. I had never known
-trouble or sorrow, and, until my father fell into misfortune, I had
-lived very happily with him. He had his faults, I do not doubt, as we
-all have; but he was a good father to the last, and I loved him to the
-last. You judged him harshly, I know, and made no excuses for him--but
-it is in your nature to judge harshly. Weak as he was to some extent,
-I do not believe that he would have wronged his wife--doubly wronged
-her--and then have deserted her: as you wronged and deserted me. I
-have some remembrance of my mother, who died when I was very young,
-and I know that he was indulgent and good to her.
-
-I fancy I can see a hard look on your face at the word indulgent. But
-some natures require indulgence, and are the better and the happier
-for it. You were for a time indulgent to me, and it was for this, as
-well as for other qualities in you upon which I placed higher value
-than you deserved, that I loved you.
-
-Yes, I loved you. I scarcely know whether you ever believed I
-did; for, thinking over matters since our separation, I have
-arrived--whether rightly or wrongly--at what I believe to be a correct
-estimate of your character, at what assuredly is a correct estimate if
-you are destined to read it. I see you, hard and intolerant; doubtful
-of goodness in others; prone to place the most uncharitable
-construction on the actions of others. Lightness of heart is in your
-eyes a sign of levity. Surely the moods which were familiar to me in
-the first days of our acquaintanceship, and in the first few months of
-our wedded life, must have been foreign to your nature.
-
-I see something more in you. I see you false to your wife and to your
-marriage vows. I see you, who prided yourself upon your sense of
-justice, most unjust and ungenerous to me. Let your heart answer if I
-am wrong.
-
-Recall the evening on which we met for the first time, and certain
-words which passed between us. You were at my father's house, advising
-him upon his business affairs, which had become complicated. You said
-that my voice reminded you of a friend--a lady friend, very dear to
-you--and that she was dead. The words did not make much impression
-upon me at the time; but I had occasion afterwards to remember them. I
-liked you that evening. Your grave face, your sensible ways, were
-agreeable to me, frivolous girl as you supposed me to be. We kept but
-little society; the only regular visitor at my father's house was my
-cousin Ralph. I loved him; but not in the way you suspected. We had
-been intimate from early childhood, and I had a sincere affection for
-him. When I became better acquainted with you, I saw faults in him
-which I had not hitherto discerned; there was a want of stability in
-his character; he was indolent and deficient in manliness. Even if you
-had not entered into my life, and marred it, I think I should never
-have had any but a cousinly love for him. So far as I was concerned,
-there were no grounds for jealousy on your part, and no grounds for
-your base suspicions of me. I do not speak for him; I speak for
-myself. And when you wrote to me on the day you deserted me, and
-accused me of loving him as a woman should love the man she wishes to
-marry, you lied. But you had another purpose to serve, and it suited
-you to write the lie.
-
-Of our married life I need say but few words. I was very happy for a
-time. You had behaved nobly and generously to my father; you were most
-kind and indulgent to me. If, as I afterwards learnt, we were living
-beyond our means, I had no suspicion of it. You never gave me the
-slightest hint to that effect, and you encouraged what I now know were
-extravagances in me. But--believe it or not as you will--I could have
-been contented and happy without them. You told me you were rich, and
-you could not fail to know that I had no idea of the value of money.
-Why could you not have confided in me? Was it honest to keep me, of
-your own free will, in such absolute ignorance, and then to blame me
-for not having known? I think, if you had trusted me, that you might
-have found some good in me--judged even by the light of your own hard
-judgment; but it is in your nature to accuse and judge in the same
-breath, and to do both unmercifully.
-
-I remember well the last day you were kind to me. You left me in the
-morning with smiles; you returned home long after midnight a changed
-man. I, also, was changed when you returned. I have other cause to
-remember the day; for in the evening my cousin Ralph came to see me,
-and stayed with me until nearly eleven o'clock. You had sent me a note
-saying that you were detained at your office by important business. I
-read the note to my cousin, and he laughed at it, and said that you
-had good cause for your absence. His words conveyed a strange meaning
-to my ears, and I asked for an explanation. He gave it to me; and I
-learnt, to my horror, that you were in the habit of visiting another
-woman--a stranger in the town. Before I had recovered from the shock,
-I received another. My cousin Ralph, in a mad moment, proved himself
-to be what I had not hitherto suspected--a vile bad man. He told me,
-in passionate terms, that he loved me, and that he had loved me from
-boyhood; that it had been the dream of his life that we should be
-married, and that, but for you and your money, his life might have
-been a life of happiness. I listened in dismay and astonishment; I
-knew that he had an affection for me, but I thought it was such an
-affection as one cousin might innocently have entertained for another.
-I was so overwhelmed by this discovery, and by his accusations against
-you, that I had no power to stay his words. He misinterpreted my
-silence, and proceeded in wilder terms to propose flight to me. I
-tried to answer him, but my grief, and my terror lest you should
-return while he was in the house--for he was at my feet and refused to
-stir--made me weak. I implored him for my sake and for his own to
-leave me; and presently, when I grew stronger, I addressed him in
-words which it was impossible for him to misunderstand. It flashed
-upon me then that he had invented the story he had told me about you,
-and I taunted him with it. He answered me to the effect that he would
-prove it true before many days were over, and that then I might
-possibly listen to him more favourably. He left me; and your own
-conduct towards me from that day, during the short time we were
-together, was almost a sufficient proof. You would have judged upon
-that evidence; I was not content with it. I soon tasted the bitterness
-that lay in knowledge. A clerk in your office, who had for a
-purpose of his own made himself acquainted with the history of this
-woman--probably to use against you in some way--and whom you had
-employed to convey money and letters to her at different times, told
-me more than I wanted to know. On the day that you had the public
-quarrel with my cousin Ralph--I heard of it soon afterwards, for it
-became matter of common talk--I discovered that this woman came from a
-town in which you had formerly resided--that you knew her then--and
-that her history was a shameful one. Then there came to me the words
-that had passed between us upon your first visit to my father's house,
-when you said that my voice reminded you of a woman who was dear to
-you, and who was dead. It was easy to supply the blank spaces in the
-story to make it complete--shamefully, miserably complete. Your clerk
-told me that the life you had lived in that town was not a respectable
-one: I did not ask him how he had gained his knowledge, but I was sure
-of its truth. You left that town, and came to this place, a complete
-stranger, knowing no one, known by none. You refused to speak of your
-past life; not a word had ever passed your lips with reference to it.
-What other confirmation was needed of the truth of your clerk's
-statements? You tried to blot out your past career, knowing that it
-would not bear the light, and that the good name and position you had
-gained would be sullied and lost if the particulars were made public.
-You deserted the woman who had been your companion, and when you were
-inadvertently betrayed into remembrance of her by the sound of my
-voice, you told me she was dead. You never mentioned her again, nor
-did I, for I had forgotten her. But see how hard it is to lead a life
-of hypocrisy, as you have done! Shame never dies, nor can it ever be
-completely wiped away. After years of sojourn here, when you had
-gained money, position and a good name--when you had position, a
-simple, ignorant, and innocently-vain girl to your heart, and had
-sworn to cherish and protect her--this woman tracks you, finds you,
-and appeals to you by the remembrance of old times, and perhaps by
-other arguments more powerful, of which I am ignorant. On the very
-evening she meets you, you take her to a house in the town, and
-provide lodgings for her, and from that time your visits are frequent.
-Is this part of your story complete, and need I add to it by saying
-that you mentioned not a word concerning the woman to the wife you
-professed to love? If there was no shame in the relations that existed
-between you and her, why should you have taken such pains to conceal
-them? On the day you deserted me, you told me you were ruined, and you
-adopted the miserable subterfuge of saying that you had discovered
-all, and that you could no longer live with me. Your meaning was plain
-enough. You implied that I was false to you and to the vows I had
-taken on the day we were married. A more wicked lie never poisoned the
-heart of man or woman. I had brought shame and disgrace upon you, you
-said, and that it was useless my sending after you. I have read this
-letter often--it is destroyed now; I burnt it lest one who is dearer
-to me than my heart's blood should see it--and I have wondered at my
-folly and credulity in ever, for one moment, believing you to be a
-good and just man. For I did believe you to be this. There was a time
-in my life when I set you up as a model of honour and integrity and
-truth. The last words of your letter are burnt into my heart. Do you
-remember them? 'If I could make you a free woman, so that you might
-marry the man you love, I would willingly lay down my life; but it
-cannot be done. The only and best reparation I can offer is to
-promise, as I do now most faithfully, to wipe you out of my heart,
-so that you may be free from me for ever.' How fair those words
-sound--how self-sacrificing--how manly! What a noble nature do they
-display! Would it be believed that while this letter was on its way to
-the wife whom he was about to desert--to the wife whom he had most
-cruelly wronged, and most shamefully betrayed--the man who wrote it
-was entering the house where the woman lived who had been his
-companion in former years? The next morning you left. Two days
-afterwards, the woman followed you to London.
-
-Is anything more wanted to complete the shameful story? Had I brought
-disgrace upon you, or had you brought it upon me? A noble reparation,
-indeed, did you make to me!
-
-You may ask how it was that I discovered your visit to the woman. My
-father and my cousin saw you coming from the house, where doubtless
-you had completed all your arrangements, and left your final
-instructions. My cousin it was who told me. 'Now,' he said, 'do you
-believe that he is false?' 'Yes,' I answered; 'I am convinced of it'
-What followed? Remember it is your dead wife who is speaking to you,
-and do not dare, for your soul's sake, to add to your cruelty by
-doubting what she says. My cousin Ralph then began to speak again of
-his own selfish passion, and I bade him never to presume to address me
-again. From that day I never saw him; some little while afterwards my
-father told me he had gone abroad, but we never heard from him.
-
-We remained--my father and I--for a few weeks after your departure,
-and then my father's health suddenly broke down. In one thing you had
-most completely succeeded; you had blackened my name as well as your
-own. Innocent as I was, wronged as I was, I think no one in my native
-place pitied me. Persons who had once respected me avoided me, or
-slighted me. Day by day the torture of living in this atmosphere of
-injustice grew until it was unbearable; and when my father broke down,
-I took him with me into a strange place, where neither of us was
-known, and where I hoped by carefully husbanding our small means, and
-by employing some hours of the day in needlework, to be enabled to
-live quietly, if not in peace. There was another reason why I was
-anxious to leave--a reason which you will now learn for a certainty
-for the first time. I was about to become a mother.
-
-I kept this secret from you. Often and often had I listened to the
-expression of your wishes--the dearest wish of your heart, you
-said--that our union might be blessed with children. Your wish was
-that our first child might be a girl, and I used to hang with delight
-upon your words--believing in them in my credulous faith--when you
-described how you would educate and rear her into a good woman. I kept
-the secret, intending to joyfully surprise you later on; but it was
-fated that you should never learn it from my lips. When my time drew
-near, I was among strangers. I prayed that I might be blessed with a
-boy, who would be able to fight against the world's cruelties--with a
-boy who might one day--if you lived--be able to tell you to your face
-that you had slandered his mother. I had those thoughts at that time,
-and I set them down so that you may know exactly the state of my mind
-towards you. I prayed most fervently that the child might not be a
-girl, whose fate it might be to be treated by a man as her unhappy
-mother was treated by you. But my prayers were not heard. The child I
-clasped to my breast--your child--was a girl.
-
-I hardly dared to look into her face at first, for I feared that it
-might resemble you, and that I should be compelled to hate her. I
-thanked God when I saw that there was but little resemblance to you.
-Think when you read this what my feelings towards you must have been.
-
-My darling's was the sweetest, most beautiful face that I had ever
-gazed upon. I had never conceived it possible that a human heart could
-throb with such ineffable delight as mine did even in the midst of my
-bitter sorrow and shame, when I looked into my darling's face and
-eyes. I offered up grateful prayers that I lived and was a mother, and
-I offered up prayers of thankfulness also that it was out of your
-power to rob me of my treasure. That you would have done it had you
-known, I entertained no doubt.
-
-The first few months of my child's life I was as happy as it was
-possible for a wronged and betrayed woman to be. Intending in these
-lines to hide nothing, I will not disguise from you that I shed many
-bitter tears because she was deprived of a father's love; but she did
-not lack love and attention. She was my one comfort and joy; I soon
-had no one else to love but her.
-
-My father died. The doctor who had attended him in his illness warned
-me that, unless I was careful of myself, my life might be short. The
-thought that my darling might be left, helpless and dependent, among
-strangers, frightened me, and I did not know which way to turn for
-counsel and advice. I had not a friend in the world capable of helping
-me by a kindly, sensible word. To this condition you had brought me.
-
-But my cup of sorrow was not yet full. The doctor I have mentioned was
-an unmarried man. He believed me to be a widow, as I had given out. I
-had no other resource than to speak this untruth. It was impossible
-for me to say that I was a helpless, unhappy woman, who had been
-deserted by her husband. To such a creature strangers show no mercy;
-they put their own construction on the story and judge accordingly--as
-you would judge, harshly, unfeelingly. I think I should not have cared
-so much for myself, but I had my darling to look to.
-
-The doctor flattered me by saying that he saw I was a lady, and, in
-most respectful terms, he invited my confidence. He was most delicate
-and considerate, but I could not confide in him or any one; my cruel
-story and my cruel wrongs must be for ever locked in my breast. He did
-not press me when he saw that I was pained by his inquiries, but he
-paid me great attention, and by his kindness lightened my load. I did
-not place any serious construction upon his intentions, nor indeed did
-I think of them, for I was entirely wrapt up in my love for my darling
-child, who was growing every day more beautiful and more engaging. But
-when he asked me to be his wife, my eyes were opened. If I had been a
-free woman I would have accepted him, if only for the sake of
-providing a comfortable home for my child. As I was in chains, I
-refused him. He said he was a patient man, that he loved me very
-sincerely, and that he would wait. In the heavy catalogue of my sins
-that you have against me, place this new one--that this good man loved
-me. He continued his attentions, and they brought me into fresh
-disgrace. In the place I was living there were single ladies, and
-mothers who had daughters to marry, who entertained a hope that the
-doctor would choose from among them, and they were angry when they saw
-that I stood in their way. I do not know whom I have to thank for what
-followed, but gradually rumours got about to my discredit. I was not a
-widow; I was not a married woman; the name I went by was not my own.
-Women shrugged their shoulders when they met me; men stared at me
-insolently and familiarly. What had occurred in my native town when
-you deserted me was repeated here. I had no alternative but to fly
-from the place.
-
-At that time my darling was nearly three years old, and the unkind
-creatures had attempted to drop poison even into her young and
-innocent mind. One day she asked me, in her pretty way, where her
-father was. 'You have none, my darling,' I said; 'he is dead.'
-
-In the new place I found refuge in I made friends with a kind family,
-who grew very fond of my child--as none indeed could help doing. Her
-bright ways, her innocence, her artlessness, would win any heart not
-dead to human affection. If anything should happen to me, these
-friends will take care of my darling as long as they are able. I think
-it is likely that I shall not live long, and I have thought anxiously
-over the future of my darling until she arrives at an age when she may
-be able to protect and provide for herself. I have consulted with my
-new friends, and I have arranged everything to the best of my ability
-and judgment. I shall place in their hands a small box, which, in the
-event of my death and of their being unable to maintain my child (for
-they are poor people), is to be given to her with plain instructions.
-These instructions it will be necessary for me here to explain, first
-saying, however, that should these good friends be able to look after
-my child until she arrives at womanhood, there will be no necessity to
-give them to her. In that event, also, the box and its contents will
-be burnt. They have promised me faithfully, and I know they will keep
-their word.
-
-If I am gone, and they are too poor to help my child, she will be, as
-I have been, without a friend. These good people have some idea of
-emigrating, if they can save sufficient money, and then my darling
-will be indeed helpless. They might take her with them, it may be
-said; but they may not have sufficient means. And then, again, it
-inflicts the most bitter pain upon me to think that my darling child
-should be taken thousands of miles from the spot where her mother's
-ashes are laid. She will be helpless, as I have said; but there is one
-upon whom she has a just claim--yourself. I wished her never to see
-you; I wished that you might never look upon her beautiful face, nor
-feel the charm of her presence. But I see no other way to secure a
-home for her. Should she be left without friends, she will come to
-you, a stranger, with a letter from me, who will even then be dead,
-asking you to give a home to a friendless child. She will bear a
-strange name, and will know you only as a stranger. Neither will you
-know her; it may be that you will see in her face some slight
-resemblance to the wife whose happiness you have destroyed, and it may
-be that you may place that resemblance to your dead wife's discredit.
-Do so, and bring another shame upon your soul.
-
-How do I know where you live in London? It has been discovered for me,
-by means of a clue which my father obtained soon after your flight.
-When a mother is working for her child, she can do much. I have never
-seen London, but I know your address; and on the day that the friends
-I have made for my child find they can no longer provide for her, she
-will present herself at your door. Hard and unfeeling, cruel and
-unjust, as you are, I think you will not turn her from it.
-
-In the small box which my friends will give to my darling child are
-three letters, numbered first, second, third. On the first letter is
-written, 'To be opened first, on your eighteenth birthday, before the
-other letters are touched. This is the sacred wish of your dead
-mother.' I copy this letter in this place, so that you may clearly
-understand what I have done:
-
-
-'My darling Child,--I wish you to regard these written words as though
-they are spoken to you with my dying breath, and to obey them. If Mr.
-Bryan Carey has made your life happy, and if you are in the enjoyment
-of a happy home, destroy the second letter by fire, and hand him the
-third. If it is otherwise with you, and your life with him has been in
-any way unhappy, destroy the third letter by fire, as you would have
-done the second. Then seek some quiet place and read the second
-letter, and when you have read it, send it to Mr. Carey, and act as
-you think best for your welfare and happiness. That God will for ever
-bless and protect my darling is the prayer of your mother,
-
- 'Frances.'
-
-
-The third letter contains a short account of my life since you left
-me, and the statement that Jessie is your daughter. It leaves it to
-your judgment to make the relationship known to her, or to let it
-remain a secret.
-
-The second letter you are now reading.
-
-If it fall into your hands, Jessie will have read it first, and will
-know how basely you behaved to me. She will know that your conduct
-towards me was such that a woman never can forgive, and she will
-understand that a man had better kill his wife than inflict upon her
-such shame and misery and humiliation as you inflicted upon me, a
-guiltless woman, as God is my Judge. She will know that you deserted
-me for another woman, and left me, a simple inexperienced girl, to
-battle alone with the pitiless world. Ah, how pitiless it is, how
-uncharitable, how cruel! How many nights have I passed shedding what
-might have been tears of blood, for they were wrung from a bruised and
-bleeding heart! She, who has lived with me many happy years in her
-childhood's life, will, when she reads this, be able to look back with
-the eyes of a woman upon the life I led while we were together, and
-she will know whether it was without stain and without reproach. She
-will have had experience both of you and myself, and of both our
-natures and minds, and she will have sense and intelligence enough to
-judge fairly between us. I repeat here, with all the strength of my
-soul, what I have declared before--that when you accused me of loving
-my cousin Ralph and of being false to you, you lied most foully.
-
-I believe that I decided rightly when I decided to write these things.
-As you have acted towards your daughter, so shall be your reward.
-Whether it be for good or ill, you have earned it.
-
- Your unhappy wife,
-
- Frances.
-
-
-After the last sheet of this letter, there were a few words in uncle
-Bryan's handwriting, evidently intended for my mother: 'If you see her
-whom I scarcely dare call my daughter for the shame which overwhelms
-me, tell her but one thing from me--that her mother's suspicions
-concerning the woman I befriended are unfounded. She will believe
-this, perhaps; it is the truth.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-A HAPPY RECOVERY.
-
-
-The perusal of this letter affected me powerfully. There was something
-solemn in the mere handling of a confession written by a woman long
-since dead--a woman who had been so cruelly wronged and had so cruelly
-suffered. It was like a voice from the tomb, and it was impossible to
-resist the conviction that forced itself upon my mind that it was the
-solemn, bitter truth.
-
-I had never suspected that Jessie was in any way related to uncle
-Bryan, but it did not surprise me to learn it. The fact that she was
-my cousin brought with it no sense of pleasure; it gave me no claim on
-her affection. Rather would she be inclined to look with feelings of
-repugnance upon all who were connected with her by blood, for by the
-nearest of these her mother had been brought to misery and shame, and
-her own life had been made most unhappy; and it was not to be doubted
-that all her soul would rise in vindication of her mother's honour.
-
-It was past midnight, and everything about me was very still. My
-mother was sleeping more peacefully than she had yet done through her
-illness, and I remarked with thankfulness that the distressed
-expression on her face was wearing away, and that she was beginning to
-look something like her old sweet self. Insensibly in her sleep her
-arm stole round my neck. I let it rest there for many minutes, and
-when I rose from her side and kissed her fingers, there was a soft
-smile upon her lips--the first unclouded smile I had seen there for
-many a day. It gave me hope and gladdened my heart.
-
-I was in no humour for sleep, having had some rest during the day, and
-I had told Florry that I would sit up with my mother until the
-morning. I placed the letter I had been reading in my desk, and then,
-arranging the screen in such a manner that the light by which I worked
-should not fall upon my mother's face, and also in such a manner that
-when she opened her eyes they must rest upon me, I sat at my table and
-worked and thought. My work was noiseless, and I could do it without
-disturbing the stillness. I was thankful for that. I do not know in
-what way it came into my mind that there are numberless small things
-in life which we ought to be grateful for, but the thought came.
-Presently, while my hand and eyes were busy on delicate manipulations
-in the wood, my mind reverted to uncle Bryan and Jessie, and the
-strange, strange letter I had read. Could Jessie ever forgive her
-father? Never, I thought. The unkindnesses inflicted upon herself she
-might have been eager to forgive when she made the discovery that she
-had a father living, but the wrong inflicted upon her mother was past
-forgiveness. Truly, the dead wife had punished the living husband with
-a cunning hand. But it was a just blow that she had struck. She had
-shown no vindictiveness; for had he behaved kindly to the girl to whom
-he had given the shelter of his home, Jessie would never have been
-made acquainted with her mother's wrongs. Yes, it was just, but it was
-terrible.
-
-Terrible indeed. To find a father only to hate him. To find a father,
-and in the discovery to gain the knowledge that his conduct to her
-mother might have brought lasting shame and disgrace upon her own good
-name.
-
-And he? How did he feel it? The words he addressed to me in his letter
-to my mother were very clear in my mind. Too late I see my folly and
-my crime. Many things that Christopher said to me were true. I humbly
-ask his forgiveness, and I humbly pray that the happiness he said I
-did my best to destroy may yet fall to his lot. If he will picture me,
-an old man with a bleeding heart, into whose life but few rays of
-sunshine have passed, pleading to him, he may soften towards me.
-Perhaps he may believe that I loved him; if he does believe it, he
-will believe the truth.'
-
-I did believe it; I felt that it was true. I asked myself whether all
-the fault was his, whether he was entirely to blame because it was not
-in his nature to show love in its sweetest way. I recalled the words
-he had used when he described to me and my mother the home in which he
-spent his childhood's days. I raised up a picture of his mother, a
-weak-minded woman, ruled as with a rod of iron by her husband, ruled
-even in her affections by a man whom his own son could not respect,
-knowing him to be a hypocrite. The son must have learned bad lessons
-in such a home. Was it not to the son's credit that he refused to be
-moulded by such influences? But if the son had had such a mother as
-mine----
-
-Ah, if an influence so sweet had sweetened his life--if an affection
-so pure had purified his mind--how different it might have been with
-him! The cobwebs of scepticism and bitter distrust might have been
-swept from his soul. He might have grown into a good and noble man.
-For I recognised qualities in uncle Bryan's nature far higher than
-those with which the men I was acquainted with were gifted. My blind
-unreasoning anger against him was gone, and I felt only pity for the
-desolate old man. I pictured him, as he had desired me to do, an old
-man with a bleeding heart, into whose life but few rays of sunshine
-had passed--an old man who in his youth had been soured, misdirected,
-misjudged, his rare qualities and gifts turned against himself; and I
-pitied him with a full heart, and most freely forgave him.
-
-At this point I recalled everything in his character that spoke in his
-favour--his love of flowers, his love of justice, which had something
-heroic in it, his contempt for meanness and roguery, his gentle
-behaviour towards my mother, by whom alone he was properly understood.
-He would have been astonished had he known my thoughts.
-
-In this better mood I continued my work. Tick, tick, tick, went the
-little clock on the mantelpiece, and the sound seemed to add to the
-stillness instead of disturbing it. Once, upon raising my eyes to my
-mother's bed, I fancied that she was awake and was observing me. I
-stole towards the bed, but her eyes were closed; I kissed her softly,
-and resumed my work. The wood-block I was engaged upon represented a
-woman standing by a field after the corn had been cut and gathered. It
-was sunset, and the woman, who was between forty and fifty years of
-age, was gazing sadly and mournfully at the setting sun and the bare
-field, with only the stubble left on it. I knew the story which the
-picture was intended to illustrate. The woman had been parted from her
-son, who was in a distant land, many thousands of miles across the
-sea, and the last news she had received from him represented him as
-being beset by misfortune and sickness. She was standing now, thinking
-mournfully of the times when she and he were together; and the sun,
-setting among sad clouds, and the cornfield, shorn of its golden
-glory, were in fit keeping with her thoughts. Another picture drawn on
-the wood, and which I had not yet commenced to engrave, lay before me.
-The scene was the same, and the figure of the woman was there, but the
-time and circumstances were different from the last. It was morning in
-the opening of summer; the corn was ripening, and lying on the ground
-at the mother's feet was the son, restored to her in health.
-Insensibly, as I proceeded with my work, my thoughts reverted to a
-certain time in my childhood when my mother toiled during the day and
-sat up late in the night working for me. How many a night had I seen
-her sitting at the table in our poorly-furnished one room, stitching
-until daylight dawned to earn bread for her child! The songs she used
-to sing softly to herself came to my lips, and I murmured them almost
-unconsciously, while the tears ran from my eyes. My heart was
-throbbing with exquisite tenderness towards my mother, and I thought
-that never in all my reading had I met with a woman so thoroughly good
-and pure and true. I covered my eyes with my hand to shut out the
-aching fear that, with the force of a visible presence, was creeping
-upon me and whispering that the priceless blessing of her love was
-lost to me for ever; but the action brought a deeper darkness to my
-soul. It lasted but a moment, thank God! for suddenly my name was
-uttered in a soft clear tone.
-
-'Chris!'
-
-My heart almost ceased to beat as the sound of my mother's voice, with
-its old sweet cadence, fell upon my ear; but I remembered the caution
-which the doctor had given me, and I quietly proceeded with my work.
-
-'Yes, mother.'
-
-'What are you doing, dear child?'
-
-'Working, mother.'
-
-I scarcely dared to raise my eyes, and I waited anxiously for her to
-speak again.
-
-'It is late, my child.'
-
-'Not very, mother. The night was so beautiful, and I had such a long
-rest this morning, that I thought I would work for an hour or two upon
-some pictures I have to get done quickly.' I spoke calmly and softly
-and cheerfully. 'I thought you were asleep, mother.'
-
-'I have lain for some time watching you, my darling, and wondering
-whether this was not all a dream.'
-
-'A dream, mother!' I said, and I went to her side, and passed my arm
-under her neck. 'No, it is not a dream.' She gazed at me long and
-earnestly.
-
-'Where are we, dear child?'
-
-'In the country, at Hertford. You were not very well, and I brought
-you down here to nurse you into health again.'
-
-She pondered over these words. 'You were singing my songs, my dearest'
-
-'I hope they did not disturb you, mother.'
-
-'What sweeter music could I hear, dear child? But what made you sing
-them?'
-
-'I was thinking of the old times, mother, when you and I were
-together, and when you used to work late in the night for me. There
-was a prayer in my heart while I was singing.'
-
-'What prayer, my dearest?'
-
-'That I might be able to repay you by my love for the love you have
-given me all my life. That God would be merciful to me, and would give
-me the power to show you that I love you with all my heart and soul,
-and to prove that as no son ever had a more loving mother than you
-have been to me, so no mother ever had a son who was filled with a
-deeper love than I have for you.'
-
-'Dear child! darling child!' she said, with deep-drawn sighs of
-happiness, what can I say to you for your goodness to me? I do not
-deserve it! I do not deserve it!' She folded me in her arms, and I lay
-by her side with my face pressed close to hers.
-
-'If you say that, mother, I shall think you do not believe me.'
-
-'No, no, dear child, I do believe it. These are tears of joy that I am
-shedding. And we two are alone, darling!'
-
-'Yes, mother, and I only want one thing to make me quite happy.'
-
-'Tell it me, child?' she asked, a little anxiously.
-
-'To see you well again, mother, that is all. Then I shall go on with
-my work, and we shall get along famously together. But you mustn't
-talk any longer; you must go to sleep. Shall I sing you to sleep as
-you used to do to me? Do you remember that dear old song? Well, but
-_I_ must not talk any longer. I am going to lie here; first let me put
-out the light.' When I returned to the fond prison of her loving arms,
-I said softly, 'I shall only say two or three words more. First,
-mother, you must promise me to get quite well. Promise, now, for my
-sake.'
-
-'I will try to, dear child; I think I shall; I feel strong already.'
-
-'Then you must tell me that you are happy, dear mother.'
-
-'Ah, my darling, there is not a happier mother in the world. Blessed
-with such a son, I should be ungrateful to God if I were not.'
-
-'And now, mother, not another word----'
-
-'But draw the counterpane round you, darling; you will take cold
-else.'
-
-'There, it is done; feel: and I'm quite warm. Good-night, mother. One
-kiss--two--three; and before you can count three more I shall be
-asleep.'
-
-I pretended to be, but I remained awake, listening to her sighs of
-happiness. Every now and then she passed her fingers over my face, and
-over my eyes, to learn if they were closed. After a time she fell
-asleep herself, and her composed peaceful breathing seemed in itself
-an assurance of returning health.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-AT REHEARSAL.
-
-
-As the curtain falls upon a scene in a drama, and when it rises again
-so many years are supposed to have elapsed, so between the closing of
-the last chapter and the opening of this six months must be supposed
-to have passed. We are again in London. My mother, thank God, is well,
-and I have within me the happy assurance that I have nursed her into
-health; the doctor has told me so, my mother herself has repeated it a
-hundred times, and I believe it and am humbly grateful.
-
-We are living near to Paradise-row, but not in uncle Bryan's shop. My
-mother, knowing all that occurred on Jessie's birthday, showed no
-surprise when, on returning to London, I took her to some comfortable
-rooms I had engaged, and said that these were to be our home. She made
-only one remark--she hoped I would not have any objection to her going
-to the shop occasionally to see Josey West. I told her I should be
-glad if she went, and that I intended to go there myself very often.
-
-We are as happy as we can reasonably expect to be. That we have
-sorrows is certain; but we refrain from speaking of them. We are as
-silent concerning our hopes, if we have any.
-
-Nothing has been heard of uncle Bryan; Josey West conducts the
-business as though she had been born to it, and it is really
-prospering under her management. She is such a favourite with all the
-neighbours, that her customers increase every week, and the takings
-are nearly doubled.
-
-'I think we shall be able to set up a plate window soon,' says Josey
-West, with a grand air. 'The sale of the pills is astonishing, my
-dear, astonishing! Do you know, Chris, I feel quite like a respectable
-member of society! I shall soon begin to turn up my nose at
-play-actors, who are nothing but vagrants, my dear, nothing but
-vagrants. And they're bad paymasters, Chris; I've two of them on my
-books already.'
-
-When I ask her about Jessie, Josey says that she's all right, and that
-I have no occasion to bother myself about _her_. I can extract nothing
-more from her than this, and if I endeavour to press the subject
-further, she turns snappish.
-
-My mother and I have had many conversations about uncle Bryan, and I
-think one great cause of her contentment is the altered state of my
-feelings towards him, which I do not disguise from her. I am
-prospering in a worldly sense, and when I feel most despondent I work
-the hardest; it is a relief to me. My name has appeared in print,
-connected with words of praise, and I often wonder whether Jessie has
-seen it. As for my mother, when I brought home the paper containing
-the two lines in which my work was spoken of favourably, I thought she
-would have gone wild with joy. I am afraid to say how many times she
-must have read the few ordinary words, but, knowing what a delight
-they are to her, I am glad that I have earned them for her sake.
-
-In this way the months roll on. With reference to my feelings towards
-Jessie, I shall be almost as silent now as I was at home during that
-time. Sufficient to say that I never forgot her, and that I never
-loved her less; but her name is rarely mentioned at home.
-
-There is one person, however, to whom I speak of Jessie freely--to
-Turk West. Turk is getting along capitally in his shop, and has
-already paid off more than half his debt to Mr. Glover. I see this
-gentleman occasionally in Turk's shop; Turk shaves him, and dresses
-his hair for him two or three times a week; whenever I go into the
-shop and see him there, I retire immediately. I have no wish to injure
-Turk's business, and when I reason calmly over matters I cannot see
-what tangible ground of complaint I have against Mr. Glover--which
-does not lessen my detestation of him.
-
-'He is a good customer,' says Turk to me, 'and it will be best for
-more reasons than one not to offend him. I can't say that I like
-him--although I try to, Chris, my boy, let me tell you--but I know
-that he is the soul of honour.'
-
-'How _do_ you know it?' I ask.
-
-Turk scratches his head. 'Well, _he_ says it, Chris, my boy, and
-everybody says it who knows him. He comes from a highly-respectable
-family.'
-
-I can say nothing in opposition, knowing nothing of his family.
-
-'And it is something to be proud of, Chris?' says Turk.
-
-'What _is_, Turk?'
-
-'To be so respectably connected.'
-
-'I suppose so,' I answer indifferently.
-
-Old Mac is a constant visitor at Turk's shop; indeed, it appears to me
-that he spends most of his time there, for whenever I go westward and
-open Turk's door, his is the first familiar face I see. He keeps
-guard, as it were.
-
-'Turk is inside,' he says; or 'Turk is upstairs, crimping a lady's
-hair.' For Turk has lady as well as gentleman customer's, and has
-become very skilful in the business. His flow of conversation and
-anecdote is of great assistance to him; he has always something to
-say, and, not having been born a barber and hairdresser, he seldom
-commences about the weather--which is a relief.
-
-On a windy day in April, I visited Turk, and, as usual, found old Mac
-there. Turk, very busy over some theatrical wigs, looked up from his
-work, and asked me if I wanted to speak to him. No, I answered; I had
-merely dropped in as I passed. I had as little excuse for the visit as
-I had for many others; I only went in the vague hope of hearing
-something of Jessie. Turk understood this, without being told.
-
-'Business good, Turk?' I inquired.
-
-'First-class,' said Turk. 'I shall have to get an assistant, I expect.
-By the bye---- O, never mind!'
-
-He suddenly interrupted himself, in a confused manner.
-
-'By the bye, what, Turk?'
-
-'Nothing,' he replied, bending over his work.
-
-Old Mac looked at me somewhat significantly, and, rising, said he
-should take a stroll in Covent-garden Market.
-
-'It does one good to walk up and down that arcade,' he said. 'One
-smells the country lanes there. How would it do to have it on the
-stage, Turk, with real hothouse fruit and flowers fresh from the
-market gardens every night? I daresay it will come to that, in time.
-The stage is not what it was, my sons.'
-
-Winking at me, old Mac went out, and I, regarding the wink as an
-invitation to follow him, wished Turk good-morning.
-
-'This is not the way to Covent Garden,' I said, as I joined him. 'Have
-you had your morning drain, Mac?'
-
-'No, my son, no,' he replied cheerfully; 'and I know a place.'
-
-Without more words he conducted me to the 'place,' where I paid for
-his morning drain twice over.
-
-'You took my hint, my son,' he said, when he had drained his glass,
-and eaten his lemon; he always ate the slice of lemon after he
-finished his glass, saying humorously that it was a preparation for
-the next. 'You took my hint.'
-
-'You wanted to speak to me I thought, Mac.'
-
-'Well, not exactly wanted, my son; but I have something to communicate
-which may be interesting to you. I know what the tender passion is,
-and how it burns. I've had my day, and, faith! I'd like to have it
-over again! It wasn't all sugar, my son. There was one--ah, there was
-one, I do remember me, in my hot youth!--
-
-
- "Her lips to mine how often did she join.
- Between each kiss her oaths of true love swearing!
- How many tales to please me did she coin.
- Dreading my love, the loss thereof still fearing!
- Yet in the midst of all her pure protesting.
- Her faith, her oaths, her tears, and all were jesting."
-
-
-But what cared I? I whistled her off, and took another, for they're as
-thick as mulberries, my son. And I'd like to have my time over again,
-pleasures, pains, and all. But this is not to the point, and yet it
-is, although the lines will not apply--that is to say, I hope not.'
-
-I listened in anxiety; I was well acquainted with old Mac's character
-by this time, and I knew it would be useless to interrupt him and ask
-him to come to the point at once; he must come to it his own way.
-
-'Old Mac can tell a hawk from a handsaw with half an eye,' he
-continued, 'and he has two good ones at his command. Old Mac says to
-himself, seeing a certain talented young friend whom he esteems--your
-health, my son. Ah, I forgot, my glass is empty'--(I was obliged to
-fill it again; I had no fear of Mac's getting tipsy on three glasses;
-he was too well seasoned)--'Old Mac says to himself, what does this
-talented young friend of his mean by coming so often to Turk West's
-establishment? Well, there would be nothing in that, but he comes in
-unseasonable hours--that is to say, in the hours during which he is
-supposed to be working for the public. What does that mean? says old
-Mac, in confidence to himself. Your health, my son. It can mean but
-one thing. Old Mac knows the signs. And that's why he winked at you to
-follow him. _Do_ you follow me?'
-
-'Not exactly,' I was obliged to confess, notwithstanding that I had a
-dim glimmering of what was coming.
-
-Old Mac laughed.
-
-'Well, not to beat about the bush--but I thought I'd lead up to it by
-easy stages--a certain fair friend of ours is at a certain place this
-morning, and I fancied you might like to see her.'
-
-My heart beat violently; I knew that he referred to Jessie.
-
-'Did she tell you to come for me?'
-
-He dashed my hopes to the ground by hurriedly replying, 'No, no, my
-son; she knows nothing of it, and had best not know, perhaps. The fact
-is, our fair friend is about to make her first appearance on the
-boards, and she is now rehearsing her part. I know the box-keeper, and
-he will let us into the dress circle, where you can see her without
-her seeing you.'
-
-I thanked him cordially, and we walked together to the theatre, and
-were admitted to the dress circle, which was in complete darkness.
-Certainly no one on the stage could distinguish us, but in the dim
-light I could see all the actors and actresses engaged in the
-rehearsal. Jessie was among them.
-
-Eight months had passed since I last saw her, and I gazed on her with
-aching eagerness. It was a cold day, and she was warmly dressed; and
-the only change I could discern in her was that she appeared to have
-grown more beautiful. What pain and pleasure I felt as I heard her
-voice once more, fresh and sweet as ever, and saw the old familiar
-action of her hands, I cannot describe.
-
-'Steady, my son, steady,' whispered old Mac warningly.
-
-I controlled myself, without being aware what I had done to excite
-this remonstrance.
-
-'When does she appear?' I asked in the same low tone.
-
-'Next Monday week.'
-
-'In her own name?'
-
-'No; she has taken the name of Mathews. You will see the announcements
-outside the theatre. There's a good deal of curiosity excited about
-her already, for she plays an ambitious character; she commences at
-the top instead of at the bottom of the ladder. I should have liked
-her to begin a little lower down, or to have appeared in the provinces
-first. There's one great thing in her favour, though. She plays in a
-new piece, and can't be compared to other and more experienced
-actresses in the same character. There's somebody you know.'
-
-He referred to Mr. Glover, whom I had seen before he had, and who,
-standing at the side wings, appeared to be on familiar terms with all
-the company; but I knew the lodestone which had drawn him there. When
-I first caught sight of him Jessie was engaged in a scene; presently
-she was free for a time, and then he approached her, and they talked
-together.
-
-'Mac,' I said, in a whisper, 'I think you are a friend of mine.'
-
-'I am proud to hear you say so, my son. I _am_ your friend.'
-
-'What does that mean?' And I pointed to Jessie and Mr. Glover.
-
-He looked at my agitated face, and then at the two persons I was
-interested in; but he did not answer me.
-
-'Why don't you speak, Mac? Why don't you answer me?'
-
-'Because I don't quite understand you, my son.'
-
-'When a person in Mr. Glover's position,' I said, 'pays attention to
-an actress commencing the world as Jessie is, what does it mean?'
-
-'Speak a little lower, my son. It means that he is interested in her.
-There's nothing unusual in that.'
-
-'But it _may_ mean something more; it may mean that he is fond of
-her.'
-
-'It may; and there would be nothing unusual in that. But it does not
-follow that she is fond of him. Beware of the green-eyed monster, my
-son. Good heaven, the souls of all my tribe defend from jealousy!
-Take a lesson from an old stager.' (But what the lesson was he did not
-state.) 'Why don't you ask Turk about it?'
-
-'I have my reasons; I would rather Turk should not know anything of
-this.'
-
-'Well, I'll find out for you, quietly between ourselves. Old Mac knows
-the signs. He has seen a few things, old Mac has. Only don't you run
-away with the idea that there's anything wrong in a gentleman speaking
-to an actress. I daresay it's through him that my fair friend has got
-this chance. Well, why shouldn't she speak to him, then? I know what
-you feel, my son. I've felt the same myself, and wouldn't mind feeling
-so again. It comes in the regular course of things.'
-
-I went outside the theatre with him, and made an excuse to get rid of
-him. Then I waited, in the hope of seeing Jessie; and bearing in mind
-Jessie's words, 'If we meet again it must be at my own time, and in my
-own way,' I resolved not to show myself to her. She came out in the
-course of half an hour, accompanied by Mr. Glover. I walked behind
-them at some distance on the opposite side of the road, making many
-shifts and pretences of looking in shop-windows, so that they should
-not see me. But Mr. Glover, happening to turn his head in my
-direction, caught sight of me. I saw the flash of recognition in his
-eyes. He must have uttered an exclamation, for Jessie turned, and also
-saw me. I hesitated for one moment; should I retrace my steps, or walk
-boldly on? Jessie decided the question for me, by running towards me.
-Her face was scarlet, but that might have been caused by her running
-too quickly, for her breath came fast.
-
-'O Chris!' she cried, in the first excitement of the moment. 'How glad
-I am to see you! What brings you this way?'
-
-She held out her hand eagerly, and I took it, and would have retained
-it, but that the appearance of Mr. Glover, who paused quite close to
-us, caused me to relinquish it.
-
-'What brings him this way?' echoed Mr. Glover. Not accident, I'll be
-bound.'
-
-'I came on purpose to see you, Jessie,' I said; 'I heard through a
-friend that you were rehearsing this morning, and I gained admission
-to the dress circle, and sat there for some time.'
-
-'Was it Turk who told you?' she asked.
-
-'No, not Turk. I think he would not tell me anything that you did not
-wish me to know.'
-
-It was not without intention that I let this arrow fly. Jessie made no
-comment upon it, but said:
-
-'And then you waited outside to see me, Chris?'
-
-'Yes; I had no other purpose. But I did not intend that you should see
-me.'
-
-No? But we'll not quarrel now that we _have_ met. How is mother,
-Chris?'
-
-'She is well, Jessie. You know that we were very nearly losing her.'
-
-'I know; and you took her into the country, and nursed her.'
-
-'Thank God, she is well now.'
-
-If Mr. Glover had not been present, I should have spoken in a very
-different manner, but I could not show my heart while he stood by,
-with a look of cold contempt in his eyes.
-
-'And you?--you are looking thinner, I think, Chris; but you are well
-and happy.'
-
-'Yes,' I answered mechanically, 'I am well and happy, Jessie.'
-Although I strove to speak in an indifferent tone, it must have
-miserably belied my words.
-
-'And you are getting along famously,' continued Jessie hurriedly; I
-read your name in the papers, and it made me very proud.'
-
-'We shall read your name in the papers soon, Jessie.'
-
-'I suppose so; if I have strength and courage to go through with it. I
-hope you will not come on the first night, Chris.'
-
-I was silent, and she was generous enough not to exact the promise.
-
-'At all events, then, if you do come I shall have one friend there,'
-she said.
-
-'Not more than one, Jessie?' asked Mr. Glover, in a tone which made my
-heart throb violently.
-
-Jessie, looking first at me and then at Mr. Glover, said that she must
-wish us good-morning, and with her parasol hailed an omnibus that was
-passing.
-
-'Good-bye, Chris. Will you give my love to mother?'
-
-'Yes, Jessie.'
-
-She drew me aside, out of the hearing of Mr. Glover, and whispered,
-'Don't quarrel with him, Chris.'
-
-'I will not, Jessie. One moment. Are you happy?'
-
-She cast a swift glance at me, and then turned her eyes to the ground.
-'I think so, Chris; I am not sure.' With this singular answer, she
-pressed my hand, and left me. I watched her get into the omnibus, and
-when it was out of sight I turned homewards, without noticing Mr.
-Glover. But he was at my heels, speaking to me.
-
-'How did you gain admission into the theatre, young man?' he said.
-'Did you sneak in, or did you tell the doorkeeper a lie?'
-
-'That is my business,' I replied calmly; for I was determined to keep
-my promise to Jessie.
-
-'Especially your business, I should say--sneaking and lying. But
-unless you wish to find yourself in an unpleasant position, I should
-advise you not to make the attempt again. For Jessie's sake, who might
-not like to hear of your getting into trouble, I will look over the
-trespass this once.'
-
-'_You_ will overlook it!' I retorted, without any outward exhibition
-of anger. 'Is the theatre yours, then?'
-
-'In your own words, that is my business. But I have authority there,
-believe me; so you must be careful. I should, if I were you, give over
-the spying business; you will gain nothing by it. Perhaps, however,
-you have not the manliness to see that the young lady has chosen for
-herself, and that, as she has removed herself from you and your common
-surroundings, there is distinct cowardice in your thrusting yourself
-upon her. Only a gentleman can entertain these proper sentiments----'
-
-'Such a gentleman as yourself,' I interrupted.
-
-'Yes, such a gentleman as I,' he said, with a frown; and not only
-that, but one who knows how to resent impertinence and blackguardly
-interference.'
-
-I left him suddenly; if I had not done so he would have fastened a
-quarrel upon me. I saw clearly that this was his desire; but I
-disappointed him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-OLD MAC EXPRESSES HIS OPINION OF MR. GLOVER.
-
-
-The only person to whom I spoke of my interview with Jessie was my
-mother, and even to her I did not relate all that had passed.
-
-'Is she coming to see us, my dear?' my mother asked.
-
-I answered that she had given no hint of any such intention.
-
-'Perhaps,' said my mother, 'Mr. Glover being by restrained her.'
-
-'Perhaps,' I replied curtly.
-
-As the tone in which I spoke denoted that I did not wish to continue
-the conversation, my mother said nothing more. Not that she had grown
-indifferent to the subject upon which we were conversing, but that she
-studied my moods more closely than ever. Her heart had never been
-stirred by such tender love for me as during this time; it showed
-itself in a thousand little undemonstrative ways, and with a delicate
-cunning which I am sure has never been excelled, she said and did
-precisely the things which were most comforting to me. I have only her
-to thank that my sorrow did not make a cynic of me.
-
-My thoughts ran so much upon Mr. Glover, that I dreamt of him
-frequently in connection with some singular fancies. The principal
-persons who played parts in these dreams were we two and Jessie. In
-one of my dreams he was standing on a height, with his fingers to his
-mouth, curling his moustache into it as usual; I stood below, at a
-great distance from him; and Jessie was midway between us. He was
-beckoning to Jessie, saying in a boastful tone that he was a gentleman
-and a man of honour, and Jessie was walking towards him. In another of
-my dreams he was standing over me, preaching the same text. In
-another, Turk was very seriously impressing upon me the fact that Mr.
-Glover came from a highly-respectable family, and that it _was_ a
-thing to be proud of. This was the leading idea of all my dreams.
-
-I did not go again to see Jessie at the rehearsals. I knew I had no
-right to be in the theatre on those occasions, and I did not intend to
-give Mr. Glover a chance of placing me in an unpleasant position. I
-had scarcely a hope of seeing Jessie at our house; my mother thought
-differently, saying that in certain things she was seldom mistaken,
-and this was one of them. It was known to me that she had never ceased
-making inquiries for uncle Bryan, and that she had taken many and many
-a journey about London in the hope of finding him. I did not question
-her as to the result of these inquiries, and she herself was silent on
-the subject.
-
-'Oh,' said Josey West to me, a couple of days after I had seen Jessie,
-'so you've seen her.'
-
-'Yes, Josey,' I replied, 'I have seen her.'
-
-'And never told me!' she exclaimed.
-
-'Why should I tell you, Josey? You have kept things from me which I
-think you might have told me, without doing any great harm.'
-
-'Do you, my sweet child? How wise we are, to be sure! But I don't
-blame you. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. I tell
-you what, Chris! On the first night that Jessie plays, you and I will
-go arm-in-arm to the theatre.'
-
-'No, we will not.'
-
-'Why, my sweet child?' she inquired, not in the least disturbed by my
-abrupt tone.
-
-'Because I have not made up my mind whether I shall be there.'
-
-'Oh, indeed!' she said, with a little laugh.
-
-I was not ingenuous in my reply, for I had quite resolved to go, and
-to go early. During the days that intervened between my meeting with
-Jessie and her announced first appearance I was very busy with
-important work. This kept me close to my bench, and I did not have
-time even to visit Turk, but it did not prevent me from thinking
-constantly of Jessie. What would be the result if she made a great
-success? Would she grow into a fine lady, and would her picture be in
-all the shop-windows? What was the nature of the connection between
-her and Mr. Glover? What were her feelings now towards her father? I
-found a hundred different answers to these questions, not one of which
-brought any satisfaction or consolation to me. But I could not
-relinquish the consideration of them, and, in the usual way, I
-extracted from them as much unhappiness as they would fairly yield.
-
-'My mother knew where I was going when I prepared myself on the
-evening that Jessie was to make her first appearance before the
-public, and as she kissed me she said she did not expect me home very
-early. I nodded, and left her. I could not trust myself to speak, for
-I felt as though my own fate were about to be definitely decided by
-the issue of this night's events. I arrived at the theatre before the
-time announced for the opening of the doors, and to my surprise,
-instead of finding, as I expected, a great mass of people pressing
-towards the entrances, I found a few scores of persons standing
-loosely about the closed doors, grumbling and wondering at notices
-which were pasted on the walls to the effect that in consequence of
-the indisposition of the new actress the opening of the theatre was
-postponed. The disappointment to those assembled was the greater
-because the play in which Jessie was to appear was the first dramatic
-work of a new author, who, although his name was not given on the
-bills, it was said was a nobleman well known in fashionable circles.
-While I was reading the notice, and tormenting myself with the idea
-that Jessie must be seriously ill, Turk accosted me.
-
-'Hallo, Chris,' he said, hooking his arm in mine; 'this is a surprise,
-isn't it?'
-
-'Is Jessie very ill, Turk?' I asked anxiously.
-
-He looked at me inquiringly, seemingly in doubt as to whether I was in
-earnest in asking the question. I repeated it.
-
-'I do not think so,' he replied.
-
-'Have you seen her lately, Turk?'
-
-'Not since Saturday, Chris; then she appeared to be well. That notice
-is only put up as an excuse. There's a hitch with the author, or the
-lessee, or the man who advances the money, I expect.'
-
-'I should like to know if Jessie is really well,' I said.
-
-'Go round to my shop, then; here's the key. I'll make inquiries and
-come to you soon.'
-
-I went to the shop, and unlocked the door, and as it was dark inside,
-I lit the gas. I had not been in the place many minutes before old Mac
-poked in his head.
-
-'I saw a light,' he said, entering, and closing the door behind him.
-
-'Ah, Chris, my son; it's you, is it? This is a rum go, isn't it?
-Where's Turk?'
-
-'He'll be here presently. You mean about the theatre, don't you?'
-
-'I do, my son. So our fair friend doesn't make her appearance after
-all. Well, the loss is the public's. The stage is going to the dogs.
-Going! Gone, I should say. Not conducted on straight principles, my
-son. Elements introduced into the management of theatrical matters
-which have no business there at all. Where's your school for acting
-nowadays, I should like to know. How do men and women come to be
-actors and actresses? Where's the education for the profession? Once
-upon a time--ah, well, no matter. Drown dull care. Anything to drink
-about?' He looked around for the desired bottle. I could not assist
-him in his search, and did not desire to do so, for it seemed to me
-that he had already had a glass too much. 'Closed through the
-indisposition of the new actress!' he continued. 'That's the way the
-public is gulled. There are more things in heaven and earth than are
-dreamt of in their philosophy. Look here, my son. A word in your ear.'
-
-This word in my ear was a whispered request for a trifling loan of two
-shillings and sevenpence. He always asked for loans in a whisper, even
-when there was no third person near. It was not the first time I had
-lent old Mac small sums of money, and I pulled three shillings from my
-pocket, not having the coins for the exact sum. He gravely gave me
-fivepence change.
-
-'Thank you, my son,' he said, 'and now, a word to the wise. On a
-certain morning you and I went to the Rialto--no, to a rehearsal in
-which our fair friend took part.'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'You confided your woes to me, not in words perhaps, but in look,
-accent, manner. Old Mac knows the signs. The liquid eye, the tremulous
-tone, the sighs that come unbidden. I saw them all, my son, and my
-sympathising breast received them as a sacred deposit. You remember
-the lines I quoted: "Her lips to mine how often did she join!" But I
-see that you are impatient, my son. You said to me then that you
-believed that I was your friend. I answered in suitable terms. The
-word to the action, the action to the word. Shake hands, my son.' By
-this time I had fully made up my mind that old Mac was tipsy, although
-he was as steady as a rock; it was only his voice that betrayed him.
-'To continue. You drew my attention to two persons who shall be
-nameless, one of whom was paying attentions to the other, and you
-asked what it meant. I replied in general terms, and after warning you
-to beware of the green-eyed monster, I said that I would find out, in
-a quiet way, what those intentions meant, and that I would let you
-know, in a quiet way. Am I correct, and do you follow me?'
-
-I said that he was quite correct, and that I was following his words.
-
-'I placed myself at once in communication with our fair friend----'
-
-I was surprised into an exclamation by this information. In no way
-disturbed, old Mac went on.
-
-'I did. I placed myself at once in communication with our fair
-friend----'
-
-'You did not mention my name, I hope,' I could not help saying.
-
-'Was I born yesterday, do you think, my son, or the day before? I had
-some slight acquaintance with our fair friend, as you know, and I
-threw myself in her way. That is what I mean when I say I placed
-myself in communication with her. I read her part for her, and gave
-her a hint or two, which she received and thanked me for in a manner
-very different from some lady stars I could mention, who think
-themselves above tuition because they have pretty faces, and because
-they happen to have made a third- or a fourth-rate success. They come
-to grief in the long-run, my son, these clever ladies. They shine for
-a little while, with much outside pushing and puffing, and then, Out,
-out, brief candle! Our fair friend is a different kind of creature.
-She is amiability, sweetness, and modesty combined, and when the old
-actor ventured to throw out a hint or two as to emphasis in certain
-places, as to appropriate action, as to where and how a point could be
-made, she received them with gratitude and deference. Damme, my son!
-the old actor could not help wishing he was a thirty years younger
-man; and then again he was glad he wasn't, because it might have
-interfered with the chances of a young friend of his, whom he sees
-before him now. But if I don't hurry on with my story, you will be
-applying to me Hamlet's words to Polonius, "These tedious old fools!"
-The old actor doesn't mind giving himself a rub, you see. Well, having
-fairly established himself in the sweet graces of the young lady, old
-Mac, from his point of observation, kept one eye steadily fixed upon a
-certain gentleman whose name commences with G, and who seems to have a
-habit of biting his nails--a sign of ill-temper, my son. Old Mac was
-on the watch, my son--"On the Watch," a fine title for a drama, and I
-wish I had time to write it. This gentleman whose name commences with
-G did not appear to relish the observation of the old actor, which was
-not, for that reason, relaxed, depend upon it. And now, old Mac has
-but few words to add. If, having reason to suspect the honesty of the
-intentions of this gentleman whose name commences with a G, the old
-actor sounded him artfully, and learnt enough to convince him that his
-suspicions were correct, and if, being thus satisfied or dissatisfied,
-the old actor gradually and delicately opened a certain young lady's
-eyes to the true state of affairs, you may depend that he did it
-partly out of the friendship he entertains for a fine young
-fellow--shake hands, my son--partly out of his contempt for a certain
-person whose fingers are always playing with his moustache, but
-chiefly out of his admiration for a young lady whose beauty, grace,
-virtue, and modesty are unparalleled in the experience of an old
-fellow who has seen the world, and knows the stuff that men and women
-are made of.'
-
-Ambiguous as this speech was--and old Mac seemed to make it purposely
-mysterious, and to enjoy it--I thoroughly understood it, and I thanked
-the speaker cordially. My heart felt lighter after it, and when Turk
-returned--old Mac being gone--I met him with a smile on my face.
-
-'Has any one been here, Chris?' he asked, as he entered.
-
-'Only old Mac; it is scarcely two minutes since he left.'
-
-'No one else?'
-
-'No, Turk. Have you found out about Jessie?'
-
-'I have reason to believe she is quite well,' replied Turk, and that
-the notice is only a blind. I thought Mr. Glover might have called.'
-
-'No; he has not been here. Did you expect to see him?'
-
-Turk, without replying to my question, commenced to walk up and down
-his shop, which unusual proceeding on his part caused me to observe
-him more closely. A strange expression of trouble and perplexity was
-on his face, and I questioned him concerning it.
-
-'I asked you once,' he said, somewhat awkwardly, 'if you were in
-trouble. You will remember it--on the anniversary of Jessie's
-birthday.'
-
-'I remember, Turk.'
-
-'Yours, you said, was not a money trouble.'
-
-'But yours is, Turk?'
-
-'Yes; chiefly. Partly my own, partly another person's. Chris, if I
-speak vaguely, it is because I am on my parole; I mustn't break my
-word. Now we can trust one another, I think?'
-
-'I am sure I can trust you, Turk.'
-
-'And that is just what I want,' he said, with a perplexed look.
-
-'What is?
-
-'Trust. It is a tremendous misfortune, sometimes, to be a poor hard-up
-devil, not to be able to lay one's hand on a five-pound note.
-Generally, it doesn't matter; as a rule, I am happy enough with half a
-crown in my pocket, and owing no man anything. Chris, I want a large
-sum of money. Can you tell me where to borrow it on my word of
-honour?'
-
-'How much, Turk?'
-
-'Eighty pounds.'
-
-I had more than that saved out of my earnings.
-
-'I can lend it to you, Turk,' I said quite gladly.
-
-'You, Chris! Your own money?'
-
-'My own money--money that I have saved.'
-
-'And you will lend it to me on _that_ security?'
-
-'What better do I want from you, Turk?'
-
-He resumed his walk, and was silent for a few moments. When he paused
-before me, there was a soft bright light in his eyes.
-
-'It's good to have a friend. But, first, let me tell you. Only twenty
-pounds of the eighty are for myself. I want that sum to pay off my
-debt to Mr. Glover. The other sixty is for another person; and I shall
-be quite twelve months in paying you back.'
-
-'I am satisfied, and more so, because you will be free, and out of Mr.
-Glover's clutches. I can give you the money to-night. Mother has it.'
-
-'Is it all you have saved, Chris?'
-
-'No; I shall have a little left.'
-
-'Then, when I've paid Mr. Glover, I can give you a bill of sale over
-my stock.' He looked round upon his wigs and other theatrical
-property. 'It is worth the money.'
-
-'I can't lend to you upon that security, Turk. The first you mentioned
-is the only security I can accept.'
-
-He laughed a little huskily.
-
-'All right, Chris, my boy. I'll borrow the money on those terms. This
-may be a good night's work for all of us. I never thought that Turk
-West's word would be good for eighty pounds. But stranger things than
-that might occur, eh, Chris?'
-
-I acquiesced, although I had not the slightest idea of his meaning.
-
-'If you knew,' he continued, 'the relief it will be to me to get out
-of Mr. Glover's clutches, as you called it, you would be surprised.'
-
-I was sufficiently surprised at the change that was apparent in his
-tone concerning Mr. Glover, whom he had hitherto extolled so highly.
-
-'Curse all professional moneylenders, I say!' he exclaimed excitedly.
-'And if ever I believe again in a man with a handle on the top of his
-head, my name's not Turk West.'
-
-I could not help laughing at these singular words.
-
-'Ah, you may laugh, Chris; but when he sat in that chair--the very one
-you are sitting in now, Chris, my boy--for the first time last week,
-and asked me to shampoo him, and I felt the knob, it made me curious.
-I thought he had been fighting, or had knocked his head against
-something, but he told me he was born with it. That sort of thing runs
-in families, I should say. If he had it, his father must have had it
-before him. Look here, Chris; you are good at figures--I never was.
-See how I stand with him.'
-
-He produced some papers and receipts, all of which bore reference to
-the account he had with Mr. Glover. I examined them, and found that he
-had paid Mr. Glover a large interest for the money he had borrowed. He
-had already paid the full sum of seventy-five pounds advanced, and
-there were still, as he himself had calculated, twenty pounds odd to
-be paid before he could call himself free. I made out a clear
-statement, and gave it to Turk.
-
-'Mr. Glover has managed to make a large profit out of you, Turk.'
-
-'Yes, and I don't know how it has been done. I was to pay ten
-per cent for the money, I understood; but what with one thing and
-another--lawyer's charges, drawing up of deeds that were not required,
-I am sure, signing of printed papers, inquiry fees, and a dozen other
-things--it has come to a deal more.'
-
-'I see that you only received sixty-five pounds,' I said, busy over
-another calculation.
-
-'That is all.'
-
-'So that,' I continued, having finished my calculation' which I handed
-to Turk, when you pay the balance to-morrow, Mr. Glover will have
-received at the rate of at least sixty per cent per annum for the
-loan. Not much of a friend in that, Turk?'
-
-'No, I should say not; I have only rightly understood this, and other
-things in connection with Mr. Glover as well, within the last week.'
-
-'Perhaps,' I ventured to say, 'you do not now think me so unreasonable
-in the dislike I took to him.'
-
-'It is I who was wrong, Chris, my boy. I see that now.'
-
-'Do you know, Turk, it pleases me in some way to be convinced that he
-is not the soul of honour, as you tried to make me believe.'
-
-'There, there, Chris--let's say no more about him.'
-
-'We'll be done with him presently. I don't know how it was, but I
-suspected and disliked him from the first. That trick of his of
-curling his moustache into his mouth--old Mac told me he bites his
-nails----'
-
-'I cannot tell what it was that made me pause suddenly here, but pause
-I did, and the sentence was not concluded.
-
-'Do you know where Jessie lives, Turk?'
-
-'Yes, Chris, but you mustn't ask me to tell you. I am on my parole.'
-He repeated this statement with a certain air of enjoyment.
-
-'Very well,' I said. But can you tell me when Jessie is likely to make
-her appearance----'
-
-He interrupted me, and asked me as a favour to change the subject; and
-as I saw that I made him uneasy by my questions, I discontinued them.
-He walked home with me, and I gave him the money.
-
-'I wonder,' he said, as he pocketed it, 'that you haven't asked me
-what I wanted the other sixty pounds for.'
-
-'I have been going to ask half a dozen times,' I replied, 'but I
-thought it might be another of your secrets.'
-
-'It is a secret,' he said with a smile. 'And if you had asked, I
-shouldn't have told you.'
-
-Certainly, Turk was playing a most mysterious part; but I trusted him
-thoroughly, knowing what a good fellow he was.
-
-My mother was surprised to see me home so early, and more so when she
-heard what had taken place.
-
-'I have a presentiment, my dear,' she said, 'that this is going to
-turn out a fortunate night for us.'
-
-We went to the shop in the course of the night, and there was Josey
-West behind the counter, as busy as a bee, serving the customers, and
-chattering away like any magpie. Uncle Bryan would scarcely have known
-the shop. Josey had had it cleaned and painted, and the scales and
-counter, and nests of drawers in which the spices and more valuable
-commodities were kept, had been so smartened up that they looked like
-new. You could see your face in every bit of brass about the place.
-During a lull in the business, Josey came into the little parlour
-where we were sitting.
-
-It's wonderful,' she said; 'we've taken eleven shillings already for
-pills and mixture. I'm beginning to get frightened. If an inspector of
-something or other were to come in and analyse us, I should drop down
-in a fit. Turk says there's nothing to be afraid of, but I'm not so
-sure of that.' Presently, however, she derived consolation from the
-reflection that, after all, the medicine could not possibly do any one
-any harm.
-
-'Have you been to the theatre, Josey?' I asked.
-
-'If you ask no questions, my sweet child,' was her reply, 'you'll be
-told no stories. Theatres! As if I haven't something a thousand times
-more important to attend to!'
-
-For all that, she found time to have a quiet chat with Turk, and when
-he went away she called me into the shop, and saying she had something
-very particular to whisper to me, kissed me instead of making any
-communication; by which sign I knew that Turk had told her of the
-money I had lent him. She shut up the shop earlier than usual, and we
-had supper together. I had not had a meal in the little parlour for
-many months, and my mind was filled with the memorable incidents in my
-life with which the room was connected. It was just such a night as
-that on which Jessie had tapped at the door, years ago, when uncle
-Bryan was asleep, and my mother and I were sitting quietly together. I
-remembered the story I was reading, _Picciola_, and during a silence I
-raised my head to the door, with something of expectation in my mind.
-I dismissed the fancy instantly, but it was not unpleasant to me to
-think of what had occurred on that night--the conversation in the shop
-between Jessie and my mother, the awaking of uncle Bryan, and the
-first passage-at-arms between the child and the old man. My mother
-must have divined the current in which my thoughts were running, for
-she took my hand under the table, and held it fondly in hers.
-
-'I can't help liking the little room after all, mother,' I said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-A STRANGE DREAM.
-
-
-My mother and I stopped up talking until very late on this night. The
-future was not mentioned; all our talk was of the past. My mother
-recalled the reminiscences of her younger days, and dwelt upon them
-with affection. She drew pictures of her home when she was a girl, and
-told me a great deal concerning her parents, and especially concerning
-my grandmother, of whom my own impressions were so vivid. As though
-she were living her life over again, she travelled from those days
-gradually to the day upon which she first saw my father, and in tender
-tones related many incidents of their courtship which I had never
-before heard. She required a great deal of coaxing before she would
-speak of her courting days, but I led her on artfully from one thing
-to another, and listened to her with delight. On such occasions as
-this my mother seemed to grow twenty years younger; her face grew
-fresher, rounder, and in her eyes the soft light of youth lived again.
-Then came the description of her wedding-day, and she laughed or grew
-pensive as she recalled the names of those who were present, stopping
-occasionally, until I said, 'Yes, mother, and then,'--upon which she
-took up my words, saying, 'And then, my dear,'--and proceeded with her
-descriptions. When, in the course of her narration, I came into the
-world, I was able to take a larger share in the conversation, and I
-added my experience to hers. We were by turns grave and merry,
-according to the nature of our reminiscences. My grandmother's
-peculiarities, her death, the search for the long stocking, and the
-picture of Snaggletooth ripping open the beds and the armchairs, and
-sitting on the floor with his hair full of feathers; then on to my
-father's burial, and my illness, and the removal farther and farther
-away from our native town until we found ourselves in London--scarcely
-anything, except what was painful, was left unspoken of.
-
-'And there's an end to it all, mother,' I said, when we had brought
-the reminiscences up to the very night upon which we were conversing.
-
-'No, my dear,' she replied, with a tender shake of her head, not an
-end; there are brighter pages to come in my darling's life.'
-
-'Do you know, mother,' I said, as I stood by her side at the door of
-her bedroom, 'I have often thought of grandmother's long stocking, and
-fancied that one day we should find a treasure somewhere.'
-
-My mother laughed.
-
-'Why, my dear, where on earth would you look for it? We have not a
-thing left that belonged to your grandmother.'
-
-'Yes, we have; you don't forget that brown monkey-man that used to
-stand on the mantelshelf and wag its head at us?'
-
-'I remember it perfectly, dear child; you don't mean to say you have
-kept it all this time?'
-
-'It is in my box now; I shall take it out to-night, and have a look at
-it.'
-
-'You don't suppose the treasure is in that?' said my mother, laughing.
-
-'No; though Jessie and I did think one day that we had made a
-discovery. Good-night, mother.'
-
-'Good-night, dear child, and God bless you. Remember, my dear, there
-are brighter days to come, and your mother will live to see them.'
-
-That, before she went to sleep, she prayed for those brighter days, I
-was certain, but I scarcely dared to hope that what she so fondly
-desired would ever take place.
-
-Before I went to bed I took from my box the stone image of the brown
-monkey-man; it was at the very bottom of my box, which I had not
-opened for many months, for the reason that it contained all the
-sketches I had made of Jessie, and which I had put away when I lost
-her. But for these, and the tender thought which they excited, I
-should have given more attention to the stone image which looked
-uglier and more repulsive than ever. How such a hideous thing could be
-considered an ornament it puzzled me to think; but it occurred to me
-that there were more flagrant violations of art than this. On the
-previous day I had seen a ghastly death's-head pin in the cravat of a
-coxcomb, who seemed very proud of it. I set the image of the
-monkey-man on the mantelshelf, and slowly replaced the sketches in my
-box, lingering over them with fond regret.
-
-Among them I found a sketch with the name of 'Anthony Bullpit' at the
-foot, and I remembered that it was a fancy drawing I had made of my
-grandmother's lover, after reading the account of his arrest by the
-detective Vinnicombe, elsewhere narrated; a sneaking figure was
-Anthony Bullpit, as I had represented him, with his hang-dog look and
-hypocritical face, gnawing at his finger-nails. I pushed it out of
-sight, and turned again to the contemplation of my sketches of Jessie,
-over which I spent a sad and tender quarter of an hour. Then, with a
-sigh, I closed the box and locked it, and went to bed. It was my habit
-of a night to lie awake for a few minutes with the candle alight on a
-chair close to my bed. Generally I passed these minutes in reading,
-but on this night 'I lay a-thynkinge,' and did not open my book.
-Directly opposite the head of my bed was the mantelshelf, with the
-smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone on it, and this was the last
-thing that presented itself to my sight before I blew out the light.
-Restless as I was with the events of the evening, and with the
-conversation which had taken place between my mother and myself, I was
-tired enough to fall asleep within a very few moments. But I was not
-too tired to dream; my body was asleep, but my imagination was never
-more active. To me, the most wonderful feature in the physiology of
-dreams has always been the fact that Time, the dominant and inexorable
-tyrant which rules and guides our course, and regulates the passions
-and emotions of life, is in our sleep utterly set at naught; a
-lifetime is compressed in a moment, as it were, and between waking and
-sleeping a hundred years of history are played out. I think I must
-have dreamt of every important event in my life, and of many in the
-lives of others; they presented themselves to me without coherence or
-sequence, and there was but one consistent feature in my fancies--the
-figure of the monkey-man, which was never absent. I dreamt of
-Snaggletooth and Snaggletooth's wife. She was relating the stories of
-the Cock-lane Ghost and Old Mother Shipton, as she had related them in
-the kitchen on the night my father lay dying upstairs, but in my
-dream she was not speaking to me, but to the monkey-image, which
-gravely wagged its head at her as she proceeded; Snaggletooth was
-running up and down the stairs, and poking in the oddest corners, in
-his search for the long stocking, and the monkey-man was assisting him
-frantically, running at his heels, and tearing things open with
-fiendish haste; I was in the mourning coach, following my father's
-body to the churchyard, and the monkey-man was sitting opposite to me,
-grinning at me; Snaggletooth was carrying me out of the churchyard,
-and as I opened my eyes, the monkey-man, squatting on Snaggletooth's
-shoulder, squinted at me. In the same way the image presented itself
-in every incident connected with Jessie and my mother and uncle Bryan;
-and when I lay trembling in bed, and Jane Painter stood in my bedroom
-in the dark telling me stories of blood and murder, the monkey-man
-prowled about the floor, and dropped from the ceiling, and crept from
-under my bed, and sat on my pillow with its ugly face illumined. When
-Jessie knocked at the shop-door, as she had done years ago for the
-first time, and my mother opened it, the monkey-man entered first, and
-jumped on to the table; and on the night of the amateur performance at
-Josey West's the monkey-man was among the audience, seated in a place
-of honour. Suddenly all this chaos of persons and circumstances came
-to an end, and there were only my grandmother, and I, and the
-monkey-figure sitting together. I was in my little low chair, my
-grandmother, very stately and grand, was in her armchair, and the
-monkey-man was on the mantelshelf. Said my grandmother in my dream, in
-a very distinct tone, 'He had a knob on the top of his head, and was
-always eating his nails.' I looked at the monkey-man for confirmation
-of her words, and it said, in a stony voice, 'He had a knob on the top
-of his head, and was always eating his nails.' After this
-confirmation, my grandmother continued, 'And the last time I set eyes
-on him was on my wedding-day.' Again I looked at the monkey-man, and
-again it confirmed my grandmother's statement, but with a slight
-difference this time, 'And the last time we set eyes on him was on our
-wedding-day.' Which inference on the part of the monkey-man of being
-my grandfather somewhat disturbed me. Now, at this point of my
-fancies, what on earth brought old Mac, the actor, into the scene?
-There he was, however, face to face with the monkey-man, who
-questioned him as a lawyer would have done. 'What do you say his name
-commences with?' asked the monkey-man? 'It commences with a G,'
-replied old Mac. 'And what is that habit of his that you say is a sign
-of ill-temper?' asked the monkey-man. 'Biting his nails,' replied old
-Mac; 'he is always at it.' By this time my dream has resolved itself
-into a court of inquiry; the monkey-man is dressed in a wig and gown,
-which do not hide his ugliness; my grandmother, very broad and portly,
-sits as judge, and I, it seems, am in some way the criminal whose case
-is being tried, for my grandmother nods her head at me continually,
-and says, 'Perhaps you will believe me now; all these things happened
-on my wedding-day.' Old Mac fades away, and is replaced by Turk West.
-'Curse all professional moneylenders, I say,' he cries; 'and if ever
-I believe again in a man with a handle on the top of his head, my
-name's not Turk West' 'Hold your tongue,' calls out the monkey-man;
-'who wants to know what your name is? We'll come to names presently.
-'When did you first discover the handle?' It isn't a handle,' says
-Turk, in correction, 'it's a knob.' My grandmother nods in
-confirmation. 'He had a knob on the top of his head,' she says, 'and
-he was always biting his nails.' 'I don't know about that,' says Turk,
-'but his fingers are always at his moustache, and he is the soul of
-honour and comes from a highly-respectable family.' 'That he does,'
-adds my grandmother. 'Poor Anthony! He proposed and wished to run away
-with me, but my family stepped in and prevented him.' 'Very wrong,'
-says Turk gravely; 'wasn't his family respectable enough for them? The
-soul of honour!' 'Quite so,' says my grandmother. 'He told me, after I
-had accepted this child's grandfather' (at this point of my dream I
-become suddenly a child, in a pinafore), 'that life was valueless to
-him without me, and that as he had lost me, he would be sure to go to
-the devil.' 'Did he go?' asks the monkey-man. 'I always found him a
-man of his word,' replies my grandmother. 'Now attend to me, sir,'
-cries the monkey-man, in a bullying tone, turning suddenly upon Turk;
-'when did you say you first discovered this knob?' 'Last week,'
-replies Turk, 'when he sat in that chair' (the chair comes into the
-dream) 'and told me to shampoo him.' 'You were surprised when you felt
-it?' asks the monkey-man. 'I was,' says Turk, 'and I asked him if he
-had knocked his head against something. He said, no, that he was born
-with it.' 'And what was the remark,' continues the monkey-man,
-levelling a threatening finger at me, 'you made to the prisoner at the
-bar?' 'I said,' says Turk, 'that that sort of thing runs in families,
-and that if he had it, his father must have had it before him.'
-Suddenly, and as if it were quite in the natural order of things, we
-are all listening to the statement of a new witness who has risen in
-Turk's place. 'I am an officer in the detective force, and my name is
-Vinnicombe. From information received, I went to Liverpool, and
-tracked Anthony Bullpit on board the Prairie Bird, bound for America.
-"It's no use making a noise about it," I says to him, as I slipped the
-handcuffs on him; "I want you, Anthony Bullpit. You sha'n't be done
-out of a voyage across the sea, but Botany Bay's the place as'll suit
-you best, I should think." Here my grandmother brindles up, 'You're an
-infamous designing creature,' she screams. 'He is no more guilty than
-I am.' 'He pleads guilty at all events,' is the detective's reply.
-'That is to spite me,' says my grandmother, 'and to prove that he's a
-man of his word.' Then, by quite an easy transition, the court and the
-crowd fade away, and my grandmother, I, and the monkey-figure are
-again in the little parlour, and she is saying to me, 'Your
-grandfather has much to answer for, child. Mr. Bullpit was transported
-for twenty-one years. Some wicked people said it was a mercy he wasn't
-hanged. If he had been, I should never have survived it. Poor
-Anthony!' 'You would like to have a peep at him, I daresay,' says the
-monkey-man to me, my grandmother having disappeared; 'come along, I'll
-show him to you.' And in the same moment we are peeping through the
-keyhole of Turk West's shop-door at the figure of Mr. Glover, who sits
-in the chair with his fingers at his lips. Here a sudden movement or
-noise partially awakes me.
-
-With all the details of this strange dream in my mind I lay for a few
-moments half asleep and half awake, endeavouring to bring the confused
-particulars into some kind of order; but the only thing that was clear
-to me was the connection that had been created between Anthony Bullpit
-and Mr. Glover. As I gradually returned to full consciousness, this
-connection seemed to become something more than a fancy. That the knob
-on Anthony Bullpit's head, of which I heard so much from my
-grandmother's lips in my young days, was reproduced, according to Turk
-West's testimony, on the head of Mr. Glover, was certainly no fancy;
-Anthony Bullpit bit his nails; Mr. Glover had the same objectionable
-habit. Stranger discoveries were made every day than the discovery
-that Mr. Glover was Anthony Bullpit's son. If this were so, what
-became of Mr. Glover's boast that there was not a stain upon his good
-name, and that his character and the character of all his family were
-above reproach? It occurred to me here that his ardent desire to make
-people believe this sprang from the fact that he had something
-disreputable to conceal. What made me so anxious in the matter was,
-that if there were a solid foundation to the suspicion, and if I could
-prove a connection between Mr. Glover and Anthony Bullpit the convict,
-then I had a lever in my hands which I could use to good effect
-against Mr. Glover--a lever which I believed would cause him at once
-to cease his attentions to Jessie. That he had laid her under an
-obligation to him was evident, and he might be inclined to persecute
-her in consequence. The lever I speak of was the printed account by
-Vinnicombe, the detective, of the arrest and conviction of Anthony
-Bullpit for the robbery from the bank.
-
-I rose and lit the candle, and taking the mouldy old paper from the
-hollow of the stone monkey-figure, I read it carefully. I was
-particularly struck in the reading by the description given by the
-detective of the peculiarity in Anthony Bullpit's teeth. If that
-peculiarity existed in the teeth of Mr. Glover, it would be almost
-impossible to resist the conviction that he was Anthony Bullpit's son.
-I set to work at once, and made a fair copy of the 'Remarkable
-Discovery of a Forger by the Celebrated Detective, Mr. Vinnicombe.' At
-nine o'clock in the morning I was in Turk West's shop, with the
-manuscript in my pocket.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVII.
-EXIT MR. GLOVER.
-
-
-Turk regarded me with surprise.
-
-'An early visitor, Chris,' he said.
-
-'Yes,' I answered; 'I have come on some very particular business. When
-do you pay the balance of your debt to Mr. Glover?'
-
-'I expect him here at twelve o'clock. I shall pay him then.'
-
-'Can you give me half an hour or so of your undivided attention,
-Turk?'
-
-'Certainly I can: a couple of hours, if you want them.'
-
-'Then sit down, and read this quietly,' I said, handing him the
-Remarkable Confession, 'and don't make a remark upon it until you have
-finished.'
-
-He read it attentively, and returned it to me with a thoughtful look.
-
-'It is cut from an old newspaper, printed a good many years ago, Turk.
-Do you find anything singular in it?'
-
-'I do; something very singular indeed; but how on earth did you come
-across it, Chris?'
-
-'I will tell you another time. First, I want to know what it is that
-strikes you as singular in the account.'
-
-'Well, Chris, there's the knob in this Bullpit's head----'
-
-'Yes, Turk.'
-
-'Mr. Glover has one precisely similar on his head.'
-
-I could scarcely restrain the expression of my satisfaction at this
-proof that, without prompting, his thoughts were taking the same
-direction as mine.
-
-'Yes, you told me so, Turk; and that sort of thing runs in families,
-you said.'
-
-'I did say so, and I think so.'
-
-'Mr. Glover said he was born with it.'
-
-'Yes, he told me so distinctly,' said Turk, with a puzzled look.
-
-'That's all right, then. What else do you find singular in it, Turk?'
-
-'Well, there's that habit of Anthony Bullpit's of biting his nails.
-Mr. Glover does the same.'
-
-'Yes; anything else?' I asked eagerly.
-
-'Well, Chris, the teeth. Mr. Glover's two middle teeth in his top jaw
-have just the kind of slit between them that caused the detective to
-discover Anthony Bullpit, for all his disguise.'
-
-I uttered an exclamation of triumph.
-
-
-'Now, what do you make of all this, Turk? Do you think it possible
-that such remarkable peculiarities can exist in two men without there
-being a relationship between them? Turk, as sure as I stand here, Mr.
-Glover is Anthony Bullpit's son. Don't interrupt me. If he is a
-convict's son, what becomes of his good character and his unblemished
-name, of which he is always preaching, as you know? He trades upon it,
-Turk--he trades upon it; and if it were made public that his father
-was a forger and a convicted thief, it would be the greatest blow he
-could receive. This man is a scoundrel, Turk; a scoundrel and a
-hypocrite.'
-
-I believe he is, Chris,' said Turk, carried away probably by my hot
-words; but what good can come of exposure--what good to you, I mean?
-
-'Why, Turk, are you blind? Can't you see that I can make the best use
-in the world of this strange discovery?'
-
-I told him rapidly what had passed between old Mac and me, and the
-opinion which the old actor entertained of Mr. Glover, and then I
-developed my own plan of action.
-
-'It is very simple, Turk. I want Mr. Glover immediately to cease his
-attentions to Jessie, whose eyes, according to old Mac's account, have
-only lately been opened to his real character. Jessie, I have no
-doubt, is under obligations to him; and he may take advantage of this
-to persecute her. If he does this, I shall expose him; but I shall
-first give him a chance of withdrawing himself voluntarily. I think
-there will be no reason to fear that he will prove an active enemy;
-the proof that I hold will take the sting out of him----'
-
-'But,' interposed Turk, 'what if these personal marks should be mere
-coincidences, and no relationship exists between Anthony Bullpit and
-Mr. Glover?'
-
-'We shall learn that very soon,' I replied. 'I shall send him this
-copy of the Remarkable Discovery with a few words of my own. If he is
-quiet after their receipt, we may be sure that our suspicions are
-correct. I know that he is a scoundrel--I have been convinced of that
-all along, Turk, notwithstanding your defence of him--and I believe
-him to be a coward. We shall see. Will you let me be present while you
-are paying him the balance you owe him?'
-
-'I have no objection, Chris.'
-
-'And if I happen to say something to him--something to the
-point--you'll not mind, perhaps.'
-
-'Say whatever you like, Chris, my boy.'
-
-'I want a promise from you, Turk. Not a word of all this to Jessie.'
-
-'All right, Chris.'
-
-Exactly at twelve o'clock Mr. Glover entered the shop. I was in the
-back-room, and I listened quietly to the few words that passed, in the
-course of which Turk told Mr. Glover that he was enabled to pay him
-the balance of the account between them. Mr. Glover said that it might
-stand, if Turk wished, but Turk insisted on paying him, and produced
-the money. As Mr. Glover was signing the receipt to the bond, Turk
-threw open the door of the room in which I was sitting, and said,
-
-'Chris, perhaps you would not mind witnessing Mr. Glover's signature.'
-
-Mr. Glover looked up with anger in his face, and our eyes met. I
-quietly placed my name on the paper as a witness, and then, with a
-glance at Mr. Glover's signature, I handed the paper to Turk.
-
-'So now, Turk,' I said, with a smile, 'I am your creditor instead of
-Mr. Glover.'
-
-I saw that Turk did not understand why I made this apparently
-unnecessary statement.
-
-'Oh,' said Mr. Glover, with a sneer, 'it is your money, then, with
-which Turk West has paid his debt!'
-
-'Yes,' I replied. 'Turk is safer in my hands than in the hands of a
-moneylender who charges sixty per cent. What was it you said
-yesterday, Turk? Curse all professional moneylenders, wasn't it? So
-say I.'
-
-Mr. Glover glanced from me to Turk, and from Turk to me, while his
-face grew dark with passion.
-
-'I have been thinking, Turk,' I continued, regarding Mr. Glover
-steadily, what would be the value of a receipt for money paid,
-supposing the name of the person at the foot of the paper is not his
-own. How would it stand in law, Mr. Glover? Supposing a person whose
-real name was Bullpit----'
-
-I saw instantly that the shot had taken effect The dark shade of
-passion disappeared from Mr. Glover's face, which was now quite white.
-Added to this, the startled exclamation which escaped him was a
-sufficient confirmation.
-
-'You shall hear from me,' he said, in a thick voice, as he turned to
-leave the shop.
-
-'You shall hear from me first,' I replied; within two hours I will
-leave a letter for you at your house.'
-
-I wrote my letter at once in Turk's shop. The substance of it was that
-I enclosed a copy of an account of the arrest and conviction of a
-criminal well known in Hertford many years ago; that this criminal had
-on his person peculiar marks which were almost certain to be
-transmitted to his children; that the history of this criminal was
-known only to me and Turk West; that the secret of it would be
-faithfully kept if the person to whom my letter was addressed would
-immediately cease to honour with his attentions any of the lady
-friends of the writer; and that if this condition were not accepted
-and carried out in its full letter and spirit, means would be
-immediately adopted for making public the Remarkable Discovery, and
-the subsequent history of the forger and thief. I did not mention any
-names, but Turk West said that Mr. Glover would understand my meaning.
-I left the letter with its enclosure at Mr. Glover's house, and
-received no answer. Three days afterwards Turk came to tell me that
-Mr. Glover had left on a tour to Germany.
-
-'I have other news for you as well,' he said; the theatre in which
-Jessie was to have appeared is let to a French Company for three
-months.'
-
-I asked Turk no questions, remembering what he had said as to his
-being on his parole, but I worked that day with a heart less sad than
-it had been for many a long month past.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVIII.
-JOSEY WEST LAMENTS HER CROOKED LEGS.
-
-
-Exactly three weeks had passed since Mr. Glover's departure, and I
-here take the opportunity of mentioning that, although I have seen the
-gentleman subsequently on two or three occasions, we have avoided each
-other by mutual consent--a state of things with which I am perfectly
-contented. The connection between him and Turk West is also completely
-severed, so that he has, as it were, dropped out of our lives. During
-the above-mentioned interval, nothing of importance transpired; my
-mind was busy with possibilities, but I saw no clear way of playing an
-active part in their development. My mother during this time, and
-especially during the past week, had been out a great deal. I guessed
-that she was still searching for uncle Bryan, and I should have been
-happy to learn from her lips that she had been successful in finding
-him. Within a few days of the time of which I am writing, I
-entertained a suspicion that she had found a clue, for when she came
-home her eyes were bright, and there was an expression of great
-happiness in her face; but I said nothing to her. I knew that I should
-soon hear good news if she had any to tell. The special direction of
-my thoughts may easily be understood by an observation I made to my
-mother one afternoon at the end of the three weeks.
-
-'Mother,' I said, 'I think you ought to go and see Jessie.'
-
-She looked up with glad eyes.
-
-'Some feeling with regard to myself,' I continued, 'may prevent Jessie
-from coming to you here, and I think it would be a good thing for you
-to go to her. I know she loves you and would be glad to see you, and
-you may be able to counsel and advise her. Turk West knows where she
-lives, and, although he would not tell me if I asked him, I believe he
-would tell you readily.'
-
-'Do you think so, dear child?' she asked. 'Then I will go to him, and
-tell him what you say.'
-
-The voice is a great tell-tale, and I knew by the tune in which my
-mother spoke that my suggestion had given her pleasure.
-
-'There is no time like the present,' I said.
-
-My mother rose immediately, and put on her bonnet.
-
-'I shall leave off work at eight o'clock,' I said, so that she might
-understand I did not wish her to hurry back, and then I shall go round
-to Josey West for an hour.'
-
-She nodded, and stood looking over my shoulder as I worked.
-
-'If I see Jessie,' she said, and paused.
-
-'Yes, mother, if you see her---- I hope you will see her.'
-
-'I hope so too, dear child. Shall I give her any message from you?'
-
-'Not unless she asks after me, mother; then you may give her my love.'
-
-There was the merest trembling in my voice as I said this, but it was
-sufficient to agitate my mother's soul. I laid my graver aside, and
-said,
-
-'You see how it is, mother; I cannot do or act otherwise. Jessie could
-not know more about me and my feelings if I stood at her door all day
-long. I never loved her more than I do now, and I believe I shall
-never love her less; it would not be true if I said I was happy, but I
-am far happier than I deserve to be. My mother is still left to me,
-thank God!'
-
-'Dear child! dear child!' she murmured, with tender caresses.
-
-'And you must not think it strange, mother, if I don't ask you
-questions when you come back. You will tell me whatever is worth
-telling. Now, one other word, and then you must run away, for I have
-work to finish. Should you meet with uncle Bryan----'
-
-'Would you wish me to, my dear?' she asked wistfully.
-
-'Yes,' I answered; I should like you to find him. If you do, give him
-my love also, and say that I should like to come to see him, if he
-will not come to us. And, remember, mother, if he wants for anything,
-all that I have is his; but for him I should not have been in my
-present position. As for the past, let bygones be bygones. As
-Americans would say, I should be truly happy to shake hands with him
-on that platform.'
-
-My mother kissed me, and went out of the room. I thought she had
-started on her errand, but she returned in a quarter of an hour, with
-a bunch of wallflowers in her hand.
-
-'I only came in to show you these, my dear,' she said; 'smell
-them--they are very sweet. You have not studied the language of
-flowers, have you, my dear?'
-
-'No, mother.'
-
-'Then you don't know what wallflowers stand for,' she said, with a
-bright smile. 'Now this is for you, my dear; it is the first rose I
-have seen;' and placing on my table a small rose embedded in moss, she
-left the room again. I watched her from the window as she walked down
-the street; she walked almost like a girl.
-
-On my way to Josey West in the evening, I passed the house in which I
-had first made her acquaintance. The door being opened, I entered, and
-found the place in an unusual bustle. Florry and her younger sisters
-were dusting and cleaning up, and putting the rooms in order. In
-explanation, Florry told me that their eldest brother, Sheridan, was
-coming to live there with his wife and children.
-
-'They come in next week,' said Florry; and I daresay Clarance and his
-family will follow them; they have always lived together, and they
-won't like to be parted now. There's plenty of room for them all.'
-
-'The place will look like its old self again,' I said to Josey West, a
-few minutes later on; and I added, with a sigh, 'and you'll be having
-the jolly old times over again, I shouldn't wonder.'
-
-'I shouldn't wonder, either,' replied the little woman briskly. 'Do
-you know, Chris, there's one thing I do miss--the Sunday evenings we
-used to have in the old house. Now that Sheridan is coming, we'll
-revive the Sunday-night suppers. You'll come, won't you, and bring
-your dear mother. She's never been to one of our parties. Upon my
-word, I feel quite happy only in thinking of them. There's Sheridan
-and his seven youngsters, and Clarance with his five--another one
-added, Chris, a fortnight ago--the sweetest little thing! Well, I do
-love to have a lot of children about me. When I die, an old woman--I
-shall be the queerest little old woman _you_ ever set eyes on,
-Chris!--well, when I die, an old, old woman, I should like to see
-heaps of children round me, so that I might take the memory of their
-bright little faces away with me. It isn't often that I talk
-seriously, but I've got that fancy.'
-
-'You ought to have children of your own, Josey.'
-
-Josey was stitching and mending some of the youngsters' clothes, and,
-at my remark, she paused and looked at me pensively; but the next
-moment she gave such a vicious dig with her needle that she broke it,
-and cried,
-
-'Ought to have! Ought to have! Me, with my crooked legs! No, my dear,
-never, never, never! Little witches don't have children. Never, never,
-never!' And for the first time in my experience of her, Josey West
-burst out crying. Her passion did not last long; she conquered it
-within a couple of minutes, and, as she wiped her eyes, exclaimed,
-
-'There! A nice little fool you'll think me now, Chris!'
-
-I gave her a kiss, and in a little while she was herself again,
-rattling away as usual.
-
-'I'm going to sleep in the old house every night,' she said, until
-Sheridan takes possession; and Turk is coming here to sleep, and to
-mind the shop, if I want to get away a bit earlier. I wish Turk would
-marry. I should like to take care of his children. He's a real good
-sterling fellow is Turk, and deserves a happy home. Your mother was
-here this afternoon, Chris. She told me all that you said to her.'
-
-'You guess, I daresay, what my reason is in wishing her to see
-Jessie.'
-
-Josey West laughed. 'I guess, you daresay! Well, yes, I can guess,
-although I am not in love.'
-
-I shook my head. 'I don't think you have guessed, Josey. It is not for
-myself that I want mother and Jessie to come together again.'
-
-'What other reason can you have, my sweet sensitive child?'
-
-'Oh, I don't mind your bantering me, Josey. Do you remember sending me
-a letter from uncle Bryan addressed to mother, when we were away at
-Hertford?'
-
-'Yes; and I wondered at the time what such a thick letter could be all
-about.'
-
-'It contained a great secret, Josey, and a very wonderful story
-concerning Jessie.'
-
-'Indeed!' said Josey, with a cautious look at me.
-
-'I think there is no harm in telling you, especially as you'll not
-speak of it.'
-
-'Oh, you may trust me, Master Chris.'
-
-'It is a story concerning Jessie and her father.'
-
-'Indeed! So Jessie has a father.'
-
-'You would never guess who her father is, Josey.'
-
-'Then I won't break my head over it; but I shall know if you tell me.'
-
-Uncle Bryan is her father; so that you see Jessie and I are cousins.'
-
-Josey did not express the surprise I expected she would; an expression
-of thoughtfulness was in her face.
-
-'Go on, Chris; I am waiting to hear more.'
-
-'Well, neither Jessie nor uncle Bryan knew of the relationship
-existing between them until the day that Jessie went away from this
-house, and then it came upon them both like a thunderbolt. It was
-because Jessie discovered that uncle Bryan was her father that she ran
-away from him.'
-
-'That sounds very dreadful, Chris.'
-
-'There is a dreadful story attached to it--which I mustn't tell you
-nor anybody, Josey. They are both very much to be pitied; but I am not
-sure that I don't pity uncle Bryan more than I do Jessie. However,
-there it is; they are father and daughter, and they are separated.
-Never mind what has passed, I ask you is this right--is it natural?
-Uncle Bryan is an old man, and cannot have many years to live. That he
-repents many things he has been unconsciously guilty of in the past, I
-am certain.'
-
-'That's a curious phrase,' interrupted Josey, with her thoughtful
-manner still upon her. 'Unconsciously guilty.'
-
-'It is a correct one. His has not been conscious guilt; what was bad
-in his character was stamped in him, and was almost forced to take
-root by the unfortunate circumstances in his early life; what was good
-never had a chance. We all have good and bad in us, Josey, and
-surrounding circumstances have much to do in making one or the other
-predominate in our characters. What is that thought that crossed your
-eyes just now, Josey?'
-
-'I was thinking that you have grown into a perfect philosopher, Chris.
-Go on.'
-
-'Say that uncle Bryan had been blessed with such a mother as my mother
-is--he would have been a different man; he couldn't have helped being
-a better man. He would have believed in God, in goodness; he would not
-have grown into a misanthrope. Josey, if there is anything good in
-me--and I hope I am not all bad--I have mother only to thank for it.
-It makes me tremble to think that I was so nearly losing her, and that
-her love for me was very nearly her death; and I know, to my sorrow,
-that for a long time I repaid her affection with indifference. Well,
-but that is all over now, thank God. If uncle Bryan had had a good,
-tender, considerate mother, many unhappy things would not have
-occurred to him, and it might have been better for Jessie also. As I
-said, it is dreadful to think of father and daughter being separated
-as they are, and to think that uncle Bryan might die without a word of
-affection passing between them. Well, that was the thought in my mind
-when I said to mother to-day that she ought to go to Jessie; for if
-mother finds uncle Bryan--and I have an idea that she will--no one but
-she can bring him and Jessie together.'
-
-'But you didn't tell your mother this, Chris?'
-
-'No; mother did not need telling. She knew my meaning well enough.
-Words are not required between us now, Josey, to make us understand
-one another.'
-
-'And so, and so, and so,' said Josey, with tender gaiety, when I
-had concluded, 'everything having been made right, they lived happily
-together for ever afterwards.'
-
-It was with sadness I remembered that those were the very words which
-Jessie had spoken to me in the little parlour in which Josey and I
-were now conversing.
-
-'Now I'm a witch,' cried Josey, 'and I'll give you three wishes. What
-are they?'
-
-I looked at her reproachfully, but she did not heed me. She hobbled
-about as witches are in the habit of doing on the stage, and waved the
-poker over my head, and conducted herself generally in a ridiculous
-manner.
-
-'Halo!' cried Turk, poking his head in at the door. 'What are you
-about with your pokers? What a pity I didn't come in a minute later!
-There's an account I could have written for the papers! "The first
-thing that met Our Correspondent's view was the distended"--distended
-is good, Chris, my boy; I've seen it used so--"was the distended form
-of the unfortunate victim on the ground, winking his last gasp. Over
-him stood the infuriated figure of a woman, who, with glistening eyes
-and rage in her countenance, was brandishing the murderous weapon--an
-enormous crowbar, weighing fifty-three pounds--preparatory to giving a
-last fell stroke to the prostrate form at her feet." That's the style,
-Chris; a penny a line. Spin it out--_must_ have at least two columns.
-"Upon inquiry among the neighbours, who stood in clusters about the
-building in which the murderous deed was perpetrated, Our
-Correspondent learned that jealousy was the cause of the fatal
-assault. It appears that thirteen years ago there lived in a certain
-street, called et cetera, et cetera, et cetera." Now, after that,
-Chris, if you start an illustrated paper, and don't employ me as
-Special Correspondent, I shall have a bad opinion of your judgment.'
-
-I was relieved by this diversion, and upon Turk proposing that we
-should pay a visit to the Royal Columbia Theatre, in which he had
-played the first villain for so long a time, I gladly assented.
-
-I left a message for my mother, desiring her to wait with Josey until
-I returned, and Turk and I strolled to the theatre. I found not the
-slightest alteration either in the theatre, the audience, or the
-performance; they were all the same--the same atmosphere, the same
-fashions, the same pieces with different names. The very dresses were
-the same; but I was bound to confess that the First Villain was vastly
-inferior to Turk, who, I learned, had left a reputation behind him
-which would last while the walls held together. We did not stay longer
-than an hour, and then, as we had done on the occasion of my first
-visit to the Royal Columbia, we visited a neighbouring bar, and over
-our pewter pots listened and took part in a precisely similar
-conversation to that which I had listened to with such respectful
-admiration and attention after the performance of the thrilling drama
-of _The Knight of the Sable Plume_. The decadence of the drama, the
-low ebb of dramatic literature, the glorious days of Garrick and
-Kemble, the inferior parts which men and women of genius were
-compelled to play upon the mimic stage, the false positions which
-pretenders were puffed into by venal critics who ignored real
-talent--these were the themes touched upon; and I began to reflect
-whether this state of things was chronic in the profession, and
-whether, when the golden age of the drama is in its full meridian, the
-decadence of the drama will not be spoken of as mournfully as it is in
-the present day.
-
-My mother was waiting for me when I returned; but although she was
-exceptionally bright and happy, and although there was a tenderly
-joyous significance in her words and manner towards me, she said
-nothing of the result of her visit to Jessie.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIX.
-UNCLE BRYAN AGAIN.
-
-
-'Chris,' says my mother to me, on the following day, can you leave off
-work an hour earlier this evening?'
-
-'Yes, mother,' I replied; 'at six o'clock if you like.'
-
-'Then at six o'clock,' she says gaily, 'I shall take possession of
-you.'
-
-As the hour strikes, she comes to my side, dressed for walking. 'No
-tea, mother?' I ask.
-
-'We are going out to tea, my dear,' she answers.
-
-I keep her waiting but a very few minutes, and presently we are in the
-streets. I know that something of importance is about to be disclosed
-to me, and that it will please my mother to be allowed to disclose it
-in her own way; therefore I hazard no conjectures, and we talk on
-indifferent subjects. But this does not prevent me from working
-myself into a state of agitation as to the precise nature of our
-errand. We take the omnibus to Holborn, and from there we walk towards
-Bedford-square. My mother leads the way down a clean narrow street,
-and we pause before a small three-storied house.
-
-'Somebody lives here that we know,' says my mother, as she knocks at
-the door.
-
-'Can it be Jessie?' I ask of myself, as I glance upwards. There are
-flowers on the window-sills of the first and third floor; those on the
-first floor are especially fine, and almost entirely cover the
-windows. It is on the third floor we stop when we enter the house.
-
-'Remember what you said to me, my dear,' my mother whispers as we
-enter the room. There is no one to receive us, but my Mother goes into
-an inner room, and comes out of it presently, and motions me with a
-tender smile to go in. I enter alone; an old man with white hair is
-standing by the window, looking towards the door. A grave expression
-is on his face, which is deeply lined; I recognise uncle Bryan
-immediately, although he is much changed. I had had in my mind a
-lingering hope that my mother was taking me to see Jessie; but in the
-pleasure of seeing uncle Bryan I lose sight for a few moments of my
-disappointment.
-
-'Uncle,' I say, as I advance towards him with outstretched hand. He
-meets me half-way, and clasps my hand eagerly in his, and then turns
-aside with quivering lips, still holding my hand. I know that he has
-noticed both my pleasure and my disappointment, and I hope it is not
-the latter that causes him to turn aside.
-
-I have said that he is changed, but I find it difficult to explain
-in what way he is different from what he was. It is not that his
-hair has grown quite white during the months that we have been parted,
-it is not that his form is bowed, or that his features are more
-deeply-lined; the same shrewd thoughtful expression is there, but in
-some undefinable way it is softened, and although the old look of
-self-reliance is in his eyes, it is less hard than it was. As I
-silently note these changes, I am reminded of a passage I read a few
-days before this meeting, in which a man is said to have had in his
-face an expression which might have been brought there by the touch of
-angel fingers on his eyelids while he slept.
-
-'I received your message yesterday, my dear boy,' he says presently.
-'Your mother brought it straight to me. It gladdened my heart
-inexpressibly.'
-
-Then I know that my mother must have been in the habit of visiting him
-for some time; it does not surprise me to learn this; every day of her
-life brings me fresh proofs of her goodness.
-
-'How long ago was it, uncle,' I ask, 'since mother discovered where
-you were living?'
-
-'Quite a month, my dear boy,' he replies, and adds quickly, 'it was my
-wish that she should say nothing to you until I gave her permission.'
-
-I smile softly at this defence of her.
-
-'She can do nothing wrong,' I say. 'I think I know the spirit that
-lives in the hearts of angels.'
-
-My mother, who is preparing tea for us, peeps in here.
-
-'Do you forgive me, my dear?' she says. 'You never thought your mother
-would deceive you, I daresay.'
-
-'I shall have to consider very seriously,' I say, kissing her, 'before
-I can pronounce an opinion on your conduct. There are some things that
-take a long time in learning.'
-
-She stands between us, embracing us, glancing with tearful eyes from
-one to the other.
-
-'But I must make haste, and get tea ready,' she cries, running away
-from us; 'there! the kettle's boiling over.'
-
-'Which is the better kind of wisdom, uncle,' I say; 'that which comes
-from the head or the heart?'
-
-He answers: 'That which touches us most deeply, which makes us kinder,
-more tender and tolerant, less harsh and dogmatic, more charitable and
-merciful, must be the better kind of teaching. All this springs from
-the heart. You said to your mother just now that some things take a
-long time in learning. I have been all my life learning a lesson, and
-have but now, when I am near my grave, mastered it. In plays, in
-poems, in stories, in songs, those words and sentiments which appeal
-to the heart are invariably most effective. You see, my dear boy, my
-views are changed.'
-
-After this he asks me about myself, and I tell him what has passed,
-and he listens with pleasure and patience, as though he had not
-already heard it all from my mother's lips--but I do not think of this
-at the time.
-
-'You have not mentioned Jessie's name,' he says, 'thinking perhaps it
-would pain me; but I can speak of her without grief, if not without
-sadness. I have only one wish in life now, my dear lad.'
-
-Believing that he refers to a reconciliation between himself and
-Jessie, and having full faith in my mother's power to bring this
-about, I say that I earnestly hope it will be fulfilled, and that I
-believe it will be. He gazes at me with a soft light in his eyes.
-
-'You know in what relation she stands to me, Chris?'
-
-'Yes, uncle.'
-
-If I could give her to you, my dear boy----'
-
-But I stop him here, and beg him in scarcely distinct words not to
-continue the subject.
-
-'But one word, Chris,' he says; 'you love her still?'
-
-'With all my heart, uncle, and shall all my life. But it hurts me to
-speak of her; I can bear it better in silence.'
-
-My mother calls out that tea is ready, and once more we three sit down
-together.
-
-'I miss the little parlour,' my mother says; 'how many happy years we
-lived there!'
-
-She forgets all the sorrow and pain we experienced there, and recalls
-only the tenderest reminiscences. Occasionally a flash of uncle
-Bryan's old humour gives piquancy to the conversation, but there is
-now no bitterness or cynicism in what he says. At eight o'clock my
-mother puts on her bonnet; I am surprised that we are going so early,
-but she says it is a fine night and that she feels inclined for a
-walk.
-
-'Uncle Bryan will walk with us,' I say.
-
-My mother shakes her head, smilingly, and says she does not want him.
-I look towards uncle Bryan; he does not seem in the least disturbed.
-
-'We shall see each other again soon,' he says, as he shakes hands with
-me on the doorstep of his house.
-
-'You will come to us, then,' I say eagerly. 'I want to show you my
-work.'
-
-'Yes, I will come very soon; but your mother will see to everything,
-Chris.'
-
-'There is one thing I want particularly to ask you, uncle, if you'll
-not mind.'
-
-'Say it, my dear boy.'
-
-'Living here, all alone, as you are doing,' I say, and I pause
-somewhat awkwardly.
-
-He assists me.
-
-'Yes, my dear boy--living here all alone, as I am doing----'
-
-'I was thinking it must be very lonely for you, uncle.'
-
-'It is a lonely life, Chris, living by oneself.'
-
-'And without any friends near you.'
-
-'Yes, my dear boy.'
-
-'I want you to give up these rooms, uncle, and come and live with us,
-or if you wouldn't like to do that, to go back to your shop.'
-
-His eyes brighten; my mother's eyes also are beaming.
-
-'It would be a pity to take the shop away from that good little woman,
-Josey West. And you would really like me to come and live with you
-again?'
-
-'It would make us very happy--mother especially. Look at her face.'
-
-'With all my eccentricities and oddities, you would still wish me to
-come?'
-
-'Ah, but you are altered now.' He makes a grimace. 'Well, even if you
-were not, I should be very, very glad if you will come. You can give
-me lessons in flower-growing.'
-
-I glance up to the windows in which the flowers were blooming. His
-eyes follow mine.
-
-'Which do you think the best, Chris; those on the first or those on
-the third floor?'
-
-'On the first floor certainly, and I am surprised at it. I thought no
-one could beat you. Mother was never so successful as you were. Your
-flowers were always the finest.'
-
-He rubs his hand, and says,
-
-'Well, we shall see, we shall see.' And then, more earnestly, 'I am
-glad you have asked me, Chris; I was wishing for it. Good-night now;
-we'll talk of it by and by.'
-
-As he seems evidently wishful to get rid of us, and as my mother seems
-no less anxious to go, I take my leave. On our way home we pass a
-theatre, and my mother expresses a wish to enter; we go into the pit,
-and witness a French comic opera done into English. The performance is
-a good one, but is spoilt by the unnecessary introduction of some
-foreign dancers, whose coarse vulgarity and outrageous disregard for
-decency shock my mother. It is seldom that my mother goes to a
-theatre, and she says, as we come out,
-
-'If that is to become the fashion in theatres, I am more than glad
-that Jessie is not going on the stage.'
-
-'Then she is not going?' I ask eagerly.
-
-'Well, my dear,' replies my mother, with sudden reserve, 'it almost
-looks as if she had given up the idea.'
-
-At home I find a letter on the table. I open it and read:
-
-
-'Miss West presents her compliments to Mr. Christopher Carey, and will
-be happy to see him and his mother at nine o'clock to-morrow evening,
-at the Old House at Home.'
-
-
-'Why, mother,' I say, 'this is exactly like the note Josey sent to me
-when I first went to her place. I suppose she wants to have an evening
-in the old house before her brother Sheridan takes possession. I
-wonder if the kitchen is the same. I shall never forget my feelings
-when I saw it for the first time. You must come, mother, is a
-wonderful sight.'
-
-My mother smiles an assent.
-
-'I am glad you asked your uncle to come and live with us,' she says,
-as she wishes me good-night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER L.
-JOSEY WEST DISTURBS US IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT.
-
-
-'Well, Master Chris,' said Josey West, as my mother and I entered the
-kitchen on the following night, here are the old times come over
-again. Now, children, bustle about! Florry, take mother's shawl and
-bonnet.' (They all called her mother.) 'Ah, you're looking about you,
-my dear; they're a queer lot of things; but they belong to a queer lot
-of people. The first night Chris came here he bumped his head. I heard
-some one tumbling about in the passage, and I called out to know who
-was there. "It's Me," Master Chris answered, as if all the world knew
-who Me was. "Come downstairs, Mr. Me," I called; and down he came
-head over heels, and fell sprawling right in the middle of the
-kitchen. Ah, that was a night! Do you remember the scene from _As You
-Like It_, Master Chris, and how mad you were when Jessie said, "Ask me
-what you will, I will grant it;" and Gus said, "Then love me,
-Rosalind?" You thought no one knew what was going on inside that head
-of yours, but I saw it all as clear as clear can be. I'm a witch, my
-dear. Did you ever hear'--(she was addressing my mother now)--'that I
-played an old witch for an entire season? I did, and played it well; I
-could show you the notices I got in the papers on the day they
-contained all about the pantomimes, but you would think me vain if I
-did. What a big little woman I thought myself, to be sure! I thought
-all the world must know me as I walked along, and I cocked up my head,
-I can tell you. How we do puff ourselves out, we frogs! That's what I
-asked you that night, Master Chris, the name of that thing in the
-fable that puffed itself out and came to grief; and I remember saying
-that of all the conceited creatures in this topsy-turvy world actors
-and actresses are the worst; though I think I know some who are almost
-as bad. But to come back about Gus, my dear. You've no cause to be
-jealous of him; he's engaged, my dear--engaged! Here's her picture--a
-pretty little thing, isn't she? But Gus never would make love to a
-girl unless she was pretty, and he was always a bit of a flirt. He'll
-have to settle down now; his ogling days are over; this little bit of
-a thing has got hold of him as tight as a fish. They'll all be getting
-married directly--all of them except me and Turk perhaps--and he's the
-one I want to see married most of all. There's Florry there--what are
-you listening to, Florry?--you should see how the men are beginning to
-stare at her! and that sets a girl thinking, you know. As for Chris,
-he must be blind; I only know if I was a young man--But there! I'll
-say no more, or you'll be calling me as bad a gossip as Mrs. Simpson.
-Perhaps some one else would like to say a word or two?'
-
-And here Josey paused to take breath. I knew that she had only
-chattered on in this way for the purpose of giving me time to recover
-myself upon entering the kitchen; for as I looked around upon the old
-familiar walls, a flood of tender reminiscences had rushed upon my
-mind, and my eyes had filled with tears. Whether by design or
-accident, the kitchen presented exactly the same appearance as on the
-first night I had seen it. The old theatrical dresses and properties
-were on the walls; the dummy man in chain armour that had once played
-a famous part in a famous drama was lurking in a corner; the curtain
-of patchwork was hung on its line, dividing the stage from the
-auditorium; and Matty and Rosy and Nelly and Sophy were busy at work
-on stage dresses and adornments. My mother was delighted with all she
-saw, and caressed the children, who all doted on her, and pulled out
-of her pocket a packet of sweetmeats for them. Her brain could never
-have been idle; when she went on the simplest errand, she must have
-thought of it beforehand, and her affectionate thoughtful nature
-invariably made that errand pleasant to some one. Her wonderful
-thoughtfulness, wedded as it was to affection and unselfishness, was
-one of her greatest charms; it strewed her course through life with
-flowers which sprang up in barren places, and gladdened many a sad
-heart. I know that, between ourselves, every wish I formed was
-anticipated before I expressed it, and while the words explaining it
-were on my lips, she was scheming how it could be gratified. This
-charming and most beautiful quality--which in a home breeds love, and
-keeps it always sweet and fresh--was exhibited even on such an
-occasion as our present visit to Josey, in the pleasantest of ways. As
-my mother chatted with Josey, she handed one child the thread, another
-the wax, another something which the little one's eyes were seeking
-for; and all these things were done in the most natural manner, and
-without in the least disturbing her conversation with Josey. Trivial
-as these matters are, they are deserving of mention; happy must be
-that home which has such a spirit moving in its midst.
-
-'The youngsters are all at work, I see,' I said to Josey, when I had
-mastered my agitation; 'to fill up the time, I suppose.'
-
-'Not a bit of it, Master Chris,' replied Josey. 'Sophy and Rosy and
-Matty have an engagement to play in a new burlesque; they play the
-Three Graces--very little ones they will be, but it's a burlesque, you
-know--and very well they'll look. Now then, up with you, and go
-through the first scene.'
-
-The children jumped from their chairs, and went through the scene,
-speaking with pretty emphasis the few words intrusted to them, and
-dancing with infinite grace. It was amusing to witness the gravity
-with which they tucked up their dresses so as to show their
-petticoats, which looked more like ballet clothes than their brown
-frocks. We all applauded heartily.
-
-'Bravo! bravo!' cried Turk, who had entered during the scene. 'If the
-author isn't satisfied with that performance, then nothing will
-satisfy him. But nothing less than a hundred nights' run ever does
-satisfy an author--How are you, mother? How do you do, Chris, my boy?
-Well, Josey, old girl! No, nothing less than that ever does satisfy an
-author, who invariably says, when a piece is a failure, that the
-actors are muffs and don't know their business. But they get as good
-as they give; let actors alone for reckoning up an author. They know
-how much of the credit belongs to them, and how much to him.'
-
-Josey laughed merrily at this.
-
-'It almost always all belongs to the actor, Turk,' she said.
-
-'Of course it does, and very properly too. The audience say, when an
-actor makes a point, What a clever fellow the author is! They should
-read the stuff: they'd form a different opinion. Josey, do you know it
-is nearly ten o'clock?'
-
-A look of some meaning passed between Turk and Josey, and Josey
-desired the children to put away their work. Presently they all went
-to bed, my mother going with them at their express desire. Only Turk,
-Josey, and I were now in the kitchen. We talked on various subjects,
-not in the most natural way, as it appeared to me; I said little, not
-being inclined for conversation. Turk was somewhat thoughtful, and
-more than usually observant of me, but Josey was in the wildest of
-spirits, and laughed without apparent cause, and said the most absurd
-things.
-
-'I knew a lady,' she said, 'who played a character-part in a
-successful piece, which had an immense run; it was played for more
-than two hundred nights. She hadn't a great deal to say, but every
-time she spoke she either commenced or ended with "Bless my soul!"
-Now, if you will believe me, her "Bless my soul!" made the piece.
-Every time she said it the audience roared with laughter, and you
-could hear them as they went away from the theatre of a night saying,
-"Bless my soul!" to one another, and laughing, as if there was really
-something wonderfully comic in the words. It was a great misfortune to
-her, for her mind so ran upon it, that morning, noon, and night she
-was continually saying nothing but "Bless my soul!" until her friends
-got so wearied of it that they wished she hadn't a soul to bless. I
-slept with her one night, and all through her sleep she was talking to
-herself, and blessing her soul. It was the ruin of her as an actress;
-for always afterwards the people in the theatre called out, "Hallo!
-here conies Bless-my-soul!" and of course that spoilt the effect of a
-good many of her characters.'
-
-'But that's not as bad,' said Turk, 'as me when I played The Thug for
-seven months. Do you remember, Josey?'
-
-'Do I remember it?' Josey repeated, with a look of comic horror.
-'Haven't I cause to remember it? You see, Chris, he had to strangle
-people in the piece. How many every night, Turk?'
-
-'Seventeen,' he replied in a tone of great satisfaction.
-
-'He had to strangle seventeen people every night for seven months, my
-dear. Well, that made an impression upon him, and I daresay he began
-to look upon himself as a lawful strangler. I must say, that when he
-strangled the people on the stage, he did it in such a manner that no
-one could help believing that he enjoyed it.'
-
-'It was realistic acting, Josey,' said Turk complacently; 'that's what
-it was.'
-
-'It was a little too realistic for me,' observed Josey. 'For what do
-you think he did one night, Chris, my dear? He was living in this
-house at the time, and we all went to bed quite comfortably, after a
-heavy supper. Turk had had a great triumph that night, and the
-audience were so delighted with the way in which he strangled his
-victims, that they called him before the curtain more than once. We
-talked of it a great deal after supper. Well, in the middle of the
-night I woke up with a curious sensation upon me. Something seemed to
-be crawling towards me very stealthily. I listened in a terrible
-fright, and sure enough I heard something crawling in the room. I
-lit a candle quickly, you may be sure; and there I saw Turk in his
-nightshirt, as I'm a living woman, creeping about on the floor, as he
-was in the habit every night of creeping about on the stage in the
-character of The Thug. He was fast asleep, my dear. "Turk! Turk!" I
-cried, and I was about to jump out of bed and give him a good shaking,
-when he shouted, "Ha! ha! I have you! Die! die!" and he ran up to me.
-My dear, if I hadn't jumped out on the other side of the bed, and
-poured a jug of cold water down his back, I believe he would have
-strangled me. It woke him up, and a nice state he was in. Every night
-after that, until the run of the piece was over, and he was playing
-other characters, I locked him in his bedroom, and took away the key.
-I wasn't going to have the children strangled in their sleep, and Turk
-hanged for it. I used to go to the door of his room in the dead of
-night, and more than once I heard him crawling about on the floor,
-strangling imaginary people, with his "Ha! ha! Die! die!" He never
-knew anything of it, my dear, and used to come down to breakfast
-looking as innocent as a lamb.'
-
-Turk seemed to take pride in this narration.
-
-'It shows that I was in earnest,' he said. 'There's ten o'clock
-striking.'
-
-We listened in silence, and did not speak until the last echo had
-quite died away. Then I raised my head and saw that Josey was looking
-at me very earnestly.
-
-'Chris, my dear,' she said, somewhat nervously, 'you have good cause
-to remember the first night you came into this house.'
-
-'Indeed I have, Josey,' I replied.
-
-'I'm going to give you better cause to remember to-night. I'm a little
-witch, you know.' She hobbled about the kitchen, and, after going
-through some absurd pantomime, came and stood close behind me. I
-should have been inclined to laugh, but that Turk's serious face made
-me serious. 'Now, then,' she continued, placing her arms round my
-neck, and her hands upon my eyes, 'ever since I played that witch,
-I've had the idea that I could do magic things if I tried. I'm going
-to try now; shut your eyes, and wish.' She placed her lips close to my
-ear, and I thought she was about to whisper something, but she kissed
-me instead. I humoured her, and did not make an effort to free myself
-from her embrace. We must have remained in this position for fully two
-minutes, during which time I heard the door open and shut. When Josey
-removed her hands, I saw my mother sitting on one side, and uncle
-Bryan on the other. I held out my hand gladly to him; Josey clapped
-hers in delight.
-
-'It was a whim of this good little woman's,' said uncle Bryan, looking
-at Josey affectionately. 'And we were compelled to let her have her
-way. We owe her too much to refuse her anything.'
-
-'But you don't look as surprised as I thought you would, Master
-Chris,' exclaimed Josey, in a tone of assumed disappointment.
-
-'Well, the truth is, Josey,' I said, 'I saw uncle Bryan yesterday; so
-it is not so much of a surprise as you thought it would be.'
-
-'Oh, indeed!' she said.
-
-'And then again,' I said, taking her hand, 'do you think that anything
-kind from you can surprise me? No, indeed, Josey; we all have cause to
-know the goodness of your heart. I couldn't love a sister better than
-I love you.'
-
-'Did anybody ever hear the like of that!' she exclaimed, laughing and
-crying at one time. 'As if a single girl wanted to be loved like a
-sister! Never mind, Chris, my dear, don't mind what I say; you know
-what I mean. But, as the first act of my piece is not as successful as
-I thought it would be, I shall have nothing to do with the second. Oh,
-yes, it's in two acts, Chris!'
-
-Before I could speak, uncle Bryan took up her words.
-
-'It is another of this good little woman's whims, my dear boy,' he
-said, that we should all sleep in the old shop to-night, as we used to
-do, your mother, you, and I. It will only be for this one night,
-Chris, notwithstanding Josey's persuasion, for if all goes well, I
-shall regularly make over the business to her; and to-morrow morning
-she will take possession again.'
-
-'You have decided to come and live with us,' I said; 'that is good,
-isn't it, mother?'
-
-'We shall have time to talk over that to-night, my dear boy.'
-
-'Then the best thing you can do,' said Josey briskly, 'is to run away
-at once and settle it. I sha'n't be able to close my eyes until I know
-how it is all settled. There! Away with you!' And she fairly bustled
-us out of the house.
-
-'Let us walk slowly,' said uncle Bryan, 'it is a fine night, and I
-have something to say to you. Nay, Emma, don't walk away; I should
-like you to hear me. Chris, the words you addressed to me the last
-night we were together in the old shop have never left my mind. Do not
-interrupt me, my dear boy--I think I know what you wish to say. You
-would say that you spoke too strongly, and that you painted all that
-had passed in colours too vivid; let that be as it may, you spoke the
-truth. I recognised it then; I recognise and acknowledge it now. But
-the pain which I suffered--and I did suffer most keenly, my dear
-boy--was not so much for myself as for your dear mother, for I saw
-that every word you spoke wounded her tender heart. Had you seen this,
-you would have held your tongue, and I should have been spared a just
-punishment. Chris, I did not ask you yesterday, although it was in my
-mind to do so; I ask you now: have you forgiven me?'
-
-I was humbled by the humbleness of his tone and manner. It might have
-been a child who was pleading to me. I found it impossible to speak,
-but I threw my arms round his neck, and kissed him.
-
-'That is well, that is well,' he said; 'I have but one wish now--to
-repair the wrong I have done. You said that I had driven all hope of
-happiness from your heart; what kind of happiness should I experience
-if I could restore what I have robbed you of! Repentance is good;
-atonement is better!'
-
-I knew by his agitated tone how strong was his wish, and I pressed his
-hand. Silence was best at such a time.
-
-Shortly afterwards we arrived at the shop, and I saw a light gleaming
-through the shutters. To my surprise, uncle Bryan, instead of
-unlocking the door, knocked at it, and I found myself wondering who
-was inside; all the members of Josey West's family were at home in
-their old house. As uncle Bryan knocked, my mother grasped my hand
-tightly; I looked into her face, and saw in it an expression of love,
-so sweet and pure, and yet withal so wistful and yearning, that a wild
-unreasoning hope entered my heart. I could not have defined it, but it
-seemed to me that something good was about to occur. The door was
-opened from within, and uncle Bryan stood for a moment on the
-threshold. Before I could follow him my mother pulled my face down to
-hers, and kissed me more than once with great tenderness.
-
-'You are crying, mother,' I said; and then I thought that joy on
-entering the old shop, and sleeping again beneath its roof, had caused
-her tears.
-
-'God bless you, my darling!' she sobbed; 'God bless you!'
-
-We entered the shop; uncle Bryan was standing there alone; a light was
-in the little parlour.
-
-'Go in, Chris,' he said.
-
-'I went in, and there sat Jessie, working at the table. She looked
-towards me, with a smile that was tender and arch upon her lips. I
-passed my hands across my eyes, scarcely believing the evidence of my
-senses.
-
-'It is true, Chris,' she said, rising; 'are you not glad to see me?'
-
-I looked round for uncle Bryan and my mother; they were not in the
-room, and the door was closed behind me. Then I understood it all.
-
-'Have you come back for good, Jessie?' I asked.
-
-'I can't hear you,' she replied, 'you are so far away!'
-
-I stepped close to her side, and my arm stole round her waist; she
-sighed happily.
-
-'Have I come back for good?' she repeated. 'That is for you to decide,
-Chris.'
-
-'You are in earnest with me, Jessie?'
-
-She smiled. 'I saw you yesterday,' she said.
-
-'Where?'
-
-'When you came to see your uncle Bryan; I have been living in the same
-house, on the first floor, Chris, where the finest flowers are. Do you
-begin to understand?'
-
-'Tell me more, Jessie. Did mother know you were living there?'
-
-'Yes, and Josey West, and Turk also. Nearly all that money Turk
-borrowed of you was for me to pay what Mr. Rackstraw said I owed him.
-Would you have lent it to him if you had known?'
-
-'You must answer that question for me, Jessie,' I said, still
-uncertain of the happiness that was in store for me.
-
-We were standing by the mantelshelf, on which lay a little packet in
-brown paper. Jessie took it in her hand.
-
-'Mother told me to give you this, Chris. Stay, though; what is that
-round your neck?'
-
-'The ribbon you gave me, Jessie.'
-
-'And the locket, where is that?'
-
-'It is here, Jessie.' I showed it to her; the earnest look that was
-struggling to her eyes came into them fully.
-
-'You did not cast me quite away, then? Have you always worn it,
-Chris?'
-
-'Always, Jessie.'
-
-'I am glad, I am glad,' she murmured, and presently said, 'Here is
-your packet, Chris.'
-
-I opened it, and found the watch and the ivory brooch I had intended
-to give Jessie on her birthday.
-
-'Do you know what is in this packet, Jessie?'
-
-'No, Chris.'
-
-I took the trinkets out of the paper:
-
-'I bought them as a birthday present for you, Jessie. Look at what is
-engraved inside the watch, and if you can accept it, you will make me
-very happy.'
-
-She opened the case and read: 'From Chris to Jessie, on her eighteenth
-birthday. With undying love.' Her eyes were fixed upon the inscription
-for a much longer time than was necessary for the reading and
-understanding of the words. When she raised them, tears were
-glistening in them.
-
-'Will you fasten it for me, Chris?' she said, in a low soft tone.
-
-With an ineffable feeling of happiness I placed the slender chain
-about her neck, and while my arms were round her, she raised her face
-to mine, and I kissed her.
-
-
-A few minutes later, while we were still alone, Jessie said,
-
-'You know why I left home on my birthday, Chris?'
-
-'I know all, Jessie.'
-
-'And yet not quite all, I think. I shall have no secrets from you,
-Chris, not one. I believe I should have left soon afterwards, even if
-it had not been for my mother's letter, and for the discovery that
-uncle Bryan was my father.'
-
-'For what reason, Jessie?'
-
-'You do not suspect, then?'
-
-'I have a dim suspicion, dear, but I would prefer you to tell me.'
-
-'Chris,' she said, very seriously, 'you loved me too much.'
-
-'That could not be, Jessie.'
-
-'It could and can be. In your love for me you forgot some one else, a
-thousand million times better than I am, Chris.'
-
-'My mother?'
-
-'Your mother. I reproached myself every day and every night for being
-the cause of it. I was afraid that your attachment to that dearest
-angel on earth was growing weaker and weaker, and I knew that I was
-the cause of it. I saw the pain, the unutterable pain, my dear, that
-your neglect of your mother was causing her tender heart, and I was
-continually striving to discover in what way you could be 'brought to
-learn how much more pure and beautiful and sacred her love was than
-mine. If things had gone on in the same way, I should have run away as
-it was, Chris, so that you might have been forced to seek for comfort
-in the shelter of her love. Do you understand me, my dear? Your love
-for me made you colour-blind.'
-
-How much dearer this confession made Jessie to me I need not describe.
-
-'I see things in a better light now, my darling,' I said humbly; 'I am
-not colour-blind now.'
-
-Uncle Bryan and my mother would not have disturbed us all the night if
-we had not called to them to come in and share our happiness.
-
-Those who understand the strength and purity of love can understand by
-what links of tender feeling we were henceforward bound to one
-another--sacred links which death itself will be powerless to sever.
-
-Jessie sat on a stool at her father's feet; my mother and I sat close
-to them, my hand on Jessie's neck, clasped in one of hers.
-
-It must have been two o'clock in the morning, and we were still
-talking, unconscious of the hour, when a great thumping was heard at
-the street-door. I jumped to my feet, and opened the door, and Josey
-West ran in.
-
-'I couldn't help it, my dears,' she cried; 'I know I have no business
-here, but I should have done something desperate if I hadn't run round
-to see how you were all getting on. I went to bed, but as I'm a living
-woman I couldn't sleep a wink; so I got out of bed and dressed myself,
-and thought, I'll just see if there's a light in the shop. And when I
-came and saw the light, how could I help knocking? Well, Chris, how do
-you like the second act? Better than the first? I do believe, as the
-speechmakers say, this is the happiest day of my life.'
-
-And the queer good little woman fell to crying and kissing us.
-
-I am afraid you would scarcely believe me if I were to tell you at
-what time we went to bed that morning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER LI.
-MY MOTHER'S BIBLE.
-
-
-I resume my pen after an interval of two years.
-
-Within a few weeks after the events described in the last chapter
-Jessie and I were married. There were six bridesmaids, Josey and
-Florry West, and their four little sisters. On that day my mother gave
-uncle Bryan a Bible.
-
-Josey is sole proprietor of the grocer's shop, and the business has
-wonderfully improved. She is really making and saving money. This of
-course is known, and has attracted the attention of more than one
-young man; I say more than one, for there is one in particular who
-seems to consider that if he were a grocer he would be in his proper
-groove. His chance, however, of getting into that groove does not
-appear to be a good one.
-
-'I know what he's casting sheep's eyes at,' says Josey, tossing her
-head; I see him reckoning up the stock every time he comes into the
-shop.'
-
-She does not openly discourage him; she makes him spend all his
-pocket-money in candied lemon-peel and uncle Bryan's medicines, which
-are having an immense sale.
-
-'You are injuring that young man's constitution, Josey,' I say.
-
-'All the better,' she replies; 'with his present constitution, he'll
-never suit Josey West.'
-
-'Don't you ever intend to marry, Josey?'
-
-'I haven't quite made up my mind, Chris; but if I don't die an old
-maid I shall be very much surprised.'
-
-Turk is doing well, but I have lately discerned in him an itching to
-go on the stage again. He has purchased a splendid wardrobe that
-belonged to a famous First Villain, and he is reading a manuscript
-play by a new author with a character in it which he says would take
-all London by storm.
-
-'No one can play that character but Turk West,' says old Mac, who is
-egging him on.
-
-'It would be a thousand pities,' says Turk, 'not to play the piece.
-It's a work of genius--original, Chris, my boy, original.' And then he
-adds musingly, 'I've a good mind to; I've a good mind to. The
-situations are tremendous. New blood, Chris, that's what's wanted--new
-blood.'
-
-Florry is just married. Her husband is a very elegant young man, and
-plays walking gentlemen. Every year babies are being introduced into
-the world by the married Wests. The number of children in that family
-is something amazing, and aunt Josey is idolised by all of them.
-
-Uncle Bryan lives with us. I am prospering, and our home is a very
-happy one. How could it be otherwise with two such women as my mother
-and Jessie to brighten and bless it! A great grief, however, came to
-us lately.
-
-Our union was blessed by a child--a sweet beautiful little girl, whose
-presence was a new happiness to us. I have not the power to describe
-the emotion which filled my heart when this treasure was placed in my
-arms; Jessie's joy and my mother's may be imagined, but it would be
-difficult to realise the depth of uncle Bryan's feelings towards the
-darling. We named her Frances, after Jessie's mother; it was uncle
-Bryan's wish. His love for the dear little creature became a worship;
-he was restless and unhappy if a waking hour passed without his seeing
-her. He nursed her, and prattled to her, and rocked her cradle, and
-would sit for hours by her side while she was sleeping. She grew to
-love him, and her beautiful eyes would dilate, and she would wave her
-dimpled arms when he held out his to her. When she was ten months old,
-and just when she began to lisp the word so dear to a mother's ear,
-she was taken from us.
-
-'Ah, how well I remember the sad days that followed! This may sound
-strange, when you know that a very few months have passed since our
-bereavement, but it expresses my feeling. Our darling seemed, as it
-were, to sink into the past, and I saw her ever afterwards, as one in
-a deep pit looks upwards in the daylight to the heavens and sees a
-star there. When I am an old man, the memory of this dear child will
-shine with a clear light among a forest of unremembered days. On the
-night before she was buried, I walked to the room where she lay in her
-coffin. I opened the door softly, and saw uncle Bryan on his knees by
-the coffin's side; his hands were clasped, and on the body of our
-darling lay an open book from which he was reading. It was the Bible
-which my mother had given him on our wedding-day.
-
-Farewell.
-
-
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. XV.
-LONDON: ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
-<html>
-<head>
-<title>Jessie Trim</title>
-<meta name="Author" content="B. L. Farjeon">
-
-<meta name="Publisher" content="Tinley Brothers">
-<meta name="Date" content="1874">
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Jessie Trim, by B. L. Farjeon
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Jessie Trim
-
-Author: B. L. Farjeon
-
-Release Date: December 12, 2016 [EBook #53724]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JESSIE TRIM ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charles Bowen from page images provided by
-Google Books (Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public
-Library)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<p class="hang1">Transcriber's Notes: This edition of Jessie Trim was published
-by<br>
-Tinsley Brothers (London) in two installments exerpted from the following issues<br>
-of Tinsleys' Magazine:</p>
-
-<p class="hang2">Vol. XIV. From January to June 1874. Chapters I.-XXV.<br>
-https://books.google.com/books?id=Dj8xAQAAMAAJ<br>
-(Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public Library)</p>
-
-<p class="hang1">Vol. XV. From July to December 1874. Chapters XXVI.-LI.<br>
-https://books.google.com/books?id=1-kRAAAAYAAJ<br>
-(Mercantile Library, New York; New York Public Library)</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE</h3>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>LONDON:<br>
-ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE.</h3>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<hr class="W50">
-<h4>VOL. XIV.<br>
-From January to June 1874.</h4>
-<hr class="W50">
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>LONDON:</h5>
-<h3>TINSLEY BROTHERS,</h3>
-<h4>8 CATHERINE STREET, STRAND, W.C.</h4>
-<h5>[<i>All rights of translation and reproduction reserved</i>.]</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4>CONTENTS.</h4>
-<h4><span class="sc">Jessie Trim</span>. By B. L. Farjeon, Author of
-Blade-o'-Grass,'<br>
-'Golden Grain,' Bread-and-Cheese and Kisses,' 'Grif,' 'London's<br>
-Heart,' and 'Joshua Marvel:'</h4>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4>CONTENTS.</h4>
-
-<p><span class="sc">Chap.</span></p>
-<div style="margin-left:10%">
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_01" href="#div1_01">I. My Grandmother's
-Wedding.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_02" href="#div1_02">II. I am frightened of my
-Shadow.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_03" href="#div1_03">III. My Grandmother's Long
-Stocking.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_04" href="#div1_04">IV. I murder my
-Baby-brother.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_05" href="#div1_05">V. I play the Part of
-Chief Mourner.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_06" href="#div1_06">VI. In which a great
-Change in my Circumstances takes place.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_07" href="#div1_07">VII. In which a Fairy in a
-Cotton-Print Dress is introduced.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_08" href="#div1_08">VIII. A Postman's Knock.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_09" href="#div1_09">IX. Uncle Bryan introduces
-himself.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_10" href="#div1_10">X. Our new Home.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_11" href="#div1_11">XI. In which I take part
-in some lawless Expeditions.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_12" href="#div1_12">XII. A singular Episode in
-our quiet Life.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_13" href="#div1_13">XIII. A sudden Shock.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_14" href="#div1_14">XIV. The World becomes
-bright again.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_15" href="#div1_15">XV. Jessie's Rosewater
-Philosophy.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_16" href="#div1_16">XVI. The Stone Monkey
-Figure gives up its Treasures.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_17" href="#div1_17">XVII. The true Story of
-Anthony Bullpit.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_18" href="#div1_18">XVIII. Uncle Bryan
-commences the Story of his Life.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_19" href="#div1_19">XIX. Strange Revelations
-in Uncle Bryan's Life.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_20" href="#div1_20">XX. Uncle Bryan concludes
-his Story.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_21" href="#div1_21">XXI. I receive an
-Invitation.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_22" href="#div1_22">XXII. I am introduced to a
-Theatrical Family.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_23" href="#div1_23">XXIII. The Sunday-night
-Suppers at the Wests'.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_24" href="#div1_24">XXIV. Turk, the First
-Villain.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_25" href="#div1_25">XXV. Holding the Word of
-Promise to the Ear.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_26" href="#div1_26">XXVI. We enjoy a deceitful
-Calm.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_27" href="#div1_27">XXVII. The Storm breaks.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_28" href="#div1_28">XXVIII. Colour-blind.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_29" href="#div1_29">XXIX. Preparations for an
-important Event</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_30" href="#div1_30">XXX. Jessie's Triumph.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_31" href="#div1_31">XXXI. My Mother expresses
-her Fears concerning Jessie.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_32" href="#div1_32">XXXII. Jessie makes an
-Explanation.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_33" href="#div1_33">XXXIII. Mr. Glover.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_34" href="#div1_34">XXXIV. Turk West's
-Appearance at the West-end Theatre, and its Results.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_35" href="#div1_35">XXXV. Jessie's Birthday.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_36" href="#div1_36">XXXVI. I speak plainly to
-uncle Bryan.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_37" href="#div1_37">XXXVII. Turk makes a
-Confession.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_38" href="#div1_38">XXXVIII. Mr. Glover
-declines to satisfy me.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_39" href="#div1_39">XXXIX. A new Fear.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_40" href="#div1_40">XL. What the Neighbours
-said.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_41" href="#div1_41">XLI. Josey West declares
-that she has got into her proper Groove.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_42" href="#div1_42">XLII. From Frances to her
-Husband, Bryan Carey.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_43" href="#div1_43">XLIII. A happy Recovery.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_44" href="#div1_44">XLIV. At Rehearsal.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_45" href="#div1_45">XLV. Old Mac expresses his
-Opinion of Mr. Glover.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_46" href="#div1_46">XLVI. A strange Dream.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_47" href="#div1_47">XLVII. Exit Mr. Glover.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_48" href="#div1_48">XLVIII. Josey West laments
-her crooked Legs.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_49" href="#div1_49">XLIX. Uncle Bryan again.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_50" href="#div1_50">L. Josey West disturbs us
-in the Middle of the Night.</a></p>
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div1Ref_51" href="#div1_51">LI. My Mother's Bible.</a></p>
-</div>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3><i>TINSLEYS' MAGAZINE</i>.</h3>
-<h4>January 1874.</h4>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h3>JESSIE TRIM.</h3>
-
-<h4>BY B. L. FARJEON,</h4>
-
-<h5>AUTHOR OF 'BLADE-O'-GRASS,' 'GOLDEN GRAIN,' 'BREAD-AND-CHEESE AND<br>
-KISSES.' 'GRIF,' 'LONDON'S HEART,' AND 'JOSHUA MARVEL.'</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_01" href="#div1Ref_01">CHAPTER I.</a></h4>
-<h5>MY GRANDMOTHER'S WEDDING.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">As my earliest remembrances are associated with my
-grandmother's wedding, it takes natural precedence here of all other matter. I
-was not there, of course, but I seem to see it through a mist, and I have a
-distinct impression of certain actors in the scene. These are: a smoke-dried
-monkey of a man in stone, my grandmother, my grandfather (whom I never saw in
-the flesh), and a man with a knob on the top of his head, making a meal off his
-finger-nails.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Naturally, this man's head is bald. Naturally, this man's
-nails are eaten down to the quick. I am unable to state how I come to the
-knowledge of these details, but I know them, and am prepared to stand by them.
-Sitting, as I see myself, in a very low armchair--in which I am such an exact
-fit that when I rise it rises with me, much to my discomfort--I hear my
-grandmother say:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He had a knob on the top of his head, and he was always
-eating his nails.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then a solemn pause ensues, broken by my grandmother adding,
-in a dismal tone:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And the last time I set eyes on him was on my wedding-day.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The words are addressed not so much to me as to the
-smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, which had occupied the place of honour on
-the mantelpiece in my grandmother's house, and which she had brought with her as
-a precious relic--(Jane Painter, I remember, always called it a relict)--when
-she came to live with us. The head of this stone figure is loose, and wags upon
-the slightest provocation. When something falls in the room, when the door is
-slammed, when a person walks sharply towards it, when it is merely looked at I
-sometimes fancy. I am not prepossessed in its favour, and I regard it with
-uneasy feelings, as probably possessing a power for evil, like a
-malevolently-inclined idol. But my grandmother, for some mysterious reason,
-values it as a very precious possession, and sits staring dumbly at it for
-hours. I watch her and it until, in my imagination, its monkey-face begins to
-twitch and its monkey-lips to move. At a certain point of my watch, I fancy that
-its eyes roll and glare at me, and I cover mine with my hands to shut out the
-disturbing sight. But I have not sufficient courage to remain blind for more
-than a very few moments, and I am soon fascinated into peeping at the figure
-through the lattice of my fingers. My grandmother observes me, and says:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I see you, child! Take your fingers away.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I obey her timidly, and with many a doubtful glance at the
-monkey-man, I ask:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Does <i>it</i> see me, grandmother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My grandmother regards it with a gloomy air; evidently she has
-doubts. She does not commit herself, however, but says:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It will belong to you, child, when I am gone. It must be kept
-always in the family.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The tone in which she utters these words denotes that evil
-will fall upon the family when this heirloom is lost sight of. I am not grateful
-for the prospective gift. It has already become a frightful incubus; it weighs
-me down, and is a future as well as a present torment. I think it has lived long
-enough--too long--and that when my grandmother goes, she ought to take it with
-her. Happening to catch the eye of the figure while this thought is in my mind,
-I am convinced that it shows in its ugly face a consciousness of my bad feeling
-towards it; its eyes and lips threaten me. It would have terrified, but it would
-not have surprised me to find it suddenly gifted with the power of speech, and
-to hear it utter dreadful words. But happily for my peace of mind no such
-miracle happens. I look at my grandmother, and I begin to fancy that she, from
-long staring at it, bears in her face a resemblance to the face of the
-monkey-man. For how much longer will my grandmother sit and stare at it? For how
-many more days and weeks and years? She has frequently told me that naughty boys
-were invariably 'fetched away' to a dismal place by Some One wearing horns and a
-tail. She made no mention of naughty girls; and sometimes when she has been
-delighting me with these wholesome lessons, a sort of rebellion has possessed me
-that I was not born a girl. Now, if Some One were to come and 'fetch' my
-grandmother away, it would not grieve me; I should rejoice. But I dare not for
-my life give utterance to my thought. Says my grandmother, with a nod at the
-stone figure, which, suddenly animated by a mysterious influence, returns the
-nod:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I had it in my pocket on my wedding-day.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The circumstance of its being a guest at my grandmother's
-wedding invests it with an additional claim to my protection when she is gone.
-How happy I should be if it would fall into the fireplace, and break into a
-thousand pieces!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Grandmother!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Was the man with the knob on the top of his head----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My grandmother interrupts me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You mean the gentleman, child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I mean the gentleman--and who was always eating his
-nails,--was he like that?' Pointing to the stone monkey-figure.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Like that, child! How can such an idea have entered your
-head? No; he was a very handsome man.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A pure fiction, I am convinced, if nothing worse. How <i>could</i>
-a man with a knob on his head, and who was always eating his nails, be handsome?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your grandfather used to be very jealous of him; he was one
-of my sweethearts. I had several, and nine proposals of marriage before I was
-twenty years of age. Some girls that I knew were ready to scratch their eyes out
-with vexation. He proposed, and wished to run away with me, but my family
-stepped in between us, and prevented him. You can never be sufficiently grateful
-to me, child; for what would have become of you if I had run away and married
-him, goodness only knows!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The reflection which is thus forced upon me involves such wild
-entanglements of possibilities that I am lost in the contemplation of them. What <i>
-would</i> have become of me? Supposing it had occurred--should I ever have been?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He told me,' continues my grandmother, revelling in these
-honey-sweet reminiscences, 'after I had accepted your grandfather, that life was
-valueless without me, and that as he had lost me, he would be sure to go to the
-Devil. I don't know the end of him, for I only saw him once after that; but he
-was a man of his word. He told me so in Lovers' Walk, where I happened to be
-strolling one evening--quite by accident, child, I assure you, for I burnt the
-letter I received from him in the morning, for fear your grandfather should see
-it. Your grandfather had a frightfully jealous disposition--as if I could help
-the men looking at me! When we were first married he used to smash a deal of
-crockery, with his quick temper. I hope he is forgiven for it in the place he
-has gone to. He was an auctioneer and valuer; he had an immense reputation as a
-valuer. It was not undeserved; he fell in love with me. Oh, he was clever,
-child, in his way!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Although I am positive that I never saw my grandfather, I
-have, in some strange way, a perfect remembrance of him as a little man, very
-dapper, and very precisely dressed in a snuff-coloured coat and black breeches
-and stockings. Now, my grandmother was a very large woman; side by side they
-are, to my mind, a ridiculous match. I have grown quite curious concerning my
-grandmother's lover, and I venture to recall her from a moody contemplation of
-the monkey-figure into which she is falling.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But about the man with the knob, grandmother?' I commence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Child, you are disrespectful! The man with the knob, indeed!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The gentleman, I mean, who wanted to marry you. What was his
-name?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bullpit. He was connected with the law, and might have become
-Lord Chancellor if I hadn't blighted him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did he behave himself at your wedding, grandmother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Save the child!' she exclaims. 'You don't suppose that Mr.
-Bullpit was at my wedding, do you? Why, there would have been murder done! Your
-grandfather and he would have torn each other to pieces!' These latter words are
-spoken in a tone of positive satisfaction, as adding immensely to my
-grandmother's reputation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I thought you said that the last time you saw him was on
-your wedding-day?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So I did, child; but I didn't say he was <i>at</i> the
-wedding. We were coming out of church---- Deary, deary me! I can see it as if it
-was only yesterday that it took place! The church was scarcely three minutes'
-walk from mother's house, and the expense would not have been great, but your
-grandfather, who was a very mean man, did not provide carriages, and we had to
-go on foot. It was the talk of the whole neighbourhood for months afterwards. I
-never forgave him for it, and I can't forget it, although he is in his grave
-now, where all things ought to be forgotten and forgiven. Remember that, child,
-and if you have anything to forget and forgive, forget and forgive it. Animosity
-is a bad thing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My grandmother gives me time to remember if I have anything to
-forget and forgive. I feel somewhat remorseful because of the hard thoughts I
-have borne towards her, and I mentally resolve that when she is in her grave I
-will endeavour to forget and forgive.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We walked,' she continues, from mother's house to the church,
-and from the church back again. It was like a procession. There were five
-bridesmaids, and mother and father, and your grandfather's mother and
-father,'--(I am a little confused here with so many mothers and fathers, and,
-notwithstanding my efforts to prevent it, they all get jumbled up with one
-another)--'whom we could very well have done without, and the Best Man, who did
-not know how to behave himself, making the bridesmaids giggle as he did, as if
-my wedding was a thing to be laughed at! and a great number of guests with white
-favours in their coats--all but one, who ought to have known better, and who was
-properly punished afterwards by being jilted by Mary Morgan. Everybody in the
-town came to see us walk to church, and when the fatal knot was tied, the crowd
-round the church door was so large that we could scarcely make our way through
-it. The Best Man misbehaved himself shamefully. He pretended to be overcome by
-grief, and he sobbed in such a violent manner as to make the mob laugh at him,
-and the bridesmaids giggle more than ever. I knew what they did it for, the
-hussies! They thought he was a catch; a nice husband he turned out to be
-afterwards! When we were half way between the church and mother's house, our
-procession met another procession, and for a minute or two there was a stoppage
-and great confusion, and several vulgar boys hurrayed. What do you think that
-other procession was, child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I ponder deeply, but am unable to guess.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That other procession, child, was made up of policemen and
-riff-raff. And in the middle of it, with handcuffs on, was Anthony Bullpit. He
-had been arrested on a warrant for forgery. What with the confusion and the
-struggling, the processions got mixed up together, and as I raised my eyes I saw
-the eyes of Anthony Bullpit fixed upon me. Such a shock as that look of his gave
-me I shall never forget--never! I knew the meaning of it too well. It meant that
-all this had occurred through me; that life without me was a mockery; that he
-had arranged everything so that we should meet immediately the fatal knot was
-tied; and that he was on his road to ---- where he said he would go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He must have been a very wicked man, grandmother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A wicked man, child! How dare you! He was as innocent as I
-was, and he did it all to punish me. I fainted dead away in the middle of the
-street, and had to be carried home, and have hartshorn given to me, and brown
-paper burnt under my nose. When I came to, I looked more like a blackamoor than
-a bride, and my wedding dress was completely spoilt. And nothing of all this
-would have occurred, child, if it had not been for the meanness of your
-grandfather. If he had provided carriages <i>we</i> should never have met. When
-poor Mr. Bullpit was put upon his trial he would not make any defence. Your
-grandfather said the case was so clear that it would only have aggravated it to
-defend it. But I knew better. When he pleaded guilty, I knew that he did it to
-spite me, and to prove that he was a man of his word. I wanted to go to the
-trial, but your grandfather objected; and when I said I
-<i>would</i> go, he locked all the doors in the house, and took the keys away
-with him. Your grandfather has much to answer for. Mr. Bullpit was transported
-for twenty-one years. Some wicked people said it was a mercy he wasn't hanged.
-If he had been, I should never have survived it. Poor Anthony!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was too young to exercise a proper judgment upon this
-incident in my grandmother's life, but it is imprinted indelibly upon my memory.
-I knew very well that I did not like my grandmother, and that I did not feel
-happy in her society. Often when I wished to go out into the sunshine to play,
-she would say,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bring the boy in here, and let him keep me company. It will
-do him more good than running about in the dirt.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And her word being law in the house, I used to be taken into
-the room where she sat in her armchair, staring at the monkey-man on the
-mantelshelf, and used to be squeezed into my own little armchair, and placed in
-the corner to keep her company. For a certain sufficient reason I deemed it
-advisable to be companionable; for once I had sulked, and was sullen and
-ill-tempered. Then my grandmother had said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The child is unwell! He must have some physic.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She herself prescribed the medicine--jalap, which was my
-disgust and abhorrence--and the dose, which was not a small one. Out of that
-companionship sprang my knowledge of the man with the knob on the top of his
-head, and who was always eating his nails. By some process of ratiocination I
-associate him with the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, and I hate them
-both honestly. As for Anthony Bullpit being innocent of the crime for which he
-was transported, I smile scornfully at the idea. He is my model for all that is
-disagreeable and bad, and I never see a man whose nails are bitten down to the
-quick without associating him--often unjustly, I am sure--with meanness and
-trickery.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was a reason for my being doomed to the companionship of
-my grandmother, and for my being made her victim as it were. Our family circle
-comprised five individuals: my grandmother, my father and mother, myself, and a
-baby-brother. My parents had, through no fault of their own, drifted into that
-struggling-genteel class of persons whose means never quite come up to their
-efforts to make an appearance. We had been a little better off once upon a time,
-but unfortunately my father's health had failed him, and at the period of which
-I am writing he was confined to his bed, unable to work. My mother, what with
-her anxiety and her ignorance of the world, was to a certain extent helpless.
-Therefore, when my grandmother proposed to come and live with us, and bring her
-servant, and pay so much a week for board and lodging, her offer was gladly
-accepted. It was a current belief that my grandmother had a 'long stocking'
-somewhere, with plenty of money in it, and to this long stocking may be
-attributed much of my unhappiness at that time. For it had come to be recognised
-that I was to be my grandmother's heir, and that her long stocking would descend
-to me. It was, perhaps, regarded as a fair arrangement that, as my grandmother's
-property was to be mine when she was dead, I was to be my grandmother's property
-while she was alive; and I have no doubt that care was taken that her whims with
-respect to me should be carefully attended to, so that my inheritance might not
-be jeopardised. My mother did not know that I was unhappy; I was as a child
-somewhat secretive by nature, and I kept my thoughts and feelings much to
-myself. Besides, I had an intuitive perception of the state of affairs at home,
-and I felt that if I offended my grandmother my parents might suffer.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_02" href="#div1Ref_02">CHAPTER II.</a></h4>
-<h5>I AM FRIGHTENED OF MY SHADOW.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I have already mentioned the name of the servant whom my
-grandmother brought with her to our house; it was Jane Painter. She had been
-with my grandmother for many years, from girlhood I believe, and she was now
-about thirty years of age. In appearance she was a thin, sharp-featured,
-pale-faced woman; in manners she was a viciously-minded creature, fond of
-pinching children on the sly in tender places, assuming the while, to deceive
-observers, an expression of amiability, which intensified the malignity of her
-conduct. From the moment she entered our house she became the enemy of every
-person in it, and waged open and secret war upon all of us. Her service with my
-grandmother had been a very easy one, but things were different when her
-mistress changed her residence. She had to do double the work she had been
-accustomed to, and as we were the direct cause of this, she was not slow in
-showing resentment. My mother, patient as she always was, made light of the
-woman's infirmities of temper, believing that she was necessary to my
-grandmother; Jane Painter, however, declined to accept the olive-branch which my
-mother held out to her, and would certainly not have remained in the house but
-for one inducement. This was made clear to us a very few days after the change.
-My mother had occasion to remonstrate with her for some piece of impertinence,
-and Jane Painter ran into my grandmother's room in a fury, and demanded to know
-if she was to be treated like a galley-slave. My mother stood quietly by,
-listening to the servant's complainings. Said my grandmother,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You must do what my daughter desires you to do, Jane. I told
-her you would help her in the house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I won't be ordered about as if I was a bit of dirt!'
-exclaimed Jane Painter, gasping.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O Jane!' remonstrated my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't O Jane me!' and then followed the unreasoning argument.
-'I'm flesh and blood the same as you are!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jane,' said my grandmother, 'I mustn't be worried; my nerves
-won't stand it. I sha'n't be here long, and you know what I have promised you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Whose servant am I--yours or hers?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mine, Jane, and a very good servant you've been. I hope for
-your own sake you are not going to be different now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Haven't I served you faithfully?' asked Jane Painter, sobbing
-herself into a quieter emotional stage.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jane, yes; and you shall be remembered for it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Haven't I waited on you hand and foot?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jane, yes; and you shall be remembered.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When you was took bad with the spasms,' blubbered Jane,
-didn't I stop up with you all night till I was fit to drop?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jane; and I haven't forgotten you for it. You shall be
-remembered, I tell you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">By being remembered, my grandmother meant that Jane Painter
-was set down in her will for a certain portion of the contents of her long
-stocking; and but for this inducement it was pretty clear that Jane Painter
-would have taken her departure. The war she waged against us from this time was
-passive, but bitter. I, as the recognised heir to the long stocking, and as
-being likely, therefore, to diminish her portion, came in for the largest share
-of her ill-temper and animosity, and she showed much ingenuity in devising means
-to torment me. Parting my hair on the wrong side, brushing it into my eyes,
-rubbing the soap in my mouth and only half-wiping my face after I was washed,
-buttoning my clothes awry, running pins into me, holding me suspended by one arm
-as we went down stairs; these were the smallest of my sufferings. An incident,
-laughable in itself, but exceedingly painful in its effect upon me, comes
-vividly to my remembrance here; and it afforded Jane Painter an opportunity of
-inventing a new torture, and of inflicting upon me the sharpest and most
-terrible distress I ever experienced. It occurred in this way:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Whether it was that the dull companionship of a peevish old
-woman was having its due effect upon me, or whether it sprang from my natural
-constitution, I was growing to be very nervous. I was frightened of being alone
-in the dark; a sudden noise startled me painfully; any unusual exhibition of
-tenderness brought tears to my eyes. One bright summer afternoon I was sitting
-with my grandmother. Everything about me was very quiet; my grandmother had not
-spoken for a long time, and I listened to the regular sound of her breathing
-which told me she was asleep. I tried all kinds of devices to while away the
-time. I looked at the wall and traced the pattern of the paper; I tried to stare
-the monkey-man on the mantelshelf out of countenance; I closed my eyes and
-placed the tips of my forefingers on them, and then opened them to assure myself
-that the world had not come to an end; I counted the rise and fall of my
-grandmother's capacious bosom till I grew so confused that the billows before me
-seemed to swell and fill the room. There was no pleasure to be gained from any
-of these tasks, and I felt weary and dispirited. The sunshine streaming in at
-the parlour-window seemed to say, 'Why are you stopping in that dull room? Come
-out and play.' I gazed wistfully at the light, and thought how nice it would be
-outside. I felt that I <i>should</i> like to go. But I knew from rueful
-experience how cross my grandmother would be if I made a noise and awoke her;
-and I was so tightly fixed in my little armchair that I could not extricate
-myself without a struggle. I dared not attempt to wrench myself free from its
-embrace in the room; it might fall to the ground. There was nothing for it but
-to try and escape from the room with the chair fixed to me. The sunshine grew
-brighter and brighter, and more and more tempting. My grandmother really seemed
-to be fast asleep. I stretched out my hand and touched her dress: she always
-dressed in silk, and sat in state. Her steady breathing continued. I coughed,
-and whispered, 'Grandmother!' but she did not hear. I spoke more loudly.
-'Grandmother!' There was no response, and then I thought I would venture. I
-rose, with my chair attached to me--the firmest and closest of friends--and
-crept slowly and softly out of the room into the passage. There I released
-myself, and then ran out into the sunshine. In aglow of delight I flitted about
-like a butterfly escaped from prison. I was in the full height of my enjoyment,
-when turning my head over my shoulder, I saw my long ungainly shadow following
-me, and in sudden unreasoning fright I ran away from it. I screamed in terror as
-I saw it racing fast at my heels, as if trying to leap upon me and seize me, and
-my mother happening at that moment to come to the street-door, I flew towards
-her in a paroxysm of terror, and, clutching tight hold of her, hid my face in
-her gown. In that position my mother, with soothing words, drew me into the
-house, and I was only pacified by being assured that the 'black man' who had
-frightened me had disappeared; and certainly, when I was persuaded to look
-around I saw no trace of him. My grandmother, awakened by my screams, did not
-fail to give me a solemn lecture for my bad behaviour in stealing from the room,
-and she improved the occasion by making me tremble with new fears by her
-dreadful prophecies as to what the 'black man' would do to me if I dared to be
-naughty again. The incident had a serious effect upon me, and I was ill for a
-week afterwards. The doctor who was attending my father said that I was of a
-peculiarly sensitive temperament, and that great care must be taken of me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The nervousness,' he said, which has been the cause of his
-fright may, if not counteracted, produce bad results by-and-by. The lad's nature
-is essentially womanly and delicate. None the worse for that--none the worse for
-that!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He laid his hand upon my head in a very kind manner, and tears
-rushed to my eyes. Seeing these, he immediately removed his hand, and gave my
-cheek a merry pinch.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He will grow out of it?' questioned my mother, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes,' was the reply, cheerfully uttered, 'he will grow
-out of it; but you must be careful with him. Don't let him mope; give him plenty
-of exercise and fresh air.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like a pony,' I said. My mother's troubled eyes
-sought the floor. If she could only have seen a magic pumpkin there!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then,' continued the doctor, until he is older and stronger I
-would fill his mind with cheerful fancies. Tell him as many stories as you
-please of fairies, and princesses, and flowers, and such-like; but none about
-ghosts. You would like to hear about beautiful fairies rising out of
-flower-bells, and sailing in the clouds, and floating on the water in lilies,
-would you not, my lad?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I nodded gaily; his bright manner was better than all the
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do they really do all these things, sir?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Surely; for such as you, my boy.' I clapped my hands. 'You
-see!' he said to my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Many a time after this did my mother ransack her mental store,
-and bring forth bright-coloured fancies to make me glad. She told Jane Painter
-what the doctor said, and asked her to tell me the prettiest stories she knew.
-Jane Painter replied with one of her sweetest smiles. It was part of her duties
-to put me to bed every night, and one night, soon after I was well, she came
-into my room in the dark, as I was lying half awake and half asleep. She crept
-up the stairs and into the room so stealthily that I had no consciousness of her
-presence until a sepulchral voice stole upon my ears saying,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ho! Mister Friar, Don't be so bold, For fear you should make
-My 'eart's blood run cold!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My heart's blood did run cold at these dreadful words, and I
-uttered a cry of fright. Then Jane Painter spoke in her natural tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I knew a boy once, and his name was Namby-Pamby. He was the
-greatest coward that ever breathed, and he was always telling tales. I know what
-happened to him at last. You're like him. Perhaps it'll happen to you. A fine
-boy you are! You ought to have been born a rabbit. I suppose you'll tell your
-mother. All cowards do.' Here she must have put her head up the chimney, for her
-voice sounded very hollow as she repeated, 'Ho! Mister Friar, Don't be so bold,
-For fear you should make My 'eart's blood run cold!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I cannot describe my terror. I wrapped the counterpane tightly
-round my head, and lay all of a tremble until Jane Painter thought fit to take
-her departure. From that night she inflicted the most dreadful tortures upon me.
-The first thing she did after putting me to bed was to blow out the candle; then
-she would calmly sit down and tell me frightful stories of murders and ghosts.
-Blood was her favourite theme; she absolutely revelled in it, and to this day I
-cannot look upon it without a shudder. She would prowl about the room,
-muttering:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I smell blood! I smell blood!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And then:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let him be alive, Or let him be dead, I'll have his blood to
-make my wine, I'll grind his bones to make my bread.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">After that she would grind her teeth, and make sounds as
-though she were drinking.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Serve him right, too, the little coward! Grind his bones on
-two large stones. His blood and brine I'll drink for wine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I suffered this martyrdom in silence. I would not tell my
-mother, as all cowards did. What the effect on me would have been if
-circumstances had allowed Jane Painter to continue her persecution I am afraid
-to think; but fortunately for me the event occurred which she was waiting for.
-My grandmother died very suddenly. The last words she was heard to utter were,
-Poor Anthony!' I was not sorry when she died. I tried to look sad, as everybody
-else looked, but I knew that I was a dreadful hypocrite.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_03" href="#div1Ref_03">CHAPTER III.</a></h4>
-<h5>MY GRANDMOTHER'S LONG STOCKING.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">There was a friend of the family of whose name I have no
-remembrance, and whom, from a certain personal peculiarity, I must denominate
-Snaggletooth. He was a large man--very tall, and round in proportion--with a
-glistening bald head, a smooth full-fleshed face, and clear gray eyes. In
-repose, and when he was not speaking, he was by no means an unpleasant-looking
-man; his face was benignant, and his clear gray eyes beamed kindly upon you. But
-directly he smiled he became transformed, and his features were made to assume
-an almost fiendish expression by reason of a hideous snaggle-tooth which thrust
-itself forward immediately he opened his mouth. It stuck out like a horn, and
-the change it effected in his appearance was something marvellous.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As the friend of the family, Snaggletooth came forward and
-offered his assistance. My father being confined to his bed by sickness, there
-was no man in the house to look after the funeral of my grandmother, and
-Snaggletooth's services were gladly accepted. I fancy that he was fond of
-funerals, from the zealous manner in which he attended to the details of this
-and a sadder one which followed not long afterwards. Setting this fancy aside,
-he proved himself a genuine and disinterested friend. We had no near relatives;
-my mother was an only daughter, and my father had but one brother, older than
-he, whom I had never seen, and who had disappeared from the place many years
-ago. He was supposed to be dead; and from certain chance words which I must have
-heard, I had gained a vague impression that he was not a credit to the family.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a strange experience for me to sit in my grandmother's
-room after her death, gazing at her empty armchair. I could not keep away from
-the room; I crept into it at all hours of the day, and sat there trembling. I
-mentally asked the stone monkey-figure what it thought of my grandmother's
-death, and I put my fingers in my ears lest I should hear an answer. Jane
-Painter found me there in the evening when she came to put me to bed, and stated
-that my grandmother's spirit was present, and that she was in communication with
-it. She held imaginary conversations with my grandmother's ghost in the dusk,
-speaking very softly and waiting for the answers. The effect was ghastly and
-terrifying. These conversations related to nothing but poor me, and the
-exquisite pain Jane Painter inflicted upon me by these means may be easily
-imagined.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The first thing Snaggletooth did after my grandmother's
-funeral was to search for her long stocking and the treasures it was supposed to
-contain. Taking the words in their literal sense, I really thought that the long
-stocking would be found hidden somewhere--under the bed perhaps, or among the
-feathers, or up the chimney--stuffed with money, in shape resembling my
-grandmother's leg, which I knew from actual observation to be a substantial one.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps she made a will,' observed Snaggletooth to my mother.
-Jane Painter was present, hovering about us with hungry jealous eyes, lest she
-should be cheated.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She did make a will,' said Jane Painter, 'and I'm down in
-it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then we will find it,' said Snaggletooth cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My grandmother's desk was opened, and every piece of paper in
-it was examined. No will was there, nor a word relating to it. Her trunk was
-searched with a like result.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never mind,' said Snaggletooth, with a genial smile, 'we
-shall be sure to find the old lady's long stocking.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And he set to work. But although a rigid search was made, no
-long stocking could be found. Snaggletooth became immensely excited. Very hot,
-very dusty and dirty, and with his shirt-sleeves tucked up to his shoulders, he
-gazed at vacancy, and paused to take breath. Disappointed as he was up to this
-point, his faith in my grandmother's long stocking was not shaken; he had it
-not, and yet he saw it in form as palpable as the lisle-thread stockings of my
-grandmother, which were scattered about the room. A closer and more systematic
-search was commenced. The hunt became more and more exciting, and still not a
-glimpse of the fox's tail could be seen. Under Snaggletooth's instructions the
-bedstead was taken down, the pillows and mattresses were ripped open
-(Snaggletooth being determined not to leave a feather unturned), the posts were
-sounded to discover if they were hollow, and the strictest examination was made
-of every vestige of my grandmother's clothing without a satisfactory result.
-Dirtier and hotter than ever, and covered with fluff and feathers, Snaggletooth
-looked about him with an air of 'What next?' His eye fell upon my grandmother's
-armchair. Out came the stuffing that it contained, and nothing more. My
-grandmother's footstool: a like result. Her portly pincushion: nothing but bran.
-Up came the carpet, and almost blinded us with dust. And then Snaggletooth sat
-down in the midst of the wreck and said disconsolately:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am afraid we must give it up.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">So it was given up, and the mystery of my grandmother's long
-stocking took honourable place in the family records as an important legend for
-ever afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jane Painter passed through many stages of emotion, and ended
-by being furious. She vowed--no, she swore; it is more appropriate--that she had
-been robbed, and openly declared that my mother had secreted my grandmother's
-long stocking, and had destroyed the will. Nay, more; she screamed that she had
-seen the treasure, which consisted of new Bank of England notes and a heap of
-gold, and that in the will my grandmother had left her three hundred pounds.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Woman!' exclaimed Snaggletooth, rising from the ruins, 'be
-quiet!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Woman yourself!' screamed Jane Painter. 'You're in the plot
-to rob a poor girl, and I'll have the law of you; I'll have the law, I'll have
-the law!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Take it and welcome,' replied Snaggletooth. 'I hate it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But he was no match for Jane Painter, and he retired from the
-contest discomfited; did not even stop to wash his face.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was sad and puzzled. I did not entirely realise at
-the time the cause of her sadness, because I did not know how poor she really
-was, but I learnt it afterwards. She gathered sufficient courage to tell Jane
-Painter that of course she could not stop in the house after what she had said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If every hair in your head was a diamond,' gasped Jane
-Painter, 'I wouldn't stop. No, not if you went down on your bended knees! I'll
-go to-morrow.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then she pounced upon two silk dresses and some other articles
-of clothing, and said that my grandmother had given them to her. My mother
-submitted without a word, and Jane Painter marched to her room and locked them
-in her box. She did as much mischief as she could on her last evening in our
-house; broke things purposely and revenged herself grandly on poor little me.
-After undressing and putting me to bed as usual, and after smelling about the
-room, and under the bed, and up the chimney for blood, she imparted to me the
-cheerful intelligence that my grandmother's ghost would come and take me away
-exactly at twelve o'clock that night. Near to our house was a church, and many a
-night had I lain awake waiting for the tolling of the hour; but I never listened
-with such intensity of purpose as I listened on this night. As midnight drew
-near, I clenched my fists, I bit my lips, I drew my knees almost up to my nose.
-I trembled and shook in the darkness. I would not look, I thought; and when the
-hour tolled, every note seemed charged with terrible meaning, and I shut my eyes
-tighter and held my breath under the clothes. But when the bell had done
-tolling, my state of horrible curiosity and fear compelled me to peep out, and
-there in the middle of the room stood a tall figure in white. So loud and shrill
-were my hysterical cries that my mother ran into the room, there to find Jane
-Painter in her nightdress. I think the woman herself; fearful lest she had gone
-too far, was glad to quit the house the following day without being called to
-account for her misdeeds. She did not leave without a few parting words. She
-called us all a parcel of thieves, and said that a judgment would fall upon us
-one day for robbing a poor servant of the money her dead mistress had left her.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_04" href="#div1Ref_04">CHAPTER IV.</a></h4>
-<h5>I MURDER MY BABY-BROTHER.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Misfortunes never come singly, and they did not come singly to
-us. It was not for us to give the lie to a proverb. Often in a family, death is
-in a hurry when it commences, and takes one after another quickly; then pauses
-for a long breath.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In very truth, sorrow in its deepest phase had entered our
-house, and my mother's form seemed to shrink and grow less from the day she put
-on mourning for my grandmother. But if my mother had her troubles, I am sure I
-had mine; and one was of such a strange and terrible nature that, even at this
-distance of time, and with a better comprehension of things, a
-curiously-reluctant feeling comes upon me as I prepare to narrate it. It is
-summarised in a very few words. I murdered my baby-brother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At least, such was my impression at the time. For a long while
-I was afflicted by secret remorse and by fear of discovery, and never till now
-have I made confession. There was only one witness of my crime: our cat. I
-remember well that my father was said to be sinking at the time, and my mother,
-having her hands full, and her heart, too, poor dear! placed me and my
-baby-brother in the room in which I used to sit with my grandmother. My task was
-to take care of the little fellow, and to amuse him. He was so young that he
-could scarcely toddle, and we had great fun with two oranges which my mother had
-given us to play with. It required great strength of mind not to eat them
-instead of playing with them; but the purpose for which they were given to us
-had been plainly set down by my mother. All that I could hope for, therefore,
-was that they might burst their skins after being knocked about a little, when
-of course they would become lawful food. We played ball with them; my
-baby-brother rolling them towards me, not being strong enough to throw them, and
-I (secretly animated by the wish that they would burst their skins) throwing
-them up to him, with a little more force than was actually necessary, and trying
-to make him catch them. I cannot tell for how long we played, for at this
-precise moment of my history a mist steals upon such of my early reminiscences
-as are related in this and the preceding chapters--a mist which divides, as by a
-curtain, one part of my life from another. My actual life will soon commence,
-the life that is tangible to me, as it were, that stands out in stronger colour
-and is distinct from the brief prologue which was acted in dreamland, and which
-lies nestled deep among the days of my childhood. Cloud-memories these; most of
-us have such. Some are wholly bright and sweet, some wholly sad and bitter, some
-parti-coloured. When the dreamland in which these cloud-memories have birth has
-faded, and we are in the summer or the winter of our days, fighting the Battle,
-or, having fought it, are waiting for the trumpet-sound which proclaims the
-Grand Retreat, we can all remember where we received such and such a wound,
-where such and such a refreshing draught was given to us, at what part of the
-fight such and such a scar was gained, and at what part a spiritual vision
-dawned upon our souls, captivating and entrancing us with hopes too bright and
-beautiful ever to be realised; and though our blood be thin and poor, and the
-glory of life seems to have waned with the waning of our strength, our pulses
-thrill and our hearts beat with something of the old glow as the remembrance of
-these pains and pleasures comes upon us!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">To return to my baby-brother. The dusk steals upon us, and we
-are still playing with the oranges. The cat is watching us, and when an orange
-rolls in her direction she, half timidly, half sportively, stretches out her paw
-towards it, and on one occasion lies full-length on her stomach, with an orange
-between the tips of her paws, and her nose in a straight line with it. I hear my
-baby-brother laugh gleefully as I scramble on all-fours after the orange. The
-dusk has deepened, and my baby-brother's face grows indistinct. I throw the
-orange towards him. It hits him in the face, and his gleeful laughter changes to
-a scream. I absolutely never see my baby-brother again, and never again hear his
-voice. All that afterwards refers to him seems to be imparted to me when it is
-dark, and so strong is my impression of this detail that in my memory I never
-see his face with a light upon it. My baby-brother is taken suddenly ill, I am
-told. I go about the house, always in the dark, stepping very gently, and
-wondering whether my secret will become known, and if it does, what will be done
-to me. Still in the dark I hear that my baby-brother is worse; that he is
-dangerously ill. Then, without an interval as it seems, comes the news that my
-baby-brother is dead, and I learn in some undiscoverable way that he has died of
-the croup. I know better. I know that I gave him his death-blow with the orange,
-and I tremble for the consequences. But no human being appears to suspect me,
-and for my own sake I must preserve silence. Even to assume an air of grief at
-my baby-brother's death might be dangerous; it might look as if I were too
-deeply interested in the event; so I put on my most indifferent air. There are,
-however, two things in the house that I am frightened of. One is our old Dutch
-clock, the significant ticking and the very ropes and iron weights of which
-appear to me to be pregnant with knowledge of my crime. Five minutes before
-every hour the clock gives vent to a whirring sound, and at that sound, hitherto
-without significance, I tremble. There is a warning in it, and with nervous
-apprehension I count the seconds that intervene between it and the striking of
-the hour, believing that then the bell will proclaim my guilt. It <i>does</i>
-proclaim it; but no person understands it, no one heeds it. I lean against the
-passage wall, listening to the denunciation. Snaggletooth comes in and stands by
-my side while the clock is striking. I look up into his face with imploring eyes
-and a sinking heart. He taps my cheek kindly, and passes on. I breathe more
-freely; he does not know the language of the bells. The other thing of which I
-am frightened is our cat. I know that she knows, and I am fearful lest, by some
-mysterious means, she will denounce me. If I meet her in the dark, her green
-eyes glare at me. I try to win her over to my side in a covert manner by
-stroking her coat; but as I smooth her fur skilfully and cunningly, I am
-convinced that she arches her back in a manner more significant than usual, and
-that by that action she declines to be a passive accessory to the fact. Her very
-tail, as it curls beneath my fingers, accuses me. But time goes on, and I am not
-arrested and led away to be hanged. When my baby-brother is in his coffin I am
-taken to see him. The cat follows at my heels; I strive to push her away
-stealthily with my foot, but she rubs her ear against my leg, and will not leave
-me. I do not see my baby-brother, because I shut my eyes, and I sob and tremble
-so that they are compelled to take me out of the room; but I have a vague
-remembrance of flowers about his coffin. I am a little relieved when I hear that
-he is buried, but the night that follows is a night of torture to me. The Dutch
-clock ticks, 'I know! I know!' and the cat purrs, 'I know! I know!' and when I
-am in bed the shade of Jane Painter steals into the room, and after smelling
-about for blood, whispers in a ghastly undertone that <i>she</i> knows, and is
-going to tell. Of the doctor, also, I begin to be frightened, for after his
-visit to my father's sick-room, my mother brings him to see me--being anxious
-about me, I hear her say. He stops and speaks to me, and when his fingers are on
-my wrist, I fancy that the beating of my pulse is revealing my crime to him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But more weighty cares even than mine are stirring in our
-house, and making themselves felt. My father's last moments are approaching, and
-I hear that he cannot last the day out. He lasts the day out, but he does not
-last the night out. As the friend of the family, Snaggletooth remains in the
-house to see the end of his old comrade. He and my father were schoolboys
-together, he tells me. 'He was the cleverest boy in the school,' Snaggletooth
-says; 'the cleverest boy in the school! He used to do my sums for me. We went
-out birds'-nesting together; and many and many's the time we've stood up against
-the whole school, snowballing. A snowball, with a stone in it, hit him in the
-face once, and knocked him flat down; but he was up in a minute, all bloody, and
-rushed into the middle of our enemies, like a young lion--like a young lion! He
-was the first and the cleverest of all of us--I was a long way behind him. And
-now, think of him lying there almost at his last breath, and look at me!'
-Snaggletooth straightens himself as he walks upstairs, murmuring, 'The cleverest
-boy in the school! And now think of him, and look at me!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Snaggletooth's wife is in the house, and helps my mother in
-her trouble. In the night this good creature and I sit together in the
-kitchen--waiting. My mother comes in softly two or three times; once she draws
-me out of the kitchen on to the dark landing, and kneels down, and with her arms
-around my neck, sobs quietly upon my shoulder. She kisses me many times, and
-whispers a prayer to me, which I repeat after her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Be a good child always, Chris,' she says.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will, mother.' And the promise, given at such a time, sinks
-into my heart with the force of a sacred obligation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then my mother takes me into the kitchen, and gives me into
-the charge of Snaggletooth's wife, and steals away. Snaggletooth's wife begins
-to prattle to amuse me, and in a few minutes I ascertain that she in some way
-resembles Jane Painter; for--probably influenced by the appropriateness of the
-occasion for such narrations--she tells me stories in a low tone about the Ghost
-of the Red Barn, and the Cock-lane Ghost, and Old Mother Shipton. The old witch
-is a favourite theme with Snaggletooth's wife, and I hear many strange things.
-She says:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'One night Mother Shipton was in a terrible rage, and she told
-the grasshopper on the top of the Royal Exchange to jump over to the ball on St.
-Paul's Church steeple. And so it did. Soon after that, London was burnt to the
-ground.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I muse upon this, and presently inquire: 'Was it an accident?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The fire? No; it was done on purpose.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Was it because the grasshopper jumped on to the steeple that
-London was set on fire?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course,' is the reply. 'That was Mother Shipton's spite.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Snaggletooth's wife tells so many stories of ghosts and
-witches that the air smells of fire and brimstone, and I see the cat's tail
-stiffen and its eyes glow fearfully. Then I hear a cry from upstairs, and
-Snaggletooth's wife rises hurriedly, and looks about her with restless hands,
-and the whole house is in a strange confusion. Snaggletooth himself comes into
-the room, and as he whispers some consoling words to me--only the import of
-which I understand--his great tooth sticks out like a horn. He looks like a
-fiend.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_05" href="#div1Ref_05">CHAPTER V.</a></h4>
-<h5>I PLAY THE PART OF CHIEF MOURNER.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Notwithstanding her limited means, my mother had always
-managed to keep up a respectable appearance. Popular report had settled it that
-my grandmother was a woman of property and that my father had money; and the
-fact that my grandmother's long stocking had proved to be a myth was most
-completely discredited. We are supposed, therefore, to be well to do, and the
-scandal would have been great if my father had not received a respectable
-funeral. Public opinion called for it. My mother makes a great effort, and quite
-out of love, I am sure, and not at all in deference to public opinion, buries my
-father in a manner so respectable as to receive the entire approval of our
-neighbours. Public opinion called for mutes, and two mutes--one with a very long
-face and one with a very square face--are at our door, the objects of deep and
-attentive contemplation on the part of the sundry and several. Public opinion
-called for four black horses, and there they stand, champing their bits, with
-their mouths well soaped. Public opinion called for plumes, and there they wave,
-and bow, and bend, proud and graceful attendants at the shrine of death. Public
-opinion called for mock mourners, and they are ready to parody grief, with very
-large feet, ill-fitting black gloves, and red-rimmed eyes, which suggest the
-idea that their eyelids have been wept away by a long course of salaried
-affliction. Never all his life had my father been so surrounded by pomps and
-vanities; but public opinion has decided that on such solemn occasions grief is
-not grief unless it is lacquered, and that common decency would be outraged by
-following the dead to the grave with simple humility.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The interior of our house has an appearance generally
-suggestive of graves and coffins. The company is assembled in the little parlour
-facing the street--my grandmother's room--and in her expiring attempt at
-respectability my mother has provided sherry and biscuits. The blinds are down
-although it is broad day; a parody of a sunbeam flows through a chink, but the
-motes within it are anything but lively, and float up and down the slanting
-pillar in a sluggish and funereal manner, in perfect sympathy with the occasion.
-The cat peeps into the room, debating whether she shall enter; after a cautious
-scrutiny she decides in the negative, and retires stealthily, to muse over the
-uncertainty of life in a more retired spot. The company is not numerous.
-Snaggletooth is present, and the doctor, and two neighbours who approve of the
-sherry. These latter invite Snaggletooth's attention to the wine, and he pours
-out a glass and disposes of it with a sadly resigned air; saying before he
-drinks it, with a tender reference to my father as he holds it up to the light,
-Ah! If <i>he</i>
-could!' Conversation is carried on in a deadly-lively style. I think of my
-baby-brother, and a wild temptation urges me to fall upon my knees and make
-confession of the murder; but I resist it, and am guiltily dumb. Snaggletooth,
-observing signs of agitation in my face, pats me on the shoulder, and says,
-'Poor little fellow!' The two neighbours follow suit, and poor-little-fellow me
-in sympathising tones. After this, they approach the decanter of sherry with one
-intention. There is but half a glass left, which the first to reach the decanter
-pours out and drinks, while the second regards him reproachfully, with a look
-which asks, On such an occasion should not self be sacrificed? Before the lid of
-the coffin is fastened down, I am taken into the room by Snaggletooth to look
-for the last time upon my father's face. I see nothing but a figure in white
-which inspires me with fear. I cling close to Snaggletooth. He is immensely
-affected, and mutters, 'Good-bye, old schoolfellow! Ah, time! time!' As I look
-up at him, his bald head glistens as would a ball of wax, and something glistens
-in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When the coffin is taken out of the house, there is great
-excitement among the throng of persons in the street. They peep over each
-other's shoulders to catch a glimpse of the coffin and of me. I cannot help
-feeling that I am in an exalted position. A thrill of pride stirs my heart. Am I
-not chief mourner?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I stand by the side of a narrow grave, dug in a corner of the
-churchyard, and shaded from the sun's glare by a triangular wall, the top of
-which is covered with pieces of broken bottles, arranged with cruel nicety and
-precision, so that their sharp and jagged ends are uppermost. Standing also
-within the shadow of the triangular wall are a number of tombstones, some fair
-and white, others yellow and crumbling from age, which I regard with the air of
-one who has acquired a vested interest in the property. I do not understand the
-words the clergyman utters, for he has an impediment in his speech. But as the
-coffin is lowered, I am impelled gently towards the grave, from which I shrink,
-however, apprehensive lest I shall be thrust into it, and buried beneath the
-earth which is scattered on the coffin with a leaden miserable sound. When the
-service is ended, I hear Snaggletooth mutter, 'Think of him lying there, and
-look at me! And we were schoolfellows, and played snowball together!'
-Snaggletooth shows me my grandmother's grave, and the grave of my baby-brother.
-I dare not look upon the latter, knowing what I know. Then Snaggletooth, still
-with head uncovered, stands before a little gave over which is a small marble
-tombstone, with the inscription, 'Here Lieth our Beloved Daughter.' Seeing that
-his tears are falling on the grave, I creep closer to him, and he presses me
-gently to his side. I read the inscription slowly, spelling the words, 'Here
-Lieth our Beloved Daughter,' and I look at him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My daughter,' he says; 'the sweetest angel that ever
-breathed. She was three years and one day old when she died, nearly five years
-ago. Poor darling! Five years ago! Ah, time! time!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As we pass out of the churchyard I notice again the broken
-glass on the top of the wall, and I say,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Isn't that cruel?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why cruel?' asks Snaggletooth. 'No one can get in without
-hurting himself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Snaggletooth regards me with an eye of curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And who do you think wants to get into such a place, my
-little fellow?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I do not answer, and Snaggletooth adds,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The angels, perhaps. Good--good. But they come in another
-way.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one can get out without hurting himself,' I suggest.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is a better thought; but if they lived good lives----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Walls covered with broken glass won't hurt them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Snaggletooth looks upwards contemplatively. I look up also,
-and a sudden dizziness comes upon me and overpowers me. Snaggletooth catches me
-as I am falling.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are not well, my little fellow.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, sir; I feel very weak, but the doctor says I shall get
-over it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Snaggletooth lifts me in his arms, and I fall asleep on his
-shoulder as he carries me tenderly home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Here we are, my mother and I, sitting in the little parlour.
-My mother has been crying over me, and perhaps over the sad future that lies
-before us. Not a sound now is to be heard. My condition is a strange one.
-Everything about me is very unreal, and I wonderingly consider if I shall ever
-wake up. All my young experiences come to me again. I see my grandmother and
-myself sitting together. There upon the mantelshelf is the figure of the
-smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, wagging his head at me; there is the man
-with the knob on the top of his head--what is his name? Anthony--yes, Anthony
-Bullpit--making a meal off his finger nails. In marches my grandmother's long
-stocking, bulged out with money to the shape of a very substantial leg, just as
-I had fancied it--that makes me laugh; but my flesh creeps as I hear Jane
-Painter's voice in the dark, telling of blood and murder. The last word, as she
-dwells upon it, brings up my baby-brother, and I hear the Dutch clock tick: 'I
-know! I know!' But it ticks all these fancies into oblivion, and ticks in the
-picture of the churchyard. I see the graves and the tombstones, and I read the
-inscription: 'Here Lieth our Beloved Daughter.' How it must grieve her parents
-to know that their beloved daughter is lying shut up in the cold earth! I raise
-a portrait of the child, with fair hair and laughing eyes, and I wonder how she
-would look now if she were dug up, and whether her parents would know her again.
-Night surprises me confined within the triangular wall of the churchyard. The
-gates are closed, and I cannot pass out. The moon shines down icily. The cold
-air makes my fevered blood hotter. I <i>must</i> get out! I cannot stop confined
-here for ever! I dig my fingers into the wall; desperately I cling to it, and
-strive to climb. Inch by inch I mount. With an exquisite sense of relief I reach
-the top, but as I place my hands upon it they are cut to the bone by the broken
-glass, and with a wild shudder I sink into darkness and oblivion!</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_06" href="#div1Ref_06">CHAPTER VI.</a></h4>
-<h5>IN WHICH A GREAT CHANGE IN MY CIRCUMSTANCES TAKES PLACE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">When I recovered from the fever of which the experiences just
-recorded were the prelude, I found that we had removed from the house in which I
-was born, and that we were occupying apartments. We had removed also from the
-neighbourhood; the streets were strange, the people were strange; I saw no
-familiar faces. Hitherto we had been living in Hertford, and many a time had I
-watched the barges going lazily to and fro on the River Lea. The place we were
-in now was nothing but a village; my mother told me it was called Chipping
-Barnet. I cannot tell exactly what it was that restrained me from asking why the
-change had been made; it must have been from an intuitive consciousness that the
-subject was painful to my mother. But when, after the lapse of a year or so, we
-moved away from Chipping Barnet, and began to live in very humble fashion in two
-small rooms, I asked the reason.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' said my mother, 'we cannot afford better.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked into her face; it was pale and cheerful. But I saw,
-although no signs of repining were there, that care had made its mark. She
-smiled at me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We are very poor, dear child,' she said; and added quickly,
-with a light in her eyes, 'but that is no reason why we should not be happy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She did her best to make me so, and poor as our home was, it
-contained many sweet pleasures. By this time I had completely lost sight of
-Snaggletooth and all our former friends and acquaintances. I did not miss them;
-I had my mother with me, and I wished for no one else. Already, my former life
-and my former friends were becoming to me things of long ago. My mother often
-spoke of London, and of her wish to go there.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think it would be better for us, Chris,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is London a very large place?' I asked. 'As large as this?'
-stretching out my arms to gain an idea of its extent.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother told me what she knew of London, which was not much,
-for she had only been there once, for a couple of days, and I said I was sure I
-should not like it; there were too many people in it. My idea of perfect
-happiness was to live with my mother in some pretty country place, where there
-were fields and shady walks and turnstiles and narrow lanes, and perhaps a
-river. I described the very place, and artistically dotted it with lazy cattle
-listening for mysterious signs in earth or air, or looking with steady solemn
-gaze far into the horizon, as if they were observing signs hidden from human
-gaze. I also put some lazy barges on the river, 'Creeping, creeping, creeping,'
-I said, 'as if they were <i>so</i> tired!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And we would go and live in that very place, my dear,' said
-my mother, 'if we had money enough.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When you get money enough, mother, we <i>will</i> go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Other changes were made, but not in the direction I desired.
-Like a whirlpool, London was drawing us nearer and nearer to its depths, and by
-the time I was twelve years of age we were nearly at the bottom of the hill down
-which we had been steadily going. My clothes were very much patched and mended
-now; all our furniture was sold, and we were living in one room, which was
-rented to us ready furnished. The knowledge of the struggle in which my mother
-was engaged loomed gradually upon me, and distressed me in a vague manner. We
-were really now in London, although not in the heart of the City; and my mother,
-whose needle brought us bread and very little butter, often walked four miles to
-the workshop, and four miles back, on a fruitless errand. Things were getting
-worse and worse with us. My mother grew thinner and paler, but she never looked
-at me without a smile on her lips--a smile that was often sad, but always
-tender. At night, while she worked, she taught me to read and write; there was
-no free school near us, and she could not afford to pay for my learning. But no
-schoolmaster could have taught me as well as she did. She had a thin, sweet
-voice, and often when I was in bed I fell asleep with her singing by my side. I
-used to love to lie thus peacefully with closed eyes, and float into dreamland
-upon the wings of her sweet melodies. I woke up sometimes late in the night, and
-saw her dear face bending over her work. It was always meek and cheerful; I
-never saw anger or bad passion in it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother,' I said one night, after I had lain and watched her
-for a long time.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She gave a start. 'Dear child; I thought you were asleep.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So I have been; but I woke up, and I've been watching you for
-a long, long time. Mother, when I am a man I shall work for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's right, dear. You give me pleasure and delight. I know
-my good boy will try to be a good man.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will try to; as good as you are. I want to be like you.
-Could I not work now, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, dear child; you are not strong enough yet.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I wish I could grow into a strong man in a night,' I thought.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother came to the bedside and rested her fingers upon my
-neck. What tenderness dwells in a loving mother's touch! I imprisoned her
-fingers in mine. She leant towards me caressingly and kissed me. Sleep stole
-upon me in that kiss of love.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I saw a picture in a shop window of a girl whose bright fresh
-face brought my mother's face before me. But the girl's face was full of
-gladness, and her cheeks were glowing; my mother's cheeks were sunken and wan.
-Still the likeness was unmistakably there, and I thought how much I should love
-to see my mother as bright as this bright girl. I spoke to her about it, and she
-went to see the picture, which was in the next street to ours. She came back
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It <i>is</i> like me, Chris,' she said; 'as I was once.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you must have been very, very pretty,' I said, stroking
-her cheek.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother laughed melodiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When I was young, my dear,' she said with innocent vanity,
-blushing like a girl, 'I was thought not to be ugly.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ugly, indeed!' I exclaimed, looking around defiantly. 'My
-mother couldn't be ugly!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What do you call me now, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are beautiful--beautiful!' with another defiant look. My
-mother shook her hand in mild remonstrance. 'You are--you are! But you're pale
-and thin, and you've got lines here--and here.' I smoothed them with my hand.
-'And, mother, you're not old!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'm forty, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is not old. Tell me--why did you alter so?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Time and trouble alter us, dear. We can't be always bright.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thought that I might be the trouble she referred to, and I
-asked the question anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You, my darling!' she said, drawing me to her side and
-petting me. 'You are my joy, my comfort! I live only for you, Chris--only for
-you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I noticed something here, and, with a touch of that logical
-argumentativeness for which I was afterwards not undistinguished, I said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I am your joy and comfort, you ought to be glad.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And am I not glad? What does my little boy mean by his
-roundabouts?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You cried when you said I was your joy and comfort.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They were tears of pleasure, my dear--tears that sprang from
-my love for my boy. Then perhaps they sprang from the thought--for we will be
-truthful always, Chris--that I should like to buy my boy a new pair of boots and
-some new clothes, and that I couldn't because I hadn't money enough.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You would buy them for me if you had money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah! what would I not buy for my darling if I had money!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">How delicious it was to nestle in her arms as she poured out
-the love of her heart for me! How I worshipped her, and kissed her, and patted
-her cheek, and smoothed her hair.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are like a lover, my dear,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am your lover,' I replied, and murmured softly to myself,
-'Wait till I am a man! wait till I am a man!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That night I coaxed my mother to talk to me of the time when
-she was young, and she did, with many a smile and many a blush; and in our one
-little room there was much delight. She picked out the daisies of her life, and
-laid them before me to gladden my heart. Simple and beautiful were they as
-Nature's own sweet flower. She showed me a picture of herself as a girl, and I
-saw its likeness to the picture I had admired in the shop window. She sang me to
-sleep with her dear old songs, full of sweetness and simplicity. How different
-are our modern songs from those sweet old airs! The charm of simplicity is
-wanting--but, indeed, it is wanting in other modern things as well. The spirit
-of simplicity dwells not in crowded places.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then commenced my first conscious worship of woman. I held her
-in my heart as a devotee holds a saint. How good was this world which contained
-such goodness! How sweet this life which contained such sweetness! She was the
-flower of both. Modesty, simplicity, and truth, were with her invariably. To me
-she became the incarnation of purity.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Time went on, and low as we were we were still going down hill
-steadily and surely. It is a long hill, and there are many depths in it. Work
-grew slack, and in the struggle to make both ends meet, my mother was frequently
-worsted; there was often a great gap between. I do not wonder that hearts
-sometimes crack in that endeavour. Yet my mother ('by hook and by crook,' as I
-have heard her say merrily) generally managed in the course of the week to
-scrape together some few coins which, jealously watched and jealously spent,
-sufficed in a poor way to keep body and soul together. How it was managed is a
-mystery to me. The winter came on: a hard winter. Bread went up in price; every
-additional halfpenny on a four-pound loaf was a dagger in my mother's breast. We
-rubbed through this hard time somehow, and Christmas glided by and the new year
-came upon us. A cold spring set in, and work, which had been getting slacker and
-slacker, could not now be obtained. Still my mother did not lie down and yield.
-She tried other shops, and received a little work--very little--at odd times.
-There came a very hard week, and my mother was much distressed. On the Friday
-night I heard her murmuring to herself in her sleep as I thought, and I fancied
-I heard her sob. I called to her, but she did not answer me. Her breath rose and
-fell in regular rhythm. Yes, she was asleep, and the sob I thought I heard was
-born of my fancy. I was thankful for that!</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_07" href="#div1Ref_07">CHAPTER VII.</a></h4>
-<h5>IN WHICH A FAIRY IN A COTTON-PRINT DRESS IS INTRODUCED.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The next day was Saturday, and my mother went out early in the
-morning, and returned at two o'clock with the saddest of faces.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No work, mother?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear,' she replied; 'but come, my child, you must be
-hungry.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was little enough to eat, but my boy's appetite, and the
-cunning way my mother had of placing our humble fare before me, made the plain
-food as sweet as the best.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I noticed that she ate nothing, and I tried to persuade her to
-eat.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have no appetite, my dear,' she said, and added in reply to
-my sorrowful look, 'My little boy doesn't know what I've had while I was out
-this morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Deeper thought than usual seemed to occupy her mind during the
-afternoon, and she suddenly started up, and hurriedly threw on her bonnet and
-shawl.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you going to try again, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my darling; I must try again.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She did not return until late, but she returned radiant, and
-said, as she took my face between her two hands, and kissed me:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Child, dear child! God bless those who help the poor!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She did not bid me repeat the words; but some deep meaning in
-her voice impelled me to do so, and I said in a solemn tone, what the words
-seemed to demand,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'God bless those who help the poor!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded pensively as she knelt before me, and as I looked
-at her somewhat earnestly, her face flushed, and she rose, and bustled about the
-room, putting things in order. I think she tried to hide her face from me, and
-that her bustling about was a pretence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now, Chris,' she said presently, drawing her breath
-quickly, as though she had been running, 'let us go out and get something nice
-for supper, and for dinner to-morrow. Put on your cap, dear; you must be
-hungry.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was; and I was glad, indeed, to hear the good news, and to
-accompany her on such an errand. She consulted me as to what she should buy, and
-made me very proud and happy with her 'What do you say to this, dear?' and
-'Would you like this, my darling?' We returned home loaded with meat, potatoes,
-and one or two little delicacies. I was in a state of great satisfaction, and we
-made quite merry over the trifling incident of a few potatoes rolling out of my
-mother's apron down the stairs in the dark. Bump, bump, bumping,' I said, as I
-scrambled down after them, 'as if they knew their way in the dark, and could see
-without a candle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Potatoes have eyes, my dear,' said my mother; and we laughed
-blithely over it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother's mood changed after supper. We always said a very
-simple grace after meals. It was, 'Thank God for a good breakfast!' 'Thank God
-for a good dinner!' or whatever meal it was of which we had partaken. Our 'Thank
-God for a good supper!' being said, most earnestly by my mother, she cleared
-away the things, and said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now we will see how rich we are.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We sat down at the table, side by side, and my mother took out
-of her pocket what money it contained. I thought that our all had been expended
-in our frugal purchases, but I was agreeably mistaken. There were still left two
-sixpences and a few coppers. My mother selected a battered halfpenny, and
-regarded it tenderly--so tenderly, and with so much feeling, that her tears fell
-on it. I wondered. A battered halfpenny, dented, dirty, bruised! I wondered more
-as she kissed it, and held it to me to kiss.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, mother?' I asked, as I kissed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In reply, she told me a story.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, there lived in a great forest a poor woman who had
-no friend in the world but one--a bird that she loved with all her heart and
-soul, and who, not being big enough or strong enough to get food for himself,
-depended, because he couldn't help it, upon what this poor woman could provide
-for him. There were other birds that in some way resembled the bird that
-belonged to this poor woman, and that she loved so dearly, and many of these
-were also compelled to wander about the great forest in search of food; but they
-found it so difficult to obtain sufficient to eat, and they met with so many sad
-adventures in their search, that their wings lost their strength, and their
-hearts the brightness that was their proper heritage--for they were young birds,
-whose time for battling with the world had not arrived. The poor woman did not
-wish her dear bird to meet with such sad experiences until he was strong and
-able to cope with them. I can't tell you, my dear, how much she loved her bird,
-and how thoroughly her whole heart was wrapped up in her treasure. Once she had
-friends who were good to her; but it was the will of God that she should lose
-them, and she and her bird were left alone in the world. She had many
-difficulties to contend with, being a weak and foolish woman----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I shook my head, and said, 'I am sure she wasn't; I am sure
-she wasn't!' My mother pressed me closer to her side, and continued, her fingers
-caressing my neck:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">----'And the days were sometimes very dark for her, or would
-have been but for the joy she found in her only treasure. A time came when her
-heart almost fainted within her--for her bird was at home hungry, and there was
-no food in the nest, and she did not know which way to turn to get it. She
-wandered about the forest with rebellious thoughts in her mind--yes, my dear,
-she did!--and out of her blindness and wickedness--hush, my dearest!--out of her
-blindness and wickedness, she began almost to doubt the goodness of God. She
-thought, foolish woman that she was! that there was no love in the forest but
-the love which filled <i>her</i> breast; that pity, compassion, charity, had
-died out of the world, and that she and her bird were to be left to perish. But
-she received such a lesson, my dear, as she will never forget till her dying
-day. While these despairing thoughts were in her mind, and while her rebellious
-heart was crying against the sweetest attributes with which God has endowed His
-children, a fairy in a cotton-print dress came to her side----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mother!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is true, my dear. A fairy in a cotton-print dress came to
-her side, and with a sweet word and a sweeter look put into her hand a
-talisman--call it a stone, my dear, if you will--a common, almost valueless
-piece of stone; and the touch of the pretty little fairy fingers to the poor
-woman's hand was like the touch of Moses's rod to the rock, when the waters came
-forth for the famished people. And she prayed God to forgive her for doubting
-His goodness, and the goodness of those whom He made in the image of Himself.
-Then, as she looked at the common piece of stone which the fairy had given to
-her, she saw in it the face of an angel, and she kissed it again and again, as I
-do this.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">After a little while my mother wrapped the halfpenny in a
-piece of paper, and put it by, saying she hoped she would never be compelled to
-spend it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">During the whole of the following week my mother was
-unsuccessful in obtaining work. It was not from want of perseverance that she
-did not succeed, for she came home every day weary and footsore.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The sewing-machines are keeping many poor women out of work,'
-she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then they are bad things,' I exclaimed; 'I wish they were all
-burnt!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear; they are good things; they are blessings to many
-poor creatures. Why, Chris, if I had one, we should be quite rich!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But she did not have one, and her needles were at a discount,
-so far as earning bread for us was concerned. On the Saturday she went out again
-early, and did not come home until late at night. Good fortune had again
-attended her, and she brought home a little money.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you seen the fairy in the cotton-print dress?' I asked
-gaily. My mother nodded sorrowfully. Saturday's a lucky day, mother,' I said,
-rubbing my hands.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my child,' she answered, with a heavy sigh.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She added another halfpenny to the one she had kissed and put
-by last week, and we went out again to make our purchases. Another week
-followed, and another, with similar results and similar incidents. Then my
-mother fell sick, and could not, although she tried, keep the knowledge of her
-weakness from me; a sorrow of which I was not a sharer was preying on her heart.
-I did not know of it; but I saw that my mother was growing even paler and
-thinner, and often, when she did not think I was observing her, I saw the tears
-roll down her cheek, and her lips quiver piteously. Friday night found us with a
-cupboard nearly empty, and with but one halfpenny in our treasury--the first
-battered and bruised halfpenny, which my mother hoped she would never be
-compelled to spend. Those she had added to it had gone during the week. She
-looked at it wistfully:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Must we spend it, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is the angel's face there?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I see it.' And she kissed the battered coin again.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then we must keep it,' I said stoutly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When I awoke the next morning, my mother was kneeling by my
-bedside, and when she saw my eyes resting on her face, she clasped me in her
-arms, and so we lay for fully half an hour, without a word being spoken. There
-was a little milk left for breakfast, and this my mother made into very weak
-milk-and-water. The bread she cut into four slices. One she ate, two she gave to
-me, and one she put into the cupboard. She laid the battered halfpenny on the
-mantelshelf.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now, Chris,' she said, as she put on her poor worn bonnet,
-'when you are hungry you can eat the slice of bread that's in the cupboard; and
-if I am not at home before you are hungry again, you can buy some bread with
-that halfpenny. Kiss me, dear child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But, mother,' I remonstrated, you are too ill to go out. You
-ought to stay at home to-day.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I dare not, child. I <i>must</i> go out. Why, doesn't my Chris
-want his supper to-night, and his dinner to-morrow? And don't I want my supper
-and dinner, too?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you going to the workshop, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am going that way, child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I begged her to promise that she would try and be home
-early, and she was compelled to promise, to satisfy me. With faltering steps she
-left the room, and walked slowly downstairs. I felt that there was something
-wrong, but I did not understand it, and certainly would have been powerless to
-remedy it. I was soon hungry enough to eat the slice of bread; and then I went
-out, and strolled restlessly about the streets. It was a cold day, and I was
-glad to get indoors again, although there was no fire. In the afternoon I was
-hungry again, and mother had not returned. Should I spend the halfpenny? I took
-it from the mantelshelf. The gift of a fairy in a cotton-print dress! I turned
-it this way and that, in the endeavour to find some special charm in it. It was
-as common a halfpenny as I had ever looked upon. I saw no angel's face in it.
-But my mother said there was, and that was enough. No; I could not spend it.
-Then I thought that it was unkind of me to let my mother, ill and weak as she
-was, go out by herself. I reproached myself; I might have helped her on. She
-promised to return soon; perhaps she was not strong enough to return. These
-reproachful thoughts and my hunger grew upon me, and my uneasiness increased,
-until I became very wretched indeed. As dusk was falling, I made up my mind that
-a certain duty was before me. I must walk into the City to the shop for which my
-mother used to work, and seek for her. I had been to the place two or three
-times to take work home, and I knew my way pretty well. Perhaps I should meet my
-mother on the road. Off I started on my self-imposed task. My increasing hunger
-made the distance appear twice as long as it really was, and I could not help
-lingering and longing for a little while at a fine cook-shop, the perfume which
-pervaded it being more fragrant to me at the time than all the perfumes of
-Arabia would have been. When I arrived at the workshop, it was closed. There was
-nothing for it but to turn my face homeward. Weary, hungry, and dispirited, I
-commenced my journey back; I was anxious to get home quickly now, to lessen the
-chance of my mother returning while I was absent. In my eagerness and confusion
-I missed my way, and it was quite ten o'clock at night when I found myself in a
-street which was familiar to me, and which I knew to be about two miles from the
-street in which we lived. The neighbourhood in which I was now was a busy one; a
-kind of market was held there every Saturday night, in which poor people could
-purchase what they required a trifle cheaper than they could be supplied at the
-regular shops. There were a great glare of lights and a great hurly-burly of
-noise which in my weak condition confused and frightened me. I staggered feebly
-on, and stumbled against a man who was passing me in a great hurry. He caught
-hold of my arm with such force as to swing me round; and without any effort on
-my part to escape, for I was almost unconscious, I slipped from his grasp and
-fell to the ground. I think I heard the words, Unmanly brute uttered in a female
-voice; but my next distinct remembrance is that I was standing on my feet,
-swaying slightly, and held up by the man I had run against. He spoke to me in
-sharp tones, and demanded to know where I was running to. I begged his pardon
-humbly, but in tones too faint to reach his ear, for he inquired roughly if I
-had a tongue in my head. There were a few persons standing about us, and one or
-two women told the man he ought to be ashamed of himself, and asked him what he
-meant by it, and why he didn't leave the boy alone. In sneering reply he called
-them a parcel of wise women.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did you ever see a thief of his size?' he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not a thief,' I said, in a faint tone. 'Let me go. I
-want to get home.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I raised my eyes to his face as I spoke. I could not
-distinguish his features, for everything was dim before me, but he seemed to see
-something in my face that occupied his attention, for he looked at me long and
-earnestly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you been ill?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am tired and hungry. Let me go, please,' I implored.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He released his hold of me. Glad to be free, and intent only
-on getting home as soon as I could, I walked from him with uncertain steps. But
-I did not know how weak I really was; and I was compelled to cling to the
-shop-fronts for support. I must have stumbled on in this way for fifty or sixty
-yards, when stopped to rest myself. Then,' without raising my eyes, I knew that
-the man against whom I had stumbled was standing by me again; he must have
-followed me out of his course, for when we first met his road was different from
-mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did you see me following you?' he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was frightened of him; his voice seemed to hurt me. I had
-scarcely a comprehension of the meaning of his words; and I was fearful that, if
-I disputed anything he said, I might arouse his anger, and that he would detain
-me again. He repeated his question; and I answered, almost without knowing what
-I said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My reply appeared to dissatisfy him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you have been shamming weakness?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked about me timidly and nervously for a means of escape.
-Standing in the road, close to the kerbstone, and facing a portion of the
-pavement which was partly in shade, was a beggar-woman, with her face hidden on
-her breast. One hand held her thin shawl tightly in front of her; the other hand
-was held out supplicatingly. What it was that caused me to fix my eyes on her I
-cannot tell; perhaps it was because I recognised in her drooping form and humble
-attitude something kindred to my own pitiable condition. As I gazed at her, a
-little girl, very poorly dressed, and with a basket on her arm, stopped before
-the woman, and put a coin into her outstretched hand. The woman curtseyed, and
-stooped and kissed the little girl. As the child, her act of charity performed,
-walked away, I saw her face; and it was so sweet and good, that my mother's
-words with reference to the battered halfpenny came to my mind: 'I see an
-angel's face in it.' I watched her until she was lost in the throng; and then I
-turned to the beggar-woman again, and saw, as in a flash of light, my mother!
-Was it shame, was it joy, that convulsed me, as crying, 'Mother! mother!' I ran
-and fell senseless at her feet?</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_08" href="#div1Ref_08">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>A POSTMAN'S KNOCK.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">It seemed to me as if I had closed my eyes and opened them
-with scarcely a moment's interval; and yet I was at home in our own little room,
-and my mother was bending over me tenderly. I could not immediately realise the
-change. The busy streets, and the glare in them, and my fear of the man who had
-accused me of being a thief, were still present to my mind. I clung closer to my
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What is my darling frightened of?' she said soothingly. 'He
-is at home, and safe in his mother's arms.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At home!' I looked around apprehensively. 'Where's the man?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What man, dear child? The man who carried you home?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had no remembrance of being carried home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The man who carried me home!' I exclaimed; and repeated
-wonderingly, 'Carried me home! No, I don't know him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is no one here, dear child, but you and I. Taste this.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She held a cup of tea to my lips, and I drank gratefully; and
-ate a slice of bread-and-butter she gave me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There, my dear! My darling feels better, does he not?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes.' As I looked at her, the scene I had witnessed, of which
-she had been the principal figure, dawned upon me. I could not check my sobs; I
-felt as if my heart would burst. 'O mother! mother!' I cried. 'I remember now; I
-remember now!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She held me in her arms, and caressed me, and pressed me to
-her heart. My tears flowed upon her faithful breast.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How did you find me, dear child? Unkind mother that I am to
-leave my darling hungry and alone all the day!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't say that, mother. You mustn't; you mustn't! If anybody
-else said it, I would kill him!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Hush, dear child! You must not excite yourself. Come, you
-shall go to bed; and you shall tell me all in the morning, please God.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, I want to tell you now; I want to talk to you now. I want
-to lie here, and talk quietly, quietly! Oh, but I am so sorry! so sorry!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For what, dear child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Through my sobs I murmured, 'That you should have to stand in
-the cold, and beg for me!' My arms were round her, and I felt her shrink and
-tremble within them. 'Now I know what the poor woman in the forest did when she
-went to look for food for her bird. If any one saw you that knew you, would you
-not be ashamed? Would you not run away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Sadly and tearfully she replied, 'No, my own darling, I do not
-think I should. Who would be so cruel as to say I ought to be ashamed of doing
-what I do?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But, mother, you stand with your head down, as if you wanted
-to hide your face!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The blood rose to her face and forehead pitifully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I cannot help it, dearest,' she said with trembling lips; it
-comes natural to me to stand so. I do not think of it at the time. And O, Chris!
-don't despise your poor mother now that you have found out her secret!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She would have fallen at my feet if I had not kept my arms
-tightly around her. In the brief pause that ensued before she spoke again, I
-closed my eyes, and leant my head upon her shoulder, the better to think of her
-goodness to me. I saw all the details of the picture which now occupied my mind.
-I saw my mother approach the spot where she had decided to stand, to solicit
-charity for me; I saw her hesitate, and tremble, and look around warily and
-timidly, as though she were about to commit a crime; and then I saw her glide
-swiftly into the road and take her station there, with her dear head drooping on
-her breast from shame. Yes, from shame. And it was for me she did this!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I could get work to do,' she presently said, in low meek
-tones, such as one who was crushed and who despaired might use if wrongfully
-accused, 'I would not beg. Heaven knows I have tried hard enough; I have
-implored, have almost gone on my knees for it, in vain. What was I to do? We
-could not starve, and I would not go to the parish; I would not bring that shame
-upon my darling's life, until everything else in the world had failed. I did not
-intend my child to know. I tried to keep the knowledge from him--I tried, I
-tried! O, my dear boy! my heart is fit to break!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I listened in awe, and could say no word to comfort her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is no shame to me to do as I have done,' she said half
-appealingly, half defiantly. 'It is for bread for my dear child's life. I should
-stand with my face open to the people, if I had the courage. But I am a
-coward--a coward! and I shrink and tremble, as if I were a thief, with terror in
-my heart!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She a coward! Dear heart! Brave soul! Her voice grew softer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And O, Chris, my child! since I have stood there I have
-learnt so much that I did not know before. It has made me better--humbler. Never
-again, never again can I doubt the goodness of God! What good there is in the
-world of which we are ignorant, until sorrow brings us to the knowledge of it!
-When I first stood there, the world seemed to pass away from me, so dreadful a
-feeling took possession of me. In my fancy, harsh voices clamoured at me, cruel
-faces mocked me from all sides; I did not dare raise my head. But in the midst
-of my soul's agony, soft fingers touched mine, and the sweet voice of a child
-brought comfort to my heart. And then poor women gave, and I was ashamed to
-take. I held it out to them again, begging them with my eyes to take it back
-again; and they ran away, some of them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The floodgates of my mother's heart were open, and she was
-talking now as much to herself as to me, recalling what had touched her most
-deeply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Two weeks ago a young woman came and stood before me. God
-knows what she was thinking of as she stood there in a way it made my heart ache
-to see. She was very, very pretty; very, very young. She stood looking at me so
-long in silence that I began almost to be afraid. I dared not speak to her
-first. I have never yet spoken unbidden in that place; I seem to myself to have
-no right to speak. But, seeking to soften any hard thought she may have had in
-her mind for me or for herself, I returned her look, kindly I hope, and
-pityingly too. &quot;I thought I'd make you look at me,&quot; she said in a hard voice
-that I felt was not natural to her; &quot;beggars like you haven't much to be proud
-of, I should say. Thank the Lord I haven't come to that yet!&quot; I tried to shape
-an answer, but the words wouldn't leave my lips, and I could only look at her
-appealingly. Poor girl! she seemed to resent this, and tossed her head, and went
-away singing. But there was no singing in her heart. I followed her with my
-eyes, and saw her stop at a public-house; but she hesitated at the door, and did
-not enter. No; she came back, and stood before me again. &quot;What do you come here
-for?&quot; she asked, after a little pause. &quot;For food,&quot; I answered. She sneered at my
-answer, and I waited in sorrow for her next words. &quot;Have you got a husband?&quot;
-&quot;No,&quot; I said, wondering why she asked. &quot;No more have I,&quot; she said. My thoughts
-wandered to a happier time, and pictures of brighter days which seem to have
-passed away for ever came to my mind; but the girl soon brought me back to
-reality. &quot;Are you a mother?&quot; she asked. &quot;Oh, yes!&quot; I answered, with a sob of
-thankfulness, for the dear Lord has made my boy a blessing to me. &quot;So am I,&quot; she
-said, with a little laugh that struck me like a knife. &quot;Here--take this; I was
-going to spend it in drink.&quot; And she put sixpence in coppers into my hand, and
-ran away. But I ran after her, and entreated her to take the money back; but she
-would not, and grew sullen. I still entreated, and she said, &quot;Very well; give it
-to me; I'll spend it in gin.&quot; What I said to her after this I do not know, I was
-so grieved and sorry for her; but I told her I would keep the money, and she
-thanked me for the promise, oh! so humbly and gratefully, and began to cry so
-piteously and passionately, that my own sorrows seemed light compared with hers.
-I drew her away to a quiet street, and kissed her and soothed her, and although
-we had never met before, she clung to me, and blessed me with broken words and
-sobs. Then, when she was quieter, I asked her where her little one was, and
-might I go with her and see it? She took me to her room, and I saw her
-baby--such a pretty little thing!--and I nursed it till it fell asleep, and then
-tidied up the room, and put the bed straight. Ah, my darling! I could not repeat
-all that the poor girl said. I went out and spent fourpence of the sixpence she
-gave me in food for the baby, and she was not angry with me for it. I have been
-to see her and her baby twice since that night, and my heart has ached often
-when I have thought of them. If I were not as poor as I am, I would try to be a
-friend to them. But, alas! what can I do? Yet there is not a night I have stood
-in that place that I have not lifted my heart to God for the goodness that has
-been shown to me. How good a thing it is for the poor to help the poor as they
-do! God sweeten their lives for them!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We were silent for a long time after this. I broke the silence
-by whispering,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother, I didn't spend the halfpenny; it is on the
-mantelshelf now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear child! I am sorry and glad. It is the first halfpenny I
-ever received in charity, and it was given to me by a little child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let me look at it, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She took it from the mantelshelf, and placed it in my hands.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can see the angel's face now,' I said. 'It is the fairy in
-a cotton-print dress.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother nodded with a sweet smile.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And the fairy is a little girl?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And she came every Saturday night afterwards, with a basket
-on her arm, and gave you a halfpenny?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, dear. How do you know?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I saw her to-night, and I guessed the rest. I am so glad you
-kissed her! Mother, we will never, never spend this halfpenny!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, my darling; but you haven't told me yet how it was
-you found me out.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had barely finished my recital when a knock came at our
-door. On opening it, our landlady was discovered, puffing and blowing. A great
-basket was hanging from her hand. Benignant confidence in her lodger reigned in
-her face; curiosity dwelt in her eye. As she entered, the air became
-spirituously perfumed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O, them stairs!' she panted. They ketch me in the side! If
-you'll excuse me, my dear!' And she sat down, still retaining her hold of the
-basket. She went through many stages before she quite recovered herself, gazing
-at us the while with that imploring look peculiar to women who are liable to be
-'ketched in the side.' Then she brightened up, and spoke again. 'I thought I'd
-bring it up myself,' she said; the stairs ain't been long cleaned, and the boy's
-boots are that muddy that I told him to wait in the passage for the basket. If
-you'll empty it, I'll take it down to him. Oh,' she continued, seeing that my
-mother was in doubt, I don't mind the trouble the least bit in the world! If all
-lodgers was as regular with their rent as you, my dear, I shouldn't be put upon
-as I am!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Still my mother hesitated; she did not understand it. I saw
-that the basket was well filled, for the lid bulged up. The landlady, declaring
-that it was very heavy, placed it on the table, and was about to lift the lid,
-when my mother's hand restrained her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is some mistake; these things are not for me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my dear creature!' exclaimed the landlady, growing
-exceedingly confidential, 'didn't you order 'em?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, I haven't marketed yet. My poor boy has been ill, and I
-haven't been able to go out.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, but there can't be any mistake, my dear;' and the
-landlady, scenting a mystery, became very inquisitive indeed; here's your name
-on a bit of paper.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The writing was plain enough, certainly: 'For Mrs. Carey. Paid
-for. Basket to be returned.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know the boy who brought them?' asked my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To be sure I do, my dear creature! He belongs to Mrs.
-Strangeways, the greengrocer round the corner.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like to speak to him. May he come up?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Certainly, my dear soul!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And the landlady, in her eagerness to get at the heart of the
-mystery, disregarded the effect of muddy boots on clean stairs, and called the
-boy up. But he could throw no light upon the matter. All that he knew was that
-his mistress directed him to bring the things round to Mrs. Carey's, and to make
-haste back with the basket. 'And please, will you look sharp about it?' he
-adjured in a tone of injured innocence, digging his knuckles into his eyes, and
-working them round so forcibly that it almost seemed as though he were trying to
-gouge out his eyeballs; if you keep me here much longer, missis'll swear when I
-get back that I've been stopping on the road playing pitch and toss.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The landlady, whose curiosity had now reached the highest
-point, protested that it would be flying in the face of Providence to hesitate
-another moment, and whipped open the basket.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Half a pound of salt butter,' she said, calling out the
-things as she placed them on the table; half a pound of tea; sixpennorth of
-eggs--they're Mrs. Chizlett's eggs, my dear, sixteen a shilling--I know 'em by
-the bag; a pound of brown sugar; a cabbage; taters--seven pound for tuppence, my
-dear; and a lovely shoulder of mutton--none of your scrag! There!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My eyes glistened as I saw the good things, and my mother was
-gratefully puzzled. The garrulous landlady stopped in the room for a quarter of
-an hour, placing all kinds of possible constructions upon the mystery, and
-inviting, in the most insinuating manner, the confidence of my mother, whom she
-evidently regarded as a very artful creature. It was sufficient for me that the
-food was lawfully ours, and I blessed the generous donor in my heart. On the
-following day my mother took me for a walk in the Park, and we arrived home in
-time to get the baked dish from the baker's, which my mother had prepared. We
-had a grand dinner, and we fared tolerably well during the week. On the
-Saturday, however, our cupboard and treasury were bare, and my mother was once
-more racked by those pin-and-needle anxieties which, insignificant as they seem
-by the side of matters of public interest, form the sum of the lives of hundreds
-of thousands of our fellow creatures. My mother watched me very nervously. I
-knew what was in her mind. She was striving to gather courage to bid me stop at
-home while she went out to beg. My heart was very full as, watching her
-furtively, I saw her put on her bonnet and shawl. Then she stood irresolutely by
-the mantelshelf. I crept to her side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My child!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let me go with you,' I implored.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, no, dear child! No, no!' she cried, and she knelt before
-me, and twined her arms around my neck. She was entreating me in the tenderest
-manner to stop at home, when the simplest thing in the world changed the current
-of our lives. A postman's knock was heard at the street-door, and a minute
-afterwards the landlady came running upstairs, almost breathless. My mother
-started to her feet. In one hand the landlady held a letter by the corner of her
-apron; the other hand was pressed to her side; and she panted as if her last
-moments had arrived.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O them stairs!' she exclaimed. 'They'll be the death of me!
-For you, my dear.' And she held the letter towards my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">
- the receipt of a letter threw us all into a state of excitement. It was
- certainly an event in my life. My mother was very agitated as she looked at
- the address, and the landlady took a seat, and waited in the expectation of
- hearing the news. But the letter was not opened until that worthy woman had
- retired, which she did in a very dignified, not to say offended, manner, as
- a proof that she had not the slightest wish--not she! to pry into our
- private concerns.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's no mistake, mother,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear; it is addressed to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then, with great care, she opened the letter, and read aloud:</p>
-<br>
-<p style="text-indent:10%; font-size:9pt">
-'14 Paradise-row, Windmill-street.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Emma Carey,--Personally you will have not the slightest
-knowledge of me, for I do not think you ever set eyes on me; but you will know
-my name. I was not aware until a few days ago that your husband was dead. I am
-poor, but not as poor as you are. I offer you and your boy a home. You can both
-come and live with me if you like. If you decide to come, you must not expect
-much. I am not a pleasant character, and my disposition is not amiable. But the
-probability is, if you accept my offer, that you and your boy will have regular
-meals, such as they are. I keep a shop; you can help me in it. You can come at
-once if you like--this very day. I don't suppose it will take you long to pack
-up.</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:40%">
-'<span class="sc">Bryan Carey</span>.'</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I started when I heard the name, for it was our own.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is from your uncle Bryan,' said my mother; 'your dear
-father's elder brother, who disappeared many years ago.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought he was dead, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We all supposed so, never having heard from him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Was he nice, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have no idea, child; I never saw him. But he says that he
-is neither amiable nor pleasant.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Two words in the letter had especially attracted my attention.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Regular meals,' I murmured, somewhat timidly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother rose instantly. Unless she accepted the offer, there
-was but one alternative before her; and no one knew better than I how her
-sensitive nature shrank from it. It was the bitterest necessity only that had
-driven her to beg.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will go at once and see your uncle, my dear. I don't know
-where Paradise-row is, but I shall be able to find it out. I will be back as
-soon as possible. Keep indoors, there's a dear child!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She was absent for nearly three hours.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, mother?' I said, running to the door as I heard her
-step on the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She drew me into the room, and sat down, with her arms round
-my neck.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We will go, dear,' she said, and my heart beat joyfully at
-the words. 'it will be a home for us. Situated as we are, what would become of
-my dear child if I were to fall really ill? And I have been afraid of it many
-times. Yes, we will go. Your uncle Bryan keeps a grocer's shop. I told him I
-should have to give a week's warning here, and he gave me the money to pay the
-rent, so that we might go to him at once.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother looked about her regretfully. It belonged to her
-nature to become attached to everything with which she was associated, and she
-could not help having a tender feeling even for our one little room in which we
-had seen so much trouble.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now, Chris, We will pack up.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As uncle Bryan predicted in his letter, it did not take us
-long. Everything we possessed went into one small trunk, and there was room for
-more when everything was in. The smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone--the
-precious relic I had inherited from my grandmother--had been carefully taken
-care of, and now lay at the bottom of the trunk. It had not brought us much
-luck, and I regarded it with something like aversion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">From the inscrutable eye of a landlady living in the house
-nothing can be concealed, and our landlady hovered in the passage, divining
-(with that peculiar inspiration with which all of her class are gifted) that
-something important was taking place. My mother called her in, and paid her the
-week's rent in lieu of a week's notice. She was deeply moved, after the fashion
-of landladies (living in the house), when lodgers who have paid regularly take
-their departure. The fear of another lodger not so punctual in paying as the
-last harrows their souls. As my mother did not enter into particulars, not even
-mentioning to the landlady where we were moving to, the inquisitive creature
-invited confidence by producing from a mysterious recess in her flannel
-petticoat a bottle of gin and a glass. My mother, however, declined to be
-bribed, much to the landlady's chagrin; after this she evidently regarded us
-with less favour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan sent a boy with a wheelbarrow, Chris,' said my
-mother, 'to wheel your trunk home. He's waiting at the door now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>With</i> the wheelbarrow?' I asked gaily. I was in high
-spirits at the better prospect which lay before us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, dear. <i>With</i> the wheelbarrow.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could not help laughing, it seemed to me such a comical
-idea. My mother cast an affectionate look at the humble room we were leaving for
-ever, and then we carried the trunk down to the street door, the landlady <i>not</i>
-assisting. There stood the boy with the wheelbarrow. The trunk was lifted in,
-and we marched away, the boy trundling the barrow, we holding on in front, for
-fear the trunk should fall into the road. All the neighbours rushed into the
-street to look at the procession.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_09" href="#div1Ref_09">CHAPTER IX.</a></h4>
-<h5>UNCLE BRYAN INTRODUCES HIMSELF.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The boy took no notice of the neighbours, but wheeled straight
-through them, regardless of their legs. Neither did he take any notice of us,
-except by whistling in our faces. But he trundled the wheelbarrow cheerfully,
-and with an airy independence most delightful to witness. It was a long journey
-to Paradise-row, and it occupied a long time; but the boy never flagged, never
-stopped to rest, although in the course of the journey he performed some
-eccentric antics. He was not as old as I, but he was much more strongly built. I
-envied him his strong limbs and broad shoulders. It was a cold day, and he was
-insufficiently clad; his toes peeped out of his boots, and his hair straggled
-through a hole in his cap, and a glimpse of his bare chest could now and then be
-seen through a rent in his waistcoat, which was made to serve the purpose of a
-jacket by being pinned at the throat; but the boy was not in the slightest
-degree affected by these disadvantages. The wind, which made me shiver, seemed
-to warm him, and he took it to his bosom literally with great contentment. His
-eyes were dark and bright, his nose was a most ostensible pug, and the curves of
-his large well-shaped mouth and lips spoke of saucy enjoyment. Indeed, he was
-full of life, noting with eager curiosity everything about him, and his dirty
-face sparkled with intelligence. As he drove the barrow before him, he whistled
-and sang without the slightest regard to nerves, and if any street lad accosted
-him jocosely or derisively, he returned the salutation with spirited interest.
-He appeared to be disposed to pause near the first organ-grinder we approached;
-but he resisted the inclination, and after a short but severe mental struggle,
-he compromised matters by trundling the barrow three times round the unfortunate
-Italian, making a wider sweep each time. My mother remonstrated with him; but
-the boy, with the reins of command in his hand, paid no other attention to her
-remonstrance than was expressed in a knowing cock of his eye, implying that it
-was all right, and that he knew what he was about. For the safety of our trunk
-we were compelled to accompany him in his circular wanderings, and I felt
-particularly foolish as we swept round and round. But the third circle
-completed, the boy drove straight along again contentedly, whistling the last
-air the organ-grinder had played with such force and expression as to cause some
-of the passers-by to put their fingers to their ears. This man[oe]uvre the boy
-conscientiously repeated with every organ-grinder we met on the road; repeated
-it also, very slowly and lingeringly, at a Punch-and-Judy show, afterwards
-conveying to the British public discordant reminiscences through his nose of the
-interview between Punch and the Devil; and with supreme audacity repeated it
-when we came to a band of negro minstrels, proving himself quite a match for
-them when they threatened him with dreadful consequences if he did not
-immediately put a stop to his circular performance. Indeed, when one of the band
-advanced towards him with menacing gestures, he ran the wheelbarrow against the
-opposing force with such an unmistakable intention, that to save his legs the
-nigger had to fly. In this manner we came at length to the end of our journey.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I found Windmill-street to be a mere slit in a busy and
-bustling neighbourhood, and Paradise-row, where uncle Bryan lived, a distinct
-libel upon heaven, being, I fervently hope, as little like a thoroughfare in
-Paradise as can well be imagined. Uncle Bryan's shop was at the corner of
-Windmill-street and Paradise-row, and uncle Bryan himself stood at his
-street-door, seemingly awaiting our arrival.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Been loitering, eh?' was uncle Bryan's first salutation;
-sharply spoken, not to us, but to the boy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never stopped wheelin', so 'elp me!' returned the boy, in a
-tone as sharp as my uncle's, yet with a doubtful look at my mother. 'Never
-stopped to take a breathful of air from the blessed minute we started. Arks
-'er!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother, being appealed to by uncle Bryan, confirmed the
-boy's statement, which was strictly correct, and, to his manifest astonishment,
-made no reproachful reference to his circular flights. His astonishment,
-however, almost immediately assumed the form of a satisfied leer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How much was it to be?' asked uncle Bryan, not at all
-satisfied with my mother's assurance.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thrums,' replied the boy, readily. By which he meant
-threepence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan regarded him sourly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say that again, and I'll take off a penny.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, tuppence, then. I got to pay a ha'penny for the barrer.
-What's a brown, more or less?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The question was not addressed to any of us in particular, so
-none of us answered it. Uncle Bryan paid him twopence; and the boy, with never a
-'thank you,' spun the coins in the air, and caught them deftly; then, with a
-wink at my mother as a trustworthy conspirator, he walked away with his empty
-barrow, whistling with all his wind at mankind in general.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Now, when uncle Bryan first spoke, I started. I thought it was
-not the first time I had heard his voice. It sounded to me like the voice of the
-man with whom I had had the adventure on the previous Saturday night. The boy
-being out of sight, uncle Bryan turned to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why did you start just now?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought I knew your voice, sir,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Call me uncle Bryan. Knew my voice! It isn't possible, as
-you've never set eyes on me, nor I on you, till this moment.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This was intended to settle the doubt, and I never again
-referred to it, although it remained with me for a long while afterwards. The
-trunk had been left on the doorstep, and uncle Bryan assisted us to carry it
-upstairs to the bedroom allotted to us. A little bed for me--uncle Bryan made it
-over to me in three words--was placed behind a screen.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought,' he said to my mother, 'you would like your boy to
-sleep in the same room as yourself. The house is a small one, but we can find
-another place for him if you wish.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you, Bryan,' replied my mother simply, 'I would like to
-have him with me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan was evidently no waster of words, and my mother
-entered readily into his humour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You must be tired,' he said, as he was about to leave the
-room; 'rest yourself a bit. But the sooner you come downstairs, the better I
-shall be pleased.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother laid her hand on his arm, and detained him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let me say a word to you, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will never repeat it!' he exclaimed, with a quick
-apprehension of what she wished to say.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never, without a strong necessity, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He laughed; but it was more like a dry husky cough than a
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When a man locks the street-door,' he said, 'trust a woman to
-see that the yard-door's on the latch.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I want to thank you, Bryan, for the home you have offered me
-and my boy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps it won't suit you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It will suit us, Bryan, if it will suit you to allow us to
-remain.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He seemed to chew the words, 'allow us to remain,' silently,
-as if their flavour were unpleasant to him; but he said aloud:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Wait and see, then.' And although my mother wished to
-continue the conversation, he turned his back to us, and abruptly left the room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother sank into a chair; she must have been very tired,
-for she had walked not less than twelve miles that day.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You must be tired too, my dear,' she said, drawing me to her
-side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not so tired as you, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't feel very, very tired, my dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I knew why she said so; hope dwelt in her heart.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think your uncle Bryan is a good man,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not express dissent; but I must have looked it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' she said, answering my look, 'you will find in your
-course through life that many sweet things have their home in the roughest
-shells. Uncle Bryan has a strange rough manner, but I think--nay, I am sure--he
-is a good man. Do you know, Chris, I believe those things that came home for us
-last Saturday night were sent by him. No, my dear, we will not ask him, or even
-speak of it. He will be better pleased if it is not referred to. And yet I
-wonder how he found us out!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The room which was assigned to us was a back-room, small, and
-commonly but cleanly furnished. Immediately beneath the window was the
-water-butt, and beyond it were numbers of small back-yards--so many, indeed,
-that I wondered where the houses could be that belonged to them. The general
-prospect from this window, as I very soon learned, was composed of sheets,
-shirts, stockings, and the usual articles of male and female attire in the
-process of drying: of some other things also--of washing-tubs, and women and
-little girls wringing and washing and up to their arm-pits in soap-suds.
-Occasionally I saw men also thus engaged. A variation in the prospect was
-sometimes afforded by small children being brought into the yards to be slapped
-and then set upon the stones to cool, and by other small children blowing
-soap-bubbles out of father's pipes. The peculiarity of the scene was that the
-clothes never appeared to be dried. They were eternally hanging on the lines,
-which intersected each other like a Chinese puzzle, or were being skewered to
-them in a damp condition. I can safely assert that existence, as seen from our
-bedroom window, was one interminable washing-day.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When we went downstairs uncle Bryan was in the shop, weighing
-up his wares and attending to occasional customers. Attached to the shop were a
-parlour, in which the meals were taken and which served as a general
-sitting-room, and a smaller apartment in the rear. My mother called me into the
-smaller room. Do you see, Chris?' she said, pointing to some flowers on the
-window-sill. There were two or three pots also, in which seeds had evidently
-been newly planted. In my mother's eyes, these were a strong proof of my uncle's
-goodness. A rickety flight of steps led to the basement of the house, in which
-there was a gloomy kitchen (very blackbeetle-y), which could not have been used
-for a considerable time. The cobwebs were thick in the corners, and a prosperous
-spider, a very alderman in its proportions, peeped out of its stronghold, with
-an air of 'What is all this about?' The appearance of a woman in that deserted
-retreat did not please my gentleman; it was a sign of progress. In the basement
-were also two or three other gloomy recesses.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Our brief inspection ended, we ascended to the parlour. The
-fire was burning brightly, and the kettle was on the hob. My mother went to the
-door which led to the shop.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At what time do you generally have tea, Bryan?' she inquired.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At half-past five,' he replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a quarter-past five by an American clock which stood in
-the centre of the mantelshelf. The clock was a common wooden one, with a glass
-door in front, on which was engraved a figure of Father Time with a crack down
-his back. One of his eyes was damaged, and his scythe also was mutilated; taking
-him altogether, as he was there represented, damaged and with cracks in him, old
-Father Time seemed by his disconsolate appearance to be of the opinion that it
-was high time an end was made of <i>him</i>. Without more ado, my mother opened
-the cupboard, and finding everything there she wanted, laid the table, and
-prepared the meal. Exactly at half-past five uncle Bryan came in, and we had
-tea. He did not express the slightest approval of my mother's quickness, nor did
-she ask for it; and when tea was over, he went into the shop again, and my
-mother cleared up the things. She asked him about to-morrow's dinner, and took
-me with her to market with the money he gave her. While we were looking about us
-we came across the boy who had fetched our trunk in the wheelbarrow. He was
-standing with others listening to a hymn which was being sung by two men and a
-woman. One of the men was blind, and he played on a harmonium, while his
-companions sang. He joined in also, having a powerful voice, and I thought the
-performance a very fine one.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The boy saw us; approached my mother, and said in a tone of
-strong approval:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You're a brick. I say, we sold old Bryan, didn't us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother could not help smiling, which heightened the
-favourable opinion he had of her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What are you going to do?' he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother explained that she was going to market.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll show you the shops,' he said; and his offer was
-accepted.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He proved useful, and took us to the best and cheapest shops,
-and gave his candid opinion (generally unfavourable) of the articles my mother
-purchased. When the marketing was finished, he volunteered to carry the basket,
-and did not leave us until we were within a yard or two of uncle Bryan's shop.
-He enlivened the walk with many quaint and original observations, and when he
-had nothing to say he whistled. He took his departure with good-humoured winks
-and nods. Upon my mother counting out her purchases to uncle Bryan, and
-returning him the few coppers that were left, he said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We'll settle things on Monday, Emma. You'll have to take the
-entire charge of the house, and to keep the expenses down, and we'll arrange a
-certain sum, which must not be exceeded. If anything is saved out of it, you can
-put it by in this box,' pointing to a stone money-box shaped like an urn, which
-was on a shelf. You can do anything you like to the place, but don't disturb my
-flower-pots.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What have you planted in the new pots, Bryan?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Some of the new Japan lilies; they'll not flower till summer.
-Don't touch them; you don't understand them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was very busy that night, dusting and cleaning, and
-I think I never saw her in a happier mood. Now and then she went into the shop,
-and stood quietly behind the counter, noting how uncle Bryan attended to his
-business. He took not the slightest notice of her; did not address a single word
-to her. Once she came bustling back, with an air of importance. 'I've served a
-customer, Chris,' she said gleefully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan's shop was stocked with small supplies of
-everything in the grocery line, and in addition to these, he sold a few simple
-medicines for clearing the blood--some of them, I afterwards learned, of his own
-concoction and mixing. Friday was the day fixed for the preparation and
-making-up of these medicines, for Saturday was the great night for the sale of
-the mixtures to working people, who purchased them in halfpenny and penny doses.
-I discovered that uncle Bryan's pills were famous in the neighbourhood. I
-calculated that on this Saturday night he must have served at least fifty
-customers with his medicines. The little parlour presented quite a different
-appearance when my mother had finished cleaning and dusting. I looked for some
-expression of approval in uncle Bryan's face when he came in to partake of a
-bread-and-cheese supper; but I saw none. During the night my thoughts wandered
-to the little girl who had given the first halfpenny to my mother. I spoke about
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you think she will be sorry or glad, mother, because she
-will not see you to-night?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Sorry, I think, Chris; she will fancy I am ill.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But this is a great deal better, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Infinitely better, dear child: and remember, we owe it all to
-uncle Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Neither my mother nor I felt at all strange in our new home,
-and I slept as soundly as if I had lived in the house for years. Before we went
-to bed, my mother and I had a delicious ten minutes' chat; the storm in our
-lives which had lasted so long, and which had threatened to wreck us, had
-cleared away, and a delightful sense of rest stole into our hearts.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On the Sunday no business was done. After breakfast, uncle
-Bryan brought his account-book into the parlour, and busied himself with his
-accounts, adding up the week's takings, and calculating what profit was made. My
-mother asked him if he was going to church.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I never go to church,' was his reply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother looked grieved, but she entered into no argument
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have no objection to our going?' she said timidly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What have I to do with it? I dictate to no one. If you think
-it right to go to church, go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is there one near, Bryan?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Zion Chapel isn't two minutes' walk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan asked no questions when we returned, and the day
-passed quietly. He devoted the evening to smoking and reading. My mother did not
-like the smoke at first, but it was not long before she schooled herself to fill
-uncle Bryan's pipe for him. So, with a pair of horn spectacles on his nose, and
-his pipe in his mouth, uncle Bryan read and enjoyed his leisure. Occasionally he
-took his pipe from his mouth, and read a few words aloud. At one time he became
-deeply engrossed in a book which he took from a shelf in the shop, and he read
-the following passage aloud:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That the consciousness of existence is not dependent on the
-same form or the same matter is demonstrated to our senses in the works of the
-Creator, as far as our senses are capable of receiving that demonstration. A
-very numerous part of the animal creation preaches to us, far better than Paul,
-the belief in a life hereafter. Their little life resembles an earth and a
-heaven, a present and a future state; and comprises, if it may be so expressed,
-immortality in miniature.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Immortality in miniature!' repeated my mother, in a puzzled
-tone. 'What is that from, Bryan?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The <i>Age of Reason</i>,' he answered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was a long pause, broken again by uncle Bryan's voice:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If we consider the nature of our condition here, we must see
-there is no occasion for such thing as revealed religion. What is it we want to
-know? Does not the creation, the universe we behold, preach to us the existence
-of an Almighty Power, that governs and regulates the whole? And is not the
-evidence that this creation, holds out to our senses infinitely stronger than
-anything we can read in a book that any impostor might make and call the word of
-God? As for morality, the knowledge of it exists in every man's conscience.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Presently he laid the book aside, and my mother took it up.
-Uncle Bryan stretched forth his hand with the intention of keeping it from her;
-but he was too late. He gazed at her furtively from beneath his horn spectacles,
-as she turned over the pages. After a few minutes' inspection of the book she
-returned his gaze sadly, and, with a protecting motion, drew me to her side. I
-had not liked uncle Bryan's laugh, and I liked it less now.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, my dear child,' said my mother, in a tone of infinite
-tenderness, 'go upstairs and bring down my Bible.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did as she desired, and my mother caressed me close, with
-her arm round my waist. Uncle Bryan sat on one side of the fireplace, reading
-the <i>Age of Reason</i>; my mother sat on the other side, reading the Bible.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_10" href="#div1Ref_10">CHAPTER X.</a></h4>
-<h5>OUR NEW HOME.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">A day or two afterwards I surprised my mother and uncle Bryan
-in the midst of a conversation which I supposed had reference to myself. My
-mother was in a very earnest mood, but uncle Bryan, except that he listened
-attentively to what she was saying, seemed in no way stirred. In all my life's
-experiences I never met or heard of a man who was more thoroughly attentive to
-every little detail that passed around him than was uncle Bryan; but although he
-gave his whole mind to the smallest matter for the time being, he evinced no
-indication of it, and persons who did not understand his character might
-reasonably have supposed him to be utterly indifferent to what was going on.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will promise me, Bryan,' my mother said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will promise nothing, Emma,' he replied; 'I made a promise
-once in my life, and I received a promise in return. I know what came of it.' He
-smiled bitterly, and added, his words seeming to me to be prompted more by inner
-consciousness than by the signs of distress in my mother's face, 'But you can
-make your mind easy. It is not in my nature to force my views upon any one.
-Force! as if it were any matter of mine! What comes to him must come as it has
-come to me--through the light of experience.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you not believe, Bryan----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He interrupted her, almost vehemently. 'I believe in nothing!
-If that does not content you, I cannot help it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I could assist you, Bryan--if I could in any way relieve
-you----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You cannot. I am fixed. Life for me is tasteless.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Something of desolation was in his tone as he said this, but
-its plaintiveness was not designed by the speaker. Rather did he intend to
-express defiance, and a renunciation of sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But, Bryan,' said my mother, with a tender movement towards
-him----</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I must stop you,' he said, 'for fear you should say something
-which would compel an explanation from me. Let matters rest I am but one among
-hundreds of millions of crawlers. Once I saw other than visible signs--or
-fancied that I saw them, fool that I was! The time has gone, never to return;
-the power of comprehension has gone, never to return. You must take me as you
-find me. There is very little in the world that I like or dislike; but I can
-heartily despise one thing: insincerity. Have you anything more to say?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Bryan;' and I could see that my mother was both pained
-and relieved.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have; two or three words. A question first. You can be
-satisfied to remain here?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Bryan, if it satisfies you. I can do no better.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A gleam came into his eyes. 'That is sincere,' he said, with a
-pleasanter smile than the last. 'Very well, then; it does satisfy me. What I
-want to say now is, that there must be no break. You must not remain, and let me
-get accustomed to you, and then leave me for a woman's reason.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">With that, the conversation ended. In the night, when my
-mother and I were alone in our bedroom, I said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you think uncle Bryan is a good man now, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is it not good of him, Chris, to give us a home?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I said; but I was not quite satisfied with her answer.
-'His shell is very rough, though.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother laughed. I loved to hear her laugh; it was so
-different from uncle Bryan's. His laughter had no gladness in it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We shall find a sweet place here and there, Chris,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She tried to, I am sure, and she brightened the house with her
-pleasant ways. One night we were sitting together as usual; I was doing a sum on
-a slate which uncle Bryan had set for me; he was reading; my mother was mending
-clothes. We had been sitting quiet for a long time, when my mother commenced to
-sing one of her simple songs, very softly, as though she were singing to
-herself. In the midst of her singing she became aware that uncle Bryan was
-present, and with a rapid apprehensive glance at him she paused. He looked up
-from his book at once.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why do you stop, Emma?' he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought I might disturb you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You do not; I like to hear you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The charm, however, was broken for that night, and my mother
-knew it, and sang but little. Two or three nights afterwards, when uncle Bryan
-was engrossed in his book, my mother began to sing again over her work. I knew
-every trick of her features, and I think she was designing enough to watch her
-opportunity, for there was never a more perfect master than she of the delicate
-cunning which kindness to rough and cross natures often requires. It was with
-much curiosity that I quietly observed uncle Bryan's behaviour while my mother
-sang. He held his book steadily before him, but he did not turn a page; and to
-my, perhaps, too curious eyes there appeared to be, in the very curve of his
-shoulders, a grateful recognition of my mother's wish to please him. I could not
-see his face, but I liked him better at that time than I had ever yet done.
-Truly, my mother was right; here at least was one sweet place found in the rough
-shell. She continued her singing in the same soft strains; and often afterwards
-sang when we three were sitting together of an evening.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Exactly three weeks after we had taken up our quarters with
-uncle Bryan, my mother and I paid a visit to the neighbourhood in which she had
-made the acquaintance of the fairy in the cotton-print dress; but although it
-was Saturday night we saw no trace of the little girl. My mother was much
-disappointed; and then she went to the house in which the young woman lived who
-had given her sixpence, and learned that she had moved, the landlady did not
-know whither. I was glad to get away from the neighbourhood, although I was
-almost as much disappointed as my mother was at not finding our little fairy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Our new life, having thus fairly commenced, went on for a long
-time with but little variation. Uncle Bryan allowed my mother to do exactly as
-she pleased, and she, without in the slightest way disturbing his regular
-habits, made the house very different from what it was when she first entered
-it. Every room in it, down to the basement, where she did the cooking, was
-always sweet and clean. We also had flowers on the sill of our bedroom window,
-and their graceful forms and bright colours were a refreshing relief to the dark
-back wall. It delights me to see the taste for <i>growing</i> flowers cultivated
-by the poor. Flowers are purifiers; they breed good thoughts. Quite a rivalry
-was established between uncle Bryan and my mother in the care and attention
-which they bestowed on their respective window-sills. It went on silently and
-pleasantly, and my mother was not displeased because uncle Bryan was the victor.
-He trained some creepers from the window of his little back room to the window
-of our bedroom, and my mother watched them with intense interest creeping up,
-and up, until they reached the sill. 'They are like a message of love from your
-uncle, my dear,' she said. It is by such small precious links as these that
-heart is bound to heart. Yet the feelings with which uncle Bryan inspired me
-were by no means of a tender nature. He made no effort to win my affection; as a
-general rule, his bearing towards me was sufficiently cold to check tender
-impulse, and the words, 'I believe in nothing!' which I had heard him address
-sternly to my mother, had impressed me very seriously. I regarded him sometimes
-with fear and aversion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was sent to a cheap school, a very few pence a week being
-paid for my education. My career in the school is scarcely worthy of record. All
-that was taught there were reading, writing, and arithmetic; and when these were
-learned our education was completed. The master never allowed himself to be
-tripped up by his pupils. Arithmetic was his strong point, and the rule-of-three
-was his boundary.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In that happy hunting-ground we bought and sold the usual
-illimitable quantities of eggs, and yards of calico, and firkins of butter; and
-there we should have wallowed until we were old men, had we remained long
-enough, without ever reaching another heaven. My principal reminiscences of
-those days are connected with the bully of the school; who, whenever we met in
-the streets out of school-hours, compelled me to make three very low and humble
-bows to him before he would allow me to pass. I have not the satisfaction of
-being able to record that he met with the usual fate (in fiction) of school
-bullies--that of being soundly licked, and of being compelled to eat humble pie
-for ever afterwards. He was a successful tyrant. His position occasionally
-compelled him to fight two boys at a time--one down, the other come up--but he
-was never beaten. A tyrant he was, and a tyrant he remained until I lost sight
-of him. In his career, virtue was never triumphant.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_11" href="#div1Ref_11">CHAPTER XI.</a></h4>
-<h5>IN WHICH I TAKE PART IN SOME LAWLESS EXPEDITIONS.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">In his letter which offered us a home, uncle Bryan had stated,
-truly enough, that he was a poor man. Although he purchased his stock in very
-small quantities, he often had as much as he could do to pay his monthly bills.
-I remember well a certain occasion when he was seriously perplexed in this way.
-My mother, who had been attentively observant of him during the day, said in the
-evening:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are troubled, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am short of money, Emma,' he replied; and he went on to say
-that he had to pay Messrs. So-and-so and So-and-so to-morrow; and that his last
-week's takings were two pounds less than he had reckoned upon.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">How much short are you, Bryan?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He adjusted his horn spectacles, and brought forward his
-account-book, and his file of bills, and every farthing the till contained. In a
-few minutes he had his trouble staring him in the face in black and white, in
-the shape of a deficit of two pounds eighteen shillings--a serious sum. My
-mother, with a grateful look in her eyes, produced the stone money-box, in which
-he had said she might put by anything she was able to save out of the money he
-gave her to keep house with. She shook it; what was in it rattled merrily. It
-was a hard job to get the money out, the slit in the box was so narrow; but it
-was managed at last by means of the blade of a knife, and a little pile of
-copper and silver lay on the table. I think the three of us seated round the
-table would not make a bad picture; but then you could not put in my mother's
-delicious laugh. She had saved more than three pounds. I could scarcely tell
-whether uncle Bryan was sorry or pleased. He bit his lips very hard, but said
-never a word; and, taking the exact sum he required, put the balance back into
-the box.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The chief difficulty uncle Bryan had to contend with in
-keeping his stock properly assorted was brown sugar. Indeed, brown sugar may be
-said to have been the bane of his life; to me, it was a most hateful commodity,
-and I often wished there was not such an article in the world. Uncle Bryan had
-to pay ready money for sugar, and he could not purchase at the warehouse less
-than a bag at the time--about two hundredpounds weight, I believe. Sometimes he
-had not the money to go to the sugar market with, and the stock on the shelves
-had dwindled down almost to the last quarter of a pound. Then commenced a series
-of dreadful expeditions which I remember with comical terror. One of the first
-instructions given by uncle Bryan to my mother had been, never, under any
-pretext, to serve even the smallest quantity of sugar to a strange customer
-unless he or she purchased something else at the same time. The reason for this
-was that there was no profit on sugar; it was what was called a leading article
-in the trade, and by some mysterious trade machinations, arising probably out of
-the fever of competition, had come to be sold by the large grocers at exactly
-cost price. The small grocers, of course, were compelled to follow in the wake
-of the large ones; if they had not, their customers would have deserted them.
-Not only, indeed, did the small grocers make no profit on the sugar they sold,
-but, taking into consideration the draft necessary to turn the scale ever so
-little when weighing out quarter and half pounds, there was an absolute loss;
-even the paper in the scale would not make up for it, for it cost as much per
-pound as the sugar. Hence the necessity for not serving strangers with sugar by
-itself, and hence it was that I not unnaturally came to look upon it as a
-desperate crime for any stranger to attempt to purchase sugar over uncle Bryan's
-counter without asking at the same time for a proper quantity of tea or coffee,
-or some other article upon which there was a profit. My feelings, then, can be
-imagined when uncle Bryan (being short of sugar, and not having sufficient funds
-to purchase a bag at the warehouse), bidding me carry a fair-sized market
-basket, took me with him one dark night--and often afterwards on many other dark
-nights--to purchase brown sugar, and nothing else, in pounds, half pounds, and
-quarters. The plan of operation was as follows: uncle Bryan, selecting a
-likely-looking grocer's shop (an innocent-looking fly, he being the spider),
-would station me at some distance from it, bidding me wait until he returned.
-Then he would enter the shop boldly, and come out, with the air of one who
-resided in the neighbourhood, holding in his hand a quarter or half pound of
-feloniously-acquired moist. This he would deposit in the basket (which had a
-cover to it, to hide our villainy), and we would wander to another street, in
-which he pounced upon another grocer's shop, where the operation would be
-repeated. Thus we would wander, often for two or three miles, until the basket
-was filled with packages of sugar, with which we would return stealthily, like
-burglars after the successful accomplishment of daring and unlawful deeds. When
-the basket was too heavy for me to carry, uncle Bryan carried it, and would
-place me in a convenient spot--always at the corner of two streets, so that in
-case of pursuit we could make a rapid disappearance--with the basket on the
-ground. While thus stationed, I have trembled at the very shadow of a policeman,
-and have often wondered that we were not marched off to prison. Uncle Bryan was
-not always successful. On occasions he would pause suddenly in the middle of a
-street, and wheel sharply round. 'Can't go into that shop,' he would say; 'was
-turned out of it the week before last;' or, 'They know me there; swore at me
-when they served me the last time; mustn't show my face there for another
-month;' or, with a laugh, 'Come away, Chris, quick! That woman wanted to know
-what I meant by imposing on a poor widow who was trying to get an honest
-living.' These remarks, of themselves, would have been sufficient to convince me
-that we were committing an offence against law and morality. At first I was a
-passive accomplice in these unlawful operations, but in time I became an active
-agent.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, my boy,' said uncle Bryan to me one night, in an
-insinuating tone; he was out of spirits, having met with a number of continuous
-failures; 'do you think you could buy a quarter of a pound in that shop?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll try to, uncle,' I said, with a sinking heart, for I had
-long anticipated the dreaded moment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go into the shop in an offhand way, as if you were a regular
-customer. I'll wait at the corner for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Go into the shop in an offhand way! Why, if I had been the
-greatest criminal in the world, I could not have been more impressed with a
-sense of guilt. I showed it in my face when I stepped tremblingly to the
-counter, and I was instantly detected by the shopkeeper.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you want anything else besides sugar?' he demanded
-sternly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'N-no, sir,' I managed to answer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know, you young ruffian, that there's a loss on
-sugar!' I knew it well enough--too well to convict myself by answering. 'What do
-you say to two ounces of our best mixed at two-and-eight,' he then inquired,
-with satirical inquisitiveness, 'or half a pound of our genuine mocha at
-one-and-four?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As I did not know what to say except, 'Guilty, if you please,
-sir!' and as I suspected him of an intention to leap over the counter and seize
-me by the throat, I fled precipitately, with my heart in my mouth, and the next
-minute was running away, with uncle Bryan at my heels, as fast as my legs would
-carry me. When we were well out of danger's reach, uncle Bryan indulged in the
-only genuine laugh I had heard from him; but he soon became serious, and we
-resumed our unlawful journey. This first attempt was not the last; I tried again
-and again; but practice, which makes most things perfect, never made me an adept
-in the art. Dark nights were always chosen for our expeditions, and sometimes so
-many streets and thoroughfares were closed to uncle Bryan, that he was at his
-wits' end which way to turn to fill the basket.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Things went on with us in the same way until I was fourteen
-years of age. Long before this, I had learned all my schoolmaster had to teach
-me, and I was beginning to be distressed by the thought that I was doing a wrong
-thing by remaining idle. It was time that I set to work, and tried to help those
-who had been so good to me. I spoke about it, and uncle Bryan approved in a few
-curt words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'm afraid he's not strong enough,' said my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nonsense!' exclaimed uncle Bryan; and I supported him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I want to work,' I said; 'I should like to.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A good trade would be the best thing,' said my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Weeks passed, and I was still idle. My mother had been busy
-enough in the mean while, but her efforts were unsuccessful. She learnt that a
-good trade for me meant a good premium from my friends; and that of course was
-out of the question. It would have been a hard matter to scrape together even so
-small a sum as five pounds, and the lowest premium asked was far above that
-amount. I thought it behoved me to look for myself; and I began to stroll about
-the streets, and search in the shop windows for some such announcement as,
-'Wanted an apprentice to a good trade: no premium required; liberal wages;'
-followed by a description which fitted me exactly as the sort of lad which would
-be preferred. But no such announcement greeted my wistful gaze. I saw bills,
-'Wanted this,' Wanted that,' and now and then I mustered sufficient courage to
-go in and offer myself; but at the end of a month's experience I could come to
-no other conclusion than that I was fit for neither this nor that. My manner was
-against me; I was shy and timid, and sometimes could scarcely find words
-suitable for my application; but I had that kind of courage which lies in
-perseverance, and my aspirations were not of an exalted nature; I was willing to
-accept anything in the shape of work. I know now that I applied for many
-situations for which I was totally unfitted, but I was not conscious of it at
-the time; and I know also that for a few days I was absurdly and supremely
-reckless in my estimate of my fitness for the employers who made their wants
-public. It was during this time that I found myself standing before one of those
-exceedingly small offices which squeeze themselves by the force of impudence and
-ingenuity into the very midst of really pretentious buildings which frown them
-down, but cannot take the impudence out of them. In the front of this office was
-a large black board, on which were wafered, in the neatest of round-hand, the
-most amazing temptations to persons in search of situations. The first
-temptation which assailed me was, 'Wanted a Gardener for a Gentleman's Family.
-Must have an Unexceptionable Moral Character. Apply within.' The doubt I had
-with reference to this announcement was not whether I would do for a gardener
-(this was during my reckless days, remember), but whether my moral character was
-unexceptionable. I had never before been called to answer a declaration of this
-description, and now that it was put to me in bold round-hand, I was stung by
-the share I took in the lawless sugar expeditions. Not being able to resolve the
-doubt as to my moral character (although sorely tempted by the exigences of my
-position to give myself the benefit of it), I laid aside the gardener for future
-consideration. The next temptation was, 'Wanted a Cook. High Church.' I
-discarded the cook. Reckless as I was, it exceeded the limits of my boldness to
-declare myself a High-Church Cook. I was not even aware that I had ever tasted
-food cooked in that way; the very flavour was a mystery to me. The next was,
-'Wanted a Groom, Smart and Active. Seven Stone. Apply within.' I debated for
-some time over seven stone before I decided that it must apply to the weight of
-the groom. A stone was fourteen pounds. Seven fourteens was ninety-eight (I did
-the sum on a dead wall with a bit of brick I picked up in the road.) That I was
-perfectly ignorant of the duties of a groom did not affect me in the slightest
-degree; my only trouble was, did I weigh ninety-eight pounds? I immediately
-resolved to ascertain. I strolled into a by-street, and discovering a
-mysterious-looking recess wherein was exhibited a small pile of coals and a
-large pair of scales to weigh them in, I considered it a likely place to solve
-the problem. I had two halfpennies in my pocket, and I thought I might bargain
-to be weighed for one of them. So I walked into the recess, and tapping upon the
-scales with a halfpenny, as a proof that I meant business, waited for the
-result. The result came in the shape of a waddling woman with a coaly face and
-an immense bonnet, who said, 'Now then?' Timidly I replied, 'I want to be
-weighed, ma'am; I'll give you a halfpenny.' I was not prepared for the
-suddenness of what immediately followed. Without the slightest warning the woman
-lifted me in her arms with great ease, and laid me across the scales, which were
-shaped like a scuttle, with great difficulty, although I tried honestly to suit
-myself to the peculiarity of the case. Presently she threw me off as if I were a
-sack of coals, and tossing the weights aside, one after another, as if they were
-feathers, said, 'There you are!' Her words did not enlighten me. '<i>Am</i> I
-seven stone, ma'am?' I asked, as I handed her the coin. 'About,' was her reply.
-I retired, dubious, in a very grimy and gritty condition, and walking to the
-little office where the black board was, I boldly entered, and asked the young
-man behind the counter (there was only room for him and me) if he wanted a
-groom. <i>His</i> reply was, 'Half a crown.' This was perplexing, and I asked
-again, and received a similar answer. I soon understood that I should have to
-pay the sum down before I could be accommodated with particulars, and as a
-halfpenny was the whole of my wealth, I was compelled to retire, much
-disheartened.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">However, I was successful at length. I obtained a situation as
-errand-boy, sweeper, and whatnot, at a wood-engraver's, the wages being three
-shillings a week to commence with. How delighted I was when I told my mother,
-and with what pride I brought home my first week's wages, and placed them in her
-hand! In the duties of my new position, and in endeavouring, not unsuccessfully,
-to pick up a knowledge of the business, time passed rapidly. My steady attention
-to everything that was set me to do gradually attracted the notice of my
-employer, and he encouraged me in my efforts to raise myself. I was fond of
-cleanliness for its own sake, and my mother's chief pleasure was to keep my
-clothes neat and properly mended. I can see now the value of the difference
-between my appearance and that of other boys of my own age in the same position
-of life as myself, and I can more fully appreciate the beauty of a mother's love
-when it is deep and abiding--as my mother's love was for me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And here I must say a word, lest I should be misunderstood.
-Some kindly-hearted readers may suppose that my life and its surrounding
-circumstances call for pity and commiseration. I declare that they are mistaken,
-and that I was perfectly happy, contented in the present, hopeful in the future.
-What more could I desire? Poor as our home was, it was decent and comfortable;
-the anxieties which invaded it were not, I apprehend, of a more bitter nature
-than the anxieties which reign in the houses of really well-to-do and wealthy
-people. Well, I had a home which contented and satisfied me; and dearer, holier,
-purer, than anything else in life there was shed upon me a love which brightened
-my days and sweetened my labour. Life was opening out to me its most delightful
-pages. Already had I learned to love books for the good that was in them; I was
-also learning to draw, and every hour's leisure was an hour of profitable
-enjoyment. I began to see things, not with the eyes of a soured and discontented
-mind, but with the eyes of a mind which had been, almost unconsciously, trained
-to learn that sorrow and adversity may bring forth much for which we should be
-truly and sincerely grateful, and which, but for these trials, might be hidden
-from us. And all this was due to the influence of Home, and of the love which
-life's hard trials had strengthened. Sweet indeed are the uses of adversity. But
-for it, the milk of human kindness would taste like brackish water.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_12" href="#div1Ref_12">CHAPTER XII.</a></h4>
-<h5>A SINGULAR EPISODE IN OUR QUIET LIFE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">At this point I am reminded that I have not described uncle
-Bryan. A few words will suffice. A tall spare man, strongly built, with no
-superfluity of flesh about him; iron-gray hair, thick and abundant; eyebrows
-overlapping most conspicuously, guarding his eyes, as it were, which lurked in
-their caverns, as animals might in their lairs, on the watch. He wore no hair on
-his face, his cheeks were furrowed, and his features were large and well formed.
-He possessed the power of keeping himself perfectly under control; but on rare
-occasions, a nervous twitching of his lips in one corner of his mouth mastered
-him. This always occurred when he was in any way stirred to emotion, and I knew
-perfectly well, although he tried to disguise it from me, that it was one of his
-greatest annoyances that he could not conquer this physical symptom of mental
-disturbance. He was not only scrupulously just in his dealings as a tradesman;
-he exercised this moral sentiment with almost painful preciseness in his
-intercourse with my mother and me. He had no intimates, and he determinedly
-rejected all overtures of friendship. His habits were regular, his desires few,
-his tastes simple. He appeared to be contented with everything, and grateful for
-nothing. If love resided in his nature, it showed itself in a fondness for
-flowers; in no other form.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was nearly eighteen years of age, and the days--garlanded
-with the sweet pleasures which spring naturally from a mother's love--followed
-one another calmly and tranquilly. Nothing had occurred to disturb the peaceful
-current of our lives. Uneventful as the small circumstances of my past life were
-in the light of surrounding things, each scene in the simple drama which had
-thus far progressed was distinctly defined, and seemed to have no connection
-with what preceded it or followed it. The first, which had occurred in the house
-where I was born, and which ended with my father's death; the second, in which
-my mother had taken so mournful a part, and which contained so strange a
-mingling of joy and sorrow; the third, which was now being played, and which up
-to this period had been the least eventful of all. A certain routine of duties
-was got through with unvarying regularity. Uncle Bryan's trade yielded, with
-careful watching, sufficient profit for our wants; but I, also, was earning
-money now, and it was with an honest feeling of pride that I paid my mother so
-many shillings a week--I am almost ashamed to say how few--towards the expenses
-of my living. And so the days rolled on.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But in the web of our lives a thread was woven of which no
-sign had yet been seen, and chance or destiny was drawing it towards us with
-firm hand--a thread which, when it was linked to our hearts, was to throw strong
-light and colour on the tranquil days.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A very pleasant summer had set in, and uncle Bryan's flowers
-were at their brightest. It had grown into a custom with my mother to come for
-me two or three times a week during the fine weather, in the evening, when my
-day's work was done. She would wait at the corner of the street which led to my
-place of business, and we generally had a pleasant walk, arriving home at about
-half-past nine o'clock, in time for supper, a favourite meal with uncle Bryan.
-Now, my mother and I had been for some time casting about for an opportunity to
-present uncle Bryan with a token of our affection in the shape of a pipe and a
-tobacco-jar; he was so strange a character that it was absolutely necessary we
-should have a tangible excuse for the presentation. My mother found the
-opportunity. With great glee she informed me that she had found out uncle
-Bryan's birthday, and that the presentation should take the form of a birthday
-gift. 'It will be an unexpected surprise to him, my dear,' she said, 'and we
-will say nothing about it beforehand.' On a fine morning in August I rose as
-usual at half-past five, and made my breakfast in the kitchen; I slept now in
-the little back-room on a line with the shop and parlour. Eight o'clock was the
-hour for commencing work, and I generally had a couple of hours' delightful
-reading in the kitchen before I started. Sometimes, however, when we were busy,
-I was directed to be at the office an hour or so earlier, and on this morning I
-was due at seven o'clock. I always wished my mother good-bye before I went to
-work. Treading very softly, so as not to disturb uncle Bryan, and with my dinner
-and tea under my arm--invariably prepared the last thing at night, and packed in
-a handkerchief by my mother's careful hands--I crept upstairs to her room. She
-called me in, and I sat by her bedside, chatting for a few minutes. This was the
-anniversary of uncle Bryan's birthday, and our purchases were to be made in the
-evening.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I must be off, mother,' I said, starting up; 'I shall have to
-run for it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-morning, dear child,' she said; 'I shall come for you
-exactly at eight o'clock.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I kissed her, and ran off to work. My mother was punctual in
-the evening, and we set off at once on a pilgrimage to tobacconists' windows.
-Any person observing us as we stood at the windows, debating on the shape of
-this pipe and the pattern of that tobacco-jar, would at once have recognised the
-importance of our proceedings. At length, after much anxious deliberation, our
-purchases were made, and we walked home to Paradise-row. My mother had suggested
-that I should present uncle Bryan with the birthday gifts, and in a vainful
-moment I had consented, and had mentally rehearsed a fine little speech, which I
-prided myself was perfect in its way. But, as is usual with the amateur, and
-sometimes with the over-confident, on such occasions, my fine little speech flew
-clean out of my head when the critical moment arrived, and resolved itself into
-about a dozen stammering and perfectly incomprehensible words. Covered with
-confusion, I pushed the pipe and tobacco-pouch towards uncle Bryan in a most
-ungraceful manner. My mother saw my difficulty.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We have brought you a little birthday present, Bryan,' she
-said, 'with our love.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He made a grimace at the last three words, and I thought at
-first that he was about to sweep the things from him; but if he had any such
-intention, he relinquished it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How did you know it was my birthday?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I found it out.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh,' replied my mother, with a coquettish movement of her
-head, which delighted me, but did not find favour with uncle Bryan, 'little
-birds come down the chimney to tell me things.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Psha!' he muttered impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Or perhaps I put this and that together, and found it out
-that way. You can't hide anything from a woman, you know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her gay manner met with no sympathetic response from uncle
-Bryan. On the contrary, he gazed at her for a moment almost suspiciously, but
-the look softened in the clear light of my mother's eyes. Then, in a careless,
-ungracious manner, he thanked us for the present. I was hurt and indignant, and
-I told my mother a few minutes afterwards, when we were together in the kitchen,
-that I was sorry we had taken any notice of uncle Bryan's birthday.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He would have been much better pleased if we hadn't mentioned
-it,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear,' said my mother, 'you are not quite right. Your
-uncle will grow very fond of that pipe by and by.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother always won me over to her way of thinking, and I
-thought the failure might be due to the bungling manner in which I had presented
-the birthday offerings. I walked about the kitchen, and spoke to myself the
-speech I had intended to make, with the most beautiful effect. It was a
-masterpiece of elegant phrasing, and every sentence was beautifully rounded, and
-came trippingly off the tongue. Of course I was much annoyed that the
-opportunity of impressing uncle Bryan with my eloquence was lost. When we
-reëntered the room, uncle Bryan's head was resting on his hand, and there was an
-expression of weariness in his face, which had grown pale and sad during our
-brief absence. My mother's keen eyes instantly detected the change.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are not well, Bryan,' she said, in a concerned tone,
-stepping to his side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There are two things that disagree with me, Emma,' he
-replied, with a grim and unsuccessful attempt at humour; 'my own medicine is
-one, memory is another. I've been taking a dose of each. There, don't bother me.
-I have a slight headache, that's all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But although he tried to turn it off thus lightly, he was
-certainly far from well; for he asked my mother to attend to the shop, and
-leaning back in his chair, threw a handkerchief over his face, and fell asleep.
-My mother and I talked in whispers, so as not to disturb him. Uncle Bryan was
-not a supporter of the early-closing movement, for he kept his shop open until
-eleven o'clock every night. Very dismal it must have looked from the outside in
-the long winter nights, lighted up by only one tallow candle; but it had always
-a home appearance for me, from the first day I entered it. The shop-door which
-led into the street was closed, and so was the door of the parlour in which we
-were sitting. The upper half of this door was glass, to enable us to see into
-the shop. My mother's hearing was generally very acute, and the slightest tap on
-the counter was sufficient to arouse her attention; but the tapping was seldom
-needed, for the shop-door, having a complaining creak in its hinges, never
-failed to announce the entrance of a customer. On this night, customers were
-like angels' visits, few and far between. It was nearly ten o'clock; uncle Bryan
-was still sleeping; my mother, whose hands were never idle, was working as
-usual; I was reading a volume of
-<i>Chambers's Traits for the People</i>, from which many a young mind has
-received healthy nourishment. I was deep in the touching story of 'Picciola, or
-the Prison Flower,' when an amazing incident occurred--heralded by a tap at the
-parlour-door.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Whoever it was that knocked must not only have opened the
-street-door, but must have silenced its watch-dog creak (by bribery, perhaps);
-or else my mother's hearing must have played her very false. Again, it was
-necessary to lift the ledge of the counter and creep under it, before the
-parlour-door could be reached.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother started to her feet; and opened the door. A young
-girl, with bonnet and cloak on, stood before us. I thought immediately of the
-fairy in the cotton-print dress; but no, it was not she who had thus
-mysteriously appeared. The girl looked at us in silence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You should have tapped on the counter, my dear,' said my
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What for?' was the answer, in the most musical voice I had
-ever heard. 'I don't want to buy anything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This was a puzzling rejoinder. If she did not want to buy
-anything, why was she here?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is Mr. Carey's? asked the girl.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who are you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Now this was so manifestly a question which should have come
-from us, and not from her, that I gazed at her in some wonder, and at the same
-time in admiration, for her manner was very winning. She returned my gaze
-frankly, and seemed to be pleased with my look of admiration. Certainly a
-perfectly self-possessed little creature in every respect. Uncle Bryan still
-slept.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who are you?' repeated our visitor, to my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My name is Carey,' said my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, indeed!' exclaimed the girl. 'That is nice. And who is
-he?' indicating uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is my brother-in-law, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mr. Bryan Carey. I've come to see him.' And she made a
-movement towards him. My mother's hand restrained her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Hush, my dear! You must not disturb him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I am not in a hurry. But I think you ought to help me in
-with my box.' This to me. 'If I was a man, I wouldn't ask you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her box! Deeper and deeper the mystery grew. When the girl
-thus directly addressed me, my heart beat with a feeling of intense pleasure.
-Hitherto I had been mortified that she had evinced no interest in me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Come along!' she exclaimed imperiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I followed her to the door, like a slave, and there was her
-box, almost similar in appearance to the box we had brought with us. It was
-altogether such an astounding experience, and so entirely an innovation upon the
-regular routine of our days, that I rubbed my eyes to be sure that I was awake.
-My mother had closed the door of the room in which uncle Bryan was sleeping, and
-now stood by my side. I stooped to lift the box, and found it heavy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What is in it?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Books and things,' our visitor replied. 'I'll help you. Oh,
-I'm strong, though I <i>am</i> a girl! I wish I was you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then I should be a boy. There! You see I am almost as strong
-as you are.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The box was in the shop by this time. My mother was perfectly
-bewildered, as I myself was; but mine was a delightful bewilderment The
-adventure was so new, so novel, so like an adventure, that I was filled with
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How did the box come here?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Walked here, of course,' she said somewhat scornfully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nonsense!' I exclaimed; although if she had persisted in her
-statement, I was quite ready to believe it, as I would have believed anything
-from her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, you don't believe in things!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I do; but I don't believe that thing. How <i>did</i> it
-come?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A boy carried it. A strong boy--not like you. Isn't that
-candied lemon-peel in the glass bottle?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like some. I'm very fond of sweet things.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Quite as though the little girl were mistress of the
-establishment, my mother went behind the counter, and cut a slice of the
-lemon-peel.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What a small piece!' exclaimed the girl, sitting on the box,
-and biting it. 'I could put it all in my mouth at once; but I like to linger
-over nice things.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And she did linger over it, while we looked on. When she had
-finished, she said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I suppose I am to sit here till he wakes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear,' said my mother, who had been regarding her
-childlike ways with tenderness; 'you had better come inside. It will be more
-comfortable. But, indeed, indeed, you have bewildered me!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The girl laughed, soft and low, and my mother's heart went out
-to her. The next minute we were in the parlour again. My mother motioned that
-she would have to be very quiet, and pointed to a seat. Before our visitor sat
-down, she took off her bonnet and mantle, and laid them aside. The presence of
-this slight graceful creature was like a new revelation to me; the common room
-became idealised by a subtle charm. But how was it all to end? An hour ago she
-was not here; and I wondered how we could have been happy and contented without
-her. She was exceedingly pretty, and her face was full of expression. That,
-indeed, was one of her strongest charms. When she spoke, it was not only her
-tongue that spoke. Her eyes, her hands, the movements of her head, put life and
-soul into her words, and made them sparkle. Her hair was cut short, and just
-touched her shoulders; its colour was a light auburn. Her hands were small and
-white; I noticed them particularly as she took from the table the book I had
-been reading.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Are you fond of reading?' she asked, in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I answered. It really seemed to me as if I had known
-her for years. 'Are you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I love it. I like to read in bed. Then I don't care for
-anything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Soon she was skimming through 'Picciola;' but looking up she
-noticed that my mother's eyes were fixed admiringly upon her. She laid the book
-aside and approached my mother, so that her words might not be lost.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It makes it strong to cut it, does it not?' was the first
-question.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Makes what strong?' My mother did not know to what it was our
-visitor referred. I made a shrewd guess, mentally, and discovered that I was
-right.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The hair. To cut it when one is young, as mine is cut, makes
-it strong?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear. It will be all the better for being cut.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why do you call me your dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother replied gently, with a slight hesitancy: 'I won't,
-if you don't like me to.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, but I like it! And it sounds nice from you. It will be
-all the better for being cut! That's what <i>I</i> think. It was nearly down to
-my waist. Do you like it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is very pretty.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And soft, is it not? Feel it. When I was a little child, it
-was much lighter--almost like gold. I used to be glad to hear people say, &quot;What
-beautiful hair that child has got!&quot;'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It will get darker as you grow older.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't want it to. I'll sit in the sun as much as ever I
-can, so that it sha'n't grow darker.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear. Say it, please!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, have you been told that that is the way to keep hair
-light?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, but I think it is. It must be the best way.' This with a
-positive air, as if contradiction were out of the question.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you are so fond of your hair, what made you say just now
-that you wished you were a boy?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I do wish it. I think it is a shame. Persons ought to
-have their choice before they're born, whether they would be boys or girls.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, they ought to have, and you can't help agreeing with me.
-Then I should have been a boy, and things would have been different. All that I
-should have wanted would have been to grow tall and strong. Men have no business
-to be little. But as I am a girl, I must grow as pretty as I can.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And she smoothed her hair from her forehead with her small
-white hands, and looked at us and smiled with her eyes and her lips. All this
-was done with such an utter absence of conscious vanity that it deepened my
-admiration of her, and I was ready to take sides with her against the world in
-any proposition she might choose to lay down. That she saw this expressed in my
-face, and that she, in an easy graceful way, received the homage I paid her, as
-being naturally her due, and did her best--again without conscious artifice--to
-strengthen it, were as plainly conveyed by her demeanour towards me as though
-she had expressed it in so many words. It struck me as strange that my mother
-did not ask her any questions concerning herself, not even her name, nor where
-she lived, nor what was her errand; and although all of these questions, and
-especially the first, were on the tip of my tongue a dozen times, I did not have
-the courage to shape them in words. My mother not saying anything more to her,
-she turned towards me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you generally rude to girls--I mean to young ladies?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I protested warmly, ransacking my mind for the clue.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You were to me just now. You said that I spoke nonsense.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am very sorry,' I stammered; I beg your pardon; but when
-you said your box walked here----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You shouldn't have asked foolish questions. Never mind; we
-are friends again.' She gave me her hand, quite as though we had had a serious
-quarrel, which was now made up. Then she nestled a little closer to me, and
-proceeded with 'Picciola.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Nothing further was said until the scene assumed another
-aspect. I was looking over the pages of the story with her, when, raising my
-eyes, I saw that uncle Bryan was awake. His eyes were fixed on the girl, with a
-sort of bewilderment on his face as to whether he was asleep or awake. He looked
-neither at my mother nor me, but only at the girl. Her head was bent over the
-book, and he could not see her face. I plucked her dress furtively under the
-table, and she looked up, and met my uncle's gaze. Then I noticed his usual sign
-of agitation, the twitching of his lips.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What is this, Emma? he demanded, presently, of my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother had been waiting for him to speak. 'This young----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Lady,' added the girl quickly, as my mother slightly
-hesitated, and rising with great composure. 'Say it. I like to hear it. This
-young lady----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Completely dominated by the girl's gentle imperiousness, my
-mother said, 'This young lady has come to see you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He glanced at her uncovered head; then at her bonnet and
-mantle. A flush came into her cheeks, and she exclaimed,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I don't want to stop, if you're not agreeable. I only
-like agreeable people. But if you turn me out to-night I don't exactly know
-where to go to; and there's my box----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your box!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, with all my things in. It's in the shop. You can go and
-see if you don't believe me. But if you do go, I sha'n't like you. You have no
-right to doubt my word.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her eyes filled with tears, and these and the words of
-helplessness she had spoken were sufficient for my mother. She drew the girl to
-her side with a protecting motion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you a stranger about here, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know anything of the place,' replied the girl, in a
-more childlike tone than she had yet used. 'I have no idea where I am--except
-that this is Paradise-row. I shouldn't like to wander about the streets at this
-time of night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is no need, my dear, there is no need. There, there!
-don't cry.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But of course,' continued the girl, striving to restrain the
-quivering of her lips, 'I would sooner do that than stop where I am not wanted.'
-She would have said more, but I saw that she was fearful of breaking down, and
-thus showing signs of weakness. I looked somewhat angrily towards uncle Bryan;
-my mother's arm was still around the girl's waist. With a quick comprehension he
-seized all the points of sentiment in the picture.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' he growled, this is more like a leaf out of a story-book
-than anything else. You'--to the girl--'are injured innocence; you'--to my
-mother--'are the good genius of the oppressed; and I am the dragon whom St.
-George here'--meaning me--'would like to spit on his lance.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure, Bryan--' commenced my mother, in a tone of mild
-remonstrance; but uncle Bryan interrupted her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't be sure of anything, Emma. Let me understand matters
-first. How long have I been asleep--days, weeks, or years?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nearly two hours, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So long! There was a man once who, at the bidding of a
-magician, but dipped his head into a bucket of water----' he paused moodily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, yes!' exclaimed the girl eagerly, advancing a step
-towards him, with a desire to propitiate him. 'Go on. Tell me about him. I'm
-fond of stories about magicians.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He stared at her. 'Injured innocence,' he said, 'speak when
-you're spoken to.' She tossed her head, and retreated, and uncle Bryan again
-questioned my mother. 'How long has this little----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Young lady,' interposed the girl, with rather a comical
-assertion of independence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">--'This little girl--how long has she been here?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'About an hour, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Long enough, I see, to make herself quite at home.' He seemed
-to be at a loss for words, and sat drumming his fingers on the table, moving his
-lips as if he were holding converse with them, and with his eyes turned from us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the silence that ensued, the girl stole towards him. My
-mother's footstool was near his chair, and she sat upon it, and resting her hand
-timidly on his knee, said, in a sweet pleading voice,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I wish you would be kind to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her face was upturned to his. He looked down upon it, and
-placing his hands on her shoulders, said in a tone which was both low and
-bitter, which was harsh from passion and tender from a softer emotion which he
-could not control,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For God's sake, child, tell me who you are! What is your
-name?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My name is Jessie Trim.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_13" href="#div1Ref_13">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>A SUDDEN SHOCK.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Emma,' said my uncle, 'can you find something to do for a few
-minutes? Chris can shut up the shop.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We went out of the parlour together, and I put up the
-shutters, and bolted them. Then my mother and I went downstairs to the kitchen,
-and my mother set light to the fire, and warmed up what remained of the day's
-dinner. Our usual supper was bread-and-cheese.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She must be hungry,' said my mother, and I think it will
-please your uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad she is going to stay, mother. Do you think she will
-stop altogether with us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have no idea, child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie Trim! It's a pretty name, isn't it? Jessie, Jessie!
-Mother, why didn't you ask her her name when she came in?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She came to see your uncle, Chris. We must never forget one
-thing, my dear. This is his house, and he has been very kind to us.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He would be angry if he heard you say so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is his nature, and I should not say it to him. The least
-we can do in return for all his goodness is to study him in every possible way
-in our power. To have asked her all about herself might have been like stealing
-into his confidence. He may have secrets which he would not wish us to know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Secrets! Do you think <i>she</i> is one of them?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How can she be? But let you and me make up our minds, my
-dear--I made up mine a long time ago, Chris--not to be too curious concerning
-anything your uncle does. If he wished us to know anything, he would tell us of
-his own free will.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't suppose he has anything to tell,' I said, with not
-the slightest belief in my own words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps not. Anyhow, we'll not say anything--eh, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, mother. She is very pretty, isn't she?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very, very pretty.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Such beautiful hair--and such white hands!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was proceeding with my raptures, when my mother tapped my
-cheek merrily, which brought the blood into my face strangely enough. 'At all
-events,' I said, I hope she will stay with us always.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You stupid Chris! What has got into your head? I really don't
-suppose she will stay very long.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But she has brought her box--and--and--'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother suddenly assumed a look of perplexity. 'Really,
-really now,' she said, sitting down, and holding me in front of her, 'I know
-every mark upon you. You have got a brown mole on your left side, and a little
-red spot like a currant on the back of your neck, and another one just here----'
-and then she paused.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, Chris, I really <i>cannot</i> remember that I have ever
-seen a note of interrogation anywhere about you. Have you got one, my dear? And
-where is it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But, mother,' I said, laughing, and kissing her, 'I must be
-inquisitive and I must ask questions.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Only of me, dear child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, then, only of you. Now wouldn't you grow quite fond of
-her?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure I should, dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, wouldn't it be too bad, directly you got fond of her,
-for her to go away? Now wouldn't it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But life is full of changes, my dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's not an answer, mother. You're fond of me;'--an
-endearing caress answered me--'very, very fond, I know, and I am of you. Now,
-supposing <i>I</i> was to go away!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Child, child!' cried my mother, kneeling suddenly before me
-and clasping me in her arms. If I were to lose you, my heart would break!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was frightened at the vehement passion of her words, and at
-the white face upon which my eyes rested; but she grew more composed presently.
-Then the voice of uncle Bryan was heard at the top of the stairs, calling to us
-to come up.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What can we do with our visitor to-night, Emma?' he said,
-thus indicating that matters had been arranged during our absence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She can sleep with me. You won't mind, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall like to,' replied Jessie. He's ever so much nicer
-than he was, although I can't say that he's at all polite.' This referred to
-uncle Bryan, who made a grimace. 'I couldn't help coming.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The least said,' observed uncle Bryan, with all his usual
-manner upon him, 'the soonest mended, young lady.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She pursed up her lips: Young lady! That was all very well
-when we were distant. You may call me something else now, if you like.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Indeed! Well, then, Miss Trim.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She laughed saucily. How funny it sounds as you say it! Miss
-Trim! I think we are quite intimate enough for you to call me Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You think!' retorted uncle Bryan, with some sense of
-enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are given to thinking, I have no doubt.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes; I think a good deal.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Upon my word What about?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All sorts of things that wouldn't interest you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I quite believe you, young lady.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, if you like to call me that,' she said, with a shrug of
-her shoulders, you can. 'But I think it's a pity when people try to make
-themselves more disagreeable than they naturally are.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">For the life of him, uncle Bryan could not help laughing. This
-little play of words was to him what the world is always looking out for
-nowadays--a new sensation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then I am naturally disagreeable, you think?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She did not reply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What else do you think about me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think it must be uncomfortable for the others for you to go
-to sleep every night, with a handkerchief over your face.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I had known you were coming----' he said, with mock
-politeness; but she interrupted him with wonderful quickness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't say unkind things. I feel when they are coming; my
-flesh begins to creep.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you think anything else about me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; I think you might give me some supper. You can't know
-how hungry I am; and I have always a good appetite.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was so intent upon this unusual dialogue, and was
-probably so lost in wonder (as I myself was) at the appearance of uncle Bryan in
-a new character, that she had entirely forgotten the supper; but at Jessie
-Trim's mention of it she ran downstairs, and it was soon on the table.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' exclaimed Jessie, with approving nods; 'that smells
-nice.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan stared at the unexpected fare.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You see what it is to be a young lady,' he said; hitherto we
-have always been contented with bread-and-cheese.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is much nicer,' said Jessie, beginning to eat; 'are you
-not going to have some?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No. Give me some bread-and-cheese, Emma.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The girl was too much occupied with her supper to bandy words
-with him; she ate heartily, and when she had finished, asked uncle Bryan if he
-did not feel in a better humour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>I</i> always do,' she remarked, 'after meals. There is
-only one thing I want now to make me feel quite amiable.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then,' said uncle Bryan sententiously, 'all the trouble in
-the world would come to an end.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded acquiescently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And that one thing is----' he questioned.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Something I sha'n't get. I see it in your face; it is really
-too much to ask for.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To put an end to all the trouble in the world, I would make a
-sacrifice.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' she said, shaking her head, I really haven't courage to
-ask.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What is it?' demanded uncle Bryan impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then ensued a perfect piece of comedy-acting on the part of
-Jessie Trim; who, when she had worked uncle Bryan almost into a passion, made
-the prettiest of curtseys, and said that the only thing she wanted to make her
-feel quite amiable was a piece of candied lemon-peel.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I always,' she added, with the oddest little twinkle in her
-eyes, 'like something sweet to finish my meals with.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The expression on uncle Bryan's face was so singular that I
-did not know if he was going to laugh or storm. But Jessie got her piece of
-candied lemon-peel, and chewed it with great contentment, and with many sly
-looks at uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now, then,' he cried, 'it is time to go to bed.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It isn't healthy,' observed Jessie, who seemed determined to
-upset all the rules of the house, 'to go to bed the moment after one has eaten a
-heavy supper.' She spoke with perfect gravity, and with the serious authority of
-a grown-up woman.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then we are to sit up after our time because you have
-over-eaten yourself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have not over-eaten myself: I have had just enough. I wish
-you wouldn't say disagreeable things; you would find it much nicer not to. If
-you think I am not right in what I say about going to bed immediately after
-supper, of course I will go. You are much older than I, and ought to be much
-wiser.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I think you <i>are</i> right,' he growled.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why do you make yourself disagreeable then?' she asked,
-sitting down on the stool at his feet.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Not a word was spoken for half an hour; at the end of which
-time our visitor rose, just as if she were the mistress of the house, and
-remarked that now she <i>did</i> think it time we were all in bed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night,' she said, giving him her hand; 'I hope I haven't
-vexed you.' She held up her face to him to be kissed, but he did not avail
-himself of the invitation, and retired to his room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is a very strange man,' she said to us, and I don't quite
-know whether I like him or whether I don't. Good-night, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mind was full of her and her quaint ways as I undressed
-myself, and I found myself unconsciously repeating, 'Good-night, Jessie! Jessie!
-Jessie!' Her name was to me the sweetest of morsels. 'I am glad she has come,' I
-thought; 'I hope she will stop.' I had not been in my room two minutes before I
-heard her knocking at the door of the room in which uncle Bryan slept. I crept
-to the wall to listen.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you hear me?' she said. 'You can't be asleep already.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But no response came from uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do answer me!' she continued. 'If you think I have been rude
-to you, I am very sorry. I shall catch my death of cold if I stand here long.
-Say, good-night, Jessie!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie!' she called out archly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night, Jessie. Now go to bed, like a good--little girl.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And then the house was quiet, and I fell asleep, and dreamt
-the strangest and sweetest dreams about our new friend.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The following morning when I rose I moved about very quietly,
-and I debated with myself whether I ought to bid my mother good-morning as
-usual. I stole softly upstairs, and put my ear to the door.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-morning, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I almost whispered the words, but the reply came instantly, in
-clear sweet tones,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-morning, dear child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She must have been listening for my step.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Is that you, Chris?' inquired a voice which, if I had not
-known the speaker, I should have imagined had proceeded from a little child.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jessie,' I answered, with a thrill of delight.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where are you going?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am going to work.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had never been so happy in my work as I was during this day,
-and yet I wanted the hours to fly so that I might be home again. When eight
-o'clock struck, I whipped off my apron eagerly, and ran out of the office. My
-mother was at the gate.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I didn't expect you, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, dear child. I wished to leave your uncle and Jessie
-together for a little while. She wanted to come with me, but I thought it best
-to leave her at home. Shall we take a walk, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, but not a long one. Mother, who is she?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do not know, my dear; and your uncle hasn't said a
-word--neither has she.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not a word! Why, mother, she couldn't keep quiet!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't think she could, dear,' said my mother, with a smile.
-'I mean not a word as to who she is. I think she gave your uncle a letter, for
-he has been writing to-day with one before him; but I am not sure.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have been thinking about her all day, and I can't make her
-out. Anyhow, I hope she will stop with us. The house is quite different with her
-in it. Don't you think so? She is as light-hearted and as sparkling as a--a
-sunbeam.' I thought it a very happy simile. 'She couldn't be anything else.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' said my mother gravely, she was sobbing in her
-sleep last night as if her heart would break.' I looked so grieved at this that
-my mother quickly added, But she has been talking to your uncle to-day just as
-she did last night. She is like an April day; but then she is quite a child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A child! Why, mother, she must be--how old should <i>you</i>
-think?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'About fifteen, I should say, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So how can she be quite a child? And she doesn't talk like a
-child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She does and she doesn't, my dear. I shouldn't wonder,' she
-said, with her sweet laugh, that because you are nearly eighteen, you think
-yourself quite a man.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I <i>am</i> growing, mother, am I not?' And I straightened
-myself stiffly up. Why, I am taller than you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will be as tall as your father was, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad of that. She said men had no business to be
-little.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>She</i> said!' repeated my mother, laughing; and she
-tapped my cheek merrily, as she had done on the previous night, and again I
-blushed. Jessie ran into the shop to welcome us when we arrived home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The evening passed very happily with me, Jessie entertaining
-us with her light talk. Her marvellous ingenuity, in twisting a few simple words
-so as to make them bear sparkling meanings, afforded me endless enjoyment. Uncle
-Bryan said very little, and notwithstanding the many challenges she slyly threw
-out to him, declined to be drawn into battle; but now and then she provoked him
-to answer her. He needed all his skill to hold his own against her, and he spoke
-rather roughly to her once or twice. On those occasions she became grave, and
-edged closer to my mother, having already learned that nothing but what was
-gentle could emanate from her tender nature. When Jessie went to bed with my
-mother, she did not hold up her face to be kissed, as she had done on the
-previous night. I do not think she debated the point with herself, whether she
-should do so; she gave him a rapid look when she wished him good-night, and
-decided on the instant--as she would have decided the other way had she seen
-anything in his face to encourage her. A week passed, and no word of explanation
-fell from uncle Bryan's lips as to the connection that existed between these two
-opposite beings; but I could not help observing that he grew more and more
-reserved, more and more thoughtful. In after days I recognised how strange a
-household ours really was during this period, but it did not strike me at the
-time, so entirely was I wrapped up in the new sense of happiness which Jessie
-Trim had brought into my life. Of the four persons who composed the household
-only Jessie and I were really happy. My mother was distressed because of uncle
-Bryan's growing moroseness; with unobtrusive gentleness she strove, in a hundred
-little ways, to break through the wall of silence and reserve which he built
-around himself, as it were, but she could scarcely win a word from his lips. It
-did not trouble me; my mind, was occupied only with Jessie. What Jessie did,
-what Jessie said, how Jessie looked and felt and thought--that was the world in
-which I moved now. A second week passed, and there was still no change. One
-night my mother said that she would come for me on the following evening.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And bring Jessie,' I suggested, taking advantage of the
-opportunity which I had been waiting for all the week; 'a walk will do her
-good.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie's eyes sparkled at the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like to come,' she said, with a grateful look; 'I
-haven't had a walk since I came here. What are you thinking about?' to my
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am thinking,' replied my mother, 'whether there will be any
-objection to it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'On whose part?' I asked. 'Uncle Bryan's? Why, what objection
-can he have?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure,' said Jessie, he won't care, one way or another;
-he doesn't care about anything, and especially about me. Why, how many words do
-you think he has spoken to me all this day, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't guess, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She counted on her fingers. One, two, three--sixteen. &quot;I don't
-know anything about it! Be quiet! You're a magpie--nothing but chatter, chatter,
-chatter!&quot; and he didn't speak them--he growled them. So he can't care. I shall
-come, Chris,'--pressing close to my mother coaxingly--'and we'll take a nice
-long walk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, my dear,' said my mother, with a smile; 'but I <i>
-must</i> ask your uncle, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I mapped out in my mind the pleasantest walk I knew, and on
-the following night, when work was over, I hastened into the street; but neither
-my mother nor Jessie was there. I looked about for them, and waited for a
-quarter of an hour, and then raced home. Only my mother was in the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why didn't you come, mother?' I asked. 'I've been waiting
-ever so long. And where's Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' replied my mother, with her arm around my waist,
-'Jessie has gone.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gone! Oh, for a walk with uncle Bryan, I suppose?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear; she has gone away altogether.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_14" href="#div1Ref_14">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h4>
-<h5>THE WORLD BECOMES BRIGHT AGAIN.</h5>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gone away altogether!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I echoed the words, but the news was so sudden and unexpected
-that for a few moments I did not quite understand their meaning. I had never,
-until the last fortnight, had a friend so nearly of my own age as Jessie; and
-the companionship had been to me so sweet and delightful, and so altogether new,
-that to lose it now seemed like losing the best part of my life. I released
-myself from my mother's embrace, and ran upstairs to her bedroom, to look for
-Jessie's box. It was gone, and the room was in all respects the same as it had
-been before Jessie's arrival. Until that time it had always worn a cheerful
-aspect in my eyes, but now it looked cold and desolate; the happy experiences of
-the last two weeks seemed to me like a dream--but a dream which, now that it had
-passed away, filled my heart with pain.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Her box is gone,' I said, with quivering lips, when I
-rejoined my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was taken away this morning, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That shows that she is not coming back; and I shall never,
-never see her again!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother did not reply. The feeling that now stole upon me
-was one of resentment towards uncle Bryan. Who was to blame but he? From the
-first he had behaved harshly towards her. He saw that we were fond of her, and
-he was jealous of her. He was always cold and unsympathetic and unkind. Every
-unreasonable suggestion that presented itself to me with reference to him, I
-welcomed and accepted as an argument against him; and to this effect I spoke
-hotly and intemperately.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, Chris, my dear!' remonstrated my mother; 'you should
-not have hard thoughts towards your uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't help it; he almost asks for them. He won't let us
-like him--he won't! I don't care if he hears me say so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He can't hear you, my dear; he went away with Jessie this
-morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where to?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have no idea, Chris; he did not tell me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And wouldn't, if you had asked,' I said bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother sighed, but said, with gentle firmness, 'I had no
-right to ask, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then we are alone in the house, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear, for a little while. Sit down, and I will tell
-you all about it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I sat down, and my mother sat beside me, and took my hand in
-hers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It came upon me as suddenly as it has come upon you, my dear,
-and I am almost as sorry as you are. But life is full of such changes, my dear
-child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on, mother.' In my rebellious mood her gentle words
-brought no comfort to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When I said last night that I would come for you this
-evening, I had no idea that anything would have prevented me. I intended to
-bring Jessie, and I looked forward with pleasure to the walk we intended to
-take. I did not tell your uncle that Jessie would come with me; I thought I
-would wait till teatime. Lately I have considered it more than ever my duty to
-study him, because of the change that has taken place in him--you have noticed
-it yourself, my dear--since Jessie came so strangely among us. For it was
-strange, was it not, my dear?--almost as strange as her going away so suddenly,
-and as unexpected too; for I am certain your uncle did not expect her, and that
-he was as much surprised as we were. He is not to blame, therefore, for what has
-occurred now. It is not for us, dear child, to find fault with him because he is
-silent and reserved with us; the only feeling we ought to have towards him is
-one of deep gratitude for his great kindness to us. You don't forget our sad
-condition, my darling, on the morning we received your uncle's letter.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, mother, I don't forget,' I said, somewhat softened
-towards uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He did not deceive us; he spoke plainly and honestly, and the
-brightest expectations we could have entertained from his offer, and the manner
-in which it was made, have been more than realised. Is it not so, dear child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In common honesty I was compelled to admit that it was so.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shudder when I think what might have become of my dear boy
-if it had not been for this one friend--this one only friend, my darling, in all
-the wide, wide world!--who stepped forward so unselfishly to save us. And we
-have been so happy here, my darling, so very, very happy, all these years! If a
-cloud has come, have we not still a little sunshine left? There, there, my
-dear!' returning my kisses, and wiping her eyes; 'as I was saying'--(although
-she had said nothing of the kind; but she was flurried and nervous)--'and as I
-told you once before, I think Jessie gave your uncle a letter, and that I saw
-him, the day after she came, writing, with this letter before him. Every morning
-since then I have observed him watch for the arrival of the postman in the
-neighbourhood, and every time the postman passed without giving him the letter
-which I saw he expected, he grew more anxious. This morning he reminded me that
-I had some errands to make; I was away for nearly two hours, and when I came
-home he and Jessie were in the shop, dressed for walking. What passed after that
-was so quick and rapid that I was quite bewildered. Your uncle, beckoning me
-into the parlour, said that he and Jessie were going away, and that I was to
-take care of the shop while he was absent. &quot;I want you not to ask any
-questions,&quot; he said, seeing, I suppose, that I was about to ask some. &quot;I shall
-be away for two or three days, perhaps longer. Do the best you can. You had
-better wish Jessie good-bye now.&quot; I could not help asking, &quot;Is she coming back
-with you?&quot; And he said, &quot;No.&quot; I was so grieved, Chris, that when I went into the
-shop, where Jessie was waiting, I was crying. &quot;You are sorry I am going, then,&quot;
-she said. &quot;Indeed, indeed, I am, my dear,&quot; I replied, as I kissed her. She
-kissed me quite affectionately, and said she was glad I was sorry, and that I
-was to give her love to you----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did she say that, mother? Did she?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear. &quot;Give my love to Chris,&quot; she said, &quot;and say how
-sorry I am to go away without seeing him.&quot; And the next minute she was gone. I
-thought of her box then, and I ran upstairs, as you did just now, and found that
-it had been taken away while I was out. And that is all I know, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is very strange,' I said, after a long pause. Mother, what
-do you think of it, eh?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, I don't know what to think. The more I think, the
-more I am confused. And now, my dear----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We must make ourselves happy in our old way, and we must
-attend to the business properly until your uncle returns.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Make ourselves happy in our old way! How was that possible?
-The light had gone out of the house. The very room in which we three--uncle
-Bryan, my mother, and I--had spent so many pleasant days before Jessie came,
-looked cold and comfortless now. Even the figure of my dear mother, bustling
-cheerfully about, and the sweet considerate manner in which she strove, in many
-tender ways, to soften my sorrow, were not a recompense for the loss of Jessie.
-I opened my book and pretended to be occupied with it, and my mother, with that
-rare wisdom which springs from perfect unselfish love, did not disturb my
-musings. The evening passed very quietly, and directly the shop was shut, I went
-to bed. I was in a very unhappy mood, and it was past midnight before I fell
-asleep. I did not think of my mother, or of the pain she was suffering through
-me. My grief was intensely selfish; I had not the strength which often comes
-from suffering, nor was I blessed with such a nature as my mother's--a nature
-which does not colour surrounding circumstances with the melancholy hue of its
-own sorrows. Unhappily, it falls to the lot of few to be brought within the
-sweet influence of one whose mission on earth seems to be to shed the light of
-peace and love upon those among whom her lot is cast, and to whom, unless we are
-ungratefully forgetful, as I was on this night, we look instinctively for
-comfort and consolation when trouble comes to us. In the middle of the night, I
-awoke suddenly, and found my mother sitting by my bed; she was in her
-nightdress, and there was a light in the room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, mother!' I exclaimed, confused for a moment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't be alarmed, dear child,' she said; 'there's nothing the
-matter; but I could not sleep, knowing that you were unhappy. You too, my dear,
-were a long time before you went to sleep.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then I knew that she must have watched and waited at my
-bedroom door until I had blown out my candle.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What time is it, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It must be three o'clock, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O, mother! And you awake at this time of the night for me!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She smiled softly. Something of worship for that pure nature
-stole into my heart as I looked into her dear eyes. But there was grief in them,
-too, and I asked her the reason.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know, my darling,' she said, with a wistful yearning
-look, and with a sigh which she vainly strove to check, that you went to bed
-to-night without kissing me? For the first time in your life, dear child; for
-the first time in your life!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In a passion of remorse I threw my arms around her neck, and
-kissed her again and again, and asked her forgiveness, and said, 'How could
-I--how could I be so unloving and unkind?' But she stopped my self-reproaches
-with her lips on my lips, and with broken words of joy and thankfulness. She
-folded me in her arms, and there was silence between us for many
-minutes--silence made sacred by love as pure and faithful as ever dwelt in
-woman's breast. Then I drew the clothes around her, and she lay by my side,
-saying that she would wait until I was asleep.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is like the old time, mother,' I whispered, 'when there
-was no one else but you and me. But I love you more than I did then, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My darling child!' she whispered, in return; 'how you comfort
-me! But I won't have my dear boy speak another word, except good-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We looked out on the following day for a letter from uncle
-Bryan, but none came, nor any news of him. It was the same on the second day,
-and the third. My mother began to grow uneasy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If he had only left word where he was going to!' she said. 'I
-am afraid he must be ill.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The business went on very well without him, thanks to my
-mother's care and attention, except that on Saturday night the supply of 'uncle
-Bryan's pills,' as they had got to be called in the neighbourhood, ran short,
-which occasioned my mother much concern. Sunday and Monday passed, and still no
-tidings of him. On the Tuesday--I remember the day well: we were very busy where
-I was employed, and I did not come home until past ten o'clock--the shop was
-shut--a most unusual thing. I knocked at the door hurriedly, and my mother, with
-happiness in her face, opened it for me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan has come home!' I cried, in a hearty tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded gladly, and I ran in, and threw my arms about him.
-I think he was pleased with this spontaneous mark of affection; but he looked at
-me curiously too, I thought. We sat down--the three of us--and a dead silence
-ensued. We all looked at each other, and spoke not a word.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What's the matter, mother?' I asked, for certainly so strange
-a silence needed explanation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A sweet laugh answered me, and my heart almost leaped into my
-throat. I darted behind the door, and there stood Jessie Trim, bending forward,
-with eager face, and sparkling eyes, and hand uplifted to her ear. But when she
-saw that she was discovered, her manner changed instantly. She came forward,
-quite demurely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you glad?' she asked gravely, with her hand in mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My looks were a sufficient answer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now,' she said, sitting down on the stool, and resting
-her hands on her lap, we are going to live happily together for ever
-afterwards.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_15" href="#div1Ref_15">CHAPTER XV.</a></h4>
-<h5>JESSIE'S ROSEWATER PHILOSOPHY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Her voice was like music to my heart. With Jessie on one side
-of me, and my mother on the other, there was not a cloud on my life, nor room
-for one. I sat between them, now patting my mother's hand, now turning
-restlessly to Jessie, and looking at her in delight. But the change in the
-aspect of things was so sudden and unexpected, that it would not have much
-amazed me to see Jessie melt into thin air. This must have been expressed in my
-face, for Jessie, who was a skilful interpreter of expression, whispered,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is true; I have really come back.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was doubting,' I said, in a similar low tone, 'whether I
-was asleep or awake.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't speak loud,' she said mockingly, 'don't look at me too
-hard, and don't blow on me, or you will find that you're only dreaming. Shall I
-pinch you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; I am awake, I know. This is the most famous thing that
-ever happened.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You were sorry when I went away, then?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't tell you how sorry; but you are not going away
-again?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I suppose not; I have no place to go to.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was a change in her manner; she was more thoughtful and
-sedate than usual, and her face was pale; but I noted these signs only in a
-casual way. To be certain that everything was right, I went out of the room to
-see if her box had been brought back. It was in its old place in my mother's
-bedroom. My mother had followed me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So you are happy again, my dear,' she said, as we stood, like
-lovers, with our arms around each other's waist.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I <i>am</i> glad, mother,' I replied, pressing her fondly to
-me; 'and so are you too, I know. But tell me how it all happened.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is very little to tell, dear child. I was as surprised
-as you were. I was having tea when your uncle and Jessie came in suddenly; it
-gave me quite a turn, for Jessie, as you see, is in mourning.' (I had not
-noticed it, and I wondered at my blindness.) 'Your uncle looked worn and
-anxious, and they were both very tired, as if they had come a long distance. &quot;I
-have not quite deserted you, you see,&quot; your uncle said. I told him how glad I
-was he had returned, and how anxious we had been about him. &quot;And Jessie, too,&quot; I
-said. &quot;I was afraid I was not to see her again.&quot; &quot;You will see a great deal of
-her for the future,&quot; said your uncle; &quot;she will live with us now. She must sleep
-with you, as there is no other room in the house for her.&quot; And that is
-positively all I have to tell, Chris, except that Jessie has been very quiet all
-the evening, and only showed her old spirits when your knock was heard at the
-street-door.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And Jessie has told you nothing, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing, dear child; and I have not asked.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't even know whom she is in mourning for?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie was displaying more of her old spirits when my mother
-and I went downstairs; as we entered the room she was saying to uncle Bryan,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I wish you would tell me what I <i>am</i> to call you. I
-can't call you Bryan, and I don't like Mr. Carey. I could invent a name
-certainly, if I wanted to be spiteful.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What name?' he asked, in his rough manner.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never mind. You'd like to know, so that you could bark and
-fight. What <i>shall</i> I call you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Call me what you please,' he answered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, then, I shall call you uncle Bryan, as Chris does; I
-daresay I shall get used to it in time.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Soon after this point was settled I found an opportunity to
-touch Jessie's black dress, and to press her hand sympathisingly. She understood
-the meaning of the action, and her lips quivered; she did not speak another word
-until she went to bed. The events of the evening had for a time driven from my
-head news which I had to tell, and which I knew would be received with pleasure.
-My errand-running days were over. My employer, whose name was Eden, satisfied
-with the manner in which I had performed my duties, had placed me on the footing
-of a regular apprentice, and I was to learn the art of wood-engraving in all its
-branches. A fair career was therefore open to me. It is needless for me to say
-how these glad tidings rejoiced my dear mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mr. Eden,' I said, 'has often asked to see my little
-sketches, and has been pleased with them, I think. He told me that he commenced
-in the same way himself, and he has given me every encouragement. He says that
-in three years I shall be able to earn good wages. Who knows? I may have a
-business of my own one day.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And you have only yourself to thank for it, my dear child;
-said my mother, casting looks of pride around.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, mother; you are wrong. I have kept the best bit to the
-last. Mr. Eden has spoken of you a good many times--he has often seen you, you
-know, when you came for me of an evening--and I have told him all about you.
-When he called me into his office this afternoon, he said that I had you to
-thank for this promotion, and that I was to tell you so, with his compliments.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my dear!' exclaimed my mother; Mr. Eden has never spoken
-one word to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But he has seen you,' interrupted uncle Bryan, the tone and
-meaning of his words being strangely at variance, and that is enough. Mr. Eden
-is right, Chris. Whatever good fortune comes to you in life, you have only one
-person in the world to thank for it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think so too, uncle.' His words softened me towards him,
-and I went to his side, and said gratefully, 'You have been very good to me,
-sir, also.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Psha!' he said, with an impatient movement of his head.
-'Emma, if you will fill my pipe for me, I will smoke it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The pipe we had presented to him on his birthday had not yet
-been used, and my mother took it from the mantelshelf, filled it, and handed it
-to him. He received it with a kind of growl, implying that he had been conquered
-unawares, but he smoked it with much inward contentment nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was so excitedly happy when I went to bed that I was as long
-getting to sleep as I was on the night of Jessie's sudden disappearance. Here
-and there life is dotted with sunny spots, the light of which is but rarely
-entirely darkened, and had Jessie never returned, she might have dwelt in my
-mind as one of these; or--so surrounded with romance was her appearance and
-disappearance--I might have grown to wonder whether she was a creation of my
-fancy, or had really belonged to my life. But now that she was among us again,
-and was going to live with us, I felt as if a bright clear stream were flowing
-within me, invigorating and gladdening my pulses--a sweet refreshing stream
-within the range of which sadness or melancholy could find no place. Reason
-became the slave of creative thought, and within my heart flowers were blooming,
-the beautiful forms and colours of which could never wither and fade. Jessie had
-struck the key-note of my certain belief when she said, 'And now we are going to
-live happily together for ever afterwards.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Curious as I was to know why she had returned to us in
-mourning, I held my tongue, out of respect for my mother's wish that we should
-ask no questions. Jessie's quieter mood soon wore away; little by little she
-introduced colour into her dress, and in three months she was out of mourning. I
-fancied now and then, as these alterations in her dress were made, that her
-manner towards uncle Bryan indicated an expectation that he would speak to her
-on the subject. But he made no remark, and noticed her the least when most she
-invited notice.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She changed the entire aspect of our house. It belonged to her
-to brighten, apparently without conscious effort, everything which came in
-contact with her. The contrast between her and my mother was very great. My
-mother's tastes, like her nature, were quiet and unassuming. Her hair was always
-plainly done, and, within my experience, she had never worn cap or flower; her
-dress was always of one sober tint; and her pale face and almost noiseless step
-were in keeping with these. If she had had the slightest reason to suppose that
-by placing a flower in her hair, and wearing a bit of bright ribbon, or by any
-other innocently-attractive device, she could have given me or uncle Bryan
-pleasure, she would have done so instantly; but, out of her entire disregard of
-self, no such thought ever entered her mind. Now Jessie was fond of flowers and
-ribbons, and was gifted with the rare faculty of knowing where a bit of colour,
-and what colour, would prove most attractive. From the most simple means she
-produced the most exquisite results. Her box was a perfect Pandora's box in its
-inexhaustible supply of adornments, and she was continually surprising us with
-something new, or something which she made to look like new. And she was by no
-means disposed to hide her light under a bushel. Everything she did must be
-admired, and if admiration did not come spontaneously, she was very prompt in
-asking or even begging for it. It was amusing to watch the tricksy efforts by
-which she strove to attract attention to anything she was wearing for the first
-time, however trifling it might be, or to the slightest change in the
-arrangement of her dress. Then, when her object was attained, she would ask,
-'And do you really like it? Are you sure now?' or 'Would it look better so?' or
-'What do you think of its being this way--or that?' I was the person whom she
-consulted most frequently; but I could see nothing to find fault with, and could
-never suggest any improvement; whereas uncle Bryan would shrug his shoulders,
-and mutter disparaging remarks, which never failed to provoke warm replies from
-Jessie. Then he would smile caustically, and hit her hard with words still more
-spiteful, or retire into his shell, according to his humour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We will have a world made especially for you, young lady,' he
-said--whenever he was disposed to be bitter, he called her young lady'--'a world
-full of ribbons and flounces and flowers and silk dresses and satin shoes, and
-everything else you crave for.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That would be nice,' she observed complacently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you shall live in it all alone, so that your title to
-these nice things shall not be disputed.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That wouldn't do,' she answered promptly; 'what is the use of
-having nice things unless you get people to admire them?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We will have people made to order for you, then; people who
-shall be always admiring you and praising you and flattering you.' He rung
-changes on this theme for five minutes or so, and when he paused, she made a
-grimace, as if she had been compelled to swallow a dose of medicine. But this
-kind of warfare did not alter her nature. She coaxed my mother to buy a pair of
-pretty ornaments for the mantelshelf; she coaxed uncle Bryan--how she managed
-it, heaven only knows! but she was cunning, and she must have entrapped him in
-an unguarded moment--to allow her to buy a piece of oil-cloth for the table, and
-she herself chose the pattern; and in many other ways she made it apparent that
-a new spirit was at work in our household. She made the bedroom in which she and
-my mother slept the prettiest room in the house; pictures were hung or pasted on
-the wall; her own especial looking-glass was set in a framework of white muslin,
-daintily edged with blue ribbon. 'Blue is my favourite colour,' she said, as she
-stood, the fairest object there, pointing out to me some trifling improvement;
-'it suits my complexion.' It is not difficult to understand how popular she soon
-became in the neighbourhood; admiring eyes followed her whenever she appeared in
-the narrow streets round about, and I would not have changed places with an
-emperor when I walked out with her by my side. If any one quality in her could
-have made her more precious to me, it was her feeling towards my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one can help loving her,' said Jessie to me, in one of our
-confidential conversations. 'Is she ever angry with any one?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think not,' I replied. 'Where another person would be
-angry, she is sorry. There isn't another mother in the world like mine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Would you like me to be like her? Would it be better for me,
-do you think?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I like you as you are, Jessie; I shouldn't like you to alter.
-There are different kinds of good people, you know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not good.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nonsense! you not good!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your mother is, Chris; she never goes to bed without kneeling
-down and saying her prayers.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know it, Jessie. And you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I often forget--always when I go to bed before her. When
-we go together, I kneel down, and shut my eyes; but I don't say anything. I see
-things.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On one occasion Jessie met me at the street-door when I came
-home from work, and led me with an air of importance into the sitting-room,
-where my mother sat in a new dress and a cap with ribbons in it. My mother
-blushed as I looked at her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She <i>would</i> make me do it, Chris,' she said
-apologetically.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now doesn't she look prettier so?' asked Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was no denying it; I had never seen my mother look so
-attractive, and I kissed her and told her so.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That makes it all right,' cried Jessie, clapping her hands.
-'All the time I was persuading her, she said, &quot;What will Chris say?&quot; and, &quot;Will
-not Chris think it strange?&quot;'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And Jessie pretended that something was wrong with the cap,
-and spread out a ribbon here and a ribbon there, and fluttered about my mother
-in the prettiest way, and then fell back to admire her handiwork.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I want a new nightcap,' growled uncle Bryan, adding with a
-sarcastic laugh, 'but the ribbons in it must suit my complexion.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The next night Jessie gravely presented him with a nightcap
-gaily decorated with ribbons. 'It will become you beautifully,' she said, with a
-demure look. When he crossed lances with her, he was generally vanquished.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie explained to me the philosophy of all this.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I like everything about me to look nice,' she said; 'what
-else are things for? Everybody ought to be nice to everybody. What are people
-sent into the world for, I should like to know--to make each other comfortable
-or miserable?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I subscribed most heartily to this rosewater philosophy.
-Certainly, if Jessie had had her way, there would have been no heartaches in the
-world; no poverty, no sickness, no rags, no rainy days. The sun would have been
-eternally shining where she moved, and everything around her would have been
-eternally bright. The world would have been a garden, and she the prettiest
-flower in it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the mean time I was making rapid progress in my business.
-My great ambition was to become a good draughtsman; and I had learnt all that
-could be learnt in the school of art, which I had attended regularly for some
-time.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now sketch from nature,' the master said; 'I can do nothing
-more for you. You have a talent for caricature, but before that can be properly
-developed, you must learn figure drawing from the life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These words fired me, and I commenced my studies in this
-direction with my mother, who was always ready to stand in any uncomfortable
-position for any length of time, while I laboured to reproduce her. Perhaps I
-would come suddenly into the room while she was stooping over the fire, or
-standing on tiptoe to reach something from the top shelf of the cupboard. 'Stand
-still, mother,' I would cry; 'don't move!' And the dear mother would stand as
-immovable as a statue until I released her; and then, dropping her arms, or
-rising from her stooping posture, with a sigh of relief which she could not
-suppress, she would fall into ecstasies with my work, whether it were good or
-bad. Uncle Bryan was a capital study for me, and would smile cynically when I
-produced any especially ill-favoured sketch of his face or figure. It was but
-natural that I should make the most careful studies of Jessie; and she, not at
-all unwilling, posed for me half a dozen times a week, until my desk was filled
-with sketches of her in scores of graceful attitudes and positions. Her face was
-my principal study; and I sketched it with so many different expressions upon
-it, that before long I knew it by heart, and could see it with my eyes
-shut--smiling, or pouting, or looking demurely at me. Jessie inspected every
-scrap of my work, and very promptly tore into pieces anything that did not
-please her, saying she did not want any ugly likenesses of herself lying about.
-I made studies of her eyes, her lips, her ears, her hands; and we passed a great
-deal of time together in this way, to our mutual satisfaction. We were allowed
-full liberty; but I sometimes detected uncle Bryan observing us with a curiously
-pondering expression on his face. This did not trouble me however.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_16" href="#div1Ref_16">CHAPTER XVI.</a></h4>
-<h5>THE STONE MONKEY FIGURE GIVES UP ITS TREASURES.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I had been for some time employed on a large drawing of
-Jessie, in crayons. It was my first ambitious attempt in colours; and it arose
-from Jessie's complaint that I could not paint her as she was.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am all black and white,' she said; 'I am tired of seeing
-myself so. Now if you could show me my eyes as they are---- What colour are
-they, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Thereupon it was necessary that a close investigation should
-be made, which was not too rapidly concluded: these matters take a long time to
-determine, especially when one is an enthusiast in his art, as I was. The next
-day I bought crayons, and practised secretly; and secretly also commenced the
-sketch of Jessie above mentioned. I was never tired of contemplating my work,
-which promised to be a success; and one Sunday, when it was nearly completed, I
-went to my room to examine it. I kept it carefully concealed in my box, and,
-after a long examination, I was about to replace it, when I was startled by
-Jessie's voice, asking me what I was hiding. She had entered the room softly and
-slyly, on purpose to surprise me, she told me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am certain,' she said, 'that you are doing something
-secretly. For the last three or four weeks you have shut yourself in here night
-after night, for hours together. Now I want to know all about it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not wish her to see the sketch until it was quite
-finished; but as she knelt by my side, and as my box was open, I could not
-prevent her from discovering it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O Chris!' she cried. It's beautiful!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And she expressed such praise of it that my heart thrilled
-with delight.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You think it's like you, then, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Like me! It's <i>me</i>--me, myself! Set it on the box there;
-I'll show you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And with a rapid movement she altered the fashion of her hair
-to suit my picture, and assumed the exact expression I had chosen. She looked
-very bewitching as she stood before me, the living embodiment of my work. Then
-she knelt before the box again, and praised the picture still more warmly,
-analysing it with exclamations of pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">While she was talking and admiring herself; she was tossing
-over the contents of my box, when she came upon the only legacy my grandmother
-had left me--the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone, which the old lady had
-solemnly confided to my care. From the day I had entered uncle Bryan's house it
-had lain in my box, and by this time I had almost forgotten it; but as Jessie
-held it up and turned it about, my mind was strangely stirred by those
-reminiscences of my early life with which it was inseparably connected.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What a curious image?' exclaimed Jessie. 'How long have you
-had it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All my life, Jessie. Put it away; it's the ugliest thing that
-ever was seen.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't think so. It's funny; look at it, wagging its head.
-Why, you seem quite frightened of it! Well, then, I shall take it, and keep it
-in my room.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, I mustn't part with it. It was given to me by my
-grandmother, and she said that it must be kept always in the family. Not that I
-think much of what she said.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie shifted her position, and seated herself very
-comfortably upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now you've got something to tell me,' she said, pulling me
-down beside her. 'I've never heard of your grandmother before, and you know how
-fond I am of stories.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But mine is not a story, And there's nothing interesting to
-tell.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes, there is; there must be. Everybody's life is full of
-stories.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yours, Jessie?' I put the question somewhat timorously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps,' she answered gravely; and added, after a short
-pause, 'But we're not speaking of me; we're speaking of you. I want to know
-everything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But it was long before she could coax me to speak of my early
-life. There was much that I felt I should be ashamed for Jessie to know; and a
-burning blush came to my cheeks as I thought of the time when my mother used to
-beg for our living. To escape too searching an inquiry I began to tell her of my
-grandmother, which led naturally to the story of my grandmother's wedding. Of
-course the man with the knob on the top of his head, and who was always eating
-his nails, was introduced, he being the principal figure at the wedding.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There!' cried Jessie. You said you hadn't any story to tell.
-Why, you've told me half a dozen already. I can see your grandmother as plain as
-plain can be; and that disagreeable man, too--I wonder what became of him, after
-all? What was his name, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Anthony Bullpit'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hate the name of Anthony. Go on; I want to hear more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I gave a description of Jane Painter, at which Jessie laughed
-heartily, and clapped her hands.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall come into your bedroom one night with a sheet over
-me, and frighten you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shouldn't be frightened of you, Jessie; besides, I'm not a
-boy now, and I'm not afraid of anything. Then your voice----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your voice is musical. How could you frighten anybody with
-it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie edged a little closer to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on, Chris. Anything more about Jane Painter? What a wretch
-she must have been!' Then came an account of my grandmother's death, and the
-legend of the long stocking, in which Jessie was immensely interested.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you never found any money after all, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; and I'm sure we searched for it everywhere. We looked up
-the chimney, and ripped the bed open, and pulled the armchair all to pieces.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'd have had the cellar dug up,' cried Jessie excitedly; I'd
-have had the paper taken off the walls, and the flooring taken away bit by bit.
-I am certain the money was hidden somewhere.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I shook my head.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Or Jane Painter stole it,' she continued. 'I sha'n't sleep
-to-night for thinking of it. I do so like to find out things! And I'd like to
-find out this thing more than any other.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Such a lot of money, Chris! Hundreds and hundreds of pounds
-there must have been hidden away, or stolen. Hundreds and hundreds of pounds!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Would you like to be rich, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris,' she replied, looking at me seriously, 'I think I
-would do anything in the world for money.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A miserable feeling came over me, and for the first time in my
-life I repined at my lot. What would I not have sacrificed at that moment if I
-could have filled her lap with money! All this time Jessie had been playing with
-the stone monkey figure, and now she suddenly uttered an exclamation of
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Look!' she cried. 'The head comes off. It isn't broken;
-here's the wire it hangs upon. Why, Chris----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She seized my hand in uncontrollable excitement, and hid the
-figure in her lap.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What's the matter, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's something inside. It's stuffed full of paper. What if
-it should be your grandmother's money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The amazing suggestion almost took away my breath.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's just the kind of place,' continued Jessie, panting, 'she
-would have hidden it in. She kept it all in large bank-notes, and stuffed them
-in here, where nobody could possibly suspect they were, and where she could have
-them under her eye all the day. O Chris! feel how my heart beats!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My excitement was now as great as her own.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Quick, Jessie! Let us look!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' she cried, covering the figure with both hands, 'let us
-wait a bit. This is the best part of things: knowing that something wonderful is
-coming, and waiting a little before it comes. How much is it? A hundred pounds!
-Five hundred pounds! It can't be less, for you say she always wore silk dresses.
-What will you do with it? We'll all have new clothes. I know where there's such
-a lovely blue barege, and I saw a hat in a window yesterday, trimmed with blue
-ribbon, and with lilies and forget-me-nots in it, that I'd give my life for. O
-Chris! I can see myself in them already.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">So she went on for full five minutes, building her castles;
-then with a long-drawn breath she said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now, Chris!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The inside of the figure was certainly full of paper, which I
-fished out very easily with one of Jessie's hairpins, and amid a little cloud of
-dust--emblematical of Jessie's castles, for the paper was utterly valueless. She
-refused to believe at first, and when she was convinced, her disappointment took
-the form of anger against my grandmother; she declared that the old lady had
-done it on purpose, and that she was a spiteful, wicked, deceitful old creature.
-I was quite as disappointed as Jessie was, more for her sake than my own, and I
-tried to talk her into a better mood. Thinking there might be writing on some of
-the paper, I smoothed it out, piece by piece; but there was nothing written or
-printed on any of it with the exception of one long slip, which was evidently a
-cutting from a newspaper. It was headed, 'Remarkable Discovery of a Forger by
-the Celebrated Detective, Mr. Vinnicombe.' And glancing down the column, the
-name of Anthony Bullpit attracted my attention. I became interested immediately.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Here's something, at all events,' I said; 'something about my
-grandmother's nail-eating lover. Listen, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't want to hear anything about him,' replied Jessie, in
-a pet, leaving the room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">So I read this 'Remarkable Discovery' quietly by myself. It
-ran as follows:</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_17" href="#div1Ref_17">CHAPTER XVII.</a></h4>
-<h5>THE TRUE STORY OF ANTHONY BULLPIT.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Among the cases tried at the late assizes was one not only of
-local interest, but exceedingly remarkable, because of the extraordinary
-circumstances attendant upon the arrest of the prisoner, who, after the
-commission of his crime, had absconded. We throw the particulars of this case
-into the form of a narrative, as being likely to prove more interesting to our
-readers. The three principal characters in the story are Mr. James Pardon, a
-Solicitor; Mr. Anthony Bullpit, his confidential clerk; and Mr. Vinnicombe, a
-detective. These terse definitions would be sufficient for dramatic purposes,
-but a more comprehensive description is necessary here for the purposes of our
-story. Mr. James Pardon is the head of the well-known and highly-respected firm
-of solicitors in High-street, and to his care is intrusted a vast amount of
-important business. Not only as a solicitor, but as a man and a churchwarden his
-name commands universal respect. He employs a large staff of clerks, conspicuous
-among whom was Anthony Bullpit, who had been in his service from boyhood, and
-whose face is familiar to most of our townsmen. Mr. Vinnicombe, we need scarcely
-say, is the name of the celebrated detective whose unerring instinct, in
-conjunction with a powerful and keen intellect, has been the means of bringing
-many a criminal to justice. In his profession, Mr. Vinnicombe is <i>facile
-princeps</i>. There is a fourth character, who plays a minor but important part,
-and whom it will be sufficiently explicit to describe as Mr. Vinnicombe's
-friend. Now for the story.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">To all outward appearance trustworthy and attentive to his
-duties, Anthony Bullpit rose step by step in the office of Mr. James Pardon
-until he had arrived at the position of head clerk; his manners were civil and
-plausible, and not the slightest suspicion was entertained of his honesty. He
-had access to the safe and cheque-book of the firm, and was intrusted with much
-confidential business. On the twenty-first of last month Mr. James Pardon had
-occasion to go to London on a matter of great importance; he expected to be
-absent for at least three weeks, and Anthony Bullpit was left to superintend the
-affairs of the firm. It fortunately happened that Mr. Pardon's business in
-London was transacted more rapidly than he had anticipated, and he returned to
-Hertford, without warning, after an absence of fourteen days only. His
-confidential clerk was absent; and to his astonishment he was informed that,
-three days before his return, Anthony Bullpit had stated in the office that he
-had received a letter from Mr. Pardon, desiring his immediate attendance in
-London, to render assistance in the matter on which Mr. Pardon was engaged. As
-Mr. Pardon had sent no such letter to Anthony Bullpit, his suspicions that all
-was not as it should be were naturally aroused, and he at once made an
-examination of the affairs of the business. A very slight inquiry was sufficient
-to justify his suspicions: not only had all the money which had been received
-during his absence been abstracted, but a cheque for seven hundred pounds, taken
-from his cheque-book, and purporting to be signed by James Pardon, had been
-presented to the bank, and cashed without hesitation. The signature was a most
-skilful imitation, and Mr. Pardon acknowledges that any person might have been
-deceived by it. Thus far the story is, unhappily, but an ordinary one in the
-history of crime; but now come the extraordinary incidents which elevate it
-almost into the sphere of romance. Mr. Pardon's indignation was extreme, and
-being determined to bring the delinquent to justice, he went at once to the
-police-court, and laid his charge. While it was being taken down a person, who
-did not appear to be particularly interested in the narration, was sitting by
-the fire, apparently deeply engaged in a newspaper which he held in his hand.
-When Mr. Pardon had finished, he gave expression to his indignation, and to his
-determination to inflict upon the forger the utmost punishment of the law. The
-person who was reading by the fire said aloud, 'First catch your hare, then cook
-it.' Mr. Pardon, not being aware whether the stranger was quoting from the paper
-he was reading or was making an independent observation, asked, in his quick
-manner, whether the words were addressed to him. 'To any one,' answered the
-stranger. 'And you said----' prompted Mr. Pardon. 'I said,' repeated the
-stranger, 'first catch your hare, then cook it. You see,' added the stranger,
-'the first thing you have to do is to catch your clerk; then you can cook
-him--not before. Now how are you going to do it?' Mr. Pardon confessed that he
-did not know how it was to be done, but he supposed that the police---- The
-stranger interrupted him. 'This clerk, Anthony Bullpit, is more than a match for
-the police. You acknowledge that your name was so skilfully forged that you
-might have been taken in by it yourself. Now, the skill which enabled Anthony
-Bullpit to write your name in such a way as might deceive even you, was not
-acquired in an hour or a day. He has been secretly practising your signature for
-years, and has been secretly practising, I don't doubt, many other things you're
-not acquainted with, which might come useful to in one day or another. What does
-this imply? That Anthony Bullpit is a shallow bungling sort of criminal, or an
-artful, scheming, designing sort of criminal?' Mr. Pardon, himself the shrewdest
-of lawyers, was struck by the shrewd intelligence of the stranger, and admitted
-that it was clear that Anthony Bullpit was a scheming, artful, designing
-scoundrel. 'But he had a quiet way with him,' said Mr. Pardon, 'that any person
-might have been taken in by.' The stranger smiled. 'One of your sneaking kind,'
-he said; 'I know them. They're the most difficult to deal with, and the most
-difficult to catch. The chances are that Anthony Bullpit had all his plans well
-laid beforehand. And don't forget that he's got three days' start. Why, you
-don't even know what road he has taken!' Mr. Pardon acknowledged the
-reasonableness of these observations. 'May I ask,' he said, 'with whom I have
-the pleasure of conversing?' 'My name is Vinnicombe,' replied the stranger,
-rising. 'Mr. Vinnicombe, the famous detective!' exclaimed Mr. Pardon. 'The
-same,' was the answer. Mr. Pardon immediately made a proposition to Mr.
-Vinnicombe, and the result was that, within an hour, Mr. Vinnicombe presented
-himself at Mr. Pardon's office, saying that he was ready to take the case in
-hand at once. What follows is from the eminent detective's own lips,
-<i>verbatim et literatim</i>, taken down in our own office by the editor of this
-paper:<a name="div4Ref_01" href="#div4_01"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-<br>
-<p>----------</p>
-
-<p class="hang1"><a name="div4_01" href="#div4Ref_01">Footnote 1</a>:
-
-<p class="normal">It is evident, from the manner in which he presented his
-report of the case to his readers, that 'the editor of this paper' was in
-advance of his times; he would have made an admirable descriptive reporter in
-these days. Mr. Vinnicombe also, as is apparent from the style of the narrative,
-was an advanced detective; but the qualities which are necessary for the making
-of a good detective, and the spirit which animates the class, do not differ,
-whatever the year.--<span class="sc">Author</span>.]</p>
-<p>----------</p>
-<br>
-<p class="normal">'The first thing Mr. Pardon wanted me to do,' said Mr.
-Vinnicombe, was to trace the notes; but I said, No; the thief first, the
-property afterwards. If I could trace him by the property, all right; but there
-was no time to lose in ascertaining what road he had taken, and where he was
-bound to. In a very short time I discovered by what means and by what road
-Anthony Bullpit had left the town. That road did <i>not</i>
-lead to Liverpool, and immediately I learnt this, I decided that Liverpool was
-the port which he intended to reach. Why port? you ask. Well, it wasn't likely
-that a cunning card like this Bullpit was going to remain in England. I picked
-up a bit of gossip concerning him, and I found out that he had had a love affair
-with a young lady--I mention no names, and I only mention it professionally--and
-that her family, not liking his sneaking ways, had shut their doors on him; I
-found out also that this young lady was soon to be married to a gentleman who
-was more worthy of her. That was one reason why it wasn't likely he was going to
-remain in England; having filled his pockets with another man's money was
-another reason. But there were stronger reasons than these. He had peculiar
-marks about him, and if he wasn't found out to-day by these marks, he would be
-to-morrow; and he knew it. So what he had to do was to get out of the country as
-quick as he could. Now, there's only two ports in England from where a man as
-wants to go can go to all parts of the world, civilised and uncivilised. These
-ports are London and Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bullpit wouldn't go to London. Why? Mr. Pardon was there.
-He'd go naturally to Liverpool, because Mr. Pardon was <i>not</i> there. Now,
-I'll tell you about these peculiar marks of his. First, he had--a knob on the
-top of his head. But the knob couldn't be seen, you'll say, because he had a
-bushy head of hair. That's right enough, but it don't do away with the knob; he
-had it, and that was enough for me. I don't know as ever I had any business in
-connection with a man as had a knob on his head, and that circumstance made the
-case interesting to me. I like to do with all sorts. Second, he had a
-peculiarity with his teeth. The two middle ones in the top jaw--I hope you don't
-think I'm going to swear or use bad language; but jaw's a word, and when a
-word's got to be used, I use it--the two middle teeth in his top jaw had a slit
-between 'em, a slit as you could see daylight through, if there was such a thing
-in his mouth. That slit ain't much, you'll say. All right. Third, he had a habit
-of biting his nails. Well, now, that ain't a crime, you say. <i>I</i> don't say
-it is, but he had it, and that was enough for me. These peculiarities and a
-general description of Bullpit--as to how tall he was (a man can't alter <i>that</i>),
-how stout (nor that), what kind of complexion, and other personal details--were
-all I had to go upon. I tracked him, without ever making a miss, in the contrary
-direction of Liverpool, and then back again by another road in the direction of
-Liverpool, and there I lost sight of him completely. But I knew he must be
-there, and that was enough for me. I had travelled faster than he had, and I
-reckoned I had gained a day and a half on him. According to my calculation, he
-hadn't had time to get away yet; he could only have been in Liverpool two days,
-and as Mr. Pardon wasn't expected home for a week after he left, there was no
-need for him to put on any show of hurry; it might look suspicious. Now, what
-should I do? Bullpit would be sure to disguise himself--clap on a pair of false
-whiskers and coloured spectacles perhaps, cut his hair short, wear a wig; he
-would certainly not walk about in the clothes he run away in. Thinking of these
-things I felt that Bullpit might prove more than a match for <i>me</i>. There
-was the knob on his head certainly; but I couldn't go up to every
-suspicious-looking stranger, pull off his hat, and feel for the knob; people
-might resent it as a liberty, and treat it accordingly. There was his habit of
-biting his nails; but he would be sure to restrain himself, though it is about
-the most difficult thing in the world for a man to keep from, when he's been
-accustomed to it all his life. I don't see what there is in nails except dirt to
-make people fond of 'em. They ain't sweet and they ain't tasty. Well, but
-Bullpit. He'd be cunning enough to restrain himself from biting his nails,
-knowing it was a mark to go by; still nails don't grow in a day, and they'd be
-short on <i>his</i>
-fingers naturally. But he'd wear gloves. Then the slit between his teeth. Well,
-that couldn't be altered; but he could keep his mouth shut. Now if I was to tell
-you everything I did in the first two days I was in Liverpool, it would fill a
-book, and that's what you don't want; what you <i>do</i> want is for me to come
-to the point, and that I'll do in a jiffy. I went down to the docks, and took up
-my lodgings near there; I didn't stop in any particular place, but shifted from
-one eating-house to another, and mixed with the customers, and talked to the
-waiters; no ship sailed out of the Mersey without my being on it at the last
-minute, with my eyes wide open; I communicated with the captains and the
-ship-agents; I watched every new arrival at the eating-houses, and drank with
-them, and did a hundred other things--and at the end of the fourth day I was as
-far off as ever; I hadn't picked up a link. Now, that nettled me; it did--it
-nettled me. I had set my heart on catching this Bullpit; he was worth catching,
-he was such a sly cunning customer; I looked upon it as a match between us, and
-I wanted to win, and here was I four days in Liverpool, with never a link in my
-hands for my pains. On the fifth day I met--quite by accident--a professional
-friend, who had come down to Liverpool to say good-bye to a relative of his who
-was going to America. The ship was to sail that afternoon; it was called The
-Prairie Bird. We had a bit of dinner together in the coffee-room, where other
-men were dining. Over dinner I told my friend what had brought <i>me</i> to
-Liverpool; I spoke in a low tone, so as not to be overheard, and I was not sorry
-when the man who was eating at the next table to ours went away in the middle of
-my story; he was a little too close to us. Well, we finished dinner; my friend
-insisted on paying the reckoning, and I moved a step or two towards the next
-table, where the man who went away in the middle of my story had been dining.
-The waiter was clearing the table, when I saw something that set me on fire.
-Now, what do you think it was? You can't guess. I should think you couldn't, if
-you tried for a week. What do you say to a piece of bread? You laugh! Well, but
-that piece of bread was enough for me. It wasn't a link. It was the chain
-itself. In what way? I'll tell you. You see, that piece of bread was partly
-eaten, and the man who had been dining had put it down after taking his last
-bite at it. The marks of his teeth were in it, but the only mark I saw was a
-little ridge in the centre of the bite--just such a ridge as would be left by a
-man who had a slit between two of his upper teeth, as Anthony Bullpit had. Would
-that little mark have been enough for you?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now I had seen this man a dozen times; a most
-respectable-looking man he was, with leg-of-mutton whiskers, and most
-respectably dressed, something like a clergyman; and I knew he was a passenger
-by The Prairie Bird. I had never for one moment suspected him. Anthony. Bullpit
-was a pale-faced man; this man had a high colour. There was nothing particular
-in Anthony Bullpit's walk; this man dragged one leg behind the other slightly.
-Anthony Bullpit's hair was black; this man's hair was sandy. Anthony Bullpit had
-good eyebrows; this man had no eyebrows at all to speak of. Ah, he's a cunning
-rascal is Anthony Bullpit, and was worth catching. I put things together very
-quickly in my mind, and I settled it--if it wanted settling after the first
-sight of that piece of bread--that this man, and no other, was the man I wanted.
-There was only one thing that puzzled me, and that was his nails; they were
-long. However, I wasn't going to let that stop me, so I laid a little plot with
-my professional friend, and we went aboard The Prairie Bird--not in company,
-because of the little plot I laid, but one a minute after the other. There was
-my respectable customer, standing by himself; I was puzzled even then as I
-looked at him, he was so well disguised; but his height was there, and his bulk
-was there, with a little added to it, which might be padding. Well, while I
-stood a little distance away, with my eye on him, but not in an open way, my
-professional friend walks up to him from behind, until he gets close, and this
-is what my professional friend whispers to him: &quot;Don't start,&quot; whispers my
-professional friend, most confidentially; &quot;don't turn your head, or it might
-attract notice. My name's Simpson, and I cashed the cheque for seven hundred
-pound for you in the Hertford Bank. I was in the bank for six years, and I've
-done a little bit of business on my own account, and have got clear away. Twelve
-hundred pounds I've got about me, and I'm a fellow passenger of yours; when The
-Prairie Bird gets to America, what's to hinder you and me going partners and
-making our fortunes? Two such heads as ours'll be sure to make a big one. I
-sha'n't speak another word to you till we're safely off, but I'm glad I've got a
-friend on board.&quot; With that, my professional friend slips quietly away. Now, if
-my respectable-looking customer hadn't been the man I wanted, he would have
-turned round on my professional friend, and hit him in the eye perhaps; at all
-events, he would have kicked up a row. But he listened to every word, with his
-eyes looking down on the deck, and the only movement he made was a kind of
-twitching with his fingers, and a rising of them to his lips, as if he wanted to
-set to work on his nails. He didn't get so far as his mouth with them; he had
-himself too well in hand; but I was sure of my man--his own cunning was the trap
-in which he was caught. I waited until the last minute, until those who weren't
-going to the other side of the Atlantic in The Prairie Bird were scrambling away
-lest they should be taken by mistake; and I saw my respectable friend give one
-triumphant look around, being sure then he was safe. At the same moment, as if
-he couldn't stand it any longer, up went his fingers to his lips; his longing to
-get at those nails of his must have been something dreadful. Then I stepped up
-to him suddenly, and before he knew where he was I had the handcuffs on him.
-&quot;It's no use making a noise about it,&quot; I said; &quot;I want you, Anthony Bullpit.
-Here's the warrant.&quot; And quick as lightning I passed my hand over his head, and
-felt the knob. He saw it was all over with him, and I could see that he turned
-deadly white, for all his false colour. &quot;You sha'n't be done out of a voyage
-across the sea,&quot; I said; &quot;but it'll be a longer voyage than the one to America.
-Botany Bay'll be the place as'll suit <i>you</i> best, I should think.&quot; He never
-spoke a word; I got his trunk, and found the money in it--all changed into gold
-it was, the cunning one. Well, everything was comfortably arranged, and I was
-about to guide him down the ladder to the boat, when he whispered to me,
-&quot;There's another man on board as you'd like to have. He's a better prize than I
-am. If you'll make it easier for me, I'll tell you who it is.&quot; &quot;What man?&quot; I
-asked, with a quiet chuckle. &quot;A man as has robbed the bank of twelve hundred
-pound.&quot; Just then my professional friend came to my side. &quot;That's him,&quot; said
-Anthony Bullpit &quot;And you and him's going partners when you get safe across,&quot; I
-said, with a wink at my professional friend; &quot;he cashed that cheque for you,
-didn't he? Lord! you're not half as clever as I took you to be!&quot; He was clever
-enough to understand it all without another word, for he only gave a scowl; and
-when me and him and my professional friend was in the boat, he fell-to on his
-nails without restraint, and before the day was out he had eaten them down to
-the quick. He only asked one question, and that was how I had discovered him. I
-pulled the piece of bread from my pocket, and pointed to the marks of his teeth
-in it, and to the ridge the slit in his teeth had left. I brought my man safely
-back, and you know what has become of him. If I live till I'm a hundred--which
-isn't likely--I shall never forget the feeling that came over me when I saw that
-piece of bread with the ridge in it that brought Anthony Bullpit to justice.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We have only to add to Mr. Vinnicombe's statement that Anthony
-Bullpit, when placed in the dock, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to
-twenty-one years' transportation. The sentence would have been for life, but for
-Mr. Pardon's intercession, who pleaded for mercy for the infamous scoundrel who
-had abused his trust. We have occupied more space than we otherwise should have
-done with the details of this case, for the purpose of pointing out how often
-the most trivial circumstance will lead to the detection and punishment of the
-most cunning criminals.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Apart from the circumstance of this Anthony Bullpit being one
-of my grandmother's lovers, the narrative was interesting to me from the really
-remarkable manner in which the forger was discovered. I refolded the printed
-paper carefully, and replaced it in the interior of the stone figure; and in the
-course of a couple of days I made a drawing of Anthony Bullpit, as I imagined
-him to be, a sneaking hang-dog figure of a man, with a hypocritical face,
-gnawing his finger-nails.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_18" href="#div1Ref_18">CHAPTER XVIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>UNCLE BRYAN COMMENCES THE STORY OF HIS LIFE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris is growing quite a man,' observed my mother one evening
-to uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her words attracted uncle Bryan's attention, and he regarded
-me with more interest than he usually evinced. We three were alone. Jessie was
-spending the evening with some neighbours, and was not expected home before ten
-o'clock. The family she visited was named West. I did not know them personally,
-but I was curious about them, not only because Jessie's visits to their house
-had lately grown very frequent, but because they were a theatrical family. They
-were, in a certain sense, famous in the neighbourhood because of their vocation,
-which lifted them out of the humdrum ordinary course of common affairs. During
-the whole time we had lived in Paradise-row, I had made no friends among our
-neighbours. It was different with Jessie: before she had been with us six
-months, she knew and was known by nearly every person in the locality. She
-informed me that she was fond of company, and she accepted invitations to tea
-from one and another. But lately she had confined her intimacy to the Wests, and
-whenever I came home, and she was absent, I was told she was spending an hour at
-their house. Many weeks before the observation which commences this chapter was
-made, Jessie and I had had a conversation about the Wests. She introduced their
-name, and after informing me that she was going to have tea with them on the
-following evening, asked me if I would come for her at nine o'clock and bring
-her home. But I demurred to this, as being likely to be considered an intrusion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What nonsense you talk!' she exclaimed. They are the most
-delightful persons in the world.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your friendships are quickly made, Jessie,' I said, with a
-jealous pang.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Directly I see persons I know whether I like them or not.
-Don't you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't say,' I replied sententiously; 'I have never
-considered it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, consider it now. Don't be disagreeable. Directly you
-saw me, didn't you like me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, then; that shows you <i>do</i> make up your mind
-properly about these things, as a man ought to do.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thrilled with pleasure at this cunning compliment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you are different, Jessie, from any one else.' (What I
-really wanted to say was, 'You are different in my eyes from any one else;' but
-the most important words oozed away, from my want of courage.)</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Am I?' she cried softly and complacently, as was her way when
-she felt she was about to be flattered. How different? In what way? Tell me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are prettier and nicer. There's no one in the world like
-you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's what you think.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's what everybody must think.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, Chris!' she exclaimed, making a telescope with her two
-hands, and peeping at me through them, I declare your moustachois are coming.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I blushed scarlet. 'Are they?' I inquired, with an effort at
-unconsciousness, notwithstanding that I had already many times secretly
-contemplated in my looking-glass, with the most intense interest, these coming
-signs of manliness. 'But never mind them, Jessie; tell me about the Wests.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They are the most wonderful people, and the most delightful.
-I'm in love with all of them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My blushes died away; jealous pangs assailed me again.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are there many of them?' I asked gloomily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ever so many; but you must see for yourself. You will come
-for me, then? You mustn't knock at the door and say, &quot;Tell Miss Trim I am
-waiting for her;&quot; you must come right into the house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But being angry with the Wests, and beginning to hate them
-because Jessie was so fond of them, I insisted that it would not be proper,
-because I had never been invited; and after a little quarrel, in which I deemed
-it necessary, as an assertion of manliness, to become more and more obstinate in
-my refusal, Jessie said with a pout, 'Oh, very well; if you're determined to
-stand upon your dignity, you'll see that other people can do so as well as you.'
-Thus it fell about that it became a point almost of honour with me not to go to
-the Wests, nor to express any desire to go; but I suffered agonies in
-consequence, and was tempted many times to humble myself. Jessie knew as well as
-possible what was going on in my mind; but she was offended with me on the
-subject, and would not assist me--would not even give me an opportunity of
-humbling myself.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But all this while I have left uncle Bryan regarding me, as I
-have said, with more than usual interest. From me he turned his attention to the
-wall, upon which hung the picture of Jessie, in crayons, which I had finished. I
-said nothing, but proceeded with my work.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What are you drawing now, Chris?' asked my uncle.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Of course it was a sketch of Jessie. I murmured some words to
-the effect that it was nothing particular, and was about to put it in my desk,
-when uncle Bryan expressed a wish to see it. I could not refuse, and I handed it
-to him. It happened to be one of my happiest efforts; it would have been
-difficult to find a more winsome face than that which uncle Bryan gazed upon. He
-contemplated it for a long time without speaking--for so long a time that I
-asked him if he liked it, so as to break the awkward silence. He did not answer
-me. With the sketch still in his hand he said to my mother,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Emma, I have not treated you fairly.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother looked up from her work in surprise. Uncle Bryan
-continued:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What I am about to tell you ought to have been told before;
-but probably no better time than this could be chosen. By the time I have
-finished, you will perhaps understand my motive for saying so; but whether you
-do or not, it is due to you that I should clear away some part of the mystery
-which hangs around Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Although I was burning with curiosity, I rose to leave the
-room, thinking from his manner that what he was about to say was intended only
-for my mother's ears.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nay, Chris,' he said, you can stay. 'You are almost a man, as
-your mother says, and you may learn something from my words. I am about to read
-some pages in my life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He turned from us, so that we could not see his face; and full
-five minutes elapsed before he spoke. I was awaiting to hear with so much
-eagerness what he had to tell, that the five minutes seemed an hour. With his
-face still averted, he addressed my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Emma, you know the house in which I was born?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you knew my family--my father and mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They are not alive?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could scarcely restrain an exclamation of surprise at such a
-question from the lips of a son concerning his parents. My mother's tone was
-soft and pitiful as she replied,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They have been dead many years, Bryan. They died within a
-year of my marriage with your brother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'During the time you and my brother courted, and afterwards
-indeed, my name must have been occasionally mentioned.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In what terms?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He paused for a reply, but my mother held her tongue.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Be frank and candid with me, Emma; it will not hurt me. What
-you heard was not to my credit?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He was determined that the subject should not be evaded; and
-my mother was wise enough not to thwart him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was said that you had a violent temper.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was doubtless true; but,' said uncle Bryan somewhat
-grimly, 'time must have softened it. No one now can accuse me justly--if there
-is such a thing as justice in the world--of showing violence, in the ordinary
-meaning of the word.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can bear witness to that, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on; there was more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And that it was impossible to agree with you, or your
-opinions.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My opinions! That is one of the things I wanted to arrive at.
-Remember, Emma, that after I left home, I held no communication with my parents;
-that I was as one dead to them. What was said of my opinions? Nay, nay; you hurt
-me more by your silence than you can possibly do by anything you can say.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I heard that, as a boy, you associated yourself with a
-society of Freethinkers, who openly boasted of their infidelity.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can guess the rest; I was wanting in respect to my elders,
-and in obedience and duty. They did not spare me, evidently. When I left home I
-was seventeen years of age; I ran away--no, I walked away, in fact, for they did
-not care to stop me--as much displeased with the narrow-minded views of those
-who were nearest to me in blood, as they were doubtless with my violent temper
-and my independent expression of opinion. A free exercise of the reasoning
-powers with which we are endowed was, in their eyes, a sacrilege. Still, when I
-was fairly gone, they might have let me rest. Of my after career they had no
-knowledge.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These last words he did not put as a question, but as a
-satisfactory reflection. The simplest assent from my mother would have contented
-him; but she was too truthful to give utterance to it, and all his suspicions
-were aroused by her silence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I repeat--of my after career, they had no knowledge.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She would have spared him, but he would not allow her to do
-so.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They had!' he exclaimed, his rapid breathing showing how
-deeply he was moved.' What did they know?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The rumour was very vague, Bryan----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But discreditable. To what effect?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I really cannot explain, nor could they have done so, I
-believe.' My mother was much distressed. 'If Chris were not here----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say no more.' I could not see his face, but his tone
-indicated that he had recovered his composure. 'I can fill up the blanks. Chris
-is older than I was when I threw myself upon the world, and it will be best for
-him to hear the story I shall relate.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Whatever impression I might have gained,' said my mother
-solicitously, 'from the vague rumours I heard has been entirely obliterated
-since I have known you. Believe me that this is so, dear Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you for saying so much. But I doubt whether my parents
-would ever have believed that I was not the blackest of black sheep. They were
-hard and intolerant to me from the first, and I have no pleasurable
-recollections of even my earliest days. I do not know if it was the same when
-you were first introduced into it as it is in my remembrance, but the home in
-which I was born and reared was ruled by cold and formal laws, and by a cold and
-formal master. How it came about is a mystery I have never tried to solve, but
-it is a plain fact that I was not a favourite with my parents. My brother--your
-husband--was; he was much younger than I, but I saw it clearly. His nature was a
-more pliable one than mine; he could be easily led, not because he was weak, but
-because he was sympathetic and amiable. I was neither. Perhaps I imbibed some
-drops of gall with my mother's milk; but I don't pretend to account for my cross
-grain. My parents might have loved me after their fashion, but their mode of
-showing their love deprived it of all tenderness. It is a blessing to a man to
-be able to think of his mother with affection and veneration when she has passed
-away from him. Such a feeling, and the roads he must have trodden to acquire it,
-are a counterfoil to much that may be bad in his own nature; but this feeling is
-not mine. My mother was a weak-minded woman, entirely dominated by the strong
-mind of her husband. She had no will of her own; she followed the current of his
-likes and dislikes, of his opinions, of his commands, without question and
-without inquiry, as a spaniel follows its master. Many persons would see a kind
-of virtue in this submission; I do not. My father was dogmatic and stern; I
-could have forgiven him that, if he had been honest-minded. But he was a
-hypocrite, and I knew it, and he knew that I knew it. With great appearance of
-candour, he, when conversing with acquaintances in the presence of my mother and
-myself, would give expression to sentiments in which he did not believe; then,
-when we were alone, he would take off his mask of dissimulation, and go over the
-ground again according to his own conviction, and justify his deceit. If my
-mother ever thought of these things, she must have been bewildered; I did think
-of him, and I was indignant. Most especially was he a hypocrite in religious
-matters; his prayers and his practice were utterly at variance. I could not
-respect one who professed to believe that charity was a good thing, and who
-declined to practise it. He was intolerant to a degree; his was the only right
-way--all others were wrong. It was my evil fortune--I suppose I must call it
-so--to possess a mind which led me to sift things for myself; I
-<i>could</i> not accept established doctrines, and this, in my father's eyes,
-was not only a great presumption but a great crime. It is not necessary for me
-to state how, little by little, I became estranged from such parental affection
-as might have been bestowed upon me had I been docile and obedient--as might
-have been mine if I had tried to win it. I sought for congenial companionship
-away from the social circle in which my parents moved; it is true that I found
-associates among men who, doubtless with more reason than myself, were
-dissatisfied with things as they were, and that I identified myself--being, as a
-youth, proud of the connection--with a body of so-called Freethinkers, whose
-chief crime was that they were groping to find truth by the light of reason. My
-father, hearing of this connection, sternly commanded me to relinquish it, and
-when I refused, threatened me. He declared he would drive the evil spirit out of
-me, and he tried to do so by blows; but he hurt only my body--my spirit he
-strengthened. About this time a circumstance occurred which for ever destroyed
-all chance of peace between us. We had a servant at home, a poor half-witted
-creature--an orphan without a friend in the world. One would have supposed that
-my father, being so fond of his prayers, would have been kind to this servant
-because of her utterly dependent condition, and because she performed her work
-as well and as faithfully as her dull wits allowed her. Had this been so, I
-think I might have been inclined to waver in my estimate of him; but the
-contrary was the case. My father, through his unvarying harshness towards the
-poor girl, made her life a torture to her. I constituted myself her champion,
-and stepped between her and his blows many a time. Boy as I was, he chose to
-place misconstruction upon my championship, and each became more embittered
-against the other. I fed my bitterness by contemplation of the girl's misery,
-and the unhappy war went on until it was terminated by a tragic circumstance.
-One day the servant was missing; the next, the body was found in the river. The
-idea fixed itself firmly in my mind that my father was accountable for her
-death; I even hinted as much to him when my blood was boiling with a new
-injustice inflicted upon myself. What passed between us after that, it will be
-as well not to recall; the result was that I left my home, and no hand was held
-out to stay me. I never saw my parents from that day, nor have I ever mentioned
-them until this evening. Whether I have done them injustice cannot now be
-decided; but I have no doubt, if the world were to judge between us, the verdict
-would be against me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I retained my name because, in my opinion, I had done nothing
-to disgrace it, and because I abhor deceit. I was neither elated nor depressed
-at the step I had taken. It is said that the springtime of life is bright with
-sunshine. The springtime of my life was joyless and gloomy. I had no hope in
-anything, no belief in anything, no faith in anything. I had no special ambition
-and no desire to become rich; all that I desired was to earn a decent living by
-the labour of my hands and the exercise of my abilities. I determined to make no
-friendships, and to live only in myself and by myself. Although I had no thought
-of it at the time, I can see now that the rules I laid down for myself were just
-the rules, with fair opportunities, to lead to success in life.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In my determination to sever myself entirely from my family,
-I wandered away from my native place until I was distant from it hundreds of
-miles. Then, a stranger among strangers, I applied myself to the task of
-obtaining a situation. I could read, I could write, and I was a fair bookkeeper;
-but these qualifications did not avail me, and I was driven to hard shifts. Had
-I been shipwrecked on a lonely land I should have fared better. I did nothing
-dishonest, nor would I have done it to save my life; but I shrunk from nothing
-to earn a few pence. I accepted employment in whatever shape it was offered; no
-toil was too low for me, so long as it would buy me bread. The hardships which
-the world dealt out to me did not dishearten me, did not humble me; I bore them
-with pride, and in my bitter frame of mind I found a certain pleasure even in
-misery. My unmerited sufferings were arguments to convince me that I was right
-in my estimate of things. Look where I would, I could nowhere find morality and
-humanity exercised in their larger sense; where charity was most due, it was
-least given; virtue and goodness were terms; all over the civilised world
-religious precepts were being preached; all over the civilised world religious
-precepts were being violated; what was good in the Bible was turned to bad
-account--its power was so used as to teach people to fear, not to love. During
-these days I used to creep into the churches and laugh at the moralities there
-laid down. It was a hard bitterly-sweet time; I did not repine; in my pride I
-exulted in my condition. Many a night did I walk the streets homeless and
-hungry, laughing at my sufferings. Life had no attractions for me, and I did not
-desire to live. But I was part of a scheme--I recognised that, although I could
-not solve the problem--and I would do nothing to myself; I would simply wait.
-From men and women in as miserable a position as myself I rejected all overtures
-of friendship; I had nothing in common with them. But on a starless night I met
-one to whom was drawn by humanity, if you like to call it by that name. A woman
-this, a girl indeed, homeless as I was, friendless as I was. Nay, you may
-listen, Emma. I became like a brother to her, and she like a sister to me.
-Neither knew how the other lived, neither asked; and when we were specially
-unfortunate we wandered by instinct to a certain street, and met by premeditated
-chance. Then we would talk together for hours, or sit in silence in the shadow
-of a friendly refuge. She told me her story--a pitiful story, but common: it
-hardened me the more. I never saw her face by daylight; a dark shadow
-encompassed her and her history. &quot;I am so tired of life!&quot; she said to me; &quot;these
-stones must be happier than I, for they cannot feel. Would it be wrong to die?&quot;
-I drove the thought from her mind. &quot;Be brave, and play your part,&quot; I said aloud,
-and added mentally, &quot;It will not be for long.&quot; I can hear now the faint echo of
-her dreary laugh at my words, and the strangely-pitiful tone in which she
-repeated, &quot;Be brave, and play my part!&quot; I knew she would not live long; a
-desperate cold had settled on her lungs, and her cough, as we walked the
-desolate streets or sat in them after midnight, was a sound to cause the stars
-to weep. She died in my arms during one of these wanderings. I had no special
-foreboding of her death, nor had she, I believe; she was seized with a violent
-fit of coughing, and she clung to me, as she had often done, for support, then
-suddenly she fell to the ground, and I saw blood coming from her mouth. &quot;Don't
-leave me,&quot; she sighed, almost with her last breath; &quot;you can do me no good.
-Thank God it is over!&quot; An inquest was held, and I gave evidence. Necessarily
-some particulars concerning my own mode of life came out, and after the inquest
-a man offered me money. I rejected it; I had resolved never to accept charity.
-The man was surprised; questioned me; and learning that I was willing to work,
-offered me employment. I remained with him long enough to clothe myself decently
-and to save a little money, and then I turned my back upon a place which had
-become hateful to me. It must have been a rumour of my connection with the poor
-girl who died in my arms that was twisted to my discredit in my native town, and
-it was your mention of it that has caused me to drift into details which, when I
-commenced, I had no intention of relating.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_19" href="#div1Ref_19">CHAPTER XIX.</a></h4>
-<h5>STRANGE REVELATIONS IN UNCLE BRYAN'S LIFE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">So, without a friend in the world, I wandered still further
-away from the town in which I was born. I tarried here and tarried there, and
-found no rest for the sole of my foot until I reached a city where, before my
-means were exhausted, I obtained employment in the office of an accountant. It
-was by the merest chance that I obtained the situation, for there were many
-applicants; but I was quick at figures, and that quality served me. The position
-was not a distinguished one; I was not destined to occupy it long, however, for
-being coldly interested in my work--simply because it enabled me to live--I
-performed the tasks set for me to do, not only expeditiously, but with the
-exactitude of a machine. This was precisely what was required of me, and I rose
-into favour with my employer. Some of the clients who came to us for advice in
-their difficulties were afflicted with a kind of moral disease, which for their
-credits' sake it was necessary should not be exposed to the world. It was not
-the business of our office to be nice as to our clients' honesty and integrity,
-and it did not trouble me to see rogues walking about in broadcloth. It was of a
-piece with the rest. Many delicate matters of figures were intrusted to me; my
-lonely habits, my reserved manner, and the circumstance of my having no
-connections or friends, were high recommendations, and I heard my employer say,
-more than once, to his clients, 'Mr. Carey is as secret as the grave; you may
-confide anything to him.' No wonder, therefore, that in the course of years I
-became manager of the business. I began to save money, simply because I was
-earning more than I required for my necessities. I had no extravagances, I never
-went into society, and I did not see that any pleasure was to be derived from
-following the ordinary pursuits of men of my own age. I set down a rigid course
-of life for myself, and I spent my leisure in solitude; walked and read and
-lived entirely in myself. One fancy alone I indulged in; I loved flowers, and I
-made them my companions. An occupation of some kind for my leisure was forced
-upon me, I suppose, by natural necessity; the mind, if its balance is to be
-maintained, must have something to feed upon, and I tended my flowers and
-watched them through their various stages with much interest; I had, and have a
-real affection for them. Every year that passed fixed my habits more firmly, and
-I had no desire to change them. Apart from my mute and beautiful friends, life
-was tasteless for me; there was no sweetness in it that I could see. It
-consisted of dull plodding day after day, of growing older day after day. I
-reflected upon it with scornful curiosity, and made myself, as it were, a text
-for speculative commentary. I knew what would be the end of it: in the natural
-order of things I should live until I grew old, when, in the natural order of
-things, I should die and pass away, fading into absolute nothingness--that was
-all. It seemed to me a poor affair, so far as it was presented to me in the
-different aspects with which I had been made familiar. I often thought of the
-poor girl who had been the only friend I had ever had in the world, and in that
-remembrance was comprised all the tenderness I had ever felt towards my species.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I hope I do not distress you by my words; but it has come upon
-me in some odd way to give you as exact a portrait of myself, as I was at that
-time, as I can produce; perhaps for the reason that I wish you to understand the
-wonderful change that took place in me not long afterwards. Years ago I buried
-as in a grave all the records of my life, with the intention of never speaking
-of them, of never thinking of them if I could help it. But man proposes, chance
-disposes. Even to-night I intended to pluck out only one remembrance, but I have
-been overpowered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When I was thirty years of age I was taken into partnership,
-and five years afterwards my partner died, and I was sole master. Before I was
-taken into partnership I had been a machine, paid to perform certain duties; but
-when I was a partner I considered myself responsible for the nature of the
-business we undertook, and I purified the office, sending all clients away who
-came with a dishonest intent. This change resulted, strangely enough, to my
-advantage, and the business increased. I conducted it steadily, without in any
-respect changing my mode of life. The money I was making was in every way
-valueless to me. I had no one to whom I cared to leave it, and no pet scheme
-which I wished to be carried out after my death. I remember thinking that it
-would be a fine thing to fling the money into the sea before I died.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I come now to the most eventful page in the history of my
-life. If I could blot out the record, and could stamp it into oblivion, I would
-gladly do so; but it is out of my power, and I can only look upon it with
-wonder, and upon myself with contempt for the part I played in it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a cold day in November, and a miserable sleet was
-falling. I was sitting alone in my private office, looking over some papers,
-when my clerk announced a Mr. Richard Glaive, who had written that he wished to
-consult me upon his affairs. He entered--a tall sleek man, well fed, well
-dressed, about fifty years of age--a man, I judged, who had seen but little of
-the troubles of the world. But there was trouble in his face on the occasion of
-my first introduction to him. With the air of one who was suffering from a deep
-injustice, he explained to me the nature of his inheritance. I learnt that he
-was, as I had supposed, a man who had never worked, who had never done anything
-useful, and who had lived all his life upon a moderate income which he had
-inherited. Wishing to increase his income, for the purpose, as I understood, of
-being able the better to enjoy life--'surely an innocent and laudable desire,'
-he said--he had been tempted to take a large number of shares in a company which
-had been established with a great flourish of promises--had been tempted to
-become a director for the sake of the fees; 'nothing to do, my dear sir,' he
-explained to me, and so much a year for it; the very thing to suit a gentleman.'
-His money hitherto had yielded five per cent, invested in safe securities; the
-new company promised from twenty to thirty. The temptation was too great to be
-resisted, and, blinded by his cupidity, he had walked into the pit. As was to be
-expected, the company was a bubble, the crash came, and the gulls were swooped
-upon by the creditors. Lawyers' letters were pouring in upon him, and actions
-were about to be taken against him. There were other complications, also, in the
-shape of long-standing debts upon which he had been paying interest, but a full
-settlement of which was now demanded. There was a manifest sense of injury in
-his tone as he spoke of these debts--'youthful follies,' he called them; adding
-immediately, with an easy smile, 'youth must have its fling;' conveying the idea
-that he did not consider himself responsible for them, for the reason that they
-had been so long standing. Altogether the case was a common one enough, and when
-he had concluded the catalogue of his embarrassments, I said that the first
-thing to be done was to prepare a statement of his affairs from his papers, so
-that he might really see how he stood with the world. He thanked me effusively,
-as though I had suggested something which would not have occurred to an ordinary
-mind, and said that he had been advised to consult me, as I should most
-certainly be able to steer him safely through his difficulties. I replied that I
-would do the best I could, and on the following day he brought to the office a
-mass of papers, letters, and accounts. He had received other threatening letters
-since our first interview, and he was in a fever of perplexity. 'I depend
-entirely upon you, my dear sir,' he said. I suggested that I should write to his
-creditors to the effect that he had placed his affairs in my hands, and that in
-a short time he would be able to make a proposal to them, asking them to be
-patient in the mean while. He assented, saying, in words which sounded queerly
-in my ears, that all he wanted was to be relieved of his liabilities, and to be
-allowed to go on enjoying life in his old way; and before he left he asked me
-not to intrust the business to the hands of my clerks, but to undertake it
-personally myself. I promised that I would do so, and in a week I had the
-statement prepared--a statement which showed his affairs to be in the worst
-possible condition. He was insolvent to the extent of not being able to pay one
-quarter of what he owed. I was surprised at this result, for I had expected
-something very different from his manner and statements. On the morning of the
-day on which it had been arranged that Mr. Glaive should call, I received a note
-from him, saying that he was very unwell, and that he would regard it as a
-favour if I would come to his house and explain matters to him. In the ordinary
-course of business I should have sent a clerk with the statement; but I could
-not do so in this instance, as it was necessary I should tell him what course he
-had best pursue. At seven o'clock in the evening I was at his house, a pretty
-little villa in the suburbs embedded in a garden. I was shown at once into what
-Mr. Glaive called his study, where he sat expecting me. He glanced carelessly
-down the columns of figures in the statement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't understand figures,' he said; 'will you please
-explain them to me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I commenced an explanation of the statement, line by line,
-when he interrupted me, saying,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Pray forgive me, but I can't keep these details in my head.
-Tell me the result.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I told him in one word--ruin. Hitherto his manner had been so
-indifferent that one might have supposed we were speaking of business which did
-not concern him, but on mention of the word 'ruin,' a deathly paleness came into
-his face. Before he had time to speak the door opened, and a young man entered
-the room with the air of one who was privileged in the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle,' he said, 'Fanny told me--'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't you see that I'm engaged, Ralph?' cried Mr. Glaive. 'I
-can't be disturbed. Go and wish Fanny good-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The young man muttered a word or two of laughing apology, and
-retired. I saw him no more on that night, but, in the brief glance I cast at
-him, I saw that he was singularly handsome.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now tell me,' said Mr. Glaive, breathing quickly, 'what is
-your meaning?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My meaning is clear enough,' I answered. 'If these claims
-against you are pressed--and they will be--your entire property will not be
-sufficient to pay one-fourth of them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But why should the claims be pressed?' he asked, with a
-helpless look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I almost laughed in his face.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You owe the money,' I said; 'that should be a sufficient
-explanation.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you mean to tell me,' he asked, 'that they would turn me
-out of house and home?' And he looked around his comfortably-furnished room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is more than probable,' I replied. 'I know the lawyers
-with whom you have to deal. This house is your own freehold, and its value is
-included in the statement.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He clasped his hands despairingly; I was silent, despising his
-weakness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can't you advise me?' he cried. 'If ruin came to you, what
-would you do?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bear it,' I replied. I was growing weary of him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you any children?' he asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nor wife perhaps?' he continued.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nor wife, nor child, nor friend,' I said, rising.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What are you going to do?' he cried. 'For God's sake, don't
-leave me! You have undertaken the conduct of my affairs, and you will surely not
-desert me when your services are most needed?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The observation was a just one, and I resumed my seat. I
-should not have attempted to leave so abruptly had it not been that his manner
-of addressing me had irritated me. He had spoken to me as though our positions
-were not equal, almost as though I were a dependent, and it was because of this
-that I had answered him roughly. His manner was now changed; it became almost
-servile. He implored me to suggest a plan by which he could be released from his
-liabilities, and he revealed sufficient of his true nature to convince me that
-he would have shrunk from no meanness to accomplish his desire. Perhaps,
-however, I do him injustice; perhaps I should rather say that he convinced me he
-had no sense of moral responsibility in the matter. I resolved to come to the
-point at once, and I told him that I saw absolutely no way but one in which he
-could free himself from his liabilities, and that even that way, supposing his
-creditors were hard, would be difficult and harassing. It was by offering to
-give up the whole of his property on the condition of obtaining a clear release.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But then I shall be beggared,' he exclaimed, pressing his
-hand to his heart. 'It is cruel--merciless!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is just,' I said sternly. 'Your creditors have more right
-to complain than you. 'There is another plan, certainly, by which you might be
-enabled to keep possession of your house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He asked me eagerly what it was, and I said that if he had a
-friend who would come forward and advance the necessary sum, his creditors would
-almost certainly accept it; but he informed me that he had no such friend, and
-that he and his daughter were alone in the world. Upon mention of his daughter,
-as if he had conjured her up, she entered the room. I do not know how to
-describe the effect of her appearance upon me. It was like the breaking of the
-sun upon one who had lived in the dark all his life. Mr. Glaive, clutching my
-arm, drew me close to him, and whispered to me that <i>that</i> was the reason
-he could not contemplate the ruin before him with a calm mind.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">(Uncle Bryan paused. Hitherto he had spoken in a cold and
-measured tone; when he resumed his story his voice was no longer passionless,
-and he did not seek to hold it in restraint.)</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">As Mr. Glaive introduced me to his daughter I rose to go, and
-bowing to her and saying that I would see him again, was about to take my
-departure, when Miss Glaive said she hoped she had not frightened me away. Not
-her words, nor the effect of her appearance upon me, but her voice, arrested my
-steps; it was so exactly like the voice of the poor girl of whose last agony I
-had been the only witness, that I turned and looked steadily at her. There was
-no resemblance between them--my lost friend was dark, Miss Glaive was fair.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You look at me,' said Miss Glaive, 'as if you knew me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I managed to say that her voice reminded me of a dear friend.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear!' Miss Glaive exclaimed archly; 'very dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very dear,' I said gravely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A lady friend?' she asked, with smiles.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She of whom I speak,' I said, 'was a woman.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Was!' echoed Miss Glaive.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She is dead,' I explained.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sorry,' said Miss Glaive very gently; 'I beg your
-pardon.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was strangely stirred by her sympathising words. There was a
-little pause, and I moved again, towards the door, not wishing to leave, but
-finding no cause to stay. Again her voice arrested me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you go now,' she said, 'I shall be quite sure that I <i>
-have</i>
-frightened you away. Papa declares that no one makes tea like me; I tell him he
-knows nothing about it. Do you drink tea, Mr. Carey? You shall be the judge.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And after tea,' added Mr. Glaive with an observant look at
-me--he had grown calmer while his daughter and I were speaking--'Fanny will give
-us some music.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss Glaive did not ask for my verdict upon her tea-making,
-and soon sat down to the piano and played. In this quiet way an hour must have
-passed without a word being spoken. It was a new experience to me, and it took
-me out of myself as it were. The peaceful room, the presence of this graceful
-girl, and the sweet melodies she played, softly and dreamily, seemed to me to
-belong to another and a better world than that in which I was accustomed to
-move. It was strangely unreal and strangely beautiful. The music ceased, and
-Miss Glaive came to my side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Papa is asleep,' she whispered; 'we must be very quiet now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There were books on the table, and I turned the leaves of one
-without any consciousness of what I was gazing upon. It did not occur to me that
-this was the proper time for me to leave; I was as a man enthralled. A movement
-made by the sleeping man (did he sleep? I have sometimes wondered in my jealous
-analysis of these small details) aroused me from my dream, and I wished Miss
-Glaive good-night. She accompanied me to the street-door.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Papa is in trouble,' she said; are you going to assist him?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He has asked for my advice,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We must not talk now,' she said, 'for fear he should wake up
-and miss me; he is irritable, and has heart-disease. May I call and see you
-to-morrow? I know where your office is. I wrote the notes you received from
-papa.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall be glad to see you,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At three o'clock, then,' were her last words, and we shook
-hands and parted.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A heavy rain had set in during my visit, but I was scarcely
-conscious of it as I walked into the town. Late as it was, I went to my office.
-For what purpose do you think? To get the notes which I had received from Mr.
-Glaive--the notes which now were precious to me because she had written them. I
-took them home with me and read them, and studied the delicate writing with
-senseless infatuation, and then placed them under my pillow for a charm, as a
-schoolgirl might have done. At the office the next morning I made another and a
-closer examination of Mr. Glaive's affairs, with the same result as I had
-previously obtained. Ruin was before him--before her. Punctually at three
-o'clock Miss Glaive arrived. I met her at the door, and conducted her to my
-private room. My impressions of the previous night were deepened by her
-appearance; she was the most beautiful girl I had ever seen, and her charm of
-manner was perfect. It would be useless for me to attempt to describe the
-feelings with which she inspired me; I have often endeavoured to account for
-them and understand them, and have never succeeded.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Papa is very ill to-day,' she said; 'the doctor has been to
-see him, and says that he is suffering from mental disorder, which may prove
-dangerous. I have come to you to ask you the nature of his trouble.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you not think,' I asked, 'that he would be angry if he
-knew I had made any disclosure of his private affairs?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But he need not know,' she replied; 'I shall not tell him.
-Let it be a confidence between us. I saw some papers which you brought last
-night, but I do not understand them any more than papa does.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could not resist her pleading, and I told her, awkwardly and
-hesitatingly, what I had told her father.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And all this trouble is about money,' she said with smiles;
-'I was afraid it was something worse.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I told her that it could not well be worse, unless she knew
-where money was to be obtained. She answered that she did not know, but that she
-supposed it would be got somewhere.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't understand these matters of business,' I said; 'it
-is perhaps better for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That can't be,' she exclaimed; 'if I knew anything of
-business I should know where to get the money from, and I would get it That is
-what business men are for, is it not?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Charmed as I was by her simplicity--a simplicity which was
-utterly new to me, and which it was delightful to hear from her lips--I deemed
-it my duty to explain matters clearly to her. Steeling my heart, I did so in
-plain terms, and showed her the position in which her father would be placed
-within a very few days.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You frighten me!' she cried, as my words forced conviction
-upon her; and overcome by the news or by my manner of telling it, she fainted.
-If she had been fair before, how much fairer was she now as she lay before me?
-Her childlike ways, her beauty, her helplessness, made a slave of me. I feared
-at first that I had killed her, and I reproached myself bitterly. Timidly I
-bathed her forehead with water, and when she opened her eyes, and looked at me
-in innocent wonder, a feeling that might have been heaven-born--to use a
-phrase--so fraught was it with thankful happiness, took possession of me. I
-explained to her what had occurred, and she lowered her veil to hide her tears.
-As I witnessed her grief, it seemed to me as if I were the cause of her father's
-misfortunes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And there is absolutely no hope for us?' she sobbed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is only the hope,' I replied, 'as I explained to your
-father, that some friend will come forward and serve him in this strait.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Papa has no such friend that I know of,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thought of the young man whom I had seen at Mr. Glaive's
-house on the previous night, and I mentioned him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ralph,' she said, 'my cousin. No, he is very poor.' She
-turned to me. 'I had a fancy last night that you were our friend.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered in a constrained voice: 'I never saw Mr. Glaive
-until a fortnight ago; he called upon me only in the way of business.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Forgive me,' she murmured; 'I was wrong to come, perhaps--but
-I did not know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I could serve you--' I said, and paused. The words came to
-my lips and were uttered almost without the exercise of my will; not that I
-repented of them. She threw up her veil, and moved towards me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>If!</i>' she echoed. 'You could if you pleased, could you
-not? <i>You</i> are rich?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not a poor man,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Help us,' she pleaded, holding out her hands to me. 'Be my
-friend.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I murmured something--I did not know what--and she clasped my
-hand; the warm pressure of her fingers upon mine thrilled my pulses. The next
-minute I was alone. I strove to concentrate my thoughts upon certain matters of
-business which claimed my attention, but I found it impossible to do so. I could
-not dispossess myself of the image of Frances Glaive. In an idle humour I wrote
-her name, Frances Glaive, over and over again; if I had been a boy, with all a
-boy's enthusiasm, instead of a man hardened and embittered by cruel experience,
-I could not have behaved more in accordance with established precedent. I saw
-Frances Glaive sitting in the vacant chair at my table; I heard her sweet voice;
-I gazed upon her face as it lay, insensible and beautiful, before me. 'Be my
-friend,' she had said. I could serve her; it was in my power to make her happy.
-I took out my bank-book and the private ledger in which I kept the record of my
-worldly progress; I was rich enough to pay all Mr. Glaive's liabilities, and
-still have a considerable sum left; but I need not pay them in full. I knew that
-I could easily settle with his creditors for a trifle over the value of his
-estate. I did not value money, and yet I decided upon nothing; I could not think
-calmly upon the matter; I thought only of Frances Glaive, knowing full well that
-she, by a word, by a look, by a smile, could make me do any wild or extravagant
-thing against all reason and conviction. I craved to see her again, and so
-strong was this craving that in the evening I found myself walking in the
-direction of Mr. Glaive's house. I can recall the manner of that walk; I can
-recall how, governed by an impulse stronger than reason, I still was conscious
-of a curious mental conflict which was being waged within me, independent of my
-own will as it seemed, and the most powerful forces of which strove to pull me
-back, while I was really walking along without hesitation. I <i>did</i> hesitate
-when I stood before Mr. Glaive's house, but only for a very few moments. Frances
-Glaive came into the passage to receive me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought you would come,' she said, her face lighting up.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you are glad?' I could not help asking.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very, very glad. Papa is in the study; he is dreadfully weak
-and ill, and I have been counting the minutes. May I tell him that I have
-brought him a friend?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I answered; 'a friend of yours.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">All this while she had not relinquished my hand; and I too
-willingly retained hers in mine. Well, well--at that time I would have thought
-no price too heavy to pay for such precious moments.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I will not prolong my story more than I can help; already it
-has far exceeded the limits I proposed to myself; but when the floodgates are
-opened, the tide rushes in. You can guess what followed; you can guess that I
-served Mr. Glaive for the sake of his daughter. In a short time he was a free
-man, and I was his only creditor. I grew to love Frances Glaive most
-passionately, and her father saw and encouraged my passion. My character
-underwent a wonderful change. Love transformed all things. Through Frances
-Glaive's innocence and artlessness the world became purified; through her beauty
-the world became beautiful to me. By simple contact with her nature all the
-bitterness in my nature was dissolved. The scales fell from my eyes, and I saw
-good even in things I had most despised. The days were brighter; the nights were
-sweeter. Life was worth having. Say that a man who had been born blind, and who
-had no knowledge of the beauties of nature, is suddenly blessed with vision; a
-new world is open to him, and he appreciates, with the most exquisite enjoyment
-and sensibility, the light and colour and graceful shapes by which for the first
-time he sees himself surrounded. The spring buds, the bright sunshine of summer,
-the russet tints of autumn, the pure snow with its myriad wonders, as it lies on
-the hills, as it floats in the air, as it fringes the bare branches--not alone
-these, but the tiniest insect, the smallest flower, are revelations to him. It
-was thus with me, and all the fresh feelings of youth came to me when I was a
-middle-aged man.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_20" href="#div1Ref_20">CHAPTER XX.</a></h4>
-<h5>UNCLE BRYAN CONCLUDES HIS STORY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I became a frequent visitor at Mr. Glaive's house. Three or
-four times every week I spent my evenings there, and I was always welcomed with
-smiles and good words. Mr. Glaive and his daughter had never mingled in the
-gaieties of the city; neither had I. One night we were speaking of a concert
-that was to be given at the largest public hall in the city; a royal prince had
-promised his patronage, and Frances Glaive was eager to see him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like to go so much,' she said; 'I think I would give
-anything to go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I would take you with pleasure,' said her father; 'but there
-are two obstacles. One is the expense--that could be got over, I daresay; but
-the other is insurmountable. The excitement would be too much for my heart.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">His heart was a favourite theme with him; he was not to be
-troubled or irritated or excited because of it; he was to be petted and humoured
-because of it. It enabled him to live the life he loved best--a life of perfect
-indolence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The next time I visited them, I presented Frances Glaive with
-tickets for the concert. It required courage on my part, for it was the first
-step in a new direction.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What am I to do with them?' she asked. 'You are very good,
-but I have no one to take me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was going to ask Mr. Glaive,' I said, 'if he would intrust
-you to my care.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mr. Glaive replied in his heartiest manner, and his daughter
-was wild with delight. If anything had been needed to complete the spell,
-Frances Glaive's appearance on that night would have supplied it. For beauty,
-for grace, for freshness, there was not a lady in the hall who could compare
-with her. I experienced a new feeling of happiness as I witnessed the admiring
-glances of the assembly, and Frances Glaive herself was no less happy in the
-admiration she excited. From that night we drifted into the gaieties of the
-city, and I became her constant companion--necessarily, because I supplied the
-means.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I must mention here that her cousin Ralph was also a constant
-visitor at the house; but although he was on terms of affectionate intimacy with
-Frances--which I set down, not without jealous feeling, to their cousinship and
-to their having been much together during their childhood--Mr. Glaive did not
-seem to care for his presence at that time. I heard Ralph say to Frances at one
-time, when she spoke of an entertainment to which we were going,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I would take you if I had money.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Get rich, then,' she replied, 'like Mr. Carey; but you are
-too idle to work.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I believed this to be pretty near the truth, although he chose
-to put another construction upon his indolence by saying that it was his
-misfortune to have been born a gentleman. He was barely twenty-two years of age
-at the time, but he had learnt that fine lesson perfectly. I came upon them
-then, and Frances Glaive said that she had just told her cousin that he was too
-idle to work, and that he had pleaded as an excuse that he had been born a
-gentleman. How I loved her for her frankness and truthfulness! Ralph turned very
-red, and said that he would work if he could obtain anything suitable. A little
-while after this conversation, at the intercession of his cousin, I obtained a
-situation for him, but he did not keep it many weeks. He was altogether too fine
-for work. As I have said, I had a jealous feeling towards him with reference to
-Frances Glaive; his youth, his comeliness, his gayer manners made me uneasy
-sometimes, and my intense love often magnified this feeling until it became
-torture. Was not this pearl of womanhood too precious for me to hope to win? On
-one side there was light; on the other, darkness. There was no medium. Without
-her love, it was blackest night; with her love, it was brightest day. I
-determined to know my fate, and soon; but before I had mustered sufficient
-courage to speak, Mr. Glaive anticipated me. My attentions to his daughter, he
-said, were becoming conspicuous; as her only protector--a poor and helpless one,
-he added, with his heart-complaint, which prevented his guarding her and
-watching over her as he should--he was naturally anxious as to her future. I
-took advantage of a pause to ask nervously if my attentions were displeasing to
-him. Not at all, he answered eagerly; but as a father he was bound to ask the
-precise meaning that was to be attached to them. If ever I had a child of my
-own, I should be able to understand his anxiety. He put his handkerchief to his
-eyes, and waited for me to speak. A thrill of unspeakable happiness set my
-pulses quivering with sweet music. A child of my own--of hers! If such a solemn
-charge were given into my hands, how sacredly, how tenderly would I guard it! I
-replied to Mr. Glaive, that my attentions could have but one meaning, and that
-it was my dearest hope to make Frances Glaive my wife. Then ensued a business
-conversation as to my means, as to how he himself was to live, and other
-details. My answers must have satisfied him, for he told me that the day on
-which I became his son-in-law would be the happiest day in his life.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Take an early opportunity,' he said, 'of seeing Frances, and
-speak for yourself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I would have spoken to her at once; but he told me that she
-was not at home, and that he had designed this interview while she was out lest
-we should be disturbed, or lest he had misunderstood the attention I had paid to
-her. I appreciated the delicacy of his design, and I waited until the following
-day. I was not destined to be disappointed; Frances Glaive accepted me for her
-husband. I scarcely dared to ask her if she loved me, but when she placed her
-hand in mine, was it not sufficient? I bought the house which pleased her best,
-and left her to furnish it according to her taste. It delighted me to humour her
-in all her whims; nothing that she did, nothing that she said, could be wrong. I
-changed my mode of life to please her; I dressed to please her. What was right
-in her eyes was right in mine. There was no questioning on my part. I had found
-my teacher, and I was supremely satisfied to be led by her who had brought
-sunshine into my life. She furnished the house with, exquisite taste; it cost
-three times the money I had anticipated, but she said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What does it matter? You are rich.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">What <i>did</i> it matter? What consideration of money could
-influence me when I would have given her my heart's blood had she asked for it?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Well, we were married. On the wedding-day I gave Mr. Glaive a
-full release of what he owed me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My father-in-law must not be my creditor,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">For a time I was very, very happy, and Frances herself seemed
-to be so. If indulgence in every whim, in every desire, can produce happiness,
-she must have been in possession of it, for I grudged her nothing. It was very
-sweet to be led, and I did not count the cost. Ralph, her cousin, lived almost
-entirely at our house. I found it difficult to enter thoroughly into my wife's
-enjoyments, although I strove honestly to do so. She was fond of society, fond
-of dress, fond of being admired; if, now and then, a thought intruded itself
-that there was frivolousness in her fancies, I crushed it down. What right had I
-to judge? My life had been until now a life of misery, because of my belief in
-my own convictions, because I had judged everything by hard stern rules; and
-now, when happiness was in my possession, and I had discovered the folly and the
-error of my ways, I would not allow myself to relapse into my old beliefs. We
-were living at a rate that outstripped my means, but it did not trouble me much.
-Money would make no difference in our feelings: if we grew poor, it would be a
-good test for our affection. I happened to mention casually to Mr. Glaive that
-we were living at a high rate.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You surely do not mean to retrench!' he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I certainly have no such intention,' I replied, smiling,
-'unless Frances wishes it. She knows my position, and I am entirely satisfied to
-be led by her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Quite right,' said my father-in-law, regarding me somewhat
-thoughtfully I fancied; 'women know best about these matters--though Frances
-after all is a mere girl, twenty years your junior at least, eh?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is so,' I said, angry with myself for feeling uneasy at
-the remark.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, yes,' he continued; 'it would break her heart to give up
-any of her little whims--she is like a child. The dear girl <i>must</i> enjoy
-life--now is her only time. By and by, when she becomes a mother, perhaps--'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I turned from him; it was my dearest hope, but it was fated
-not to be gratified.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I tell you what it is, Bryan,' he said, 'you do not make a
-proper use of your opportunities; were I in your position, I would treble my
-income.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'By what means?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'By speculating, my dear Bryan; by speculating judiciously, as
-with your abilities you would be sure to do. Think of the additional pleasures
-you could offer my dear girl, and of the thousand ways in which you could add to
-her enjoyment of life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Money had never presented itself to me in this light before;
-Mr. Glaive was right; it was a thing to be desired for what it would purchase. I
-took heed of his counsels, and became a speculator. The words he had spoken to
-me bore other fruit besides--bitter fruit, from the distress they caused me. I
-was twenty-five--not twenty--years older than Frances, and gray hairs were
-multiplying fast on my head. The thought that in a very few years my hair might
-be quite white, while Frances would be still a girl, gave me unutterable pain;
-but I strove to banish it from my mind. We had been married nearly six months,
-and with the exception of my own self-torturings, no cloud had appeared to
-darken our lives, when a circumstance occurred. As I was going home one evening,
-a woman stopped me--a poor ragged creature--and addressing me by name, begged me
-to assist her. During those few months I never paused to inquire into the merits
-of an appeal for charity--my own happiness pleaded for the applicants, and I
-gave without question. I gave this woman a shilling, and she accepted it
-thankfully enough, but with the mournful remark that it would be gone to-morrow.
-That, and the circumstance of her addressing me by name--I having no knowledge
-of her--interested me, and I questioned her. She was a stranger, she said, and
-had but newly arrived, having walked many weary miles. Where did she come from?
-I asked; and she mentioned the town where I had first tarried and suffered after
-leaving my home. She told me that she saw my name over my place of business, and
-had recognised it as belonging to one who had been most kind to a young friend
-she knew years and years ago, and then she mentioned the name of the girl who
-had died in my arms.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What were you?' I asked. 'I have no remembrance of you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't ask me what I was or what I am,' she faltered; 'but if
-you can assist me to lead an honest life, do so for pity's sake.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In memory of the poor girl whom she had known, I determined to
-assist this unfortunate creature--at this time a middle-aged woman--and I
-obtained a respectable lodging for her at once. I told her that we would never
-refer to the past, but that she should commence a new and better life at once.
-And she did; and honestly fulfilled its duties.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Everything seemed to be going on well and happily at home, and
-I was in the full enjoyment of my fool's paradise, when I received a shock which
-almost turned the current of my blood. It took place on a day when I had been
-occasioned much annoyance by the circumstance of my father-in-law drawing upon
-me, without my permission, for a sum of money which was of consequence to me. It
-was not the first time he had done this, and I had paid his drafts with but
-slight reluctance, for they were for small amounts. But the amount of the
-present bill was serious, and it came at an inconvenient time. I was so much
-annoyed that, knowing Mr. Glaive to be at my house spending the evening, I
-determined not to go home until late, for fear that angry words might pass
-between us in the presence of Frances. So I sent a note to my wife, saying that
-business detained me at the office; and I idled away the time until ten o'clock,
-when I walked slowly home. My wife was not in the usual room in which we sat of
-an evening, and I went to a little room of which she was very fond, and which
-she called her sanctuary. I heard voices there, hers and her cousin Ralph's, and
-the words that he was addressing to her arrested my steps. I was guilty then of
-the first mean action in my life--I listened. What I heard I cannot here repeat,
-but I heard enough to know that I had been cheated and cajoled. I did not wait
-for the end, but I stole away with a desolate heart. My dream was over, and I
-was awake again, with a desolate heart, and with all my old opinions and old
-convictions at work within me in stronger force than ever.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I said nothing; certain as I was of the ugly bitter truth, I
-resolved to be still more certain of it, not from my own impressions, but from
-outward evidence. I discovered to my astonishment that my wife's vanity, her
-fondness for display, her love of the admiration of men, her frivolity, her
-flirtations with her cousin Ralph, and my own ridiculous infatuation and
-blindness were matters of common conversation. Fool that I was to believe in
-goodness! I cast aside all weakness, and resolved never to be deceived again. My
-heart was like a withered leaf; and all the foolish tenderness of my nature died
-an unredeemable death. Towards one person, and one alone, did I entertain any
-feeling of kindness; that was the woman who had solicited my help, and who had
-known the poor lost girl-friend of my younger days. I was sick almost to death
-of my home; the sight of my wife's fair face was unutterably painful to me; I
-was sick of the place in which I had been worldly prosperous. I yearned to fly
-from it, and to find myself again among strangers. The events that brought about
-the accomplishment of this desire came quickly. Some of the speculations I had
-entered into turned out badly; I could have saved myself from loss had I
-exercised my usual forethought; but I was reckless and despairing, and it was
-almost with a feeling of joy that I found, upon a careful examination of my
-affairs, that I had barely enough to settle with my creditors. I called them
-together secretly, letting neither my wife nor Mr. Glaive know of my position. I
-enjoined secrecy upon those to whom I was indebted, and made over to them
-everything I possessed in the world. Upon that very day Mr. Glaive took me to
-task for my treatment of his daughter, for my neglect of her. I listened to him
-calmly, and told him I had good and sufficient reasons for my conduct. It was an
-angry interview, and I ended it abruptly upon his saying that his daughter's
-happiness would have been more assured if he had given her to one who was more
-suitable to her. That same night a meeting of another description took place
-between Ralph and myself. He was talking of his pretty cousin in public, and of
-me in offensive terms. I have always regretted that I took notice of him on that
-occasion, for he was in liquor; but I was not master of myself. I left him after
-hot words had passed between us, and went to my office. He sought me there, and
-continued the quarrel, and boasted to my face that my wife loved him, and would
-have married him but for my stepping between them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You fool,' he said scornfully; you bought her!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a bitter truth. Had I been a poor man, Frances Glaive
-would never have become my wife. But when he said that it was a bargain between
-me and her father, I thrust him from the office, and shut the door in his face.
-Everything was clear to me now, and I looked with shame and mortification upon
-my childish folly; but I was justly punished for it. I made my arrangements for
-departure, for I resolved never to live with my wife again, never even to see
-her, for fear that her fair false face should turn my senses again. The news of
-my failure must soon become known, and I did not intend to remain a day after
-its announcement. I wrote a letter to my wife, telling her that I had discovered
-all, and that I could no longer live with her. I told her that I was ruined, and
-that I was going to London to bury myself in a locality where there was the
-least possibility of my becoming known, and that it was useless her seeking me
-or sending to me, after the shame and disgrace she had brought upon me. 'If,' I
-concluded, 'I could make you a free woman, so that you might marry the man you
-love, I would willingly lay down my life; but it cannot be done. The only and
-best reparation I can offer is to promise, as I do now most faithfully, to wipe
-you out of my heart, so that you may be free from me for ever.' I had some small
-store of money by me, half of which I enclosed in the letter. I knew that she
-was in no fear of want, and that she would find a home if she wanted it in her
-father's house. Before I left the town I went to see the woman I had befriended,
-and to bid her farewell; she was earning her living by needlework. I gave her
-some of the money I had left, and I might have been tempted to believe, if I
-could have believed in anything good, that she at least was grateful to me for
-the assistance I had rendered her. When I came out of the house in which she
-lived, I saw Mr. Glaive and Ralph, arm-in-arm, on the opposite side of the way.
-I avoided them, and the next morning I shook the dust from my feet, and started
-for London. I never saw them again. I came to this part of London, where there
-was the least chance of my being discovered; shortly afterwards I learnt that
-this business was for sale, and I found I had just sufficient money to purchase
-it. You know now, thus far, the leading incidents of my life, and that its
-crowning sorrow and bitterness arose from my senseless worship of a vain,
-frivolous, and beautiful woman. I have only a few words to add, and they refer
-to Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had no knowledge whatever of her, but on the first night of
-her arrival something in her face, something in her ways, reminded me of my
-wife. On the following morning she gave me a letter. It was from my wife, and
-was dated six years ago. How she discovered my address I cannot tell. It was to
-the effect that I should read it when she was dead, and it asked me simply to
-give a home to the friendless child who presented it. You can understand the
-effect it had upon me; questioning Jessie privately, I learned from her that she
-was indeed friendless and an orphan. I ascertained the place she came from, and
-was relieved to know that it was not the town in which I had been married. She
-had been stopping at an ordinary lodging-house, and I wrote to the address she
-gave me, but received no answer. In the mean time I feared that the quiet
-routine of the life I had led, and which suited me, was likely to be interrupted
-by the introduction into the house of another inmate. I resolved to take Jessie
-back to the friends she had been stopping with before she came here, and to
-arrange for her residence with them, undertaking to pay the expenses of her
-living, although, as you are aware, I could ill afford it. On the morning I took
-Jessie away, I gave her to understand that she would not return; but when I
-reached the place I found that her friends had left; I was told they had
-emigrated, and I made sure of the fact. It does not come within the scope of
-what I intended to relate to you to state why I was absent from home longer than
-I anticipated, nor what consideration influenced me in bringing Jessie back with
-me. But it is pertinent to say that I see in her the same qualities, the same
-frivolities and vanities which I know existed in my wife, and which entailed
-upon me the most bitter sorrow it has ever fallen to the lot of man to suffer.
-She is here, however, for good or for ill; if it turn out for good, it will be
-due to but one influence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I have nothing more to add except to exact from you the
-condition that not one word of what I have said shall ever be told to Jessie.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_21" href="#div1Ref_21">CHAPTER XXI.</a></h4>
-<h5>I RECEIVE AN INVITATION.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Thus abruptly uncle Bryan concluded his story. Some parts of
-it had moved me very deeply with sympathy for him; but the latter part, where he
-spoke of Jessie in such a strangely unjust and inexplicable manner, filled me
-with indignation. I had no time, however, to think about it, for almost
-immediately upon the conclusion of his story, Jessie came home, flushed and
-radiant, from her visit to the Wests. Our grave faces checked her exuberant
-spirits, and, looking from one to another, she sought for an explanation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you angry with me for going out?' she asked, divining
-that she was the cause of all this seriousness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear,' replied my mother; 'no one is, I am sure. I
-hope you enjoyed yourself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I always do,' said Jessie, her face clouding, when I go to
-the Wests. Has anything disagreeable occurred?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Jessie, nothing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie had a habit of shaking her head at herself when she was
-not satisfied with things; it was the slightest motion in the world, but there
-was much meaning in it. On the present occasion it expressed to me very plainly,
-'I know that you have been talking of me, and that I have done something wrong
-which I am not to be told of.' My mother understood it also, for with expressive
-tenderness she assisted Jessie to take off her bonnet and mantle, and smoothed
-Jessie's hair in fond admiration. I could have embraced my mother for those
-marks of affection towards Jessie; they were an answer to uncle Bryan's unjust
-words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think,' said Jessie, looking into my mother's face, that <i>
-you</i> are fond of me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' responded my mother, kissing her, 'I regard you
-almost as my daughter.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I like to be loved,' murmured Jessie, almost wistfully, with
-tender looks at my mother, and keeping close to her as if for shelter from
-unkindness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Which would you rather have, Jessie,' I asked most suddenly,
-'love or money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Heaven only knows how the words came to my tongue! They
-certainly were not the result of deliberate thought. Perhaps it was because of
-some unconscious connection between the words Jessie had just spoken and those
-which she had spoken to me a little time before: 'Chris, I think I would do
-anything in the world for money.' The words were often in my mind, or perhaps
-they were prompted by an episode in the story I had just heard. Uncle Bryan's
-keen eyes were turned upon Jessie immediately the question passed my lips, and
-his scrutiny did not escape Jessie's observation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ask me again, Chris,' she said, with a sudden colour in her
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I said, which would you rather have--love or money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How much money--a great deal?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, a great deal.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What a question to ask! What does uncle Bryan say to it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan is too old for such follies,' he replied roughly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is a crooked way of getting out of an argument,' she
-said defiantly, as if being provoked herself, she wished to provoke him. 'Money
-is not a folly, and money can buy anything. So, Chris, I think I would rather
-have money; for then,' she continued, with a disdainful laugh, 'I could buy new
-dresses and new bonnets, and everything else in the world that's worth having.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I listened ruefully, hoping she did not mean what she said,
-for she spoke mockingly. My mother, seeing that the conversation was taking an
-unfortunate direction, turned it by speaking of the West family, and Jessie
-entertained us with lively descriptions of her friends, throwing at the same
-time an air of mystery over them, which considerably enhanced my curiosity
-concerning them. Soon afterwards all in the house had retired to rest.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I knew that my mother would come down for a few minutes'
-quiet chat, and that we should have something to say to each other about uncle
-Bryan's wonderful story. It was in every way wonderful to me. I had always
-imagined that he had led a quiet uneventful life, and suddenly he had become a
-hero; but I could not associate the uncle Bryan I knew with the man who had
-fallen in love with Frances Glaive, and so I told my mother as we sat together
-half an hour later in my quiet little bedroom.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'His life has been a life of great suffering,' my mother said,
-'and we can never feel too kindly towards him. He has shown us his heart
-to-night; and yet, my dear, I think I understand him better than you do.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I daresay, mother; that's because you <i>are</i> better than
-I am.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, no, my dear,' she replied. 'Who can be better than my
-darling boy? It is because I have more experience of the world. Chris, my heart
-melted to him to-night more than it has ever done. I had a curious fancy once
-when he was speaking. I wished that he had been a boy like you instead of an old
-man, for I yearned to take him in my arms and comfort him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But what person in the world,' I thought, 'would she not wish
-to comfort if she knew that they needed it?' And I said aloud: 'If he had had a
-mother like mine, it would have been different with him.' (Such words as these
-were the natural outcome of my affection for this dearest of women, and I did
-not know then, although I believe I have learnt since, how sweet they were to
-her.) 'But, mother, I can't think of him as you do, when I remember what he said
-about Jessie. And tell me--would you like me to look on things as uncle Bryan
-does?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'God forbid, child!' she exclaimed warmly. 'It would take the
-sweetness out of your life; but I pray that you may never be tried as he has
-been. All that I want to impress upon you is to be tolerant to him and kind,
-because of his great trials and troubles. And now, my dear, I have something to
-tell you that you will be glad to hear. Jessie, before she went to sleep, asked
-me not to believe what she had said about money. &quot;I couldn't help saying it,&quot;
-she said; &quot;but I would rather be loved than have all the money there is in the
-world.&quot; Jessie puzzles me sometimes, my darling; but I have seen nothing in her
-nature that is not good.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And with these sweet words of comfort my mother left me to my
-rest.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The battle between Jessie and me with respect to the Wests
-still continued. Jessie, standing upon her dignity, as she had declared she
-would, did not ask me again to call for her when she visited them, and as her
-visits were growing more frequent, my sufferings were proportionately
-intensified. I felt that I could not hold out much longer, and I was on the
-point of giving way and sacrificing my manliness, when the difficulty was
-resolved for me by the following note, which my mother placed in my hands with a
-smile:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Miss West presents her compliments to Mr. Christopher Carey,
-and will be happy to see him at nine o'clock to-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was greatly delighted, and I congratulated myself upon my
-powers of endurance, thinking, naturally enough, that I had Jessie to thank for
-the invitation. In obedience to the summons, and feeling really very curious
-about the Wests--and most anxious also, I must confess, to be where Jessie
-was--I presented myself at the house at the hour named to the minute. There was
-no need to knock at the street-door, for it was open. I tapped on the wall of
-the dark passage, and waited for an answer. There was a great deal of laughter
-below, and my soft tapping was not heard, so I advanced two or three steps, and
-knocked more loudly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who's there?' a voice cried, and the laughter ceased.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's me,' I answered; and I was about to announce myself more
-explicitly, when my words were taken up mockingly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, it's Me, is it? Well, come downstairs, Mr. Me. Flora
-child, open the door. Take care! Mind your head!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The warning came too late. I knocked my head smartly against a
-beam in the ceiling, and stumbling down the stairs, entered the kitchen--the
-door of which was opened, by Flora I presume, just in time to receive me--in a
-very undignified manner. Screams of laughter greeted me as I picked myself up,
-very hot and red at my loss of dignity.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Be quiet, children!' cried the voice which I had first heard.
-'I hope you haven't hurt yourself, Mr. Me! Come along and shake hands. Very glad
-to see you. &quot;And Jack fell down and broke his crown.&quot;'--This quotation because I
-was rubbing my head, which I had bumped severely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not hurt much, thank you,' I said, as I walked towards
-the speaker, who was either a girl or a woman, or both in one, for I could not
-guess her age within ten years. She was sitting on a bench before a table; and
-as I gave her my hand, she placed her fingers to her lips, and glanced
-expressively towards a curtain, made of two patchwork quilts, which partitioned
-off a part of the kitchen. There was something going on behind this curtain, for
-there was a shuffling of feet there, and I heard low voices.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't speak loud,' said my hostess, as I guessed her to be.
-'I'm Miss West. Jessie's behind there; you'll see her presently. Don't let her
-know you're here.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, doesn't she know?' I exclaimed, in a maze of
-bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bless your heart, no! <i>I</i> sent you the note without her
-knowing anything of it. I thought you'd be glad.' As Miss West made this remark
-she gave me a sharp look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I <i>am</i> glad,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I knew you would be. Rubbing your head again! Well, you <i>
-have</i> raised a bump! Shall I brown-paper-and-vinegar you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, thank you,' I said, laughing; and then I looked round in
-wonder upon the strange scene.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_22" href="#div1Ref_22">CHAPTER XXII.</a></h4>
-<h5>I AM INTRODUCED TO A THEATRICAL FAMILY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I think if I had been suddenly plunged into Aladdin's cave, I
-should not have been more amazed. There I should have expected to see the rich
-treasures of gold and precious stones and the magic fruit growing on magic trees
-with which that cave is filled, but for the strange wonders by which I was here
-surrounded I was totally unprepared. These loomed upon me only gradually, for
-the two tallow candles which threw light upon the scene were but a dim
-illumination. The kitchen, which comprised nearly the whole of the basement, was
-irregularly shaped, and so large that the distant corners were almost completely
-in shade. Lurking, as it were, in one of these distant corners was a man
-strangely accoutred, whom I expected would presently step forward and join our
-party, but not a motion did the figure make. I subsequently discovered that it
-was a dummy man, in chain armour, which had once played a famous part (the
-armour, not the man) in a famous drama of the middle ages. Hanging upon the
-walls were numberless articles of male and female attire, some mentionable, some
-un-ditto; but with rare exceptions the dresses were not such as I was accustomed
-to rub against in my daily walks. These that I saw hanging around the room,
-covering every inch of available space from ceiling to floor, were theatrical
-dresses of different fashions and degrees; many were of silk and satin, very
-much faded, for persons of quality, and some were of commoner stuff for commoner
-folks--which latter, from their appearance, seemed to have worn better. Here the
-dress of a noble Roman fraternised with the kilts of a canny Scotchman, and here
-the satin cloak and trunks of a fashionable melodramatic nobleman contemplated
-(doubtless with sinister designs) the modest bodice which covered the breast of
-female virtue. High life and low life, in every description of ancient,
-mediæval, and modern fashion, were here represented, and to an eye more
-practised and fanciful than mine, the room might have been supposed to be
-furnished with all the cardinal vices and virtues in allegory. Here were long
-boots whose character could not be mistaken--they represented villainy of the
-very deepest dye, and they frowned upon the heavy hobnails of a model peasantry.
-Here were the woollen garments and broad-buckled belt which had played their
-parts in a hundred smuggling adventures; and here the breeches, stockings, and
-natty shoes which had danced hundreds of jigs amidst uproarious applause. Here
-was a harlequin's dress ready to flash into life and play strange antics at the
-mere waving of the wand which hung above the mask; and clinging to it on either
-side, as if in fond memory of old triumphs, were the short skirts of dainty
-columbines. Here was the dress of Wah-no-tee, feathers, bald scalp, moccasins,
-and hatchet, all complete, side by side with the fripperies of my Lord
-Foppington. Among the pots and pans on the dresser were polished breastplates
-and gauntlets and shields of various patterns. There were other dresses, very
-much bespangled and be-jewelled, and pasteboard helmets and crowns of priceless
-value, and masks that had had a hard life of it, being dented here and bulged
-there and puffed up and bunged up in tender places, worse than any
-prizefighter's face after the severest encounter. A donkey's head and shoulders
-hung immediately above me, and by its side the plaster cast of a face without
-the slightest expression in it, and which is popularly supposed to represent an
-important branch of the histrionic art. Whichever way I turned, these and a
-hundred other strange articles most incongruously mixed together met my gaze.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, what do you think of us?' asked Miss West. 'We're a
-queer bunch, ain't we?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's a strange place,' I said, thinking it best to avoid
-personalities. 'I never saw anything like it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We're a theatrical family, my dear,' said Miss West
-complacently, 'born in the profession every one of us. Are you fond of
-theatres?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As a matter of fact, I had only been twice to a theatre, but
-it was a place of enchantment to me, and I said as much to Miss West.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah!' she mused. 'It looks so from the front, I daresay; and a
-good job for us that it does. But it is bright, and it <i>does</i> carry you
-away.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A familiar voice behind the curtain caused a diversion, and I
-turned eagerly in that direction. Miss West gave me another of her sharp looks.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't you wish you had eyes in your ears?' she said. 'You're
-one of the bashful ones, I can see. Could you play the part of the Bashful Lover
-do you think?' (This question was accompanied by a significant dig in the ribs
-and a merry laugh.)</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't think,' I stammered, very red and confused, 'that I
-should ever be able to act.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not <i>that</i> part!' exclaimed my good-natured tormentor.
-'Well, then, you <i>could</i> play &quot;The Good-for-nothing.&quot;'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Which was an allusion I did not at all understand. Miss West
-proceeded:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All you've got to do, my dear, is to stick to nature. Turk
-gets mad with me when I tell him that. &quot;Stick to nature!&quot; he cries. &quot;Why, then
-every fool could act.&quot; I say to him, every fool <i>could</i> act if he stuck to
-nature. Then he rolls his eyes and glares, does Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why does he do that?' I inquire.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He plays the heavy villains, my dear, at the Royal Columbia
-Theatre; and what's a heavy villain without his glare? You should see him in
-<i>The Will and the Way!</i> It's a sight.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like to see him; but you haven't told me who Turk
-is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Turk is my brother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is not here?' I ask, with another glance at the curtain.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, no; he is playing a new part to-night Poor Turk! the new
-school of acting depresses him. Say, O.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O,' I said, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, you should hear Turk say it! It would fill a large page.
-Do you remember when you first learnt to write?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And how, with your left arm sprawling over the table, and
-your left ear listening for something you never heard, and your eyes as staring
-wide open as ever they could be, and your tongue half out of your mouth, you dug
-your pen into the copy-book to produce your first O, which took about five
-minutes in the making, and then came out squabbled? That's the way Gus says his
-O's. He takes a long time over them. Now Brinsley's different.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Brinsley?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My brother. He's sensible. He plays walking gentlemen in the
-new style, and rattles off what he has to say quite in the elegant way--as if he
-didn't care a bit for it, you know. Turk sneers at him (dramatically, my dear),
-and says that the new school of acting is the ruin of the profession. But to
-come back to the Bashful Lover. You shall play it, my dear. Gus shall write the
-piece.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gus?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'One of my brothers. Gus can write anything--tragedies,
-melodramas, farces--and he shall write <i>The Bashful Lover</i>, after the style
-of
-<i>The Conjugal Lesson</i>. One scene, and only two performers--you and Jessie.
-That would be nice, as Jessie says. You shall quarrel, of course, and make it
-up, and quarrel again, and snub each other, and sulk, and say spiteful things
-(Gus will see to all that), but--don't look so glum!--it shall all come right in
-the end. You shall drop into each other's arms and kiss, and while you are
-folding her to your heart (that's the style nowadays, my dear), the curtain
-shall fall. We'll have a select audience--none of the boys, for that would spoil
-it, eh? but Gus--he must be present as the author. There'll be me, and Florry,
-and Matty, and Rosy, and Nelly, and Sophy, and we'll all applaud at the right
-places, you may be sure.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss West counted the names on her fingers as she went over
-them; the young ladies who bore them were all seated round the table and about
-the room, engaged in various ways. One was cutting-out stars of paper tinsel,
-and gluing them on to a gauze dress; another was making dancing shoes; another
-was amusing herself with a cardboard stage and cardboard characters, which she
-drew on and off by means of tin slides. Miss West, who also had an article of
-female attire, in an unfinished state, in her lap, which she worked upon in the
-intervals of her conversation, called these young ladies by name, one by one,
-and desired each to perform a magnificent curtsy to me, which the little misses,
-the eldest of whom could not have been more than fourteen years of age, did in
-grand style, worthy of the finest ladies in the land. I was somewhat bewildered
-at the extent of Miss West's family, and I asked if there were any more of them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Heaps, my dear,' she complacently replied; 'there are
-nineteen of us altogether--eleven boys and eight girls, and all straight made,
-with the exception of me. I'm crooked. My legs are wrong. But I've been on the
-stage too. I played an old witch for an entire season, and got great applause.
-People in the house wondered how I could keep doubled up almost for such a long
-time together; I was on in one scene for twenty minutes; they didn't know I was
-doubled up naturally.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In proof of her words Miss West rose, and hobbled to the end
-of the kitchen as if in search of something, and hobbled back, the most genial
-and good-humoured of old witches. She was barely four feet in height, and was a
-queer little figure indeed, but her face was bright, and her eyes were bright I
-could not help liking the little woman, and I told her so.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's right, Master Christopher. We'll be friends, you and
-me. Well, but to come back.' (This was evidently one of her favourite figures of
-speech.) got two pound five a week for playing the old witch; it lasted for
-twenty-two weeks, and it was almost the death of me. I had to do it though.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her voice grew quieter and she spoke in subdued tones, so that
-the little misses should not hear.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother and father died within a month of each other, and
-there were the doctor's bills and the funeral expenses to be provided for. Then
-there's a large family of us, Master Christopher, and taking us altogether in a
-lump, we're no joke. The boys wouldn't hear of my going on the stage again, and
-I don't see myself how I could do it regularly, for there's a deal of business
-to look after indoors, letting alone the household affairs. Though I like it! If
-anybody--that is, anybody who's somebody--would write me a strong one-part
-piece, I could make a big hit with my figure. 'Tisn't every day you see such a
-figure as mine; it's worth a mint of money on the stage if it was properly
-worked. They're all on the stage but me; little Sophy there--she's the youngest,
-four years--spoke two lines in the pantomime last year to rounds of applause.
-The people love to see a clever child on the stage, though the papers write
-against it. But what are the papers? as Turk says, with a glare.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course,' I repeated, with a foolish air of wisdom, 'what
-are the papers?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Turk says, if they were what they ought to be, somebody that
-he knows (that's himself, my dear) would be at the top of the tree.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Turk is very clever, then?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He's the best murderer to slow music that <i>I've</i> ever
-seen. But Gus is the genius of the family. In the matter of that, we're all
-geniuses. But blighted, my dear, blighted!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She gave me the merriest look, as little like a blighted being
-as can well be imagined.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We're all of us very conceited, my dear, and very vain. What
-was that thing in the fable that tried to blow itself out, and came to grief?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The frog.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We're all of us frogs, my dear. If people would only give us
-as much room as we think we ought to have, the world wouldn't be big enough for
-a quarter of us. And of all the conceited creatures in this topsy-turvy world,
-actors and actresses are the worst. We're good enough in our way, but we <i>do</i>
-think such a deal of ourselves.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is Mr. Gus a good actor?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Plays leading business; he's out of an engagement just now,
-He's behind the curtain with Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was burning to ask what they were doing there, but the words
-hung on my tongue, and an inquiry of another description came forth. It was
-concerning the wonderful collection of dresses and theatrical properties with
-which the kitchen was filled. I wanted to know if they were used solely for the
-adornment of the persons of the Wests.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bless your heart, my dear, no,' was the reply. This is the
-'stock-in-trade of our theatrical wardrobe business. We lend them out for
-private theatricals and bal masques. It was a good business once, but it has
-fallen off dreadfully. When bal masques were in fashion, mother used to lend as
-many as twenty and thirty dresses a night sometimes. If ever you want a dress
-for a bal masque--though there's scarcely one a year now, worse luck!--come to
-me, and make you a nobleman, or a chimney sweep, or a brigand, or the Emperor of
-Russia, in the twinkling of a bedpost, and all for the small charge of--nothing,
-to you. But to come back. You wanted to ask just now what Gus and Jessie are
-doing behind that curtain. They're rehearsing a scene, my dear, out of <i>As You
-Like It</i>. Not that she wants teaching; Jessie's a born actress, and if she
-were on the stage, she'd make a fortune with her face and voice. And as for her
-laugh--there, listen! I never <i>did</i> hear Mrs. Nesbit laugh--I'm not old
-enough to have seen her act, my dear--but if her laugh was as sweet and musical
-as Jessie's, I'll eat my stock-in-trade down to the last feather. And there's
-another reason, Master Christopher--Gus is in love with her. Bless my soul! how
-the boy changes colour! Why, they're all in love with her. Turk is mad about
-her, and Brinsley is pining away before our eyes. He doesn't mind it so much,
-because a slim figure suits his line of acting. It wouldn't do for a walking
-gentleman to be fat.' Miss West placed her hand upon mine, and said, with
-sagacious nods, 'My dear, if Jessie was on the stage, she would have ten
-thousand lovers. Hark! there's the bell. They're going to play the scene. Are
-you ready, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' cried Jessie, 'but we want some one for Celia; she only
-speaks twice.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Florry will do Celia,' replied Miss West. 'Go behind, Florry;
-we'll commence the scene properly, and I'll read Jacques. Now, then. Act four,
-scene one: The Forest of Arden. Up with the curtain.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The curtain was drawn aside, and disclosed a roughly
-constructed stage, and absolutely an old scene representing a wood.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We have three scenes,' whispered Miss West: 'a chamber scene,
-a street scene, and a wood. You'll see how beautifully Gus will play Orlando.
-He'll be dressed for the part. Enter Rosalind, Celia, and Jacques. Look over the
-book with me. Florry knows her part. I commence: &quot;I prithee, pretty youth--&quot;'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked up, and saw Jessie and Florry on the stage. Jessie,
-looking towards us, did not appear to recognise me; her face was flushed, and
-her eyes were brilliant with excitement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss West (as Jacques): 'I prithee, pretty youth, let me be
-better acquainted with thee.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie (as Rosalind): 'They say you are a very melancholy
-fellow.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss West: 'I am so; I do love it better than laughing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie: 'Those that are in extremity of either are abominable
-fellows, and betray themselves to every modern censure worse than drunkards.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss West: 'Why, 'tis good to be sad and say nothing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie: 'Why, then, 'tis good to be a post!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The raillery of the tone was perfect, and I was aglow with
-admiration. I had never in my life heard anything more exquisitely intoned, and
-this was but a foretaste of what was to follow.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie (to Miss West): 'A traveller! By my faith, you have
-great reason to be sad: I fear you have sold your own lands to see other men's;
-then, to have seen much, and to have nothing, is to have rich eyes and poor
-hands.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Miss West: 'Yes, I have gained my experience.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie: 'And your experience makes you sad: I had rather have
-a fool to make me merry than experience to make me sad; and to travel for it,
-too!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Here Gus West entered, dressed as Orlando. Very noble and
-handsome he looked, and in the love scene that followed between him and Jessie,
-he played much too well for my peace of mind. When Jessie said, 'Ask me what you
-will, I will grant it;' and he answered, 'Then love me, Rosalind,' he spoke in
-so natural a tone, and with so much eagerness, that I could not believe he was
-acting, especially with Miss West's words in my mind that he really was in love
-with her. I was heartily glad when the scene was at an end. But I was somewhat
-comforted at Jessie's unfeigned delight that I had at last found my way to the
-Wests'.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought at first that I had you to thank for being here,' I
-said; 'but Miss West sent me an invitation without you knowing anything of it,
-it seems.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Miss West is a meddlesome--dear delightful creature! She's as
-good as gold! And I'm a little bit glad that it has happened so; it was manly in
-you not to give in, and I had a good mind to commence coaxing you again to
-come.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And I was beginning to be so miserable,' I said, adding my
-confession to hers, 'at not being able to be where you were, that I was on the
-point of giving way myself, and asking you if I might come without an
-invitation.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So the best thing you can do,' cried Miss West, who had
-overheard us, 'is to kiss and make friends.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie laughed, and said, 'I didn't see you while I was
-acting, Chris. I was so excited that I couldn't see a face in the room.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Not even Orlando's?' I suggested, with a furtive look at
-Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes; his of course, but then we were acting to each
-other.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Only acting, Jessie?' I inquired, with much anxiety.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Only acting, Jessie!' mimicked Miss West, whose sharp ears
-lost not a word. 'Why, what else <i>should</i> it be? Or else she's married to
-Gus--Scotch fashion, my dear. &quot;I take thee, Rosalind (meaning Jessie), for
-wife,&quot; says Gus. &quot;I do take thee, Orlando (meaning Gus), for my husband,&quot; says
-Jessie. But she'd say that to any man who played Orlando as well as Gus
-does--wouldn't you, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course I would,' replied Jessie, entering into her
-friend's humour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my dear, I knew a young lady who was married a dozen
-times a week (in two pieces every night) for more than six months. And her
-sweetheart was the stage carpenter, and saw it all from the wings--imagine his
-sufferings, my dear! Ah, but such marriages are often a good deal happier than
-real ones; there's more fun in them, certainly. Jessie, there's ten o'clock
-striking; it's time for you to go. Now mind,' concluded Miss West, addressing
-me, 'no more standing on ceremony; you're welcome to come and go when you like;
-we shall look on you as we look on Jessie, as one of the family.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I promised to come very often, and Miss West said I could not
-come too often. There was no mistaking the hearty sincerity of the invitation.
-Jessie and I walked very slowly home, and she listened delightedly to my praises
-of her acting.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't want them at home to know about it, Chris,' she said;
-'at least, not till I tell them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, Jessie;' and we entered the little parlour
-together in a very happy mood.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_23" href="#div1Ref_23">CHAPTER XXIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>THE SUNDAY-NIGHT SUPPERS AT THE WESTS'.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">In due time I was introduced to other members of the West
-family, and grew so much attached to them, and so enamoured of their ways, that
-I spent nearly all my leisure in their company. Uncle Bryan seemed to resent
-this, growling that 'new brooms swept clean,' and asking me sarcastically if I
-intended to adopt the fashion through life of throwing over old friends for new
-ones. Jessie stepped in to defend me, and said boldly that uncle Bryan was not
-so fond of our society as to have reasonable cause to grumble at our absence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How do you know that?' asked uncle Bryan sharply. 'You want
-people to be like peacocks or jackdaws, always showing their feathers or
-chattering about themselves.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The cause of this little disturbance was that we often stayed
-at the Wests' until eleven or past eleven o'clock at night.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Now that I have you to take care of me, Chris,' said Jessie,
-we need not be so particular.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You had better live with your new friends altogether,'
-observed uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will, if you wish me to,' replied Jessie indignantly; 'I
-know that I'm a burden to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, no, my dear,' interposed my mother; 'uncle Bryan does not
-mean what he says.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And indeed uncle Bryan was silent, and retired from the
-contest. These little quarrels were always smoothed over by my mother, and
-Jessie herself not unfrequently played the penitent, and atoned indirectly to
-uncle Bryan for the sharp words she used. It is needless to say that I took
-sides with Jessie in the sometimes noisy, but more often quiet warfare, which
-existed between her and uncle Bryan. As I grew older, I recognised the
-helplessness of her position in uncle Bryan's house, and I found bitter fault
-with him for his manner towards her. It was wanting not only in tenderness, but
-in chivalry, and were it not for the respect and consideration he showed for my
-mother, I have no doubt I should have quarrelled with him openly. As it was, I
-looked forward to the time when I should be able to offer my mother a home of my
-own, where she and Jessie and I could live together in harmony. With the Wests I
-became a great favourite. My talent as an artist contributed to this result, and
-I drew innumerable sketches of them in their various capacities. Miss West's
-Christian name was Josey (short for Josephine), and by that familiar title she
-insisted that I should address her. So it was Jessie and Josey, and Turk and
-Brinsley and Chris, with us in a very short time, as though we had been on the
-most intimate terms for years. The walls of all the rooms in the house, with the
-exception of the kitchen, were soon adorned with portraits and character
-sketches, with the artist's initials, C. C., in the corner. The portrait of
-Josey West, as the Witch of the Blasted Heath, as played by her &amp;c. &amp;c.; the
-portrait of little Sophy West, as Celandine, in the <i>Fairy Dell</i>, as played
-by her &amp;c. &amp;c.; the portrait of Augustus West, as Claude Melnotte (I would not
-take him as Orlando), as played by him &amp;c. &amp;c.; the portrait of Brinsley West,
-as Tom Shuffleton, as played by him &amp;c. &amp;c.; the portrait of Turk West, as The
-Thug, as played by him &amp;c. &amp;c.; and numberless others, were shown to admiring
-visitors, and contemplated by the admiring originals, to the glory of 'the
-eminent young artist,' as Miss West called me. It is necessary to add that in
-most of the superscriptions at the foot of the pictures the word 'eminent' did
-good service. It was the eminent tragedian, the eminent comedian, the eminent
-character actor; and so on. Certainly the name of the West family was legion.
-Three of them were married, and seemed from appearances to be emulative of the
-example of their parents in the matter of children. Sometimes on a Sunday
-evening the entire family would be assembled in the one house, and as the
-married folk brought their broods with them--the youngest three of which
-invariably were babies in arms--the total number of brothers and sisters and
-uncles and aunts was something alarming. The house was overrun with them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If we go on like this for a hundred years,' Miss West said to
-me, in confidence, 'we shall become an institution. Sheridan has seven already,
-and his wife is quite a young woman; J. H. has five, and Clarance four--and more
-coming, my dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That was the chronic condition of the wives. There were always
-more coming. Sheridan, J. H., and Clarance were the eldest of Josey West's
-brothers, and were well known to the British theatrical public in our quarter of
-London. In the commencement of our intimacy the constant introduction of members
-of the family, of whose existence I had been previously ignorant, was very
-confusing to me, especially as Miss West, without preliminary explanation, spoke
-of all her relatives by their Christian names, and placed me on a footing of
-personal intimacy with them. I used to write lists of the names, with
-descriptions appended, and privately study them, so that I might not make
-mistakes in addressing them, but some of them were always in a tangle in my
-mind. The Sunday-night suppers were things to remember; every available article
-of crockery in the house was pressed into service, and as even the youngest
-members of the family were accustomed to late hours and late suppers, the result
-may be imagined. Those for whom there was no room at the table had their supper
-on chairs, on stools, or on their laps as they sat on the ground. It was very
-rough and undignified, but it was delightfully enjoyable. The chatter, the
-laughter, the ringing voices of one and another trying to make themselves heard,
-the good humour, the free-handed and free-hearted hospitality of those merry
-meetings are present to me, as I recall the reminiscence. There was always
-plenty to talk about, and plenty of words spoken that were worth listening to. A
-theatre in which one of the family was engaged was doing a bad business, and the
-actors were compelled to work on half salaries; one or two others were going on
-a provincial tour; another was out of an engagement; a manager had failed and
-the theatre was closed; and so on, and so on.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's always something,' said Miss West. Directly one saves
-a bit of money--it's precious little one has the opportunity of
-saving--something happens that sucks it up. But, bless your heart! what else can
-be expected with such swarms of children as we've got in the family!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If a legitimate actor,' said Turk moodily, 'could be certain
-of a regular engagement, it would be all right; but the public taste is
-vitiated--vitiated! They want novelty; they're not satisfied with legitimate
-business. Why, if any one of us had happened to be born covered from head to
-foot with red pimples, with a green sprout sticking in the middle of each of
-them, he could command his fifty pound a week, while a man of sterling talent is
-compelled to vegetate on a paltry fifty bob!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This sally was received with screams of laughter, and cries of
-Bravo, Turk!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I've got an idea,' cried Josey West; 'why don't we start a
-theatre ourselves, on the sharing principle? Here we are, all ready-made:
-leading man, walking gentleman, low comedy, genteel comedy, new style of acting,
-old style of acting, old men and women, heavy villain' (a general laugh at Turk,
-who joined in it readily), 'chambermaids, and ballet, all complete.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's all very well,' interposed Gus West, but where's the
-theatre?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's all very well,' added Turk, but where's the capitalist?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Advertise for one,' said Miss West. '&quot;Wanted, a capitalist
-with five thousand pounds to undertake the management&quot; (tickle him with that,
-eh, Turk?)--&quot;to undertake the management of a highly talented theatrical family,
-nearly forty in number (and more on the road), who can play tragedy, comedy,
-melodrama, farce, ballet, burlesque, and pantomime in an unrivalled manner. They
-are furnished with well-stocked wardrobes, including wigs, and they will be
-happy to give private exhibition of their abilities, in proof of their
-competency. Included in their number is a dramatic author, who will be willing
-to supply new pieces, if desired, to suit the capacity of the company. As a
-proof that they are not pretenders, they have all been born in the profession&quot;
-(listen to that, Turk)--&quot;they have all been born in the profession. No objection
-to travel. In India and Australia they would astonish the natives, and would be
-sure to create an immense sensation. A certain fortune. Competition invited and
-defied.&quot; There! would that catch a capitalist?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And what should I do,' asked Jessie, laughing, if the
-capitalist were to come and carry you all away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Come out with us as leading lady, to be sure,' replied Josey
-West promptly; 'and Chris can come as scene-painter, and there we are, all
-complete. Quite a happy family, my dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We made very merry over the fancy, and extracted many amusing
-pictures from it. I was sorry when Josey West called to us that it was late and
-time for us to go. It was a fine night, very quiet and very still, and Jessie
-and I lingered and talked of the Wests and their merry light-hearted ways.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They have plenty of trouble, though,' said Jessie; 'all that
-glitters isn't gold.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have never seen any one happier than they are,' I said.
-'Suppose they had all the money in the world, could they have spent a merrier
-evening?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What makes you mention money, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know exactly, except that it came into my head
-to-night, that if everybody had just a little more, everything would be right.
-But then I suppose when they had just that little more, they would want just a
-little more?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is in uncle Bryan's style. Chris, I think you are
-clever!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know, Jessie; Mr. Eden is pleased with me, and says I
-shall get along very well. I would like to; I would like to be rich.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She mimicked uncle Bryan: 'You would like to be rich! You
-would like the moon! Open your mouth, and what you would like will drop into
-it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I laughed at the imitation, which was perfect, and said,
-'Well, I suppose it is all nonsense--wishing, wishing! Uncle Bryan would be
-right if he said that, Jessie, and it's just what he <i>would</i> say, if he had
-the opportunity. Most of the great men I've read about had to work and wait for
-success. The other night, when uncle Bryan was in one of his amiable moods, he
-said that success was like the robbers' cavern in <i>The Forty Thieves</i>, and
-that there was one magic key which would always open it. When I asked him what
-that key was, he said, Earnestness.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's one of the things that uncle Bryan would never give me
-credit for.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan is very unjust and very unkind. Let us turn back
-and walk a little. The night is so beautiful and I feel so happy at this minute
-that I should like it to last for ever.' Jessie's hand stole into mine, and I
-held it close; the silence that followed was broken by Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why would you like to be rich, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For your sake, Jessie, more than for my own. If I could give
-you all that you desired, I shouldn't wish for anything more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are very good to me, Chris. Why?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I love you, Jessie,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Really and truly?' she exclaimed, half tenderly, half
-tantalisingly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'With all my heart and soul,' I said, in a low passionate
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When one loves like that' (she was speaking seriously now),
-'what does it really mean?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can only speak of myself, and I know that there is no
-sacrifice I would not make for you. I am sure there is nothing you could ask me
-to do that I would not do; if I could die to make you happy, I would do so
-gladly, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I don't want you to die, Chris; what should I do without
-you? Then when one loves really and truly, and with one's heart and soul, there
-is no selfishness in it? One doesn't think of oneself?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think of nothing but you, Jessie. I should like to be
-successful, for your sake; I should like to be rich, for your sake. Now do you
-understand?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She did not reply, and when presently I ventured to look into
-her face, I saw that there were tears in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are not angry with me, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should be an ungrateful girl indeed, if I were. No, Chris.
-I love to hear you speak to me as you have done. I was only thinking that I
-wished others were like you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You mean uncle Bryan,' I said, with a quick apprehension of
-the direction of her thoughts. 'But he takes pains to make people dislike him.
-Besides, he is at war with everything--he is, Jessie! He never goes to church;
-he never opens a Bible. I believe,' I added, my voice sinking to a whisper,
-'that he is an atheist.' (And I said to myself mentally, as I gazed into
-Jessie's sweet face, If he does not believe in God, it is less strange that he
-does not believe in you.')</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had given no thought to time, and now, when the church bells
-struck one o'clock, I was startled at the lateness of the hour. With a guilty
-look at each other, Jessie and I hurried home; before I could knock at the
-street-door, it was opened for us by my mother. She put her finger to her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I heard your steps, my dear,' she said, with anxious
-tenderness; 'hush, don't make a noise. You might wake your uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We had no idea of the time, mother,' I said; 'it isn't
-Jessie's fault. I kept her talking, and really thought it was no more than
-eleven o'clock. I am so sorry we have kept you up! See what a lovely night it
-is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We stood at the door for a little while, my mother in the
-centre, with her arms round our waists. When she kissed me and wished me
-good-night, I saw that she had been crying; but her pale face brightened as I
-put my arms about her neck, and held her to me for a few moments. When I
-released her, I found that we were alone; Jessie must have stepped upstairs very
-quietly, for I did not hear her leave the room.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_24" href="#div1Ref_24">CHAPTER XXIV.</a></h4>
-<h5>TURK, THE FIRST VILLAIN.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Of all the male members of the West family, Turk was the one I
-liked best. Our intimacy soon ripened into friendship, and he made me the
-confidant of his woes, and as I was a good listener, we got on admirably
-together. It seemed that he had never had 'a chance,' as he termed it, and that
-he had been condemned by fate to act a line of business which he declared was
-distasteful to him--although I must confess that my after experience of him
-convinced me that it was exactly suited to him, and he to it--and in theatres
-where the intellectual discernment of the audiences was proverbially of a low
-standard.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps you will tell me,' he said to me, in one of our
-private conferences, 'what there is in my appearance that I should have been
-selected to play the first villain almost from my birth--from my birth, sir,
-Chris, my boy. Do I look like a murderer? Do I look like a man who had passed
-through a career of the deepest-dyed ruffianism, and was eager to go on with it?
-Speak your mind--it won't hurt me; I'm used to criticism, and I know what value
-to place upon it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk was really a slight-made man, and as I had not seen him
-act at the time of these utterances, I could not understand his sister's praises
-of him as the best murderer to slow music that she had ever seen. His appearance
-in private life was, to say the best of it, insignificant, and as utterly
-opposed to that of a deeply-dyed ruffian as can well be imagined. The only
-likeness to the description Josey West had given of him that I could see was his
-'glare,' and he certainly did roll his eyes as he spoke, with an effect which
-was nothing less than tremendous. I mentioned to him that I had heard the
-greatest praises of his acting, and that he played the villain's part to the
-life.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And what does that prove?' he asked, with an oratorical
-flourish. 'Does it prove that I am fit for nothing better, or that I am a
-conscientious actor? When I have a part to play, I play it; I don't play Turk
-West every night. See me play the Thug, and I defy you to recognise me; see me
-as the First Murderer in <i>Macbeth</i>, and I defy you to recognise the Thug.
-When I first played the Thug, my own mother didn't know me; &quot;That's something
-like acting,&quot; she said; and she ought to have known, rest her soul! for she
-played a baby in arms before she was out of long clothes, and spoke lines on the
-stage when she was three years old. Why, sir, my struggle with old Martin, in
-<i>The Will and the Way</i>, was said to be the most realistic thing ever seen
-on the stage--and do I look as if I would murder a man? It was art, sir, pure
-art. I am a conscientious actor--a conscientious actor, sir, Chris, my boy--and
-what I have to play, I play. Give me a strong leading part in a good piece, in a
-good theatre in the West-end--in the West-end, sir, Chris, my boy, not in this
-heaven-forsaken quarter--and then see what I can do! Why, sir, there are men
-occupying leading positions in our best theatres who can't hold a candle to Turk
-West--I'm not a vain man, and I say they can't hold a candle to Turk West! There
-are men--whose names I'll not mention, for I'm not envious and I only speak in
-the interests of art--men on the boards on the other side of Temple Bar--where
-I've never been seen--who are drawing large screws, and who have as much idea of
-acting as a barn-door fowl. What do they play? They play <i>themselves</i>,
-never mind what characters they represent. Dress doesn't make a character--it's
-the voice, and the manner, and the bearing. Why, look at----never mind; I said I
-wouldn't mention names. Directly he comes on the stage--whether he plays a young
-man or a middle-aged man or an old man, a man of this century or a man of the
-last century, or farther back if you please--everybody says, &quot;Ah, there's old
-So-and-so!&quot; And he uses the same action and the same leer and the same walk, as
-if the hundreds of characters he has played in his time were written to
-represent <i>him</i>, not as if, having taken to the stage, it was his duty to
-represent
-<i>them</i>. Call that acting! It's death and destruction to art, that's what it
-is. And the public stand it--stand it, sir, Chris, my boy--being led by the
-nose, as asses are, by critics who have reasons of their own for not putting
-their thumbs down on such incompetency. That's the word, sir, Chris, my boy,
-that's the word--incompetency. But wait-till I come out; wait till an author
-that I have in my eye-- yes, sir, I have him; I know him, and he believes in me,
-and I believe in him; we fight a common cause--wait till he has finished the
-piece he is writing for me, a piece representing two passions; one is not enough
-for Turk West. When that piece is performed at one of the West-end theatres,
-with Turk West in the leading character, you may mark a new era in the history
-of the stage. But mum, Chris, my boy, mum! Not a word of this to any of my
-relations.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My acquiescent rejoinders were very pleasing to him, and he
-expressed a high opinion of my judgment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You shall come and see me play to-morrow night,' he said, 'at
-the Royal Columbia. I'm engaged there for the heavy business. Can you get away
-from work at half-past five o'clock? I'll come for you, if you like, and we'll
-walk together to the shop' (thus irreverently designating the Temple of
-Thespis).</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I said I thought I could get away, and he promised to call for
-me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will see, sir, Chris, my boy, the most villainous and
-incomprehensible blood-and-thunder melodrama that ever was presented on the
-stage--it is called <i>The Knight of the Sable Plume, or The Bloodstained Banner</i>.
-Isn't the very title enough to drive intelligent persons from the doors? But,
-sir, Chris, my boy, we play to a twopenny gallery, and the twopenny gallery will
-have blood for its money, and plenty of it. <i>The Bloodstained Banner</i> is a
-vile hash put together for a &quot;star&quot;--an arrant impostor, sir--who plays the
-leading part. I'll say nothing of him--you shall see and judge for yourself. I
-play Plantagenet the Ruthless; I don't slur my part because it's impossible,
-absurd, and ridiculous--you'll find no shirking in Turk West; he knows what duty
-is, and he does it. If I have lines given me to speak in which there isn't an
-atom of sense, it isn't my fault; I speak them because I'm paid to speak them,
-and I do my best to illuminate--that's the word, sir, Chris, my boy--to
-illuminate a character which is an insult to my intelligence. Necessity knows no
-law, and if I'm compelled to knuckle-down to fate to-day, I live in hopes that
-the sun will shine to-morrow.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I said that I sincerely hoped the sun would shine to-morrow,
-and that it <i>would</i> shine brightly for him; and Turk West wrung my hand,
-and said that he wished the audiences he had to play to were as intellectually
-gifted as I was, adding that then there would be hope for the drama.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I obtained permission to leave on the following evening at the
-time mentioned by Turk, who was as good as his word in coming for me, and we
-walked together to the Royal Columbia Theatre.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Prepare yourself, my boy,' he said, in the tone of one who
-was about to initiate a novice in solemn mysteries; 'I am going to take you
-behind the scenes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was duly impressed by the great privilege in store for me,
-and I walked by the side of Turk West, glorified in a measure by his importance.
-The theatre was not yet open, and a large number of persons was waiting for
-admittance, some of whom, as regular frequenters, recognised Turk and pointed
-him out to their companions, who regarded him with looks of awe and wonder;
-others, unaware of the great presence, were kicking vigorously at the doors.
-After lingering a little and looking about him with an unconscious air (really,
-I now believe, to enjoy the small tribute of fame which was descending upon him;
-but I did not suspect this at the time), Turk preceded me down an unobtrusive
-narrow passage, the existence of which could have been known only to the
-initiated. This led to the stage-door, which to my astonishment was the meanest,
-shabbiest, and most battered door within my experience. We plunged at once into
-the dark recesses of the theatre; and after bumping my head very severely
-against jutting beams, and nearly breaking my neck by falling up and down
-unexpected steps, which were nothing more nor less than traps for the unwary, I
-found myself in a long barn-like room, full of draughts (which latter feature,
-indeed, seems to be the chronic complaint of all theatres, before and behind the
-curtain), and with a very low ceiling, which Turk informed me was the principal
-dressing-room for the gentlemen of the company. Therein were congregated seven
-or eight individuals, making-up for the first piece; some were rubbing
-themselves dry with dirty towels, some were dressing, some undressing, some
-painting their faces. One, whom I afterwards discovered was the low-comedy man,
-was sticking pieces of pluffy wool upon his nose and cheeks, and dabbing them
-with rouge, with which he was also painting his eyebrows, so that they might
-match his close-cropped, carroty-haired wig. Turk was familiarly and merrily
-greeted by all these brothers-in-arms, who all addressed him as 'Cully;' and as
-he returned the compliment and 'cullied' them, I presumed it was a family name
-which they all enjoyed. Turk proceeded at once to disrobe himself, and I, filled
-with wonder at the mysteries of which I was, for the first time, a privileged
-observer, turned my attention to the other members of the company. The room
-adjoining was also occupied, by the ladies of the company, to judge from their
-voices; they were in the merriest of spirits, and a smart rattle of jokes and
-saucy sayings passed from one room to another. Turk was evidently a favourite
-with the ladies, who called out 'Turk, my dear' this, and 'Turk, my dear' that,
-he returning their 'dears' with 'darlings,' as became a man of gallantry. When,
-after the lapse of a few minutes, I looked towards the place where Turk was, I
-discovered in his stead an imposing individual with a pair of magnificent
-moustaches on his lips, and such a development of calf to his legs as I
-certainly never should have given Turk credit for without ocular proof. I gazed
-at him in doubt as to whether it really was Turk I saw before me, and his voice
-presently convinced me that it was Turk, and no other. Over his herculean calves
-he drew a pair of doubtfully-white cotton tights, and over these a pair of
-yellow-satin breeches, rather the worse for wear; around his waist (no longer
-slim, but bulky, as became the 'heavy man') he drew a flaming red-silk sash,
-with enormous fringes, and a broad black belt, in which were ominously displayed
-two great knives and three great pistols. Then came a ballet shirt which had
-seen better days (or nights), then a blue-velvet jacket, with slashed sleeves
-and large brass buttons, and he completed his attire by throwing carelessly upon
-his head-- which was framed in a wig of black ringlets--a peaked black hat, with
-a stained red feather drooping over (I feel that I ought to say o'er') his brow.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is the regulation kind of thing, Chris,' he said to me
-in a low voice--'this is the stuff that draws the twopenny gallery.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And he turned, with much affability, and accepted a pewter-pot
-offered to him by a brother with a 'Here, Cully!' and drank a deep draught. Then
-he took me into the passage, and asked some person in authority to pass me into
-the theatre. The people were pouring in at all the entrances, and in a short
-time the house was completely filled. They were fully bent upon enjoying
-themselves, and began to kick and applaud directly they were seated. When the
-lights were turned up and a bright blaze broke upon the living sea of faces,
-there was a roar of delight; and as the musicians straggled into the orchestra,
-they were greeted with applause and exclamations of familiarity, which fell upon
-ears supremely indifferent. I was placed in a good position, where I had a
-capital view of the stage, and having purchased a playbill, I began to study it.
-The programme was an imposing one, and the occupants of the twopenny gallery
-could certainly not complain that they did not have enough for their money.
-First, there was the romantic melodrama of <i>The Knight of the Sable Plume</i>,
-in which that distinguished actor, Mr. Horace Saint Herbert Fitzherbert
-(pronounced by the entire press to be superior to the elder Kean, and to surpass
-Garrick), would sustain the principal character. To be followed by the thrilling
-drama of <i>The Lonely Murder at the Wayside Inn</i>. After which, a comic song
-by Sam Jacobs, entitled the 'Jolly Drunken Cobbler,' and the clog hornpipe, by
-Mr. Dicksey. The whole to conclude with the stirring domestic drama of <i>The
-Trials and Vicissitudes of a Servant-Girl</i>; winding up with a grand
-allegorical tableau in coloured fires. The appetite that could have found fault
-with the quantity must surely have been unappeasable. In due time the music
-ceases, a bell rings, there is a moment's breathless expectation in the house,
-and the curtain rises on <i>The Knight of the Sable Plume</i>. Scene the first:
-A wood. In the distance, the battlemented castle of Plantagenet the Ruthless.
-(So says the programme, but I cannot see the battlemented castle, although I
-strain my eyes to discern it, being interested in it as the family residence of
-my friend Turk.) Enter two ruffians in leather jerkins and buff gloves. Times
-are very bad with them. They want gold, they want blood, and--ahr! they want
-revenge (with a redundancy of <i>r</i>'s). They roll their eyes, they gnash
-their teeth. Yonder is the castle of Plantagenet. There sits the lordly tyrant
-who grinds his vassals to the dust. Shall he be allowed to go on in his ruthless
-course unchecked? No! Hark! a thousand echoes reiterate the declaration. (I
-fancy the echoes.) No no! no! They kneel, and swear revenge in dumb show. Who
-comes here? As they live, it is the lovely Edith, the heiress to those baronial
-halls. The Fates are propitious. They'll tear her from the domestic hearth, and
-bear her senseless form to mountains wild. Exit ruffians elaborately. Enter
-Edith pensively. She is pretty, and she receives a round of applause from all
-parts of the house. She bows, and tells the audience that she has just
-dismounted from her snow-white palfrey outside. This accounts for her coming in
-without a hat, and with her hair hanging down her back over a white-muslin
-frock. The sparkling foliage of the trees tempted her to stroll along the mossy
-sward. She sighs. Who is the stranger she met nine days ago upon this very spot?
-She did not speak to him, she did not see his face, but the beating of her
-heart, the clouds athwart the sky, the dew upon the grass, the whisper of the
-breeze, the beauteous birds that warble delicious notes to scented flowers, all,
-all whisper to her that she loves him. Ah, yes, she loves him! Could she but see
-once more his manly form, she'd die content. Cue to the musicians, with whose
-assistance Edith sings a plaintive song expressive of her wish To quit the
-sordid world, And with her love be whirled To other lands. On sorrow bent (she
-sings), I'd die content If he were by my side. Oh, take me, love, To realms
-above, And let me be thy bride. The ruffians enter at the back of the stage, and
-roam about with stealthy steps. They draw their knives, and breathe upon them.
-Expectation is in every eye. The ruffians advance. The high-born maiden
-continues her song. The ruffians retreat. The high-born concludes her song with
-a tra-la-la. The ruffians, having just made up their minds at that point,
-advance again, with a quick sliding movement. Seize her! Oh, spare me, spare me
-she cries. Spare you, daughter of Plantagenet the Ruthless! spare you! Never!
-Did thy gory sire spare my white-haired parent when, with his bloody sword, he
-clove him from head to foot, and laid him writhing in the dust? Spare you! Not
-if lightnings flashed and thunders rolled, not if all the powers of earth and
-air interpose their forms protecting, shall you be spared! Revenge! The music is
-worked up terrifically during the scene. The ruffians drag the maiden this way
-and that, evidently undecided as to which road they shall take to their
-mountains wild. They seem bent upon rending her lovely form into small pieces
-and running off the opposite sides of the stage with the fragments. Help, oh,
-help me! she cries. A sudden tumult is heard without. Make way there, make way!
-is heard, at least two yards from the spot. She shrieks more loudly. I hear his
-lovèd step without! she cries. And the next moment a figure clad in armour
-rushes in, and with one blow lays the two ruffians dead upon the stage. His
-visor is down, and towering in his helmet is a sable plume. It is he, the Knight
-of the Sable Plume! He supports Edith on one arm; he raises the other aloft to
-the skies, and the curtain drops upon the picture amidst the admiring plaudits
-of the audience. Vociferous cries for Fitz! Fitz! bring that hero to the front
-of the curtain, where he gracefully bows, and wipes his brow languidly with a
-cambric handkerchief The second act introduces my friend Turk West, in the
-character of Plantagenet. I am glad to find that he is a favourite with the
-audience, who clap their hands, and two or three profane ones cry out, 'Bravo,
-Turk! Go in and win!' I am not aware whether this is a stimulant to him, but he
-certainly 'goes in' with vigour. The scene in which he appears is described as
-the grand hall in the castle, and its appointments are two chairs and a brown
-wooden table of modern manufacture. Very ruthless and very fierce indeed does
-Turk look, and he is accompanied by the pair of dead ruffians, who now appear as
-retainers: I recognise them by their buff boots. It is in vain that I endeavour
-to unravel the plot; the threads slip from me directly I attempt to gather them
-together. From a lengthy soliloquy indulged in by Plantagenet, I learn that he
-is not the rightful owner of the battlemented castle. Seventeen years ago he
-killed a noble prince in cold blood (which popular phrase cannot be a correct
-one), and murdered his beautiful child, the last, last scion of a noble race.
-(Here Turk grows magnificent, and 'goes in' with a will.) Oh, agony! He beholds
-once more their mangled corpses, he sees the death-sweat br-reaking on their
-brows! The demon of remorse is tearing at his vitals. Oh, would he could recall
-the past, and restore the two wooden chairs and the table to their rightful
-owner! During the applause that follows, Turk winks at me, and I am delighted.
-The low-comedy man and a waiting-maid in short petticoats and wearing an
-embroidered apron, as was the fashion with waiting-maids in the days of
-chivalry, play important comic parts in the piece, and send the audience into
-convulsions of laughter. But the plot has quite baffled me, and I have given up
-all hope of unravelling it. The Knight of the Sable Plume has been thrown into
-prison by Plantagenet, after a desperate fight with eight retainers (in
-slippers), and is released by the hand of the lovely Edith, to whom he swears
-eternal fealty. The last scene is the same as the first--a wood, with the
-(invisible) battlemented castle in the distance. Plantagenet the Ruthless
-enters. He is mad with rage. His prisoner has escaped. He gnashes his teeth.
-He'll search the wide world through but he will find him. Usurper! ye search not
-long. Behold him here! He enters, the Knight of the Sable Plume. At length we
-stand front to front! Back to thy teeth thy lying words! Villain! Defend
-thyself! They fight to music. One, two, up; one, two, down; one, two, three,
-four, sideways. They turn round, and when they are face to face, they clash
-their swords terrifically. They lock their arms together, and fight that way.
-The gallant knight is getting the worst of it. He is forced first upon one knee,
-then upon the other. He fights round the stage in this position. By a herculean
-effort he gains his feet. The swords flash fire. Ah, the usurper yields! He
-stumbles. He lies prostrate on the ground. Over him glares the knight. Recreant,
-beg thy miserable life! Never! Die, then, remorseless tyrant! With a piercing
-shriek Edith rushes in, and cries, Spare him, oh, spare him; he is my father!
-The Knight of the Sable Plume is softened; his sword drops from his grasp. He
-kneels, and supports the head of the Ruthless. It is too late; Death has marked
-me for his own, says Turk. The knight raises his visor. Ah! what is that scar
-upon thy brow? cries Turk. Avenging heaven! it is <i>his</i> child. These
-possessions are thine. Take them. Take my daughter. Her love will compensate for
-her father's hate. He joins their hands, and turning up the whites of his eyes
-(which elicits from the gallery cries of 'Bravo, Turk!') and saying, 'I die
-hap-pappy!' proceeds to do so in the most approved corkscrew style. Thus ended <i>
-The Knight of the Sable Plume</i>, by far the most incomprehensible piece of
-romance it had been my good fortune to witness. Mr. Horace Saint Herbert
-Fitzherbert was called before the curtain at the end of the drama, and appeared;
-there were calls also for Turk, but he did not appear. He gloomily informed me,
-when the performance was over, that Fitzherbert was on a 'starring' engagement,
-and that it was in the agreement that in his own pieces nobody should be allowed
-to appear before the curtain but himself. On reference to the playbill, I found
-that in <i>The Lonely Murder at the Wayside Inn</i> Turk was the murderer, and I
-am afraid to say how many times he deserved to be hanged for the dreadful crimes
-he performed in <i>The Trials and Vicissitudes of a Servant-Girl</i>. In the
-last piece the allegorical tableau in coloured fires may have conveyed a good
-moral, but the smell was suggestive of the lower regions, where good morals are
-not fashionable.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Following out the instructions given to me by Turk, I made my
-way, when the curtain fell for the last time, to the dressing-room at the back
-of the stage, and whispered my praises of my friend's acting. Before we went
-home, he and a number of his professional brethren 'looked in' at a neighbouring
-bar, where pewter pots were freely handed about. There was no lack of animated
-conversation, and the subject of course was the drama. One man, who had played a
-small character in <i>The Knight of the Sable Plume</i>, and played it well, was
-holding forth to two or three unprofessional friends on the peculiar hardship of
-his case. As he had not played in the last piece, I inferred from his condition
-that he had been regaling himself at the bar for some time before we entered. He
-was an elderly man, and Turk whispered to me that he had once been leading man
-in the theatre, but that he had come down in the world. Those who addressed him
-by name called him Mac.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, Turk, my boy,' he said, giving Turk a left-handed grasp;
-his right hand held his glass of whisky-toddy--'ah, my sons, come in to drink?
-That's right. Drown dull care.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You've tried to do that for a pretty considerable time, Mac,'
-said Turk good-humouredly. 'Take a pull at the pewter, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have, my boy, I have,' returned Mac; I'm an old stager now,
-but, dammee! there's life in the old boy yet. I'll play Claude Melnotte with the
-youngest of you. I'm ready to commence all over again. Show me a more juvenile
-man than I am on the boards, and dammee! I'll stand glasses round I will--and
-pay for them if I can borrow the money!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A volley of laughter greeted this sally, in which Mac joined
-most heartily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Drown dull care!' he continued. 'I've tried to do it for a
-pretty considerable time, as Turk says--dammee, my sons! I've it all my life,
-and I'd advise you to do the same. Care killed a cat, so beware. Before you came
-in, my sons, I was speaking to these gentlemen'--indicating his unprofessional
-friends--'who kindly asked me to take a glass with them--thank you, I don't
-mind; my glass <i>is</i>
-empty; another whisky-toddy--The cry is still they come! eh, my sons?--I was
-speaking to these gentlemen, whose names I have not the pleasure of knowing, but
-who take an interest in the profession. I was speaking to them of myself, in
-connection with the noble art. I was saying that I act for my bread----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And sack,' interrupted a member of the company. 'And sack.
-Mac.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Hang it, no, my son!' exclaimed the old actor, with a capital
-mixture of humour and dignity. 'I act for my bread; I let my friends pay for the
-sack. I may, or I may not, be an ornament to my profession; that is a matter of
-public opinion and public taste; but whether I am or am not, I am not ashamed to
-say I act for my bread. I was speaking to these gentlemen also--your healths,
-gentlemen--of the decadence of the drama. In the halcyon days of youth, in the
-days of the great Kemble (I made him my model; I trust I do not tarnish his fair
-fame), the drama was worth something. But now, when a fellow like this
-Fitzherbert--a man who has been pitchforked, so to speak, into the
-profession--comes in and takes all the fat of the piece, and when he is puffed
-and posted and advertised into a successful engagement, and when every other
-worthy member of the company is pushed into a corner, and compelled, so to
-speak, to hold a variety of lighted candies to show off his spurious brightness,
-it's an infernal hard thing to each of us as individuals, and a degradation to
-the drama as an art.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bravo, Mac!' said one and another, some in sincerity, some to
-humour the old actor.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are certainly right, sir,' said one of the strangers,
-speaking with the deference due to so eminent an authority. Your glass is empty;
-will you fill again?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ay, till the crack of doom,' was the ready reply. 'Right,
-sir! of course I'm right.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But,' said another of the strangers, not quite so deferential
-as the former speaker, some one must play second fiddle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Second fiddle, sir! Yes, I admit it, sir. Some one <i>must</i>
-play second fiddle--and third fiddle too, if you like. But let the man who plays
-second fiddle <i>be</i> a second fiddle, and not a first fiddle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who is to blame for all this?' asked the deferential
-stranger.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who's to blame, sir! The public, sir--the public. But what
-consolation is that to me? I must live, sir, I suppose. I must feed my family,
-or answer for it to the beak. Here am I, who will place my Macbeth in comparison
-with any man's--who can play Hamlet, Lear, Othello, Brutus, in a masterly
-manner--I don't say it <i>of</i> myself; it has been said of me--here am I
-compelled to knuckle-under to a man young enough to be my son, and with not a
-tenth part of my brains or experience. And what's the consequence? I haven't had
-a call for six months, while he gets called on three times a night. Why, sir, I
-remember the time when a discriminating audience called me on six times in one
-piece! I've had a dozen bouquets thrown to me in one night! And now, sir, these
-things are forgotten, and old Mac is shelved, sir, shelved!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The public ought to be ashamed of themselves,' said the
-deferential stranger.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But the public's not all to blame.. It's the managers, who
-allow themselves to be led, like tame sheep, into the trap; they haven't the
-moral courage to stand up against it. And what's a man, or a manager, without
-moral courage? I wouldn't mind it so much, but what's the consequence? A star is
-engaged upon shares, at an enormous screw, and to make this up, all <i>our</i>
-screws are reduced. That's where it comes hard. I pledge you my dramatic word,
-my screw isn't so much by seven-and-sixpence a week as it was six months ago.
-Who gets my seven-and-six? Why, who but the star? And my poor children must
-starve and perish, or go on the parish, if they hadn't a self-denying parent,
-who would pawn his shirt before they should come to want. I'll take another
-glass of whisky-toddy--my last, sir, my last to-night. Old Mac knows when he's
-had enough. Turk, my son, a word in your ear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk went aside with him, and I heard the jingling of coin.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He's a rum old fellow,' said Turk to me, as we walked home;
-'a good actor too, and might have got on well if he hadn't been so much engaged
-all his life in drowning care.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You gave him some money?' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Lent it to him, Chris; only fourpence halfpenny. The old
-fellow never borrows even money; it's always an exact sum for an exact purpose
-that he wants--fourteenpence, or eightpence halfpenny, or sevenpence, or some
-other odd amount. He was never known to borrow a shilling or a half-crown.
-There's a good deal of truth in what he says, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sorry for his wife and children,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The best of it is,' replied Turk, laughing, 'that the old
-fellow has only two sons, and the youngest is thirty-four years of age, and in a
-very good way. But it pleases old Mac to talk like that, and he has talked like
-it so long, that I've no doubt he really believes that he
-<i>has</i> a destitute family somewhere, who would starve if he couldn't borrow
-his fourpence-halfpennies and his sevenpences now and then. It's one of the best
-things I know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Altogether this night's entertainment was a most enjoyable one
-to me, and gave me much food for reflection.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_25" href="#div1Ref_25">CHAPTER XXV.</a></h4>
-<h5>HOLDING THE WORD OF PROMISE TO THE EAR.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">So far as I could judge from outward appearances, the coldness
-between uncle Bryan and Jessie increased with time, rather than lessened. Their
-natures seemed to be in direct antagonism, and every effort to make things
-pleasant between them completely failed. My mother often made such efforts in
-her quiet loving way; Jessie herself wooed him, after her fashion, when the
-humour was on her; but he was implacable, except on one occasion to which I
-shall presently refer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He ought,' said Jessie to me, 'to be at the head of a
-monastery of monks; he thinks it is a crime even to laugh. What sort of a young
-man was he, I wonder?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could have told her, but the seal of secrecy was on my
-tongue. I need scarcely say that all my sympathies were with Jessie. I was an
-attentive observer of the state of things at home, and I had many confidential
-conversations with my mother concerning matters. Loving Jessie as I did, I could
-not, in my heart, be tolerant and kind to uncle Bryan, as she begged me to be;
-the hard and stern rules which he had set down for himself, the following out of
-which by us might possibly have won his favour, would have made life a burden. I
-applied these rules to himself, and his own life was his own condemnation. There
-was no question in my mind as to whether he was right or wrong. But I could not
-win my mother to my way of thinking; nor did I endeavour after a little while,
-for I saw that it gave her pain. Never did a hard word pass her lips concerning
-him; she had affectionate excuses for him in every fresh difference between him
-and Jessie. I thought she was wrong, but I did not tell her so, nor did I
-distress her by endeavouring to explain to her that her own conduct was a
-contradiction to her words. That she never missed an opportunity to be tender
-and gentle to Jessie was a sufficiently strong argument against uncle Bryan. In
-her love for my mother Jessie never wavered; it seemed to me to grow stronger
-every day. Sometimes when we were at home together--it was not a very frequent
-occurrence now, for Jessie and I were generally out of an evening at the Wests',
-or at a theatre for which orders had been given to us--I observed Jessie
-watching us; but when she saw my eyes upon her, she would turn hers away
-thoughtfully. One night we had come home late; uncle Bryan was abed; my mother
-had prepared supper for us. We sat down, and after supper fell into silence; I
-do not know what I was thinking of, but we remained silent for many minutes.
-Happening to look in the direction of my mother, I saw her wistful eyes upon me,
-and at the same moment Jessie rose, and, kneeling before my mother, drew her
-face down, and kissed it. I was by their side in an instant, and the three of us
-were clasped in one embrace; but Jessie quickly released herself, and left me
-and my mother together.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Time went on and there was no change, except that we were
-growing older, and that Jessie was growing more and more beautiful. I was
-getting along well, and as I was earning fair wages, I contributed, with pride,
-a fair sum towards the expenses of the house. I was enabled to make my mother
-and Jessie many little presents now, and I sometimes coaxed my mother to buy
-Jessie a new dress or a new hat, and not to let her know that they came from me.
-On the anniversary of my twenty-first birthday we had a party at home, the four
-of us, and were happier and more comfortable in each other's society than we had
-been for a long time. Even uncle Bryan softened--not only towards me, but
-towards Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your boyhood is over,' said uncle Bryan; 'you are now a man,
-with a man's responsibility, and a man's work to do in life. Do it well.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will try to, uncle,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To perform one's duties,' continued uncle Bryan, 'taxes a
-man's judgment very severely, and as a man's judgment is generally the slave of
-his inclination, it is seldom that he can look back upon his life with
-satisfaction.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't quite understand that,' I observed; 'if a man's
-inclinations are good----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan interrupted me, for I had paused. He took up my
-words. 'Inclination is an idle selfish imp. Life is full of temptations, and
-inclination leads us to them; we follow only too readily.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All that we can do,' said my mother, caressing me fondly, 'is
-to do our best; we are often the slave of circumstances, Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In many cases,' he replied, 'not in all, a man can rise above
-them. We do not exercise our reason sufficiently. We cry and fret like children
-because things are not exactly as we wish.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you?' asked Jessie quickly. He answered her evasively. 'I
-have my sorrows.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad of that,' said Jessie, in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is more wisdom in your remark,' he said, with a
-thoughtful observance of her, 'than you probably imagine. I give you credit for
-using it in the best and kindest sense.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I meant it in that sense,' said Jessie gently, drawing a
-little nearer to him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Will you tell me why you are glad that I should have
-sorrows?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For one reason----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It does not remove you so far from us,' said Jessie, with
-less confidence than she usually exhibited.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I try to do that?' he asked. 'I try to remove myself from
-you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think so,' she answered. 'You are not angry with me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, child,' he said, and the gentleness of his tone surprised
-me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But for sorrow and trouble,' mused my mother, the tenderest
-qualities of our nature would never be shown. God is very good to us, in our
-hardest trials. Dear Bryan! I am thinking of the time when Chris and I were in
-London without a friend. As I look upon my darling boy now, and think of the
-happy future there is before him----' She did not complete her sentence, but she
-went towards uncle Bryan, and stooped and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say no more, Emma,' he said huskily; you do not know how
-vastly the balance is in your favour.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Notwithstanding your sorrows? questioned Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' he replied, with an approving nod, notwithstanding my
-sorrows. You are sharp-witted, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you, uncle,' she said merrily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was almost like the commencement of a new and more
-harmonious era in our relations with one another.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How old are you, Jessie?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall be eighteen in a little more than three months. A
-girl becomes a woman at eighteen, I am told. I shall expect to be treated with
-dignity then, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The greatest wonder of the evening was reserved for its close.
-Uncle Bryan was the first to rise and wish us good-night. He grasped my hand
-warmly, and kissed my mother. He did not offer to shake hands with Jessie, but
-wished her good-night, and lingered at the door, waiting for her response; but
-it did not come. He turned to go, but before he could leave the room, she was by
-his side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why are you so kind to others,' she asked, and so cold to
-me?' He stood silent, looking upon the ground. I want to love you if you will
-let me; I want you to love me. Say &quot;Good-night, dear Jessie,&quot; and kiss me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He did exactly as she desired. 'Good-night, dear Jessie,' he
-said, and they kissed each other. He drew his arm round her, and I saw a tender
-light flash into his face, and rob it of its habitual sternness of expression.
-But it was gone in a moment, and he with it.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_26" href="#div1Ref_26">CHAPTER XXVI.</a></h4>
-<h5>WE ENJOY A DECEITFUL CALM.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The harmonious relations between uncle Bryan and Jessie which
-my birthday seemed to have inaugurated continued for more than a fortnight, a
-result entirely due to Jessie's untiring efforts to conciliate him, and to 'keep
-him good,' as she expressed it. On the day following that on which I came of
-age, he showed symptoms of irritability at the tenderness into which he had been
-betrayed--for that undoubtedly was the light in which he viewed it; he had a
-suspicion that he had been played upon, and he was annoyed with himself for his
-weakness. Having, I doubt not, thought the matter well over during the night,
-and having quite made up his mind to vindicate himself, he came down in the
-morning more than usually morose and reserved, and received Jessie's
-affectionate advances in his coldest and most repellent manner. But Jessie would
-not permit him to relapse into his old cross humour; she charmed it out of him
-by a display of wonderful submission and tenderness, and by answering his
-snappish words with gentleness. In this way she disarmed him, and he, after some
-resistance, and with a singular mixture of pleasure and ungraciousness in his
-manner, allowed himself to be beguiled by her. The truth of the proverb that 'a
-soft answer turneth away wrath' was never better exemplified. If, when she had
-wooed him into a kinder mood, she had shown any signs of triumph, her influence
-over him would have come to an end immediately; he watched furtively for some
-such sign, and detecting none, resigned himself to this new and pleasant
-beguilement. Whether Jessie's conduct sprang from impulse or reason, she could
-not have behaved more wisely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was greatly rejoiced, and told me from day to day
-all that passed between these opposite natures. That the links of home love
-which bound us together were being strengthened was a source of exceeding
-delight to her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And it is all Jessie's doings, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is, my dear. I scarcely believed her capable of so much
-gentleness and submission.' (Here I thought to myself, 'I believe no one but I
-knows of what Jessie is capable.') 'When your uncle is most trying----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'As he often is,' I interrupted, 'and without cause.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, my dear, if you will have it so. When he is most
-trying, she is most gentle, and she wins him to her side almost despite himself.
-And, Chris, I really think he likes it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who would not,' I exclaimed, 'when wooed by Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is in her power,' said my mother, with a sweet smile of
-acquiescence, 'to make a great change in him. There is an undercurrent of deep
-tenderness in your uncle's nature, and Jessie is reaching it by the most
-delicate means. If she will only have patience! for it will take time, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But these fair appearances were treacherous. Neither my mother
-nor I saw the clouds that were gathering, and when the storm burst I was
-impressed by the unhappy conviction that I, and I alone, was the cause. How
-little do we know of the power of light words lightly spoken! But for certain
-inconsiderate words which I had used, there would certainly have been sunshine
-in our house for a much longer time. As it was, this better aspect of things was
-destined soon to come to an end, and to come to an end in a way which introduced
-not only a more bitter discord between Jessie and uncle Bryan, but imbued us
-insidiously with a want of faith in one another. The storm broke suddenly, and
-without forewarning to uncle Bryan and my mother. But in the mean time the
-harmony was almost perfect. Jessie, when she went to bed, no longer parted from
-uncle Bryan with a careless 'Good-night,' but kissed him regularly every morning
-and every night, and he submitted to the caress without, however, inviting it by
-look or word. But even that wonder took place on a certain evening when Jessie,
-with a touch of her old ways upon her, wished us all good-night in a careless
-tone, and without kissing uncle Bryan. She opened and closed the door, but did
-not leave the room, and placed her fingers on her lips with a bright eager look
-in our direction, warning us not to betray her. Uncle Bryan's back was towards
-us, and he made no motion at first. Jessie stole quietly behind his chair, and
-stood there in silence. Presently, uncle Bryan turned his head slowly to the
-door, with something of a yearning look of regret in his face, and at the same
-instant Jessie's arms were round his neck, and her lips were pressed to his.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't be angry with me,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Angry, Jessie! I thought you had forgotten me. But you are as
-full of tricks as Puck was.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't help it, uncle Bryan. Good-night!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night, my dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And Jessie went to bed with a very light heart, and left light
-hearts behind her. It was apparent that these enchanting ways were pleasant to
-uncle Bryan, and I told Jessie so.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It softens him, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It takes a long time to soften a rock,' she observed, with a
-thoughtful smile.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If anybody can do it, you can, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You think nothing but good of me, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I only say what I feel. And you really want uncle Bryan to
-love you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes--more than I can say--and I can scarcely tell why.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Except,' I said, with a foolish hesitation, 'that you like to
-be loved by everybody.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps it is because of that, Chris. I <i>do</i> like
-everybody to love me. It is much nicer so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">If I wanted any consolation I supplied it by observing: 'To be
-sure, there are different kinds of love.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Indeed!' exclaimed Jessie tantalisingly. 'Is it like uncle
-Bryan's sugar, of different shades and different degrees of sweetness? Some of
-it tastes very sandy, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, now you are joking, Jessie!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not in a joking humour. I want to speak seriously.
-Chris, I have sometimes wondered that you have never asked me questions about
-myself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In what way, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'About myself, before I came here. When one likes any one very
-much, one is naturally curious to know all about one.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I had my reasons, Jessie. When you first came, mother wished
-me not to ask you any questions. She said it would be like an attempt to steal
-into uncle Bryan's confidence. He might have secrets, she said, which he would
-not wish us to know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Secrets!' she mused. 'What can I have to do with them? And
-yet, it is strange, now I think about it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like you to tell me all about yourself,' I said; 'it
-doesn't matter now that you have spoken of it first yourself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was thinking of a secret that I have, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I composed myself to receive her confidence.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I don't know what it is myself, yet. It is in a letter;
-perhaps----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps nothing. It is only a letter that I am not to open
-until I am eighteen years of age. That will not be long, Chris. We will wait
-until then, and then I will tell you all I know. Let us blow it away till that
-time comes.' She blew a light breath. 'I wanted to make you a present on your
-birthday, but I did not have money enough then. Shall I give it to you now?' I
-held out my hand eagerly, and Jessie took from her pocket a small card-box. 'It
-is in this. What do you think it is?' I made a great many guesses, but she shook
-her head merrily at all of them. 'I went to look at it every day in the
-shop-window, afraid that some one might buy it before I had saved up money
-enough.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I opened the box, and took from it a small silver locket,
-heart-shaped, with the words engraven on it, 'To Chris, with Jessie's love.'
-Unspeakable happiness dwelt in my heart as I gazed upon the emblem. As I held it
-in my hand tenderly, it seemed to me a living link between Jessie and me--an
-undying assurance of her love. Nothing so precious had ever been mine. My looks
-satisfied Jessie, and she clapped her hands in delight.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So you like it, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will never, never part with it, Jessie. But I want a piece
-of ribbon; may I have that piece round your neck?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Take it off yourself, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">What a bungler I was, and how long it took me to remove the
-piece of simple ribbon, need not here be described. I know that while my
-trembling fingers were about her neck, Jessie, in reply to a look, said, 'Yes,
-you may, Chris;' and that I kissed her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now, Chris,' she said, 'I want to speak to you about
-something that is troubling me very much. When you said the other night that
-uncle Bryan was an atheist, were you in earnest?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I said what I believed,' I answered with an uneasy feeling.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And he <i>is</i> an atheist?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am afraid he is, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Has he ever told you so?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, no; there are some things that one scarcely dares to
-speak of.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is if one is weak and a coward. I am not that, and I
-don't think you are, Chris. Then I suppose you have never spoken to uncle Bryan
-about religion?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not a word has ever passed between us upon religious
-matters.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'An atheist is a person who does not believe in God, is he
-not, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was sensible that the discussion of so solemn a subject
-might lead to grave results, and I wished to discontinue it; but Jessie said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't be weak, Chris; I think I ought to know these things,
-and if we can't speak together in confidence, no two persons in the world can.
-Of course I can easily find out what I want to know; Gus West will tell me
-everything; but I came to you because we are nearer to each other.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nearer and dearer, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Chris; and now tell me what you know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I told her all that I knew concerning atheism, and all that I
-knew concerning uncle Bryan in connection with it. 'When I was a boy, Jessie,
-scarcely a week after we came to live with uncle Bryan, I heard him say that
-life was tasteless to him, and that he believed in nothing. I thought of it
-often afterwards.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Life was tasteless to him <i>because</i> he did not believe
-in anything; that is the proper view to take of it. If a person does not believe
-in anything, he cannot love anything. Can you imagine anything more dreary than
-the life of a person who does not love anybody, and who has nobody to love him?
-I can't. A person might as well be a stick or a stone--better to be that, for
-then he couldn't feel. But the words that uncle Bryan used may not have meant
-what you suppose, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They came in this way, Jessie. On the first Sunday we were
-here, mother asked uncle Bryan if he was going to church. He said that he never
-went to church. Mother was very sorry, I saw, but she did not say anything more.
-On that same night, uncle Bryan was reading a book, and he read aloud some
-passages from it. Mother asked him what was the name of the book, and he
-answered, <i>The Age of Reason</i>. When he laid the book aside, mother took it
-up, and looked at it; and then she sent me upstairs for the Bible. That was all;
-but I didn't quite know what was the real meaning of it until a long time
-afterwards, when I found out what kind of a book <i>The Age of Reason</i> is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tell me what it is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a book written by an atheist for atheists; it might
-almost be called the Atheist's Bible, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And did you never speak to your mother about uncle Bryan's
-religion?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have tried to, but mother is like me; there are some things
-she does not like to speak of.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And this is one of them,' said Jessie, following out her
-train of thought; 'and out of your love for her, when she said, &quot;Let us talk of
-something else, my dear,&quot; you have talked of something else.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is so, Jessie. It is almost as if you overheard what we
-said.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is easy to see into your mother's heart, Chris. She did
-not like to speak about uncle Bryan's religion, because she loves him, and
-because she wants you to love him. Now, if it had been anything that would have
-made uncle Bryan stand out in a good light, she would have encouraged you to
-speak about it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is true enough, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, your mother is all heart.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She is everything that is good, if you mean that?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do mean that; she is the best, the sweetest, the dearest
-woman in the world. Ah, if I were like her! But I am very, very different. What
-I say and what I think comes more often out of my head than out of my heart.
-Chris, it is impossible for an atheist to be a good man!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I saw the pit we were walking into, but I had not the skill to
-lead Jessie away from it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A man who does not believe in God,' she exclaimed, 'cannot
-believe in anything good. No wonder that he is what he is. I am not satisfied--I
-am not satisfied! It is shocking--shocking to think of!' She shook her head at
-herself, and I listened to her words in no pleasant frame of mind. She was
-showing me an entirely new phase in her character. It was Jessie reasoning, and
-reasoning on the most solemn of subjects. 'Why,' she continued, 'God made
-everything that's good, and if uncle Bryan is an atheist, he is a bad man. And
-yet your mother loves him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That she does, Jessie, with all her heart.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She couldn't love anything that's bad. If you were an
-atheist, Chris, I should hate you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank God, I am not, Jessie; even if I were, you could make
-me different. But I don't like to hear you speak like this,' I said, reproaching
-myself bitterly for having been the cause of this conversation; for when I had
-told Jessie that uncle Bryan was an atheist I had spoken with a full measure of
-dislike towards him. 'Mother does not reason as you do. After all, I may be
-mistaken, Jessie, and we maybe doing him a great injustice. I know so much that
-is good of him--more than you possibly imagine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And then I told her what, from a false feeling of shame, I had
-hitherto withheld from her--the story of my mother's hard battle with the world
-when we came to London, and of uncle Bryan's noble behaviour to us when we were
-sunk in the bitterest poverty.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All the time I have known him, Jessie, I have never known him
-to be guilty of an unjust action. He is as upright and honest a man as ever
-lived. Can such a man be a bad man?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Upright, honest, and just!' she repeated my words in a musing
-tone. 'It is an enigma.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He would die,' I continued warmly, 'rather than be guilty of
-a mean action. Now that we are speaking of him in this way, I am ashamed of
-myself for ever thinking ill of him. Mother was right, from the very first--she
-was right about him, as she always is about everything. If he were not so
-hard----But you don't know what trials he has gone through in his life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know some of them, but I am pledged not to speak of them to
-any one--not even to you. One thing happened to him--never hint, for my sake,
-Jessie, that you even suspect it--one thing happened to him so terrible and so
-dreadful that it is no wonder he is hard and cold and morose. Many and many a
-time mother has entreated me to be kind and charitable in my thoughts towards
-him, and instead of doing so I have repaid all his kindness by the basest of
-ingratitude.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How have you done that, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'By saying anything to you to cause you to dislike him. Ah,
-you may shake your head, but it is so, Jessie. If he were in my place, and I in
-his, he would come to me and ask me to forgive him; but I haven't the courage
-and fearless heart that he has, and I shouldn't know how to do it without giving
-him pain.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was really very remorseful, and sincerely so; but Jessie
-said nothing to comfort me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have I had no reason of my own, until the last few days, to
-dislike him? Has he behaved quite kindly to me? Chris, is it possible that I am
-wrong in nearly everything that I have done? How many times have I tried to
-conciliate him, and how many times has he answered me with unkind words! There
-is some reason for it--there is some reason for it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And yet remember, Jessie,' I said, without thinking, 'that he
-has given you a home, as he gave one to us, never asking for a return--never
-expecting one.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her face turned scarlet.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Would <i>he</i> have said that?' she asked, and left me
-without another word.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_27" href="#div1Ref_27">CHAPTER XXVII.</a></h4>
-<h5>THE STORM BREAKS.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie's moods were sufficiently variable and perplexing to
-cause me serious uneasiness, but I had no suspicion of what was in her mind when
-she spoke of uncle Bryan and his religious opinions, or I should have used my
-strongest efforts to avert the storm. Even when she made her first open move,
-which she did on the evening of the same day on which we had the conversation
-just recorded, I did not suspect her; truth to tell, my mind at that time was
-almost completely occupied by one theme--the locket which Jessie had given me,
-and its significance. As a charm, it was most potent in its power of bringing
-happiness to the wearer; I felt that while this locket was in my possession, it
-would be impossible for a cloud to shadow my life. But clouds came all too
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We were sitting together in the evening, in the most amicable
-of moods. Suddenly Jessie addressed uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan, who teaches the young?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He looked inquiringly at her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well,' she continued, understanding that an explanation was
-expected of her, 'one has to learn things; knowledge doesn't come of itself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Assuredly not,' he said, with evident pleasure and curiosity;
-'even parent birds teach their brood the use of their wings, and how to build
-their nests.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I did not know that; but it is of men and women I am
-speaking. They are higher than birds and beasts.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' he said, in a reflective tone; 'it is so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If the world were filled with nothing but old people, I
-wonder what sort of a world it would be!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would soon be no world at all,' he said; and added, with
-good-humoured depreciation, 'and while it lasted it would be a very disagreeable
-world, if the inhabitants in any way resembled me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never mind that, uncle Bryan; perhaps some people try to make
-themselves out a great deal worse than they are. So, then, there
-<i>must</i> be young people; that is a necessity.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'As much a necessity as the seasons; it is the law of nature.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A good law?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Undoubtedly, young philosopher.' His manner was almost
-blithe.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, then, to come back, as a friend of mine says. The young
-do not know what is right and wrong, and knowledge does not come of itself. Who
-teaches them?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The old,' he replied readily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because they are more likely to know what is right and
-wrong.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For that reason, I should say. They have had more time to
-learn, and they have had more experience of the world.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course,' she said, 'and experience means wisdom. The old <i>
-must</i>
-know better than the young.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Naturally.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And young people should be guided by old people?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would be better if that were more generally done.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is all I wanted to know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before many days were over, Jessie made her meaning apparent.
-She always accompanied my mother and me to church, and on the Sunday following
-this conversation she unmasked her battery.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan,' she said, while we were at breakfast, 'I want
-you to come to church with us this morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A startled look flashed into my mother's eyes; uncle Bryan
-stared at Jessie, and bit his lips. He did not reply immediately.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Young ladies have many wants,' he said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But this is a good want,' she pleaded. There was nothing
-saucy or defiant in her tone or manner; both were very gentle. 'But this is a
-good want. You will come with us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not come with you,' he replied sternly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you never go to church?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is my affair.' The corners of his lips began to twitch.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is it not good to go to church?' she asked, still in a gentle
-tone, her colour beginning to rise. I noted with consternation these familiar
-signs of the coming battle. The shock was the more bitter because, to all
-outward appearance, everything had been fair between them until this moment.
-Only the night before we had stopped up half an hour later than usual, because
-the time was passing very pleasantly to all of us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear,' said my mother, with a sweet smile, taking Jessie's
-hand in hers; 'my dear, you forget!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Forget what, mother?' asked Jessie; she sometimes addressed
-my mother thus. 'Am I doing anything wrong?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Even I could not help acknowledging to myself that Jessie, by
-a literal acceptation of my mother's words, was wilfully misinterpreting the
-nature and intent of her remonstrance; but I found justification for her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan is the best judge,' said my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know he is,' said Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let her go on,' cried uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The old stern look was in his face, and his voice was very
-harsh. I was the more unhappy, because I alone held the key of the situation.
-Jessie repeated the question, addressing herself to uncle Bryan.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is it not good to go to church?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do not say that,' was his reply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I want you to say one way or the other. It <i>must</i> be
-either good or bad. You will come with us!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not come with you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The high tone in which he spoke put a stop to the discussion,
-and we finished the breakfast in the midst of an unhappy silence. Indeed, we all
-seemed too frightened to speak. At the proper time my mother and I were ready
-for church, and were waiting downstairs for Jessie, whom my mother had left in
-their room dressing. But Jessie was somewhat more dilatory than usual. My mother
-went to the stairs, and softly called out,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now, my child, be quick, or we shall be late!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was the first time I had ever heard my mother call Jessie
-her child, and I pressed her hand fondly for it. She returned the pressure,
-almost convulsively, and presently Jessie came slowly downstairs. She was
-dressed with unusual care in a pretty new soft dress, concerning the making of
-which there had been great excitement; but her head was uncovered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Get on your hat quickly, my dear,' said my mother; 'we shall
-have to walk fast.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not going to church,' said Jessie, in a low tone, in
-which I--and I alone, I believe--detected a tremor.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie!' cried my mother, in a tone of suffering; 'Jessie, my
-dear child!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She stepped to Jessie's side, trembling from agitation. Jessie
-stood quite quietly by the table, and repeated, in a tone which she strove in
-vain to make steady,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not going to church this morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan was in the room, but spoke not a word.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you not well, my dear?' asked my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am quite well.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then why will you not come with us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not sure that it is right to go to church.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, if I tell you that it is'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan is older than you--twenty years older--and has
-had more experience of the world; therefore he must know better than you. If it
-were right to go to church, he would go, for I am sure he is an upright and just
-man.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At this direct reference to him uncle Bryan raised his head,
-and gazed fixedly at Jessie, and at her latter words something like a sneer
-passed into his face. My mother looked helplessly from one to another.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know,' said Jessie, 'that I am the cause of this trouble,
-and I wish--oh, I wish!--that I had never come into the house! No, I don't wish
-it, for then I should never have known you!' She stood very humbly before my
-mother. 'I feel how ungrateful I am: to uncle Bryan for giving me a home'--(how
-these words stung me!)--'and to you for giving me a love of which I am so
-undeserving.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The tears came into her eyes, and I went towards her, but she
-moved a step from me; and thus apart from each other we four stood for a few
-moments in perfect silence--a house pulsing with love and tenderness, but
-divided against itself. Then Jessie said suddenly:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan, if I go to church this morning, will you come
-with us some time during the year?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' he replied sternly and firmly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have asked you in the wrong way, perhaps,' she said; 'but
-that would not alter the thing itself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Whichever way you asked me, my answer would have been the
-same, young lady.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you tell me to go now, I will go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will tell you nothing. You are your own mistress.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How are the young to be taught, then, if the old will not
-teach them?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the presence of my mother's distress he had no answer to
-make, and I felt that it was out of consideration for her, and not from any
-desire to spare himself, that he went into the shop and left us to ourselves.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then Jessie to my mother:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hope you will forgive me, but if I knew I should have died
-for it I could not have helped doing what I've done. Don't be grieved for me; I
-am not worth it. I am going to spend the morning with Miss West.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother and I went to church by ourselves; but I fear that
-my mood was not a very devout one. My mind was filled with what had taken place
-at home, and its probable consequences.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_28" href="#div1Ref_28">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>COLOUR-BLIND.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The consequences were more serious than any one of us could
-possibly have imagined, with the single exception of uncle Bryan; where we
-hoped, he reasoned, and reasoned with bitterness against himself. There are in
-the world a sort of men with whom you are for ever at a disadvantage--men who
-from various motives are strangely, and ofttimes cruelly, reticent as regards
-themselves, their thoughts, and their actions. These men receive your
-confidences, but do not confide in you in return; they listen to your schemes,
-your hopes, your fears, but say not a word concerning their own. You wear your
-heart upon your sleeve; they lock up theirs jealously, and place upon them an
-impenetrable seal, which perhaps once or twice in a lifetime they
-remove--perhaps never. Uncle Bryan was one of these men. Scarcely by a look had
-he ever shown us his heart, and it required a nature not only more noble and
-generous, but more self-sacrificing, than mine not to misjudge him--to be even
-tolerant of him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">All our hopes of a more harmonious feeling between him and
-Jessie were utterly shattered, and my birthday, instead of being the
-commencement of a brighter and better era in our home relations, inaugurated an
-era of much unhappiness and discomfort. In the most unfortunate, and yet, as it
-seemed to me, in the most natural way, we were placed in a painfully-delicate
-position of antagonism. Who was to blame for this? I found the answer to this
-question without difficulty. Who but uncle Bryan was to blame? The part which
-Jessie had taken in the conversations between them was dictated by the best of
-feelings--was good and tender--and I admired her, not only for her courage, but
-for the affection she had displayed towards him, and for her efforts to wean him
-from his moroseness and infidelity. That she had failed was no fault of hers.
-The fault lay entirely in himself, and in his insensibility to softening
-influences. That, if she had succeeded, the result would have been both good and
-beautiful, was incontrovertible. I argued the matter very closely in my mind,
-for, notwithstanding my love for Jessie, I was anxious not to do uncle Bryan an
-injustice, and I could come but to one conclusion. What home could be happy with
-a master who possessed such a nature as his? He was like a dark shadow moving
-among us, and turning our joy into gloom.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These were partly the result of my reflections. Other
-considerations also arose. We were all bound to one another by ties of
-affection. That was a certainty, in the first blush of my reflections; but
-afterwards a doubt occurred to my mind. By what tie of affection was Jessie
-bound to uncle Bryan? He himself, when he told my mother and me the story of his
-life, had confessed it: by none. The charge of Jessie had almost been forced
-upon him, and his sense of duty had compelled him to accept it. It was not
-humanity that had impelled him to give Jessie a home. And if, after she came
-among us, she had failed to win his love, it was because his heart was hard and
-cold, and incapable of tenderness. I recalled a hundred little ways in which she
-had wooed him, and every one of them was an argument against him. Then I thought
-of her helpless dependent position, and my love for her and my anger against him
-grew stronger. That he was hard to her was an additional reason why I should
-show her openly, and without false weakness, that in me she had a champion and a
-friend who would be true to her until death. Even if I did not love her, I
-argued, this championship of one who was cast as a stranger amongst us would
-have been demanded of my manliness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">All these things were settled in my mind before my mother and
-I returned home from church on that memorable Sabbath, but not a word passed
-between us on the subject. I was silent out of consideration for my mother; she
-was silent out of the exquisite tenderness of her nature. Over and over again
-had she played the part of the Peacemaker between uncle Bryan and Jessie; but
-knowing uncle Bryan as she did, she felt that in this crisis she was powerless.
-The day passed quietly and unhappily. Jessie joined us as we passed the house of
-the Wests, and walked home with us; but during the whole of the day neither
-uncle Bryan nor she addressed each other, nor made any conciliatory movement
-towards each other. Once or twice she looked towards him, and the slightest look
-of kindness from him would, I knew, have brought her to his side. But although
-he was conscious of her gaze, he carefully avoided meeting it, and she,
-instinctively aware of his intention, looked towards him no more. It had been
-arranged that we should go to the Wests on this night; our visits there during
-the past fortnight had not been so frequent as usual; but as the time drew near,
-Jessie whispered to me that she intended to stop at home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will run round,' she said, 'and tell Josey that I can't
-come; but you can go.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall do as you do, Jessie,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thought afterwards that it was a great pity we stopped at
-home, for we were anything but lively company. Uncle Bryan might have been made
-of stone, so silent was he; Jessie rejected all my sympathising advances towards
-her; and even my mother was at a loss for words. I was curious about the
-'good-night' between uncle Bryan and Jessie when bedtime was near; it occupied
-Jessie's thoughts also; but he settled it by lighting his candle and going to
-bed without bidding any one of us good-night. It was evident from this and from
-uncle Bryan's behaviour during the week that followed that all harmonious
-relations between him and Jessie were at an end. On the next Sunday Jessie came
-to church with us as usual.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I fully expected that she would take an opportunity of
-speaking to me on the subject of her difference with uncle Bryan; but as the
-time passed, and she did not speak of it, I approached the subject myself. I
-told her my opinion, and praised her for her courage.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are speaking against uncle Bryan,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't help it, Jessie; 'he brings it on himself by his
-tyranny.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tyranny!' she exclaimed. 'Do you forget what you said, and
-what I believe--that he is upright, honest, and just?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In other things he is; but not in this. He is like a man who
-can see, and who is colour-blind.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is,' she said, with a deprecatory shake of the head,
-'that he is Jessie-blind. Ah, Chris, if he is blind to what there is good in me,
-are you not blind to what there is bad?' I was about to expostulate, but she
-stopped me: 'I am not quite satisfied with myself; I don't know that it would
-not have been better for me to have held my tongue. And another thing, Chris: I
-am not sure whether I am glad that you think I was right.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, Jessie, what things you are saying!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I must say them, Chris, for I know what is in my mind. Answer
-me this question. Supposing you were not fond of me, as I know you are--I don't
-mind saying it now, for I am speaking very seriously--would you think then that
-I was right? Do you side with me out of your head or out of your heart?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My reason approves of what you did,' I said earnestly; 'I
-want you to believe that, Jessie. Say that you do believe it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you must be glad to know that I am certain you are not
-to blame.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She shook her head again, and said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps it would have been better if all of you had been
-against me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But who <i>is</i> against you, Jessie?' I persisted. 'Mother
-is not, and I am not.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never mind that now, Chris. I can see things that you can't
-see, because----'and she took my hand, and looked straight into my eye.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because what, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because you are colour-blind, my dear,' she replied, half
-gravely, half sportively, in unconscious imitation of Josey West.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">From this time her visits to the Wests grew even more frequent
-than they used to be. She was there not only in the evening--on which occasions
-I was always with her--but very often also in the day. My mother spoke of this
-to me regretfully, and said she was afraid that Jessie mistrusted her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mistrust the sweetest woman in the world!' said Jessie. 'No,
-indeed, indeed I do not! But can't you see, Chris, that I am better away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, I can't see it, Jessie--not that I have any objection to
-the Wests; you know that I am very fond of them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Still colour-blind, Chris? you still can't see what I can
-see?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You seem to be putting riddles to me, Jessie,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, you must find the answers without my assistance; and as
-to my going to the Wests so often in the daytime, what comfort do you think I
-find at home?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">None, I was compelled reluctantly to confess.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you heard uncle Bryan complain of my absence?' continued
-Jessie. 'Does he say that I am too often away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Jessie, he has said nothing, to my knowledge.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because he sees nothing to regret in it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But mother does, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris,' said Jessie, with tearful earnestness, 'if I had a
-mother like yours I should thank God for her morning, noon, and night; and if I
-ever wavered in my love for her, in my faith in her, if I ever did anything to
-give her pain, I should pray to die!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You speak out of <i>my</i> heart, Jessie, as well as out of
-your own.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She gazed at me sadly and affectionately, and with something
-of wonder too.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, well, Chris,' she said, 'I have my plans; let me go my
-way.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was content that she should, having settled in my mind that
-her way was my way, and that her way was right. I had my plans also, which I did
-not disclose to Jessie. I was improving my position rapidly, and I knew that the
-day was not far distant when I should be able to support a home by my own
-labour--nay, I was at the present time almost in a position to do so. But there
-were things to be seen to and provided for--furniture and that like; and I was
-saving money for them secretly. I looked forward with eagerness to the
-accomplishment of my scheme, and I worked hard to hasten its ripening. The sweet
-pictures of home-happiness which I conjured up were sufficient
-incentives--pictures from which neither Jessie nor my mother was ever absent.
-'Then,' I thought, 'Jessie will not be a dependent upon one who is filled with
-unkind and uncharitable feelings towards her.' It was on my tongue a dozen times
-to tell Jessie how I was progressing in my scheme, but I restrained myself.
-'No,' I said, 'I will not say anything to her about it until I am quite ready.
-Then I will speak openly to her. She knows that I love her, and that I am
-working for her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I could not keep my plans entirely to myself. I unfolded
-them to my mother, who sat silent for a little while after I had finished. Then
-she said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you not forgotten something, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, mother, not that I know of.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Or some one, I should rather say--your uncle Bryan.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I returned a disingenuous answer. Uncle Bryan would never
-leave his shop. What would he find to do in a place where there were no
-customers to serve, and no business to look after?' (I added mentally, and where
-he was not master and tyrant?')</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, my dear child,' said my mother humbly and imploringly,
-'do not hide your heart from me!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother!' I cried, shocked at myself.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear child, forgive me! It was forgetfulness on your part, I
-know, and unkind of me to put such a construction upon it. My boy could not be
-ungrateful. He knows how I love him, how proud I am of him. How well I remember
-his promise to me one night--in the old times, my darling, when I used to take
-in needlework for a living--that he would try to grow into a good man; and how
-grateful I am to the Lord to see him after all these years a good and clever
-man, the best, the dearest son that mother was ever blessed with!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The old times came vividly before me, and a strangely-penitent
-feeling stirred my heart as I looked into my mother's face, with its expression
-of yearning love, and thought of the road I had traversed from boyhood to
-manhood. Bright and beautiful was this road with flowers of sweet affection; a
-heart whose tenderness time nor trouble could not weaken had cheered me on the
-way, and unselfish hands had made it smooth for me. The faithful mother who had
-strewn these flowers was by my side now, shedding the light of her sacred love
-upon me. She was unchanged and unchangeable, but I---- Ah, me! Let me not think
-of it. Let me kneel, as I used to kneel with my head in her lap when I was a
-boy, and when we were all in all to each other. Let me kneel and think of the
-long, long nights during which my mother used to work for bread for me; the
-trials, the disappointments, and the cheerful spirit bearing up through all,
-because a life that was dearer than her own was dependent upon her. The
-intervening years melted like a dream, and for a little while I was a boy again,
-and my heart was overflowing with tenderness for this dearest, best of women.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I remember that night too, mother,' I said, raising my head
-from her lap; 'I have been looking at it again. I lay awake for a long time
-watching you; you were sighing softly to yourself, and did not know that I was
-awake.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother smiled, and sang, as softly now as then, and as
-sweetly, the very words she had sung on that night.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You forget nothing, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing that is so near to my heart, my dear. Nor would I
-have you forget Chris, to whom it is we owe our release from the dreadful
-difficulties that once threatened to overwhelm us; for I was getting very ill,
-you recollect, when your uncle's letter came to us, and I felt that my strength
-was failing me. We owe all to him, my dear; wherever our home is he must share
-it. We must never leave him--never; the mere contemplation of it, after all
-these years, makes me very unhappy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Delicate as was the manner in which my mother had set my duty
-before me, she had made it quite clear to my mind; but love and duty were at war
-with each other. All my visions of home-happiness were darkened now by the
-shadow of uncle Bryan. Whichever way I turned his image seemed to stand, barring
-my way to the realisation of my dearest hopes.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_29" href="#div1Ref_29">CHAPTER XXIX.</a></h4>
-<h5>PREPARATIONS FOR AN IMPORTANT EVENT.</h5>
-
-<p class="normal">The coldness between uncle Bryan and Jessie did not diminish
-with time. As a matter of necessity they were compelled to speak to each other
-occasionally, but they did so with coldness and reluctance, and a distinct
-avoidance of the subject which had broken the bond between them. I say that they
-were compelled to speak to each other as a matter of necessity, but I may be
-mistaken; they may have spoken not out of consideration for themselves, but for
-my mother. Thinking over the matter since that time, I have understood how those
-two, if they had been alone, might have lived in the same house for years, and
-might have performed their separate duties conscientiously, without a word
-passing between them. For the sake of peace Jessie would have yielded, but uncle
-Bryan would have remained implacable. Results proved this. In vain did my mother
-strive to bring them together in a more amiable spirit; in vain did she speak
-separately to each of the other's good qualities, magnifying their merits,
-ignoring their faults. Her labour upon uncle Bryan was entirely lost; but it was
-different with Jessie, not because she thought she was wrong, nor for uncle
-Bryan's sake, but out of her love for my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are a child, my dear,' said my mother to her, 'and he is
-an old man. If for that reason alone, you should yield.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would be useless,' was Jessie's rejoinder; 'I have known
-him for a much shorter time than you, but I know his nature better than you do.
-I judge of it by my own.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You do both him and yourself injustice, my dear,' pleaded the
-peacemaker; 'if he were all wrong and you were all right, it would be your duty
-to give in.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Love and duty do not always go together,' said Jessie
-obstinately.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But we must make sacrifices, my child; what a miserable thing
-this life would be if some of us did not yield!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I thought,' said Jessie, softening, 'that I should not be
-insulted I would do as you wish willingly, most willingly--not for my sake, but
-for yours.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Try, then, for my sake.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will; and you will see what will come of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And Jessie tried, in her best manner and in good faith, with
-the result for which she was prepared.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can you not see now how it is?' she asked, with tears in her
-eyes. 'I have brought trouble into this house. How much better would it have
-been for you if I had never entered it! But it wasn't my fault. Ah, if I were a
-man I wouldn't stop in it for another hour! But I have no friends; and if it
-were not that I love to live, I might wish that I had never been born.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you do not regard me as a friend, my dear child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But Jessie, with cruel determination, refused to respond to
-the tender appeal, and turned rebelliously away. All this I learnt from my
-mother, who hid nothing from me, and it did not tend to make me happier.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Be patient, my darling,' my mother said; 'all will come right
-in the end.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did anything ever come right with uncle Bryan?' I fretfully
-asked. 'Think of the story he told us! I remember too well what you said when I
-asked if you would have me look on things as he does. You said it would take all
-the sweetness out of my life; and you were right. He has taken the sweetness out
-of it already.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not consider that it was the very refinement of cruelty
-to bring her own words in judgment against herself. On such occasions she would
-tremble from sheer helplessness; but with unwearied patience she would
-strengthen her soul, and strive, and strive, for ever with the same result. So
-wrapt was I in my own unhappiness, that it was only by fits and starts I gave a
-thought to hers; even that she was growing thinner and more sad, with this
-inward conflict of her affections, escaped me. Others saw it, but at that time
-the selfishness of my own grief made me blind.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But there were bright spots in my life during these days, even
-in the midst of these unhappy differences, in every one of which Jessie was the
-central figure. All that seemed to me worth living for was centred in Jessie;
-and she was never absent from my mind. She passed nearly the whole of her time
-with the Wests now--naturally enough, finding so little comfort at home--and as
-I was not happy out of her society, all my leisure was spent with her. This
-circumstance was introduced unpremeditatedly one evening when Jessie and I were
-preparing to go out. My mother, to tempt us to stop at home, had promised some
-little delicacies for supper, and mentioned it incidentally, when Jessie said
-that she should not want any supper when she came home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure to have supper with Josey West,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You go there a great deal, Jessie,' remarked my mother, with
-an anxious look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am happy there,' was Jessie's terse reply; 'but I don't
-want to take Chris away.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't want the sunflower to turn to the sun,' sneered
-uncle Bryan, with his usual amiability.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not thank you for the compliment,' said Jessie, 'for
-it isn't meant for one. Chris,' she exclaimed, turning suddenly to me, 'is the
-sun the only bright thing in the heavens? Is not the moon as lovely, and are not
-the stars the loveliest of all?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan took up the theme, continuing it to her
-disadvantage.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But one loses sight of these loveliest things of all when the
-glare of the sun is in his eyes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie bit her lips.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Am I to blame for going where my best friends are?' she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You go where your wishes take you. We are certainly not good
-enough for such a young lady as you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps not,' said Jessie defiantly, as she left the room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This was her custom, after all her attempts at conciliation
-had failed. Sometimes she would be silent; at others she would answer pithily
-and bitterly, and without thought, perhaps; but she always retired when she was
-becoming the subject of conversation. The old days of light skirmishing were at
-an end. Short and bitter battles of words, in which there was much gall, were
-now the fashion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was aware that for some time preparations were being made
-for an important evening at the Wests'. I was very curious about it, but Jessie
-would not allay my curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You shall know all at the proper time,' she said; 'in the
-mean time you can help me if you like.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course I will. What is that paper in your hand?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is one of my characters, Chris. See here. Pauline--I'm
-to play Pauline. And here's another--Mrs. Letitia Lullaby--that's me again. I
-must learn every word of the parts, and you can help me in them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know what you want, Jessie; I've heard Turk go through some
-of his parts.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Thus it fell to my lot to hear Jessie repeat from memory all
-that Pauline and Mrs. Letitia Lullaby have to say, giving her the cues, and
-correcting her until she was, as she said, 'letter perfect.' But as she
-continued to tease me, and would not let me into the secret of all this
-preparation, I applied to Josey West for information. The good-natured creature
-seldom refused me anything.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We are going to have a grand dress performance, my dear,' she
-said, 'and Jessie will play the principal characters in two pieces.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In dress?' I asked, in some amazement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In dress, my dear. The pieces are <i>Delicate Ground</i>, and <i>
-A Conjugal Lesson</i>; three characters in the first, and two in the second. Gus
-will play Mr. Simon Lullaby, Jessie's husband, in one piece, and Citizen
-Sangfroid, Jessie's husband, in the other. Brinsley, who is out of an
-engagement, has condescended--that is the word, my dear--condescended to play
-Alphonse de Grandier in <i>Delicate Ground</i>
-for one night only, by special request of a lady.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie?' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She is the lady referred to; the part is far beneath him, of
-course--these parts always are, my dear, unless they are the principal
-parts--but he'll play it very well; I shouldn't wonder if he doesn't try to cut
-Gus out, so that we are sure to have some good acting. Between the pieces there
-will be some dancing by Sophy, and Florry, and Matty, and Rosy, and Nelly--it's
-good practice for them--and as there's a change of performance at the Royal
-Columbia, Turk hopes to be able to get away in time to see the last piece, and
-to recite &quot;The Dream of Eugene Aram.&quot; He wished very much to recite another
-piece, as he was sick of committing murders, he said; but he does Eugene Aram
-also by special request of a lady. He does it very finely too; one night at a
-benefit two ladies went into hysterics in the middle of it, and had to be
-carried out of the theatre. There was a paragraph in the
-<i>Era</i> about it, and it was put in some country papers as well. Turk is very
-proud of that; he often speaks of it as a triumph of art. I ought to play
-something as well, oughtn't I, my dear, on Jessie's night? But I shall have
-enough to do as acting-manager.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why do you call it Jessie's night?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because it's the first time she ever dressed to act. Why,
-Turk has got some bills printed!--he's a good-natured fellow, is Turk, the best
-in the whole bunch, my dear! Here's one; but you mustn't say you've seen it.
-Jessie doesn't know anything about it yet.' And Josey West produced a printed
-bill, which read as follows:</p>
-<br>
-<p class="center"><img src="images/playbill.png" alt="playbill"></p>
-
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey West drew my particular attention to various parts of
-the programme, such as the price of the stalls. 'In a fashionable theatre, my
-dear, such as this is,' she said, with a whimsical look,' you can't make the
-stalls too high;' and the notice about babies in arms--'You know what a famous
-family we are for babies, my dear;' especially to the words, 'Free list
-suspended, press excepted.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you don't expect the press,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not exactly the press; but somebody of as much importance as
-a critic may honour us with his company. But never mind him just now. Isn't the
-programme splendid? It was Turk's idea, and he drew it up, and had it printed,
-all out of his own pocket. No one knows anything of it but you and me and him,
-so you must keep it quiet--we want to surprise Jessie with it when the night
-comes. Turk says that when Jessie is a famous actress this playbill will be a
-great curiosity.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When Jessie becomes a famous actress!' I repeated, with a
-sinking heart.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear; and she will be if she likes. Do you know,
-Chris, that if I were you--I really think if I were you'--and she paused, and
-looked at me kindly and shrewdly--'that I would buy two of the nicest bouquets I
-can see to throw to Jessie when she is called on at the end of the pieces. We'll
-manage between us, you and me, that no one shall see them until the proper
-moment; you buy them, and give them to me on the sly before the audience
-arrives, and I'll place them under your seat, so that no one shall know. And
-now, my dear, I want you to tell me something. If you don't like to, don't; and
-if I am asking any thing that I oughtn't to ask, all you've got to do is to tell
-me of it, and I'll drop it at once. Is Jessie comfortable at home? Ah, you
-hesitate and turn colour; if you speak, you'll stammer. Don't say a word; I'll
-drop the subject.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, why should you?' I said. 'You are a good friend, and you
-have a reason for asking.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am as good a friend, my dear, to you and Jessie as you'll
-find in all your knockings about in the world. Mind that! Don't you forget it,
-or you'll hurt my feelings, as the Kinchin says. You've only got one better
-friend, and that's that dear mother of yours, that I'd like to throw my arms
-round the neck of this minute, and hug.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, you've never spoken to her, Josey!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What of that? I've heard of her, and that's enough for Josey
-West. And a good mother makes a good son. I like you first for yourself, and I
-like you second for your mother (<i>not</i> out of a riddlebook, my dear, though
-it sounds like it)! As for my reasons, why, yes, I have my reasons for asking,
-or I shouldn't ask.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie does not make a confidant of any one but you, I
-suppose, Josey.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of no one but me, my dear, and I know what I know, and
-suspect a great deal more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If Jessie confides in you, I may. She is not so happy at home
-as she might be and as she deserves to be.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you, my dear; I only wanted to make sure. Now we'll
-drop the subject.' She went through some comical pantomime, as though she were
-sewing up her lips. 'Stop and see the girls go through their ballet. Come along,
-Sophy and Florry and all of you; the bell has rung for the curtain.' And she
-began to sing, first, however, whispering to me that we should have real music
-on <i>the</i> night. 'No expense, my dear; it's all ready to hand in the
-family.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then the children arranged their figures and positions to
-Josey West's singing, and rehearsed the ballet with the seriousness of grown-up
-people.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Neither uncle Bryan nor my mother knew anything of Jessie's
-passion for acting. Jessie held me to my promise of not saying anything about it
-at home; and on occasions when I urged her to let my mother know of it, she
-refused in the most decided manner, and said she had her reasons for keeping it
-a secret.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As for myself, I found myself in a labyrinth. So conflicting
-were the influences around me, that I scarcely dared to think of the plans I had
-cherished but a little while since, and hoped to see fulfilled. I could only
-hope and wait.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_30" href="#div1Ref_30">CHAPTER XXX.</a></h4>
-<h5>JESSIE'S TRIUMPH.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The eventful evening arrived. It had been a difficult matter
-with me to keep the knowledge of the affair to myself, for I was in a state of
-great excitement, and my mother noticed it; but she did not seek my confidence
-except by kind looks of interest and curiosity. During the day, in accordance
-with Josey West's advice, I bought two handsome bouquets, which I conveyed to
-Josey secretly, and which she hid under my seat in the kitchen. Great pains had
-been taken with the room, which, with benches and chairs properly arranged, and
-the stage curtain, and a row of stagelights with green shades to them, really
-presented the appearance of a miniature theatre. It was rather gloomy,
-certainly, for all the candles were required for the stage, but that was a small
-matter. The room was filled chiefly by the West family, of whom every available
-member was present, down to the youngest baby in arms, and among the audience
-were a few persons with whom I was not acquainted, but whose appearance, with
-one exception, clearly denoted that they belonged to the dramatic profession.
-Two male and two female Wests, of tender age, comprised the band; the girls
-played the violin, and one of the boys played the flute, and the other the
-cornopean--which latter instrument ran short occasionally in the matter of wind.
-Everybody was very excited and very merry, and Josey West's queer little figure
-was continually darting before and behind the curtain.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Would you like to see her?' the good-natured creature
-whispered to me. 'Of course you would. Come along, then. She's dressed for
-Pauline.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I went with Josey behind the scenes to Jessie's dressing-room,
-which had been built for the occasion with shop-shutters, and blankets, and odds
-and ends. Jessie looked wonderfully fascinating and beautiful in her fine dress,
-and a painful feeling of inferiority came upon me in the presence of so much
-grace and loveliness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And how do I look, Chris?' she asked, as she stood before me,
-with flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I sighed as I told her that I had never seen any one look more
-lovely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>She'll</i> never want a wig, my dear!' said Josey West
-admiringly, as she ran her fingers through Jessie's beautiful hair. 'Did you
-ever see such hair and such a complexion? All her own, my dear--scarcely a touch
-of the hare's foot. But, bless the boy! he looks as if he was sorry instead of
-pleased. That's not the way to make her act well. There! kiss her, and go back
-to your seat. The music's beginning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My cheeks were as red as Jessie's as Josey West pushed me
-towards Jessie, and turned her back; but my arm was round Jessie's waist
-nevertheless, and Jessie, moved by a sudden impulse, kissed me very
-affectionately. It was the first time our lips had ever met.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Done?' cried Josey West. 'There! I'm sure you feel more
-comfortable now. Now run away, or I shall have you turned out of the house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In a very happy frame of mind I took my seat among the
-audience, whose enthusiasm was unbounded. The stage management was simply
-perfect; there was not a hitch in the entire performance. Directly the music
-ceased, amidst a general clapping of hands and stamping of feet--our
-satisfaction was so complete that we wanted everything done over again--a bell
-tinkled for the curtain, which was promptly drawn aside, and the comic drama of <i>
-Delicate Ground</i> commenced. General interest of course centred round Jessie,
-who at first was slightly nervous, but she grew more confident as the scene
-progressed. To say that she played well is to say little; her acting on that
-night is fixed in my mind as the most perfect and beautiful I have ever seen. It
-was not only my opinion, it was the opinion of all, and the applause that was
-bestowed upon her was astonishing in its genuineness and heartiness. 'By
-heavens, sir!' I heard one of the visitors with whom I was not acquainted say to
-another--'by heavens, sir, she's peerless--peerless! She'll make a sensation
-when she comes out.' There was an entire absence of envy in the praise that was
-given to her; and the women, as well as the men, were extravagantly enthusiastic
-in their demonstrations. I heard remarks also passed from one to another, to the
-effect that Gus and Brinsley never acted better in their lives; they certainly,
-after the fashion of Turk, 'went in' with a will, and it was difficult to say
-which of them deserved the palm of victory. I liked Brinsley best, because he
-did not play the part of Jessie's husband, but this view I kept to myself. Had
-it not been for the kiss Jessie had given me, the memory of which made me
-triumphantly happy during the whole of the night, I might have been rendered
-uneasy by the passion which Gus West threw into the last lines of his part: 'You
-<i>have</i> no rival. You have been, and are, sole mistress of this my heart.
-You have been, and will be, sole mistress of this my house.' But even these
-words, and the passion with which they were spoken, did not disturb me, and when
-the curtain fell upon the scene, my only feeling was one of pride in Jessie's
-triumph. There were loud calls for Pauline; and Turk, who came in just as the
-curtain fell, joined vehemently in the applause, although he had seen nothing of
-the piece. He was accompanied by the old actor, whom I knew as Mac, and whose
-acquaintance I had made on the memorable night I spent at the Royal Columbia.
-When Jessie, led on by Gus and Brinsley West, came before the curtain and
-curtsied her acknowledgments, and when I threw my bouquet at her feet, the
-cheers were redoubled again and again; and all acknowledged that there could not
-have been a greater success. Then there was a merry interval, which was occupied
-by gossip and refreshments; and then the ballet and terpsichorean revel by Josey
-West's sisters, towards whom the audience were disposed to be more critical. The
-young misses acquitted themselves admirably, and were followed by Turk West,
-whose 'Dream of Eugene Aram' was a most tremendous elocutionary effort. To me it
-was terribly grand, and the intense earnestness of Turk made a deep impression
-upon me. He was rewarded by unanimous cries of 'Bravo, Turk!' 'Well done, old
-fellow!' and a call before the curtain, which he acknowledged in his best
-manner. Jessie's appearance in <i>The Conjugal Lesson</i>, as Mrs. Simon
-Lullaby, was, if possible, more successful than her Pauline; but Turk, who found
-a seat next to me, was somewhat sarcastic on his brother Gus. Perhaps he was
-jealous too; at all events, he whispered to me that he wished <i>he</i> had had
-the opportunity of playing Mr. Simon Lullaby; 'then you would have seen a piece
-of acting, Chris, my boy, which you would not easily have forgotten.' It was
-late when the performances were over. Jessie was of course called on again, and
-received my second bouquet, and then the company prepared to depart. But Josey
-West cried out from behind the curtain that they were all to stop to supper, and
-in a short time these male and female Bohemians, the merriest and best-hearted
-crew in the world, were regaling themselves on bread-and-cheese and pickles and
-beer, amid such a din of joviality that you could scarcely hear your own words.
-I went behind to Jessie's room, and waited until she was dressed; Josey West
-heard me walking restlessly about, and called to me when Jessie was ready.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And what do you think of us now?' she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not stint my measure of admiration, and I told them what
-I had heard one of the visitors say, that Jessie's acting was
-peerless--peerless.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And so it was,' said Josey West. 'Which one was it, my dear,
-who said that--a tall thin man, with a sandy moustache?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; but he was sitting near, and I saw him nodding his head,
-and clapping, as though he was very pleased.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's a good sign; he's a fine judge of acting. He'll want
-to be introduced to you, Jessie; so will they all. I shouldn't wonder----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing, my dear, unless you can make something out of the
-circumstance that that gentleman's name is Rackstraw, and that he prepares young
-ladies for the stage. That was a good thought of yours, my dear, bringing these
-bouquets. Such beautiful ones, too! I wish I had such a prince!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie laughingly bade Josey West hold her tongue, and I saw
-with delight that she had placed in her bosom a flower from one of the bouquets.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was very kind of you, Chris,' said Jessie, giving me her
-hand, which was burning with excitement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You must be tired, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I could go all through it again,' she replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's the way with us excitable creatures,' observed Josey
-West complacently; 'we're like thoroughbred race-horses, we can go on till we
-drop. Now, Jessie, come along and be praised.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The praises she received were sufficient to turn any one's
-head; she was surrounded and kissed by all the women, and the men could not find
-words sufficiently strong to express their gratification. Mr. Rackstraw, the
-gentleman who prepared young ladies for the stage, was very eulogistic and very
-inquisitive, asking personal questions with a freedom which did not please me.
-But neither Josey West nor Jessie shared my feeling in this respect--Josey
-especially taking great interest in what he said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you think she would succeed?' said Josey West.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure of it, Josey,' he answered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He addressed all in the room by their Christian names, and was
-evidently regarded as a man of importance.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But there is a great deal to be learnt?' asked Jessie; 'is
-there not?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, assuredly, my dear.' (Another sign of familiarity which
-displeased me. I did not mind it from the members of the West family; there was
-a homely and honest ring of affection in the term as they used it, but it
-sounded quite differently from Mr. Rackstraw's lips.) 'A great deal.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And it would cost money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, yes,' he said promptly, 'it would cost money--but not
-much, not much. Josey, I took the liberty of bringing a friend with me--Mr.
-Glover.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mr. Glover, the best-dressed man in the room, tall and dark,
-and between forty and fifty years of age, was the gentleman I had noticed who,
-alone among the audience, did not appear to belong to the dramatic profession. I
-had not paid any attention to him during the evening, but upon this direct
-reference I turned towards him, and saw at a glance, in my closer observance of
-him, that his station in life was higher than ours. Being introduced to Jessie,
-he thanked her for a most pleasant evening.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not a frequenter of theatres,' he said, 'but if you were
-upon the stage, I think I should be tempted to come very often to see you.' He
-spoke well and slowly, and with the manner of a person who was accustomed to
-reflect upon each word before it passed his lips. When he and his friend were
-gone, Josey West informed us that Mr. Rackstraw was a person of the greatest
-influence. Not only did he prepare young ladies for the stage, she said, but he
-was in connection with a theatrical agency, where important engagements were
-effected. Gus's name was down upon the books of this agency, and having in this
-way made Mr. Rackstraw's personal acquaintance, he had induced him to come down
-and see Jessie act. Josey was in high spirits because everything had gone off so
-well.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a real, complete, and splendid success,' she said, 'and
-ought to be repeated every evening until further notice. Hark--old Mac's going
-to speak!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The old actor had risen, glass in hand, and had expressed his
-wish to address a few words to the company--an intimation which was received
-with vociferous and lengthened applause.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Brothers and sisters in the noblest of all noble
-professions,' he said, 'this reception is not only cheering, but, coming upon me
-when I am in the sere and yellow----'(Here there were cries of 'No, no, old
-fellow; you've a good twenty years before you yet!')--'I use the language of
-those base and envious detractors who say it is time the old actor was laid on
-the shelf. Using their words, then, which Avon's Swan never thought would be so
-misapplied, this reception coming upon me when I am in the sere and yellow, is
-not only cheering but affecting. It recalls the memory of times when the humble
-individual before you never stepped upon the boards without one, and when old
-Mac's place--his proper and legitimate place in the ranks, won by the force of
-genius and hard study----'(Cries of 'Bravo, Mac! Go it!')--'I mean to--when his
-legitimate place, won, as I have said, by the force of hard study and genius,
-was not occupied by pretenders. But tempora mutantur, nos et mutamur in
-illis----' (The applause here lasted for full a minute) 'O yes, old Mac can show
-these pretenders the way to go! Tempora mutantur, et cetera, my sons, and may
-you never find it out in the same way as the humble individual who stands before
-you has! But it was not to speak of myself that I rose--the old actor never
-cares to thrust himself forward'--(general and good-humoured laughter)--'knowing
-as he does that the subject is weary, stale, and unprofitable. He knows that he
-is but &quot;a poor player, that struts and frets his hour upon the stage, and then
-is heard no more!&quot; But damme, my sons, the poor player is happy to know that in
-his old age he has honour, love, and, if not obedience, troops of friends.' ('So
-you have, old boy! Go on!') 'I intend to. I drink to you. Give me the cup. Nay,
-I have it'--(with a humorous look)--'not sparkling to the brim, but 'twill
-serve. &quot;Let the kettle to the trumpet speak. The trumpet to the cannoneer
-without. The cannons to the heavens, the heavens to earth.&quot; Old Mac drinks to
-those he loves!' (As the speaker drained his glass, the youngster who played the
-cornopean performed a flourish upon the instrument, and the other members of the
-company did their best to produce an appropriate demonstration.) 'But to the
-point. We have witnessed to-night a most remarkable performance by a young lady,
-who I am informed has never appeared upon the boards--a young lady who is
-destined to occupy a distinguished position--mark me, a distinguished
-position--and may old Mac live to see it! She has youth, she has grace, she has
-beauty, she has genius. In her presence I say it, my sons. The old actor knows a
-pretender when he sees him, and he knows genius when he sees it; he sees it
-here. In proposing the toast of this young lady's health' (Mac placed his glass
-upon the table, and waited until it was refilled), 'and in wishing her the
-success that always should, but sometimes doesn't, wait on merit, old Mac knows
-that he is performing a task which every one of you would like to have performed
-in his place. But damme, my sons, while old Mac lives, the old school of
-gallantry will never die out.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">How the toast was received, and with what enthusiasm it was
-drunk; how they all surrounded Jessie and petted her and complimented her; how
-she blushed and trembled at the praises which were showered upon her; and how
-these honours seemed to remove her farther and farther from me,--I have not the
-power to describe. It was two o'clock in the morning before the company broke
-up, and Jessie and I walked home. My heart was full almost to bursting, and I
-could not trust myself to speak. Not a word passed between us, but with Jessie's
-arm closely entwined in mine, and with her hand clasped in mine, I felt that
-without her I would not wish to live. When we reached home, I knocked softly at
-the street-door, but no answer came. I knocked more loudly, but still there was
-no answer. Surprised that my mother was not waiting up for us, I tried the
-handle of the door, and found that it was unlocked. I closed the street-door,
-and we entered the sitting-room, where a candle was burning. My mother was
-there, sitting by the table, with her head on her arm. I approached her in some
-alarm, and saw that she was asleep; her dreams must have been distressing ones,
-for she was sobbing bitterly.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_31" href="#div1Ref_31">CHAPTER XXXI.</a></h4>
-<h5>MY MOTHER EXPRESSES HER FEARS CONCERNING JESSIE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">One evening, as I was smartening myself up in my room,
-preparatory to going to the Wests', my mother entered, and said, almost humbly,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, can you spare me a few minutes?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Certainly,'I replied. 'Jessie is at the Wests', isn't she?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear. I'll not keep you long. I want to speak to you
-about her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on, mother,' I said, in a tone of satisfaction, for that
-was the subject I loved best to converse upon.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How you have grown, my darling! You are the image of your
-father, who was a fine handsome man. How proud I am of my son!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked in the glass, without any feeling of vanity. I always
-took pains with my appearance when I was about to present myself to Jessie, but
-I had no high opinion of myself, and I was never quite satisfied with the
-result.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You do your best to spoil me, mother,' I said, submitting
-myself to my mother, whose fond fingers were about my neck. 'Go on, about
-Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are in her confidence, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The words were used in the form of a question; and I was
-immediately conscious that they were the prelude to something of importance, for
-there was trouble in my mother's face. I also was troubled; a new sorrow had
-entered into my life, a sorrow with which of course Jessie was connected. All
-that there was for me of joy and pain in the world was associated with her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I hesitated in my answer. Jessie had pledged me to secrecy
-with reference to the peculiar nature of her intimacy with the Wests and to her
-passion for acting, and I would not betray her, not even to my mother. There
-were confidences between Jessie and me which even she could not share. My mother
-and I had but few opportunities for conversation during this time, for very
-little of my time was spent at home. Wherever Jessie went I was bound to follow.
-It did not matter--except in the sorrow that it caused me--that she gave me less
-encouragement than formerly; it did not matter that certain undefinable signs
-from her, which I had hitherto treasured in my heart of hearts as proofs of her
-love, came rarely and more rarely; the rarer they were the more precious they
-were. I found excuses for her: in my own inferiority, which hourly and daily
-impressed itself more painfully upon me; in my being poor; in her being so
-beautiful and so far above me. I could not see, I dared not think, how it was to
-end; but I followed her blindly, clung to her blindly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother observed my hesitation, and divined the cause.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nay, my dear,' she said, in a sad and gentle tone, 'I do not
-ask you to tell me anything you think you ought to keep to yourself. I have not
-forfeited <i>your</i> confidence, have I, my darling?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before I could reply, she placed her hand to her heart, and
-uttered an exclamation of pain.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother!' I cried.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is nothing, dear child,' she said; 'it is only a pain in
-my side that has come once or twice lately. Put your arms round my neck, my
-darling; it will pass away directly.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She rested her head upon my shoulder and closed her eyes,
-holding me tightly to her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am better now, dear child,' she said presently, with a
-sweet smile.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Could I see nothing in her face but physical pain? No,
-nothing. The old patient look was there, the old tender love was there. What
-more
-<i>could</i> I have seen, had I not been blind?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You ought to get advice, mother. Promise me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will, my dear; but it is nothing. I am not growing younger,
-Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You were speaking of Jessie, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear. I was about to say that Jessie has no one to
-look after her but me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And me,' I added proudly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you, my dear. I know what your feelings are towards her,
-but you are away at your work all the day, and then the duty devolves upon me
-alone.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie is a little different to me from what she was; I am
-beginning to think--sorely against my will, dear child--that she mistrusts me. I
-know that she is not happy, but I could comfort her if she would let me. It
-might be better for all of us if she would confide in me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure it would be, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She does not repulse me, Chris; she avoids me. When I have it
-in my mind to speak to her seriously, she seems to know what I am about to
-say--she is very bright and clever, my dear--and she obstinately refuses to
-listen; runs away, or turns me from my purpose by some means. I am very anxious
-about her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie can take care of herself,' I said, assuming an
-easiness I did not feel; she is not happy at home, as we know; but we know,
-also, who is to blame for that. I suppose she refuses to listen to you because
-she feels that the subject you wish to speak to her upon is a painful one. I
-should do the same in her place.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't blame her, my dear; don't think that I blame her. But
-I must not forget my duty. She has no mother; do not I stand in that relation to
-her?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I kissed my mother for these words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then, knowing that I wish her nothing but good, why does she
-avoid me so steadily? O Chris, my child! greater unhappiness than all may come
-from her distrust of me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A tremor ran through my frame. Not love alone, but pity, was
-expressed in my mother's face and tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't quite understand you, mother,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where does Jessie go to in the day, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where does Jessie go to in the day!' I repeated. 'Does she go
-anywhere?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you do not know, my dear; she hides it from you as well.
-For the last fortnight she has gone out every morning at eleven 'o'clock, and
-has not returned until four. I have put her dinner by for her every day, but she
-will not eat it, and she refuses to say where she has been.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I considered for a few moments, and soon arrived at a
-satisfactory conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is very simple. She goes to Miss West's, and she does not
-eat her dinner because she knows she is not welcome to it. It is uncle Bryan's
-dinner, and this is uncle Bryan's house. Jessie is very proud.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother shook her head. 'She does not go to Miss West's. I
-have not watched her, because I know that she would discover me, and that it
-would turn her more against me. But three mornings ago I saw her get into an
-omnibus which goes to the West-end. What friends can she have there, Chris? And
-if she has friends, should we not know who they are?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If she has friends!' I exclaimed, putting a brave face on the
-disclosure, although I was inexpressibly hurt at the knowledge that Jessie was
-keeping a secret from me. 'Do you suspect she has?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She must have, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked at my mother; there was more in her tone than her
-words implied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on, mother. You have something more to tell me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is best you should know, my darling,' said my mother in a
-tone of inexpressible tenderness, encircling my waist with her arm; it is best
-you should know, for you are in Jessie's confidence, and she will listen to you
-when she would not heed me. Yesterday afternoon, as I was walking home--I had
-been out on an errand for your uncle--a cab passed me, with two persons in it.
-One was a gentleman, the other was Jessie. Nay, my dear, don't shrink. There is
-no harm in that; the harm is in keeping it from us, her dearest friends, and in
-making a secret of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I controlled my agitation, foolishly believing that I could
-deceive this fondest of mothers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did the cab come to our door?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear; it did not come down the street. It stopped a
-few yards in front of me, and the gentleman assisted Jessie out----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't hide anything from me, mother; of course I shall speak
-to Jessie about it. Tell me exactly what you saw and heard.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I heard nothing; I shrank away, so that Jessie should, not
-see me. The gentleman said something to her, but she shook her head, and then he
-bade her good-bye and drove away. That is all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was enough to make me most unhappy, but still I strove to
-conceal my feelings. I endeavoured to make light of the circumstance, and I
-asked my mother in a careless tone whether she was sure it <i>was</i> a
-gentleman who accompanied Jessie. She said she was sure of it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What was he like?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tall and dark, and very well dressed.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Young?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' she answered, and I could not help feeling relieved at
-the information; nearer fifty than forty, I should say.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could not at the moment call to mind any person whom the
-description fitted, and I promised my mother that I would speak to Jessie about
-it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ask her to confide in me, my dear,' my mother said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As I walked towards the Wests', my mind was filled with what
-my mother had told me. I held the clue which would have led me to the truth, but
-I juggled with myself, and rejected it because the result was displeasing to me.
-I had never yet mustered sufficient courage to speak to Jessie plainly
-concerning her passion for acting, and what it was likely to lead to. Many and
-many a time had I thought of Josey West's words, 'when Jessie becomes a famous
-actress,' and of old Mac's remark that Jessie was destined to occupy a
-distinguished position on the boards. These utterances, coupled with the
-conversation that took place between Mr. Rackstraw and Jessie on the night of
-the performance, were surely sufficient to convince me that Jessie's visits to
-the West-end had something to do with her desire to become an actress; but I
-would not be convinced, simply because I did not wish to believe it. Say that
-Jessie did appear upon the public stage, and became famous--as I was sure she
-would become--she would be farther than ever from me. I caught at one little
-straw that lay in the way of the result I dreaded. Mr. Rackstraw had said that
-there was a great deal to be learnt, and that it would cost money. Well, Jessie
-did not have any money. I magnified this straw into an insurmountable obstacle
-which it was impossible for Jessie to get over, and so I played the fool with my
-reason.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I found the Wests busy as usual. Jessie was there, learning
-some dancing steps from one of the young misses; she blushed as I entered, and
-the lesson was discontinued. I had intended to speak privately to Josey West
-about Jessie, but within a few minutes of my arrival, Gus West came in, and I
-had not the tact to make the opportunity. Josey informing Gus that Jessie had
-been taking a dancing lesson, he proposed that they should go through a minuet;
-and he and Jessie and two of the girls performed the old-fashioned dance most
-gracefully, Josey West humming the minuet de la cour, while I sat in the corner,
-the only serious person in the room. When the minuet was finished, Josey West
-called me to her, and addressing me quietly as Mr. Glum, said she was afraid I
-was of a sulky disposition. I said I did not think I was sulky, but that I was
-very unhappy.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'About her?' questioned Josey, with a sharp look in the
-direction of Jessie; but before I could answer, Jessie came towards us, and said
-she was ready to go home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I did not wish to go,' she said to me, on our way, 'but I saw
-that you had something to say to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered, yes; that I did wish to speak to her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And about something unpleasant, I can see,' she said; 'make
-it as short as you can, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She was toying with a flower which Gus West had worn in his
-coat when he came in. I did not see him give it to her, but that she had it, and
-seemed to value it, was like a dagger in my heart.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie,' I said disconsolately, 'you know how I love you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If any person on the stage,' she answered lightly, 'spoke of
-love in that tone, the whole house would laugh at him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is the only thing that runs in your thoughts now,' I
-said gloomily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What?' she exclaimed. 'Love? I meant the stage. You think of
-nothing but acting.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well--perhaps! What else have I to think of that brings any
-happiness to me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I thought you loved me, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So I do, Chris,' she said in careless fashion, still toying
-with the flower.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And others, too,' I added.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, yes--if you please. There are always more than two
-persons in the world.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie!' I implored. 'It hurts me to hear you speak in that
-careless way. I cannot believe that it is in your nature to think and speak so
-lightly of what is most precious.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why cannot you believe so?' she asked, somewhat more
-seriously. 'Am I the only one who lightly regards a precious gift--am I the only
-one who does not know the value of love?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I at least know the value of it, Jessie. Ah, you would
-believe me if you knew what I would do for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think you love me, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'With all my heart, Jessie; with all my soul!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She trembled a little at the passion of my words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tell me,' she said, averting her head, 'what would you do for
-me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered that there was no sacrifice that I would not
-willingly, cheerfully make for her sake; that I thought of none but her, that I
-loved none but her; that if all the world were on one side, and she alone on the
-other, I would fly to her, and deem myself blessed to live only for her. This,
-and much more that has been said a myriad times before, and will be said a
-myriad times again, I said passionately and fervently. She listened in silence,
-and then, after a pause, told me she believed I had spoken the true feelings of
-my heart, and that she was sure I had meant every word I had uttered. And then
-she pinned Gus West's flower to the bosom of her dress, and asked me if it did
-not look well there. Miserably, I answered Yes, and felt as though all the
-brightness were dying out of the world.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you have something else to say to me,' Jessie presently
-remarked; 'what you have already said is very pleasant to me. Now for the
-unpleasant thing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The conversation with my mother, which in the heat of my
-declaration had slipped out of my mind, now recurred to me, and I told Jessie
-that my mother was very anxious about her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In what way?' she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where do you go to every day, Jessie? Mother tells me that
-you go out regularly at eleven o'clock every morning, and that you do not return
-until four in the afternoon, and that you don't spend that time at the Wests'.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Has she been watching me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I replied, very hurt at the question; 'you don't think I
-would play the spy upon you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I don't know,' she said, with a toss of her head;
-'persons do strange things when they are in love.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You seem to know a great deal, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She appeared to be both pleased and discontented at this
-remark.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When girls get together, Chris, they <i>will</i> talk; and
-Josey West and I don't sit in the corner, mumchance, with our mouths shut, as
-you sat to-night. Have you anything else to tell me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I said, 'and I wouldn't speak of it if I hadn't
-promised mother that I would do so. Yesterday she saw you riding in a cab with a
-gentleman.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is quite true,' said Jessie simply, before I could
-proceed farther; 'but why didn't she speak to me about it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Rather say, Jessie, why did you not speak to her. But mother
-is afraid that you mistrust her; she says that you avoid her when she has it in
-her mind to speak seriously to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She told you that?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She is not wrong, Chris,' said Jessie, with a sigh; 'but we
-all seem to be playing at cross purposes, and not one of us seems to understand
-the other.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think I understand you, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you, Chris?' she asked, in a tenderer tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If others mistrust you, I don't. I know that everything you
-do is right.' She shook her head gently. 'No, you shall not make me think
-otherwise, Jessie. You and I will stand together, come what will.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Against all the rest of the world,' she said, quoting my
-words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, against all the rest of the world, Jessie,' I replied
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It will never be, Chris; I would not accept such a service
-from you if the whole happiness of my life depended upon it. Ah me! Often and
-often I think what an unhappy day that was for all of us when I came among you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You said so on the Sunday morning that you asked uncle Bryan
-to come to church with us; but you repented immediately afterwards, if you
-remember, and said you were not sorry, for if it had happened so, you would not
-have known mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have learnt something from her, Chris--something good, I
-hope.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You could learn nothing from her that was not sweet and
-good,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These last words were spoken on the threshold of our home.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_32" href="#div1Ref_32">CHAPTER XXXII.</a></h4>
-<h5>JESSIE MAKES AN EXPLANATION.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie walked straight into the parlour, where both uncle
-Bryan and my mother were sitting.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are anxious to know,' she said, addressing my mother,
-'where I go to of a morning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear,' answered my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I saw that uncle Bryan was listening, and I saw also by the
-expression in his face that the matter was new to him; my mother had not
-complained to him of Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris has been speaking to me about it,' said Jessie, 'and I
-thought it best to tell you myself. I go to Mr. Rackstraw's.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who is he, my dear?' asked my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is a gentleman who teaches young ladies--I beg your
-pardon'--(with the slightest possible glance at uncle Bryan)--'young women how
-to act; he educates them for the stage.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But surely, my dear,' remonstrated my mother, 'you have no
-intention of becoming an actress.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why not? I am not wise, I know, and I am very wilful, and
-passionate, and unreasonable.' She resolutely moved a step from my mother, who
-was approaching her tenderly. 'But I have sense enough to think of my future,
-and I do not see what I could do better. I have been acting for a long time at
-Miss West's; we have often had little private performances there--Chris has seen
-them.' There was grief, but no reproach, in my mother's eyes as she looked at
-me. 'When I first commenced to act, I did it purely out of fun, and I had no
-serious intention of taking to the stage; but when I grew so unhappy here as to
-know that I was bringing discord among those who loved each other, and to whom I
-was in a certain sense a stranger, and when day after day the feeling grew
-stronger that I was not welcome in this house, I thought of what was before me
-in the future. It must be very sweet, I think, to be dependent upon those who
-love you; it is very bitter, I know, to be dependent upon those who hate you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Stop!' cried uncle Bryan, in an agitated tone. 'I say nothing
-as to whether you are right or wrong in your construction of the feelings
-entertained towards you here. You are a woman in your ideas, although almost a
-child in years, and you have evidently settled with yourself that you will not
-be led----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who is to lead me?' said Jessie, pale and trembling. 'I have
-asked to be led, and <i>you</i> know the result. Not quite out of
-hard-heartedness, but with some shadow of good feeling--though perhaps you will
-not give me credit for being capable of anything of the sort--I have asked to be
-shown what is right and what is wrong; and if I, somewhat wilfully, preferred to
-be shown by example and not by words, was I so very much to blame, after all?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are clever enough,' he said, 'to twist things into the
-shape you like best----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' she exclaimed, interrupting him again; 'be just. You
-know what I refer to, and you know I have spoken exactly the truth. Do not say I
-have misrepresented it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I beg your pardon,' he said, in a manly tone, and with a
-frankness which compelled admiration. I was wrong. You have stated exactly the
-truth, and in a truthful way. But if you really wished to be taught, what better
-teacher could you have than the one before you?'--with a motion of his hand
-towards my mother--'if you had doubts, where could you find a better
-counsellor?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are master,' said Jessie, firmly and gently; 'you gave me
-shelter and protection. Chris reminded me of that a little while ago when we
-were speaking of you, and I was angry with him for it--unreasonably angry. It is
-not to be wondered at that I should look to you for counsel.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If there were two roads before you,' he said, 'one, dark and
-bleak and bare'--he touched his breast'--the other, fair and bright and
-sweetened by most unselfish tenderness'--he laid his hand upon the hand of my
-mother--'which would you choose?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I cannot answer you; you are wiser than I am, but I do not
-think you can see my heart.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I see,' he said, with a glance at my mother's white face,
-'things which you do not seem to comprehend.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The time may come,' she retorted, 'when you will be more just
-towards me, and I must wait until then.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, well,' he said, with a sigh; 'you say it is bitter to
-be dependent upon those who hate you. Leave me out of the question. My sister
-loves you; Chris loves you. Can you not be content with this, and let me go my
-way?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; for I have been dependent upon you, not upon them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have I ever said a word which led you to believe I begrudged
-you shelter here?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Never; but we do not judge always by words.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She seemed to have caught uncle Bryan's talent for short crisp
-sentences, in which there was much truth.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on with your explanation,' he said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She turned to my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You saw me yesterday in a cab with a gentleman. His name is
-Mr. Glover, and he is a friend of Mr. Rackstraw. He offered to see me home, and
-wanted to come to the door with me, but I thought uncle Bryan would not approve
-of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should not have approved of it,' said uncle Bryan, 'and I
-do not approve of any person seeing you home in a clandestine way.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And, my dear child,' added my mother, 'he is a stranger to
-us, and must be almost a stranger to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is a gentleman,' said Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A gentleman!' repeated uncle Bryan scornfully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is nothing against him. I like gentlemen. Mr. Rackstraw
-tells me that Mr. Glover can help me to get an engagement on the stage, and I
-must consider that. He treats me with the greatest respect.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who pays this Mr. Rackstraw,' asked uncle Bryan, 'for the
-lessons he gives you? His business is not entirely philanthropic, I presume, and
-he does not teach young ladies for nothing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course I have no money to pay him; I am to pay him by and
-by, out of any money I may earn.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are determined, then, to become an actress?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am determined to get my own living, and I believe I shall
-do well on the stage. I cannot continue to live in a state of dependence. If I
-had a mother or a father, or if I were happy here, it would be different.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I suppose you can be made happy,' said uncle Bryan, 'by being
-indulged in all your whims and caprices, and by being allowed to act and think
-exactly as you please, without restraint.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' replied Jessie tearfully, 'I only want kindness; I
-cannot live without it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She turned to leave the room, with signs of agitation on her
-face, when uncle Bryan desired her to stay.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is something more,' he said. 'In the event of this
-gentleman--Mr. Glover--seeing you home again, he must not do so clandestinely. I
-owe a duty to you which I must perform, however distasteful it may be to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is not distasteful to me,' she replied. 'Mr. Glover would
-have seen me to the door yesterday but for my refusal to allow him. I am truly
-anxious to do what is right.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My uneasiness with respect to this discovery would have been
-unbearable but for a change in my circumstances which placed the day more at my
-own disposal. I had advanced steadily in my trade, and was by this time a
-thoroughly good engraver. I think I brought into my work more than mere
-mechanical exactness, and some blocks of my engraving which went out of Mr.
-Eden's office attracted meritorious attention. I knew of men who were earning
-good wages--far higher than I was receiving--by taking work from master
-engravers, and executing it at home. Why could I not do the same? I should not
-then be so tied down as not to have an hour or two in the middle of the day to
-myself; and in the event of my availing myself of the opportunity, I could
-easily make up for lost time by working an hour or two later in the night. I
-mentioned this to Jessie, and said that then I could come to Mr. Rackstraw's,
-and bring her home of an afternoon--instead of Mr. Glover, I added.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I would sooner,' said Jessie, 'that you saw me home than Mr.
-Glover. I believe you are jealous of him, you foolish boy! You have no occasion
-to be.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Such a crumb of comfort as this would console me for days.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And then I shall be my own master,' I said to myself proudly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My employer anticipated my wish; he was a generous
-conscientious man, and I had earned his respect. He called me into his office,
-and, almost in the exact words I have set down, proposed that I should do as I
-wished.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will not only be able to earn more money,' he said, but
-in a few years you may be able yourself to set up as a master, and take
-apprentices of your own. I shall be able to give you plenty of work, and you
-will find that your time will be as fully occupied as you can desire it to be.
-Let me give you one piece of advice: never promise what you cannot perform; if
-you say you will deliver a block at a certain time, keep your word, if you have
-to sit up all night to finish your work. Let it get to be known that you are a
-man whose word can be depended upon, and you are sure to be prosperous.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thanked him, and commenced almost immediately on the new
-system, with my hands full of work. So behold me now, with my bedroom, in which
-there was a good light, fitted up with table and bench, working steadily at
-home, to my mother's great delight.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_33" href="#div1Ref_33">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>MR. GLOVER.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I soon made the acquaintance of Mr. Glover. In pursuance of my
-plans, I presented myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office every day at a certain hour,
-for the purpose of seeing Jessie home. I had of course previously consulted
-Jessie, and she had acquiesced in the arrangement. It was a serious encroachment
-upon my working hours, but I made up for it in the night, and between sunrise
-and sunrise I always performed a fair day's work. On the very first occasion of
-my presenting myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office, I found Mr. Glover there. Having
-sent in my name to Jessie, I waited in an outer room, the walls of which were
-lavishly decorated with paintings and photographs of actors and actresses, in
-the proportion of about one of the former to twenty of the latter. As I was
-studying these, Jessie made her appearance, followed by Mr. Glover; she was
-waving him off lightly, and saying as she entered,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, thank you; I will not trouble you to-day. Chris has come
-to see me home.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh,' he answered, without casting a glance in my direction.
-'Chris has come to see you home! Is Chris your brother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' she said, 'I haven't a brother or a sister in the
-world.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He condescended to look at me after this, and held out his
-hand to me with smiling cordiality. I took it awkwardly, for I felt myself but a
-common person by his side.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris and I must become better acquainted,' he said. 'I
-remember now; I saw this young gentleman at Miss West's on the night of your
-performance there. He threw you two bouquets.' Jessie nodded. 'And very handsome
-bouquets they were,' he continued; 'he eclipsed us all by his gallantry; but I
-had no idea I was to have the pleasure that night of making your acquaintance,
-Jessie, or I might have entered the field against him. Any friend of yours <i>
-must</i> be a friend of mine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then he bade us both good-day, without any attempt to press
-his attentions upon Jessie. Jessie asked me what I thought of him, and I could
-not help answering that he seemed to be a gentleman, but made some demur to his
-addressing her by her Christian name.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, that is the fashion in the profession,' said Jessie
-carelessly; there is nothing in that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is not an actor, is he, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; he is something in the City.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This vague definition of many a man's occupation, common as it
-is, was new to me, and I inquired what the 'something' was. Jessie could not
-enlighten me. I continued my inquiries by asking her how she knew that he was
-something in the City. He himself had told her, Mr. Rackstraw had told her, and
-young ladies whose acquaintance she had made at Mr. Rackstraw's had also told
-her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is at Mr. Rackstraw's every day, Jessie?' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nearly every day, Chris,' she answered, and closed the
-subject of conversation by saying that, at all events, Mr. Glover was a perfect
-gentleman.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not find him to be otherwise; he was uniformly courteous
-to me, and I could not make open complaint against him because his courtesy was
-of a kind which a superior yields to an inferior. He was a gentleman, and I was
-a common workman; I chafed at it inwardly, nevertheless. I would have avoided
-him if I could, but he would not allow me to do so. The second time I walked
-into Mr. Rackstraw's office I met him at the door, and he fastened on to me. I
-had come for Jessie? Yes. Was I coming every day for Jessie? Yes. I had plenty
-of spare time then? Yes. I was fond of Jessie, he supposed? I answered as
-briefly as was consistent with bare civility, but I made no reply to his last
-question. He was neither surprised nor exacting. As I did not answer the
-question, he answered it himself. It was natural that I should be fond other; we
-had been brought up together as brother and sister, he had been given to
-understand; yes, it was natural that I should be fond of her in that
-way--natural, indeed, that we should be fond of each other in that way. He had
-been given to understand, also, that we were not in any way related to one
-another; but he could see that in an instant, without being told. Jessie was a
-lady, evidently; I might tell her he said that, if I pleased, for he was never
-ashamed of what he said or did; Jessie was a lady in her manners, in her speech,
-in her ideas; and these things do not come to one by instinct, or even by
-education; they must be born in one.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This and much more he said; conveying by implication (what
-indeed I knew already) that Jessie was far above me, and (what I could not
-doubt) that he was a gentleman, and I was not. He had a trick of playing with
-his moustaches, which he continually curled into his mouth with his fingers as
-he spoke; and even at that early period of our acquaintanceship, I, in my
-instinctive dislike of him, thought there was something stealthy in the action.
-Standing before me, with his fingers to his mouth, Mr. Glover there and then
-commenced to expatiate upon a theme of which I heard a great deal afterwards
-from his lips: this theme was his good name, of which he was evidently very
-proud. There was not a stain upon it, nor upon that of any of his connections;
-he had never harboured a thought to tarnish his character, which was above
-reproach. He did not express these sentiments in the words I have used, but
-these were the pith of them, and there was a distinct assertion in his
-utterances that he was much better than his fellow-creatures. I, listening to
-him, understood exactly what he meant to convey to my comprehension: that even
-if we twain had been equal in station, his high character and stainless name
-would have placed him far above me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In a week from this time Jessie told me that Mr. Glover had
-made closer inquiries about me, and hearing that I was a wood engraver, had
-expressed his intention of interesting himself in my career. I was not pleased
-at this; I did not wish to be placed under an obligation to Mr. Glover, and I
-muttered something to this effect to Jessie. She seemed surprised, but made no
-comment upon it. Mr. Glover, however, was as good as his word. I received a
-letter from a master engraver, desiring me to call upon him, with reference to
-some work he wished to give me. The hour fixed for the appointment was the hour
-at which I was due at Mr. Rackstraw's. I had no choice but to comply; and I made
-arrangements that afternoon, not only to engrave some blocks of a superior
-description, but to submit sketches of my own, upon wood, for a Christmas story
-which was to be published that year. The interview was a long one, and when I
-arrived home, I was not pleased to find Mr. Glover chatting to my mother in our
-sitting-room. He had seen Jessie home, and, in compliance with uncle Bryan's
-desire, had brought her to the door. An introduction to uncle Bryan and my
-mother naturally followed, and thus he was introduced to the house. He asked me
-pleasantly whether I had made satisfactory arrangements, and confessed that he
-had been the means of introducing this better kind of work to me. He received my
-mother's thanks graciously, and it made me mad to see that she thought it was a
-stroke of great good fortune to have won such a patron. What could I do but
-thank him also for the introduction? That I did so in an ungracious and even in
-a sullen manner did not seem to strike him; Jessie noticed it, however.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't seem pleased, Chris,' she said, following me out of
-the room.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know what my feelings are,' I replied; from any other
-hands than his, the work that I have received to-day would have delighted me
-beyond measure. But I had better not speak; it will be best for me to hold my
-tongue.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I seem never to dare to say what I think; and I don't
-like to play the hypocrite.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't say what you think,' Jessie said, 'because you are
-conscious that your thoughts are unjust.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps it is so; but I can't make myself believe that they
-are.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You haven't a good opinion of Mr. Glover.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am not grateful for his patronage; I don't mind saying
-that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It would have been more truthful in me to have said that the
-instinctive aversion with which he had at first inspired me was fast changing to
-a feeling of hatred. I hated him for his smooth manner, and hated him the more
-for it because it was impossible to find fault with it; I hated him for his
-civility to me, and hated him the more because he refused to notice that my
-manner towards him, if not the words I used, plainly showed that I did not
-desire his friendship or patronage. But I could have multiplied my reasons,
-which might have all been summed up in one cause of dislike--his attentions to
-Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't come to the Wests' for me to-night, Chris,' Jessie
-said, after a little quiet pondering.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why not, Jessie?' I asked, with a sinking heart.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I don't want to be made more unhappy than I am
-already. Besides, you must devote your attention more to your work, and less to
-me. I am not the most important thing in the world to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are,' I said gloomily; 'how often have I told you so! You
-don't believe what I have said, then!' I turned from her in sorrowful passion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, Chris,' she said, 'I am not, I must not be, your only
-consideration. You have other duties before you, and you must not forget them or
-neglect them, as you have hitherto done.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thought she referred to my work, and I answered that I did
-not neglect it, and that I could perform great things if she were kinder to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Am I not kind to you?' she exclaimed. 'Is it my fault that
-you are so wrapt up in your own feelings that you are regardless of the feelings
-of others? If you are blind, I am not. If you are selfish, I am not. If you
-forget your duty, I shall not forget mine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These were the unkindest words she had ever spoken to me, and
-they were a terrible torture to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do I show myself to be blind and selfish,' I said, 'and do I
-forget my duty in loving you as you know I love you, and in wishing to be where
-you are?' She did not reply. 'But perhaps,' I added bitterly, 'you have another
-reason for not wishing me to come to the Wests' to-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What other reason?' she asked quietly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps Mr. Glover is to be there;' and the next moment I
-would have made any sacrifice to have recalled what I had said. But it was too
-late. How often do we plunge daggers into our hearts by inconsiderate words,
-rashly spoken, as these were!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie looked at me swiftly, with a fire in her eyes which I
-had never seen there before, and with hot blood in her face; but in another
-moment she was as white as death.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie!' I cried repentantly, seizing her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She tore it from me indignantly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will ask him to come!' she said, and left me, ready to kill
-myself for my cruel injustice.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That night I watched outside the house of the Wests', and made
-false the words I had spoken to Jessie but a short time since, when I asked her
-if she thought I would play the spy upon her. I was careful that she should not
-see me, for, if she did, I felt that I should never have been forgiven. If I
-proved my words false, Jessie proved hers true. Mr. Glover was at the Wests',
-and walked home with her. I waited until she was in the house, and then I
-followed Mr. Glover at a distance. I had no distinct intention in my mind; I
-simply felt that I
-<i>must</i> follow him; he seemed to draw me after him. I have no doubt that, if
-a clear meaning could have been evolved from my whirling thoughts, and had been
-shown to me, I should have been shocked at it. He walked for a couple of miles,
-and then hailed a cab; after that I wandered about miserably, without thinking
-where I was walking, without thinking of the time. It was only when I found
-myself on a bridge six miles from Paradise-row, and heard the hour strike, that
-I awoke to consciousness as it were and walked slowly home. The faithful mother
-was sitting up for me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My darling child,' she said, with a sob of grief at the
-misery she saw in my face, 'where have you been? What has kept you out so late?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I put her from me in silence, and went into my room, and
-locked the door. As I did so, I thought I heard the door of my mother's bedroom
-above open and close. But I dismissed the fancy, and went to bed with a heavy
-heart.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_34" href="#div1Ref_34">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h4>
-<h5>TURK WEST'S APPEARANCE AT THE WEST-END THEATRE, AND ITS RESULTS.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Early in the morning I watched for an opportunity to endeavour
-to make peace with Jessie. My mother had been in great anxiety about me during
-the night, and had come down to my bedroom three or four times, whispering my
-name at the door; but I pretended to be asleep, and as the door was locked, she
-could not enter the room. I passed a sleepless night, and tossed about in bed,
-longing for daylight. When it came, I rose and commenced to work, and even in
-the midst of my great unhappiness I found comfort in it, for I loved it. At
-seven o'clock I heard my mother calling to me, and I opened my door.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At work so soon, my dear!' she said, in a tone of exquisite
-tenderness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered that I had a great deal of work in hand, and that
-it would not do for me to be idle. She sat by my side, and was saying meekly
-that her boy must not work too hard, but must take proper rest, when she broke
-down. Looking at her, I saw an expression of such yearning devotion in her pale
-face, such sweet and wistful love, that, softened for a moment, I laid my head
-on her shoulder, and sobbed quietly. Her tears flowed with mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ill could help you, dear child!' she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">You cannot--you cannot,' I murmured in reply. Mother, Jessie
-must not go out this morning without my seeing her. I <i>must</i> speak to her
-alone.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Soon after breakfast, when uncle Bryan was in the shop, I
-heard her tell Jessie to wait in the parlour for a minute or two, and then I
-knew that Jessie was alone. I immediately opened my door, which led into the
-parlour, and stepped to Jessie's side. She did not look at me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have come to ask you to forgive me,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What have I to forgive?' she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You know,' I answered. 'What I said yesterday about Mr.
-Glover. I did not mean it, Jessie; I spoke in passion. It was cruel of me. Say
-that you forgive me, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was unjust as well as cruel,' she said; but I am not the
-only person you are cruel to. Do you know what time your mother came to bed this
-morning?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was very late,' I said remorsefully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you any idea what she suffered while she waited up for
-you, Chris? Because you and I have quarrelled, is that a reason why you should
-be cruel to her?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have been doubly wrong,' I said, 'but I have made my peace
-with her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, that is easy with such a nature as hers; mine is
-harder.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Still you forgive me; say that you forgive me, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I forgive you,' she said coldly; 'not because you were
-unkind to me, for I deserve that, perhaps, but because you were unjust to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could extract nothing more than this from her, and I was
-fain to be satisfied. But I saw clearly enough that she was less cordial towards
-me than heretofore. The spirit that animated and sweetened our intercourse in
-the dear old days seemed to have fled, never to return. But I had something in
-my mind which, when carried out, might, I thought, be the means of
-reëstablishing myself in Jessie's favour. Her birthday was approaching; in a
-fortnight she would be eighteen years of age. From the day on which Jessie had
-given me, as a birthday present, the silver locket, with the words engraven on
-it, 'To Chris, with Jessie's love,' I had had many anxious consultations with
-myself as to what kind of gift I should give her on her birthday, and I had
-resolved that a gold Geneva watch and chain would be appropriate and acceptable.
-I had seen the very thing I wanted in a jeweller's shop, and the price asked for
-the pretty ornament--seven pounds--was not beyond my means, for I had been
-saving money for some time, and was now earning more than two pounds a week. On
-the very day on which Jessie and I made up our quarrel, I went to the jeweller's
-and purchased the birthday gift, and gave instructions that on the inside of the
-case should be engraven, From Chris to Jessie, on her eighteenth birthday. With
-undying love.' In my state of mind nothing less fervent would satisfy me. Being
-attracted by a plain ivory brooch, in the form of a true lover's knot, I
-purchased that also, and felt, as I did so, that that would complete our
-reconciliation. As I sat at my work after the transaction of this business, I
-thought of what had passed between me and Jessie when she gave me the silver
-locket, and I reproached myself very strongly for having uttered a word to give
-her pain. Was not the inscription, 'To Chris, with Jessie's love,' sufficient? I
-decided that it was, and I resolutely refused to harbour the words of Mr. Glover
-which came to my mind, to the effect that Jessie and I had been brought up as
-brother and sister, and that it was natural we should be fond of each other in
-that way. How, thought I, could I ever have been so mad as to entertain a doubt
-of Jessie? She was better than I, cleverer than I, and she saw faults in me
-which she wished to correct, and she was also naturally hurt at my suspicions of
-her. Well, I would never again suspect her; from this moment I would have the
-fullest faith in her goodness, her purity, her love. It was in this mood that I
-presented myself at Mr. Rackstraw's office, somewhat doubtful of the manner in
-which Jessie would receive me, but resolved to show her in every possible way
-how truly I loved her and what faith I had in her. Mr. Glover was there of
-course, and we all three walked together from the office. That I abased myself
-before him is true, and it is quite as true, notwithstanding the resolution I
-had formed, that I despised myself for so doing. Jessie looked at me
-thoughtfully, and seemed to be considering within herself whether she approved
-of my new mood. For this reason Mr. Glover found her a somewhat inattentive
-listener to his confidential utterances, the intervals between which he improved
-by talking to and at me on his pet theme--his character and good name. Before we
-had walked a mile, Jessie proposed that she and I should take an ..omnibus home,
-as she was tired, and Mr. Glover left us. On our way she told me that Mr.
-Rackstraw had offered her an engagement on the stage. Did she intend to accept
-it? I asked; and she said that she had deferred her answer until after her
-birthday.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I wish with all my heart,' I said, that you were not going on
-the stage; not that there is any harm in it, Jessie, nor that there could be
-harm in anything you do, but because it seems as if it will take you away from
-us.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you think,' was the reply, 'that a woman has not an
-ambition as well as a man? If I have a talent--and I really think I have,
-Chris--why should I not turn it to good account? Besides, I have my plans. I owe
-money, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">To Mr. Rackstraw for your lessons. Well, I can pay that,
-Jessie. All that I have is yours, and you don't know how rich I am growing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are too good to me, Chris,' she said, giving me her hand,
-which I took and held close in mine beneath her mantle; in that moment all my
-trouble vanished, and a feeling of ineffable delight brought peace to my heart
-once more. Will nothing cure you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing will ever cure me of loving you,' I said, in a glad
-whisper. 'You would not wish that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She turned the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I owe other money as well. I owe a great deal to uncle Bryan;
-he is poor, and I should like to pay him. But we'll not talk of this any more
-just now, Chris; wait till my birthday comes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will have a secret to tell me then, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; I have thought a great deal lately of the letter I am to
-read for the first time on that day.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you have never had the curiosity to open it, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh yes, I have; but I have never opened it. I can be
-steadfast and faithful, Chris, as well as other people. Let us call in together
-and see Josey West.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' said that little woman, with a shrewd glance at us as we
-entered, so you two lovers have been making it up?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't be foolish, Josey,' exclaimed Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How do you know we ever quarrelled?' I asked, in high
-spirits.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How do I know that it will be night to-night, you meant to
-ask.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Because I'm crooked, you think I can't see things perhaps.
-Have you seen Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I answered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He has gone to your house to tell you something. I dare say
-he is waiting there for you. Here is a rose for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I took and dropped it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' said the queer little creature, 'because a rose is
-pretty and fresh, and smells sweet, you think it can't prick you! There, get
-along with you, Mr. Wiseacre, and mind how you handle your roses for the
-future.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk had great news to communicate. His chance had come. By a
-fortunate combination of circumstances, an opening had occurred in a West-end
-theatre, and he was to make his first appearance there on the ensuing Saturday
-night in the new play that had been written for him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's a fluke, Chris, my boy, a fluke,' he said, walking up
-and down the room excitedly; 'a sensation piece that the lessee thought would be
-a great draw is a most complete failure, as it deserves to be. He must either
-fill his house with paper or play to empty benches, so he withdraws his
-sensation piece, and gives me a show. We came out without much of a flourish;
-but we shall astonish them, Chris, my boy. The simple announcement of a new play
-and a new actor at that theatre is sufficient to draw all the critics, and we
-shall have a great house and a great triumph. You shall come, Chris, my boy; you
-shall come to witness the effect I shall produce. You shall go into the pit;
-here is an order for you. I don't ask you to take a big stick with you--I scorn
-to solicit undeserved applause; but at the same time every friend is a friend,
-and what's the use of a friend if he isn't friendly, eh, Chris, my boy?--a word
-to the wise; you understand; there's no need of anything more betwixt <i>us</i>.
-The piece will be wretchedly put upon the stage; there will be no scenery to
-speak of; the stock actors who play the other parts will be--well, no better
-than they should be, Chris, my boy, and, in addition, they will not be disposed
-to regard with favour a man who is an actor, Chris, my boy, and who comes to
-break down vicious monopolies and vicious systems. But what matter these small
-drawbacks to Turk West? They daunt not him! Resolved to conquer, he goes in and
-wins. Turk's sun will rise on Saturday night, Chris, my boy, and ever after it
-will blaze--that's the word, sir, Chris, my boy--blaze refulgent, and all the
-lesser suns shall pale before it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But if you should fail,' I suggested.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He glared at me in incredulous astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's no such word in Turk's vocabulary, Chris, my boy. The
-man who goes in with an idea that he will fail generally does fail, and deserves
-to fail. Is there any want of pluck in Turk West? Is there any want of stamina
-in him? No, no. It's no game of chance that he plays. On Saturday night next he
-throws double sixes. And after that he'll be able to serve his friends.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Did his family know of it? I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, they know of it,' he replied, and those who can come
-will be there--in different parts of the theatre, Chris, my boy, strangers to
-each other. And old Mac will be there, with an oak stick; it's an off night with
-him. Here are a couple more orders which you may like to give to <i>friends</i>,'
-with most significant emphasis on the last word.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I fully understood his meaning, and I gave the orders to
-persons who promised to applaud Turk on every available opportunity, and who, I
-have good reason for believing, basely betrayed their trust; but there are not
-more ungrateful persons in the world than those who go to a theatre without
-paying. The receipt of an order has a baleful effect upon them; it deadens their
-sense of enjoyment, and makes them miserably hypercritical. On the following
-Saturday I made my way to the West-end theatre in a state of great expectation
-and excitement. Meeting with a man in the streets who sold walking-sticks, I
-purchased the stoutest in his collection, and, thus armed, seated myself in the
-front of the pit, half an hour before the curtain rose. The theatre was quite
-filled before the performances commenced, and a fashionable company was
-assembled in the stalls and private boxes. I recognised several members of Turk
-West's family in different parts of the house, who stared at me stolidly, and
-made no response to my familiar nods. Debating with myself upon the reason of
-this, I came to the conclusion that they had resolved not to know any person on
-that night lest they might be set down as partisans of Turk, and thus tarnish
-the genuineness of his triumph. The conclusion was strengthened by the
-circumstance which I noted, that they seemed to be perfectly oblivious of each
-other's existence; but there was certainly a family likeness in the sticks they
-carried. Studying the playbill, I found that a piece of some importance would be
-played first, and that Turk would not make his appearance until past nine o'
-clock. I paid but little attention to the drama in which Turk was not; my stick
-was as indifferent as myself; and the other sticks witnessed this part of the
-performance in mute inglorious ease; nevertheless there was a good deal of
-applause when the curtain fell. About this time there straggled into the stalls
-and private boxes certain persons whom a communicative stranger who sat next to
-me, and who appeared to be a wonderful authority on all matters connected with
-the drama, pointed out as notabilities.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The critics were the most interesting persons in my eyes, and
-I stared at them with interest, and with some feeling of disappointment because
-they were so like ordinary mortals. I asked my neighbour what he thought of Mr.
-Turk West as an actor--when I mentioned the name of my friend, I consulted my
-playbill with the air of one to whom he was a stranger--and I learnt to my
-mortification that he had never heard of him. He did not seem to be very
-sanguine of the success of the new play or the new actor, and I was mean enough
-to agree with him. The title of the play was <i>Twice Wedded, or Torn Asunder</i>;
-and in due time the curtain rose for its introduction to the audience. I cannot
-undertake to describe it, for the reasons that a good deal of it was not heard,
-that the actors and actresses were imperfect in their parts, and that the story
-was so involved and mysterious as to baffle description. The heroine, it
-appeared, had been twice married--once, many years ago to Turk, who had been
-torn from his wife, for no assignable reason, on the wedding-day, and who was
-supposed to have died in battle (what battle, and why he went to battle, were
-not explained); and afterwards to a person whose identity I was not successful
-in discovering. Turk played two characters, an Irish servant and the first
-husband, who instead of dying in battle, as he should have done, had been
-confined in a madhouse, from which he had just made his escape. After a comic
-scene as the Irish servant, which was mildly tolerated by the audience, Turk
-came on in a high-peaked hat, a long cloak, and hessian boots, and hearing that
-his wife had married again, behaved in so mad a manner as to fully justify his
-long incarceration. Being a very short man, Turk's appearance in this costume
-was even in my eyes most ludicrous; no effort of imagination could have made a
-hero of him, and as (for the sake of contrast, I suppose, with his other
-character) he spoke in the most lugubrious tone, the audience went through
-various transitions of feeling. First, they were, as I have said, mildly
-tolerant; then they became impatient, then indignant, and then, there was
-something so really comic in the little man's despair, they hooted and laughed
-at him. Directly the feeling of derision came into play, even I knew that both
-Turk and his new and original drama were, in dramatic parlance, 'damned.' An
-unfortunate word which Turk used was taken up as a catchword by the audience,
-and they flung it at him with merciless enjoyment. They literally screamed with
-laughter when he was most serious, and even the critics threw themselves back in
-their seats and showed by their merriment (for critics are rarely merry) that
-they were tasting a new sensation. In vain the sticks rapped approval; in vain
-did Turk's friends endeavour to stem the current. The knowing man who sat next
-to me declared, as he wiped his eyes, that he would not have missed this first
-night for anything. It's the richest thing I've ever seen,' he said; and, like a
-coward as I was, I flung away Turk's colours, and basely murmured that it was
-the richest thing <i>I</i> had ever seen. I was very sorry for poor Turk, and
-more so because he was so brave all through. He did not exhibit the slightest
-sign of discomposure at this miscarriage of his ambition, but faithfully spoke
-every word of his part, until the curtain finally fell amidst peals of laughter;
-and then the stage-manager came forward and stated that the new drama would <i>
-not</i> be played again.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When I was out of the theatre, I was almost inclined to run
-away, for I felt that the verdict was a just one, and I was afraid that Turk
-might wish me to declare otherwise; but I liked him too well to desert him. I
-waited for him near the stage-door, and so did a few other of his friends, who
-seemed to regard their big sticks, as I did mine, with gloomy disgust. Turk soon
-made his appearance, and, to my surprise, with a cheerful countenance. Not a
-word was said about his failure. We adjourned to a neighbouring tap, and talked
-of anything but the drama. Old Mac was there, enjoying his toddy, but he did not
-at first join in the conversation. Turk, also, was silent. Suddenly old Mac
-burst out:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Hang it, my sons, let's speak! Turk, you acted bravely. I was
-never prouder of my profession than I was to-night when I saw you go manfully
-and artistically through your part in defiance of the senseless howlings of the
-envious crew. If I could have broken all their heads with one blow of my
-stick--did you hear it going, Turk? I stuck to you, my son; I stuck to you like
-a man--I'd have done it! Dammee, I'd have done it, to see where the brains were.
-I'd have made a quarry with thousands of these quartered slaves as high as I
-could pick my lance! Thank you; I will. Another glass of whisky-toddy, miss--as
-before. As before!' Here old Mac drew the back of his left hand across his eyes,
-and holding out his right sympathisingly, said: 'Turk, my boy, drown dull care!
-A small piece of lemon, if you please, miss. Here's confusion to the rabble!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now what's the use of beating about the bush?' demanded Turk,
-a little huskily. 'I'm not such an ass as not to see that I've made a failure.
-Is Turk West going to bury his head in the sand, like an ostrich, and refuse to
-see it? Not he! Well, I'm not the first, and sha'n't be the last. Pass me the
-pewter, Chris. It served me right. I ought to have taken more time; I ought to
-have gone on by degrees; I ought to have stuck to my last. I've had my lesson,
-and I mean to profit by it. Mac, old boy, you and I will never meet again at
-Philippi. I've had my dream, and it's over.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces!' murmured old
-Mac.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was all the fault of the piece,' said one. 'What audience
-could be expected to stand such a hash?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It wasn't all the fault of the piece,' retorted Turk
-manfully. 'We were both to blame. It isn't a first-rate piece. I can see that
-now; but there's merit in it, merit, my boy, although the subject is an
-unfortunate one. I've brought desolation upon more than one breast to-night.' He
-beat his own, and the action would have been ludicrous, but for the genuine tone
-in which he spoke. 'The author had set his all upon the hazard of the die, and I
-saw him rush from the side-wings, with the salt tears running down his face.
-What did I say I'd throw to-night, Chris, my boy? Double sixes? Well, I threw
-for both, and threw double blank. A nice bungler I am I! My mind's made up.
-Othello's occupation's gone! Turk West acts no more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nonsense, old fellow, nonsense!' his friends remonstrated.
-'You'll think better of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I've said it,' cried Turk, with stern resolve. 'I act no
-more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In that case,' said old Mac, in a tone of gloomy desperation,
-'I'll take another glass of whisky-toddy. Little does the English stage know
-what it has lost this night!'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_35" href="#div1Ref_35">CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h4>
-<h5>JESSIE'S BIRTHDAY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The morning of Jessie's birthday rose bright and clear. How
-well I remember it, and every trivial feature connected with it, which,
-apparently but little noted at the time, impressed itself indelibly upon my
-mind! Often afterwards, in thinking of that day--and how many, many times have
-my thoughts dwelt upon it I--a rift of light has pierced the black cloud which
-overshadowed it, and I have seen myself, as I stepped into the street soon after
-sunrise, stooping to pick up a pin which lay on the pavement. I have awoke in
-the night, sobbing in bitterest grief, and this smallest and most uneventful of
-incidents has been the clearest thing I have seen in connection with that day.
-Other incidents as trivial are clear to me--a costermonger wheeling his barrow,
-loaded with fruit; a policeman standing by a lamp-post chewing a piece of straw;
-a woman who brushed past me humming a line of a song. I see the exact
-arrangement of the fruit in the costermonger's barrow; the face of the policeman
-is as familiar to me as if he had been an intimate friend; I hear the few words
-the woman hummed, with the precise and delicate intonations she gave to them.
-And yet, had these incidents occurred at the North Pole, they could not have
-been more utterly disconnected from the great and sorrowful event which made the
-day memorable to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother had not been well during the past week, and for a
-day or two had been compelled to keep her room. On one of these days I had gone
-to Mr. Rackstraw's office for Jessie, and had learned that she had left an hour
-before my arrival. Hastening home, I found her by my mother's bedside, nursing
-my mother. Hearing my step on the stairs, Jessie had come to the bedroom door,
-and had whispered to me indignantly:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I had been in your place I think I should have stopped at
-home with my mother, knowing what a comfort my presence was to her, instead of
-running after a foolish wilful girl.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before I had time for reply, my mother had called out, in her
-thin sweet voice:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie, what are you saying to Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then Jessie had left us together, and my mother, drawing my
-head on her pillow, told me how kind and gentle Jessie had been to her, and made
-my pulses thrill with delight by her praises of the girl whom I loved with all
-my soul. Something noticeable had occurred within an hour after that. Going into
-the parlour downstairs, I noticed that Jessie had a pair of new gold earrings in
-her ears. Now I was sure that she had not worn them when she met me at the door
-of my mother's bedroom. They were of a pretty and graceful pattern, and became
-her. I had not given them to her; who had? I looked towards uncle Bryan----but,
-no; he was not the giver, for his eyes were fixed upon them suspiciously and
-disapprovingly. It hurt me to see them in her ears, but I would not ask her
-about them, preferring the pain which lay in ignorance. Besides, I would show
-Jessie what confidence I had in her, by waiting until she chose to tell me of
-her own accord who was the giver. But Jessie said not a word on the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On Jessie's birthday my mother was better, although not quite
-well. We had arranged between us that there should be a little feast at home in
-the evening, in honour of Jessie, and that Jessie should not be told of it
-beforehand. I contemplated another surprise for Jessie, and I consulted my
-mother concerning it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing would please Jessie so much as having one of her
-friends at our little party.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother looked doubtfully at me. Since we had lived in uncle
-Bryan's house, no stranger had ever sat down at our table.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't think uncle Bryan can possibly object,' I said. 'It
-is only Josey West, Jessie's best friend, and one of the kindest-hearted
-creatures in the world. Before you knew her five minutes you would love her, and
-I believe she would even take uncle Bryan's fancy, strange as he is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Will you ask him, or shall I, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You had better,' I answered; 'you have more patience with him
-than I. If he refused me, I should quarrel with him perhaps. Tell him she's
-deformed, and as good as gold.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A few hours afterwards my mother said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your uncle says we can do as we please. He consents, my
-dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ungraciously, of course,' I added; 'but never mind, so long
-as Josey is here. Not a word to Jessie, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I enjoined secrecy also on Josey West, who was really glad of
-the opportunity of making my mother's personal acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall throw my arms round her neck,' said Josey, and kiss
-her the moment I see her. And as for you,' she added, with a fair disregard of
-sequence in her speech, 'you are a wise young man. Now what made you think of me
-at all?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I knew it would please Jessie,' I answered honestly,
-'and because I want to make Jessie's birthday the happiest day in her life and
-mine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She pinched my cheek merrily, as though she understood my
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had fully resolved that on that day I would ask Jessie to be
-my wife. Tortured almost beyond endurance by the doubts and difficulties which
-surrounded me, I had in some way gathered courage to look my position steadily
-in the face, and the moment I did so, the way seemed clear before me. I became
-strengthened immediately, and the fair promise which hope held forth appeared
-realised in anticipation. I set aside all obstacles for future consideration,
-and mentally leaped out of the entanglement of feeling which had brought so much
-discomfort into our lives. 'It is for me to speak,' I thought, 'and to speak
-plainly and manfully.' I painted the future in the fairest colours. My prospects
-of success were growing brighter and brighter; my sketches for the Christmas
-story which had been intrusted to me to illustrate were approved of by the
-author and the publisher, and I felt I only wanted opportunity to rise far above
-the sphere of life which, in the natural course of things, I could have expected
-to occupy. 'Jessie's love for the stage,' I thought, 'and her wish to become an
-actress, only arise from her thoughtfulness of her future, and from her state of
-dependence on uncle Bryan. Well, I can clear away all doubt; I can offer her a
-good home; and I can release her from uncle Bryan, and, if she wishes, can pay
-him what she thinks she owes him.' I resolutely closed the eyes of my mind on my
-mother's declaration, that wherever our home was, uncle Bryan must share it. I
-knew too well that it would be impossible for Jessie and me to be happy
-together, with him as a member of our household. All these things could be
-considered and settled by and by, when Jessie had promised to be my wife. I
-reproached myself that I had not spoken plainly to her before now; I had, as it
-were, driven her by my faint-heartedness to do what she might not have done, if
-she had had a protector whom she loved and who loved her. All this and other
-reasoning of the same nature I carried out exactly in the way which best suited
-my hopes, and at length I lay in my cloud-built castles at peace with myself;
-for it was not to be doubted that my dearest wishes would now be surely
-realised. I had an instinctive consciousness that Josey West was thoroughly
-acquainted with the position of affairs between Jessie and me, and knowing her
-to be my friend, I was convinced that she would have warned me if she had had
-any doubt of Jessie's affection for me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">So that it was all clear sailing. What would come, would come,
-but the bliss which I should presently taste of, knowing Jessie to be mine and
-mine only--the bliss which I was enjoying already in anticipation--was all
-sufficient. Outside our own two personalities there was nothing else to be
-considered. Nothing else? No one else? No; for this one greatest of all joys
-secured, all difficulties which once seemed to threaten to mar its fulfilment <i>
-must</i> melt away, as surely as snow melts before the sun. I pleased myself
-with this commonplace metaphor, and utterly overlooked the common sense of
-things (common sense, indeed, in this case being the very slave of
-sentiment)--utterly overlooked the possibility that the current of others'
-feelings, of others' likes and dislikes, of others' ideas of right and wrong,
-could run in a different direction from that down which I was sailing with my
-hopes realised. It is thus, I suppose, sometimes with other selfish natures than
-mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was up and out early in the morning. I could not sleep the
-night before, and wishing to give Jessie a bouquet of fresh flowers, I had
-determined to walk to Covent-garden to buy them. I had a bouquet made of the
-sweetest and loveliest flowers, and I took it to our house by the back way, and
-hid it in my workroom. How many times I looked at it, and how in every delicate
-leaf I found a sentiment which formed a connecting link between me and Jessie,
-it is unnecessary here to describe. In the afternoon I had to go to the
-jeweller's for the watch for Jessie, the inscription on which could not be
-completed before; and when I held it in my hand and read the words, 'From Chris
-to Jessie, on her eighteenth birthday. With undying love,' I saw Jessie's
-beautiful eyes looking into mine, and I uttered an exclamation of delight which
-must have satisfied the jeweller that his work was approved of. Then there was
-the ivory brooch shaped in the form of a true lover's knot. Perhaps Jessie would
-allow me to fasten it in the bosom of her dress, as she had allowed me to take
-the ribbon from her neck, which was now round mine, with the locket she had
-given me on my birthday. No one but I had yet seen or knew of these offerings of
-love. It was to be a day of delightful surprises.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was at home with my flowers before breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What made you go out so early this morning, Chris?' Jessie
-inquired over breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's a secret,' I answered gaily; 'you shall know
-to-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother had already questioned me in private, and I had
-easily satisfied her. Something unusual occurred when we had finished breakfast.
-Jessie went to uncle Bryan's side, and spoke to him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know it's my birthday to-day, uncle Bryan?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have heard so.' Then after a short pause: 'May it be a day
-of good remembrance to you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Nothing more; not a kiss, not even a hand-shake. And yet she
-invited it in the tenderest manner, as she stood before him, bright and
-beautiful, in a new light print dress, with a small lilac flower. I never see a
-dress with such a pattern without an odd sensation at my heart. She did not move
-from the spot until he, after some mental communing, I think, turned from her
-and went into the shop. I experienced a feeling very much like hatred towards
-him for his hardness and insensibility.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother took Jessie's hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'May your life be bright and happy, dear child!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She hid her face in my mother's bosom for a little while in
-silence; then she raised her face, and they kissed each other. Ah, the world was
-bright with such a flower in it!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you, Chris?' she said presently, holding out her hand to
-me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall wish you nothing until to-night,' I said, with an
-effort of great self-restraint, 'except in my heart.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded, and smiled, and then busied herself about the
-room, insisting that my mother should sit and rest while she did the work of the
-house. But my mother, laughing, said that she could not allow it, as Jessie
-would find out all her secrets; then ensued fond coaxing and teasing, which
-ended, as I was afraid it would do, in my mother whispering to Jessie that we
-were going to have a little feast that night in her honour, and that Josey West
-was coming to spend the evening with us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A nice one you are to keep a secret,' I called merrily after
-them as they went out of the room with their arms around each other's waist,
-like mother and daughter; 'it's a good job I didn't tell you everything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">What with my work and other duties, I saw but little of Jessie
-during the day; and in the evening I dressed myself in my best, and went for a
-walk, with the intention of not coming home until past eight o'clock, when Josey
-West would be at our house, and when everything would be prepared to celebrate
-Jessie's birthday in a befitting manner. I carried out my programme faithfully,
-and entered the parlour with a beating heart and flushed face. The room was very
-bright. My mother had on her best cap and dress, and in the rapid glance I cast
-at uncle Bryan, who was behind the counter, as I walked through the shop, I
-fancied I detected some change for the better in his appearance; I fancied also
-that he expected to see some one with me. Josey West was in the parlour, and the
-dear little soul was holding my mother's hand in hers with tender feeling. They
-were already the best of friends. My mother stood on tiptoe to look over my
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Whom for, mother?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was looking for Jessie, my dear. Has she not been out
-walking with you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' exclaimed Josey West briskly, 'she'll be in presently. I
-dare say she is going to surprise us with something.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Unable to keep my secret any longer, I said that I had
-something to surprise Jessie with when she came in; and I brought the flowers
-from my workroom, and placed them on the table. Then I showed them the brooch
-and the watch; before I knew it, Josey had opened the case, and read the
-inscription, and pointed it out to my mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And is it so, really?' Josey asked tantalisingly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, you knew it was so,' I answered, very hot and red.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And my mother left Josey, and came and pressed me fondly in
-her arms.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But where was Jessie? She was nowhere in the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps she's at mine,' suggested Josey; 'run round, and
-bring her. I dare say she's waiting for you there.' This with the wickedest of
-laughs.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But Jessie was not at Josey West's house, nor was she at home
-when I returned. Our perplexity soon turned to alarm. We looked at each other,
-to see whether any one of us held the key of Jessie's absence; my suspicions
-lighted on Josey West, but a frank look assured me that I had no right to
-suspect her. For an hour I walked about the street watching for Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can anything have happened to her?' my mother asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan was in the room when my mother spoke. He also, in
-his own way, shared our alarm.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother,' I said, inspired by a sudden thought, if Jessie
-comes while I am away, do not let her go out again. I shall not be long.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My thought was to go to Mr. Rackstraw's office to make
-inquiries, although I knew full well that the office was closed hours ago. But I
-could not remain still. As I turned to go from the room, a boy's voice in the
-shop arrested my steps. He was inquiring for Mr. Bryan Carey and my mother.
-Uncle Bryan, answering the lad, came in with a letter, addressed to my mother. I
-saw that the writing was Jessie's, and I took the letter from his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I <i>must</i> open it, mother,' I said. The letter contained
-these words:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have gone away, and shall not return. Forgive me for all
-the trouble I have brought among you, but I think I have not been entirely to
-blame. Do not be sorry that I have gone; I have caused you too much pain
-already. It will be useless, if you find where I am, endeavouring to prevail
-upon me to return. I would starve rather than enter the house again.</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:60%"><span class="sc">'Jessie</span>.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_36" href="#div1Ref_36">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h4>
-<h5>I SPEAK PLAINLY TO UNCLE BRYAN.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The paper which I held in my hand became blurred in my sight,
-and for a few moments the only thing that was clear to me was that Jessie was
-lost to me, and that all possible happiness had gone out of my life.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was no mistaking the meaning of Jessie's letter to my
-mother. It was intended to snap at once and for ever the bonds which united us.
-She had set herself free from her miserable thraldom, and she was not to be
-wooed back. 'It will be useless, if you find where I am, endeavouring to prevail
-upon me to return. I would starve rather than enter the house again.' I heard
-her speak these words in sharp incisive tones, and I knew too well that she was
-not to be turned from her purpose. All was over between us, and this day, which
-I had fondly imagined was to be the happiest in our lives, had sealed the
-destruction of all my hopes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Two trivial circumstances recalled me to the realities of the
-scene. One was the ticking of the watch which I had intended as a birthday
-present for Jessie; the other was a slight rustling of paper. I had observed,
-when uncle Bryan entered the room with the letter for my mother, that he held
-another paper in his hand, which must have been addressed to himself. It was the
-rustling of this paper which now attracted my attention. Uncle Bryan had opened
-it, and was reading it. He could have read but a very few lines when a ghastly
-pallor overspread his features, and his hands trembled from excess of agitation.
-Every muscle in his face was quivering, and even in the midst of my own
-suffering these signs of suffering in him did not escape me. They did not move
-me to pity; they stirred me rather to a more bitter resentment against him. He,
-and he alone, was the cause of all my misery; he, and he alone, had brought this
-blight upon my life.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not know, until I attempted to move towards him, that my
-mother's arms were round me. I had no distinct intention of raising my hand
-against him, but it might have occurred, and my mother feared it and clung to me
-convulsively. I released myself from her arms, and I stood before him, barring
-the way, for I detected in him a desire to leave the room unobserved. He gazed
-at me in a weak uncertain manner; all his old strength and sternness of
-character seemed to have deserted him, and he was suddenly transformed into a
-weak and worn old man. That his sorrow-stricken face should have won sympathy
-from my mother and Josey West--as I saw clearly it had--I construed into an
-additional wrong against myself, committed not by them, but by him. It inflamed
-me the more; I felt that my passion must have vent, and that it was impossible
-for me to be silent.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let me pass.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not hear the words, for his throat was parched, and
-refused to give them utterance; but I knew that he had striven to speak them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not till you have heard what I have to say,' was my reply, as
-I stood before him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother crept to my side, but I was not to be turned from my
-purpose. I could hear and feel the rapid beating of her heart against my hand,
-which she had taken in hers and pressed to her bosom, but the selfish intensity
-of my own grief made me deaf and blind to everything else. Uncle Bryan did not
-answer me; he strove feebly to pass me again, but I prevented him from doing so.
-Something in my attitude caused Josey West to place herself between us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hope you are satisfied,' I said. 'You have driven her from
-us. What is the next thing you intend to do?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I paused for his reply, but he did not speak.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I intended to ask Jessie to-night to be my wife. I don't know
-what her answer would have been, but I think I know what it might have been but
-for your systematic cruelty. Will it add to your satisfaction to know that I had
-set all my hopes of happiness upon her, and that you have driven these from my
-heart, as you have driven her from your door? I loved her with all my soul. I
-was not worthy of her; she is far above me and every one here; but I loved her
-most truly and sincerely, and you have stepped between us and parted us for
-ever. Does it please you to be assured of this?----Nay, mother, I will speak. I
-have been silent until now, out of my love for you, and because I knew that you
-had given even him a place in your tender heart. He has requited you nobly for
-it. If I had spoken openly before now, things might have been different, but I
-held my tongue, like a coward, and because I had some latent notion that he
-deserved respect from me. I think so no longer. On my last birthday,' I
-continued, addressing him, 'you gave me certain advice which I believed to be
-good; among other things you said that it is seldom a man can look back upon his
-life with satisfaction. You drew that from your own experience. With what kind
-of satisfaction do you look back upon your own life? A man with any tenderness
-for others in his nature would shrink with horror from the contemplation of such
-a life as yours. But perhaps you find it a pleasant task to blight the hopes and
-happiness of those who have the misfortune to come in contact with you. Having
-no children of your own upon whom you could practise in this way, you turned
-your attention to others, and you have succeeded most thoroughly. You said to
-me, when I was of age, that I was a man, with a man's responsibility, and a
-man's work to do, and you bade me do it faithfully. I have tried to do it--my
-mother knows that, and so does Miss West, I think--in the hope that it would
-lead to a good result. But when you addressed those words to me, did you think
-of yourself, and the example of your own life? They sounded well, but did you
-think of your own responsibility--or did you think that <i>you</i>, apart from
-all other men in the world, had no responsibility which it behoved you to look
-to? You brought Jessie here, a friendless, helpless girl--a girl whom nobody but
-you could help loving for the goodness that is in her. She brought sunshine into
-this house, which was gloomy enough without her. She had no mother, no father,
-no friends, and you were her only protector. How have you fulfilled your duty
-towards her? Shall I answer for you? You have behaved like a tyrant, in whom all
-human feeling was deadened. When she strove to love you, you compelled her, by
-harsh words and cold looks and repellent acts, to hate you. She has good cause
-for her feelings towards you now, for you did your best to make every hour and
-every day of her life a misery to her. She told me herself that she was only
-happy out of the house; so that you did your work well. If you saw faults in her
-which no one else saw, and which had their birth in your own hard unfeeling
-nature, what right had you to torture her in the way you did? She was but a
-child, and you are an old man. Why could you not have dealt tenderly and gently
-by her? Ask my mother--ask Miss West--ask any of her friends--if there is
-anything in her character that might not be turned to good account? But you
-could not see it. Lightheartedness and an innocent flow of spirits are crimes in
-your eyes. You made her pay bitterly for the shelter you gave her; you have
-shown the generosity of your nature in its fullest light by making her say,
-after a long experience of you, that she would starve rather than enter your
-house again. When you told us the story of your life, you said you wished me to
-hear it because I might learn something from it. I have learnt something--but
-not the lesson you wished me to learn. I have learnt that such a life as yours,
-such a nature as yours, brings desolation upon every life and nature within its
-influence, and that it would be a happier fate for me to drop down dead this
-minute than live as you have lived, a torture to all around you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, Chris!' implored my mother, with streaming eyes, and
-with a gesture of entreaty towards uncle Bryan, who sat before me now, with his
-head bowed upon his hands. Remember, my dear child, remember!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Remember what, mother?' I cried pitilessly. 'That he has
-robbed me of all that can make life dear to me--of all that <i>is</i> dear to
-me? You should ask me rather to forget when you point to him, whom I would teach
-a different lesson if he were not an old man, with one foot in the grave. Shall
-I remember that he has no belief in goodness here or hereafter--that he believes
-neither in God nor man? Will such remembrances as these plead in his favour? One
-thing I will and do remember--that I owe him money for the food he has given me
-and you. But I will pay him to the last farthing, so that nothing may remain
-between us but what I owe him for having brought misery into my life. That is a
-debt that can never be wiped out. And Jessie will pay him also; she told me she
-would. But for that resolve she would not, for a long time past, have eaten a
-meal at his expense. Are these the things you wish me to remember?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I knew that I was striking him hard with every word I uttered,
-but I would not spare him. I ransacked my mind to hurt him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you, mother,' I said pitilessly, do you think you are
-just to me in pleading for him, and in disguising the opinion you have of him?
-When, knowing that all my hopes were set on Jessie, and that it was impossible
-for her and him to live happily in the same house, I proposed to make a home
-elsewhere where we could live in happiness without him, did you show your love
-for me by saying that we must never leave him, and that, wherever our home was,
-he must share it? When he told us his story, for the purpose, as I now see, of
-setting us more and more against Jessie, and I asked you afterwards if you would
-like me to look on things as he does, what was your answer? &quot;God forbid!&quot; you
-said; &quot;it would take all the sweetness out of your life.&quot;' (Uncle Bryan removed
-his hand from his eyes at this, and raised them for one moment to my mother's
-white face; there was no reproach in them, but a look of humble grateful
-affection.) 'In what was Jessie wrong that she should have been driven from us?
-In wishing him to go to church with us? Ask your own heart, mother, for an
-answer to that, and remember what occurred on the first Sunday night we were in
-this house. If I had known then what I know now, I would have starved rather
-than have accepted the shelter of his roof. Remember how, for days and weeks
-together, Jessie has been submissive and tender to him, striving by every means
-in her power to win his affection; and remember how her efforts were received
-and rewarded. But for him Jessie might have been my wife; you loved her, and she
-loved you. How often have you told me that you saw nothing in her but what was
-good! I think at one time she would have consented to share my lot, but that
-dream is over now. There was an influence strong enough to turn love into hate,
-and to poison all our lives. I will remember that to my dying day, which I hope
-may not be far off. I have nothing worth living for. But one thing I am resolved
-upon--that while I live, those who love me shall choose between me and him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey West caught my arm suddenly and sharply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you mad?' she cried. 'Learn the lesson you want to teach
-others. Look at your mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She let go my arm, and stepped swiftly to my mother's side, in
-time to save her from falling to the ground. Uncle Bryan made a movement towards
-her, but I stood before him, and he shrank back. My mother's strength had given
-way, and she had fainted. I supported her in my arms, while Josey West loosened
-her dress and bathed her face. She opened her eyes presently, and, recognising
-me, pressed me convulsively to her breast.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O my child, my child,' she sobbed, 'my heart is almost
-broken!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked round for uncle Bryan; he was gone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What I did,' moaned my mother, 'I did for the best. I prayed
-and hoped that time would set all things right. I see now that it was
-impossible, and that I was a weak foolish woman. But I loved you, my darling,
-and I would shed my heart's blood for you. What sin have I committed that I
-should be punished by the loss of my dear child's love?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, no, mother,' I cried remorsefully, 'you must not say
-that. You have not lost it. God forbid that it should ever be so!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I think she did not hear me, for she slid from my arms and
-knelt before me, imploring me with sobs and broken words to forgive her. Many
-minutes passed before I succeeded in calming her, and then Josey West and I
-assisted her upstairs to her room, to the room which Jessie had made bright by
-her innocent devices.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie will never sleep here again,' I thought, with a
-choking sensation in my throat. This was <i>her</i> room, Josey,' I said aloud.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey nodded gravely, and whispered to me that my mother must
-go to bed, and that she ought to see a doctor. 'I hope she will not have a
-fever,' said Josey.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother's eyes were wandering around her in a strange way;
-once or twice she looked at me as if she did not know me. The simple sound of my
-voice, however, recalled her to herself.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, dear child,' she said, with a smile so sad and sweet as
-to bring the tears into my eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother,' I whispered, 'you know what has occurred?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She considered for a moment or two; I assisted her memory.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know now,' she replied, with a look of distress. 'Jessie
-has gone.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Will you be strong for my sake, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will do anything you tell me, my darling child,' she said
-humbly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'First I will go and send a doctor to you. Then I want to try
-and find Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear child, do you know where she is?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; and I have no hope of inducing her to return. I know she
-will never come back, but I cannot rest without doing something. I shall go mad
-if I stop in the house all night and make no effort to discover her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go, then, dear child,' she said; and added imploringly, You
-will come back, my darling, will you not? You will not desert me after all these
-years?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How can you think it, mother? I will come back, but it may be
-late.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will keep awake for you, my darling. Say nothing more to
-your uncle. Promise me that, dear child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not speak another word to him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I turned to Josey West; she divined what I was about to say.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll stop with your mother, if you <i>must</i> go. Run round
-to my house first, and say I sha'n't be home to-night. And look here. If Turk's
-there, you'd best take him with you. I suppose you are going to Mr. Rackstraw's?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That was my intention,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course you know the office will be closed; but I daresay
-it will relieve your feelings to thump at the door.' She spoke fretfully; but
-her tone changed when she said, 'Don't think only of yourself. Have some thought
-for your mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'One word, Josey. <i>You</i> have no idea where Jessie is?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not the slightest,' she replied. 'And you didn't know she was
-going away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I had no more idea of it than you had.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That night,' I said hesitatingly, 'when Mr. Glover was at
-your house----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh,' she interrupted in a sharp tone, Mr. Glover! Well, what
-night?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A little while ago, when Jessie was there, and I was not. Did
-he pay her great attention?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course he did.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did he seem fond of her?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It wouldn't have been natural otherwise,' she replied, with a
-suspicious look at me. 'Of course he seemed fond of her. Anything more?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I said, with a sigh; 'that's all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I kissed my mother, and left the room. Her loving eyes
-followed me to the door.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_37" href="#div1Ref_37">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h4>
-<h5>TURK MAKES A CONFESSION.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I found Turk at his sister's house. He jumped up at once on my
-proposing that he should take a walk with me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad of the opportunity, Chris, my boy,' he said; 'for I
-want to talk to you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered, in as lively a tone as I could command, that I was
-at his service.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Like a true friend as you are. The subject I want to talk
-about is spelt with four letters--s-e-l-f. Such a subject needs no overture; up
-with the curtain, then. I start with a self-evident proposition. A man must
-live. What do you say to that?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had nothing to say in contradiction.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well, then. To live, one must have money; to have money
-(barring the silver spoon), one must work for it. Granted?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Granted,' I assented listlessly. He looked at me in surprise
-at my despondent tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' he said, 'there's more in that than meets the eye.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'More in what, Turk? In your proposition?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Chris, my boy. In your face. You are in trouble.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am, Turk; in the deepest, most terrible trouble. I am
-utterly, utterly wretched. I have nothing in the world worth living for.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's bad when it comes to that,' he said, with an expression
-of deep concern. 'Money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Heart?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My silence was a sufficient answer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Is the trouble of such a nature that it may be confided to a
-friend--to a friend with a kindred soul, Chris, my boy?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will tell you about it presently, Turk. Go on with your own
-story first.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In one act, then. Without detail. Since that
-ever-to-be-remembered night when a strong verdict was pronounced against me on
-the other side of Temple Bar--in which direction, by the bye, I see we are
-walking now--and when I determined to relinquish the profession in which I
-glory--I do, Chris, I glory in it; and you can hardly have an idea of the
-sacrifice I have made in giving it up--I have been looking about me. Not having
-been born with that silver spoon in my mouth, I can't afford to be idle. Well,
-to be brief, something that will suit me has come in my way, and I have snatched
-at the chance. The affair will be settled to-morrow. Near the theatre in which I
-made my first and last appearance in the new and original drama which was played
-for the first and last time is a theatrical wig and hair shop, with a shaving
-connection attached. To-morrow that shop and that connection will be mine.
-That's the head and front of my story. But there's something more. I have a
-friend of yours to thank for it all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A friend of mine!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Two, I may say--one fair, one dark. I do perceive here a
-divided duty. But we'll speak of that anon.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; tell me now. What friends do you mean? I haven't many.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have one who stands for a host. If she were such a friend
-to me, I wouldn't call the king my uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I see you must hear it. Briefly, then, this was the way of
-it. The business was for sale, Chris, my boy. Money had to be paid for it--not
-much, but too much for a poor actor whose purse has always resembled a sieve. I
-had saved a little, but not more than half what was required for the purchase of
-the goodwill. I mention this in the presence of these friends of yours----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I interrupted him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't let us have any mystery, Turk. Who are they?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie the peerless and Mr. Glover.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I started. Turk continued:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I mention this in their presence, and lament my
-impecuniosity. Jessie sympathises with me--wishes that she had money, so that
-she might help me. She has a heart of gold, Chris, my boy, a heart of gold. Two
-or three days afterwards, Mr. Glover sends for me--says he has been considering
-the matter, and that he is disposed to assist me. He goes further than being
-disposed to do it--he does it. In short, he provides half the purchase-money,
-and there we are. It is a matter of business, Chris, my boy. I asked him to make
-a matter of business of it, and he said he intended to do so; and he has. Mr.
-Glover is a moneylender, and he lends me the money at ten per cent. But there's
-one thing I'm certain of. He wouldn't have done it but for Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I reflected with some bitterness on this information.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you certain of that, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Morally certain, that is all. For when I thanked Jessie, she
-modestly averred that all that she did was to express a wish that she had a
-friend who would assist me. And now, Chris, my boy, unbosom yourself. What's
-your trouble?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Jessie has left our house, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He gave me a look of deep concern. 'What do you mean by that,
-Chris, my son?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She has left us, never to return--left us suddenly, without
-explanation.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And then I narrated to him, in detail, all that had occurred,
-omitting only what had passed between me and uncle Bryan. Still when I mentioned
-his name, which was necessary several times in the course of my narration, I
-spoke of him with sufficient bitterness to make Turk aware of the terms upon
-which we stood to each other.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk, growing more and more serious as I proceeded, listened
-to me without interruption, and pondered deeply. By the time I had finished he
-had become very serious indeed, and there was an air of gloom upon him which
-somewhat soothed me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is more in <i>this</i> than meets the eye,' he said;
-and added, somewhat unnecessarily as I thought, 'Bear with me a little while,
-Chris, my boy,' for I felt that such a request more properly belonged to me than
-to him. But he explained his meaning presently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have given me your confidence, Chris, my boy, and you
-want me to stand by you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And I <i>will</i> stand by you, as you have stood by me--I
-don't forget the big stick you bought, Chris, to assist me on a certain eventful
-night'--(here I was stung reproachfully by the remembrance of my cowardly
-behaviour on that night); 'nor other occasions at the Royal Columbia when you
-led the applause like a true friend. I'll stand by you, my boy, but you must
-first hear my confession.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not wish to hear his confession; I wished to continue
-talking only of myself and Jessie, but I was bound to listen.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'As before, Chris, in a very few words. I knew that you loved
-Jessie, but I scarcely thought that your passion was as strong as it is--as
-powerful, as deep----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No words can express its strength and depth, Turk,' I said,
-in a tone of gloomy satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He nodded, as if he fully understood me, and continued: Well,
-others may love as well as you, Chris.' I looked at him in jealous curiosity. 'I
-shouldn't be true to you nor to myself if I didn't confess it before we proceed
-to the consideration of the state of affairs. <i>I</i>
-love her, also.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I started, and let go his arm.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't do that, Chris, my boy,' said the honest fellow; 'it's
-nobody's fault but my own. I know that I can't stand in comparison with you. You
-are ten years younger than I am--you are handsome, clever, bright; and I--well,
-I am a failure. That's what I am, Chris; a failure. Even if you were out of the
-way, which I don't for one moment wish, curious as it may sound, I think I
-should stand but a poor chance with such a beautiful creature as she is. I am
-not a hundredth part good enough for her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one is, Turk,' I said, somewhat mollified.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; I won't say that. I think that some one whom I know <i>is</i>
-good enough' (he pressed my arm sympathisingly); 'and besides, you have a claim
-upon her. You mustn't be surprised or hurt at my loving her, Chris; I could
-mention half a dozen others who are in the same boat. You see, one can't help
-loving her, she is so bright and winsome. Why, if she were mine--which she
-isn't, and never will be--I think I should take a pride in knowing it, for it
-would make her all the more precious to me. That is how the matter stands with
-me, Chris, and I think it's right that you should know it. I give her up, not
-without a pang, my boy, but freely; I am used to disappointments, and I shall
-bear this as I have borne others.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you never had any hope, Turk,' I said, disposed, after
-his magnanimous conduct, to argue the matter with him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, not to speak of,' he replied, with a melancholy sigh. 'If
-I can't be Jessie's lover--don't be angry with me for using the word--I can be
-her friend, and yours. It rests with you to say the word. If you know enough of
-Turk West to trust him, say so, Chris, and he pledges himself to act faithfully
-in your interest. He may be of more use to you than you imagine. Well?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should be an ungrateful brute not to say that I accept your
-offer thankfully, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's settled, then. Shake hands on it. And now, Chris,
-we'll be silent for just two minutes, and then we'll go into the matter.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At the end of that time he resumed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I said that there was more in your story than meets the eye,
-Chris, my boy; and there is. Jessie disappears on your birthday, suddenly,
-without any forewarning. This morning everything was nice and pleasant with all
-of you at home.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'With the exception of uncle Bryan,' I interrupted; 'you
-mustn't forget that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't forget it, but then he is the same as he usually is,
-and there's nothing unusual in that. She is affectionate to you; she is
-affectionate to your mother; and I think that she couldn't have avoided seeing
-that there was to be a little celebration of her birthday to-night. Well, it is
-plain to me that this morning she had no idea of going away. Now what has
-occurred since this morning to cause this sudden change in her? That's the first
-thing to consider.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could not think of anything. Jessie had not been out of our
-house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's something I have not told you, Turk, but I don't see
-what it can have to do with Jessie's going from us. We were talking together
-once, when Jessie said that she wondered that I had never asked her any
-questions about herself--she meant about herself before she came to live with
-us. I answered that mother had desired me not to do so, because uncle Bryan
-might not like it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What had he to do with it? asked Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know, but mother said he might have secrets which he
-would not wish us to discover. When I told this to Jessie, she said that she had
-a secret, but didn't then know what it was. It was in a letter which she was not
-to open until she was eighteen years of age--until to-day. Then she said she
-would tell me everything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's a mystery somewhere,' said Turk, pondering; in that
-letter perhaps.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I could not agree with him. Eager as I was to receive any
-impressions which would divert my suspicions from the current in which they were
-running, I could not see the slightest connection between the circumstance I had
-just mentioned and Jessie's absence. By this time we were at Temple Bar.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where are we going?' asked Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To Mr. Rackstraw's,' I answered. 'Jessie has been taking
-lessons of him, you know. He may be able to tell us something about her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk shook his head. 'There are two strong reasons against the
-realisation of that expectation, Chris. First, Jessie has not been there to-day,
-according to your own statement; second, Mr. Rackstraw's office closes at five
-o'clock.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But we may be able to discover where Mr. Rackstraw lives.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well?' I echoed, irritated at his seeming discouragement of
-my plan. 'Turk, can't you see that I'm almost mad with misery. I thought you
-were a friend----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And am I not? That's news to Turk. What good can you do by
-finding out Mr. Rackstraw's private address?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He may tell me where Mr. Glover lives.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And then?' demanded Turk, in a grave and sorrowful tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I turned from him petulantly. 'If you do not care to
-understand me,' I said, 'I had best go alone.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I walked swiftly onwards towards Mr. Rackstraw's office, Turk
-following me at a distance of a few paces.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mr. Rackstraw's office was situated in a quiet narrow street
-in the rear of Covent-garden. It was closed, as I expected it would be, and
-although I rang all the bells on the door for fully ten minutes, I received no
-answer. Turk stood quietly near me, without speaking. I was heartily ashamed of
-myself for my treatment of him, and I made an attempt at reconciliation by
-holding out my hand to him as I turned disconsolately from Mr. Rackstraw's door.
-He took my hand with affectionate eagerness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't find it in my heart,' he said with rough tenderness,
-'to be angry with you; but I ought to be.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I <i>am</i> ashamed of myself for behaving so badly to you,
-Turk, but I couldn't help it. I think I am ready to do any mad or foolish
-thing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I don't care about myself. I have a stronger reason for
-being angry with you. Who of we two should be Jessie's champion? You, I should
-say. Yet I am obliged to defend her from your suspicions. If you were ten years
-older than you are, I should quarrel with you, Chris; I would with any other man
-who dared to say a word against her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Who has said anything against her?' I demanded hotly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You, in coupling her name with Mr. Glover--you, even in the
-expression of the idea that Mr. Glover has had anything to do with her
-disappearance. I don't want you to be ashamed of yourself for treating me badly,
-but you ought to be for your suspicions of her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't know what I know, Turk. I am bringing no charge
-against Jessie--God forbid that I should; I love her too well, and think of her
-too highly. But Mr. Glover has been paying court to her from the first day he
-set eyes on her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What if he has? Is that her fault? Aren't you old enough yet
-to know that there are hundreds of men always ready to run after a pretty girl?
-Now, I daresay it has hurt you to hear that Mr. Glover has helped me into my new
-business because Jessie expressed a wish that she had a friend who would assist
-me. Why, what was more natural than that she should say so, out of her kind
-heart, and what was more natural than that he should be glad of the opportunity
-of obliging her, and of doing a fair stroke of business at the same time? It
-isn't a large sum that he advances--a matter of seventy-five pounds only, and he
-has a bill of sale, and goodness knows what, all for security. Now you are
-better satisfied perhaps. I can't say that I am over-fond of Mr. Glover, but he
-is said to be an honourable, straightforward man. I'll tell you what I'll do, if
-you must see him----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I must,' I said firmly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know where he lives, but I'll take you to a theatre
-that he often pops into of an evening; he may be there. The acting-manager is
-one of my new friends, and will pass us in, I daresay, or will be able to tell
-us if Mr. Glover is in the theatre.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_38" href="#div1Ref_38">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>MR. GLOVER DECLINES TO SATISFY ME.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The friend to whom Turk referred was, fortunately for us, in
-the lobby of the theatre, and as the two were engaged in conversation, the man I
-came to seek lounged towards us. He seemed surprised to see me, but approached
-me quite affably, and asked what I was doing in <i>his</i> part of the world so
-late in the night. I made some sort of awkward, bungling answer, and then he
-recognised Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You, too, Turk,' he said in his slow way; 'but that is
-natural, for these are your quarters now. Let me see. You take possession
-to-morrow?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' Turk answered, everything was settled, and he went into
-his new place of business early in the morning.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And how is business with you?' asked Mr. Glover, directing
-his attention to me again.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered that it was very good, and that I had nothing to
-complain of in that respect.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have nothing to complain of in that respect,' he said,
-glancing from me to Turk and from Turk to me, and appearing to be seeking for
-some solution of the circumstance that we were in company together. When he was
-in any doubt, he had an irritating habit of repeating the last words spoken by
-the person he was conversing with, which gave him time to think of his own words
-in reply. 'That must be very satisfactory. I hear good accounts of you. You will
-get on, I should say, if you are steady and straightforward, and if you keep a
-good name. That is everything in this world. A good name--a good name. But what
-brings <i>you</i> out to-night? Have <i>you</i> business in this quarter too?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No,' I said; 'I did not come out for business.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You did not come out for business. For pleasure, then. Well,
-young men will be young men.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To tell you the truth, sir,' I said----</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's right, always tell the truth,' he interrupted,
-speaking from a height, slowly, and coolly, and patronisingly, as though he were
-truth's conservator, and was glad to hear that it was being practised. 'Yes, to
-tell me the truth----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I came out partly for the purpose and in the hope of seeing
-you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">With his hand playing with his moustache, he looked not at me,
-but at Turk, for an explanation. Turk, however, had nothing to say.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You came out for the purpose and in the hope of seeing me.
-Yes. Have you brought me any message?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did you expect one, sir?' I asked quickly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did I expect one? No, I cannot really say that I did; but I
-should not have been surprised. Go on,' he said, with gentle encouragement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There were some persons passing us occasionally, and I moved
-to a more retired spot. I saw that he was curious, and I saw that his curiosity
-increased at this movement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You seem agitated,' he said. 'Turk, our young friend here
-seems agitated. Take your time--take your time. If you are going to beg a
-favour, I shall be glad to assist you in any way in my power--in any way in my
-power.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have not come to beg any favour of you, sir. I only came to
-ask----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I hesitated here; the justice of Turk's reproach came upon
-me with great force, and I was conscious that the words I was about to utter
-might be construed into an ungenerous suspicion of Jessie. If they reached her
-ears from the lips of one who was not well disposed towards me, I should sink
-for ever in her esteem.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Take time--take time,' said Mr. Glover, outwardly quite at
-his ease.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk came to my rescue here. He divined my thoughts, and the
-cause of my hesitation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps, Mr. Glover,' said Turk, 'if you would not mind
-regarding what passes as confidential, and not to be mentioned to any one else,
-Christopher would be more at his ease.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I gave Turk a grateful look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Christopher would be more at his ease,' repeated Mr. Glover.
-'This really is very mysterious. I don't see any objection. Then you know what
-he is going to say?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know the subject he wishes to speak upon--but I was not
-aware of it when I first came out with him to-night.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is it such a subject as ought to be spoken of in confidence
-between us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He totally ignored me, as if my opinion on the point were of
-the smallest possible value.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think so,' replied Turk, 'if it be spoken of at all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have your doubts as to the judiciousness of the
-communication our young friend is about to make?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have; and I have told him so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, you have told him so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He appeared to me to debate within himself whether, under such
-circumstances, he should listen any further; but his curiosity overcame his
-evident wish to baulk me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You may go on,' he said to me, with a condescending wave of
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is understood, then,' I said, somewhat more boldly, 'that
-what we say to each other is quite private and will not be repeated?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He stared at me very haughtily, and bent his head, and stood
-before me, with his fingers to his lips, waiting for me to speak. A singular
-fancy occurred to me at this moment as I gazed at him--a fancy which need not
-here be mentioned; it lingered in my mind then and afterwards, although I strove
-to dismiss it on this occasion as being utterly wild and out of all reason. But,
-in conjunction with another circumstance, which came to light in the course of
-time, it led to a strange discovery.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have not come to make any communication,' I said; 'I have
-only come to ask a question. I can speak more freely now, as you are a
-gentleman, and as what I say will not reach her ears.' (His lips repeated 'Her
-ears,' but he did not repeat the words aloud.) 'It is about Miss Trim'----</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'About Jessie,' he said, in a lighter tone. 'Yes; what about
-her?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know where she is?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">His looks were disturbed now, although he strove to be cool.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do I know where she is?' he repeated, with a contraction of
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is what I have come to ask.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, that is what you have come to ask.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is no need for me to repeat the question, I suppose,' I
-said, controlling my desire to strike at him, for his manner was in the last
-degree contemptuous, notwithstanding that the interest he took in the
-conversation was evidently strengthened.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; I understand the English language, and <i>you</i> will be
-kind enough to understand that I am not in the habit of being questioned. There
-is no need for you to repeat the question, but there is a need for my asking why
-it is put to me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you do not know?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He would not give me the satisfaction of a simple answer.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let me see,' he said, in a musing tone, 'to-day is her
-birthday.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You do know that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She told me herself; these things are not guessed at.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have not answered my question,' I said, trembling from
-passion and from a sense of helplessness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have not answered mine,' he replied. 'I ask you why you
-put it to me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk motioned to me that I ought to tell him, but I could not
-speak.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps I had best explain,' Turk then said. 'This is
-Jessie's birthday, as you know, and Christopher and his mother had prepared a
-little feast in honour of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'After the manner of such people,' observed Mr. Glover, with a
-sneer and a laugh, which set my pulses beating more quickly. Turk took no notice
-of the observation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My sister Josey was invited, to please Jessie, and Chris had
-a little present to give her----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Exceedingly pretty and pathetic,' interrupted Mr. Glover. 'It
-would make a charming domestic scene in poor life, if it was placed on the
-stage. These commonplace circumstances tickle the fancy, and please sentimental
-persons, whenever they are presented in an unreal form. In real life, of course,
-there is nothing very attractive in them--often the reverse, I should say. But
-the picture you have drawn would be a failure even on the stage, if there was
-nothing exciting to follow. We want a &quot;situation,&quot; Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We have one ready,' responded Turk. 'Without warning, and
-most strangely and suddenly, Jessie leaves her home. Her friends suppose she has
-gone out for a walk, and are waiting for her with uneasiness, which grows
-stronger as the time goes on and Jessie does not return. While they are waiting,
-a letter comes----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Are you concocting a plot?' asked Mr. Glover.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am telling you exactly what has occurred. A letter is
-received from Jessie, in which she says that she has gone away, and never
-intends to return. Chris, in his anxiety, has come to see you, in the hope--or
-the fear--of hearing some news of her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had been watching Mr. Glover's face all the time Turk was
-speaking, but it was impossible for me to decide whether he was acting or not.
-The only change I observed in him occurred during Turk's last words; then a
-little light came into his eyes, which might have been construed into an
-expression of triumph.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And Chris, in his anxiety,' he said, has come to see me in
-the hope--or the fear--of hearing some news of her. Which is it?' he asked,
-turning to me; 'hope or fear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Fear,' I replied unhesitatingly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What do you suspect me of?' he continued politely; 'running
-away with her? You don't answer. Afraid to put it into words. But that's the
-plain English of it, isn't it? You did a wise thing in stipulating that what
-passes between us is to be kept private, or I might have been tempted to tell
-the young lady in question something which would not be pleasant for her to
-hear. Had you known what is due to a gentleman from one in your station of life,
-I might have been induced to satisfy your inexplicable anxiety concerning her;
-as it is, I decline to do so. She would be both amused and angry to learn that
-you have set up some sort of a claim upon her, as if there could be any
-community of feeling between you. You seem to forget that she is a lady, and
-that you--well, that you are not a gentleman. Take this piece of advice from one
-who is competent to give it--go home and stick to your bench, and don't presume
-to cast your thoughts on what is not only beyond your reach, but immeasurably
-above you. Good-night, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And with a contemptuous glance at me, Mr. Glover walked away
-in a very leisurely manner.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_39" href="#div1Ref_39">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h4>
-<h5>A NEW FEAR.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I walked home in the most sorrowful of moods. Turk accompanied
-me part of the way, but when he began to speak in Mr. Glover's favour, I said
-that I would prefer to walk by myself. The good fellow took the hint, and would
-not notice my churlishness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know, I know, old fellow,' he said, shaking hands with me;
-'but you might count me as nobody. Never mind, Chris, my boy, you won't find
-many better friends than Turk West; and he's not to be shaken off, let me tell
-you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I reflected with bitterness that I had not one friend who
-thought as I thought. Everybody was against me, and I was distrusted and
-misunderstood even by those who should have held to me most closely. I walked
-for miles out of my way, almost blindly, seeing nothing, hearing nothing,
-feeling nothing, but my own despair and grief. The streets were very still as I
-approached our house, and I lingered about the spots where Jessie and I had
-lingered and talked in the days that were gone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey West opened the door for me. Her face was very grave.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well?' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have heard nothing, Josey. She has not come home?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A peculiar accent in her voice struck me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How is mother?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She closed her lips firmly, and looked at me seriously and
-reproachfully. I rebelled against that look; my heart was full almost to
-bursting.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why don't you and those who were my friends say what you
-think of me?' I demanded bitterly. 'Why don't you say at once that I am to blame
-for all that has occurred, and that I, and I only, am the cause of all this
-misery?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't say so,' she replied gently, 'because I don't think
-so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you look at me as if it were so,' I said loudly; 'you and
-all the others. You have fair words and fair excuses for every one but me----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She placed her fingers on her lips. 'Hush!' she said; 'don't
-be cruel as well as unjust.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Her hand was on my arm, and I shook it off roughly. 'Who is
-the just one? Uncle Bryan? I will talk to you no more. How is mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go up and see; but tread softly. You are not the only
-sufferer--remember that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I went upstairs, and into my mother's room, softly. Josey West
-followed me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She opened her eyes and looked at me vacantly. She did not
-know me; even when I took her hand, and fondled it in mine, she showed no sign
-of recognition. Then a feeling of desolation, more terrible than any pain I had
-yet suffered, entered my heart, and I fell on my knees by her side. Was I to
-lose her next? It seemed so. Her white pitiful face, her parched restless lips,
-her mournful eyes gazing on vacancy, her hot skin, were like so many tongues
-reproaching me for my selfishness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For God's sake tell me, Josey,' I whispered, 'how long has
-she been like this?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The change came a little while after the doctor left. She
-bore up while he was here, and tried to answer him cheerfully; but when he was
-gone, she broke down.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did she speak, Josey.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A little at first.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What about?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Only about you, Chris; but I cannot tell you what she said.
-They were only broken words of tenderness----' Josey turned from me, and could
-not continue for her tears.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did you not go for the doctor again, Josey?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I could not leave her, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan might have gone--'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I knocked at his door, and called him again and again; but I
-got no answer.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I went at once to his room, and knocked, but no answer came. I
-tried the handle, and found that the door was unlocked. I entered the room, and
-struck a light. Uncle Bryan was not there, and his bed had not been lain upon. I
-went downstairs into my own bedroom, and searched the house swiftly; uncle Bryan
-was not in it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Did you see him go out, Josey?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; I have not seen him since you left.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I must run for the doctor. Will you stop here?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll stop, Chris, and do all I can to help you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I pressed her hand, and within half an hour the doctor was at
-my mother's bedside. I waited below until he came down.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you will walk back with me,' he said, will give you some
-medicine for your mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is she very ill, sir?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My heart sank as I asked, 'Dangerously?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think so, but we shall know more in a day or two.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then there is no immediate danger, sir?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think not--I think not; but we must be prepared for the
-worst.' He said something more than this, but I did not hear him. A mist stole
-upon my senses, for his quiet tone portended the worst. 'Bear up, Mr. Carey,' he
-said; 'you must not give way. We will do our best. A great deal will depend upon
-good nursing. That is a sensible little woman who is with her now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This doctor was a man who was deservedly worshipped by the
-poor in our neighbourhood; his life was really one of self-sacrifice, for he was
-a capable man, was paid badly, worked hard, and did his duty bravely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can you tell me what she is suffering from, sir?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was about to ask you that question Mr. Carey,' was his
-reply. 'All that I know at present is that she is in a high state of fever, that
-her blood is thin and poor, and that she is as weak as a human being dare be who
-requires strength to battle successfully with disease. It appears to me that she
-must have been suffering for some time, for a very long time probably--but I am
-in the dark as to that--and that she has at length given way. If you put upon a
-beam a pressure greater than it can bear, the beam must break.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I do not think my mother has worked too hard, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The mind has acted upon the body. Hard physical work itself
-seldom, if ever, kills. In the case of this beam----you follow me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In the case of this beam, there have been secret inroads upon
-its power of resistance, and the wood has rotted. I have seen stout planks cut
-through, and colonies of little insects bared to the light which have been
-steadily and surely eating away its strength. I am speaking plainly, because I
-think it is the best course in all these cases, and when I am speaking to a
-sensible man.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you, sir; I should prefer to hear the truth, terrible
-though it be.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Outwardly, these planks seem capable of bearing any pressure,
-but when a great trial comes, they must give way. There are thousands and
-thousands of human beings walking about, in seemingly good health, in precisely
-the same condition. Has your mother suffered any great trouble?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A great trouble has come upon us within the last few hours.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'An unexpected trouble?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Totally unexpected, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For which you were quite unprepared?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Quite, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That may be the immediate, but is not the direct, cause of
-your mother's illness. She has been enduring a long strain, as I have said, and
-has at length broken down under it.' By this time we were in his shop, and he
-was preparing the medicine. 'You look ill yourself. Let me feel your pulse.' He
-looked me steadily in the face. 'You are your mother's only child, I believe.
-Miss West led me to infer as much.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She was right, sir.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, then,' he said, giving me a rough and kindly shake,
-'your mother's ultimate recovery may depend--I only say <i>may</i>--upon you.
-Think of that, and don't be falling ill yourself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll try not to,' I murmured, for I felt sick and faint.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Drink this,' he said, pouring out a draught for me; it will
-revive you. You will try not to? Nay, you must make up your mind not to, for
-your mother's sake. We never know what we can do. Why, we can conquer pain, if
-we are strong-willed enough. I was explaining about your mother. She is so
-delicately and exquisitely susceptible, that to have those about her whom she
-loves may contribute more to her recovery than anything all the doctors in
-London could do. She is in a state of delirium at present; under the most
-favourable circumstances, she is likely to remain in this state for a week or
-two, probably for longer. If, when she recovers her senses, the first face she
-looks upon and recognises is a face that she loves, it may not only contribute
-to her recovery, it may accomplish it. On the other hand, if she misses a face
-that is dear to her, and that she has been accustomed to see about her, it may
-cause a relapse, and prove fatal. I have tried to make myself clear, and to give
-you a good reason why you must keep well. Don't mope. If you have any private
-grief of your own, keep it under until this peril is past.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thanked him, and left him. I told Josey West exactly what
-the doctor had said, and she returned the compliment he had paid her of calling
-her a sensible little woman by saying that he was a sensible man.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now, Chris,' she said, 'you must go to bed.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I said that I would sit up with my mother, and tried to
-persuade Josey to lie down; but she refused, saying rest was more necessary to
-me than to her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In the first place, you have your work to do; that must not
-be neglected for all the Jessie Trims in the world. Oh, yes, my dear. You may
-shake your head, but I've been remarkably quiet all through, and I think I'm
-entitled to say a few words.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll not stop to hear anything spoken against her,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's right. Fly up. You think you're fonder of her than I
-am. That you can't be. But I'm not satisfied with her, and I sha'n't be until I
-get all this explained. There's something behind it that neither you nor I
-suspect, or my name isn't Josey West.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's what Turk says,' I interposed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I expect you've been leading him a fine life to-night. Poor
-Turk! Why, he worships the ground she walks upon. I tell you what it is, my
-sweet child,' she said sarcastically, there's more lessons than one you've got
-to learn. But to come back. There's some mystery behind all this; but it might
-be one thing, and it might be another. I'm in a whirl, that's what I am, my
-dear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I really think Josey administered these words to me as a kind
-of medicine. But she could not deceive me as to the feelings she entertained for
-Jessie. If any person had dared in her presence to say a word against her
-friend, she would have been the first to defend her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Josey,' I said, 'I shall feel much relieved if you will
-promise me one thing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That depends. I'm not going to open my mouth and shut my
-eyes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If Jessie tells you the reason of her going away----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Which she's sure to do. Oh, I shall know all about it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And if the knowledge does not come to me in any other way,
-will you tell me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Upon my word! Me tell a secret? Not for all the world, master
-Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But if it's not a secret?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then of course you'll hear it.' We spoke in an undertone, so
-as not to disturb my mother, who lay unconscious of what was going on around
-her. But here you are stopping up,' continued Josey fretfully, when every
-minute's rest is precious to you and all of us. I have only told you one of my
-reasons why you <i>must</i> be fresh in the morning--and mind you sleep, master
-Chris, when you get to bed. I'll tell you another. There'll be the shop to look
-after.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's uncle Bryan's business,' I replied, flushing with
-anger. The mere mention of his name aroused all my bitterness against him. 'If
-mother could be moved from this house to-morrow with safety, I'd take her out of
-his sight without a moment's delay.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You'll not see your uncle Bryan again in a hurry,' said
-Josey. 'You mark my words--he's gone for good.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not stop to discuss the point, but went to the bedside
-and kissed my mother. As I leant over her, I could scarcely hear her breathing,
-and but for a light convulsive sob which rose to her throat every now and then,
-and which she seemed to make an effort to check, it would have been difficult to
-detect any sign of life in her. The doctor's words dwelt in my mind as I gazed
-at her beloved face, and for the first time in my life I appreciated at their
-proper worth the sacrifices which this dearest of women had made for one so
-unworthy as I. I knelt at her bedside, and prayed that her life might be spared
-to me--prayed with humble heart--and my tears flowed freely.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey was outside on the landing.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night, my dear,' she said; 'give me a kiss.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mine were not the only tears on my face as I walked
-downstairs.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_40" href="#div1Ref_40">CHAPTER XL.</a></h4>
-<h5>WHAT THE NEIGHBOURS SAID.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey West's prediction proved to be right. When I rose the
-next morning uncle Bryan had not returned. Josey, looking as fresh as though she
-had had a good night's rest, told me that there had been no change in my
-mother's condition--that only a few words had passed her lips, and that those
-words were about me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There's a lot to do,' she said; you've got your work to look
-after, the shop must be attended to, and there's your mother to nurse. I really
-think, my dear, that if your uncle doesn't make his appearance, we had best take
-possession of the place. Two things we must be careful of--we mustn't let the
-business be ruined, and we must try to keep the neighbours from talking of what
-has occurred. When a lot of gossiping women get hold of a woman's name, with a
-story attached to it, they tear that woman's name to pieces with as much
-pleasure as they would eat a good dinner; and as for the story, my dear, when
-you hear it the next day you wouldn't know it, they twist and mangle it so. Stop
-here while I run round to my house; I sha'n't be gone ten minutes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">During Josey's absence the doctor came.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your mother is no worse,' he said, after his examination;
-'but I am not satisfied with her condition; it puzzles me. I can say nothing at
-present except that rest and freedom from agitation are imperative; there must
-be no noise in the house, no voices raised in anger, nothing that can in any way
-disturb her. Her life may depend upon it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">By this I knew that he must have heard something more of what
-had taken place than what I had told him. Indeed, the gossips of the
-neighbourhood had commenced their work. I have puzzled my head many times to
-discover by what means they knew what they knew, but it was and is a mystery to
-me. They were familiar with matters which I had supposed no person outside our
-little circle could possibly be acquainted with. They knew that uncle Bryan and
-I were at daggers drawn, and that there had been a desperate quarrel between us;
-they knew that he had left the house, that Jessie had run away on her birthday,
-and that my mother was lying dangerously ill. Being in possession of these bare
-bones, they put them together with amazing ingenuity, and produced the most
-astounding results. The first thing they settled was, that uncle Bryan and I had
-quarrelled not alone with our tongues, but with our hands; and one of the
-pictures which grew out of the story as it was related by one to another
-represented uncle Bryan lying on the ground and me standing over him with a
-knife, while Josey West was rushing between us to prevent murder being done.
-Another picture represented uncle Bryan packing up in a handkerchief all his
-treasure in money (for, strange to say, I now learned for the first time that he
-bore the reputation of a miser, and that it was generally supposed he had large
-sums of money concealed), and stealing off in the dead of night in fear of his
-life. Another, and the worst, picture concerned Jessie and Mr. Glover. Mr.
-Glover, an enormously rich gentleman, had fallen desperately in love with
-Jessie, and she had consented to elope with him. The gossips gloated over the
-details. A carriage with a pair of gray horses was waiting at the corner of a
-certain street (name given) about a quarter of a mile away; Mr. Glover, in a
-large cloak, was on the watch at the appointed time; Jessie made her appearance,
-with a small bundle in her hand wrapped in a handkerchief; Mr. Glover lifted her
-into the carriage, jumped in after her, and away they whirled. Even if they had
-been inclined to doubt the truth of this story (which they were not), it was
-impossible for them to do so because of the exact and wonderful details which
-accompanied its relation. There were a coachman and a footman dressed in such
-and such a way, down to their very buttons; the carriage was painted blue, with
-edgings of yellow; Mr. Glover wore a smoking-cap, and his cloak had a fur
-collar, and two gold tassels attached to it. This cloak gave an air of
-mysterious romance to the picture, and added much to the enjoyment of it. It is
-worthy of notice that both uncle Bryan and Jessie left our house with something
-done up in a pocket-handkerchief. This occurs to me as an arbitrary feature in
-the painting of such pictures; and I have no doubt that, had a dozen persons
-been missing, each would have been portrayed as stealing away with something
-done up in a pocket-handkerchief in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before the day was out, the whole neighbourhood was busy
-talking over these stories, and discussing their probable results.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey had returned within the ten minutes, and brought with
-her Matty and Rosy. The shop was opened, and a more than usually brisk business
-was done, in consequence of the gossips dropping in to pick up information; but
-I resolutely refused to go behind the counter. I would have nothing to do with
-it. I had already saved a little purse of money, and my earnings were good. I
-was determined to have no further connection with uncle Bryan in any shape or
-way whatever.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then I <i>must</i> take possession,' observed Josey, after
-listening to my views, which I expressed in most unmistakable terms. It would be
-a pity to let such a business go to rack and ruin. If your uncle Bryan returns,
-I shall be able to render a proper account.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She entered upon this as she entered upon everything else,
-with intense and thorough earnestness, and the business was carried on, and the
-duties of the house performed, as though nothing of importance had occurred to
-disturb them. She might have been born a grocer for the intimate knowledge she
-displayed of the requirements of the trade. When I expressed my astonishment,
-she said philosophically:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear, nothing's difficult. One can do anything if one
-makes up one's mind to do it. All one has got to do is to go about it
-willingly.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the mean time I looked out anxiously for news of Jessie,
-but on the first day of her absence I learnt nothing. I went to Mr. Rackstraw's
-in the afternoon to make inquiries, but he received me coldly, and desired me
-not to call again--in such terms that I was certain Mr. Glover had made him my
-enemy. Then I went to Turk's new shop, and found him very busy, and sanguine of
-his prospects. But as he had no news of Jessie I listened to his relation of his
-plans with small interest.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall be able to serve you, Chris,' he said, before I went
-away; 'I shall keep my eyes open.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That night I sat up with my mother until three o'clock, when
-Josey relieved me. My mother did not know me, and although I strove hard to make
-her recognise me, her eyes dwelt on my face as they would have done on the face
-of a stranger. What pain and grief this brought to me I cannot describe.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was something different in the arrangement of the room,
-and I made a remark concerning it to Josey. The room was clearer, lighter. Josey
-explained it to me in a sharp tone, as though she desired not to be questioned.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The doctor said the room must be made as airy as possible; he
-doesn't want a lot of lumber about.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But the next morning it occurred to me that the box in which
-Jessie kept her clothes and nicknacks had been taken out of the room. I looked
-about the house for it, but could not find it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where is Jessie's box, Josey?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gone,' was the short and snappish reply.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gone where?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, I suppose you must be told. While you were away
-yesterday, Jessie sent for it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you know where she is,' I cried excitedly, jumping to my
-feet, and tearing off my working-coat.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I know where she is.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I waited, but Josey did not volunteer further information. I
-looked at her reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'll just tell you as much as I'm compelled to, master
-Christopher, and no more. I had a letter from Jessie yesterday---O, no; you'll
-not see it! It was meant for my own eyes, and no others. I said that Jessie
-would tell me the reason of her going away, and she has done so; and I know
-where she is, and I've sent her clothes and all her things to her. And that's
-all, master Christopher.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, it isn't all, Josey. You will tell me something more. If
-I'm not to know where she is----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Which you are not,' Josey interrupted; 'not from me at
-least.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I may know whether she is well.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, she is well in health.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And happy?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know; I can't tell.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did she do right in going away?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She answered me in precisely the same words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I don't know; I can't tell.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is she stopping with friends?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, she is stopping with friends.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But what friends can she have that we don't know of?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah,' exclaimed Josey, more snappishly than before, 'what
-friends, I wonder?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Josey,' I said coaxingly, putting my arm round her waist----</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I tell you what it is, master Christopher. If you ask me many
-more questions, I shall run away;' but in spite of her assumed severity, her
-tone softened.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I won't ask you many more, Josey,' I said, and I felt the
-tears rising to my eyes, 'but you might have some pity for me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bless the dear child!' she said, with a motherly air, I <i>
-have</i> some pity for you! Why, you stupid boy, I'm as fond of you as though
-you were my own brother!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then tell me if it was because of me Jessie went away.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You had nothing to do with it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a relief to me to hear this, for I had in some way got
-it in my mind that Jessie had run away to escape the proposal she suspected I
-intended to make to her. I approached a more delicate subject.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have heard the stories the neighbours are telling each
-other, Josey, about Jessie and Mr. Glover.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, yes, I've heard them! The scandal-mongers! I'd like to
-wring their ears for them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That was sufficient for me; a great weight was lifted from my
-heart. There was another question that I must ask.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did Jessie in her letter say anything about me? Did she send
-me any message?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She did, and I wasn't to give it to you unless you asked for
-it. Perhaps I'd better read it.' She took the letter from her pocket and read:
-'&quot;Chris will be sure to miss my box&quot;--you see,' said Josey interrupting her
-reading, 'Jessie sent the letter to my house; she didn't know I was here; and I
-was to ask your mother to let me have her box, so that I might send it to Jessie
-without your knowing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then there's a message to mother in that letter?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is, but I can't give it to her, poor dear!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on with what Jessie says about me, Josey.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'&quot;Chris will be sure to miss my box, and if he asks you if I
-have sent him any message, say that I hope he will not try to discover where I
-am, and that I hope also he will not think worse of me than I am. If we meet
-again----&quot;' here Josey broke off with, 'But that's not for you, I should say.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It <i>must</i> be for me, Josey. You have no right to keep it
-from me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, if you will have it. &quot;If we meet again, it must be at
-my own time and in my own way. Whether I am right or wrong in what I have done
-and what I intend to do, I have quite made up my mind, and no one can advise
-me.&quot; Now I hope you are satisfied.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was compelled to be. There were both balm and gall in the
-letter--balm because the tales that slanderous tongues were circulating were
-false, and gall because Jessie had written in such a manner as to give me but
-little hope that she reciprocated my love. If she loved me, she would have
-confided in me. Is it possible, I reflected with bitterness, that she could have
-led me on, knowing my feelings towards her, and making light of them? But the
-thought was transient; I would not entertain it. It would be a shame on my
-manhood to doubt her. What if she were not for me--would that prove her
-unworthy? But it was bitter to bear, and the scalding tears ran from my eyes as
-I laid my head on my mother's pillow. My sobs disturbed her, and she moved her
-fingers feebly towards my neck. It was the first sign of recognition she had
-displayed since her illness. I fondled her poor thin hand, and kissed it, and
-moved close to her lips, for she was murmuring faint words. But these words were
-addressed not to me, but to my father, who had been dead for so many years. She
-was speaking to him of their darling boy, and of the happiness he would be to
-them when he grew to be a man. I listened sadly; every soft word she murmured
-was a dagger in my heart, for I was beginning to learn the strength of her love
-and the weakness of mine. Heavy as was the blow which had fallen upon me, I felt
-that there might be comfort and peace even yet for me, if my mother lived to
-enjoy the outward evidences of my penitence and love, and that a curse indeed
-must fall upon my life if she died without blessing me.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_41" href="#div1Ref_41">CHAPTER XLI.</a></h4>
-<h5>JOSEY WEST DECLARES THAT SHE HAS GOT INTO HER PROPER GROOVE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">A week had passed, and there was still no change in my
-mother's condition. Every time the doctor visited her, his manner became more
-serious. The shadow of death seemed to hang already over the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Her strength will not hold out for another week, I am
-afraid.' He spoke these words to Josey West, out of my hearing as he thought.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I followed him from the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I heard what you said to Miss West,' I said to him. 'Is all
-hope really gone? Can nothing be done?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He did not reply immediately, and before he spoke he took my
-arm kindly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is one of the cases outside my experience. Your mother
-has nothing that a physician can grapple with. She has no organic disease that I
-can discover, and although physically she is fearfully weak, it is mental
-suffering that is killing her. It is not usual for a doctor to speak as plainly
-as I am speaking to you, but it is best to do so. I have heard so much that is
-good and noble in your mother's life, that it would rejoice me exceedingly to
-see her rise from her bed in health.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one but I can know how tender and beautiful her life has
-been,' I said, with sobs. 'If I could give my life for hers, I would resign it
-with cheerfulness.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I suspect,' said the doctor, with a curiously-observant
-air upon him, 'that that is just the thing that would be most effectual in
-killing her. Come, now, recover yourself: I have something to say to you. I
-shall count a hundred, and then I shall go on. . . . When you first consulted
-me, and I asked you what your mother was suffering from, I seriously meant it. I
-want to cure your mother, or at all events to show you the way to do it, for I
-have an idea that you, not I, must be the doctor. I will make you a present of
-all my little fees in this case if I am successful. That ought to assure you of
-my earnestness.' He smiled gently as he said this. 'Knowing full well, as you
-say, that you would treble them if we happily succeed. I will give you another
-proof of my earnestness. I loved my mother. Have I won your confidence? Well
-then, I can grapple with physical disease with fair success; give me the
-opportunity of grappling with the mental disease which is killing your mother. I
-have an hour, perhaps two, to spare. Tell me, unreservedly, the story of your
-mother's life, in which of course yours will be included. Conceal nothing, and
-be especially explicit in every incident where the feelings are brought into
-play. If you understand me, and are willing to trust me, commence at once.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I told him all, freely and without reservation, from my first
-remembrance in connection with my mother, to the time--but a few days past--when
-I heard her in her delirium speaking to my father about me and my future. Many
-times during the recital I was compelled to pause from emotion, and when I
-finished his eyes also were suffused with tears.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know now,' he said softly, what will kill your mother if
-she dies. It will shock you to hear it, and you must not think me cruel for
-telling you. When your mother, in the night she was taken ill, cried to you that
-her heart was almost broken, it was no mere phrase that she uttered--it was a
-cry from her soul, and the words exactly represented her condition. If she dies,
-it will be because her heart
-<i>is</i> broken. And you will have broken it. Ay,' he continued gently, as I
-started in horror from him, 'and so would your mother start from me if she had
-strength and sense to hear and understand. She would think me the cruelest
-monster. But what I have said is true nevertheless. Your mother's life has been
-bound up in yours. No woman, unsustained by most perfect and most unselfish
-love, could have held up against such trials as hers; where she has had doubts
-she has thrust them from her, and her deep affection has given her strength to
-bear her sufferings. For a long time there has been raging within her a mental
-conflict, the torture of which only those can understand who love as she loves,
-and only those can feel whose natures are as delicately sensitive as hers. Even
-I, until now a stranger to her and to you, can see the fire which has been
-consuming her gentle spirit. And when the final blow came, and she was made to
-feel by your words that she had wrecked your happiness and had lost your love
-(for she <i>must</i> have felt then what she had long feared), she sank beneath
-it. I have, thank God, through all my life reverenced woman's character, but I
-never reverenced it so thoroughly as I do now, after hearing your story. You ask
-me if all hope is really gone, and if nothing can be done? Well, I see a way.
-What can kill can cure. I warn you that the chance is a slight one, but it must
-be tried. Can you afford to go away from London for a time?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I have money saved; and I think I could arrange to take
-work with me, and do it in the country.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is well. If you will take your mother away from London,
-say to the scenes with which you were familiar when you were a child, and attend
-to her yourself, and make her feel and understand that you love her as she
-deserves and yearns to be loved, she may recover. That is the only chance. She
-is almost certain to have conscious intervals. If you have tact enough to be
-alone with her, as you were in the old days, when her consciousness first
-returns, it may prove the turning-point towards convalescence. I cannot explain
-myself more fully; I will give you a simple strengthening medicine with you, and
-all necessary directions as to diet. When will you go?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I arranged to go on the following day, and Josey West said
-that, notwithstanding what the doctor had said, it was impossible that I should
-go alone. Her sister Florry, who was nearly sixteen years of age, should
-accompany us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If your mother asks who she is,' said Josey, 'you can say she
-is the maid.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">So it was settled, and Florry, a pretty good girl, who was
-wild with delight at the idea of going into the country, promised to do her
-best.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">No news had been heard of uncle Bryan. I cannot say that,
-after my anger had cooled, I was not anxious about him. It was impossible for me
-to be indifferent as to his fate, and I made inquiries quietly, but without
-result. He had disappeared most effectually, and had left no trace behind. My
-principal reason for wishing to find him was to let him know that we were
-leaving his house, and that we should not return; I had made up my mind on this
-point. Josey West and I had a long conversation about him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I believe he will never come back, my dear,' said Josey,
-'never, under any circumstances. Of course you have heard what some of the
-neighbours say--that he has made away with himself; but that's all nonsense.
-He's not a man of that sort. He'll rub on grimly and grumly to the end. Why, my
-dear, if it was to happen that he was to starve to death--which he wouldn't do
-willingly, and without trying to get bread--he'd starve quietly and without a
-murmur. Ah, he's a wicked old man, I daresay, and I know that you have cause to
-hate him, but I can't help liking him a bit for all that. What I shall do about
-the shop is this, unless you object. I shall shut up our house--there's no
-business doing, my dear; I don't lend out a wardrobe a month--and all the
-children shall come round here to live. It will be good fun for them. I shall
-keep the accounts as square as I can, although the figures are getting into a
-mess already, and I'm beginning to be bothered with them--but never mind,
-there's the money, so much paid out, so much coming in; it'll be simple enough
-to reckon what's left. And if I <i>do</i> hear anything of your uncle, I'll be
-off to him at once, and bring him back, tied up, if he won't come any other
-way.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could see no better plan than this, and I thanked Josey
-cordially.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where are you going to first?' she asked, interrupting me
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To Hertford, where I was born,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded, and said she thought it was the best place, and
-that I must be sure and keep her informed of my whereabouts, as she would want
-to write to me regularly. The next morning we were off.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We reached Hertford by easy stages. Josey was quite right in
-insisting that I should take Florry with me. I soon learnt that I could not have
-done without some one, and I found Florry to be so quietly and unobtrusively
-useful that I grew very fond of the little maid. I took lodgings in a pleasant
-suburb, from the windows of which we could see the river Lea, and the barges
-gliding indolently along. Florry said it was heavenly. My mother bore the
-journey well, and was no worse at the end than when we started. I was very
-thankful for that, for I feared she might not be strong enough to bear it; but
-we were very careful of her, and if she had been my sister Florry could not have
-been more attentive and affectionate. But my mother knew no one, and saw only
-the pictures and figures which her fevered imagination conjured up. I selected
-for her bedroom a large room on the first floor, and placed her bed so that she
-could see the river from it. I fixed my table for work so that when she opened
-her eyes, and looked towards the river, she could see me also. I had been
-fortunate enough to obtain sufficient work to last me for three or four weeks,
-and I was sure of more to follow.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On the very first day I observed what I thought was a
-favourable change in my mother. Awaking from a restless sleep she opened her
-eyes, and saw a white sail passing along the river; she watched it quietly until
-it was out of sight, and then closed her eyes and slept again, but more
-peacefully than before. She did not seem to see me, although I turned my face to
-her and smiled. It was soon evident that she took pleasure in the prospect of
-the river, for before two days had passed I observed her lie and watch it
-restfully. It appeared to act like a charm upon her, bringing peace to her
-troubled heart in some strange way. In London, during her illness, scarcely an
-hour had passed, day and night, without her rest being broken by sobs; but here
-in Hertford, after she grew accustomed to the sight of the river, her days were
-quiet and peaceful, and it was only in the night that she was disturbed. During
-the first week I left her but twice; once to go to the house in which I was
-born, and once to visit the old churchyard in which my father was buried. The
-house was the same as I remembered it, and the churchyard had a few new
-gravestones in it; there was no other change. All my childish experiences came
-vividly to my mind, and I should scarcely have been surprised, as I peeped
-through the parlour-window, where I used to sit in my low armchair with my
-grandmother, listening to her monotonous heavy breathing, to see her sitting in
-state, in her silk dress, with her large fat hands folded in her lap! I <i>did</i>
-see a woman who reminded me of Jane Painter, our servant, and I crossed the road
-quickly and walked away from her. In the churchyard, I went to my father's
-grave, and then to the grave of Snaggletooth's little daughter. I found it quite
-easily, but the inscription upon it was no longer discernible. I remembered so
-well every incident of that day that I could see myself carried out of the
-churchyard in Snaggletooth's arms, and I closed my eyes as I thought how I fell
-asleep there.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">These scenes and remembrances soothed and consoled me; I
-seemed to be lifted out of a fever of unrest.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Gradually my mother's eyes grew accustomed to see me working
-always at my table, and they began to dwell on me, at first unconcernedly, but
-presently with a kind of struggling observance in them. I hailed this change
-with gladness, and waited and hoped, and prayed humbly night and morning. Josey
-West wrote to me regularly, and one day this letter came:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'My dear Chris,--Don't open the packet enclosed in this until
-you read my letter. If you do, I'll haunt you, and you shall never have a
-minute's rest again. You told me once that every person in life has a proper
-groove. I think it very hard that I should have lived all these years without,
-until now, falling into <i>my</i> proper groove; I am in it at last, but I am
-ready to slap all the children's faces to think that so many years have been
-wasted. I was born to be a grocer, and at last a grocer I am. If you can find me
-a better one than I am, show him to me, and I'll resign. I've been looking over
-your uncle's books, and, as true as I'm a living woman, I'm taking more money
-than ever he took, if his figures are right. Every day I make a new customer.
-There's Mrs. Simpson, the bricklayer's wife, at No. 9. If she's been in the shop
-once, she's been in it a dozen times to-day and yesterday: all the years the old
-gentleman kept the shop she didn't spend two-and-twopence in it--that's the sum
-she mentioned, and as I'm a woman of figures now, I must be precise. She does so
-like a gossip, she says, and she don't mind getting short weight, she says, so
-long as she can have a friendly word with her quarter of a pound of moist, and
-her two ounces of the best mixture. She tried all she knew to get the old
-gentleman to gossip with her, and as he wouldn't, she wouldn't deal with him.
-Mrs. Simpson is not the only one. There's Mrs. Primmins, and Mrs. Sillitoe, the
-butcher's wife, and Mrs. Macnamara, who takes snuff. They all like a gossip, and
-they all come to have it, and so long as they buy their groceries of me, I shall
-encourage them. Why, you'd be surprised to see the old shop sometimes! It's
-quite an Institution.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, I've got along very well with everything, from the figs
-to the brickdust; but one thing puzzled me. If you have any love for me, my
-sweet child, don't betray me, for I'm not at all sure they couldn't hang me for
-it; but it pays, my sweet child, and it doesn't do any one any harm, and I shall
-go on doing it, and risk the consequences. Well, it's this. On the first
-Saturday I was here, the people came in for uncle Bryan's pills and uncle
-Bryan's mixture. Well, there was a supply in the drawers, and I served the
-customers. If there was one of them, my dear, there was fifty, and every one
-spent his penny or twopence, and a few threepence. Well, during the early part
-of the week I ran short of the pills and the mixture, and I was puzzled about
-another supply. I knew that the old gentleman made his own medicine, and I
-looked about for the prescription, but couldn't find it. Now, for all I knew,
-the success of the business might depend upon these pills and mixtures, which
-some of the neighbours are ready to swear by as being able to cure asthma, and
-consumption, and indigestion, and bronchitis, and dysentery, and flushings, and
-palpitation, and wooden legs, and sprains, and bruises, and pains in the bowels,
-and headache, and too much brandy, and low fever, and high fever, and jaundice,
-and warts, and scrofula, and coughs, and colds, and the chills, and I don't know
-what all besides. And if you knew the trouble I've taken to put all these things
-together, you'd cry out, &quot;Bless the little woman! What a painstaking creature
-she is!&quot; But to come back. Well, for all I knew, if the customers couldn't get
-these wonderful pills at our shop, they might go elsewhere to buy their tea and
-sugar, and that would never do. I was in a pucker, and Turk came in last Tuesday
-night, and I told him my trouble. Says Turk, &quot;How many pills and how many
-bottles of mixture have you got left?&quot; I counted them. Fourteen bottles of
-mixture, and eleven boxes of pills, large and small. &quot;And what do they cure?&quot;
-says Turk. I went over all those things that I've written at the top of this
-sheet. &quot;I don't feel as if anything particular is the matter with me,&quot; says
-Turk; &quot;how do you feel, Josey?&quot; I told him that I felt the same. &quot;Then,&quot; says
-Turk, &quot;it's quite necessary that you and I should take a bottle of that mixture,
-and six pills, without one moment's delay. Else it might prove fatal.&quot; And would
-you believe it, my dear? Before I knew where I was, Turk had poured one of the
-bottles of the mixture down my throat, and another down his own, and made me,
-willy nilly, swallow pill for pill with him until we had each swallowed half a
-dozen. &quot;And now,&quot; said Turk, &quot;if we die, we'll perish in one another's arms; and
-I'll come to-morrow night and write our epitaphs. We'll be buried in one grave,
-and all the neighbours will come to the funeral.&quot; I didn't like it, I tell you,
-and I kept awake all night, fancying I had pains; but I ate a very good
-breakfast the next morning, and everything inside of me went on as usual. Turk
-came in the evening, and we compared notes, as he said. He said then that it was
-a very bad case indeed, and we must take another bottle of mixture and six more
-pills each of us. I said I wouldn't; he said I should, and that he wouldn't die
-without me; and as I'm a living woman, he held my head and poured the mixture
-down my throat. After that, I thought I might as well take the pills, especially
-as Turk said I'd have to. One may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb, you
-know. They didn't have the slightest effect upon us for better or worse (and the
-sooner that day comes for me, and the man with the ring, the better I shall like
-it, my sweet child, and that's plain speaking), and Turk said it was the most
-wonderful cure that ever was known of the most wonderful complication of
-diseases that ever was heard of. Now if you can guess what Turk did next, you're
-a clever boy; but as you never <i>would</i> guess, I'll tell you. He set to work
-making bread pills by the thousand (we found the board your uncle used to make
-them with), and he made a great basin of mixture, that tasted for all the world
-like the mixture in your uncle's bottles. You know, there scarcely <i>is</i> any
-taste at all in it. He coloured the water, and then we filled all the empty
-bottles and pill-boxes, and had stock enough to last a month. You would have
-laughed if you had seen us making the medicine. It was done after the shop was
-shut and all the children were in bed. We locked the doors, and put something
-over all the windows and keyholes, and every minute or two Turk wriggled to the
-door, to slow music, to listen if anybody was outside. We were like
-conspirators. We had a great run on the pills and mixture on Saturday night, and
-my heart felt as if it was sinking into my shoes every time I served a box or a
-bottle; but I was obliged to put a brave face on it, and I served them over the
-counter as if they were the &quot;real grit,&quot; as the Yankees say. When I went to bed,
-I wondered how many murders I had committed, and how many times I could be
-hanged. I felt worse on Monday morning when I stood behind the counter; but as
-the day went on, and I didn't hear of any persons in the neighbourhood dying in
-convulsions, and as I didn't see any undertaker's men about, I began to get a
-bit relieved in my mind. And when Mrs. Huxley came in--Mr. Huxley is besieged by
-a regular army of diseases, asthma, and rackets, and &quot;ketches in the side,&quot; as
-his wife calls them--well, when she came in, and told me how ill her poor dear
-man was on Saturday night before taking the pills and mixture, and how well he
-was on Sunday after he'd swallowed two big doses, I began to think better of
-them. I plucked up courage to ask one and another how everybody was who had
-taken the physic, and would you believe it, my sweet child, none of them were
-ever better in their lives. And a story has got about that your uncle Bryan has
-gone to some place to make the pills and mixture in secret, so that no one shall
-find out what is in them.
-<i>I</i> say nothing, except &quot;Oh,&quot; and &quot;Ah,&quot; and &quot;Indeed,&quot; very mysteriously,
-and as if I didn't know anything about it (as how should I?), and the effect of
-these &quot;Ohs&quot; and &quot;Ahs&quot; and &quot;Indeeds&quot; is so extraordinary, that if I stood in a
-wagon, and talked by the hour together, with music playing all about me, and all
-the young ones dancing and posing, the thing couldn't work better. People are
-beginning to do what they never did before--they are buying the medicine in the
-middle of the week; and two strangers have already come in from a long distance
-for two boxes of the wonderful pills, one to cure palpitation and the other for
-the jaundice.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Turk is getting along famously. He is a real good fellow, and
-everybody likes him. He is making heaps of new friends, and is doing a fine
-business. He sends his love to you, and says he will have plenty to tell you
-when you come home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Gus is going to India and Australia with a company; he plays
-leading business, and has a three years' engagement at twelve pounds a week, and
-all his travelling expenses paid. Not so bad for Gus; but then he's a genius, my
-dear.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hope Florry is behaving herself; but I am only joking when
-I say that. Don't you let her fall in love with you, and then break her heart;
-I'm joking again. When you come to think or us altogether, master Christopher,
-don't you think we're a <i>re-</i>markable family? If you don't, I do. You'd
-find it hard to beat us. You should read the letters Florry writes to us; they
-are perfect gems. Where we all got our cleverness from is a perfect puzzle; but
-it runs in some families. I'm glad Florry is with your mother; it will do her
-good. Ah, my dear, do you know I pray every night that you may bring your dear
-good mother home to us strong and well? I do, my dear, and it does me good.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The letters that are in the enclosed packet came to the shop
-this morning. One of them is very heavy. I know your uncle's writing from the
-account-books he left behind him, and I see that it is his writing on the
-envelope. If there's any address inside, let me know, and I'll go and drag him
-home, although it will be the ruin of a fine business I see looming in the
-future in bread pills and the famous mixture made of coloured water.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now, my dear, I must leave off. This is the longest
-letter I ever wrote in my life, and if anybody had told me that I could have
-written it, I shouldn't have believed him. All the children send their love and
-kisses, and I send mine, and six kisses for your mother. When you give them to
-her, whisper that they're from a queer little woman in Paradise-row who loves
-both of you very much. Now don't you run away with the idea that <i>I'm</i>
-going to break my heart over you.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I almost forgot to say that the doctor was here to-day.
-He hasn't time to write, but he says he has read your letter carefully, and he
-thinks that your mother is going along well. He expects a change very soon for
-the better. He gave me another prescription for you, which I send in this.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I never thought much of it till lately, my dear, but really
-there are a great many good people in the world--But there! if I don't stop at
-once, I shall go rambling on all night, and there's some one tapping at the
-door. Come in! Only think, I've written it instead of saying it--Your
-affectionate friend,</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:60%">'<span class="sc">Josey</span>.'</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I untied the packet which Josey had enclosed, and found two
-letters in it--one, very bulky, in uncle Bryan's handwriting, the other written
-by Jessie. How my heart beat as I gazed at the latter! Both were addressed to my
-mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was a fine clear night, and a sweet soft air was
-stirring--so sweet and soft that I was sitting at my work-table with the window
-open. Florry had gone to bed; my mother was asleep. I had always opened my
-mother's letters, and I reflected whether I was justified in opening these.
-After a little while I decided to read uncle Bryan's letter, for the reason that
-it would probably inform me where he was staying; in which case I should be able
-to rid myself of the responsibility of his business. Jessie's letter I would not
-read--at least for the present; she may have written in it what she might not
-wish me to see. I laid it aside, and unfastened the envelope of uncle Bryan's
-letter. It contained many sheets of manuscript, methodically arranged, some in
-uncle Bryan's handwriting, some in a writing which was strange to me. I give
-them in their order. The first was from uncle Bryan to my mother:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear Emma,--I will not speak of my reasons for leaving you.
-Perhaps you may be able to guess them. I did it for the best. My absence may
-bring peace and happiness into your home, for it is yours. I relinquish all
-claim to it. When I tell you that I shall never return, you will know that I
-shall not set foot inside the shop again. I cannot have many years longer to
-live, and I shall do well enough, so do not give yourself any anxiety about me.
-I shall always be able to get my bread, and I shall wait patiently for death,
-and shall be grateful when it comes, but I shall do nothing to hasten it. Life
-has been a weary load to me, and I shall be glad to shake it off. This
-impatience would change to resignation and to gratitude, not for death, but for
-life, if it were possible for one thing to happen; but it is utterly, utterly
-impossible, and it is just and right that it should be out of my reach.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have a distinct purpose in writing to you, apart from any
-selfish words which fall from my pen. It is this: In telling you and my nephew
-the story of my life I threw blame upon my dead wife. I did worse than this--I
-slandered her memory. That I spoke what I believed is no excuse for me. I
-created for myself, out of my blindness and fatal imperiousness of self, a
-delusion and a lie which have embittered my life. I could bear this with
-calmness if the consequences had fallen only on myself; but I see now, when it
-is too late, how I have made others suffer. The bitterest punishment that could
-fall upon me would not serve to expiate my deadly sin. I do suffer bitterly,
-keenly, and my soul writhes from pain and shame.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can I speak more strongly? And yet these words are weak. Too
-late I see my folly and my crime. Many things that Christopher said to me were
-true. I humbly ask his forgiveness, and I humbly pray that the happiness he said
-I did my best to destroy may yet fall to his lot. If he will picture me an old
-man with a bleeding heart into whose life few rays of sunshine have passed,
-pleading to him, he may soften towards me. Perhaps he may believe that I loved
-him; if he does believe it, he will believe the truth.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The letter I send with this is from my dead wife; it will
-explain itself. I received it at the same time the letter came to you from
-Jessie. Merely looking at her name upon paper, now that I have written it,
-deepens my anguish, my shame, and my remorse. It will never fall to my lot to
-ask her forgiveness, as I ask yours and your son's. I put myself in her place,
-and I know what her feelings are.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let Christopher read this and my wife's letter.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-bye, Emma. For your unwavering kindness and gentleness
-to me, who have repaid you so badly, receive the humble heartfelt thanks of&nbsp;&nbsp;
-&nbsp;<span class="sc">Bryan Carey</span>.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then followed the letter from his wife.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_42" href="#div1Ref_42">CHAPTER XLII.</a></h4>
-<h5>FROM FRANCES TO HER HUSBAND, BRYAN CAREY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I address you from the grave, and I pray that what I write may
-never reach your hands. If, unhappily, you are fated to read these words, they
-will bring their own punishment with them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Do I hope, then, that you may be dead on the day that this
-letter shall be opened or destroyed, unread? No. But rather than you should
-receive it, it would be better that the earth covered you, as it has covered me
-these many years. You will understand my meaning before you have finished
-reading. I write in no vindictive spirit. All bitter feeling has left me;
-although even yourself may acknowledge that I have good cause for feeling
-bitterly towards you. But I am resolved that you shall not blight another life
-as you blighted mine. Another life so dear to me! that should be so dear to you!
-Another life that has been some comfort to me in the midst of my sorrow and
-affliction; and that I hope may be long spared for happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It is not a giddy girl who is writing to you. It is a woman
-who has learned to look upon things with fair judgment, notwithstanding that she
-has suffered deeply from a cruel wrong inflicted upon her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When you first came to me I was a child almost in years. I had
-had no opportunity of knowing the world, or of gaining that experience which is
-necessary to those who move in its busy quarters. I had never known trouble or
-sorrow, and, until my father fell into misfortune, I had lived very happily with
-him. He had his faults, I do not doubt, as we all have; but he was a good father
-to the last, and I loved him to the last. You judged him harshly, I know, and
-made no excuses for him--but it is in your nature to judge harshly. Weak as he
-was to some extent, I do not believe that he would have wronged his wife--doubly
-wronged her--and then have deserted her: as you wronged and deserted me. I have
-some remembrance of my mother, who died when I was very young, and I know that
-he was indulgent and good to her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I fancy I can see a hard look on your face at the word
-indulgent. But some natures require indulgence, and are the better and the
-happier for it. You were for a time indulgent to me, and it was for this, as
-well as for other qualities in you upon which I placed higher value than you
-deserved, that I loved you.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Yes, I loved you. I scarcely know whether you ever believed I
-did; for, thinking over matters since our separation, I have arrived--whether
-rightly or wrongly--at what I believe to be a correct estimate of your
-character, at what assuredly is a correct estimate if you are destined to read
-it. I see you, hard and intolerant; doubtful of goodness in others; prone to
-place the most uncharitable construction on the actions of others. Lightness of
-heart is in your eyes a sign of levity. Surely the moods which were familiar to
-me in the first days of our acquaintanceship, and in the first few months of our
-wedded life, must have been foreign to your nature.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I see something more in you. I see you false to your wife and
-to your marriage vows. I see you, who prided yourself upon your sense of
-justice, most unjust and ungenerous to me. Let your heart answer if I am wrong.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Recall the evening on which we met for the first time, and
-certain words which passed between us. You were at my father's house, advising
-him upon his business affairs, which had become complicated. You said that my
-voice reminded you of a friend--a lady friend, very dear to you--and that she
-was dead. The words did not make much impression upon me at the time; but I had
-occasion afterwards to remember them. I liked you that evening. Your grave face,
-your sensible ways, were agreeable to me, frivolous girl as you supposed me to
-be. We kept but little society; the only regular visitor at my father's house
-was my cousin Ralph. I loved him; but not in the way you suspected. We had been
-intimate from early childhood, and I had a sincere affection for him. When I
-became better acquainted with you, I saw faults in him which I had not hitherto
-discerned; there was a want of stability in his character; he was indolent and
-deficient in manliness. Even if you had not entered into my life, and marred it,
-I think I should never have had any but a cousinly love for him. So far as I was
-concerned, there were no grounds for jealousy on your part, and no grounds for
-your base suspicions of me. I do not speak for him; I speak for myself. And when
-you wrote to me on the day you deserted me, and accused me of loving him as a
-woman should love the man she wishes to marry, you lied. But you had another
-purpose to serve, and it suited you to write the lie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Of our married life I need say but few words. I was very happy
-for a time. You had behaved nobly and generously to my father; you were most
-kind and indulgent to me. If, as I afterwards learnt, we were living beyond our
-means, I had no suspicion of it. You never gave me the slightest hint to that
-effect, and you encouraged what I now know were extravagances in me.
-But--believe it or not as you will--I could have been contented and happy
-without them. You told me you were rich, and you could not fail to know that I
-had no idea of the value of money. Why could you not have confided in me? Was it
-honest to keep me, of your own free will, in such absolute ignorance, and then
-to blame me for not having known? I think, if you had trusted me, that you might
-have found some good in me--judged even by the light of your own hard judgment;
-but it is in your nature to accuse and judge in the same breath, and to do both
-unmercifully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I remember well the last day you were kind to me. You left me
-in the morning with smiles; you returned home long after midnight a changed man.
-I, also, was changed when you returned. I have other cause to remember the day;
-for in the evening my cousin Ralph came to see me, and stayed with me until
-nearly eleven o'clock. You had sent me a note saying that you were detained at
-your office by important business. I read the note to my cousin, and he laughed
-at it, and said that you had good cause for your absence. His words conveyed a
-strange meaning to my ears, and I asked for an explanation. He gave it to me;
-and I learnt, to my horror, that you were in the habit of visiting another
-woman--a stranger in the town. Before I had recovered from the shock, I received
-another. My cousin Ralph, in a mad moment, proved himself to be what I had not
-hitherto suspected--a vile bad man. He told me, in passionate terms, that he
-loved me, and that he had loved me from boyhood; that it had been the dream of
-his life that we should be married, and that, but for you and your money, his
-life might have been a life of happiness. I listened in dismay and astonishment;
-I knew that he had an affection for me, but I thought it was such an affection
-as one cousin might innocently have entertained for another. I was so
-overwhelmed by this discovery, and by his accusations against you, that I had no
-power to stay his words. He misinterpreted my silence, and proceeded in wilder
-terms to propose flight to me. I tried to answer him, but my grief, and my
-terror lest you should return while he was in the house--for he was at my feet
-and refused to stir--made me weak. I implored him for my sake and for his own to
-leave me; and presently, when I grew stronger, I addressed him in words which it
-was impossible for him to misunderstand. It flashed upon me then that he had
-invented the story he had told me about you, and I taunted him with it. He
-answered me to the effect that he would prove it true before many days were
-over, and that then I might possibly listen to him more favourably. He left me;
-and your own conduct towards me from that day, during the short time we were
-together, was almost a sufficient proof. You would have judged upon that
-evidence; I was not content with it. I soon tasted the bitterness that lay in
-knowledge. A clerk in your office, who had for a purpose of his own made himself
-acquainted with the history of this woman--probably to use against you in some
-way--and whom you had employed to convey money and letters to her at different
-times, told me more than I wanted to know. On the day that you had the public
-quarrel with my cousin Ralph--I heard of it soon afterwards, for it became
-matter of common talk--I discovered that this woman came from a town in which
-you had formerly resided--that you knew her then--and that her history was a
-shameful one. Then there came to me the words that had passed between us upon
-your first visit to my father's house, when you said that my voice reminded you
-of a woman who was dear to you, and who was dead. It was easy to supply the
-blank spaces in the story to make it complete--shamefully, miserably complete.
-Your clerk told me that the life you had lived in that town was not a
-respectable one: I did not ask him how he had gained his knowledge, but I was
-sure of its truth. You left that town, and came to this place, a complete
-stranger, knowing no one, known by none. You refused to speak of your past life;
-not a word had ever passed your lips with reference to it. What other
-confirmation was needed of the truth of your clerk's statements? You tried to
-blot out your past career, knowing that it would not bear the light, and that
-the good name and position you had gained would be sullied and lost if the
-particulars were made public. You deserted the woman who had been your
-companion, and when you were inadvertently betrayed into remembrance of her by
-the sound of my voice, you told me she was dead. You never mentioned her again,
-nor did I, for I had forgotten her. But see how hard it is to lead a life of
-hypocrisy, as you have done! Shame never dies, nor can it ever be completely
-wiped away. After years of sojourn here, when you had gained money, position and
-a good name--when you had position, a simple, ignorant, and innocently-vain girl
-to your heart, and had sworn to cherish and protect her--this woman tracks you,
-finds you, and appeals to you by the remembrance of old times, and perhaps by
-other arguments more powerful, of which I am ignorant. On the very evening she
-meets you, you take her to a house in the town, and provide lodgings for her,
-and from that time your visits are frequent. Is this part of your story
-complete, and need I add to it by saying that you mentioned not a word
-concerning the woman to the wife you professed to love? If there was no shame in
-the relations that existed between you and her, why should you have taken such
-pains to conceal them? On the day you deserted me, you told me you were ruined,
-and you adopted the miserable subterfuge of saying that you had discovered all,
-and that you could no longer live with me. Your meaning was plain enough. You
-implied that I was false to you and to the vows I had taken on the day we were
-married. A more wicked lie never poisoned the heart of man or woman. I had
-brought shame and disgrace upon you, you said, and that it was useless my
-sending after you. I have read this letter often--it is destroyed now; I burnt
-it lest one who is dearer to me than my heart's blood should see it--and I have
-wondered at my folly and credulity in ever, for one moment, believing you to be
-a good and just man. For I did believe you to be this. There was a time in my
-life when I set you up as a model of honour and integrity and truth. The last
-words of your letter are burnt into my heart. Do you remember them? 'If I could
-make you a free woman, so that you might marry the man you love, I would
-willingly lay down my life; but it cannot be done. The only and best reparation
-I can offer is to promise, as I do now most faithfully, to wipe you out of my
-heart, so that you may be free from me for ever.' How fair those words
-sound--how self-sacrificing--how manly! What a noble nature do they display!
-Would it be believed that while this letter was on its way to the wife whom he
-was about to desert--to the wife whom he had most cruelly wronged, and most
-shamefully betrayed--the man who wrote it was entering the house where the woman
-lived who had been his companion in former years? The next morning you left. Two
-days afterwards, the woman followed you to London.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Is anything more wanted to complete the shameful story? Had I
-brought disgrace upon you, or had you brought it upon me? A noble reparation,
-indeed, did you make to me!</p>
-
-<p class="normal">You may ask how it was that I discovered your visit to the
-woman. My father and my cousin saw you coming from the house, where doubtless
-you had completed all your arrangements, and left your final instructions. My
-cousin it was who told me. 'Now,' he said, 'do you believe that he is false?'
-'Yes,' I answered; 'I am convinced of it' What followed? Remember it is your
-dead wife who is speaking to you, and do not dare, for your soul's sake, to add
-to your cruelty by doubting what she says. My cousin Ralph then began to speak
-again of his own selfish passion, and I bade him never to presume to address me
-again. From that day I never saw him; some little while afterwards my father
-told me he had gone abroad, but we never heard from him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We remained--my father and I--for a few weeks after your
-departure, and then my father's health suddenly broke down. In one thing you had
-most completely succeeded; you had blackened my name as well as your own.
-Innocent as I was, wronged as I was, I think no one in my native place pitied
-me. Persons who had once respected me avoided me, or slighted me. Day by day the
-torture of living in this atmosphere of injustice grew until it was unbearable;
-and when my father broke down, I took him with me into a strange place, where
-neither of us was known, and where I hoped by carefully husbanding our small
-means, and by employing some hours of the day in needlework, to be enabled to
-live quietly, if not in peace. There was another reason why I was anxious to
-leave--a reason which you will now learn for a certainty for the first time. I
-was about to become a mother.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I kept this secret from you. Often and often had I listened to
-the expression of your wishes--the dearest wish of your heart, you said--that
-our union might be blessed with children. Your wish was that our first child
-might be a girl, and I used to hang with delight upon your words--believing in
-them in my credulous faith--when you described how you would educate and rear
-her into a good woman. I kept the secret, intending to joyfully surprise you
-later on; but it was fated that you should never learn it from my lips. When my
-time drew near, I was among strangers. I prayed that I might be blessed with a
-boy, who would be able to fight against the world's cruelties--with a boy who
-might one day--if you lived--be able to tell you to your face that you had
-slandered his mother. I had those thoughts at that time, and I set them down so
-that you may know exactly the state of my mind towards you. I prayed most
-fervently that the child might not be a girl, whose fate it might be to be
-treated by a man as her unhappy mother was treated by you. But my prayers were
-not heard. The child I clasped to my breast--your child--was a girl.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I hardly dared to look into her face at first, for I feared
-that it might resemble you, and that I should be compelled to hate her. I
-thanked God when I saw that there was but little resemblance to you. Think when
-you read this what my feelings towards you must have been.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My darling's was the sweetest, most beautiful face that I had
-ever gazed upon. I had never conceived it possible that a human heart could
-throb with such ineffable delight as mine did even in the midst of my bitter
-sorrow and shame, when I looked into my darling's face and eyes. I offered up
-grateful prayers that I lived and was a mother, and I offered up prayers of
-thankfulness also that it was out of your power to rob me of my treasure. That
-you would have done it had you known, I entertained no doubt.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The first few months of my child's life I was as happy as it
-was possible for a wronged and betrayed woman to be. Intending in these lines to
-hide nothing, I will not disguise from you that I shed many bitter tears because
-she was deprived of a father's love; but she did not lack love and attention.
-She was my one comfort and joy; I soon had no one else to love but her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My father died. The doctor who had attended him in his illness
-warned me that, unless I was careful of myself, my life might be short. The
-thought that my darling might be left, helpless and dependent, among strangers,
-frightened me, and I did not know which way to turn for counsel and advice. I
-had not a friend in the world capable of helping me by a kindly, sensible word.
-To this condition you had brought me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But my cup of sorrow was not yet full. The doctor I have
-mentioned was an unmarried man. He believed me to be a widow, as I had given
-out. I had no other resource than to speak this untruth. It was impossible for
-me to say that I was a helpless, unhappy woman, who had been deserted by her
-husband. To such a creature strangers show no mercy; they put their own
-construction on the story and judge accordingly--as you would judge, harshly,
-unfeelingly. I think I should not have cared so much for myself, but I had my
-darling to look to.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The doctor flattered me by saying that he saw I was a lady,
-and, in most respectful terms, he invited my confidence. He was most delicate
-and considerate, but I could not confide in him or any one; my cruel story and
-my cruel wrongs must be for ever locked in my breast. He did not press me when
-he saw that I was pained by his inquiries, but he paid me great attention, and
-by his kindness lightened my load. I did not place any serious construction upon
-his intentions, nor indeed did I think of them, for I was entirely wrapt up in
-my love for my darling child, who was growing every day more beautiful and more
-engaging. But when he asked me to be his wife, my eyes were opened. If I had
-been a free woman I would have accepted him, if only for the sake of providing a
-comfortable home for my child. As I was in chains, I refused him. He said he was
-a patient man, that he loved me very sincerely, and that he would wait. In the
-heavy catalogue of my sins that you have against me, place this new one--that
-this good man loved me. He continued his attentions, and they brought me into
-fresh disgrace. In the place I was living there were single ladies, and mothers
-who had daughters to marry, who entertained a hope that the doctor would choose
-from among them, and they were angry when they saw that I stood in their way. I
-do not know whom I have to thank for what followed, but gradually rumours got
-about to my discredit. I was not a widow; I was not a married woman; the name I
-went by was not my own. Women shrugged their shoulders when they met me; men
-stared at me insolently and familiarly. What had occurred in my native town when
-you deserted me was repeated here. I had no alternative but to fly from the
-place.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At that time my darling was nearly three years old, and the
-unkind creatures had attempted to drop poison even into her young and innocent
-mind. One day she asked me, in her pretty way, where her father was. 'You have
-none, my darling,' I said; 'he is dead.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the new place I found refuge in I made friends with a kind
-family, who grew very fond of my child--as none indeed could help doing. Her
-bright ways, her innocence, her artlessness, would win any heart not dead to
-human affection. If anything should happen to me, these friends will take care
-of my darling as long as they are able. I think it is likely that I shall not
-live long, and I have thought anxiously over the future of my darling until she
-arrives at an age when she may be able to protect and provide for herself. I
-have consulted with my new friends, and I have arranged everything to the best
-of my ability and judgment. I shall place in their hands a small box, which, in
-the event of my death and of their being unable to maintain my child (for they
-are poor people), is to be given to her with plain instructions. These
-instructions it will be necessary for me here to explain, first saying, however,
-that should these good friends be able to look after my child until she arrives
-at womanhood, there will be no necessity to give them to her. In that event,
-also, the box and its contents will be burnt. They have promised me faithfully,
-and I know they will keep their word.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">If I am gone, and they are too poor to help my child, she will
-be, as I have been, without a friend. These good people have some idea of
-emigrating, if they can save sufficient money, and then my darling will be
-indeed helpless. They might take her with them, it may be said; but they may not
-have sufficient means. And then, again, it inflicts the most bitter pain upon me
-to think that my darling child should be taken thousands of miles from the spot
-where her mother's ashes are laid. She will be helpless, as I have said; but
-there is one upon whom she has a just claim--yourself. I wished her never to see
-you; I wished that you might never look upon her beautiful face, nor feel the
-charm of her presence. But I see no other way to secure a home for her. Should
-she be left without friends, she will come to you, a stranger, with a letter
-from me, who will even then be dead, asking you to give a home to a friendless
-child. She will bear a strange name, and will know you only as a stranger.
-Neither will you know her; it may be that you will see in her face some slight
-resemblance to the wife whose happiness you have destroyed, and it may be that
-you may place that resemblance to your dead wife's discredit. Do so, and bring
-another shame upon your soul.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">How do I know where you live in London? It has been discovered
-for me, by means of a clue which my father obtained soon after your flight. When
-a mother is working for her child, she can do much. I have never seen London,
-but I know your address; and on the day that the friends I have made for my
-child find they can no longer provide for her, she will present herself at your
-door. Hard and unfeeling, cruel and unjust, as you are, I think you will not
-turn her from it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In the small box which my friends will give to my darling
-child are three letters, numbered first, second, third. On the first letter is
-written, 'To be opened first, on your eighteenth birthday, before the other
-letters are touched. This is the sacred wish of your dead mother.' I copy this
-letter in this place, so that you may clearly understand what I have done:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'My darling Child,--I wish you to regard these written words
-as though they are spoken to you with my dying breath, and to obey them. If Mr.
-Bryan Carey has made your life happy, and if you are in the enjoyment of a happy
-home, destroy the second letter by fire, and hand him the third. If it is
-otherwise with you, and your life with him has been in any way unhappy, destroy
-the third letter by fire, as you would have done the second. Then seek some
-quiet place and read the second letter, and when you have read it, send it to
-Mr. Carey, and act as you think best for your welfare and happiness. That God
-will for ever bless and protect my darling is the prayer of your mother,</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:60%"><span class="sc">'Frances.'</span></p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The third letter contains a short account of my life since you
-left me, and the statement that Jessie is your daughter. It leaves it to your
-judgment to make the relationship known to her, or to let it remain a secret.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The second letter you are now reading.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">If it fall into your hands, Jessie will have read it first,
-and will know how basely you behaved to me. She will know that your conduct
-towards me was such that a woman never can forgive, and she will understand that
-a man had better kill his wife than inflict upon her such shame and misery and
-humiliation as you inflicted upon me, a guiltless woman, as God is my Judge. She
-will know that you deserted me for another woman, and left me, a simple
-inexperienced girl, to battle alone with the pitiless world. Ah, how pitiless it
-is, how uncharitable, how cruel! How many nights have I passed shedding what
-might have been tears of blood, for they were wrung from a bruised and bleeding
-heart! She, who has lived with me many happy years in her childhood's life,
-will, when she reads this, be able to look back with the eyes of a woman upon
-the life I led while we were together, and she will know whether it was without
-stain and without reproach. She will have had experience both of you and myself,
-and of both our natures and minds, and she will have sense and intelligence
-enough to judge fairly between us. I repeat here, with all the strength of my
-soul, what I have declared before--that when you accused me of loving my cousin
-Ralph and of being false to you, you lied most foully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I believe that I decided rightly when I decided to write these
-things. As you have acted towards your daughter, so shall be your reward.
-Whether it be for good or ill, you have earned it.</p>
-
-<p style="text-indent:30%">Your unhappy wife,</p>
-<p style="text-indent:40%"><span class="sc">Frances</span>.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">After the last sheet of this letter, there were a few words in
-uncle Bryan's handwriting, evidently intended for my mother: 'If you see her
-whom I scarcely dare call my daughter for the shame which overwhelms me, tell
-her but one thing from me--that her mother's suspicions concerning the woman I
-befriended are unfounded. She will believe this, perhaps; it is the truth.'</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_43" href="#div1Ref_43">CHAPTER XLIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>A HAPPY RECOVERY.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The perusal of this letter affected me powerfully. There was
-something solemn in the mere handling of a confession written by a woman long
-since dead--a woman who had been so cruelly wronged and had so cruelly suffered.
-It was like a voice from the tomb, and it was impossible to resist the
-conviction that forced itself upon my mind that it was the solemn, bitter truth.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had never suspected that Jessie was in any way related to
-uncle Bryan, but it did not surprise me to learn it. The fact that she was my
-cousin brought with it no sense of pleasure; it gave me no claim on her
-affection. Rather would she be inclined to look with feelings of repugnance upon
-all who were connected with her by blood, for by the nearest of these her mother
-had been brought to misery and shame, and her own life had been made most
-unhappy; and it was not to be doubted that all her soul would rise in
-vindication of her mother's honour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was past midnight, and everything about me was very still.
-My mother was sleeping more peacefully than she had yet done through her
-illness, and I remarked with thankfulness that the distressed expression on her
-face was wearing away, and that she was beginning to look something like her old
-sweet self. Insensibly in her sleep her arm stole round my neck. I let it rest
-there for many minutes, and when I rose from her side and kissed her fingers,
-there was a soft smile upon her lips--the first unclouded smile I had seen there
-for many a day. It gave me hope and gladdened my heart.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was in no humour for sleep, having had some rest during the
-day, and I had told Florry that I would sit up with my mother until the morning.
-I placed the letter I had been reading in my desk, and then, arranging the
-screen in such a manner that the light by which I worked should not fall upon my
-mother's face, and also in such a manner that when she opened her eyes they must
-rest upon me, I sat at my table and worked and thought. My work was noiseless,
-and I could do it without disturbing the stillness. I was thankful for that. I
-do not know in what way it came into my mind that there are numberless small
-things in life which we ought to be grateful for, but the thought came.
-Presently, while my hand and eyes were busy on delicate manipulations in the
-wood, my mind reverted to uncle Bryan and Jessie, and the strange, strange
-letter I had read. Could Jessie ever forgive her father? Never, I thought. The
-unkindnesses inflicted upon herself she might have been eager to forgive when
-she made the discovery that she had a father living, but the wrong inflicted
-upon her mother was past forgiveness. Truly, the dead wife had punished the
-living husband with a cunning hand. But it was a just blow that she had struck.
-She had shown no vindictiveness; for had he behaved kindly to the girl to whom
-he had given the shelter of his home, Jessie would never have been made
-acquainted with her mother's wrongs. Yes, it was just, but it was terrible.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Terrible indeed. To find a father only to hate him. To find a
-father, and in the discovery to gain the knowledge that his conduct to her
-mother might have brought lasting shame and disgrace upon her own good name.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And he? How did he feel it? The words he addressed to me in
-his letter to my mother were very clear in my mind. Too late I see my folly and
-my crime. Many things that Christopher said to me were true. I humbly ask his
-forgiveness, and I humbly pray that the happiness he said I did my best to
-destroy may yet fall to his lot. If he will picture me, an old man with a
-bleeding heart, into whose life but few rays of sunshine have passed, pleading
-to him, he may soften towards me. Perhaps he may believe that I loved him; if he
-does believe it, he will believe the truth.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did believe it; I felt that it was true. I asked myself
-whether all the fault was his, whether he was entirely to blame because it was
-not in his nature to show love in its sweetest way. I recalled the words he had
-used when he described to me and my mother the home in which he spent his
-childhood's days. I raised up a picture of his mother, a weak-minded woman,
-ruled as with a rod of iron by her husband, ruled even in her affections by a
-man whom his own son could not respect, knowing him to be a hypocrite. The son
-must have learned bad lessons in such a home. Was it not to the son's credit
-that he refused to be moulded by such influences? But if the son had had such a
-mother as mine----</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Ah, if an influence so sweet had sweetened his life--if an
-affection so pure had purified his mind--how different it might have been with
-him! The cobwebs of scepticism and bitter distrust might have been swept from
-his soul. He might have grown into a good and noble man. For I recognised
-qualities in uncle Bryan's nature far higher than those with which the men I was
-acquainted with were gifted. My blind unreasoning anger against him was gone,
-and I felt only pity for the desolate old man. I pictured him, as he had desired
-me to do, an old man with a bleeding heart, into whose life but few rays of
-sunshine had passed--an old man who in his youth had been soured, misdirected,
-misjudged, his rare qualities and gifts turned against himself; and I pitied him
-with a full heart, and most freely forgave him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At this point I recalled everything in his character that
-spoke in his favour--his love of flowers, his love of justice, which had
-something heroic in it, his contempt for meanness and roguery, his gentle
-behaviour towards my mother, by whom alone he was properly understood. He would
-have been astonished had he known my thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In this better mood I continued my work. Tick, tick, tick,
-went the little clock on the mantelpiece, and the sound seemed to add to the
-stillness instead of disturbing it. Once, upon raising my eyes to my mother's
-bed, I fancied that she was awake and was observing me. I stole towards the bed,
-but her eyes were closed; I kissed her softly, and resumed my work. The
-wood-block I was engaged upon represented a woman standing by a field after the
-corn had been cut and gathered. It was sunset, and the woman, who was between
-forty and fifty years of age, was gazing sadly and mournfully at the setting sun
-and the bare field, with only the stubble left on it. I knew the story which the
-picture was intended to illustrate. The woman had been parted from her son, who
-was in a distant land, many thousands of miles across the sea, and the last news
-she had received from him represented him as being beset by misfortune and
-sickness. She was standing now, thinking mournfully of the times when she and he
-were together; and the sun, setting among sad clouds, and the cornfield, shorn
-of its golden glory, were in fit keeping with her thoughts. Another picture
-drawn on the wood, and which I had not yet commenced to engrave, lay before me.
-The scene was the same, and the figure of the woman was there, but the time and
-circumstances were different from the last. It was morning in the opening of
-summer; the corn was ripening, and lying on the ground at the mother's feet was
-the son, restored to her in health. Insensibly, as I proceeded with my work, my
-thoughts reverted to a certain time in my childhood when my mother toiled during
-the day and sat up late in the night working for me. How many a night had I seen
-her sitting at the table in our poorly-furnished one room, stitching until
-daylight dawned to earn bread for her child! The songs she used to sing softly
-to herself came to my lips, and I murmured them almost unconsciously, while the
-tears ran from my eyes. My heart was throbbing with exquisite tenderness towards
-my mother, and I thought that never in all my reading had I met with a woman so
-thoroughly good and pure and true. I covered my eyes with my hand to shut out
-the aching fear that, with the force of a visible presence, was creeping upon me
-and whispering that the priceless blessing of her love was lost to me for ever;
-but the action brought a deeper darkness to my soul. It lasted but a moment,
-thank God! for suddenly my name was uttered in a soft clear tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My heart almost ceased to beat as the sound of my mother's
-voice, with its old sweet cadence, fell upon my ear; but I remembered the
-caution which the doctor had given me, and I quietly proceeded with my work.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What are you doing, dear child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Working, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I scarcely dared to raise my eyes, and I waited anxiously for
-her to speak again.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is late, my child.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not very, mother. The night was so beautiful, and I had such
-a long rest this morning, that I thought I would work for an hour or two upon
-some pictures I have to get done quickly.' I spoke calmly and softly and
-cheerfully. 'I thought you were asleep, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have lain for some time watching you, my darling, and
-wondering whether this was not all a dream.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'A dream, mother!' I said, and I went to her side, and passed
-my arm under her neck. 'No, it is not a dream.' She gazed at me long and
-earnestly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where are we, dear child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In the country, at Hertford. You were not very well, and I
-brought you down here to nurse you into health again.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She pondered over these words. 'You were singing my songs, my
-dearest'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hope they did not disturb you, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What sweeter music could I hear, dear child? But what made
-you sing them?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was thinking of the old times, mother, when you and I were
-together, and when you used to work late in the night for me. There was a prayer
-in my heart while I was singing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What prayer, my dearest?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That I might be able to repay you by my love for the love you
-have given me all my life. That God would be merciful to me, and would give me
-the power to show you that I love you with all my heart and soul, and to prove
-that as no son ever had a more loving mother than you have been to me, so no
-mother ever had a son who was filled with a deeper love than I have for you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear child! darling child!' she said, with deep-drawn sighs
-of happiness, what can I say to you for your goodness to me? I do not deserve
-it! I do not deserve it!' She folded me in her arms, and I lay by her side with
-my face pressed close to hers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you say that, mother, I shall think you do not believe
-me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, no, dear child, I do believe it. These are tears of joy
-that I am shedding. And we two are alone, darling!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, mother, and I only want one thing to make me quite
-happy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tell it me, child?' she asked, a little anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To see you well again, mother, that is all. Then I shall go
-on with my work, and we shall get along famously together. But you mustn't talk
-any longer; you must go to sleep. Shall I sing you to sleep as you used to do to
-me? Do you remember that dear old song? Well, but
-<i>I</i> must not talk any longer. I am going to lie here; first let me put out
-the light.' When I returned to the fond prison of her loving arms, I said
-softly, 'I shall only say two or three words more. First, mother, you must
-promise me to get quite well. Promise, now, for my sake.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will try to, dear child; I think I shall; I feel strong
-already.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you must tell me that you are happy, dear mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, my darling, there is not a happier mother in the world.
-Blessed with such a son, I should be ungrateful to God if I were not.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And now, mother, not another word----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But draw the counterpane round you, darling; you will take
-cold else.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There, it is done; feel: and I'm quite warm. Good-night,
-mother. One kiss--two--three; and before you can count three more I shall be
-asleep.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I pretended to be, but I remained awake, listening to her
-sighs of happiness. Every now and then she passed her fingers over my face, and
-over my eyes, to learn if they were closed. After a time she fell asleep
-herself, and her composed peaceful breathing seemed in itself an assurance of
-returning health.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_44" href="#div1Ref_44">CHAPTER XLIV.</a></h4>
-<h5>AT REHEARSAL.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">As the curtain falls upon a scene in a drama, and when it
-rises again so many years are supposed to have elapsed, so between the closing
-of the last chapter and the opening of this six months must be supposed to have
-passed. We are again in London. My mother, thank God, is well, and I have within
-me the happy assurance that I have nursed her into health; the doctor has told
-me so, my mother herself has repeated it a hundred times, and I believe it and
-am humbly grateful.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We are living near to Paradise-row, but not in uncle Bryan's
-shop. My mother, knowing all that occurred on Jessie's birthday, showed no
-surprise when, on returning to London, I took her to some comfortable rooms I
-had engaged, and said that these were to be our home. She made only one
-remark--she hoped I would not have any objection to her going to the shop
-occasionally to see Josey West. I told her I should be glad if she went, and
-that I intended to go there myself very often.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We are as happy as we can reasonably expect to be. That we
-have sorrows is certain; but we refrain from speaking of them. We are as silent
-concerning our hopes, if we have any.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Nothing has been heard of uncle Bryan; Josey West conducts the
-business as though she had been born to it, and it is really prospering under
-her management. She is such a favourite with all the neighbours, that her
-customers increase every week, and the takings are nearly doubled.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think we shall be able to set up a plate window soon,' says
-Josey West, with a grand air. 'The sale of the pills is astonishing, my dear,
-astonishing! Do you know, Chris, I feel quite like a respectable member of
-society! I shall soon begin to turn up my nose at play-actors, who are nothing
-but vagrants, my dear, nothing but vagrants. And they're bad paymasters, Chris;
-I've two of them on my books already.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">When I ask her about Jessie, Josey says that she's all right,
-and that I have no occasion to bother myself about <i>her</i>. I can extract
-nothing more from her than this, and if I endeavour to press the subject
-further, she turns snappish.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother and I have had many conversations about uncle Bryan,
-and I think one great cause of her contentment is the altered state of my
-feelings towards him, which I do not disguise from her. I am prospering in a
-worldly sense, and when I feel most despondent I work the hardest; it is a
-relief to me. My name has appeared in print, connected with words of praise, and
-I often wonder whether Jessie has seen it. As for my mother, when I brought home
-the paper containing the two lines in which my work was spoken of favourably, I
-thought she would have gone wild with joy. I am afraid to say how many times she
-must have read the few ordinary words, but, knowing what a delight they are to
-her, I am glad that I have earned them for her sake.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">In this way the months roll on. With reference to my feelings
-towards Jessie, I shall be almost as silent now as I was at home during that
-time. Sufficient to say that I never forgot her, and that I never loved her
-less; but her name is rarely mentioned at home.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There is one person, however, to whom I speak of Jessie
-freely--to Turk West. Turk is getting along capitally in his shop, and has
-already paid off more than half his debt to Mr. Glover. I see this gentleman
-occasionally in Turk's shop; Turk shaves him, and dresses his hair for him two
-or three times a week; whenever I go into the shop and see him there, I retire
-immediately. I have no wish to injure Turk's business, and when I reason calmly
-over matters I cannot see what tangible ground of complaint I have against Mr.
-Glover--which does not lessen my detestation of him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He is a good customer,' says Turk to me, 'and it will be best
-for more reasons than one not to offend him. I can't say that I like
-him--although I try to, Chris, my boy, let me tell you--but I know that he is
-the soul of honour.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How <i>do</i> you know it?' I ask.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk scratches his head. 'Well, <i>he</i> says it, Chris, my
-boy, and everybody says it who knows him. He comes from a highly-respectable
-family.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I can say nothing in opposition, knowing nothing of his
-family.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And it is something to be proud of, Chris?' says Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What <i>is</i>, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'To be so respectably connected.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I suppose so,' I answer indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Old Mac is a constant visitor at Turk's shop; indeed, it
-appears to me that he spends most of his time there, for whenever I go westward
-and open Turk's door, his is the first familiar face I see. He keeps guard, as
-it were.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Turk is inside,' he says; or 'Turk is upstairs, crimping a
-lady's hair.' For Turk has lady as well as gentleman customer's, and has become
-very skilful in the business. His flow of conversation and anecdote is of great
-assistance to him; he has always something to say, and, not having been born a
-barber and hairdresser, he seldom commences about the weather--which is a
-relief.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On a windy day in April, I visited Turk, and, as usual, found
-old Mac there. Turk, very busy over some theatrical wigs, looked up from his
-work, and asked me if I wanted to speak to him. No, I answered; I had merely
-dropped in as I passed. I had as little excuse for the visit as I had for many
-others; I only went in the vague hope of hearing something of Jessie. Turk
-understood this, without being told.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Business good, Turk?' I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'First-class,' said Turk. 'I shall have to get an assistant, I
-expect. By the bye---- O, never mind!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He suddenly interrupted himself, in a confused manner.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'By the bye, what, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Nothing,' he replied, bending over his work.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Old Mac looked at me somewhat significantly, and, rising, said
-he should take a stroll in Covent-garden Market.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It does one good to walk up and down that arcade,' he said.
-'One smells the country lanes there. How would it do to have it on the stage,
-Turk, with real hothouse fruit and flowers fresh from the market gardens every
-night? I daresay it will come to that, in time. The stage is not what it was, my
-sons.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Winking at me, old Mac went out, and I, regarding the wink as
-an invitation to follow him, wished Turk good-morning.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'This is not the way to Covent Garden,' I said, as I joined
-him. 'Have you had your morning drain, Mac?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my son, no,' he replied cheerfully; 'and I know a place.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Without more words he conducted me to the 'place,' where I
-paid for his morning drain twice over.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You took my hint, my son,' he said, when he had drained his
-glass, and eaten his lemon; he always ate the slice of lemon after he finished
-his glass, saying humorously that it was a preparation for the next. 'You took
-my hint.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You wanted to speak to me I thought, Mac.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, not exactly wanted, my son; but I have something to
-communicate which may be interesting to you. I know what the tender passion is,
-and how it burns. I've had my day, and, faith! I'd like to have it over again!
-It wasn't all sugar, my son. There was one--ah, there was one, I do remember me,
-in my hot youth!--</p>
-<div style="font-size:9pt">
-<p style="margin-left:50px; text-indent:-25px; margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt">
-&quot;Her lips to mine how often did she join.<br>
-Between each kiss her oaths of true love swearing!</p>
-<p style="margin-left:50px; text-indent:-18px; margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt">
-How many tales to please me did she coin. Dreading my love, the loss thereof
-still fearing!</p>
-<p style="margin-left:50px; text-indent:-18px; margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt">
-Yet in the midst of all her pure protesting.</p>
-<p style="margin-left:50px; text-indent:-18px; margin-top:0pt; margin-bottom:0pt">
-Her faith, her oaths, her tears, and all were jesting.&quot;</p>
-</div>
-<br>
-<p class="continue">But what cared I? I whistled her off, and took another, for
-they're as thick as mulberries, my son. And I'd like to have my time over again,
-pleasures, pains, and all. But this is not to the point, and yet it is, although
-the lines will not apply--that is to say, I hope not.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I listened in anxiety; I was well acquainted with old Mac's
-character by this time, and I knew it would be useless to interrupt him and ask
-him to come to the point at once; he must come to it his own way.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Old Mac can tell a hawk from a handsaw with half an eye,' he
-continued, 'and he has two good ones at his command. Old Mac says to himself,
-seeing a certain talented young friend whom he esteems--your health, my son. Ah,
-I forgot, my glass is empty'--(I was obliged to fill it again; I had no fear of
-Mac's getting tipsy on three glasses; he was too well seasoned)--'Old Mac says
-to himself, what does this talented young friend of his mean by coming so often
-to Turk West's establishment? Well, there would be nothing in that, but he comes
-in unseasonable hours--that is to say, in the hours during which he is supposed
-to be working for the public. What does that mean? says old Mac, in confidence
-to himself. Your health, my son. It can mean but one thing. Old Mac knows the
-signs. And that's why he winked at you to follow him. <i>Do</i> you follow me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not exactly,' I was obliged to confess, notwithstanding that
-I had a dim glimmering of what was coming.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Old Mac laughed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, not to beat about the bush--but I thought I'd lead up
-to it by easy stages--a certain fair friend of ours is at a certain place this
-morning, and I fancied you might like to see her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My heart beat violently; I knew that he referred to Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did she tell you to come for me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He dashed my hopes to the ground by hurriedly replying, 'No,
-no, my son; she knows nothing of it, and had best not know, perhaps. The fact
-is, our fair friend is about to make her first appearance on the boards, and she
-is now rehearsing her part. I know the box-keeper, and he will let us into the
-dress circle, where you can see her without her seeing you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I thanked him cordially, and we walked together to the
-theatre, and were admitted to the dress circle, which was in complete darkness.
-Certainly no one on the stage could distinguish us, but in the dim light I could
-see all the actors and actresses engaged in the rehearsal. Jessie was among
-them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Eight months had passed since I last saw her, and I gazed on
-her with aching eagerness. It was a cold day, and she was warmly dressed; and
-the only change I could discern in her was that she appeared to have grown more
-beautiful. What pain and pleasure I felt as I heard her voice once more, fresh
-and sweet as ever, and saw the old familiar action of her hands, I cannot
-describe.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Steady, my son, steady,' whispered old Mac warningly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I controlled myself, without being aware what I had done to
-excite this remonstrance.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When does she appear?' I asked in the same low tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Next Monday week.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In her own name?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; she has taken the name of Mathews. You will see the
-announcements outside the theatre. There's a good deal of curiosity excited
-about her already, for she plays an ambitious character; she commences at the
-top instead of at the bottom of the ladder. I should have liked her to begin a
-little lower down, or to have appeared in the provinces first. There's one great
-thing in her favour, though. She plays in a new piece, and can't be compared to
-other and more experienced actresses in the same character. There's somebody you
-know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He referred to Mr. Glover, whom I had seen before he had, and
-who, standing at the side wings, appeared to be on familiar terms with all the
-company; but I knew the lodestone which had drawn him there. When I first caught
-sight of him Jessie was engaged in a scene; presently she was free for a time,
-and then he approached her, and they talked together.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mac,' I said, in a whisper, 'I think you are a friend of
-mine.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am proud to hear you say so, my son. I <i>am</i> your
-friend.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What does that mean?' And I pointed to Jessie and Mr. Glover.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He looked at my agitated face, and then at the two persons I
-was interested in; but he did not answer me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why don't you speak, Mac? Why don't you answer me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I don't quite understand you, my son.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When a person in Mr. Glover's position,' I said, 'pays
-attention to an actress commencing the world as Jessie is, what does it mean?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Speak a little lower, my son. It means that he is interested
-in her. There's nothing unusual in that.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But it <i>may</i> mean something more; it may mean that he is
-fond of her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It may; and there would be nothing unusual in that. But it
-does not follow that she is fond of him. Beware of the green-eyed monster, my
-son. Good heaven, the souls of all my tribe defend from jealousy! Take a lesson
-from an old stager.' (But what the lesson was he did not state.) 'Why don't you
-ask Turk about it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have my reasons; I would rather Turk should not know
-anything of this.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, I'll find out for you, quietly between ourselves. Old
-Mac knows the signs. He has seen a few things, old Mac has. Only don't you run
-away with the idea that there's anything wrong in a gentleman speaking to an
-actress. I daresay it's through him that my fair friend has got this chance.
-Well, why shouldn't she speak to him, then? I know what you feel, my son. I've
-felt the same myself, and wouldn't mind feeling so again. It comes in the
-regular course of things.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I went outside the theatre with him, and made an excuse to get
-rid of him. Then I waited, in the hope of seeing Jessie; and bearing in mind
-Jessie's words, 'If we meet again it must be at my own time, and in my own way,'
-I resolved not to show myself to her. She came out in the course of half an
-hour, accompanied by Mr. Glover. I walked behind them at some distance on the
-opposite side of the road, making many shifts and pretences of looking in
-shop-windows, so that they should not see me. But Mr. Glover, happening to turn
-his head in my direction, caught sight of me. I saw the flash of recognition in
-his eyes. He must have uttered an exclamation, for Jessie turned, and also saw
-me. I hesitated for one moment; should I retrace my steps, or walk boldly on?
-Jessie decided the question for me, by running towards me. Her face was scarlet,
-but that might have been caused by her running too quickly, for her breath came
-fast.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'O Chris!' she cried, in the first excitement of the moment.
-'How glad I am to see you! What brings you this way?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She held out her hand eagerly, and I took it, and would have
-retained it, but that the appearance of Mr. Glover, who paused quite close to
-us, caused me to relinquish it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What brings him this way?' echoed Mr. Glover. Not accident,
-I'll be bound.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I came on purpose to see you, Jessie,' I said; 'I heard
-through a friend that you were rehearsing this morning, and I gained admission
-to the dress circle, and sat there for some time.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Was it Turk who told you?' she asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, not Turk. I think he would not tell me anything that you
-did not wish me to know.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was not without intention that I let this arrow fly. Jessie
-made no comment upon it, but said:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And then you waited outside to see me, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; I had no other purpose. But I did not intend that you
-should see me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">No? But we'll not quarrel now that we <i>have</i> met. How is
-mother, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She is well, Jessie. You know that we were very nearly losing
-her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know; and you took her into the country, and nursed her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank God, she is well now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">If Mr. Glover had not been present, I should have spoken in a
-very different manner, but I could not show my heart while he stood by, with a
-look of cold contempt in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you?--you are looking thinner, I think, Chris; but you
-are well and happy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I answered mechanically, 'I am well and happy, Jessie.'
-Although I strove to speak in an indifferent tone, it must have miserably belied
-my words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you are getting along famously,' continued Jessie
-hurriedly; I read your name in the papers, and it made me very proud.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We shall read your name in the papers soon, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I suppose so; if I have strength and courage to go through
-with it. I hope you will not come on the first night, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was silent, and she was generous enough not to exact the
-promise.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'At all events, then, if you do come I shall have one friend
-there,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not more than one, Jessie?' asked Mr. Glover, in a tone which
-made my heart throb violently.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie, looking first at me and then at Mr. Glover, said that
-she must wish us good-morning, and with her parasol hailed an omnibus that was
-passing.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-bye, Chris. Will you give my love to mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She drew me aside, out of the hearing of Mr. Glover, and
-whispered, 'Don't quarrel with him, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will not, Jessie. One moment. Are you happy?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She cast a swift glance at me, and then turned her eyes to the
-ground. 'I think so, Chris; I am not sure.' With this singular answer, she
-pressed my hand, and left me. I watched her get into the omnibus, and when it
-was out of sight I turned homewards, without noticing Mr. Glover. But he was at
-my heels, speaking to me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How did you gain admission into the theatre, young man?' he
-said. 'Did you sneak in, or did you tell the doorkeeper a lie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is my business,' I replied calmly; for I was determined
-to keep my promise to Jessie.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Especially your business, I should say--sneaking and lying.
-But unless you wish to find yourself in an unpleasant position, I should advise
-you not to make the attempt again. For Jessie's sake, who might not like to hear
-of your getting into trouble, I will look over the trespass this once.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'<i>You</i> will overlook it!' I retorted, without any outward
-exhibition of anger. 'Is the theatre yours, then?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'In your own words, that is my business. But I have authority
-there, believe me; so you must be careful. I should, if I were you, give over
-the spying business; you will gain nothing by it. Perhaps, however, you have not
-the manliness to see that the young lady has chosen for herself, and that, as
-she has removed herself from you and your common surroundings, there is distinct
-cowardice in your thrusting yourself upon her. Only a gentleman can entertain
-these proper sentiments----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Such a gentleman as yourself,' I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, such a gentleman as I,' he said, with a frown; and not
-only that, but one who knows how to resent impertinence and blackguardly
-interference.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I left him suddenly; if I had not done so he would have
-fastened a quarrel upon me. I saw clearly that this was his desire; but I
-disappointed him.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_45" href="#div1Ref_45">CHAPTER XLV.</a></h4>
-<h5>OLD MAC EXPRESSES HIS OPINION OF MR. GLOVER.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">The only person to whom I spoke of my interview with Jessie
-was my mother, and even to her I did not relate all that had passed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is she coming to see us, my dear?' my mother asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I answered that she had given no hint of any such intention.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps,' said my mother, 'Mr. Glover being by restrained
-her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps,' I replied curtly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As the tone in which I spoke denoted that I did not wish to
-continue the conversation, my mother said nothing more. Not that she had grown
-indifferent to the subject upon which we were conversing, but that she studied
-my moods more closely than ever. Her heart had never been stirred by such tender
-love for me as during this time; it showed itself in a thousand little
-undemonstrative ways, and with a delicate cunning which I am sure has never been
-excelled, she said and did precisely the things which were most comforting to
-me. I have only her to thank that my sorrow did not make a cynic of me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My thoughts ran so much upon Mr. Glover, that I dreamt of him
-frequently in connection with some singular fancies. The principal persons who
-played parts in these dreams were we two and Jessie. In one of my dreams he was
-standing on a height, with his fingers to his mouth, curling his moustache into
-it as usual; I stood below, at a great distance from him; and Jessie was midway
-between us. He was beckoning to Jessie, saying in a boastful tone that he was a
-gentleman and a man of honour, and Jessie was walking towards him. In another of
-my dreams he was standing over me, preaching the same text. In another, Turk was
-very seriously impressing upon me the fact that Mr. Glover came from a
-highly-respectable family, and that it <i>was</i> a thing to be proud of. This
-was the leading idea of all my dreams.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I did not go again to see Jessie at the rehearsals. I knew I
-had no right to be in the theatre on those occasions, and I did not intend to
-give Mr. Glover a chance of placing me in an unpleasant position. I had scarcely
-a hope of seeing Jessie at our house; my mother thought differently, saying that
-in certain things she was seldom mistaken, and this was one of them. It was
-known to me that she had never ceased making inquiries for uncle Bryan, and that
-she had taken many and many a journey about London in the hope of finding him. I
-did not question her as to the result of these inquiries, and she herself was
-silent on the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh,' said Josey West to me, a couple of days after I had seen
-Jessie, 'so you've seen her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Josey,' I replied, 'I have seen her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And never told me!' she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why should I tell you, Josey? You have kept things from me
-which I think you might have told me, without doing any great harm.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you, my sweet child? How wise we are, to be sure! But I
-don't blame you. What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. I tell you
-what, Chris! On the first night that Jessie plays, you and I will go arm-in-arm
-to the theatre.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, we will not.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my sweet child?' she inquired, not in the least
-disturbed by my abrupt tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Because I have not made up my mind whether I shall be there.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, indeed!' she said, with a little laugh.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was not ingenuous in my reply, for I had quite resolved to
-go, and to go early. During the days that intervened between my meeting with
-Jessie and her announced first appearance I was very busy with important work.
-This kept me close to my bench, and I did not have time even to visit Turk, but
-it did not prevent me from thinking constantly of Jessie. What would be the
-result if she made a great success? Would she grow into a fine lady, and would
-her picture be in all the shop-windows? What was the nature of the connection
-between her and Mr. Glover? What were her feelings now towards her father? I
-found a hundred different answers to these questions, not one of which brought
-any satisfaction or consolation to me. But I could not relinquish the
-consideration of them, and, in the usual way, I extracted from them as much
-unhappiness as they would fairly yield.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My mother knew where I was going when I prepared myself on
-the evening that Jessie was to make her first appearance before the public, and
-as she kissed me she said she did not expect me home very early. I nodded, and
-left her. I could not trust myself to speak, for I felt as though my own fate
-were about to be definitely decided by the issue of this night's events. I
-arrived at the theatre before the time announced for the opening of the doors,
-and to my surprise, instead of finding, as I expected, a great mass of people
-pressing towards the entrances, I found a few scores of persons standing loosely
-about the closed doors, grumbling and wondering at notices which were pasted on
-the walls to the effect that in consequence of the indisposition of the new
-actress the opening of the theatre was postponed. The disappointment to those
-assembled was the greater because the play in which Jessie was to appear was the
-first dramatic work of a new author, who, although his name was not given on the
-bills, it was said was a nobleman well known in fashionable circles. While I was
-reading the notice, and tormenting myself with the idea that Jessie must be
-seriously ill, Turk accosted me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Hallo, Chris,' he said, hooking his arm in mine; 'this is a
-surprise, isn't it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is Jessie very ill, Turk?' I asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He looked at me inquiringly, seemingly in doubt as to whether
-I was in earnest in asking the question. I repeated it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do not think so,' he replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you seen her lately, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not since Saturday, Chris; then she appeared to be well. That
-notice is only put up as an excuse. There's a hitch with the author, or the
-lessee, or the man who advances the money, I expect.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I should like to know if Jessie is really well,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go round to my shop, then; here's the key. I'll make
-inquiries and come to you soon.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I went to the shop, and unlocked the door, and as it was dark
-inside, I lit the gas. I had not been in the place many minutes before old Mac
-poked in his head.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I saw a light,' he said, entering, and closing the door
-behind him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, Chris, my son; it's you, is it? This is a rum go, isn't
-it? Where's Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He'll be here presently. You mean about the theatre, don't
-you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do, my son. So our fair friend doesn't make her appearance
-after all. Well, the loss is the public's. The stage is going to the dogs.
-Going! Gone, I should say. Not conducted on straight principles, my son.
-Elements introduced into the management of theatrical matters which have no
-business there at all. Where's your school for acting nowadays, I should like to
-know. How do men and women come to be actors and actresses? Where's the
-education for the profession? Once upon a time--ah, well, no matter. Drown dull
-care. Anything to drink about?' He looked around for the desired bottle. I could
-not assist him in his search, and did not desire to do so, for it seemed to me
-that he had already had a glass too much. 'Closed through the indisposition of
-the new actress!' he continued. 'That's the way the public is gulled. There are
-more things in heaven and earth than are dreamt of in their philosophy. Look
-here, my son. A word in your ear.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">This word in my ear was a whispered request for a trifling
-loan of two shillings and sevenpence. He always asked for loans in a whisper,
-even when there was no third person near. It was not the first time I had lent
-old Mac small sums of money, and I pulled three shillings from my pocket, not
-having the coins for the exact sum. He gravely gave me fivepence change.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Thank you, my son,' he said, 'and now, a word to the wise. On
-a certain morning you and I went to the Rialto--no, to a rehearsal in which our
-fair friend took part.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You confided your woes to me, not in words perhaps, but in
-look, accent, manner. Old Mac knows the signs. The liquid eye, the tremulous
-tone, the sighs that come unbidden. I saw them all, my son, and my sympathising
-breast received them as a sacred deposit. You remember the lines I quoted: &quot;Her
-lips to mine how often did she join!&quot; But I see that you are impatient, my son.
-You said to me then that you believed that I was your friend. I answered in
-suitable terms. The word to the action, the action to the word. Shake hands, my
-son.' By this time I had fully made up my mind that old Mac was tipsy, although
-he was as steady as a rock; it was only his voice that betrayed him. 'To
-continue. You drew my attention to two persons who shall be nameless, one of
-whom was paying attentions to the other, and you asked what it meant. I replied
-in general terms, and after warning you to beware of the green-eyed monster, I
-said that I would find out, in a quiet way, what those intentions meant, and
-that I would let you know, in a quiet way. Am I correct, and do you follow me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I said that he was quite correct, and that I was following his
-words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I placed myself at once in communication with our fair
-friend----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was surprised into an exclamation by this information. In no
-way disturbed, old Mac went on.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I did. I placed myself at once in communication with our fair
-friend----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You did not mention my name, I hope,' I could not help
-saying.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Was I born yesterday, do you think, my son, or the day
-before? I had some slight acquaintance with our fair friend, as you know, and I
-threw myself in her way. That is what I mean when I say I placed myself in
-communication with her. I read her part for her, and gave her a hint or two,
-which she received and thanked me for in a manner very different from some lady
-stars I could mention, who think themselves above tuition because they have
-pretty faces, and because they happen to have made a third- or a fourth-rate
-success. They come to grief in the long-run, my son, these clever ladies. They
-shine for a little while, with much outside pushing and puffing, and then, Out,
-out, brief candle! Our fair friend is a different kind of creature. She is
-amiability, sweetness, and modesty combined, and when the old actor ventured to
-throw out a hint or two as to emphasis in certain places, as to appropriate
-action, as to where and how a point could be made, she received them with
-gratitude and deference. Damme, my son! the old actor could not help wishing he
-was a thirty years younger man; and then again he was glad he wasn't, because it
-might have interfered with the chances of a young friend of his, whom he sees
-before him now. But if I don't hurry on with my story, you will be applying to
-me Hamlet's words to Polonius, &quot;These tedious old fools!&quot; The old actor doesn't
-mind giving himself a rub, you see. Well, having fairly established himself in
-the sweet graces of the young lady, old Mac, from his point of observation, kept
-one eye steadily fixed upon a certain gentleman whose name commences with G, and
-who seems to have a habit of biting his nails--a sign of ill-temper, my son. Old
-Mac was on the watch, my son--&quot;On the Watch,&quot; a fine title for a drama, and I
-wish I had time to write it. This gentleman whose name commences with G did not
-appear to relish the observation of the old actor, which was not, for that
-reason, relaxed, depend upon it. And now, old Mac has but few words to add. If,
-having reason to suspect the honesty of the intentions of this gentleman whose
-name commences with a G, the old actor sounded him artfully, and learnt enough
-to convince him that his suspicions were correct, and if, being thus satisfied
-or dissatisfied, the old actor gradually and delicately opened a certain young
-lady's eyes to the true state of affairs, you may depend that he did it partly
-out of the friendship he entertains for a fine young fellow--shake hands, my
-son--partly out of his contempt for a certain person whose fingers are always
-playing with his moustache, but chiefly out of his admiration for a young lady
-whose beauty, grace, virtue, and modesty are unparalleled in the experience of
-an old fellow who has seen the world, and knows the stuff that men and women are
-made of.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Ambiguous as this speech was--and old Mac seemed to make it
-purposely mysterious, and to enjoy it--I thoroughly understood it, and I thanked
-the speaker cordially. My heart felt lighter after it, and when Turk
-returned--old Mac being gone--I met him with a smile on my face.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Has any one been here, Chris?' he asked, as he entered.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Only old Mac; it is scarcely two minutes since he left.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one else?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Turk. Have you found out about Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have reason to believe she is quite well,' replied Turk,
-and that the notice is only a blind. I thought Mr. Glover might have called.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; he has not been here. Did you expect to see him?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk, without replying to my question, commenced to walk up
-and down his shop, which unusual proceeding on his part caused me to observe him
-more closely. A strange expression of trouble and perplexity was on his face,
-and I questioned him concerning it.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I asked you once,' he said, somewhat awkwardly, 'if you were
-in trouble. You will remember it--on the anniversary of Jessie's birthday.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I remember, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yours, you said, was not a money trouble.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But yours is, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; chiefly. Partly my own, partly another person's. Chris,
-if I speak vaguely, it is because I am on my parole; I mustn't break my word.
-Now we can trust one another, I think?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am sure I can trust you, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And that is just what I want,' he said, with a perplexed
-look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What is?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Trust. It is a tremendous misfortune, sometimes, to be a poor
-hard-up devil, not to be able to lay one's hand on a five-pound note. Generally,
-it doesn't matter; as a rule, I am happy enough with half a crown in my pocket,
-and owing no man anything. Chris, I want a large sum of money. Can you tell me
-where to borrow it on my word of honour?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How much, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Eighty pounds.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I had more than that saved out of my earnings.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can lend it to you, Turk,' I said quite gladly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You, Chris! Your own money?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My own money--money that I have saved.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you will lend it to me on <i>that</i> security?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What better do I want from you, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He resumed his walk, and was silent for a few moments. When he
-paused before me, there was a soft bright light in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It's good to have a friend. But, first, let me tell you. Only
-twenty pounds of the eighty are for myself. I want that sum to pay off my debt
-to Mr. Glover. The other sixty is for another person; and I shall be quite
-twelve months in paying you back.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am satisfied, and more so, because you will be free, and
-out of Mr. Glover's clutches. I can give you the money to-night. Mother has it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Is it all you have saved, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; I shall have a little left.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then, when I've paid Mr. Glover, I can give you a bill of
-sale over my stock.' He looked round upon his wigs and other theatrical
-property. 'It is worth the money.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't lend to you upon that security, Turk. The first you
-mentioned is the only security I can accept.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He laughed a little huskily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All right, Chris, my boy. I'll borrow the money on those
-terms. This may be a good night's work for all of us. I never thought that Turk
-West's word would be good for eighty pounds. But stranger things than that might
-occur, eh, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I acquiesced, although I had not the slightest idea of his
-meaning.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you knew,' he continued, 'the relief it will be to me to
-get out of Mr. Glover's clutches, as you called it, you would be surprised.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was sufficiently surprised at the change that was apparent
-in his tone concerning Mr. Glover, whom he had hitherto extolled so highly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Curse all professional moneylenders, I say!' he exclaimed
-excitedly. 'And if ever I believe again in a man with a handle on the top of his
-head, my name's not Turk West.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could not help laughing at these singular words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, you may laugh, Chris; but when he sat in that chair--the
-very one you are sitting in now, Chris, my boy--for the first time last week,
-and asked me to shampoo him, and I felt the knob, it made me curious. I thought
-he had been fighting, or had knocked his head against something, but he told me
-he was born with it. That sort of thing runs in families, I should say. If he
-had it, his father must have had it before him. Look here, Chris; you are good
-at figures--I never was. See how I stand with him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He produced some papers and receipts, all of which bore
-reference to the account he had with Mr. Glover. I examined them, and found that
-he had paid Mr. Glover a large interest for the money he had borrowed. He had
-already paid the full sum of seventy-five pounds advanced, and there were still,
-as he himself had calculated, twenty pounds odd to be paid before he could call
-himself free. I made out a clear statement, and gave it to Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mr. Glover has managed to make a large profit out of you,
-Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, and I don't know how it has been done. I was to pay ten
-per cent for the money, I understood; but what with one thing and
-another--lawyer's charges, drawing up of deeds that were not required, I am
-sure, signing of printed papers, inquiry fees, and a dozen other things--it has
-come to a deal more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I see that you only received sixty-five pounds,' I said, busy
-over another calculation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So that,' I continued, having finished my calculation' which
-I handed to Turk, when you pay the balance to-morrow, Mr. Glover will have
-received at the rate of at least sixty per cent per annum for the loan. Not much
-of a friend in that, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, I should say not; I have only rightly understood this,
-and other things in connection with Mr. Glover as well, within the last week.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Perhaps,' I ventured to say, 'you do not now think me so
-unreasonable in the dislike I took to him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is I who was wrong, Chris, my boy. I see that now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know, Turk, it pleases me in some way to be convinced
-that he is not the soul of honour, as you tried to make me believe.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There, there, Chris--let's say no more about him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We'll be done with him presently. I don't know how it was,
-but I suspected and disliked him from the first. That trick of his of curling
-his moustache into his mouth--old Mac told me he bites his nails----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I cannot tell what it was that made me pause suddenly here,
-but pause I did, and the sentence was not concluded.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know where Jessie lives, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Chris, but you mustn't ask me to tell you. I am on my
-parole.' He repeated this statement with a certain air of enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Very well,' I said. But can you tell me when Jessie is likely
-to make her appearance----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He interrupted me, and asked me as a favour to change the
-subject; and as I saw that I made him uneasy by my questions, I discontinued
-them. He walked home with me, and I gave him the money.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I wonder,' he said, as he pocketed it, 'that you haven't
-asked me what I wanted the other sixty pounds for.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have been going to ask half a dozen times,' I replied, 'but
-I thought it might be another of your secrets.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a secret,' he said with a smile. 'And if you had asked,
-I shouldn't have told you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Certainly, Turk was playing a most mysterious part; but I
-trusted him thoroughly, knowing what a good fellow he was.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was surprised to see me home so early, and more so
-when she heard what had taken place.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have a presentiment, my dear,' she said, 'that this is
-going to turn out a fortunate night for us.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We went to the shop in the course of the night, and there was
-Josey West behind the counter, as busy as a bee, serving the customers, and
-chattering away like any magpie. Uncle Bryan would scarcely have known the shop.
-Josey had had it cleaned and painted, and the scales and counter, and nests of
-drawers in which the spices and more valuable commodities were kept, had been so
-smartened up that they looked like new. You could see your face in every bit of
-brass about the place. During a lull in the business, Josey came into the little
-parlour where we were sitting.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It's wonderful,' she said; 'we've taken eleven shillings
-already for pills and mixture. I'm beginning to get frightened. If an inspector
-of something or other were to come in and analyse us, I should drop down in a
-fit. Turk says there's nothing to be afraid of, but I'm not so sure of that.'
-Presently, however, she derived consolation from the reflection that, after all,
-the medicine could not possibly do any one any harm.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you been to the theatre, Josey?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If you ask no questions, my sweet child,' was her reply,
-'you'll be told no stories. Theatres! As if I haven't something a thousand times
-more important to attend to!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">For all that, she found time to have a quiet chat with Turk,
-and when he went away she called me into the shop, and saying she had something
-very particular to whisper to me, kissed me instead of making any communication;
-by which sign I knew that Turk had told her of the money I had lent him. She
-shut up the shop earlier than usual, and we had supper together. I had not had a
-meal in the little parlour for many months, and my mind was filled with the
-memorable incidents in my life with which the room was connected. It was just
-such a night as that on which Jessie had tapped at the door, years ago, when
-uncle Bryan was asleep, and my mother and I were sitting quietly together. I
-remembered the story I was reading, <i>Picciola</i>, and during a silence I
-raised my head to the door, with something of expectation in my mind. I
-dismissed the fancy instantly, but it was not unpleasant to me to think of what
-had occurred on that night--the conversation in the shop between Jessie and my
-mother, the awaking of uncle Bryan, and the first passage-at-arms between the
-child and the old man. My mother must have divined the current in which my
-thoughts were running, for she took my hand under the table, and held it fondly
-in hers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't help liking the little room after all, mother,' I
-said.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_46" href="#div1Ref_46">CHAPTER XLVI.</a></h4>
-<h5>A STRANGE DREAM.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother and I stopped up talking until very late on this
-night. The future was not mentioned; all our talk was of the past. My mother
-recalled the reminiscences of her younger days, and dwelt upon them with
-affection. She drew pictures of her home when she was a girl, and told me a
-great deal concerning her parents, and especially concerning my grandmother, of
-whom my own impressions were so vivid. As though she were living her life over
-again, she travelled from those days gradually to the day upon which she first
-saw my father, and in tender tones related many incidents of their courtship
-which I had never before heard. She required a great deal of coaxing before she
-would speak of her courting days, but I led her on artfully from one thing to
-another, and listened to her with delight. On such occasions as this my mother
-seemed to grow twenty years younger; her face grew fresher, rounder, and in her
-eyes the soft light of youth lived again. Then came the description of her
-wedding-day, and she laughed or grew pensive as she recalled the names of those
-who were present, stopping occasionally, until I said, 'Yes, mother, and
-then,'--upon which she took up my words, saying, 'And then, my dear,'--and
-proceeded with her descriptions. When, in the course of her narration, I came
-into the world, I was able to take a larger share in the conversation, and I
-added my experience to hers. We were by turns grave and merry, according to the
-nature of our reminiscences. My grandmother's peculiarities, her death, the
-search for the long stocking, and the picture of Snaggletooth ripping open the
-beds and the armchairs, and sitting on the floor with his hair full of feathers;
-then on to my father's burial, and my illness, and the removal farther and
-farther away from our native town until we found ourselves in London--scarcely
-anything, except what was painful, was left unspoken of.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And there's an end to it all, mother,' I said, when we had
-brought the reminiscences up to the very night upon which we were conversing.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, my dear,' she replied, with a tender shake of her head,
-not an end; there are brighter pages to come in my darling's life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know, mother,' I said, as I stood by her side at the
-door of her bedroom, 'I have often thought of grandmother's long stocking, and
-fancied that one day we should find a treasure somewhere.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother laughed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, my dear, where on earth would you look for it? We have
-not a thing left that belonged to your grandmother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, we have; you don't forget that brown monkey-man that
-used to stand on the mantelshelf and wag its head at us?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I remember it perfectly, dear child; you don't mean to say
-you have kept it all this time?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is in my box now; I shall take it out to-night, and have a
-look at it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You don't suppose the treasure is in that?' said my mother,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; though Jessie and I did think one day that we had made a
-discovery. Good-night, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Good-night, dear child, and God bless you. Remember, my dear,
-there are brighter days to come, and your mother will live to see them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">That, before she went to sleep, she prayed for those brighter
-days, I was certain, but I scarcely dared to hope that what she so fondly
-desired would ever take place.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before I went to bed I took from my box the stone image of the
-brown monkey-man; it was at the very bottom of my box, which I had not opened
-for many months, for the reason that it contained all the sketches I had made of
-Jessie, and which I had put away when I lost her. But for these, and the tender
-thought which they excited, I should have given more attention to the stone
-image which looked uglier and more repulsive than ever. How such a hideous thing
-could be considered an ornament it puzzled me to think; but it occurred to me
-that there were more flagrant violations of art than this. On the previous day I
-had seen a ghastly death's-head pin in the cravat of a coxcomb, who seemed very
-proud of it. I set the image of the monkey-man on the mantelshelf, and slowly
-replaced the sketches in my box, lingering over them with fond regret.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Among them I found a sketch with the name of 'Anthony Bullpit'
-at the foot, and I remembered that it was a fancy drawing I had made of my
-grandmother's lover, after reading the account of his arrest by the detective
-Vinnicombe, elsewhere narrated; a sneaking figure was Anthony Bullpit, as I had
-represented him, with his hang-dog look and hypocritical face, gnawing at his
-finger-nails. I pushed it out of sight, and turned again to the contemplation of
-my sketches of Jessie, over which I spent a sad and tender quarter of an hour.
-Then, with a sigh, I closed the box and locked it, and went to bed. It was my
-habit of a night to lie awake for a few minutes with the candle alight on a
-chair close to my bed. Generally I passed these minutes in reading, but on this
-night 'I lay a-thynkinge,' and did not open my book. Directly opposite the head
-of my bed was the mantelshelf, with the smoke-dried monkey of a man in stone on
-it, and this was the last thing that presented itself to my sight before I blew
-out the light. Restless as I was with the events of the evening, and with the
-conversation which had taken place between my mother and myself, I was tired
-enough to fall asleep within a very few moments. But I was not too tired to
-dream; my body was asleep, but my imagination was never more active. To me, the
-most wonderful feature in the physiology of dreams has always been the fact that
-Time, the dominant and inexorable tyrant which rules and guides our course, and
-regulates the passions and emotions of life, is in our sleep utterly set at
-naught; a lifetime is compressed in a moment, as it were, and between waking and
-sleeping a hundred years of history are played out. I think I must have dreamt
-of every important event in my life, and of many in the lives of others; they
-presented themselves to me without coherence or sequence, and there was but one
-consistent feature in my fancies--the figure of the monkey-man, which was never
-absent. I dreamt of Snaggletooth and Snaggletooth's wife. She was relating the
-stories of the Cock-lane Ghost and Old Mother Shipton, as she had related them
-in the kitchen on the night my father lay dying upstairs, but in my dream she
-was not speaking to me, but to the monkey-image, which gravely wagged its head
-at her as she proceeded; Snaggletooth was running up and down the stairs, and
-poking in the oddest corners, in his search for the long stocking, and the
-monkey-man was assisting him frantically, running at his heels, and tearing
-things open with fiendish haste; I was in the mourning coach, following my
-father's body to the churchyard, and the monkey-man was sitting opposite to me,
-grinning at me; Snaggletooth was carrying me out of the churchyard, and as I
-opened my eyes, the monkey-man, squatting on Snaggletooth's shoulder, squinted
-at me. In the same way the image presented itself in every incident connected
-with Jessie and my mother and uncle Bryan; and when I lay trembling in bed, and
-Jane Painter stood in my bedroom in the dark telling me stories of blood and
-murder, the monkey-man prowled about the floor, and dropped from the ceiling,
-and crept from under my bed, and sat on my pillow with its ugly face illumined.
-When Jessie knocked at the shop-door, as she had done years ago for the first
-time, and my mother opened it, the monkey-man entered first, and jumped on to
-the table; and on the night of the amateur performance at Josey West's the
-monkey-man was among the audience, seated in a place of honour. Suddenly all
-this chaos of persons and circumstances came to an end, and there were only my
-grandmother, and I, and the monkey-figure sitting together. I was in my little
-low chair, my grandmother, very stately and grand, was in her armchair, and the
-monkey-man was on the mantelshelf. Said my grandmother in my dream, in a very
-distinct tone, 'He had a knob on the top of his head, and was always eating his
-nails.' I looked at the monkey-man for confirmation of her words, and it said,
-in a stony voice, 'He had a knob on the top of his head, and was always eating
-his nails.' After this confirmation, my grandmother continued, 'And the last
-time I set eyes on him was on my wedding-day.' Again I looked at the monkey-man,
-and again it confirmed my grandmother's statement, but with a slight difference
-this time, 'And the last time we set eyes on him was on our wedding-day.' Which
-inference on the part of the monkey-man of being my grandfather somewhat
-disturbed me. Now, at this point of my fancies, what on earth brought old Mac,
-the actor, into the scene? There he was, however, face to face with the
-monkey-man, who questioned him as a lawyer would have done. 'What do you say his
-name commences with?' asked the monkey-man? 'It commences with a G,' replied old
-Mac. 'And what is that habit of his that you say is a sign of ill-temper?' asked
-the monkey-man. 'Biting his nails,' replied old Mac; 'he is always at it.' By
-this time my dream has resolved itself into a court of inquiry; the monkey-man
-is dressed in a wig and gown, which do not hide his ugliness; my grandmother,
-very broad and portly, sits as judge, and I, it seems, am in some way the
-criminal whose case is being tried, for my grandmother nods her head at me
-continually, and says, 'Perhaps you will believe me now; all these things
-happened on my wedding-day.' Old Mac fades away, and is replaced by Turk West.
-'Curse all professional moneylenders, I say,' he cries; 'and if ever I believe
-again in a man with a handle on the top of his head, my name's not Turk West'
-'Hold your tongue,' calls out the monkey-man; 'who wants to know what your name
-is? We'll come to names presently. 'When did you first discover the handle?' It
-isn't a handle,' says Turk, in correction, 'it's a knob.' My grandmother nods in
-confirmation. 'He had a knob on the top of his head,' she says, 'and he was
-always biting his nails.' 'I don't know about that,' says Turk, 'but his fingers
-are always at his moustache, and he is the soul of honour and comes from a
-highly-respectable family.' 'That he does,' adds my grandmother. 'Poor Anthony!
-He proposed and wished to run away with me, but my family stepped in and
-prevented him.' 'Very wrong,' says Turk gravely; 'wasn't his family respectable
-enough for them? The soul of honour!' 'Quite so,' says my grandmother. 'He told
-me, after I had accepted this child's grandfather' (at this point of my dream I
-become suddenly a child, in a pinafore), 'that life was valueless to him without
-me, and that as he had lost me, he would be sure to go to the devil.' 'Did he
-go?' asks the monkey-man. 'I always found him a man of his word,' replies my
-grandmother. 'Now attend to me, sir,' cries the monkey-man, in a bullying tone,
-turning suddenly upon Turk; 'when did you say you first discovered this knob?'
-'Last week,' replies Turk, 'when he sat in that chair' (the chair comes into the
-dream) 'and told me to shampoo him.' 'You were surprised when you felt it?' asks
-the monkey-man. 'I was,' says Turk, 'and I asked him if he had knocked his head
-against something. He said, no, that he was born with it.' 'And what was the
-remark,' continues the monkey-man, levelling a threatening finger at me, 'you
-made to the prisoner at the bar?' 'I said,' says Turk, 'that that sort of thing
-runs in families, and that if he had it, his father must have had it before
-him.' Suddenly, and as if it were quite in the natural order of things, we are
-all listening to the statement of a new witness who has risen in Turk's place.
-'I am an officer in the detective force, and my name is Vinnicombe. From
-information received, I went to Liverpool, and tracked Anthony Bullpit on board
-the Prairie Bird, bound for America. &quot;It's no use making a noise about it,&quot; I
-says to him, as I slipped the handcuffs on him; &quot;I want you, Anthony Bullpit.
-You sha'n't be done out of a voyage across the sea, but Botany Bay's the place
-as'll suit you best, I should think.&quot; Here my grandmother brindles up, 'You're
-an infamous designing creature,' she screams. 'He is no more guilty than I am.'
-'He pleads guilty at all events,' is the detective's reply. 'That is to spite
-me,' says my grandmother, 'and to prove that he's a man of his word.' Then, by
-quite an easy transition, the court and the crowd fade away, and my grandmother,
-I, and the monkey-figure are again in the little parlour, and she is saying to
-me, 'Your grandfather has much to answer for, child. Mr. Bullpit was transported
-for twenty-one years. Some wicked people said it was a mercy he wasn't hanged.
-If he had been, I should never have survived it. Poor Anthony!' 'You would like
-to have a peep at him, I daresay,' says the monkey-man to me, my grandmother
-having disappeared; 'come along, I'll show him to you.' And in the same moment
-we are peeping through the keyhole of Turk West's shop-door at the figure of Mr.
-Glover, who sits in the chair with his fingers at his lips. Here a sudden
-movement or noise partially awakes me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">With all the details of this strange dream in my mind I lay
-for a few moments half asleep and half awake, endeavouring to bring the confused
-particulars into some kind of order; but the only thing that was clear to me was
-the connection that had been created between Anthony Bullpit and Mr. Glover. As
-I gradually returned to full consciousness, this connection seemed to become
-something more than a fancy. That the knob on Anthony Bullpit's head, of which I
-heard so much from my grandmother's lips in my young days, was reproduced,
-according to Turk West's testimony, on the head of Mr. Glover, was certainly no
-fancy; Anthony Bullpit bit his nails; Mr. Glover had the same objectionable
-habit. Stranger discoveries were made every day than the discovery that Mr.
-Glover was Anthony Bullpit's son. If this were so, what became of Mr. Glover's
-boast that there was not a stain upon his good name, and that his character and
-the character of all his family were above reproach? It occurred to me here that
-his ardent desire to make people believe this sprang from the fact that he had
-something disreputable to conceal. What made me so anxious in the matter was,
-that if there were a solid foundation to the suspicion, and if I could prove a
-connection between Mr. Glover and Anthony Bullpit the convict, then I had a
-lever in my hands which I could use to good effect against Mr. Glover--a lever
-which I believed would cause him at once to cease his attentions to Jessie. That
-he had laid her under an obligation to him was evident, and he might be inclined
-to persecute her in consequence. The lever I speak of was the printed account by
-Vinnicombe, the detective, of the arrest and conviction of Anthony Bullpit for
-the robbery from the bank.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I rose and lit the candle, and taking the mouldy old paper
-from the hollow of the stone monkey-figure, I read it carefully. I was
-particularly struck in the reading by the description given by the detective of
-the peculiarity in Anthony Bullpit's teeth. If that peculiarity existed in the
-teeth of Mr. Glover, it would be almost impossible to resist the conviction that
-he was Anthony Bullpit's son. I set to work at once, and made a fair copy of the
-'Remarkable Discovery of a Forger by the Celebrated Detective, Mr. Vinnicombe.'
-At nine o'clock in the morning I was in Turk West's shop, with the manuscript in
-my pocket.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_47" href="#div1Ref_47">CHAPTER XLVII.</a></h4>
-<h5>EXIT MR. GLOVER.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk regarded me with surprise.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'An early visitor, Chris,' he said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I answered; 'I have come on some very particular
-business. When do you pay the balance of your debt to Mr. Glover?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I expect him here at twelve o'clock. I shall pay him then.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can you give me half an hour or so of your undivided
-attention, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Certainly I can: a couple of hours, if you want them.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then sit down, and read this quietly,' I said, handing him
-the Remarkable Confession, 'and don't make a remark upon it until you have
-finished.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He read it attentively, and returned it to me with a
-thoughtful look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is cut from an old newspaper, printed a good many years
-ago, Turk. Do you find anything singular in it?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I do; something very singular indeed; but how on earth did
-you come across it, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I will tell you another time. First, I want to know what it
-is that strikes you as singular in the account.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, Chris, there's the knob in this Bullpit's head----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, Turk.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mr. Glover has one precisely similar on his head.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I could scarcely restrain the expression of my satisfaction at
-this proof that, without prompting, his thoughts were taking the same direction
-as mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, you told me so, Turk; and that sort of thing runs in
-families, you said.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I did say so, and I think so.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mr. Glover said he was born with it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, he told me so distinctly,' said Turk, with a puzzled
-look.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's all right, then. What else do you find singular in it,
-Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, there's that habit of Anthony Bullpit's of biting his
-nails. Mr. Glover does the same.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; anything else?' I asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, Chris, the teeth. Mr. Glover's two middle teeth in his
-top jaw have just the kind of slit between them that caused the detective to
-discover Anthony Bullpit, for all his disguise.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I uttered an exclamation of triumph. 'Now, what do you make of
-all this, Turk? Do you think it possible that such remarkable peculiarities can
-exist in two men without there being a relationship between them? Turk, as sure
-as I stand here, Mr. Glover is Anthony Bullpit's son. Don't interrupt me. If he
-is a convict's son, what becomes of his good character and his unblemished name,
-of which he is always preaching, as you know? He trades upon it, Turk--he trades
-upon it; and if it were made public that his father was a forger and a convicted
-thief, it would be the greatest blow he could receive. This man is a scoundrel,
-Turk; a scoundrel and a hypocrite.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I believe he is, Chris,' said Turk, carried away probably by
-my hot words; but what good can come of exposure--what good to you, I mean?</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, Turk, are you blind? Can't you see that I can make the
-best use in the world of this strange discovery?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I told him rapidly what had passed between old Mac and me, and
-the opinion which the old actor entertained of Mr. Glover, and then I developed
-my own plan of action.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is very simple, Turk. I want Mr. Glover immediately to
-cease his attentions to Jessie, whose eyes, according to old Mac's account, have
-only lately been opened to his real character. Jessie, I have no doubt, is under
-obligations to him; and he may take advantage of this to persecute her. If he
-does this, I shall expose him; but I shall first give him a chance of
-withdrawing himself voluntarily. I think there will be no reason to fear that he
-will prove an active enemy; the proof that I hold will take the sting out of
-him----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But,' interposed Turk, 'what if these personal marks should
-be mere coincidences, and no relationship exists between Anthony Bullpit and Mr.
-Glover?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We shall learn that very soon,' I replied. 'I shall send him
-this copy of the Remarkable Discovery with a few words of my own. If he is quiet
-after their receipt, we may be sure that our suspicions are correct. I know that
-he is a scoundrel--I have been convinced of that all along, Turk,
-notwithstanding your defence of him--and I believe him to be a coward. We shall
-see. Will you let me be present while you are paying him the balance you owe
-him?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have no objection, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And if I happen to say something to him--something to the
-point--you'll not mind, perhaps.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say whatever you like, Chris, my boy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I want a promise from you, Turk. Not a word of all this to
-Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All right, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Exactly at twelve o'clock Mr. Glover entered the shop. I was
-in the back-room, and I listened quietly to the few words that passed, in the
-course of which Turk told Mr. Glover that he was enabled to pay him the balance
-of the account between them. Mr. Glover said that it might stand, if Turk
-wished, but Turk insisted on paying him, and produced the money. As Mr. Glover
-was signing the receipt to the bond, Turk threw open the door of the room in
-which I was sitting, and said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, perhaps you would not mind witnessing Mr. Glover's
-signature.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mr. Glover looked up with anger in his face, and our eyes met.
-I quietly placed my name on the paper as a witness, and then, with a glance at
-Mr. Glover's signature, I handed the paper to Turk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'So now, Turk,' I said, with a smile, 'I am your creditor
-instead of Mr. Glover.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I saw that Turk did not understand why I made this apparently
-unnecessary statement.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh,' said Mr. Glover, with a sneer, 'it is your money, then,
-with which Turk West has paid his debt!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I replied. 'Turk is safer in my hands than in the hands
-of a moneylender who charges sixty per cent. What was it you said yesterday,
-Turk? Curse all professional moneylenders, wasn't it? So say I.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Mr. Glover glanced from me to Turk, and from Turk to me, while
-his face grew dark with passion.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have been thinking, Turk,' I continued, regarding Mr.
-Glover steadily, what would be the value of a receipt for money paid, supposing
-the name of the person at the foot of the paper is not his own. How would it
-stand in law, Mr. Glover? Supposing a person whose real name was Bullpit----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I saw instantly that the shot had taken effect The dark shade
-of passion disappeared from Mr. Glover's face, which was now quite white. Added
-to this, the startled exclamation which escaped him was a sufficient
-confirmation.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You shall hear from me,' he said, in a thick voice, as he
-turned to leave the shop.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You shall hear from me first,' I replied; within two hours I
-will leave a letter for you at your house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I wrote my letter at once in Turk's shop. The substance of it
-was that I enclosed a copy of an account of the arrest and conviction of a
-criminal well known in Hertford many years ago; that this criminal had on his
-person peculiar marks which were almost certain to be transmitted to his
-children; that the history of this criminal was known only to me and Turk West;
-that the secret of it would be faithfully kept if the person to whom my letter
-was addressed would immediately cease to honour with his attentions any of the
-lady friends of the writer; and that if this condition were not accepted and
-carried out in its full letter and spirit, means would be immediately adopted
-for making public the Remarkable Discovery, and the subsequent history of the
-forger and thief. I did not mention any names, but Turk West said that Mr.
-Glover would understand my meaning. I left the letter with its enclosure at Mr.
-Glover's house, and received no answer. Three days afterwards Turk came to tell
-me that Mr. Glover had left on a tour to Germany.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have other news for you as well,' he said; the theatre in
-which Jessie was to have appeared is let to a French Company for three months.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I asked Turk no questions, remembering what he had said as to
-his being on his parole, but I worked that day with a heart less sad than it had
-been for many a long month past.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_48" href="#div1Ref_48">CHAPTER XLVIII.</a></h4>
-<h5>JOSEY WEST LAMENTS HER CROOKED LEGS.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">Exactly three weeks had passed since Mr. Glover's departure,
-and I here take the opportunity of mentioning that, although I have seen the
-gentleman subsequently on two or three occasions, we have avoided each other by
-mutual consent--a state of things with which I am perfectly contented. The
-connection between him and Turk West is also completely severed, so that he has,
-as it were, dropped out of our lives. During the above-mentioned interval,
-nothing of importance transpired; my mind was busy with possibilities, but I saw
-no clear way of playing an active part in their development. My mother during
-this time, and especially during the past week, had been out a great deal. I
-guessed that she was still searching for uncle Bryan, and I should have been
-happy to learn from her lips that she had been successful in finding him. Within
-a few days of the time of which I am writing, I entertained a suspicion that she
-had found a clue, for when she came home her eyes were bright, and there was an
-expression of great happiness in her face; but I said nothing to her. I knew
-that I should soon hear good news if she had any to tell. The special direction
-of my thoughts may easily be understood by an observation I made to my mother
-one afternoon at the end of the three weeks.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother,' I said, 'I think you ought to go and see Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She looked up with glad eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Some feeling with regard to myself,' I continued, 'may
-prevent Jessie from coming to you here, and I think it would be a good thing for
-you to go to her. I know she loves you and would be glad to see you, and you may
-be able to counsel and advise her. Turk West knows where she lives, and,
-although he would not tell me if I asked him, I believe he would tell you
-readily.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you think so, dear child?' she asked. 'Then I will go to
-him, and tell him what you say.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The voice is a great tell-tale, and I knew by the tune in
-which my mother spoke that my suggestion had given her pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is no time like the present,' I said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother rose immediately, and put on her bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall leave off work at eight o'clock,' I said, so that she
-might understand I did not wish her to hurry back, and then I shall go round to
-Josey West for an hour.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She nodded, and stood looking over my shoulder as I worked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If I see Jessie,' she said, and paused.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, mother, if you see her---- I hope you will see her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I hope so too, dear child. Shall I give her any message from
-you?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not unless she asks after me, mother; then you may give her
-my love.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">There was the merest trembling in my voice as I said this, but
-it was sufficient to agitate my mother's soul. I laid my graver aside, and said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You see how it is, mother; I cannot do or act otherwise.
-Jessie could not know more about me and my feelings if I stood at her door all
-day long. I never loved her more than I do now, and I believe I shall never love
-her less; it would not be true if I said I was happy, but I am far happier than
-I deserve to be. My mother is still left to me, thank God!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Dear child! dear child!' she murmured, with tender caresses.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And you must not think it strange, mother, if I don't ask you
-questions when you come back. You will tell me whatever is worth telling. Now,
-one other word, and then you must run away, for I have work to finish. Should
-you meet with uncle Bryan----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Would you wish me to, my dear?' she asked wistfully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes,' I answered; I should like you to find him. If you do,
-give him my love also, and say that I should like to come to see him, if he will
-not come to us. And, remember, mother, if he wants for anything, all that I have
-is his; but for him I should not have been in my present position. As for the
-past, let bygones be bygones. As Americans would say, I should be truly happy to
-shake hands with him on that platform.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother kissed me, and went out of the room. I thought she
-had started on her errand, but she returned in a quarter of an hour, with a
-bunch of wallflowers in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I only came in to show you these, my dear,' she said; 'smell
-them--they are very sweet. You have not studied the language of flowers, have
-you, my dear?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, mother.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then you don't know what wallflowers stand for,' she said,
-with a bright smile. 'Now this is for you, my dear; it is the first rose I have
-seen;' and placing on my table a small rose embedded in moss, she left the room
-again. I watched her from the window as she walked down the street; she walked
-almost like a girl.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">On my way to Josey West in the evening, I passed the house in
-which I had first made her acquaintance. The door being opened, I entered, and
-found the place in an unusual bustle. Florry and her younger sisters were
-dusting and cleaning up, and putting the rooms in order. In explanation, Florry
-told me that their eldest brother, Sheridan, was coming to live there with his
-wife and children.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'They come in next week,' said Florry; and I daresay Clarance
-and his family will follow them; they have always lived together, and they won't
-like to be parted now. There's plenty of room for them all.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The place will look like its old self again,' I said to Josey
-West, a few minutes later on; and I added, with a sigh, 'and you'll be having
-the jolly old times over again, I shouldn't wonder.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shouldn't wonder, either,' replied the little woman
-briskly. 'Do you know, Chris, there's one thing I do miss--the Sunday evenings
-we used to have in the old house. Now that Sheridan is coming, we'll revive the
-Sunday-night suppers. You'll come, won't you, and bring your dear mother. She's
-never been to one of our parties. Upon my word, I feel quite happy only in
-thinking of them. There's Sheridan and his seven youngsters, and Clarance with
-his five--another one added, Chris, a fortnight ago--the sweetest little thing!
-Well, I do love to have a lot of children about me. When I die, an old woman--I
-shall be the queerest little old woman <i>you</i> ever set eyes on,
-Chris!--well, when I die, an old, old woman, I should like to see heaps of
-children round me, so that I might take the memory of their bright little faces
-away with me. It isn't often that I talk seriously, but I've got that fancy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You ought to have children of your own, Josey.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey was stitching and mending some of the youngsters'
-clothes, and, at my remark, she paused and looked at me pensively; but the next
-moment she gave such a vicious dig with her needle that she broke it, and cried,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ought to have! Ought to have! Me, with my crooked legs! No,
-my dear, never, never, never! Little witches don't have children. Never, never,
-never!' And for the first time in my experience of her, Josey West burst out
-crying. Her passion did not last long; she conquered it within a couple of
-minutes, and, as she wiped her eyes, exclaimed,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There! A nice little fool you'll think me now, Chris!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I gave her a kiss, and in a little while she was herself
-again, rattling away as usual.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'm going to sleep in the old house every night,' she said,
-until Sheridan takes possession; and Turk is coming here to sleep, and to mind
-the shop, if I want to get away a bit earlier. I wish Turk would marry. I should
-like to take care of his children. He's a real good sterling fellow is Turk, and
-deserves a happy home. Your mother was here this afternoon, Chris. She told me
-all that you said to her.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You guess, I daresay, what my reason is in wishing her to see
-Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey West laughed. 'I guess, you daresay! Well, yes, I can
-guess, although I am not in love.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I shook my head. 'I don't think you have guessed, Josey. It is
-not for myself that I want mother and Jessie to come together again.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'What other reason can you have, my sweet sensitive child?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, I don't mind your bantering me, Josey. Do you remember
-sending me a letter from uncle Bryan addressed to mother, when we were away at
-Hertford?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes; and I wondered at the time what such a thick letter
-could be all about.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It contained a great secret, Josey, and a very wonderful
-story concerning Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Indeed!' said Josey, with a cautious look at me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I think there is no harm in telling you, especially as you'll
-not speak of it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, you may trust me, Master Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a story concerning Jessie and her father.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Indeed! So Jessie has a father.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You would never guess who her father is, Josey.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then I won't break my head over it; but I shall know if you
-tell me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan is her father; so that you see Jessie and I are
-cousins.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey did not express the surprise I expected she would; an
-expression of thoughtfulness was in her face.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go on, Chris; I am waiting to hear more.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, neither Jessie nor uncle Bryan knew of the relationship
-existing between them until the day that Jessie went away from this house, and
-then it came upon them both like a thunderbolt. It was because Jessie discovered
-that uncle Bryan was her father that she ran away from him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That sounds very dreadful, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is a dreadful story attached to it--which I mustn't
-tell you nor anybody, Josey. They are both very much to be pitied; but I am not
-sure that I don't pity uncle Bryan more than I do Jessie. However, there it is;
-they are father and daughter, and they are separated. Never mind what has
-passed, I ask you is this right--is it natural? Uncle Bryan is an old man, and
-cannot have many years to live. That he repents many things he has been
-unconsciously guilty of in the past, I am certain.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That's a curious phrase,' interrupted Josey, with her
-thoughtful manner still upon her. 'Unconsciously guilty.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a correct one. His has not been conscious guilt; what
-was bad in his character was stamped in him, and was almost forced to take root
-by the unfortunate circumstances in his early life; what was good never had a
-chance. We all have good and bad in us, Josey, and surrounding circumstances
-have much to do in making one or the other predominate in our characters. What
-is that thought that crossed your eyes just now, Josey?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was thinking that you have grown into a perfect
-philosopher, Chris. Go on.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say that uncle Bryan had been blessed with such a mother as
-my mother is--he would have been a different man; he couldn't have helped being
-a better man. He would have believed in God, in goodness; he would not have
-grown into a misanthrope. Josey, if there is anything good in me--and I hope I
-am not all bad--I have mother only to thank for it. It makes me tremble to think
-that I was so nearly losing her, and that her love for me was very nearly her
-death; and I know, to my sorrow, that for a long time I repaid her affection
-with indifference. Well, but that is all over now, thank God. If uncle Bryan had
-had a good, tender, considerate mother, many unhappy things would not have
-occurred to him, and it might have been better for Jessie also. As I said, it is
-dreadful to think of father and daughter being separated as they are, and to
-think that uncle Bryan might die without a word of affection passing between
-them. Well, that was the thought in my mind when I said to mother to-day that
-she ought to go to Jessie; for if mother finds uncle Bryan--and I have an idea
-that she will--no one but she can bring him and Jessie together.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you didn't tell your mother this, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No; mother did not need telling. She knew my meaning well
-enough. Words are not required between us now, Josey, to make us understand one
-another.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And so, and so, and so,' said Josey, with tender gaiety, when
-I had concluded, 'everything having been made right, they lived happily together
-for ever afterwards.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It was with sadness I remembered that those were the very
-words which Jessie had spoken to me in the little parlour in which Josey and I
-were now conversing.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Now I'm a witch,' cried Josey, 'and I'll give you three
-wishes. What are they?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked at her reproachfully, but she did not heed me. She
-hobbled about as witches are in the habit of doing on the stage, and waved the
-poker over my head, and conducted herself generally in a ridiculous manner.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Halo!' cried Turk, poking his head in at the door. 'What are
-you about with your pokers? What a pity I didn't come in a minute later! There's
-an account I could have written for the papers! &quot;The first thing that met Our
-Correspondent's view was the distended&quot;--distended is good, Chris, my boy; I've
-seen it used so--&quot;was the distended form of the unfortunate victim on the
-ground, winking his last gasp. Over him stood the infuriated figure of a woman,
-who, with glistening eyes and rage in her countenance, was brandishing the
-murderous weapon--an enormous crowbar, weighing fifty-three pounds--preparatory
-to giving a last fell stroke to the prostrate form at her feet.&quot; That's the
-style, Chris; a penny a line. Spin it out--<i>must</i> have at least two
-columns. &quot;Upon inquiry among the neighbours, who stood in clusters about the
-building in which the murderous deed was perpetrated, Our Correspondent learned
-that jealousy was the cause of the fatal assault. It appears that thirteen years
-ago there lived in a certain street, called et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.&quot;
-Now, after that, Chris, if you start an illustrated paper, and don't employ me
-as Special Correspondent, I shall have a bad opinion of your judgment.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was relieved by this diversion, and upon Turk proposing that
-we should pay a visit to the Royal Columbia Theatre, in which he had played the
-first villain for so long a time, I gladly assented.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I left a message for my mother, desiring her to wait with
-Josey until I returned, and Turk and I strolled to the theatre. I found not the
-slightest alteration either in the theatre, the audience, or the performance;
-they were all the same--the same atmosphere, the same fashions, the same pieces
-with different names. The very dresses were the same; but I was bound to confess
-that the First Villain was vastly inferior to Turk, who, I learned, had left a
-reputation behind him which would last while the walls held together. We did not
-stay longer than an hour, and then, as we had done on the occasion of my first
-visit to the Royal Columbia, we visited a neighbouring bar, and over our pewter
-pots listened and took part in a precisely similar conversation to that which I
-had listened to with such respectful admiration and attention after the
-performance of the thrilling drama of <i>The Knight of the Sable Plume</i>. The
-decadence of the drama, the low ebb of dramatic literature, the glorious days of
-Garrick and Kemble, the inferior parts which men and women of genius were
-compelled to play upon the mimic stage, the false positions which pretenders
-were puffed into by venal critics who ignored real talent--these were the themes
-touched upon; and I began to reflect whether this state of things was chronic in
-the profession, and whether, when the golden age of the drama is in its full
-meridian, the decadence of the drama will not be spoken of as mournfully as it
-is in the present day.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother was waiting for me when I returned; but although she
-was exceptionally bright and happy, and although there was a tenderly joyous
-significance in her words and manner towards me, she said nothing of the result
-of her visit to Jessie.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_49" href="#div1Ref_49">CHAPTER XLIX.</a></h4>
-<h5>UNCLE BRYAN AGAIN.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris,' says my mother to me, on the following day, can you
-leave off work an hour earlier this evening?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, mother,' I replied; 'at six o'clock if you like.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then at six o'clock,' she says gaily, 'I shall take
-possession of you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As the hour strikes, she comes to my side, dressed for
-walking. 'No tea, mother?' I ask.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We are going out to tea, my dear,' she answers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I keep her waiting but a very few minutes, and presently we
-are in the streets. I know that something of importance is about to be disclosed
-to me, and that it will please my mother to be allowed to disclose it in her own
-way; therefore I hazard no conjectures, and we talk on indifferent subjects. But
-this does not prevent me from working myself into a state of agitation as to the
-precise nature of our errand. We take the omnibus to Holborn, and from there we
-walk towards Bedford-square. My mother leads the way down a clean narrow street,
-and we pause before a small three-storied house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Somebody lives here that we know,' says my mother, as she
-knocks at the door.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Can it be Jessie?' I ask of myself, as I glance upwards.
-There are flowers on the window-sills of the first and third floor; those on the
-first floor are especially fine, and almost entirely cover the windows. It is on
-the third floor we stop when we enter the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Remember what you said to me, my dear,' my mother whispers as
-we enter the room. There is no one to receive us, but my Mother goes into an
-inner room, and comes out of it presently, and motions me with a tender smile to
-go in. I enter alone; an old man with white hair is standing by the window,
-looking towards the door. A grave expression is on his face, which is deeply
-lined; I recognise uncle Bryan immediately, although he is much changed. I had
-had in my mind a lingering hope that my mother was taking me to see Jessie; but
-in the pleasure of seeing uncle Bryan I lose sight for a few moments of my
-disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle,' I say, as I advance towards him with outstretched
-hand. He meets me half-way, and clasps my hand eagerly in his, and then turns
-aside with quivering lips, still holding my hand. I know that he has noticed
-both my pleasure and my disappointment, and I hope it is not the latter that
-causes him to turn aside.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I have said that he is changed, but I find it difficult to
-explain in what way he is different from what he was. It is not that his hair
-has grown quite white during the months that we have been parted, it is not that
-his form is bowed, or that his features are more deeply-lined; the same shrewd
-thoughtful expression is there, but in some undefinable way it is softened, and
-although the old look of self-reliance is in his eyes, it is less hard than it
-was. As I silently note these changes, I am reminded of a passage I read a few
-days before this meeting, in which a man is said to have had in his face an
-expression which might have been brought there by the touch of angel fingers on
-his eyelids while he slept.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I received your message yesterday, my dear boy,' he says
-presently. 'Your mother brought it straight to me. It gladdened my heart
-inexpressibly.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Then I know that my mother must have been in the habit of
-visiting him for some time; it does not surprise me to learn this; every day of
-her life brings me fresh proofs of her goodness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'How long ago was it, uncle,' I ask, 'since mother discovered
-where you were living?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Quite a month, my dear boy,' he replies, and adds quickly,
-'it was my wish that she should say nothing to you until I gave her permission.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I smile softly at this defence of her.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'She can do nothing wrong,' I say. 'I think I know the spirit
-that lives in the hearts of angels.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother, who is preparing tea for us, peeps in here.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you forgive me, my dear?' she says. 'You never thought
-your mother would deceive you, I daresay.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I shall have to consider very seriously,' I say, kissing her,
-'before I can pronounce an opinion on your conduct. There are some things that
-take a long time in learning.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She stands between us, embracing us, glancing with tearful
-eyes from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But I must make haste, and get tea ready,' she cries, running
-away from us; 'there! the kettle's boiling over.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Which is the better kind of wisdom, uncle,' I say; 'that
-which comes from the head or the heart?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He answers: 'That which touches us most deeply, which makes us
-kinder, more tender and tolerant, less harsh and dogmatic, more charitable and
-merciful, must be the better kind of teaching. All this springs from the heart.
-You said to your mother just now that some things take a long time in learning.
-I have been all my life learning a lesson, and have but now, when I am near my
-grave, mastered it. In plays, in poems, in stories, in songs, those words and
-sentiments which appeal to the heart are invariably most effective. You see, my
-dear boy, my views are changed.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">After this he asks me about myself, and I tell him what has
-passed, and he listens with pleasure and patience, as though he had not already
-heard it all from my mother's lips--but I do not think of this at the time.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have not mentioned Jessie's name,' he says, 'thinking
-perhaps it would pain me; but I can speak of her without grief, if not without
-sadness. I have only one wish in life now, my dear lad.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Believing that he refers to a reconciliation between himself
-and Jessie, and having full faith in my mother's power to bring this about, I
-say that I earnestly hope it will be fulfilled, and that I believe it will be.
-He gazes at me with a soft light in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You know in what relation she stands to me, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">If I could give her to you, my dear boy----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">But I stop him here, and beg him in scarcely distinct words
-not to continue the subject.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But one word, Chris,' he says; 'you love her still?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'With all my heart, uncle, and shall all my life. But it hurts
-me to speak of her; I can bear it better in silence.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother calls out that tea is ready, and once more we three
-sit down together.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I miss the little parlour,' my mother says; 'how many happy
-years we lived there!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She forgets all the sorrow and pain we experienced there, and
-recalls only the tenderest reminiscences. Occasionally a flash of uncle Bryan's
-old humour gives piquancy to the conversation, but there is now no bitterness or
-cynicism in what he says. At eight o'clock my mother puts on her bonnet; I am
-surprised that we are going so early, but she says it is a fine night and that
-she feels inclined for a walk.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Uncle Bryan will walk with us,' I say.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother shakes her head, smilingly, and says she does not
-want him. I look towards uncle Bryan; he does not seem in the least disturbed.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We shall see each other again soon,' he says, as he shakes
-hands with me on the doorstep of his house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You will come to us, then,' I say eagerly. 'I want to show
-you my work.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, I will come very soon; but your mother will see to
-everything, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'There is one thing I want particularly to ask you, uncle, if
-you'll not mind.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Say it, my dear boy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Living here, all alone, as you are doing,' I say, and I pause
-somewhat awkwardly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He assists me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear boy--living here all alone, as I am doing----'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I was thinking it must be very lonely for you, uncle.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is a lonely life, Chris, living by oneself.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And without any friends near you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, my dear boy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I want you to give up these rooms, uncle, and come and live
-with us, or if you wouldn't like to do that, to go back to your shop.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">His eyes brighten; my mother's eyes also are beaming.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would be a pity to take the shop away from that good
-little woman, Josey West. And you would really like me to come and live with you
-again?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would make us very happy--mother especially. Look at her
-face.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'With all my eccentricities and oddities, you would still wish
-me to come?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, but you are altered now.' He makes a grimace. 'Well, even
-if you were not, I should be very, very glad if you will come. You can give me
-lessons in flower-growing.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I glance up to the windows in which the flowers were blooming.
-His eyes follow mine.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Which do you think the best, Chris; those on the first or
-those on the third floor?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'On the first floor certainly, and I am surprised at it. I
-thought no one could beat you. Mother was never so successful as you were. Your
-flowers were always the finest.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">He rubs his hand, and says,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, we shall see, we shall see.' And then, more earnestly,
-'I am glad you have asked me, Chris; I was wishing for it. Good-night now; we'll
-talk of it by and by.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">As he seems evidently wishful to get rid of us, and as my
-mother seems no less anxious to go, I take my leave. On our way home we pass a
-theatre, and my mother expresses a wish to enter; we go into the pit, and
-witness a French comic opera done into English. The performance is a good one,
-but is spoilt by the unnecessary introduction of some foreign dancers, whose
-coarse vulgarity and outrageous disregard for decency shock my mother. It is
-seldom that my mother goes to a theatre, and she says, as we come out,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'If that is to become the fashion in theatres, I am more than
-glad that Jessie is not going on the stage.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then she is not going?' I ask eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, my dear,' replies my mother, with sudden reserve, 'it
-almost looks as if she had given up the idea.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">At home I find a letter on the table. I open it and read:</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Miss West presents her compliments to Mr. Christopher Carey,
-and will be happy to see him and his mother at nine o'clock to-morrow evening,
-at the Old House at Home.'</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Why, mother,' I say, 'this is exactly like the note Josey
-sent to me when I first went to her place. I suppose she wants to have an
-evening in the old house before her brother Sheridan takes possession. I wonder
-if the kitchen is the same. I shall never forget my feelings when I saw it for
-the first time. You must come, mother, is a wonderful sight.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">My mother smiles an assent.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad you asked your uncle to come and live with us,' she
-says, as she wishes me good-night.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_50" href="#div1Ref_50">CHAPTER L.</a></h4>
-<h5>JOSEY WEST DISTURBS US IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, Master Chris,' said Josey West, as my mother and I
-entered the kitchen on the following night, here are the old times come over
-again. Now, children, bustle about! Florry, take mother's shawl and bonnet.'
-(They all called her mother.) 'Ah, you're looking about you, my dear; they're a
-queer lot of things; but they belong to a queer lot of people. The first night
-Chris came here he bumped his head. I heard some one tumbling about in the
-passage, and I called out to know who was there. &quot;It's Me,&quot; Master Chris
-answered, as if all the world knew who Me was. &quot;Come downstairs, Mr. Me,&quot; I
-called; and down he came head over heels, and fell sprawling right in the middle
-of the kitchen. Ah, that was a night! Do you remember the scene from <i>As You
-Like It</i>, Master Chris, and how mad you were when Jessie said, &quot;Ask me what
-you will, I will grant it;&quot; and Gus said, &quot;Then love me, Rosalind?&quot; You thought
-no one knew what was going on inside that head of yours, but I saw it all as
-clear as clear can be. I'm a witch, my dear. Did you ever hear'--(she was
-addressing my mother now)--'that I played an old witch for an entire season? I
-did, and played it well; I could show you the notices I got in the papers on the
-day they contained all about the pantomimes, but you would think me vain if I
-did. What a big little woman I thought myself, to be sure! I thought all the
-world must know me as I walked along, and I cocked up my head, I can tell you.
-How we do puff ourselves out, we frogs! That's what I asked you that night,
-Master Chris, the name of that thing in the fable that puffed itself out and
-came to grief; and I remember saying that of all the conceited creatures in this
-topsy-turvy world actors and actresses are the worst; though I think I know some
-who are almost as bad. But to come back about Gus, my dear. You've no cause to
-be jealous of him; he's engaged, my dear--engaged! Here's her picture--a pretty
-little thing, isn't she? But Gus never would make love to a girl unless she was
-pretty, and he was always a bit of a flirt. He'll have to settle down now; his
-ogling days are over; this little bit of a thing has got hold of him as tight as
-a fish. They'll all be getting married directly--all of them except me and Turk
-perhaps--and he's the one I want to see married most of all. There's Florry
-there--what are you listening to, Florry?--you should see how the men are
-beginning to stare at her! and that sets a girl thinking, you know. As for
-Chris, he must be blind; I only know if I was a young man--But there! I'll say
-no more, or you'll be calling me as bad a gossip as Mrs. Simpson. Perhaps some
-one else would like to say a word or two?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And here Josey paused to take breath. I knew that she had only
-chattered on in this way for the purpose of giving me time to recover myself
-upon entering the kitchen; for as I looked around upon the old familiar walls, a
-flood of tender reminiscences had rushed upon my mind, and my eyes had filled
-with tears. Whether by design or accident, the kitchen presented exactly the
-same appearance as on the first night I had seen it. The old theatrical dresses
-and properties were on the walls; the dummy man in chain armour that had once
-played a famous part in a famous drama was lurking in a corner; the curtain of
-patchwork was hung on its line, dividing the stage from the auditorium; and
-Matty and Rosy and Nelly and Sophy were busy at work on stage dresses and
-adornments. My mother was delighted with all she saw, and caressed the children,
-who all doted on her, and pulled out of her pocket a packet of sweetmeats for
-them. Her brain could never have been idle; when she went on the simplest
-errand, she must have thought of it beforehand, and her affectionate thoughtful
-nature invariably made that errand pleasant to some one. Her wonderful
-thoughtfulness, wedded as it was to affection and unselfishness, was one of her
-greatest charms; it strewed her course through life with flowers which sprang up
-in barren places, and gladdened many a sad heart. I know that, between
-ourselves, every wish I formed was anticipated before I expressed it, and while
-the words explaining it were on my lips, she was scheming how it could be
-gratified. This charming and most beautiful quality--which in a home breeds
-love, and keeps it always sweet and fresh--was exhibited even on such an
-occasion as our present visit to Josey, in the pleasantest of ways. As my mother
-chatted with Josey, she handed one child the thread, another the wax, another
-something which the little one's eyes were seeking for; and all these things
-were done in the most natural manner, and without in the least disturbing her
-conversation with Josey. Trivial as these matters are, they are deserving of
-mention; happy must be that home which has such a spirit moving in its midst.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The youngsters are all at work, I see,' I said to Josey, when
-I had mastered my agitation; 'to fill up the time, I suppose.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Not a bit of it, Master Chris,' replied Josey. 'Sophy and
-Rosy and Matty have an engagement to play in a new burlesque; they play the
-Three Graces--very little ones they will be, but it's a burlesque, you know--and
-very well they'll look. Now then, up with you, and go through the first scene.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">The children jumped from their chairs, and went through the
-scene, speaking with pretty emphasis the few words intrusted to them, and
-dancing with infinite grace. It was amusing to witness the gravity with which
-they tucked up their dresses so as to show their petticoats, which looked more
-like ballet clothes than their brown frocks. We all applauded heartily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Bravo! bravo!' cried Turk, who had entered during the scene.
-'If the author isn't satisfied with that performance, then nothing will satisfy
-him. But nothing less than a hundred nights' run ever does satisfy an
-author--How are you, mother? How do you do, Chris, my boy? Well, Josey, old
-girl! No, nothing less than that ever does satisfy an author, who invariably
-says, when a piece is a failure, that the actors are muffs and don't know their
-business. But they get as good as they give; let actors alone for reckoning up
-an author. They know how much of the credit belongs to them, and how much to
-him.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey laughed merrily at this.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It almost always all belongs to the actor, Turk,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Of course it does, and very properly too. The audience say,
-when an actor makes a point, What a clever fellow the author is! They should
-read the stuff: they'd form a different opinion. Josey, do you know it is nearly
-ten o'clock?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">A look of some meaning passed between Turk and Josey, and
-Josey desired the children to put away their work. Presently they all went to
-bed, my mother going with them at their express desire. Only Turk, Josey, and I
-were now in the kitchen. We talked on various subjects, not in the most natural
-way, as it appeared to me; I said little, not being inclined for conversation.
-Turk was somewhat thoughtful, and more than usually observant of me, but Josey
-was in the wildest of spirits, and laughed without apparent cause, and said the
-most absurd things.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I knew a lady,' she said, 'who played a character-part in a
-successful piece, which had an immense run; it was played for more than two
-hundred nights. She hadn't a great deal to say, but every time she spoke she
-either commenced or ended with &quot;Bless my soul!&quot; Now, if you will believe me, her
-&quot;Bless my soul!&quot; made the piece. Every time she said it the audience roared with
-laughter, and you could hear them as they went away from the theatre of a night
-saying, &quot;Bless my soul!&quot; to one another, and laughing, as if there was really
-something wonderfully comic in the words. It was a great misfortune to her, for
-her mind so ran upon it, that morning, noon, and night she was continually
-saying nothing but &quot;Bless my soul!&quot; until her friends got so wearied of it that
-they wished she hadn't a soul to bless. I slept with her one night, and all
-through her sleep she was talking to herself, and blessing her soul. It was the
-ruin of her as an actress; for always afterwards the people in the theatre
-called out, &quot;Hallo! here conies Bless-my-soul!&quot; and of course that spoilt the
-effect of a good many of her characters.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But that's not as bad,' said Turk, 'as me when I played The
-Thug for seven months. Do you remember, Josey?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do I remember it?' Josey repeated, with a look of comic
-horror. 'Haven't I cause to remember it? You see, Chris, he had to strangle
-people in the piece. How many every night, Turk?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Seventeen,' he replied in a tone of great satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'He had to strangle seventeen people every night for seven
-months, my dear. Well, that made an impression upon him, and I daresay he began
-to look upon himself as a lawful strangler. I must say, that when he strangled
-the people on the stage, he did it in such a manner that no one could help
-believing that he enjoyed it.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was realistic acting, Josey,' said Turk complacently;
-'that's what it was.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was a little too realistic for me,' observed Josey. 'For
-what do you think he did one night, Chris, my dear? He was living in this house
-at the time, and we all went to bed quite comfortably, after a heavy supper.
-Turk had had a great triumph that night, and the audience were so delighted with
-the way in which he strangled his victims, that they called him before the
-curtain more than once. We talked of it a great deal after supper. Well, in the
-middle of the night I woke up with a curious sensation upon me. Something seemed
-to be crawling towards me very stealthily. I listened in a terrible fright, and
-sure enough I heard something crawling in the room. I lit a candle quickly, you
-may be sure; and there I saw Turk in his nightshirt, as I'm a living woman,
-creeping about on the floor, as he was in the habit every night of creeping
-about on the stage in the character of The Thug. He was fast asleep, my dear.
-&quot;Turk! Turk!&quot; I cried, and I was about to jump out of bed and give him a good
-shaking, when he shouted, &quot;Ha! ha! I have you! Die! die!&quot; and he ran up to me.
-My dear, if I hadn't jumped out on the other side of the bed, and poured a jug
-of cold water down his back, I believe he would have strangled me. It woke him
-up, and a nice state he was in. Every night after that, until the run of the
-piece was over, and he was playing other characters, I locked him in his
-bedroom, and took away the key. I wasn't going to have the children strangled in
-their sleep, and Turk hanged for it. I used to go to the door of his room in the
-dead of night, and more than once I heard him crawling about on the floor,
-strangling imaginary people, with his &quot;Ha! ha! Die! die!&quot; He never knew anything
-of it, my dear, and used to come down to breakfast looking as innocent as a
-lamb.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk seemed to take pride in this narration.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It shows that I was in earnest,' he said. 'There's ten
-o'clock striking.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We listened in silence, and did not speak until the last echo
-had quite died away. Then I raised my head and saw that Josey was looking at me
-very earnestly.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris, my dear,' she said, somewhat nervously, 'you have good
-cause to remember the first night you came into this house.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Indeed I have, Josey,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I'm going to give you better cause to remember to-night. I'm
-a little witch, you know.' She hobbled about the kitchen, and, after going
-through some absurd pantomime, came and stood close behind me. I should have
-been inclined to laugh, but that Turk's serious face made me serious. 'Now,
-then,' she continued, placing her arms round my neck, and her hands upon my
-eyes, 'ever since I played that witch, I've had the idea that I could do magic
-things if I tried. I'm going to try now; shut your eyes, and wish.' She placed
-her lips close to my ear, and I thought she was about to whisper something, but
-she kissed me instead. I humoured her, and did not make an effort to free myself
-from her embrace. We must have remained in this position for fully two minutes,
-during which time I heard the door open and shut. When Josey removed her hands,
-I saw my mother sitting on one side, and uncle Bryan on the other. I held out my
-hand gladly to him; Josey clapped hers in delight.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It was a whim of this good little woman's,' said uncle Bryan,
-looking at Josey affectionately. 'And we were compelled to let her have her way.
-We owe her too much to refuse her anything.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'But you don't look as surprised as I thought you would,
-Master Chris,' exclaimed Josey, in a tone of assumed disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Well, the truth is, Josey,' I said, 'I saw uncle Bryan
-yesterday; so it is not so much of a surprise as you thought it would be.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Oh, indeed!' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And then again,' I said, taking her hand, 'do you think that
-anything kind from you can surprise me? No, indeed, Josey; we all have cause to
-know the goodness of your heart. I couldn't love a sister better than I love
-you.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Did anybody ever hear the like of that!' she exclaimed,
-laughing and crying at one time. 'As if a single girl wanted to be loved like a
-sister! Never mind, Chris, my dear, don't mind what I say; you know what I mean.
-But, as the first act of my piece is not as successful as I thought it would be,
-I shall have nothing to do with the second. Oh, yes, it's in two acts, Chris!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Before I could speak, uncle Bryan took up her words.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is another of this good little woman's whims, my dear
-boy,' he said, that we should all sleep in the old shop to-night, as we used to
-do, your mother, you, and I. It will only be for this one night, Chris,
-notwithstanding Josey's persuasion, for if all goes well, I shall regularly make
-over the business to her; and to-morrow morning she will take possession again.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You have decided to come and live with us,' I said; 'that is
-good, isn't it, mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'We shall have time to talk over that to-night, my dear boy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Then the best thing you can do,' said Josey briskly, 'is to
-run away at once and settle it. I sha'n't be able to close my eyes until I know
-how it is all settled. There! Away with you!' And she fairly bustled us out of
-the house.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Let us walk slowly,' said uncle Bryan, 'it is a fine night,
-and I have something to say to you. Nay, Emma, don't walk away; I should like
-you to hear me. Chris, the words you addressed to me the last night we were
-together in the old shop have never left my mind. Do not interrupt me, my dear
-boy--I think I know what you wish to say. You would say that you spoke too
-strongly, and that you painted all that had passed in colours too vivid; let
-that be as it may, you spoke the truth. I recognised it then; I recognise and
-acknowledge it now. But the pain which I suffered--and I did suffer most keenly,
-my dear boy--was not so much for myself as for your dear mother, for I saw that
-every word you spoke wounded her tender heart. Had you seen this, you would have
-held your tongue, and I should have been spared a just punishment. Chris, I did
-not ask you yesterday, although it was in my mind to do so; I ask you now: have
-you forgiven me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I was humbled by the humbleness of his tone and manner. It
-might have been a child who was pleading to me. I found it impossible to speak,
-but I threw my arms round his neck, and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That is well, that is well,' he said; 'I have but one wish
-now--to repair the wrong I have done. You said that I had driven all hope of
-happiness from your heart; what kind of happiness should I experience if I could
-restore what I have robbed you of! Repentance is good; atonement is better!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I knew by his agitated tone how strong was his wish, and I
-pressed his hand. Silence was best at such a time.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Shortly afterwards we arrived at the shop, and I saw a light
-gleaming through the shutters. To my surprise, uncle Bryan, instead of unlocking
-the door, knocked at it, and I found myself wondering who was inside; all the
-members of Josey West's family were at home in their old house. As uncle Bryan
-knocked, my mother grasped my hand tightly; I looked into her face, and saw in
-it an expression of love, so sweet and pure, and yet withal so wistful and
-yearning, that a wild unreasoning hope entered my heart. I could not have
-defined it, but it seemed to me that something good was about to occur. The door
-was opened from within, and uncle Bryan stood for a moment on the threshold.
-Before I could follow him my mother pulled my face down to hers, and kissed me
-more than once with great tenderness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are crying, mother,' I said; and then I thought that joy
-on entering the old shop, and sleeping again beneath its roof, had caused her
-tears.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'God bless you, my darling!' she sobbed; 'God bless you!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We entered the shop; uncle Bryan was standing there alone; a
-light was in the little parlour.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Go in, Chris,' he said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I went in, and there sat Jessie, working at the table. She
-looked towards me, with a smile that was tender and arch upon her lips. I passed
-my hands across my eyes, scarcely believing the evidence of my senses.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is true, Chris,' she said, rising; 'are you not glad to
-see me?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I looked round for uncle Bryan and my mother; they were not in
-the room, and the door was closed behind me. Then I understood it all.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have you come back for good, Jessie?' I asked.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I can't hear you,' she replied, 'you are so far away!'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I stepped close to her side, and my arm stole round her waist;
-she sighed happily.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Have I come back for good?' she repeated. 'That is for you to
-decide, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are in earnest with me, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She smiled. 'I saw you yesterday,' she said.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Where?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'When you came to see your uncle Bryan; I have been living in
-the same house, on the first floor, Chris, where the finest flowers are. Do you
-begin to understand?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Tell me more, Jessie. Did mother know you were living there?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Yes, and Josey West, and Turk also. Nearly all that money
-Turk borrowed of you was for me to pay what Mr. Rackstraw said I owed him. Would
-you have lent it to him if you had known?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You must answer that question for me, Jessie,' I said, still
-uncertain of the happiness that was in store for me.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">We were standing by the mantelshelf, on which lay a little
-packet in brown paper. Jessie took it in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Mother told me to give you this, Chris. Stay, though; what is
-that round your neck?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'The ribbon you gave me, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And the locket, where is that?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It is here, Jessie.' I showed it to her; the earnest look
-that was struggling to her eyes came into them fully.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You did not cast me quite away, then? Have you always worn
-it, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Always, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I am glad, I am glad,' she murmured, and presently said,
-'Here is your packet, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I opened it, and found the watch and the ivory brooch I had
-intended to give Jessie on her birthday.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Do you know what is in this packet, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I took the trinkets out of the paper:</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I bought them as a birthday present for you, Jessie. Look at
-what is engraved inside the watch, and if you can accept it, you will make me
-very happy.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She opened the case and read: 'From Chris to Jessie, on her
-eighteenth birthday. With undying love.' Her eyes were fixed upon the
-inscription for a much longer time than was necessary for the reading and
-understanding of the words. When she raised them, tears were glistening in them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Will you fasten it for me, Chris?' she said, in a low soft
-tone.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">With an ineffable feeling of happiness I placed the slender
-chain about her neck, and while my arms were round her, she raised her face to
-mine, and I kissed her.</p>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">A few minutes later, while we were still alone, Jessie said,</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You know why I left home on my birthday, Chris?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know all, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'And yet not quite all, I think. I shall have no secrets from
-you, Chris, not one. I believe I should have left soon afterwards, even if it
-had not been for my mother's letter, and for the discovery that uncle Bryan was
-my father.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'For what reason, Jessie?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You do not suspect, then?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I have a dim suspicion, dear, but I would prefer you to tell
-me.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Chris,' she said, very seriously, 'you loved me too much.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'That could not be, Jessie.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It could and can be. In your love for me you forgot some one
-else, a thousand million times better than I am, Chris.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'My mother?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Your mother. I reproached myself every day and every night
-for being the cause of it. I was afraid that your attachment to that dearest
-angel on earth was growing weaker and weaker, and I knew that I was the cause of
-it. I saw the pain, the unutterable pain, my dear, that your neglect of your
-mother was causing her tender heart, and I was continually striving to discover
-in what way you could be 'brought to learn how much more pure and beautiful and
-sacred her love was than mine. If things had gone on in the same way, I should
-have run away as it was, Chris, so that you might have been forced to seek for
-comfort in the shelter of her love. Do you understand me, my dear? Your love for
-me made you colour-blind.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">How much dearer this confession made Jessie to me I need not
-describe.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I see things in a better light now, my darling,' I said
-humbly; 'I am not colour-blind now.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan and my mother would not have disturbed us all the
-night if we had not called to them to come in and share our happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Those who understand the strength and purity of love can
-understand by what links of tender feeling we were henceforward bound to one
-another--sacred links which death itself will be powerless to sever.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Jessie sat on a stool at her father's feet; my mother and I
-sat close to them, my hand on Jessie's neck, clasped in one of hers.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">It must have been two o'clock in the morning, and we were
-still talking, unconscious of the hour, when a great thumping was heard at the
-street-door. I jumped to my feet, and opened the door, and Josey West ran in.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I couldn't help it, my dears,' she cried; 'I know I have no
-business here, but I should have done something desperate if I hadn't run round
-to see how you were all getting on. I went to bed, but as I'm a living woman I
-couldn't sleep a wink; so I got out of bed and dressed myself, and thought, I'll
-just see if there's a light in the shop. And when I came and saw the light, how
-could I help knocking? Well, Chris, how do you like the second act? Better than
-the first? I do believe, as the speechmakers say, this is the happiest day of my
-life.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">And the queer good little woman fell to crying and kissing us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">I am afraid you would scarcely believe me if I were to tell
-you at what time we went to bed that morning.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h4><a name="div1_51" href="#div1Ref_51">CHAPTER LI.</a></h4>
-<h5>MY MOTHER'S BIBLE.</h5>
-<br>
-
-<p class="normal">I resume my pen after an interval of two years.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Within a few weeks after the events described in the last
-chapter Jessie and I were married. There were six bridesmaids, Josey and Florry
-West, and their four little sisters. On that day my mother gave uncle Bryan a
-Bible.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Josey is sole proprietor of the grocer's shop, and the
-business has wonderfully improved. She is really making and saving money. This
-of course is known, and has attracted the attention of more than one young man;
-I say more than one, for there is one in particular who seems to consider that
-if he were a grocer he would be in his proper groove. His chance, however, of
-getting into that groove does not appear to be a good one.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I know what he's casting sheep's eyes at,' says Josey,
-tossing her head; I see him reckoning up the stock every time he comes into the
-shop.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">She does not openly discourage him; she makes him spend all
-his pocket-money in candied lemon-peel and uncle Bryan's medicines, which are
-having an immense sale.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'You are injuring that young man's constitution, Josey,' I
-say.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'All the better,' she replies; 'with his present constitution,
-he'll never suit Josey West.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Don't you ever intend to marry, Josey?'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'I haven't quite made up my mind, Chris; but if I don't die an
-old maid I shall be very much surprised.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Turk is doing well, but I have lately discerned in him an
-itching to go on the stage again. He has purchased a splendid wardrobe that
-belonged to a famous First Villain, and he is reading a manuscript play by a new
-author with a character in it which he says would take all London by storm.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'No one can play that character but Turk West,' says old Mac,
-who is egging him on.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'It would be a thousand pities,' says Turk, 'not to play the
-piece. It's a work of genius--original, Chris, my boy, original.' And then he
-adds musingly, 'I've a good mind to; I've a good mind to. The situations are
-tremendous. New blood, Chris, that's what's wanted--new blood.'</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Florry is just married. Her husband is a very elegant young
-man, and plays walking gentlemen. Every year babies are being introduced into
-the world by the married Wests. The number of children in that family is
-something amazing, and aunt Josey is idolised by all of them.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Uncle Bryan lives with us. I am prospering, and our home is a
-very happy one. How could it be otherwise with two such women as my mother and
-Jessie to brighten and bless it! A great grief, however, came to us lately.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Our union was blessed by a child--a sweet beautiful little
-girl, whose presence was a new happiness to us. I have not the power to describe
-the emotion which filled my heart when this treasure was placed in my arms;
-Jessie's joy and my mother's may be imagined, but it would be difficult to
-realise the depth of uncle Bryan's feelings towards the darling. We named her
-Frances, after Jessie's mother; it was uncle Bryan's wish. His love for the dear
-little creature became a worship; he was restless and unhappy if a waking hour
-passed without his seeing her. He nursed her, and prattled to her, and rocked
-her cradle, and would sit for hours by her side while she was sleeping. She grew
-to love him, and her beautiful eyes would dilate, and she would wave her dimpled
-arms when he held out his to her. When she was ten months old, and just when she
-began to lisp the word so dear to a mother's ear, she was taken from us.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">'Ah, how well I remember the sad days that followed! This may
-sound strange, when you know that a very few months have passed since our
-bereavement, but it expresses my feeling. Our darling seemed, as it were, to
-sink into the past, and I saw her ever afterwards, as one in a deep pit looks
-upwards in the daylight to the heavens and sees a star there. When I am an old
-man, the memory of this dear child will shine with a clear light among a forest
-of unremembered days. On the night before she was buried, I walked to the room
-where she lay in her coffin. I opened the door softly, and saw uncle Bryan on
-his knees by the coffin's side; his hands were clasped, and on the body of our
-darling lay an open book from which he was reading. It was the Bible which my
-mother had given him on our wedding-day.</p>
-
-<p class="normal">Farewell.</p>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-<h5>END OF VOL. XV.</h5>
-<h5>LONDON: ROBSON AND SONS, PRINTERS, PANCRAS ROAD, N.W.</h5>
-<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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