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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Daniel Deronda, by George Eliot
+#7 in our series by George Eliot
+
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+
+
+Title: Daniel Deronda
+
+Author: George Eliot
+
+Release Date: February, 2005 [EBook #7469]
+[This file was first posted on May 5, 2003]
+[Date last updated: October 20, 2005]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANIEL DERONDA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Anne Soulard, Tiffany Vergon
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+DANIEL DERONDA
+
+BY GEORGE ELIOT
+
+
+
+Let thy chief terror be of thine own soul:
+There, 'mid the throng of hurrying desires
+That trample on the dead to seize their spoil,
+Lurks vengeance, footless, irresistible
+As exhalations laden with slow death,
+And o'er the fairest troop of captured joys
+Breathes pallid pestilence.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+BOOK I. THE SPOILED CHILD
+" II. MEETING STREAMS
+" III. MAIDENS CHOOSING
+" IV. GWENDOLEN GETS HER CHOICE
+" V. MORDECAI
+" VI. REVELATIONS
+" VII. THE MOTHER AND THE SON
+" VIII. FRUIT AND SEED
+
+
+
+
+DANIEL DERONDA.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I.--THE SPOILED CHILD.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ Men can do nothing without the make-believe of a beginning. Even
+ science, the strict measurer, is obliged to start with a make-believe
+ unit, and must fix on a point in the stars' unceasing journey when his
+ sidereal clock shall pretend that time is at Nought. His less accurate
+ grandmother Poetry has always been understood to start in the middle;
+ but on reflection it appears that her proceeding is not very different
+ from his; since Science, too, reckons backward as well as forward,
+ divides his unit into billions, and with his clock-finger at Nought
+ really sets off _in medias res_. No retrospect will take us to
+ the true beginning; and whether our prologue be in heaven or on earth,
+ it is but a fraction of that all-presupposing fact with which our
+ story sets out.
+
+
+Was she beautiful or not beautiful? and what was the secret of form or
+expression which gave the dynamic quality to her glance? Was the good or
+the evil genius dominant in those beams? Probably the evil; else why was
+the effect that of unrest rather than of undisturbed charm? Why was the
+wish to look again felt as coercion and not as a longing in which the
+whole being consents?
+
+She who raised these questions in Daniel Deronda's mind was occupied in
+gambling: not in the open air under a southern sky, tossing coppers on a
+ruined wall, with rags about her limbs; but in one of those splendid
+resorts which the enlightenment of ages has prepared for the same species
+of pleasure at a heavy cost of guilt mouldings, dark-toned color and
+chubby nudities, all correspondingly heavy--forming a suitable condenser
+for human breath belonging, in great part, to the highest fashion, and not
+easily procurable to be breathed in elsewhere in the like proportion, at
+least by persons of little fashion.
+
+It was near four o'clock on a September day, so that the atmosphere was
+well-brewed to a visible haze. There was deep stillness, broken only by a
+light rattle, a light chink, a small sweeping sound, and an occasional
+monotone in French, such as might be expected to issue from an ingeniously
+constructed automaton. Round two long tables were gathered two serried
+crowds of human beings, all save one having their faces and attention bent
+on the tables. The one exception was a melancholy little boy, with his
+knees and calves simply in their natural clothing of epidermis, but for
+the rest of his person in a fancy dress. He alone had his face turned
+toward the doorway, and fixing on it the blank gaze of a bedizened child
+stationed as a masquerading advertisement on the platform of an itinerant
+show, stood close behind a lady deeply engaged at the roulette-table.
+
+About this table fifty or sixty persons were assembled, many in the outer
+rows, where there was occasionally a deposit of new-comers, being mere
+spectators, only that one of them, usually a woman, might now and then be
+observed putting down a five-franc with a simpering air, just to see what
+the passion of gambling really was. Those who were taking their pleasure
+at a higher strength, and were absorbed in play, showed very distant
+varieties of European type: Livonian and Spanish, Graeco-Italian and
+miscellaneous German, English aristocratic and English plebeian. Here
+certainly was a striking admission of human equality. The white bejewelled
+fingers of an English countess were very near touching a bony, yellow,
+crab-like hand stretching a bared wrist to clutch a heap of coin--a hand
+easy to sort with the square, gaunt face, deep-set eyes, grizzled
+eyebrows, and ill-combed scanty hair which seemed a slight metamorphosis
+of the vulture. And where else would her ladyship have graciously
+consented to sit by that dry-lipped feminine figure prematurely old,
+withered after short bloom like her artificial flowers, holding a shabby
+velvet reticule before her, and occasionally putting in her mouth the
+point with which she pricked her card? There too, very near the fair
+countess, was a respectable London tradesman, blonde and soft-handed, his
+sleek hair scrupulously parted behind and before, conscious of circulars
+addressed to the nobility and gentry, whose distinguished patronage
+enabled him to take his holidays fashionably, and to a certain extent in
+their distinguished company. Not his gambler's passion that nullifies
+appetite, but a well-fed leisure, which, in the intervals of winning money
+in business and spending it showily, sees no better resource than winning
+money in play and spending it yet more showily--reflecting always that
+Providence had never manifested any disapprobation of his amusement, and
+dispassionate enough to leave off if the sweetness of winning much and
+seeing others lose had turned to the sourness of losing much and seeing
+others win. For the vice of gambling lay in losing money at it. In his
+bearing there might be something of the tradesman, but in his pleasures he
+was fit to rank with the owners of the oldest titles. Standing close to
+his chair was a handsome Italian, calm, statuesque, reaching across him to
+place the first pile of napoleons from a new bagful just brought him by an
+envoy with a scrolled mustache. The pile was in half a minute pushed over
+to an old bewigged woman with eye-glasses pinching her nose. There was a
+slight gleam, a faint mumbling smile about the lips of the old woman; but
+the statuesque Italian remained impassive, and--probably secure in an
+infallible system which placed his foot on the neck of chance--immediately
+prepared a new pile. So did a man with the air of an emaciated beau or
+worn-out libertine, who looked at life through one eye-glass, and held out
+his hand tremulously when he asked for change. It could surely be no
+severity of system, but rather some dream of white crows, or the induction
+that the eighth of the month was lucky, which inspired the fierce yet
+tottering impulsiveness of his play.
+
+But, while every single player differed markedly from every other, there
+was a certain uniform negativeness of expression which had the effect of a
+mask--as if they had all eaten of some root that for the time compelled
+the brains of each to the same narrow monotony of action.
+
+Deronda's first thought when his eyes fell on this scene of dull, gas-
+poisoned absorption, was that the gambling of Spanish shepherd-boys had
+seemed to him more enviable:--so far Rousseau might be justified in
+maintaining that art and science had done a poor service to mankind. But
+suddenly he felt the moment become dramatic. His attention was arrested by
+a young lady who, standing at an angle not far from him, was the last to
+whom his eyes traveled. She was bending and speaking English to a middle-
+aged lady seated at play beside her: but the next instant she returned to
+her play, and showed the full height of a graceful figure, with a face
+which might possibly be looked at without admiration, but could hardly be
+passed with indifference.
+
+The inward debate which she raised in Deronda gave to his eyes a growing
+expression of scrutiny, tending farther and farther away from the glow of
+mingled undefined sensibilities forming admiration. At one moment they
+followed the movements of the figure, of the arms and hands, as this
+problematic sylph bent forward to deposit her stake with an air of firm
+choice; and the next they returned to the face which, at present
+unaffected by beholders, was directed steadily toward the game. The sylph
+was a winner; and as her taper fingers, delicately gloved in pale-gray,
+were adjusting the coins which had been pushed toward her in order to pass
+them back again to the winning point, she looked round her with a survey
+too markedly cold and neutral not to have in it a little of that nature
+which we call art concealing an inward exultation.
+
+But in the course of that survey her eyes met Deronda's, and instead of
+averting them as she would have desired to do, she was unpleasantly
+conscious that they were arrested--how long? The darting sense that he was
+measuring her and looking down on her as an inferior, that he was of
+different quality from the human dross around her, that he felt himself in
+a region outside and above her, and was examining her as a specimen of a
+lower order, roused a tingling resentment which stretched the moment with
+conflict. It did not bring the blood to her cheeks, but it sent it away
+from her lips. She controlled herself by the help of an inward defiance,
+and without other sign of emotion than this lip-paleness turned to her
+play. But Deronda's gaze seemed to have acted as an evil eye. Her stake
+was gone. No matter; she had been winning ever since she took to roulette
+with a few napoleons at command, and had a considerable reserve. She had
+begun to believe in her luck, others had begun to believe in it: she had
+visions of being followed by a _cortege_ who would worship her as a
+goddess of luck and watch her play as a directing augury. Such things had
+been known of male gamblers; why should not a woman have a like supremacy?
+Her friend and chaperon who had not wished her to play at first was
+beginning to approve, only administering the prudent advice to stop at the
+right moment and carry money back to England--advice to which Gwendolen
+had replied that she cared for the excitement of play, not the winnings.
+On that supposition the present moment ought to have made the flood-tide
+in her eager experience of gambling. Yet, when her next stake was swept
+away, she felt the orbits of her eyes getting hot, and the certainty she
+had (without looking) of that man still watching her was something like a
+pressure which begins to be torturing. The more reason to her why she
+should not flinch, but go on playing as if she were indifferent to loss or
+gain. Her friend touched her elbow and proposed that they should quit the
+table. For reply Gwendolen put ten louis on the same spot: she was in that
+mood of defiance in which the mind loses sight of any end beyond the
+satisfaction of enraged resistance; and with the puerile stupidity of a
+dominant impulse includes luck among its objects of defiance. Since she
+was not winning strikingly, the next best thing was to lose strikingly.
+She controlled her muscles, and showed no tremor of mouth or hands. Each
+time her stake was swept off she doubled it. Many were now watching her,
+but the sole observation she was conscious of was Deronda's, who, though
+she never looked toward him, she was sure had not moved away. Such a drama
+takes no long while to play out: development and catastrophe can often be
+measured by nothing clumsier than the moment-hand. "Faites votre jeu,
+mesdames et messieurs," said the automatic voice of destiny from between
+the mustache and imperial of the croupier: and Gwendolen's arm was
+stretched to deposit her last poor heap of napoleons. "Le jeu ne va plus,"
+said destiny. And in five seconds Gwendolen turned from the table, but
+turned resolutely with her face toward Deronda and looked at him. There
+was a smile of irony in his eyes as their glances met; but it was at least
+better that he should have disregarded her as one of an insect swarm who
+had no individual physiognomy. Besides, in spite of his superciliousness
+and irony, it was difficult to believe that he did not admire her spirit
+as well as her person: he was young, handsome, distinguished in
+appearance--not one of these ridiculous and dowdy Philistines who thought
+it incumbent on them to blight the gaming-table with a sour look of
+protest as they passed by it. The general conviction that we are admirable
+does not easily give way before a single negative; rather when any of
+Vanity's large family, male or female, find their performance received
+coldly, they are apt to believe that a little more of it will win over the
+unaccountable dissident. In Gwendolen's habits of mind it had been taken
+for granted that she knew what was admirable and that she herself was
+admired. This basis of her thinking had received a disagreeable
+concussion, and reeled a little, but was not easily to be overthrown.
+
+In the evening the same room was more stiflingly heated, was brilliant
+with gas and with the costumes of ladies who floated their trains along it
+or were seated on the ottomans.
+
+The Nereid in sea-green robes and silver ornaments, with a pale sea-green
+feather fastened in silver falling backward over her green hat and light
+brown hair, was Gwendolen Harleth. She was under the wing, or rather
+soared by the shoulder, of the lady who had sat by her at the roulette-
+table; and with them was a gentleman with a white mustache and clipped
+hair: solid-browed, stiff and German. They were walking about or standing
+to chat with acquaintances, and Gwendolen was much observed by the seated
+groups.
+
+"A striking girl--that Miss Harleth--unlike others."
+
+"Yes, she has got herself up as a sort of serpent now--all green and
+silver, and winds her neck about a little more than usual."
+
+"Oh, she must always be doing something extraordinary. She is that kind of
+girl, I fancy. Do you think her pretty, Mr. Vandernoodt?"
+
+"Very. A man might risk hanging for her--I mean a fool might."
+
+"You like a _nez retrousse_, then, and long narrow eyes?"
+
+"When they go with such an _ensemble_."
+
+"The _ensemble du serpent_?"
+
+"If you will. Woman was tempted by a serpent; why not man?"
+
+"She is certainly very graceful; but she wants a tinge of color in her
+cheeks. It is a sort of Lamia beauty she has."
+
+"On the contrary, I think her complexion one of her chief charms. It is a
+warm paleness; it looks thoroughly healthy. And that delicate nose with
+its gradual little upward curve is distracting. And then her mouth--there
+never was a prettier mouth, the lips curled backward so finely, eh,
+Mackworth?"
+
+"Think so? I cannot endure that sort of mouth. It looks so self-
+complacent, as if it knew its own beauty--the curves are too immovable. I
+like a mouth that trembles more."
+
+"For my part, I think her odious," said a dowager. "It is wonderful what
+unpleasant girls get into vogue. Who are these Langens? Does anybody know
+them?"
+
+"They are quite _comme il faut_. I have dined with them several times at
+the _Russie_. The baroness is English. Miss Harleth calls her cousin. The
+girl herself is thoroughly well-bred, and as clever as possible."
+
+"Dear me! and the baron?".
+
+"A very good furniture picture."
+
+"Your baroness is always at the roulette-table," said Mackworth. "I fancy
+she has taught the girl to gamble."
+
+"Oh, the old woman plays a very sober game; drops a ten-franc piece here
+and there. The girl is more headlong. But it is only a freak."
+
+"I hear she has lost all her winnings to-day. Are they rich? Who knows?"
+
+"Ah, who knows? Who knows that about anybody?" said Mr. Vandernoodt,
+moving off to join the Langens.
+
+The remark that Gwendolen wound her neck about more than usual this
+evening was true. But it was not that she might carry out the serpent idea
+more completely: it was that she watched for any chance of seeing Deronda,
+so that she might inquire about this stranger, under whose measuring gaze
+she was still wincing. At last her opportunity came.
+
+"Mr. Vandernoodt, you know everybody," said Gwendolen, not too eagerly,
+rather with a certain languor of utterance which she sometimes gave to her
+clear soprano. "Who is that near the door?"
+
+"There are half a dozen near the door. Do you mean that old Adonis in the
+George the Fourth wig?"
+
+"No, no; the dark-haired young man on the right with the dreadful
+expression."
+
+"Dreadful, do you call it? I think he is an uncommonly fine fellow."
+
+"But who is he?"
+
+"He is lately come to our hotel with Sir Hugo Mallinger."
+
+"Sir Hugo Mallinger?"
+
+"Yes. Do you know him?"
+
+"No." (Gwendolen colored slightly.) "He has a place near us, but he never
+comes to it. What did you say was the name of that gentleman near the
+door?"
+
+"Deronda--Mr. Deronda."
+
+"What a delightful name! Is he an Englishman?"
+
+"Yes. He is reported to be rather closely related to the baronet. You are
+interested in him?"
+
+"Yes. I think he is not like young men in general."
+
+"And you don't admire young men in general?"
+
+"Not in the least. I always know what they will say. I can't at all guess
+what this Mr. Deronda would say. What _does_ he say?"
+
+"Nothing, chiefly. I sat with his party for a good hour last night on the
+terrace, and he never spoke--and was not smoking either. He looked bored."
+
+"Another reason why I should like to know him. I am always bored."
+
+"I should think he would be charmed to have an introduction. Shall I bring
+it about? Will you allow it, baroness?"
+
+"Why not?--since he is related to Sir Hugo Mallinger. It is a new _role_
+of yours, Gwendolen, to be always bored," continued Madame von Langen,
+when Mr. Vandernoodt had moved away. "Until now you have always seemed
+eager about something from morning till night."
+
+"That is just because I am bored to death. If I am to leave off play I
+must break my arm or my collar-bone. I must make something happen; unless
+you will go into Switzerland and take me up the Matterhorn."
+
+"Perhaps this Mr. Deronda's acquaintance will do instead of the
+Matterhorn."
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+But Gwendolen did not make Deronda's acquaintance on this occasion. Mr.
+Vandernoodt did not succeed in bringing him up to her that evening, and
+when she re-entered her own room she found a letter recalling her home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ This man contrives a secret 'twixt us two,
+ That he may quell me with his meeting eyes
+ Like one who quells a lioness at bay.
+
+
+This was the letter Gwendolen found on her table:--
+
+ DEAREST CHILD.--I have been expecting to hear from you for a week. In
+ your last you said the Langens thought of leaving Leubronn and going
+ to Baden. How could you be so thoughtless as to leave me in
+ uncertainty about your address? I am in the greatest anxiety lest this
+ should not reach you. In any case, you were to come home at the end of
+ September, and I must now entreat you to return as quickly as
+ possible, for if you spent all your money it would be out of my power
+ to send you any more, and you must not borrow of the Langens, for I
+ could not repay them. This is the sad truth, my child--I wish I could
+ prepare you for it better--but a dreadful calamity has befallen us
+ all. You know nothing about business and will not understand it; but
+ Grapnell & Co. have failed for a million, and we are totally ruined--
+ your aunt Gascoigne as well as I, only that your uncle has his
+ benefice, so that by putting down their carriage and getting interest
+ for the boys, the family can go on. All the property our poor father
+ saved for us goes to pay the liabilities. There is nothing I can call
+ my own. It is better you should know this at once, though it rends my
+ heart to have to tell it you. Of course we cannot help thinking what a
+ pity it was that you went away just when you did. But I shall never
+ reproach you, my dear child; I would save you from all trouble if I
+ could. On your way home you will have time to prepare yourself for the
+ change you will find. We shall perhaps leave Offendene at once, for we
+ hope that Mr. Haynes, who wanted it before, may be ready to take it
+ off my hands. Of course we cannot go to the rectory--there is not a
+ corner there to spare. We must get some hut or other to shelter us,
+ and we must live on your uncle Gascoigne's charity, until I see what
+ else can be done. I shall not be able to pay the debts to the
+ tradesmen besides the servants' wages. Summon up your fortitude, my
+ dear child; we must resign ourselves to God's will. But it is hard to
+ resign one's self to Mr. Lassman's wicked recklessness, which they say
+ was the cause of the failure. Your poor sisters can only cry with me
+ and give me no help. If you were once here, there might be a break in
+ the cloud--I always feel it impossible that you can have been meant
+ for poverty. If the Langens wish to remain abroad, perhaps you can put
+ yourself under some one else's care for the journey. But come as soon
+ as you can to your afflicted and loving mamma,
+
+ FANNY DAVILOW.
+
+The first effect of this letter on Gwendolen was half-stupefying. The
+implicit confidence that her destiny must be one of luxurious ease, where
+any trouble that occurred would be well clad and provided for, had been
+stronger in her own mind than in her mamma's, being fed there by her
+youthful blood and that sense of superior claims which made a large part
+of her consciousness. It was almost as difficult for her to believe
+suddenly that her position had become one of poverty and of humiliating
+dependence, as it would have been to get into the strong current of her
+blooming life the chill sense that her death would really come. She stood
+motionless for a few minutes, then tossed off her hat and automatically
+looked in the glass. The coils of her smooth light-brown hair were still
+in order perfect enough for a ball-room; and as on other nights, Gwendolen
+might have looked lingeringly at herself for pleasure (surely an allowable
+indulgence); but now she took no conscious note of her reflected beauty,
+and simply stared right before her as if she had been jarred by a hateful
+sound and was waiting for any sign of its cause. By-and-by she threw
+herself in the corner of the red velvet sofa, took up the letter again and
+read it twice deliberately, letting it at last fall on the ground, while
+she rested her clasped hands on her lap and sat perfectly still, shedding
+no tears. Her impulse was to survey and resist the situation rather than
+to wail over it. There was no inward exclamation of "Poor mamma!" Her
+mamma had never seemed to get much enjoyment out of life, and if Gwendolen
+had been at this moment disposed to feel pity she would have bestowed it
+on herself--for was she not naturally and rightfully the chief object of
+her mamma's anxiety too? But it was anger, it was resistance that
+possessed her; it was bitter vexation that she had lost her gains at
+roulette, whereas if her luck had continued through this one day she would
+have had a handsome sum to carry home, or she might have gone on playing
+and won enough to support them all. Even now was it not possible? She had
+only four napoleons left in her purse, but she possessed some ornaments
+which she could sell: a practice so common in stylish society at German
+baths that there was no need to be ashamed of it; and even if she had not
+received her mamma's letter, she would probably have decided to get money
+for an Etruscan necklace which she happened not to have been wearing since
+her arrival; nay, she might have done so with an agreeable sense that she
+was living with some intensity and escaping humdrum. With ten louis at her
+disposal and a return of her former luck, which seemed probable, what
+could she do better than go on playing for a few days? If her friends at
+home disapproved of the way in which she got the money, as they certainly
+would, still the money would be there. Gwendolen's imagination dwelt on
+this course and created agreeable consequences, but not with unbroken
+confidence and rising certainty as it would have done if she had been
+touched with the gambler's mania. She had gone to the roulette-table not
+because of passion, but in search of it: her mind was still sanely capable
+of picturing balanced probabilities, and while the chance of winning
+allured her, the chance of losing thrust itself on her with alternate
+strength and made a vision from which her pride sank sensitively. For she
+was resolved not to tell the Langens that any misfortune had befallen her
+family, or to make herself in any way indebted to their compassion; and if
+she were to part with her jewelry to any observable extent, they would
+interfere by inquiries and remonstrances. The course that held the least
+risk of intolerable annoyance was to raise money on her necklace early in
+the morning, tell the Langens that her mother desired her immediate return
+without giving a reason, and take the train for Brussels that evening. She
+had no maid with her, and the Langens might make difficulties about her
+returning home, but her will was peremptory.
+
+Instead of going to bed she made as brilliant a light as she could and
+began to pack, working diligently, though all the while visited by the
+scenes that might take place on the coming day--now by the tiresome
+explanations and farewells, and the whirling journey toward a changed
+home, now by the alternative of staying just another day and standing
+again at the roulette-table. But always in this latter scene there was the
+presence of that Deronda, watching her with exasperating irony, and--the
+two keen experiences were inevitably revived together--beholding her again
+forsaken by luck. This importunate image certainly helped to sway her
+resolve on the side of immediate departure, and to urge her packing to the
+point which would make a change of mind inconvenient. It had struck twelve
+when she came into her room, and by the time she was assuring herself that
+she had left out only what was necessary, the faint dawn was stealing
+through the white blinds and dulling her candles. What was the use of
+going to bed? Her cold bath was refreshment enough, and she saw that a
+slight trace of fatigue about the eyes only made her look the more
+interesting. Before six o'clock she was completely equipped in her gray
+traveling dress even to her felt hat, for she meant to walk out as soon as
+she could count on seeing other ladies on their way to the springs. And
+happening to be seated sideways before the long strip of mirror between
+her two windows she turned to look at herself, leaning her elbow on the
+back of the chair in an attitude that might have been chosen for her
+portrait. It is possible to have a strong self-love without any self-
+satisfaction, rather with a self-discontent which is the more intense
+because one's own little core of egoistic sensibility is a supreme care;
+but Gwendolen knew nothing of such inward strife. She had a _naive_
+delight in her fortunate self, which any but the harshest saintliness will
+have some indulgence for in a girl who had every day seen a pleasant
+reflection of that self in her friends' flattery as well as in the
+looking-glass. And even in this beginning of troubles, while for lack of
+anything else to do she sat gazing at her image in the growing light, her
+face gathered a complacency gradual as the cheerfulness of the morning.
+Her beautiful lips curled into a more and more decided smile, till at last
+she took off her hat, leaned forward and kissed the cold glass which had
+looked so warm. How could she believe in sorrow? If it attacked her, she
+felt the force to crush it, to defy it, or run away from it, as she had
+done already. Anything seemed more possible than that she could go on
+bearing miseries, great or small.
+
+Madame von Langen never went out before breakfast, so that Gwendolen could
+safely end her early walk by taking her way homeward through the Obere
+Strasse in which was the needed shop, sure to be open after seven. At that
+hour any observers whom she minded would be either on their walks in the
+region of the springs, or would be still in their bedrooms; but certainly
+there was one grand hotel, the _Czarina_ from which eyes might follow her
+up to Mr. Wiener's door. This was a chance to be risked: might she not be
+going in to buy something which had struck her fancy? This implicit
+falsehood passed through her mind as she remembered that the _Czarina_ was
+Deronda's hotel; but she was then already far up the Obere Strasse, and
+she walked on with her usual floating movement, every line in her figure
+and drapery falling in gentle curves attractive to all eyes except those
+which discerned in them too close a resemblance to the serpent, and
+objected to the revival of serpent-worship. She looked neither to the
+right hand nor to the left, and transacted her business in the shop with a
+coolness which gave little Mr. Weiner nothing to remark except her proud
+grace of manner, and the superior size and quality of the three central
+turquoises in the necklace she offered him. They had belonged to a chain
+once her father's: but she had never known her father; and the necklace
+was in all respects the ornament she could most conveniently part with.
+Who supposes that it is an impossible contradiction to be superstitious
+and rationalizing at the same time? Roulette encourages a romantic
+superstition as to the chances of the game, and the most prosaic
+rationalism as to human sentiments which stand in the way of raising
+needful money. Gwendolen's dominant regret was that after all she had only
+nine louis to add to the four in her purse: these Jew dealers were so
+unscrupulous in taking advantage of Christians unfortunate at play! But
+she was the Langens' guest in their hired apartment, and had nothing to
+pay there: thirteen louis would do more than take her home; even if she
+determined on risking three, the remaining ten would more than suffice,
+since she meant to travel right on, day and night. As she turned homeward,
+nay, entered and seated herself in the _salon_ to await her friends and
+breakfast, she still wavered as to her immediate departure, or rather she
+had concluded to tell the Langens simply that she had had a letter from
+her mamma desiring her return, and to leave it still undecided when she
+should start. It was already the usual breakfast-time, and hearing some
+one enter as she was leaning back rather tired and hungry with her eyes
+shut, she rose expecting to see one or other of the Langens--the words
+which might determine her lingering at least another day, ready-formed to
+pass her lips. But it was the servant bringing in a small packet for Miss
+Harleth, which had at that moment been left at the door. Gwendolen took it
+in her hand and immediately hurried into her own room. She looked paler
+and more agitated than when she had first read her mamma's letter.
+Something--she never quite knew what--revealed to her before she opened
+the packet that it contained the necklace she had just parted with.
+Underneath the paper it was wrapped in a cambric handkerchief, and within
+this was a scrap of torn-off note-paper, on which was written with a
+pencil, in clear but rapid handwriting--"_A stranger who has found Miss
+Harleth's necklace returns it to her with the hope that she will not again
+risk the loss of it._"
+
+Gwendolen reddened with the vexation of wounded pride. A large corner of
+the handkerchief seemed to have been recklessly torn off to get rid of a
+mark; but she at once believed in the first image of "the stranger" that
+presented itself to her mind. It was Deronda; he must have seen her go
+into the shop; he must have gone in immediately after and repurchased the
+necklace. He had taken an unpardonable liberty, and had dared to place her
+in a thoroughly hateful position. What could she do?--Not, assuredly, act
+on her conviction that it was he who had sent her the necklace and
+straightway send it back to him: that would be to face the possibility
+that she had been mistaken; nay, even if the "stranger" were he and no
+other, it would be something too gross for her to let him know that she
+had divined this, and to meet him again with that recognition in their
+minds. He knew very well that he was entangling her in helpless
+humiliation: it was another way of smiling at her ironically, and taking
+the air of a supercilious mentor. Gwendolen felt the bitter tears of
+mortification rising and rolling down her cheeks. No one had ever before
+dared to treat her with irony and contempt. One thing was clear: she must
+carry out her resolution to quit this place at once; it was impossible for
+her to reappear in the public _salon_, still less stand at the gaming-
+table with the risk of seeing Deronda. Now came an importunate knock at
+the door: breakfast was ready. Gwendolen with a passionate movement thrust
+necklace, cambric, scrap of paper, and all into her _necessaire_, pressed
+her handkerchief against her face, and after pausing a minute or two to
+summon back her proud self-control, went to join her friends. Such signs
+of tears and fatigue as were left seemed accordant enough with the account
+she at once gave of her having sat up to do her packing, instead of
+waiting for help from her friend's maid. There was much protestation, as
+she had expected, against her traveling alone, but she persisted in
+refusing any arrangements for companionship. She would be put into the
+ladies' compartment and go right on. She could rest exceedingly well in
+the train, and was afraid of nothing.
+
+In this way it happened that Gwendolen never reappeared at the roulette-
+table, but that Thursday evening left Leubronn for Brussels, and on
+Saturday morning arrived at Offendene, the home to which she and her
+family were soon to say a last good-bye.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ "Let no flower of the spring pass by us; let us crown ourselves with
+ rosebuds before they be withered."--BOOK OF WISDOM.
+
+
+Pity that Offendene was not the home of Miss Harleth's childhood, or
+endeared to her by family memories! A human life, I think, should be well
+rooted in some spot of a native land, where it may get the love of tender
+kinship for the face of earth, for the labors men go forth to, for the
+sounds and accents that haunt it, for whatever will give that early home a
+familiar unmistakable difference amid the future widening of knowledge: a
+spot where the definiteness of early memories may be inwrought with
+affection, and--kindly acquaintance with all neighbors, even to the dogs
+and donkeys, may spread not by sentimental effort and reflection, but as a
+sweet habit of the blood. At five years old, mortals are not prepared to
+be citizens of the world, to be stimulated by abstract nouns, to soar
+above preference into impartiality; and that prejudice in favor of milk
+with which we blindly begin, is a type of the way body and soul must get
+nourished at least for a time. The best introduction to astronomy is to
+think of the nightly heavens as a little lot of stars belonging to one's
+own homestead.
+
+But this blessed persistence in which affection can take root had been
+wanting in Gwendolen's life. It was only a year before her recall from
+Leubronn that Offendene had been chosen as her mamma's home, simply for
+its nearness to Pennicote Rectory, and that Mrs. Davilow, Gwendolen, and
+her four half-sisters (the governess and the maid following in another
+vehicle) had been driven along the avenue for the first time, on a late
+October afternoon when the rooks were crawing loudly above them, and the
+yellow elm-leaves were whirling.
+
+The season suited the aspect of the old oblong red-brick house, rather too
+anxiously ornamented with stone at every line, not excepting the double
+row of narrow windows and the large square portico. The stone encouraged a
+greenish lichen, the brick a powdery gray, so that though the building was
+rigidly rectangular there was no harshness in the physiognomy which it
+turned to the three avenues cut east, west and south in the hundred yards'
+breadth of old plantation encircling the immediate grounds. One would have
+liked the house to have been lifted on a knoll, so as to look beyond its
+own little domain to the long thatched roofs of the distant villages, the
+church towers, the scattered homesteads, the gradual rise of surging
+woods, and the green breadths of undulating park which made the beautiful
+face of the earth in that part of Wessex. But though standing thus behind,
+a screen amid flat pastures, it had on one side a glimpse of the wider
+world in the lofty curves of the chalk downs, grand steadfast forms played
+over by the changing days.
+
+The house was but just large enough to be called a mansion, and was
+moderately rented, having no manor attached to it, and being rather
+difficult to let with its sombre furniture and faded upholstery. But
+inside and outside it was what no beholder could suppose to be inhabited
+by retired trades-people: a certainty which was worth many conveniences to
+tenants who not only had the taste that shrinks from new finery, but also
+were in that border-territory of rank where annexation is a burning topic:
+and to take up her abode in a house which had once sufficed for dowager
+countesses gave a perceptible tinge to Mrs. Davilow's satisfaction in
+having an establishment of her own. This, rather mysteriously to
+Gwendolen, appeared suddenly possible on the death of her step-father,
+Captain Davilow, who had for the last nine years joined his family only in
+a brief and fitful manner, enough to reconcile them to his long absences;
+but she cared much more for the fact than for the explanation. All her
+prospects had become more agreeable in consequence. She had disliked their
+former way of life, roving from one foreign watering-place or Parisian
+apartment to another, always feeling new antipathies to new suites of
+hired furniture, and meeting new people under conditions which made her
+appear of little importance; and the variation of having passed two years
+at a showy school, where, on all occasions of display, she had been put
+foremost, had only deepened her sense that so exceptional a person as
+herself could hardly remain in ordinary circumstances or in a social
+position less than advantageous. Any fear of this latter evil was banished
+now that her mamma was to have an establishment; for on the point of birth
+Gwendolen was quite easy. She had no notion how her maternal grandfather
+got the fortune inherited by his two daughters; but he had been a West
+Indian--which seemed to exclude further question; and she knew that her
+father's family was so high as to take no notice of her mamma, who
+nevertheless preserved with much pride the miniature of a Lady Molly in
+that connection. She would probably have known much more about her father
+but for a little incident which happened when she was twelve years old.
+Mrs. Davilow had brought out, as she did only at wide intervals, various
+memorials of her first husband, and while showing his miniature to
+Gwendolen recalled with a fervor which seemed to count on a peculiar
+filial sympathy, the fact that dear papa had died when his little daughter
+was in long clothes. Gwendolen, immediately thinking of the unlovable
+step-father whom she had been acquainted with the greater part of her life
+while her frocks were short, said--
+
+"Why did you marry again, mamma? It would have been nicer if you had not."
+
+Mrs. Davilow colored deeply, a slight convulsive movement passed over her
+face, and straightway shutting up the memorials she said, with a violence
+quite unusual in her--
+
+"You have no feeling, child!"
+
+Gwendolen, who was fond of her mamma, felt hurt and ashamed, and had never
+since dared to ask a question about her father.
+
+This was not the only instance in which she had brought on herself the
+pain of some filial compunction. It was always arranged, when possible,
+that she should have a small bed in her mamma's room; for Mrs. Davilow's
+motherly tenderness clung chiefly to her eldest girl, who had been born in
+her happier time. One night under an attack of pain she found that the
+specific regularly placed by her bedside had been forgotten, and begged
+Gwendolen to get out of bed and reach it for her. That healthy young lady,
+snug and warm as a rosy infant in her little couch, objected to step out
+into the cold, and lying perfectly still, grumbling a refusal. Mrs.
+Davilow went without the medicine and never reproached her daughter; but
+the next day Gwendolen was keenly conscious of what must be in her mamma's
+mind, and tried to make amends by caresses which cost her no effort.
+Having always been the pet and pride of the household, waited on by
+mother, sisters, governess and maids, as if she had been a princess in
+exile, she naturally found it difficult to think her own pleasure less
+important than others made it, and when it was positively thwarted felt an
+astonished resentment apt, in her cruder days, to vent itself in one of
+those passionate acts which look like a contradiction of habitual
+tendencies. Though never even as a child thoughtlessly cruel, nay
+delighting to rescue drowning insects and watch their recovery, there was
+a disagreeable silent remembrance of her having strangled her sister's
+canary-bird in a final fit of exasperation at its shrill singing which had
+again and again jarringly interrupted her own. She had taken pains to buy
+a white mouse for her sister in retribution, and though inwardly excusing
+herself on the ground of a peculiar sensitiveness which was a mark of her
+general superiority, the thought of that infelonious murder had always
+made her wince. Gwendolen's nature was not remorseless, but she liked to
+make her penances easy, and now that she was twenty and more, some of her
+native force had turned into a self-control by which she guarded herself
+from penitential humiliation. There was more show of fire and will in her
+than ever, but there was more calculation underneath it.
+
+On this day of arrival at Offendene, which not even Mrs. Davilow had seen
+before--the place having been taken for her by her brother-in-law, Mr.
+Gascoigne--when all had got down from the carriage, and were standing
+under the porch in front of the open door, so that they could have a
+general view of the place and a glimpse of the stone hall and staircase
+hung with sombre pictures, but enlivened by a bright wood fire, no one
+spoke; mamma, the four sisters and the governess all looked at Gwendolen,
+as if their feelings depended entirely on her decision. Of the girls, from
+Alice in her sixteenth year to Isabel in her tenth, hardly anything could
+be said on a first view, but that they were girlish, and that their black
+dresses were getting shabby. Miss Merry was elderly and altogether neutral
+in expression. Mrs. Davilow's worn beauty seemed the more pathetic for the
+look of entire appeal which she cast at Gwendolen, who was glancing round
+at the house, the landscape and the entrance hall with an air of rapid
+judgment. Imagine a young race-horse in the paddock among untrimmed ponies
+and patient hacks.
+
+"Well, dear, what do you think of the place," said Mrs. Davilow at last,
+in a gentle, deprecatory tone.
+
+"I think it is charming," said Gwendolen, quickly. "A romantic place;
+anything delightful may happen in it; it would be a good background for
+anything. No one need be ashamed of living here."
+
+"There is certainly nothing common about it."
+
+"Oh, it would do for fallen royalty or any sort of grand poverty. We ought
+properly to have been living in splendor, and have come down to this. It
+would have been as romantic as could be. But I thought my uncle and aunt
+Gascoigne would be here to meet us, and my cousin Anna," added Gwendolen,
+her tone changed to sharp surprise.
+
+"We are early," said Mrs. Davilow, and entering the hall, she said to the
+housekeeper who came forward, "You expect Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne?"
+
+"Yes, madam; they were here yesterday to give particular orders about the
+fires and the dinner. But as to fires, I've had 'em in all the rooms for
+the last week, and everything is well aired. I could wish some of the
+furniture paid better for all the cleaning it's had, but I _think_ you'll
+see the brasses have been done justice to. I _think_ when Mr. and Mrs.
+Gascoigne come, they'll tell you nothing has been neglected. They'll be
+here at five, for certain."
+
+This satisfied Gwendolen, who was not prepared to have their arrival
+treated with indifference; and after tripping a little way up the matted
+stone staircase to take a survey there, she tripped down again, and
+followed by all the girls looked into each of the rooms opening from the
+hall--the dining-room all dark oak and worn red satin damask, with a copy
+of snarling, worrying dogs from Snyders over the side-board, and a Christ
+breaking bread over the mantel-piece; the library with a general aspect
+and smell of old brown-leather; and lastly, the drawing-room, which was
+entered through a small antechamber crowded with venerable knick-knacks.
+
+"Mamma, mamma, pray come here!" said Gwendolen, Mrs. Davilow having
+followed slowly in talk with the housekeeper. "Here is an organ. I will be
+Saint Cecilia: some one shall paint me as Saint Cecilia. Jocosa (this was
+her name for Miss Merry), let down my hair. See, mamma?"
+
+She had thrown off her hat and gloves, and seated herself before the organ
+in an admirable pose, looking upward; while the submissive and sad Jocosa
+took out the one comb which fastened the coil of hair, and then shook out
+the mass till it fell in a smooth light-brown stream far below its owner's
+slim waist.
+
+Mrs. Davilow smiled and said, "A charming picture, my dear!" not
+indifferent to the display of her pet, even in the presence of a
+housekeeper. Gwendolen rose and laughed with delight. All this seemed
+quite to the purpose on entering a new house which was so excellent a
+background.
+
+"What a queer, quaint, picturesque room!" she went on, looking about her.
+"I like these old embroidered chairs, and the garlands on the wainscot,
+and the pictures that may be anything. That one with the ribs--nothing but
+ribs and darkness--I should think that is Spanish, mamma."
+
+"Oh, Gwendolen!" said the small Isabel, in a tone of astonishment, while
+she held open a hinged panel of the wainscot at the other end of the room.
+
+Every one, Gwendolen first, went to look. The opened panel had disclosed
+the picture of an upturned dead face, from which an obscure figure seemed
+to be fleeing with outstretched arms. "How horrible!" said Mrs. Davilow,
+with a look of mere disgust; but Gwendolen shuddered silently, and Isabel,
+a plain and altogether inconvenient child with an alarming memory, said--
+
+"You will never stay in this room by yourself, Gwendolen."
+
+"How dare you open things which were meant to be shut up, you perverse
+little creature?" said Gwendolen, in her angriest tone. Then snatching the
+panel out of the hand of the culprit, she closed it hastily, saying,
+"There is a lock--where is the key? Let the key be found, or else let one
+be made, and let nobody open it again; or rather, let the key be brought
+to me."
+
+At this command to everybody in general Gwendolen turned with a face which
+was flushed in reaction from her chill shudder, and said, "Let us go up to
+our own room, mamma."
+
+The housekeeper on searching found the key in the drawer of the cabinet
+close by the panel, and presently handed it to Bugle, the lady's-maid,
+telling her significantly to give it to her Royal Highness.
+
+"I don't know what you mean, Mrs. Startin," said Bugle, who had been busy
+up-stairs during the scene in the drawing-room, and was rather offended at
+this irony in a new servant.
+
+"I mean the young lady that's to command us all-and well worthy for looks
+and figure," replied Mrs. Startin in propitiation. "She'll know what key
+it is."
+
+"If you have laid out what we want, go and see to the others, Bugle,"
+Gwendolen had said, when she and Mrs. Davilow entered their black and
+yellow bedroom, where a pretty little white couch was prepared by the side
+of the black and yellow catafalque known as the best bed. "I will help
+mamma."
+
+But her first movement was to go to the tall mirror between the windows,
+which reflected herself and the room completely, while her mamma sat down
+and also looked at the reflection.
+
+"That is a becoming glass, Gwendolen; or is it the black and gold color
+that sets you off?" said Mrs. Davilow, as Gwendolen stood obliquely with
+her three-quarter face turned toward the mirror, and her left hand
+brushing back the stream of hair.
+
+"I should make a tolerable St. Cecilia with some white roses on my head,"
+said Gwendolen,--"only how about my nose, mamma? I think saint's noses
+never in the least turn up. I wish you had given me your perfectly
+straight nose; it would have done for any sort of character--a nose of all
+work. Mine is only a happy nose; it would not do so well for tragedy."
+
+"Oh, my dear, any nose will do to be miserable with in this world," said
+Mrs. Davilow, with a deep, weary sigh, throwing her black bonnet on the
+table, and resting her elbow near it.
+
+"Now, mamma," said Gwendolen, in a strongly remonstrant tone, turning away
+from the glass with an air of vexation, "don't begin to be dull here. It
+spoils all my pleasure, and everything may be so happy now. What have you
+to be gloomy about _now_?"
+
+"Nothing, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, seeming to rouse herself, and
+beginning to take off her dress. "It is always enough for me to see you
+happy."
+
+"But you should be happy yourself," said Gwendolen, still discontentedly,
+though going to help her mamma with caressing touches. "Can nobody be
+happy after they are quite young? You have made me feel sometimes as if
+nothing were of any use. With the girls so troublesome, and Jocosa so
+dreadfully wooden and ugly, and everything make-shift about us, and you
+looking so dull--what was the use of my being anything? But now you
+_might_ be happy."
+
+"So I shall, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, patting the cheek that was bending
+near her.
+
+"Yes, but really. Not with a sort of make-believe," said Gwendolen, with
+resolute perseverance. "See what a hand and arm!--much more beautiful than
+mine. Any one can see you were altogether more beautiful."
+
+"No, no, dear; I was always heavier. Never half so charming as you are."
+
+"Well, but what is the use of my being charming, if it is to end in my
+being dull and not minding anything? Is that what marriage always comes
+to?"
+
+"No, child, certainly not. Marriage is the only happy state for a woman,
+as I trust you will prove."
+
+"I will not put up with it if it is not a happy state. I am determined to
+be happy--at least not to go on muddling away my life as other people do,
+being and doing nothing remarkable. I have made up my mind not to let
+other people interfere with me as they have done. Here is some warm water
+ready for you, mamma," Gwendolen ended, proceeding to take off her own
+dress and then waiting to have her hair wound up by her mamma.
+
+There was silence for a minute or two, till Mrs. Davilow said, while
+coiling the daughter's hair, "I am sure I have never crossed you,
+Gwendolen."
+
+"You often want me to do what I don't like."
+
+"You mean, to give Alice lessons?"
+
+"Yes. And I have done it because you asked me. But I don't see why I
+should, else. It bores me to death, she is so slow. She has no ear for
+music, or language, or anything else. It would be much better for her to
+be ignorant, mamma: it is her _role_, she would do it well."
+
+"That is a hard thing to say of your poor sister, Gwendolen, who is so
+good to you, and waits on you hand and foot."
+
+"I don't see why it is hard to call things by their right names, and put
+them in their proper places. The hardship is for me to have to waste my
+time on her. Now let me fasten up your hair, mamma."
+
+"We must make haste; your uncle and aunt will be here soon. For heaven's
+sake, don't be scornful to _them_, my dear child! or to your cousin Anna,
+whom you will always be going out with. Do promise me, Gwendolen. You
+know, you can't expect Anna to be equal to you."
+
+"I don't want her to be equal," said Gwendolen, with a toss of her head
+and a smile, and the discussion ended there.
+
+When Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne and their daughter came, Gwendolen, far from
+being scornful, behaved as prettily as possible to them. She was
+introducing herself anew to relatives who had not seen her since the
+comparatively unfinished age of sixteen, and she was anxious--no, not
+anxious, but resolved that they should admire her.
+
+Mrs. Gascoigne bore a family likeness to her sister. But she was darker
+and slighter, her face was unworn by grief, her movements were less
+languid, her expression more alert and critical as that of a rector's wife
+bound to exert a beneficent authority. Their closest resemblance lay in a
+non-resistant disposition, inclined to imitation and obedience; but this,
+owing to the difference in their circumstances, had led them to very
+different issues. The younger sister had been indiscreet, or at least
+unfortunate in her marriages; the elder believed herself the most enviable
+of wives, and her pliancy had ended in her sometimes taking shapes of
+surprising definiteness. Many of her opinions, such as those on church
+government and the character of Archbishop Laud, seemed too decided under
+every alteration to have been arrived at otherwise than by a wifely
+receptiveness. And there was much to encourage trust in her husband's
+authority. He had some agreeable virtues, some striking advantages, and
+the failings that were imputed to him all leaned toward the side of
+success.
+
+One of his advantages was a fine person, which perhaps was even more
+impressive at fifty-seven than it had been earlier in life. There were no
+distinctively clerical lines in the face, no tricks of starchiness or of
+affected ease: in his Inverness cape he could not have been identified
+except as a gentleman with handsome dark features, a nose which began with
+an intention to be aquiline but suddenly became straight, and iron-gray,
+hair. Perhaps he owed this freedom from the sort of professional make-up
+which penetrates skin, tones and gestures and defies all drapery, to the
+fact that he had once been Captain Gaskin, having taken orders and a
+diphthong but shortly before his engagement to Miss Armyn. If any one had
+objected that his preparation for the clerical function was inadequate,
+his friends might have asked who made a better figure in it, who preached
+better or had more authority in his parish? He had a native gift for
+administration, being tolerant both of opinions and conduct, because he
+felt himself able to overrule them, and was free from the irritations of
+conscious feebleness. He smiled pleasantly at the foible of a taste which
+he did not share--at floriculture or antiquarianism for example, which
+were much in vogue among his fellow-clergyman in the diocese: for himself,
+he preferred following the history of a campaign, or divining from his
+knowledge of Nesselrode's motives what would have been his conduct if our
+cabinet had taken a different course. Mr. Gascoigne's tone of thinking
+after some long-quieted fluctuations had become ecclesiastical rather than
+theological; not the modern Anglican, but what he would have called sound
+English, free from nonsense; such as became a man who looked at a national
+religion by daylight, and saw it in its relation to other things. No
+clerical magistrate had greater weight at sessions, or less of mischievous
+impracticableness in relation to worldly affairs. Indeed, the worst
+imputation thrown out against him was worldliness: it could not be proved
+that he forsook the less fortunate, but it was not to be denied that the
+friendships he cultivated were of a kind likely to be useful to the father
+of six sons and two daughters; and bitter observers--for in Wessex, say
+ten years ago, there were persons whose bitterness may now seem
+incredible--remarked that the color of his opinions had changed in
+consistency with this principle of action. But cheerful, successful
+worldliness has a false air of being more selfish than the acrid,
+unsuccessful kind, whose secret history is summed up in the terrible
+words, "Sold, but not paid for."
+
+Gwendolen wondered that she had not better remembered how very fine a man
+her uncle was; but at the age of sixteen she was a less capable and more
+indifferent judge. At present it was a matter of extreme interest to her
+that she was to have the near countenance of a dignified male relative,
+and that the family life would cease to be entirely, insipidly feminine.
+She did not intend that her uncle should control her, but she saw at once
+that it would be altogether agreeable to her that he should be proud of
+introducing her as his niece. And there was every sign of his being likely
+to feel that pride. He certainly looked at her with admiration as he
+said--
+
+"You have outgrown Anna, my dear," putting his arm tenderly round his
+daughter, whose shy face was a tiny copy of his own, and drawing her
+forward. "She is not so old as you by a year, but her growing days are
+certainly over. I hope you will be excellent companions."
+
+He did give a comparing glance at his daughter, but if he saw her
+inferiority, he might also see that Anna's timid appearance and miniature
+figure must appeal to a different taste from that which was attracted by
+Gwendolen, and that the girls could hardly be rivals. Gwendolen at least,
+was aware of this, and kissed her cousin with real cordiality as well as
+grace, saying, "A companion is just what I want. I am so glad we are come
+to live here. And mamma will be much happier now she is near you, aunt."
+
+The aunt trusted indeed that it would be so, and felt it a blessing that a
+suitable home had been vacant in their uncle's parish. Then, of course,
+notice had to be taken of the four other girls, whom Gwendolen had always
+felt to be superfluous: all of a girlish average that made four units
+utterly unimportant, and yet from her earliest days an obtrusive
+influential fact in her life. She was conscious of having been much kinder
+to them than could have been expected. And it was evident to her that her
+uncle and aunt also felt it a pity there were so many girls:--what
+rational person could feel otherwise, except poor mamma, who never would
+see how Alice set up her shoulders and lifted her eyebrows till she had no
+forehead left, how Bertha and Fanny whispered and tittered together about
+everything, or how Isabel was always listening and staring and forgetting
+where she was, and treading on the toes of her suffering elders?
+
+"You have brothers, Anna," said Gwendolen, while the sisters were being
+noticed. "I think you are enviable there."
+
+"Yes," said Anna, simply. "I am very fond of them; but of course their
+education is a great anxiety to papa. He used to say they made me a
+tomboy. I really was a great romp with Rex. I think you will like Rex. He
+will come home before Christmas."
+
+"I remember I used to think you rather wild and shy; but it is difficult
+now to imagine you a romp," said Gwendolen, smiling.
+
+"Of course, I am altered now; I am come out, and all that. But in reality
+I like to go blackberrying with Edwy and Lotta as well as ever. I am not
+very fond of going out; but I dare say I shall like it better now you will
+be often with me. I am not at all clever, and I never know what to say. It
+seems so useless to say what everybody knows, and I can think of nothing
+else, except what papa says."
+
+"I shall like going out with you very much," said Gwendolen, well disposed
+toward this _naive_ cousin. "Are you fond of riding?"
+
+"Yes, but we have only one Shetland pony amongst us. Papa says he can't
+afford more, besides the carriage-horses and his own nag; he has so many
+expenses."
+
+"I intend to have a horse and ride a great deal now," said Gwendolen, in a
+tone of decision. "Is the society pleasant in this neighborhood?"
+
+"Papa says it is, very. There are the clergymen all about, you know; and
+the Quallons, and the Arrowpoints, and Lord Brackenshaw, and Sir Hugo
+Mallinger's place, where there is nobody--that's very nice, because we
+make picnics there--and two or three families at Wanchester: oh, and old
+Mrs. Vulcany, at Nuttingwood, and--"
+
+But Anna was relieved of this tax on her descriptive powers by the
+announcement of dinner, and Gwendolen's question was soon indirectly
+answered by her uncle, who dwelt much on the advantages he had secured for
+them in getting a place like Offendene. Except the rent, it involved no
+more expense than an ordinary house at Wanchester would have done.
+
+"And it is always worth while to make a little sacrifice for a good style
+of house," said Mr. Gascoigne, in his easy, pleasantly confident tone,
+which made the world in general seem a very manageable place of residence:
+"especially where there is only a lady at the head. All the best people
+will call upon you; and you need give no expensive dinners. Of course, I
+have to spend a good deal in that way; it is a large item. But then I get
+my house for nothing. If I had to pay three hundred a year for my house I
+could not keep a table. My boys are too great a drain on me. You are
+better off than we are, in proportion; there is no great drain on you now,
+after your house and carriage."
+
+"I assure you, Fanny, now that the children are growing up, I am obliged
+to cut and contrive," said Mrs. Gascoigne. "I am not a good manager by
+nature, but Henry has taught me. He is wonderful for making the best of
+everything; he allows himself no extras, and gets his curates for nothing.
+It is rather hard that he has not been made a prebendary or something, as
+others have been, considering the friends he has made and the need there
+is for men of moderate opinions in all respects. If the Church is to keep
+its position, ability and character ought to tell."
+
+"Oh, my dear Nancy, you forget the old story--thank Heaven, there are
+three hundred as good as I. And ultimately, we shall have no reason to
+complain, I am pretty sure. There could hardly be a more thorough friend
+than Lord Brackenshaw--your landlord, you know, Fanny. Lady Brackenshaw
+will call upon you. And I have spoken for Gwendolen to be a member of our
+Archery Club--the Brackenshaw Archery Club--the most select thing
+anywhere. That is, if she has no objection," added Mr. Gascoigne, looking
+at Gwendolen with pleasant irony.
+
+"I should like it of all things," said Gwendolen. "There is nothing I
+enjoy more than taking aim--and hitting," she ended, with a pretty nod and
+smile.
+
+"Our Anna, poor child, is too short-sighed for archery. But I consider
+myself a first-rate shot, and you shall practice with me. I must make you
+an accomplished archer before our great meeting in July. In fact, as to
+neighborhood, you could hardly be better placed. There are the
+Arrowpoints--they are some of our best people. Miss Arrowpoint is a
+delightful girl--she has been presented at Court. They have a magnificent
+place--Quetcham Hall--worth seeing in point of art; and their parties, to
+which you are sure to be invited, are the best things of the sort we have.
+The archdeacon is intimate there, and they have always a good kind of
+people staying in the house. Mrs. Arrowpoint is peculiar, certainly;
+something of a caricature, in fact; but well-meaning. And Miss Arrowpoint
+is as nice as possible. It is not all young ladies who have mothers as
+handsome and graceful as yours and Anna's."
+
+Mrs. Davilow smiled faintly at this little compliment, but the husband and
+wife looked affectionately at each other, and Gwendolen thought, "My uncle
+and aunt, at least, are happy: they are not dull and dismal." Altogether,
+she felt satisfied with her prospects at Offendene, as a great improvement
+on anything she had known. Even the cheap curates, she incidentally
+learned, were almost always young men of family, and Mr. Middleton, the
+actual curate, was said to be quite an acquisition: it was only a pity he
+was so soon to leave.
+
+But there was one point which she was so anxious to gain that she could
+not allow the evening to pass without taking her measures toward securing
+it. Her mamma, she knew, intended to submit entirely to her uncle's
+judgment with regard to expenditure; and the submission was not merely
+prudential, for Mrs. Davilow, conscious that she had always been seen
+under a cloud as poor dear Fanny, who had made a sad blunder with her
+second marriage, felt a hearty satisfaction in being frankly and cordially
+identified with her sister's family, and in having her affairs canvassed
+and managed with an authority which presupposed a genuine interest. Thus
+the question of a suitable saddle-horse, which had been sufficiently
+discussed with mamma, had to be referred to Mr. Gascoigne; and after
+Gwendolen had played on the piano, which had been provided from
+Wanchester, had sung to her hearers' admiration, and had induced her uncle
+to join her in a duet--what more softening influence than this on any
+uncle who would have sung finely if his time had not been too much taken
+up by graver matters?--she seized the opportune moment for saying, "Mamma,
+you have not spoken to my uncle about my riding."
+
+"Gwendolen desires above all things to have a horse to ride--a pretty,
+light, lady's horse," said Mrs. Davilow, looking at Mr. Gascoigne. "Do you
+think we can manage it?"
+
+Mr. Gascoigne projected his lower lip and lifted his handsome eyebrows
+sarcastically at Gwendolen, who had seated herself with much grace on the
+elbow of her mamma's chair.
+
+"We could lend her the pony sometimes," said Mrs. Gascoigne, watching her
+husband's face, and feeling quite ready to disapprove if he did.
+
+"That might be inconveniencing others, aunt, and would be no pleasure to
+me. I cannot endure ponies," said Gwendolen. "I would rather give up some
+other indulgence and have a horse." (Was there ever a young lady or
+gentleman not ready to give up an unspecified indulgence for the sake of
+the favorite one specified?)
+
+"She rides so well. She has had lessons, and the riding-master said she
+had so good a seat and hand she might be trusted with any mount," said
+Davilow, who, even if she had not wished her darling to have the horse,
+would not have dared to be lukewarm in trying to get it for her.
+
+"There is the price of the horse--a good sixty with the best chance, and
+then his keep," said Mr. Gascoigne, in a tone which, though demurring,
+betrayed the inward presence of something that favored the demand. "There
+are the carriage-horses--already a heavy item. And remember what you
+ladies cost in toilet now."
+
+"I really wear nothing but two black dresses," said Mrs. Davilow, hastily.
+"And the younger girls, of course, require no toilet at present. Besides,
+Gwendolen will save me so much by giving her sisters lessons." Here Mrs.
+Davilow's delicate cheek showed a rapid blush. "If it were not for that, I
+must really have a more expensive governess, and masters besides."
+
+Gwendolen felt some anger with her mamma, but carefully concealed it.
+
+"That is good--that is decidedly good," said Mr. Gascoigne, heartily,
+looking at his wife. And Gwendolen, who, it must be owned, was a deep
+young lady, suddenly moved away to the other end of the long drawing-room,
+and busied herself with arranging pieces of music.
+
+"The dear child has had no indulgences, no pleasures," said Mrs. Davilow,
+in a pleading undertone. "I feel the expense is rather imprudent in this
+first year of our settling. But she really needs the exercise--she needs
+cheering. And if you were to see her on horseback, it is something
+splendid."
+
+"It is what we could not afford for Anna," said Mrs. Gascoigne. "But she,
+dear child, would ride Lotta's donkey and think it good enough." (Anna was
+absorbed in a game with Isabel, who had hunted out an old back-gammon-
+board, and had begged to sit up an extra hour.)
+
+"Certainly, a fine woman never looks better than on horseback," said Mr.
+Gascoigne. "And Gwendolen has the figure for it. I don't say the thing
+should not be considered."
+
+"We might try it for a time, at all events. It can be given up, if
+necessary," said Mrs. Davilow.
+
+"Well, I will consult Lord Brackenshaw's head groom. He is my _fidus
+Achates_ in the horsey way."
+
+"Thanks," said Mrs. Davilow, much relieved. "You are very kind."
+
+"That he always is," said Mrs. Gascoigne. And later that night, when she
+and her husband were in private, she said--
+
+"I thought you were almost too indulgent about the horse for Gwendolen.
+She ought not to claim so much more than your own daughter would think of.
+Especially before we see how Fanny manages on her income. And you really
+have enough to do without taking all this trouble on yourself."
+
+"My dear Nancy, one must look at things from every point of view. This
+girl is really worth some expense: you don't often see her equal. She
+ought to make a first-rate marriage, and I should not be doing my duty if
+I spared my trouble in helping her forward. You know yourself she has been
+under a disadvantage with such a father-in-law, and a second family,
+keeping her always in the shade. I feel for the girl, And I should like
+your sister and her family now to have the benefit of your having married
+rather a better specimen of our kind than she did."
+
+"Rather better! I should think so. However, it is for me to be grateful
+that you will take so much on your shoulders for the sake of my sister and
+her children. I am sure I would not grudge anything to poor Fanny. But
+there is one thing I have been thinking of, though you have never
+mentioned it."
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"The boys. I hope they will not be falling in love with Gwendolen."
+
+"Don't presuppose anything of the kind, my dear, and there will be no
+danger. Rex will never be at home for long together, and Warham is going
+to India. It is the wiser plan to take it for granted that cousins will
+not fall in love. If you begin with precautions, the affair will come in
+spite of them. One must not undertake to act for Providence in these
+matters, which can no more be held under the hand than a brood of
+chickens. The boys will have nothing, and Gwendolen will have nothing.
+They can't marry. At the worst there would only be a little crying, and
+you can't save boys and girls from that."
+
+Mrs. Gascoigne's mind was satisfied: if anything did happen, there was the
+comfort of feeling that her husband would know what was to be done, and
+would have the energy to do it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ "_Gorgibus._-- * * * Je te dis que le mariage est une chose sainte
+ et sacree: et que c'est faire en honnetes gens, que de debuter par la.
+
+ "_Madelon._--Mon Dieu! que si tout le monde vous ressemblait, un
+ roman serait bientot fini! La belle chose que ce serait, si d'abord
+ Cyrus epousait Mandane, et qu'Aronce de plain-pied fut marie a Clelie!
+ * * * Laissez-nous faire a loisir le tissu de notre roman, et n'en
+ pressez pas tant la conclusion."
+ MOLIERE. _Les Precieuses Ridicules._
+
+
+It would be a little hard to blame the rector of Pennicote that in the
+course of looking at things from every point of view, he looked at
+Gwendolen as a girl likely to make a brilliant marriage. Why should he be
+expected to differ from his contemporaries in this matter, and wish his
+niece a worse end of her charming maidenhood than they would approve as
+the best possible? It is rather to be set down to his credit that his
+feelings on the subject were entirely good-natured. And in considering the
+relation of means to ends, it would have been mere folly to have been
+guided by the exceptional and idyllic--to have recommended that Gwendolen
+should wear a gown as shabby as Griselda's in order that a marquis might
+fall in love with her, or to have insisted that since a fair maiden was to
+be sought, she should keep herself out of the way. Mr. Gascoigne's
+calculations were of the kind called rational, and he did not even think
+of getting a too frisky horse in order that Gwendolen might be threatened
+with an accident and be rescued by a man of property. He wished his niece
+well, and he meant her to be seen to advantage in the best society of the
+neighborhood.
+
+Her uncle's intention fell in perfectly with Gwendolen's own wishes. But
+let no one suppose that she also contemplated a brilliant marriage as the
+direct end of her witching the world with her grace on horseback, or with
+any other accomplishment. That she was to be married some time or other
+she would have felt obliged to admit; and that her marriage would not be
+of a middling kind, such as most girls were contented with, she felt
+quietly, unargumentatively sure. But her thoughts never dwelt on marriage
+as the fulfillment of her ambition; the dramas in which she imagined
+herself a heroine were not wrought up to that close. To be very much sued
+or hopelessly sighed for as a bride was indeed an indispensable and
+agreeable guarantee of womanly power; but to become a wife and wear all
+the domestic fetters of that condition, was on the whole a vexatious
+necessity. Her observation of matrimony had inclined her to think it
+rather a dreary state in which a woman could not do what she liked, had
+more children than were desirable, was consequently dull, and became
+irrevocably immersed in humdrum. Of course marriage was social promotion;
+she could not look forward to a single life; but promotions have sometimes
+to be taken with bitter herbs--a peerage will not quite do instead of
+leadership to the man who meant to lead; and this delicate-limbed sylph of
+twenty meant to lead. For such passions dwell in feminine breasts also. In
+Gwendolen's, however, they dwelt among strictly feminine furniture, and
+had no disturbing reference to the advancement of learning or the balance
+of the constitution; her knowledge being such as with no sort of standing-
+room or length of lever could have been expected to move the world. She
+meant to do what was pleasant to herself in a striking manner; or rather,
+whatever she could do so as to strike others with admiration and get in
+that reflected way a more ardent sense of living, seemed pleasant to her
+fancy.
+
+"Gwendolen will not rest without having the world at her feet," said Miss
+Merry, the meek governess: hyperbolical words which have long come to
+carry the most moderate meanings; for who has not heard of private persons
+having the world at their feet in the shape of some half-dozen items of
+flattering regard generally known in a genteel suburb? And words could
+hardly be too wide or vague to indicate the prospect that made a hazy
+largeness about poor Gwendolen on the heights of her young self-
+exultation. Other people allowed themselves to be made slaves of, and to
+have their lives blown hither and thither like empty ships in which no
+will was present. It was not to be so with her; she would no longer be
+sacrificed to creatures worth less than herself, but would make the very
+best of the chances that life offered her, and conquer circumstances by
+her exceptional cleverness. Certainly, to be settled at Offendene, with
+the notice of Lady Brackenshaw, the archery club, and invitations to dine
+with the Arrowpoints, as the highest lights in her scenery, was not a
+position that seemed to offer remarkable chances; but Gwendolen's
+confidence lay chiefly in herself. She felt well equipped for the mastery
+of life. With regard to much in her lot hitherto, she held herself rather
+hardly dealt with, but as to her "education," she would have admitted that
+it had left her under no disadvantages. In the school-room her quick mind
+had taken readily that strong starch of unexplained rules and disconnected
+facts which saves ignorance from any painful sense of limpness; and what
+remained of all things knowable, she was conscious of being sufficiently
+acquainted with through novels, plays and poems. About her French and
+music, the two justifying accomplishments of a young lady, she felt no
+ground for uneasiness; and when to all these qualifications, negative and
+positive, we add the spontaneous sense of capability some happy persons
+are born with, so that any subject they turn their attention to impresses
+them with their own power of forming a correct judgment on it, who can
+wonder if Gwendolen felt ready to manage her own destiny?
+
+There were many subjects in the world--perhaps the majority--in which she
+felt no interest, because they were stupid; for subjects are apt to appear
+stupid to the young as light seems dull to the old; but she would not have
+felt at all helpless in relation to them if they had turned up in
+conversation. It must be remembered that no one had disputed her power or
+her general superiority. As on the arrival at Offendene, so always, the
+first thought of those about her had been, what will Gwendolen think?--if
+the footman trod heavily in creaking boots, or if the laundress's work was
+unsatisfactory, the maid said, "This will never do for Miss Harleth"; if
+the wood smoked in the bedroom fireplace, Mrs. Davilow, whose own weak
+eyes suffered much from this inconvenience, spoke apologetically of it to
+Gwendolen. If, when they were under the stress of traveling, she did not
+appear at the breakfast table till every one else had finished, the only
+question was, how Gwendolen's coffee and toast should still be of the
+hottest and crispest; and when she appeared with her freshly-brushed
+light-brown hair streaming backward and awaiting her mamma's hand to coil
+it up, her large brown eyes glancing bright as a wave-washed onyx from
+under their long lashes, it was always she herself who had to be tolerant
+--to beg that Alice who sat waiting on her would not stick up her
+shoulders in that frightful manner, and that Isabel, instead of pushing up
+to her and asking questions, would go away to Miss Merry.
+
+Always she was the princess in exile, who in time of famine was to have
+her breakfast-roll made of the finest-bolted flour from the seven thin
+ears of wheat, and in a general decampment was to have her silver folk
+kept out of the baggage. How was this to be accounted for? The answer may
+seem to lie quite on the surface:--in her beauty, a certain unusualness
+about her, a decision of will which made itself felt in her graceful
+movements and clear unhesitating tones, so that if she came into the room
+on a rainy day when everybody else was flaccid and the use of things in
+general was not apparent to them, there seemed to be a sudden, sufficient
+reason for keeping up the forms of life; and even the waiters at hotels
+showed the more alacrity in doing away with crumbs and creases and dregs
+with struggling flies in them. This potent charm, added to the fact that
+she was the eldest daughter, toward whom her mamma had always been in an
+apologetic state of mind for the evils brought on her by a step-father,
+may seem so full a reason for Gwendolen's domestic empire, that to look
+for any other would be to ask the reason of daylight when the sun is
+shining. But beware of arriving at conclusions without comparison. I
+remember having seen the same assiduous, apologetic attention awarded to
+persons who were not at all beautiful or unusual, whose firmness showed
+itself in no very graceful or euphonious way, and who were not eldest
+daughters with a tender, timid mother, compunctious at having subjected
+them to inconveniences. Some of them were a very common sort of men. And
+the only point of resemblance among them all was a strong determination to
+have what was pleasant, with a total fearlessness in making themselves
+disagreeable or dangerous when they did not get it. Who is so much cajoled
+and served with trembling by the weak females of a household as the
+unscrupulous male--capable, if he has not free way at home, of going and
+doing worse elsewhere? Hence I am forced to doubt whether even without her
+potent charm and peculiar filial position Gwendolen might not still have
+played the queen in exile, if only she had kept her inborn energy of
+egoistic desire, and her power of inspiring fear as to what she might say
+or do. However, she had the charm, and those who feared her were also fond
+of her; the fear and the fondness being perhaps both heightened by what
+may be called the iridescence of her character--the play of various, nay,
+contrary tendencies. For Macbeth's rhetoric about the impossibility of
+being many opposite things in the same moment, referred to the clumsy
+necessities of action and not to the subtler possibilities of feeling. We
+cannot speak a loyal word and be meanly silent; we cannot kill and not
+kill in the same moment; but a moment is wide enough for the loyal and
+mean desire, for the outlash of a murderous thought and the sharp backward
+stroke of repentance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ "Her wit
+ Values itself so highly, that to her
+ All matter else seems weak."
+ --_Much Ado About Nothing._
+
+
+Gwendolen's reception in the neighborhood fulfilled her uncle's
+expectations. From Brackenshaw Castle to the Firs at Winchester, where Mr.
+Quallon the banker kept a generous house, she was welcomed with manifest
+admiration, and even those ladies who did not quite like her, felt a
+comfort in having a new, striking girl to invite; for hostesses who
+entertain much must make up their parties as ministers make up their
+cabinets, on grounds other than personal liking. Then, in order to have
+Gwendolen as a guest, it was not necessary to ask any one who was
+disagreeable, for Mrs. Davilow always made a quiet, picturesque figure as
+a chaperon, and Mr. Gascoigne was everywhere in request for his own sake.
+
+Among the houses where Gwendolen was not quite liked, and yet invited, was
+Quetcham Hall. One of her first invitations was to a large dinner-party
+there, which made a sort of general introduction for her to the society of
+the neighborhood; for in a select party of thirty and of well-composed
+proportions as to age, few visitable families could be entirely left out.
+No youthful figure there was comparable to Gwendolen's as she passed
+through the long suite of rooms adorned with light and flowers, and,
+visible at first as a slim figure floating along in white drapery,
+approached through one wide doorway after another into fuller illumination
+and definiteness. She had never had that sort of promenade before, and she
+felt exultingly that it befitted her: any one looking at her for the first
+time might have supposed that long galleries and lackeys had always been a
+matter of course in her life; while her cousin Anna, who was really more
+familiar with these things, felt almost as much embarrassed as a rabbit
+suddenly deposited in that well-lit-space.
+
+"Who is that with Gascoigne?" said the archdeacon, neglecting a discussion
+of military manoeuvres on which, as a clergyman, he was naturally appealed
+to. And his son, on the other side of the room--a hopeful young scholar,
+who had already suggested some "not less elegant than ingenious,"
+emendations of Greek texts--said nearly at the same time, "By George! who
+is that girl with the awfully well-set head and jolly figure?"
+
+But to a mind of general benevolence, wishing everybody to look well, it
+was rather exasperating to see how Gwendolen eclipsed others: how even the
+handsome Miss Lawe, explained to be the daughter of Lady Lawe, looked
+suddenly broad, heavy and inanimate; and how Miss Arrowpoint,
+unfortunately also dressed in white, immediately resembled a _carte-de-
+visite_ in which one would fancy the skirt alone to have been charged for.
+Since Miss Arrowpoint was generally liked for the amiable unpretending way
+in which she wore her fortunes, and made a softening screen for the
+oddities of her mother, there seemed to be some unfitness in Gwendolen's
+looking so much more like a person of social importance.
+
+"She is not really so handsome if you come to examine her features," said
+Mrs. Arrowpoint, later in the evening, confidentially to Mrs. Vulcany. "It
+is a certain style she has, which produces a great effect at first, but
+afterward she is less agreeable."
+
+In fact, Gwendolen, not intending it, but intending the contrary, had
+offended her hostess, who, though not a splenetic or vindictive woman, had
+her susceptibilities. Several conditions had met in the Lady of Quetcham
+which to the reasoners in that neighborhood seemed to have an essential
+connection with each other. It was occasionally recalled that she had been
+the heiress of a fortune gained by some moist or dry business in the city,
+in order fully to account for her having a squat figure, a harsh parrot-
+like voice, and a systematically high head-dress; and since these points
+made her externally rather ridiculous, it appeared to many only natural
+that she should have what are called literary tendencies. A little
+comparison would have shown that all these points are to be found apart;
+daughters of aldermen being often well-grown and well-featured, pretty
+women having sometimes harsh or husky voices, and the production of feeble
+literature being found compatible with the most diverse forms of
+_physique_, masculine as well as feminine.
+
+Gwendolen, who had a keen sense of absurdity in others, but was kindly
+disposed toward any one who could make life agreeable to her, meant to win
+Mrs. Arrowpoint by giving her an interest and attention beyond what others
+were probably inclined to show. But self-confidence is apt to address
+itself to an imaginary dullness in others; as people who are well off
+speak in a cajoling tone to the poor, and those who are in the prime of
+life raise their voice and talk artificially to seniors, hastily
+conceiving them to be deaf and rather imbecile. Gwendolen, with all her
+cleverness and purpose to be agreeable, could not escape that form of
+stupidity: it followed in her mind, unreflectingly, that because Mrs.
+Arrowpoint was ridiculous she was also likely to be wanting in
+penetration, and she went through her little scenes without suspicion that
+the various shades of her behavior were all noted.
+
+"You are fond of books as well as of music, riding, and archery, I hear,"
+Mrs. Arrowpoint said, going to her for a _tete-a-tete_ in the drawing-room
+after dinner. "Catherine will be very glad to have so sympathetic a
+neighbor." This little speech might have seemed the most graceful
+politeness, spoken in a low, melodious tone; but with a twang, fatally
+loud, it gave Gwendolen a sense of exercising patronage when she answered,
+gracefully:
+
+"It is I who am fortunate. Miss Arrowpoint will teach me what good music
+is. I shall be entirely a learner. I hear that she is a thorough
+musician."
+
+"Catherine has certainly had every advantage. We have a first-rate
+musician in the house now--Herr Klesmer; perhaps you know all his
+compositions. You must allow me to introduce him to you. You sing, I
+believe. Catherine plays three instruments, but she does not sing. I hope
+you you will let us hear you. I understand you are an accomplished
+singer."
+
+"Oh, no!--'die Kraft ist schwach, allein die Lust ist gross,' as
+Mephistopheles says."
+
+"Ah, you are a student of Goethe. Young ladies are so advanced now. I
+suppose you have read everything."
+
+"No, really. I shall be so glad if you will tell me what to read. I have
+been looking into all the books in the library at Offendene, but there is
+nothing readable. The leaves all stick together and smell musty. I wish I
+could write books to amuse myself, as you can! How delightful it must be
+to write books after one's own taste instead of reading other people's!
+Home-made books must be so nice."
+
+For an instant Mrs. Arrowpoint's glance was a little sharper, but the
+perilous resemblance to satire in the last sentence took the hue of
+girlish simplicity when Gwendolen added--
+
+"I would give anything to write a book!"
+
+"And why should you not?" said Mrs. Arrowpoint, encouragingly. "You have
+but to begin as I did. Pen, ink, and paper are at everybody's command. But
+I will send you all I have written with pleasure."
+
+"Thanks. I shall be so glad to read your writings. Being acquainted with
+authors must give a peculiar understanding of their books: one would be
+able to tell then which parts were funny and which serious. I am sure I
+often laugh in the wrong place." Here Gwendolen herself became aware of
+danger, and added quickly, "In Shakespeare, you know, and other great
+writers that we can never see. But I always want to know more than there
+is in the books."
+
+"If you are interested in any of my subjects I can lend you many extra
+sheets in manuscript," said Mrs. Arrowpoint--while Gwendolen felt herself
+painfully in the position of the young lady who professed to like potted
+sprats.
+
+"These are things I dare say I shall publish eventually: several friends
+have urged me to do so, and one doesn't like to be obstinate. My Tasso,
+for example--I could have made it twice the size."
+
+"I dote on Tasso," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Well, you shall have all my papers, if you like. So many, you know, have
+written about Tasso; but they are all wrong. As to the particular nature
+of his madness, and his feelings for Leonora, and the real cause of his
+imprisonment, and the character of Leonora, who, in my opinion, was a
+cold-hearted woman, else she would have married him in spite of her
+brother--they are all wrong. I differ from everybody."
+
+"How very interesting!" said Gwendolen. "I like to differ from everybody.
+I think it is so stupid to agree. That is the worst of writing your
+opinions; and make people agree with you." This speech renewed a slight
+suspicion in Mrs. Arrowpoint, and again her glance became for a moment
+examining. But Gwendolen looked very innocent, and continued with a docile
+air:
+
+"I know nothing of Tasso except the _Gerusalemme Liberata_, which we read
+and learned by heart at school."
+
+"Ah, his life is more interesting than his poetry, I have constructed the
+early part of his life as a sort of romance. When one thinks of his father
+Bernardo, and so on, there is much that must be true."
+
+"Imagination is often truer than fact," said Gwendolen, decisively, though
+she could no more have explained these glib words than if they had been
+Coptic or Etruscan. "I shall be so glad to learn all about Tasso--and his
+madness especially. I suppose poets are always a little mad."
+
+"To be sure--'the poet's eye in a fine frenzy rolling'; and somebody says
+of Marlowe--
+
+ 'For that fine madness still he did maintain,
+ Which always should possess the poet's brain.'"
+
+"But it was not always found out, was it?" said Gwendolen innocently. "I
+suppose some of them rolled their eyes in private. Mad people are often
+very cunning."
+
+Again a shade flitted over Mrs. Arrowpoint's face; but the entrance of the
+gentlemen prevented any immediate mischief between her and this too quick
+young lady, who had over-acted her _naivete_.
+
+"Ah, here comes Herr Klesmer," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, rising; and presently
+bringing him to Gwendolen, she left them to a dialogue which was agreeable
+on both sides, Herr Klesmer being a felicitous combination of the German,
+the Sclave and the Semite, with grand features, brown hair floating in
+artistic fashion, and brown eyes in spectacles. His English had little
+foreignness except its fluency; and his alarming cleverness was made less
+formidable just then by a certain softening air of stlliness which will
+sometimes befall even genius in the desire of being agreeable to beauty.
+
+Music was soon begun. Miss Arrowpoint and Herr Klesmer played a four-
+handed piece on two pianos, which convinced the company in general that it
+was long, and Gwendolen in particular that the neutral, placid-faced Miss
+Arrowpoint had a mastery of the instrument which put her own execution out
+of question--though she was not discouraged as to her often-praised touch
+and style. After this every one became anxious to hear Gwendolen sing;
+especially Mr. Arrowpoint; as was natural in a host and a perfect
+gentleman, of whom no one had anything to say but that he married Miss
+Cuttler and imported the best cigars; and he led her to the piano with
+easy politeness. Herr Klesmer closed the instrument in readiness for her,
+and smiled with pleasure at her approach; then placed himself at a
+distance of a few feet so that he could see her as she sang.
+
+Gwendolen was not nervous; what she undertook to do she did without
+trembling, and singing was an enjoyment to her. Her voice was a moderately
+powerful soprano (some one had told her it was like Jenny Lind's), her ear
+good, and she was able to keep in tune, so that her singing gave pleasure
+to ordinary hearers, and she had been used to unmingled applause. She had
+the rare advantage of looking almost prettier when she was singing than at
+other times, and that Herr Klesmer was in front of her seemed not
+disagreeable. Her song, determined on beforehand, was a favorite aria of
+Belini's, in which she felt quite sure of herself.
+
+"Charming?" said Mr. Arrowpoint, who had remained near, and the word was
+echoed around without more insincerity than we recognize in a brotherly
+way as human. But Herr Klesmer stood like a statue--if a statue can be
+imagined in spectacles; at least, he was as mute as a statue. Gwendolen
+was pressed to keep her seat and double the general pleasure, and she did
+not wish to refuse; but before resolving to do so, she moved a little
+toward Herr Klesmer, saying with a look of smiling appeal, "It would be
+too cruel to a great musician. You cannot like to hear poor amateur
+singing."
+
+"No, truly; but that makes nothing," said Herr Klesmer, suddenly speaking
+in an odious German fashion with staccato endings, quite unobservable in
+him before, and apparently depending on a change of mood, as Irishmen
+resume their strongest brogue when they are fervid or quarrelsome. "That
+makes nothing. It is always acceptable to see you sing."
+
+Was there ever so unexpected an assertion of superiority? at least before
+the late Teutonic conquest? Gwendolen colored deeply, but, with her usual
+presence of mind, did not show an ungraceful resentment by moving away
+immediately; and Miss Arrowpoint, who had been near enough to overhear
+(and also to observe that Herr Klesmer's mode of looking at Gwendolen was
+more conspicuously admiring than was quite consistent with good taste),
+now with the utmost tact and kindness came close to her and said--
+
+"Imagine what I have to go through with this professor! He can hardly
+tolerate anything we English do in music. We can only put up with his
+severity, and make use of it to find out the worst that can be said of us.
+It is a little comfort to know that; and one can bear it when every one
+else is admiring."
+
+"I should be very much obliged to him for telling me the worst," said
+Gwendolen, recovering herself. "I dare say I have been extremely ill
+taught, in addition to having no talent--only liking for music." This was
+very well expressed considering that it had never entered her mind before.
+
+"Yes, it is true: you have not been well taught," said Herr Klesmer,
+quietly. Woman was dear to him, but music was dearer. "Still, you are not
+quite without gifts. You sing in tune, and you have a pretty fair organ.
+But you produce your notes badly; and that music which you sing is beneath
+you. It is a form of melody which expresses a puerile state of culture--a
+dawdling, canting, see-saw kind of stuff--the passion and thought of
+people without any breadth of horizon. There is a sort of self-satisfied
+folly about every phrase of such melody; no cries of deep, mysterious
+passion--no conflict--no sense of the universal. It makes men small as
+they listen to it. Sing now something larger. And I shall see."
+
+"Oh, not now--by-and-by," said Gwendolen, with a sinking of heart at the
+sudden width of horizon opened round her small musical performance. For a
+lady desiring to lead, this first encounter in her campaign was startling.
+But she was bent on not behaving foolishly, and Miss Arrowpoint helped her
+by saying--
+
+"Yes, by-and-by. I always require half an hour to get up my courage after
+being criticised by Herr Klesmer. We will ask him to play to us now: he is
+bound to show us what is good music."
+
+To be quite safe on this point Herr Klesmer played a composition of his
+own, a fantasia called _Freudvoll, Leidvoll, Gedankenvoll_--an extensive
+commentary on some melodic ideas not too grossly evident; and he certainly
+fetched as much variety and depth of passion out of the piano as that
+moderately responsive instrument lends itself to, having an imperious
+magic in his fingers that seem to send a nerve-thrill through ivory key
+and wooden hammer, and compel the strings to make a quivering lingering
+speech for him. Gwendolen, in spite of her wounded egoism, had fullness of
+nature enough to feel the power of this playing, and it gradually turned
+her inward sob of mortification into an excitement which lifted her for
+the moment into a desperate indifference about her own doings, or at least
+a determination to get a superiority over them by laughing at them as if
+they belonged to somebody else. Her eyes had become brighter, her cheeks
+slightly flushed, and her tongue ready for any mischievous remarks.
+
+"I wish you would sing to us again, Miss Harleth," said young Clintock,
+the archdeacon's classical son, who had been so fortunate as to take her
+to dinner, and came up to renew conversation as soon as Herr Klesmer's
+performance was ended, "That is the style of music for me. I never can
+make anything of this tip-top playing. It is like a jar of leeches, where
+you can never tell either beginnings or endings. I could listen to your
+singing all day."
+
+"Yes, we should be glad of something popular now--another song from you
+would be a relaxation," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, who had also come near with
+polite intentions.
+
+"That must be because you are in a puerile state of culture, and have no
+breadth of horizon. I have just learned that. I have been taught how bad
+my taste is, and am feeling growing pains. They are never pleasant," said
+Gwendolen, not taking any notice of Mrs. Arrowpoint, and looking up with a
+bright smile at young Clintock.
+
+Mrs. Arrowpoint was not insensible to this rudeness, but merely said,
+"Well, we will not press anything disagreeably," and as there was a
+perceptible outburst of imprisoned conversation just then, and a movement
+of guests seeking each other, she remained seated where she was, and
+looked around her with the relief of a hostess at finding she is not
+needed.
+
+"I am glad you like this neighborhood," said young Clintock, well-pleased
+with his station in front of Gwendolen.
+
+"Exceedingly. There seems to be a little of everything and not much of
+anything."
+
+"That is rather equivocal praise."
+
+"Not with me. I like a little of everything; a little absurdity, for
+example, is very amusing. I am thankful for a few queer people; but much
+of them is a bore."
+
+(Mrs. Arrowpoint, who was hearing this dialogue, perceived quite a new
+tone in Gwendolen's speech, and felt a revival of doubt as to her interest
+in Tasso's madness.)
+
+"I think there should be more croquet, for one thing," young Clintock; "I
+am usually away, but if I were more here I should go in for a croquet
+club. You are one of the archers, I think. But depend upon it croquet is
+the game of the future. It wants writing up, though. One of our best men
+has written a poem on it, in four cantos;--as good as Pope. I want him to
+publish it--You never read anything better."
+
+"I shall study croquet to-morrow. I shall take to it instead of singing."
+
+"No, no, not that; but do take to croquet. I will send you Jenning's poem
+if you like. I have a manuscript copy."
+
+"Is he a great friend of yours?"
+
+"Well, rather."
+
+"Oh, if he is only rather, I think I will decline. Or, if you send it to
+me, will you promise not to catechise me upon it and ask me which part I
+like best? Because it is not so easy to know a poem without reading it as
+to know a sermon without listening."
+
+"Decidedly," Mrs. Arrowpoint thought, "this girl is double and satirical.
+I shall be on my guard against her."
+
+But Gwendolen, nevertheless, continued to receive polite attentions from
+the family at Quetcham, not merely because invitations have larger grounds
+than those of personal liking, but because the trying little scene at the
+piano had awakened a kindly solicitude toward her in the gentle mind of
+Miss Arrowpoint, who managed all the invitations and visits, her mother
+being otherwise occupied.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ "Croyez-vous m'avoir humiliee pour m'avoir appris que la terre tourne
+ autour du soleil? Je vous jure que je ne m'en estime pas moins."
+ --FONTENELLE: _Pluralite des Mondes_.
+
+
+That lofty criticism had caused Gwendolen a new sort of pain. She would
+not have chosen to confess how unfortunate she thought herself in not
+having had Miss Arrowpoint's musical advantages, so as to be able to
+question Herr Klesmer's taste with the confidence of thorough knowledge;
+still less, to admit even to herself that Miss Arrowpoint each time they
+met raised an unwonted feeling of jealousy in her: not in the least
+because she was an heiress, but because it was really provoking that a
+girl whose appearance you could not characterize except by saying that her
+figure was slight and of middle stature, her features small, her eyes
+tolerable, and her complexion sallow, had nevertheless a certain mental
+superiority which could not be explained away--an exasperating
+thoroughness in her musical accomplishment, a fastidious discrimination in
+her general tastes, which made it impossible to force her admiration and
+kept you in awe of her standard. This insignificant-looking young lady of
+four-and-twenty, whom any one's eyes would have passed over negligently if
+she had not been Miss Arrowpoint, might be suspected of a secret opinion
+that Miss Harleth's acquirements were rather of a common order, and such
+an opinion was not made agreeable to think of by being always veiled under
+a perfect kindness of manner.
+
+But Gwendolen did not like to dwell on facts which threw an unfavorable
+light on itself. The musical Magus who had so suddenly widened her horizon
+was not always on the scene; and his being constantly backward and forward
+between London and Quetcham soon began to be thought of as offering
+opportunities for converting him to a more admiring state of mind.
+Meanwhile, in the manifest pleasure her singing gave at Brackenshaw
+Castle, the Firs, and elsewhere, she recovered her equanimity, being
+disposed to think approval more trustworthy than objection, and not being
+one of the exceptional persons who have a parching thirst for a perfection
+undemanded by their neighbors. Perhaps it would have been rash to say then
+that she was at all exceptional inwardly, or that the unusual in her was
+more than her rare grace of movement and bearing, and a certain daring
+which gave piquancy to a very common egoistic ambition, such as exists
+under many clumsy exteriors and is taken no notice of. For I suppose that
+the set of the head does not really determine the hunger of the inner self
+for supremacy: it only makes a difference sometimes as to the way in which
+the supremacy is held attainable, and a little also to the degree in which
+it can be attained; especially when the hungry one is a girl, whose
+passion for doing what is remarkable has an ideal limit in consistency
+with the highest breeding and perfect freedom from the sordid need of
+income. Gwendolen was as inwardly rebellious against the restraints of
+family conditions, and as ready to look through obligations into her own
+fundamental want of feeling for them, as if she had been sustained by the
+boldest speculations; but she really had no such speculations, and would
+at once have marked herself off from any sort of theoretical or
+practically reforming women by satirizing them. She rejoiced to feel
+herself exceptional; but her horizon was that of the genteel romance where
+the heroine's soul poured out in her journal is full of vague power,
+originality, and general rebellion, while her life moves strictly in the
+sphere of fashion; and if she wanders into a swamp, the pathos lies
+partly, so to speak, in her having on her satin shoes. Here is a restraint
+which nature and society have provided on the pursuit of striking
+adventure; so that a soul burning with a sense of what the universe is
+not, and ready to take all existence as fuel, is nevertheless held captive
+by the ordinary wirework of social forms and does nothing particular.
+
+This commonplace result was what Gwendolen found herself threatened with
+even in the novelty of the first winter at Offendene. What she was clear
+upon was, that she did not wish to lead the same sort of life as ordinary
+young ladies did; but what she was not clear upon was, how she should set
+about leading any other, and what were the particular acts which she would
+assert her freedom by doing. Offendene remained a good background, if
+anything would happen there; but on the whole the neighborhood was in
+fault.
+
+Beyond the effect of her beauty on a first presentation, there was not
+much excitement to be got out of her earliest invitations, and she came
+home after little sallies of satire and knowingness, such as had offended
+Mrs. Arrowpoint, to fill the intervening days with the most girlish
+devices. The strongest assertion she was able to make of her individual
+claims was to leave out Alice's lessons (on the principle that Alice was
+more likely to excel in ignorance), and to employ her with Miss Merry, and
+the maid who was understood to wait on all the ladies, in helping to
+arrange various dramatic costumes which Gwendolen pleased herself with
+having in readiness for some future occasions of acting in charades or
+theatrical pieces, occasions which she meant to bring about by force of
+will or contrivance. She had never acted--only made a figure in _tableaux
+vivans_ at school; but she felt assured that she could act well, and
+having been once or twice to the Theatre Francais, and also heard her
+mamma speak of Rachel, her waking dreams and cogitations as to how she
+would manage her destiny sometimes turned on the question whether she
+would become an actress like Rachel, since she was more beautiful than
+that thin Jewess. Meanwhile the wet days before Christmas were passed
+pleasantly in the preparation of costumes, Greek, Oriental, and Composite,
+in which Gwendolen attitudinized and speechified before a domestic
+audience, including even the housekeeper, who was once pressed into it
+that she might swell the notes of applause; but having shown herself
+unworthy by observing that Miss Harleth looked far more like a queen in
+her own dress than in that baggy thing with her arms all bare, she was not
+invited a second time.
+
+"Do I look as well as Rachel, mamma?" said Gwendolen, one day when she had
+been showing herself in her Greek dress to Anna, and going through scraps
+of scenes with much tragic intention.
+
+"You have better arms than Rachel," said Mrs. Davilow, "your arms would do
+for anything, Gwen. But your voice is not so tragic as hers; it is not so
+deep."
+
+"I can make it deeper, if I like," said Gwendolen, provisionally; then she
+added, with decision, "I think a higher voice is more tragic: it is more
+feminine; and the more feminine a woman is, the more tragic it seems when
+she does desperate actions."
+
+"There may be something in that," said Mrs. Davilow, languidly. "But I
+don't know what good there is in making one's blood creep. And if there is
+anything horrible to be done, I should like it to be left to the men."
+
+"Oh, mamma, you are so dreadfully prosaic! As if all the great poetic
+criminals were not women! I think the men are poor cautious creatures."
+
+"Well, dear, and you--who are afraid to be alone in the night--I don't
+think you would be very bold in crime, thank God."
+
+"I am not talking about reality, mamma," said Gwendolen, impatiently. Then
+her mamma being called out of the room, she turned quickly to her cousin,
+as if taking an opportunity, and said, "Anna, do ask my uncle to let us
+get up some charades at the rectory. Mr. Middleton and Warham could act
+with us--just for practice. Mamma says it will not do to have Mr.
+Middleton consulting and rehearsing here. He is a stick, but we could give
+him suitable parts. Do ask, or else I will."
+
+"Oh, not till Rex comes. He is so clever, and such a dear old thing, and
+he will act Napoleon looking over the sea. He looks just like Napoleon.
+Rex can do anything."
+
+"I don't in the least believe in your Rex, Anna," said Gwendolen, laughing
+at her. "He will turn out to be like those wretched blue and yellow water-
+colors of his which you hang up in your bedroom and worship."
+
+"Very well, you will see," said Anna. "It is not that I know what is
+clever, but he has got a scholarship already, and papa says he will get a
+fellowship, and nobody is better at games. He is cleverer than Mr.
+Middleton, and everybody but you call Mr. Middleton clever."
+
+"So he may be in a dark-lantern sort of way. But he _is_ a stick. If he
+had to say, 'Perdition catch my soul, but I do love her,' he would say it
+in just the same tone as, 'Here endeth the second lesson.'"
+
+"Oh, Gwendolen!" said Anna, shocked at these promiscuous allusions. "And
+it is very unkind of you to speak so of him, for he admires you very much.
+I heard Warham say one day to mamma, 'Middleton is regularly spooney upon
+Gwendolen.' She was very angry with him; but I know what it means. It is
+what they say at college for being in love."
+
+"How can I help it?" said Gwendolen, rather contemptuously. "Perdition
+catch my soul if I love _him_."
+
+"No, of course; papa, I think, would not wish it. And he is to go away
+soon. But it makes me sorry when you ridicule him."
+
+"What shall you do to me when I ridicule Rex?" said Gwendolen, wickedly.
+
+"Now, Gwendolen, dear, you _will not_?" said Anna, her eyes filling with
+tears. "I could not bear it. But there really is nothing in him to
+ridicule. Only you may find out things. For no one ever thought of
+laughing at Mr. Middleton before you. Every one said he was nice-looking,
+and his manners perfect. I am sure I have always been frightened at him
+because of his learning and his square-cut coat, and his being a nephew of
+the bishop's, and all that. But you will not ridicule Rex--promise me."
+Anna ended with a beseeching look which touched Gwendolen.
+
+"You are a dear little coz," she said, just touching the tip of Anna's
+chin with her thumb and forefinger. "I don't ever want to do anything that
+will vex you. Especially if Rex is to make everything come off--charades
+and everything."
+
+And when at last Rex was there, the animation he brought into the life of
+Offendene and the rectory, and his ready partnership in Gwendolen's plans,
+left her no inclination for any ridicule that was not of an open and
+flattering kind, such as he himself enjoyed. He was a fine open-hearted
+youth, with a handsome face strongly resembling his father's and Anna's,
+but softer in expression than the one, and larger in scale than the other:
+a bright, healthy, loving nature, enjoying ordinary innocent things so
+much that vice had no temptation for him, and what he knew of it lay too
+entirely in the outer courts and little-visited chambers of his mind for
+him to think of it with great repulsion. Vicious habits were with him
+"what some fellows did"--"stupid stuff" which he liked to keep aloof from.
+He returned Anna's affection as fully as could be expected of a brother
+whose pleasures apart from her were more than the sum total of hers; and
+he had never known a stronger love.
+
+The cousins were continually together at the one house or the other--
+chiefly at Offendene, where there was more freedom, or rather where there
+was a more complete sway for Gwendolen; and whatever she wished became a
+ruling purpose for Rex. The charades came off according to her plans; and
+also some other little scenes not contemplated by her in which her acting
+was more impromptu. It was at Offendene that the charades and _tableaux_
+were rehearsed and presented, Mrs. Davilow seeing no objection even to Mr.
+Middleton's being invited to share in them, now that Rex too was there--
+especially as his services were indispensable: Warham, who was studying
+for India with a Wanchester "coach," having no time to spare, and being
+generally dismal under a cram of everything except the answers needed at
+the forthcoming examination, which might disclose the welfare of our
+Indian Empire to be somehow connected with a quotable knowledge of
+Browne's Pastorals.
+
+Mr. Middleton was persuaded to play various grave parts, Gwendolen having
+flattered him on his enviable immobility of countenance; and at first a
+little pained and jealous at her comradeship with Rex, he presently drew
+encouragement from the thought that this sort of cousinly familiarity
+excluded any serious passion. Indeed, he occasionally felt that her more
+formal treatment of himself was such a sign of favor as to warrant his
+making advances before he left Pennicote, though he had intended to keep
+his feelings in reserve until his position should be more assured. Miss
+Gwendolen, quite aware that she was adored by this unexceptionable young
+clergyman with pale whiskers and square-cut collar, felt nothing more on
+the subject than that she had no objection to being adored: she turned her
+eyes on him with calm mercilessness and caused him many mildly agitating
+hopes by seeming always to avoid dramatic contact with him--for all
+meanings, we know, depend on the key of interpretation.
+
+Some persons might have thought beforehand that a young man of Anglican
+leanings, having a sense of sacredness much exercised on small things as
+well as great, rarely laughing save from politeness, and in general
+regarding the mention of spades by their naked names as rather coarse,
+would not have seen a fitting bride for himself in a girl who was daring
+in ridicule, and showed none of the special grace required in the
+clergyman's wife; or, that a young man informed by theological reading
+would have reflected that he was not likely to meet the taste of a lively,
+restless young lady like Miss Harleth. But are we always obliged to
+explain why the facts are not what some persons thought beforehand? The
+apology lies on their side, who had that erroneous way of thinking.
+
+As for Rex, who would possibly have been sorry for poor Middleton if he
+had been aware of the excellent curate's inward conflict, he was too
+completely absorbed in a first passion to have observation for any person
+or thing. He did not observe Gwendolen; he only felt what she said or did,
+and the back of his head seemed to be a good organ of information as to
+whether she was in the room or out. Before the end of the first fortnight
+he was so deeply in love that it was impossible for him to think of his
+life except as bound up with Gwendolen's. He could see no obstacles, poor
+boy; his own love seemed a guarantee of hers, since it was one with the
+unperturbed delight in her image, so that he could no more dream of her
+giving him pain than an Egyptian could dream of snow. She sang and played
+to him whenever he liked, was always glad of his companionship in riding,
+though his borrowed steeds were often comic, was ready to join in any fun
+of his, and showed a right appreciation of Anna. No mark of sympathy
+seemed absent. That because Gwendolen was the most perfect creature in the
+world she was to make a grand match, had not occurred to him. He had no
+conceit--at least not more than goes to make up the necessary gum and
+consistence of a substantial personality: it was only that in the young
+bliss of loving he took Gwendolen's perfection as part of that good which
+had seemed one with life to him, being the outcome of a happy, well-
+embodied nature.
+
+One incident which happened in the course of their dramatic attempts
+impressed Rex as a sign of her unusual sensibility. It showed an aspect of
+her nature which could not have been preconceived by any one who, like
+him, had only seen her habitual fearlessness in active exercises and her
+high spirits in society.
+
+After a good deal of rehearsing it was resolved that a select party should
+be invited to Offendene to witness the performances which went with so
+much satisfaction to the actors. Anna had caused a pleasant surprise;
+nothing could be neater than the way in which she played her little parts;
+one would even have suspected her of hiding much sly observation under her
+simplicity. And Mr. Middleton answered very well by not trying to be
+comic. The main source of doubt and retardation had been Gwendolen's
+desire to appear in her Greek dress. No word for a charade would occur to
+her either waking or dreaming that suited her purpose of getting a
+statuesque pose in this favorite costume. To choose a motive from Racine
+was of no use, since Rex and the others could not declaim French verse,
+and improvised speeches would turn the scene into burlesque. Besides, Mr.
+Gascoigne prohibited the acting of scenes from plays: he usually protested
+against the notion that an amusement which was fitting for every one else
+was unfitting for a clergyman; but he would not in this matter overstep
+the line of decorum as drawn in that part of Wessex, which did not exclude
+his sanction of the young people's acting charades in his sister-in-law's
+house--a very different affair from private theatricals in the full sense
+of the word.
+
+Everybody of course was concerned to satisfy this wish of Gwendolen's, and
+Rex proposed that they should wind up with a tableau in which the effect
+of her majesty would not be marred by any one's speech. This pleased her
+thoroughly, and the only question was the choice of the tableau.
+
+"Something pleasant, children, I beseech you," said Mrs. Davilow; "I can't
+have any Greek wickedness."
+
+"It is no worse than Christian wickedness, mamma," said Gwendolen, whose
+mention of Rachelesque heroines had called forth that remark.
+
+"And less scandalous," said Rex. "Besides, one thinks of it as all gone by
+and done with. What do you say to Briseis being led away? I would be
+Achilles, and you would be looking round at me--after the print we have at
+the rectory."
+
+"That would be a good attitude for me," said Gwendolen, in a tone of
+acceptance. But afterward she said with decision, "No. It will not do.
+There must be three men in proper costume, else it will be ridiculous."
+
+"I have it," said Rex, after a little reflection. "Hermione as the statue
+in Winter's Tale? I will be Leontes, and Miss Merry, Paulina, one on each
+side. Our dress won't signify," he went on laughingly; "it will be more
+Shakespearian and romantic if Leontes looks like Napoleon, and Paulina
+like a modern spinster."
+
+And Hermione was chosen; all agreeing that age was of no consequence, but
+Gwendolen urged that instead of the mere tableau there should be just
+enough acting of the scene to introduce the striking up of the music as a
+signal for her to step down and advance; when Leontes, instead of
+embracing her, was to kneel and kiss the hem of her garment, and so the
+curtain was to fall. The antechamber with folding doors lent itself
+admirably to the purpose of a stage, and the whole of the establishment,
+with the addition of Jarrett the village carpenter, was absorbed in the
+preparations for an entertainment, which, considering that it was an
+imitation of acting, was likely to be successful, since we know from
+ancient fable that an imitation may have more chance of success than the
+original.
+
+Gwendolen was not without a special exultation in the prospect of this
+occasion, for she knew that Herr Klesmer was again at Quetcham, and she
+had taken care to include him among the invited.
+
+Klesmer came. He was in one of his placid, silent moods, and sat in serene
+contemplation, replying to all appeals in benignant-sounding syllables
+more or less articulate--as taking up his cross meekly in a world
+overgrown with amateurs, or as careful how he moved his lion paws lest he
+should crush a rampant and vociferous mouse.
+
+Everything indeed went off smoothly and according to expectation--all that
+was improvised and accidental being of a probable sort--until the incident
+occurred which showed Gwendolen in an unforeseen phase of emotion. How it
+came about was at first a mystery.
+
+The tableau of Hermione was doubly striking from its dissimilarity with
+what had gone before: it was answering perfectly, and a murmur of applause
+had been gradually suppressed while Leontes gave his permission that
+Paulina should exercise her utmost art and make the statue move.
+
+Hermione, her arm resting on a pillar, was elevated by about six inches,
+which she counted on as a means of showing her pretty foot and instep,
+when at the given signal she should advance and descend.
+
+"Music, awake her, strike!" said Paulina (Mrs. Davilow, who, by special
+entreaty, had consented to take the part in a white burnous and hood).
+
+Herr Klesmer, who had been good-natured enough to seat himself at the
+piano, struck a thunderous chord--but in the same instant, and before
+Hermione had put forth her foot, the movable panel, which was on a line
+with the piano, flew open on the right opposite the stage and disclosed
+the picture of the dead face and the fleeing figure, brought out in pale
+definiteness by the position of the wax-lights. Everyone was startled, but
+all eyes in the act of turning toward the open panel were recalled by a
+piercing cry from Gwendolen, who stood without change of attitude, but
+with a change of expression that was terrifying in its terror. She looked
+like a statue into which a soul of Fear had entered: her pallid lips were
+parted; her eyes, usually narrowed under their long lashes, were dilated
+and fixed. Her mother, less surprised than alarmed, rushed toward her, and
+Rex, too, could not help going to her side. But the touch of her mother's
+arm had the effect of an electric charge; Gwendolen fell on her knees and
+put her hands before her face. She was still trembling, but mute, and it
+seemed that she had self-consciousness enough to aim at controlling her
+signs of terror, for she presently allowed herself to be raised from her
+kneeling posture and led away, while the company were relieving their
+minds by explanation.
+
+"A magnificent bit of _plastik_ that!" said Klesmer to Miss Arrowpoint.
+And a quick fire of undertoned question and answer went round.
+
+"Was it part of the play?"
+
+"Oh, no, surely not. Miss Harleth was too much affected. A sensitive
+creature!"
+
+"Dear me! I was not aware that there was a painting behind that panel;
+were you?"
+
+"No; how should I? Some eccentricity in one of the Earl's family long ago,
+I suppose."
+
+"How very painful! Pray shut it up."
+
+"Was the door locked? It is very mysterious. It must be the spirits."
+
+"But there is no medium present."
+
+"How do you know that? We must conclude that there is, when such things
+happen."
+
+"Oh, the door was not locked; it was probably the sudden vibration from
+the piano that sent it open."
+
+This conclusion came from Mr. Gascoigne, who begged Miss Merry if possible
+to get the key. But this readiness to explain the mystery was thought by
+Mrs. Vulcany unbecoming in a clergyman, and she observed in an undertone
+that Mr. Gascoigne was always a little too worldly for her taste. However,
+the key was produced, and the rector turned it in the lock with an
+emphasis rather offensively rationalizing--as who should say, "it will not
+start open again"--putting the key in his pocket as a security.
+
+However, Gwendolen soon reappeared, showing her usual spirits, and
+evidently determined to ignore as far as she could the striking change she
+had made in the part of Hermione.
+
+But when Klesmer said to her, "We have to thank you for devising a perfect
+climax: you could not have chosen a finer bit of _plastik_," there was a
+flush of pleasure in her face. She liked to accept as a belief what was
+really no more than delicate feigning. He divined that the betrayal into a
+passion of fear had been mortifying to her, and wished her to understand
+that he took it for good acting. Gwendolen cherished the idea that now he
+was struck with her talent as well as her beauty, and her uneasiness about
+his opinion was half turned to complacency.
+
+But too many were in the secret of what had been included in the
+rehearsals, and what had not, and no one besides Klesmer took the trouble
+to soothe Gwendolen's imagined mortification. The general sentiment was
+that the incident should be let drop.
+
+There had really been a medium concerned in the starting open of the
+panel: one who had quitted the room in haste and crept to bed in much
+alarm of conscience. It was the small Isabel, whose intense curiosity,
+unsatisfied by the brief glimpse she had had of the strange picture on the
+day of arrival at Offendene, had kept her on the watch for an opportunity
+of finding out where Gwendolen had put the key, of stealing it from the
+discovered drawer when the rest of the family were out, and getting on a
+stool to unlock the panel. While she was indulging her thirst for
+knowledge in this way, a noise which she feared was an approaching
+footstep alarmed her: she closed the door and attempted hurriedly to lock
+it, but failing and not daring to linger, she withdrew the key and trusted
+that the panel would stick, as it seemed well inclined to do. In this
+confidence she had returned the key to its former place, stilling any
+anxiety by the thought that if the door were discovered to be unlocked
+nobody would know how the unlocking came about. The inconvenient Isabel,
+like other offenders, did not foresee her own impulse to confession, a
+fatality which came upon her the morning after the party, when Gwendolen
+said at the breakfast-table, "I know the door was locked before the
+housekeeper gave me the key, for I tried it myself afterward. Some one
+must have been to my drawer and taken the key."
+
+It seemed to Isabel that Gwendolen's awful eyes had rested on her more
+than on the other sisters, and without any time for resolve, she said,
+with a trembling lip:
+
+"Please forgive me, Gwendolen."
+
+The forgiveness was sooner bestowed than it would have been if Gwendolen
+had not desired to dismiss from her own and every one else's memory any
+case in which she had shown her susceptibility to terror. She wondered at
+herself in these occasional experiences, which seemed like a brief
+remembered madness, an unexplained exception from her normal life; and in
+this instance she felt a peculiar vexation that her helpless fear had
+shown itself, not, as usual, in solitude, but in well-lit company. Her
+ideal was to be daring in speech and reckless in braving dangers, both
+moral and physical; and though her practice fell far behind her ideal,
+this shortcoming seemed to be due to the pettiness of circumstances, the
+narrow theatre which life offers to a girl of twenty, who cannot conceive
+herself as anything else than a lady, or as in any position which would
+lack the tribute of respect. She had no permanent consciousness of other
+fetters, or of more spiritual restraints, having always disliked whatever
+was presented to her under the name of religion, in the same way that some
+people dislike arithmetic and accounts: it had raised no other emotion in
+her, no alarm, no longing; so that the question whether she believed it
+had not occurred to her any more than it had occurred to her to inquire
+into the conditions of colonial property and banking, on which, as she had
+had many opportunities of knowing, the family fortune was dependent. All
+these facts about herself she would have been ready to admit, and even,
+more or less indirectly, to state. What she unwillingly recognized, and
+would have been glad for others to be unaware of, was that liability of
+hers to fits of spiritual dread, though this fountain of awe within her
+had not found its way into connection with the religion taught her or with
+any human relations. She was ashamed and frightened, as at what might
+happen again, in remembering her tremor on suddenly feeling herself alone,
+when, for example, she was walking without companionship and there came
+some rapid change in the light. Solitude in any wide scene impressed her
+with an undefined feeling of immeasurable existence aloof from her, in the
+midst of which she was helplessly incapable of asserting herself. The
+little astronomy taught her at school used sometimes to set her
+imagination at work in a way that made her tremble: but always when some
+one joined her she recovered her indifference to the vastness in which she
+seemed an exile; she found again her usual world in which her will was of
+some avail, and the religious nomenclature belonging to this world was no
+more identified for her with those uneasy impressions of awe than her
+uncle's surplices seen out of use at the rectory. With human ears and eyes
+about her, she had always hitherto recovered her confidence, and felt the
+possibility of winning empire.
+
+To her mamma and others her fits of timidity or terror were sufficiently
+accounted for by her "sensitiveness" or the "excitability of her nature";
+but these explanatory phrases required conciliation with much that seemed
+to be blank indifference or rare self-mastery. Heat is a great agent and a
+useful word, but considered as a means of explaining the universe it
+requires an extensive knowledge of differences; and as a means of
+explaining character "sensitiveness" is in much the same predicament. But
+who, loving a creature like Gwendolen, would not be inclined to regard
+every peculiarity in her as a mark of preeminence? That was what Rex did.
+After the Hermione scene he was more persuaded than ever that she must be
+instinct with all feeling, and not only readier to respond to a worshipful
+love, but able to love better than other girls. Rex felt the summer on his
+young wings and soared happily.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ "_Perigot_. As the bonny lasse passed by,
+ _Willie_. Hey, ho, bonnilasse!
+ _P_. She roode at me with glauncing eye,
+ _W_. As clear as the crystal glasse.
+ _P_. All as the sunny beame so bright,
+ _W_. Hey, ho, the sunnebeame!
+ _P_. Glaunceth from Phoebus' face forthright,
+ _W_. So love into thy heart did streame."
+ --SPENSER: _Shepard's Calendar_.
+
+ "The kindliest symptom, yet the most alarming crisis in the ticklish
+ state of youth; the nourisher and destroyer of hopeful wits; * * * the
+ servitude above freedom; the gentle mind's religion; the liberal
+ superstition."--CHARLES LAMB.
+
+
+The first sign of the unimagined snow-storm was like the transparent white
+cloud that seems to set off the blue. Anna was in the secret of Rex's
+feeling; though for the first time in their lives he had said nothing to
+her about what he most thought of, and he only took it for granted that
+she knew it. For the first time, too, Anna could not say to Rex what was
+continually in her mind. Perhaps it might have been a pain which she would
+have had to conceal, that he should so soon care for some one else more
+than for herself, if such a feeling had not been thoroughly neutralized by
+doubt and anxiety on his behalf. Anna admired her cousin--would have said
+with simple sincerity, "Gwendolen is always very good to me," and held it
+in the order of things for herself to be entirely subject to this cousin;
+but she looked at her with mingled fear and distrust, with a puzzled
+contemplation as of some wondrous and beautiful animal whose nature was a
+mystery, and who, for anything Anna knew, might have an appetite for
+devouring all the small creatures that were her own particular pets. And
+now Anna's heart was sinking under the heavy conviction which she dared
+not utter, that Gwendolen would never care for Rex. What she herself held
+in tenderness and reverence had constantly seemed indifferent to
+Gwendolen, and it was easier to imagine her scorning Rex than returning
+any tenderness of his. Besides, she was always thinking of being something
+extraordinary. And poor Rex! Papa would be angry with him if he knew. And
+of course he was too young to be in love in that way; and she, Anna had
+thought that it would be years and years before any thing of that sort
+came, and that she would be Rex's housekeeper ever so long. But what a
+heart must that be which did not return his love! Anna, in the prospect of
+his suffering, was beginning to dislike her too fascinating cousin.
+
+It seemed to her, as it did to Rex, that the weeks had been filled with a
+tumultuous life evident to all observers: if he had been questioned on the
+subject he would have said that he had no wish to conceal what he hoped
+would be an engagement which he should immediately tell his father of: and
+yet for the first time in his life he was reserved not only about his
+feelings but--which was more remarkable to Anna--about certain actions.
+She, on her side, was nervous each time her father or mother began to
+speak to her in private lest they should say anything about Rex and
+Gwendolen. But the elders were not in the least alive to this agitating
+drama, which went forward chiefly in a sort of pantomime extremely lucid
+in the minds thus expressing themselves, but easily missed by spectators
+who were running their eyes over the _Guardian_ or the _Clerical Gazette_,
+and regarded the trivialities of the young ones with scarcely more
+interpretation than they gave to the action of lively ants.
+
+"Where are you going, Rex?" said Anna one gray morning when her father had
+set off in his carriage to the sessions, Mrs. Gascoigne with him, and she
+had observed that her brother had on his antigropelos, the utmost approach
+he possessed to a hunting equipment.
+
+"Going to see the hounds throw off at the Three Barns."
+
+"Are you going to take Gwendolen?" said Anna, timidly.
+
+"She told you, did she?"
+
+"No, but I thought--Does papa know you are going?"
+
+"Not that I am aware of. I don't suppose he would trouble himself about
+the matter."
+
+"You are going to use his horse?"
+
+"He knows I do that whenever I can."
+
+"Don't let Gwendolen ride after the hounds, Rex," said Anna, whose fears
+gifted her with second-sight.
+
+"Why not?" said Rex, smiling rather provokingly.
+
+"Papa and mamma and aunt Davilow all wish her not to. They think it is not
+right for her."
+
+"Why should you suppose she is going to do what is not right?"
+
+"Gwendolen minds nobody sometimes," said Anna getting bolder by dint of a
+little anger.
+
+"Then she would not mind me," said Rex, perversely making a joke of poor
+Anna's anxiety.
+
+"Oh Rex, I cannot bear it. You will make yourself very unhappy." Here Anna
+burst into tears.
+
+"Nannie, Nannie, what on earth is the matter with you?" said Rex, a little
+impatient at being kept in this way, hat on and whip in hand.
+
+"She will not care for you one bit--I know she never will!" said the poor
+child in a sobbing whisper. She had lost all control of herself.
+
+Rex reddened and hurried away from her out of the hall door, leaving her
+to the miserable consciousness of having made herself disagreeable in
+vain.
+
+He did think of her words as he rode along; they had the unwelcomeness
+which all unfavorable fortune-telling has, even when laughed at; but he
+quickly explained them as springing from little Anna's tenderness, and
+began to be sorry that he was obliged to come away without soothing her.
+Every other feeling on the subject, however, was quickly merged in a
+resistant belief to the contrary of hers, accompanied with a new
+determination to prove that he was right. This sort of certainty had just
+enough kinship to doubt and uneasiness to hurry on a confession which an
+untouched security might have delayed.
+
+Gwendolen was already mounted and riding up and down the avenue when Rex
+appeared at the gate. She had provided herself against disappointment in
+case he did not appear in time by having the groom ready behind her, for
+she would not have waited beyond a reasonable time. But now the groom was
+dismissed, and the two rode away in delightful freedom. Gwendolen was in
+her highest spirits, and Rex thought that she had never looked so lovely
+before; her figure, her long white throat, and the curves of her cheek and
+chin were always set off to perfection by the compact simplicity of her
+riding dress. He could not conceive a more perfect girl; and to a youthful
+lover like Rex it seems that the fundamental identity of the good, the
+true and the beautiful, is already extant and manifest in the object of
+his love. Most observers would have held it more than equally accountable
+that a girl should have like impressions about Rex, for in his handsome
+face there was nothing corresponding to the undefinable stinging quality--
+as it were a trace of demon ancestry--which made some beholders hesitate
+in their admiration of Gwendolen.
+
+It was an exquisite January morning in which there was no threat of rain,
+but a gray sky making the calmest background for the charms of a mild
+winter scene--the grassy borders of the lanes, the hedgerows sprinkled
+with red berries and haunted with low twitterings, the purple bareness of
+the elms, the rich brown of the furrows. The horses' hoofs made a musical
+chime, accompanying their young voices. She was laughing at his equipment,
+for he was the reverse of a dandy, and he was enjoying her laughter; the
+freshness of the morning mingled with the freshness of their youth; and
+every sound that came from their clear throats, every glance they gave
+each other, was the bubbling outflow from a spring of joy. It was all
+morning to them, within and without. And thinking of them in these moments
+one is tempted to that futile sort of wishing--if only things could have
+been a little otherwise then, so as to have been greatly otherwise after--
+if only these two beautiful young creatures could have pledged themselves
+to each other then and there, and never through life have swerved from
+that pledge! For some of the goodness which Rex believed in was there.
+Goodness is a large, often a prospective word; like harvest, which at one
+stage when we talk of it lies all underground, with an indeterminate
+future; is the germ prospering in the darkness? at another, it has put
+forth delicate green blades, and by-and-by the trembling blossoms are
+ready to be dashed off by an hour of rough wind or rain. Each stage has
+its peculiar blight, and may have the healthy life choked out of it by a
+particular action of the foul land which rears or neighbors it, or by
+damage brought from foulness afar.
+
+"Anna had got it into her head that you would want to ride after the
+hounds this morning," said Rex, whose secret associations with Anna's
+words made this speech seem quite perilously near the most momentous of
+subjects.
+
+"Did she?" said Gwendolen, laughingly. "What a little clairvoyant she is!"
+
+"Shall you?" said Rex, who had not believed in her intending to do it if
+the elders objected, but confided in her having good reasons.
+
+"I don't know. I can't tell what I shall do till I get there. Clairvoyants
+are often wrong: they foresee what is likely. I am not fond of what is
+likely: it is always dull. I do what is unlikely."
+
+"Ah, there you tell me a secret. When once I knew what people in general
+would be likely to do, I should know you would do the opposite. So you
+would have come round to a likelihood of your own sort. I shall be able to
+calculate on you. You couldn't surprise me."
+
+"Yes, I could. I should turn round and do what was likely for people in
+general," said Gwendolen, with a musical laugh.
+
+"You see you can't escape some sort of likelihood. And contradictoriness
+makes the strongest likelihood of all. You must give up a plan."
+
+"No, I shall not. My plan is to do what pleases me." (Here should any
+young lady incline to imitate Gwendolen, let her consider the set of her
+head and neck: if the angle there had been different, the chin protrusive,
+and the cervical vertebrae a trifle more curved in their position, ten to
+one Gwendolen's words would have had a jar in them for the sweet-natured
+Rex. But everything odd in her speech was humor and pretty banter, which
+he was only anxious to turn toward one point.)
+
+"Can you manage to feel only what pleases you?" said he.
+
+"Of course not; that comes from what other people do. But if the world
+were pleasanter, one would only feel what was pleasant. Girls' lives are
+so stupid: they never do what they like."
+
+"I thought that was more the case of the men. They are forced to do hard
+things, and are often dreadfully bored, and knocked to pieces too. And
+then, if we love a girl very dearly we want to do as she likes, so after
+all you have your own way."
+
+"I don't believe it. I never saw a married woman who had her own way."
+
+"What should you like to do?" said Rex, quite guilelessly, and in real
+anxiety.
+
+"Oh, I don't know!--go to the North Pole, or ride steeple-chases, or go to
+be a queen in the East like Lady Hester Stanhope," said Gwendolen,
+flightily. Her words were born on her lips, but she would have been at a
+loss to give an answer of deeper origin.
+
+"You don't mean you would never be married?"
+
+"No; I didn't say that. Only when I married, I should not do as other
+women do."
+
+"You might do just as you liked if you married a man who loved you more
+dearly than anything else in the world," said Rex, who, poor youth, was
+moving in themes outside the curriculum in which he had promised to win
+distinction. "I know one who does."
+
+"Don't talk of Mr. Middleton, for heaven's sake," said Gwendolen, hastily,
+a quick blush spreading over her face and neck; "that is Anna's chant. I
+hear the hounds. Let us go on."
+
+She put her chestnut to a canter, and Rex had no choice but to follow her.
+Still he felt encouraged. Gwendolen was perfectly aware that her cousin
+was in love with her; but she had no idea that the matter was of any
+consequence, having never had the slightest visitation of painful love
+herself. She wished the small romance of Rex's devotion to fill up the
+time of his stay at Pennicote, and to avoid explanations which would bring
+it to an untimely end. Besides, she objected, with a sort of physical
+repulsion, to being directly made love to. With all her imaginative
+delight in being adored, there was a certain fierceness of maidenhood in
+her.
+
+But all other thoughts were soon lost for her in the excitement of the
+scene at the Three Barns. Several gentlemen of the hunt knew her, and she
+exchanged pleasant greetings. Rex could not get another word with her. The
+color, the stir of the field had taken possession of Gwendolen with a
+strength which was not due to habitual associations, for she had never yet
+ridden after the hounds--only said she should like to do it, and so drawn
+forth a prohibition; her mamma dreading the danger, and her uncle
+declaring that for his part he held that kind of violent exercise unseemly
+in a woman, and that whatever might be done in other parts of the country,
+no lady of good position followed the Wessex hunt: no one but Mrs. Gadsby,
+the yeomanry captain's wife, who had been a kitchenmaid and still spoke
+like one. This last argument had some effect on Gwendolen, and had kept
+her halting between her desire to assert her freedom and her horror of
+being classed with Mrs. Gadsby.
+
+Some of the most unexceptionable women in the neighborhood occasionally
+went to see the hounds throws off; but it happened that none of them were
+present this morning to abstain from following, while Mrs. Gadsby, with
+her doubtful antecedents, grammatical and otherwise, was not visible to
+make following seem unbecoming. Thus Gwendolen felt no check on the animal
+stimulus that came from the stir and tongue of the hounds, the pawing of
+the horses, the varying voices of men, the movement hither and thither of
+vivid color on the background of green and gray stillness:--that utmost
+excitement of the coming chase which consists in feeling something like a
+combination of dog and horse, with the superadded thrill of social
+vanities and consciousness of centaur-power which belongs to humankind.
+
+Rex would have felt more of the same enjoyment if he could have kept
+nearer to Gwendolen, and not seen her constantly occupied with
+acquaintances, or looked at by would-be acquaintances, all on lively
+horses which veered about and swept the surrounding space as effectually
+as a revolving lever.
+
+"Glad to see you here this fine morning, Miss Harleth," said Lord
+Brackenshaw, a middle-aged peer of aristocratic seediness in stained pink,
+with easy-going manners which would have made the threatened deluge seem
+of no consequence. "We shall have a first-rate run. A pity you didn't go
+with us. Have you ever tried your little chestnut at a ditch? you wouldn't
+be afraid, eh?"
+
+"Not the least in the world," said Gwendolen. And that was true: she was
+never fearful in action and companionship. "I have often taken him at some
+rails and a ditch too, near--"
+
+"Ah, by Jove!" said his lordship, quietly, in notation that something was
+happening which must break off the dialogue: and as he reined off his
+horse, Rex was bringing his sober hackney up to Gwendolen's side when--the
+hounds gave tongue, and the whole field was in motion as if the whirl of
+the earth were carrying it; Gwendolen along with everything else; no word
+of notice to Rex, who without a second thought followed too. Could he let
+Gwendolen go alone? under other circumstances he would have enjoyed the
+run, but he was just now perturbed by the check which had been put on the
+impetus to utter his love, and get utterance in return, an impetus which
+could not at once resolve itself into a totally different sort of chase,
+at least with the consciousness of being on his father's gray nag, a good
+horse enough in his way, but of sober years and ecclesiastical habits.
+Gwendolen on her spirited little chestnut was up with the best, and felt
+as secure as an immortal goddess, having, if she had thought of risk, a
+core of confidence that no ill luck would happen to her. But she thought
+of no such thing, and certainly not of any risk there might be for her
+cousin. If she had thought of him, it would have struck her as a droll
+picture that he should be gradually falling behind, and looking round in
+search of gates: a fine lithe youth, whose heart must be panting with all
+the spirit of a beagle, stuck as if under a wizard's spell on a stiff
+clerical hackney, would have made her laugh with a sense of fun much too
+strong for her to reflect on his mortification. But Gwendolen was apt to
+think rather of those who saw her than of those whom she could not see;
+and Rex was soon so far behind that if she had looked she would not have
+seen him. For I grieve to say that in the search for a gate, along a lane
+lately mended, Primrose fell, broke his knees, and undesignedly threw Rex
+over his head.
+
+Fortunately a blacksmith's son who also followed the hounds under
+disadvantages, namely, on foot (a loose way of hunting which had struck
+some even frivolous minds as immoral), was naturally also in the rear, and
+happened to be within sight of Rex's misfortune. He ran to give help which
+was greatly needed, for Rex was a great deal stunned, and the complete
+recovery of sensation came in the form of pain. Joel Dagge on this
+occasion showed himself that most useful of personages, whose knowledge is
+of a kind suited to the immediate occasion: he not only knew perfectly
+well what was the matter with the horse, how far they were both from the
+nearest public-house and from Pennicote Rectory, and could certify to Rex
+that his shoulder was only a bit out of joint, but also offered
+experienced surgical aid.
+
+"Lord, sir, let me shove it in again for you! I's seen Nash, the bone-
+setter, do it, and done it myself for our little Sally twice over. It's
+all one and the same, shoulders is. If you'll trusten to me and tighten
+your mind up a bit, I'll do it for you in no time."
+
+"Come then, old fellow," said Rex, who could tighten his mind better than
+his seat in the saddle. And Joel managed the operation, though not without
+considerable expense of pain to his patient, who turned so pitiably pale
+while tightening his mind, that Joel remarked, "Ah, sir, you aren't used
+to it, that's how it is. I's see lots and lots o' joints out. I see a man
+with his eye pushed out once--that was a rum go as ever I see. You can't
+have a bit o' fun wi'out such sort o' things. But it went in again. I's
+swallowed three teeth mysen, as sure as I'm alive. Now, sirrey" (this was
+addressed to Primrose), "come alonk--you musn't make believe as you
+can't."
+
+Joel being clearly a low character, it is, happily, not necessary to say
+more of him to the refined reader, than that he helped Rex to get home
+with as little delay as possible. There was no alternative but to get
+home, though all the while he was in anxiety about Gwendolen, and more
+miserable in the thought that she, too, might have had an accident, than
+in the pain of his own bruises and the annoyance he was about to cause his
+father. He comforted himself about her by reflecting that every one would
+be anxious to take care of her, and that some acquaintance would be sure
+to conduct her home.
+
+Mr. Gascoigne was already at home, and was writing letters in his study,
+when he was interrupted by seeing poor Rex come in with a face which was
+not the less handsome and ingratiating for being pale and a little
+distressed. He was secretly the favorite son, and a young portrait of the
+father; who, however, never treated him with any partiality--rather, with
+an extra rigor. Mr. Gascoigne having inquired of Anna, knew that Rex had
+gone with Gwendolen to the meet at the Three Barns.
+
+"What is the matter?" he said hastily, not laying down his pen.
+
+"I'm very sorry, sir; Primrose has fallen down and broken his knees."
+
+"Where have you been with him?" said Mr. Gascoigne, with a touch of
+severity. He rarely gave way to temper.
+
+"To the Three Barns to see the hounds throw off."
+
+"And you were fool enough to follow?"
+
+"Yes, sir. I didn't go at any fences, but the horse got his leg into a
+hole."
+
+"And you got hurt yourself, I hope, eh!"
+
+"I got my shoulder put out, but a young blacksmith put it in again for me.
+I'm just a little battered, that's all."
+
+"Well, sit down."
+
+"I'm very sorry about the horse, sir; I knew it would be a vexation to
+you."
+
+"And what has become of Gwendolen?" said Mr. Gascoigne, abruptly. Rex, who
+did not imagine that his father had made any inquiries about him, answered
+at first with a blush, which was the more remarkable for his previous
+paleness. Then he said, nervously--
+
+"I am anxious to know--I should like to go or send at once to Offendene--
+but she rides so well, and I think she would keep up--there would most
+likely be many round her."
+
+"I suppose it was she who led you on, eh?" said Mr. Gascoigne, laying down
+his pen, leaning back in his chair, and looking at Rex with more marked
+examination.
+
+"It was natural for her to want to go: she didn't intend it beforehand--
+she was led away by the spirit of the thing. And, of course, I went when
+she went."
+
+Mr. Gascoigne left a brief interval of silence, and then said, with quiet
+irony,--"But now you observe, young gentleman, that you are not furnished
+with a horse which will enable you to play the squire to your cousin. You
+must give up that amusement. You have spoiled my nag for me, and that is
+enough mischief for one vacation. I shall beg you to get ready to start
+for Southampton to-morrow and join Stilfox, till you go up to Oxford with
+him. That will be good for your bruises as well as your studies."
+
+Poor Rex felt his heart swelling and comporting itself as if it had been
+no better than a girl's.
+
+"I hope you will not insist on my going immediately, sir."
+
+"Do you feel too ill?"
+
+"No, not that--but--" here Rex bit his lips and felt the tears starting,
+to his great vexation; then he rallied and tried to say more firmly, "I
+want to go to Offendene, but I can go this evening."
+
+"I am going there myself. I can bring word about Gwendolen, if that is
+what you want."
+
+Rex broke down. He thought he discerned an intention fatal to his
+happiness, nay, his life. He was accustomed to believe in his father's
+penetration, and to expect firmness. "Father, I can't go away without
+telling her that I love her, and knowing that she loves me."
+
+Mr. Gascoigne was inwardly going through some self-rebuke for not being
+more wary, and was now really sorry for the lad; but every consideration
+was subordinate to that of using the wisest tactics in the case. He had
+quickly made up his mind and to answer the more quietly--
+
+"My dear boy, you are too young to be taking momentous, decisive steps of
+that sort. This is a fancy which you have got into your head during an
+idle week or two: you must set to work at something and dismiss it. There
+is every reason against it. An engagement at your age would be totally
+rash and unjustifiable; and moreover, alliances between first cousins are
+undesirable. Make up your mind to a brief disappointment. Life is full of
+them. We have all got to be broken in; and this is a mild beginning for
+you."
+
+"No, not mild. I can't bear it. I shall be good for nothing. I shouldn't
+mind anything, if it were settled between us. I could do anything then,"
+said Rex, impetuously. "But it's of no use to pretend that I will obey
+you. I can't do it. If I said I would, I should be sure to break my word.
+I should see Gwendolen again."
+
+"Well, wait till to-morrow morning, that we may talk of the matter again--
+you will promise me that," said Mr. Gascoigne, quietly; and Rex did not,
+could not refuse.
+
+The rector did not even tell his wife that he had any other reason for
+going to Offendene that evening than his desire to ascertain that
+Gwendolen had got home safely. He found her more than safe--elated. Mr.
+Quallon, who had won the brush, had delivered the trophy to her, and she
+had brought it before her, fastened on the saddle; more than that, Lord
+Brackenshaw had conducted her home, and had shown himself delighted with
+her spirited riding. All this was told at once to her uncle, that he might
+see how well justified she had been in acting against his advice; and the
+prudential rector did feel himself in a slight difficulty, for at that
+moment he was particularly sensible that it was his niece's serious
+interest to be well regarded by the Brackenshaws, and their opinion as to
+her following the hounds really touched the essence of his objection.
+However, he was not obliged to say anything immediately, for Mrs. Davilow
+followed up Gwendolen's brief triumphant phrases with--
+
+"Still, I do hope you will not do it again, Gwendolen. I should never have
+a moment's quiet. Her father died by an accident, you know."
+
+Here Mrs. Davilow had turned away from Gwendolen, and looked at Mr.
+Gascoigne.
+
+"Mamma, dear," said Gwendolen, kissing her merrily, and passing over the
+question of the fears which Mrs. Davilow had meant to account for,
+"children don't take after their parents in broken legs."
+
+Not one word had yet been said about Rex. In fact there had been no
+anxiety about him at Offendene. Gwendolen had observed to her mamma, "Oh,
+he must have been left far behind, and gone home in despair," and it could
+not be denied that this was fortunate so far as it made way for Lord
+Brackenshaw's bringing her home. But now Mr. Gascoigne said, with some
+emphasis, looking at Gwendolen--
+
+"Well, the exploit has ended better for you than for Rex."
+
+"Yes, I dare say he had to make a terrible round. You have not taught
+Primrose to take the fences, uncle," said Gwendolen, without the faintest
+shade of alarm in her looks and tone.
+
+"Rex has had a fall," said Mr. Gascoigne, curtly, throwing himself into an
+arm-chair resting his elbows and fitting his palms and fingers together,
+while he closed his lips and looked at Gwendolen, who said--
+
+"Oh, poor fellow! he is not hurt, I hope?" with a correct look of anxiety
+such as elated mortals try to super-induce when their pulses are all the
+while quick with triumph; and Mrs. Davilow, in the same moment, uttered a
+low "Good heavens! There!"
+
+Mr. Gascoigne went on: "He put his shoulder out, and got some bruises, I
+believe." Here he made another little pause of observation; but Gwendolen,
+instead of any such symptoms as pallor and silence, had only deepened the
+compassionateness of her brow and eyes, and said again, "Oh, poor fellow!
+it is nothing serious, then?" and Mr. Gascoigne held his diagnosis
+complete. But he wished to make assurance doubly sure, and went on still
+with a purpose.
+
+"He got his arm set again rather oddly. Some blacksmith--not a parishioner
+of mine--was on the field--a loose fish, I suppose, but handy, and set the
+arm for him immediately. So after all, I believe, I and Primrose come off
+worst. The horse's knees are cut to pieces. He came down in a hole, it
+seems, and pitched Rex over his head."
+
+Gwendolen's face had allowably become contented again, since Rex's arm had
+been reset; and now, at the descriptive suggestions in the latter part of
+her uncle's speech, her elated spirits made her features less unmanageable
+than usual; the smiles broke forth, and finally a descending scale of
+laughter.
+
+"You are a pretty young lady--to laugh at other people's calamities," said
+Mr. Gascoigne, with a milder sense of disapprobation than if he had not
+had counteracting reasons to be glad that Gwendolen showed no deep feeling
+on the occasion.
+
+"Pray forgive me, uncle. Now Rex is safe, it is so droll to fancy the
+figure he and Primrose would cut--in a lane all by themselves--only a
+blacksmith running up. It would make a capital caricature of 'Following
+the Hounds.'"
+
+Gwendolen rather valued herself on her superior freedom in laughing where
+others might only see matter for seriousness. Indeed, the laughter became
+her person so well that her opinion of its gracefulness was often shared
+by others; and it even entered into her uncle's course of thought at this
+moment, that it was no wonder a boy should be fascinated by this young
+witch--who, however, was more mischievous than could be desired.
+
+"How can you laugh at broken bones, child?" said Mrs. Davilow, still under
+her dominant anxiety. "I wish we had never allowed you to have the horse.
+You will see that we were wrong," she added, looking with a grave nod at
+Mr. Gascoigne--"at least I was, to encourage her in asking for it."
+
+"Yes, seriously, Gwendolen," said Mr. Gascoigne, in a judicious tone of
+rational advice to a person understood to be altogether rational, "I
+strongly recommend you--I shall ask you to oblige me so far--not to repeat
+your adventure of to-day. Lord Brackenshaw is very kind, but I feel sure
+that he would concur with me in what I say. To be spoken of as 'the young
+lady who hunts' by way of exception, would give a tone to the language
+about you which I am sure you would not like. Depend upon it, his lordship
+would not choose that Lady Beatrice or Lady Maria should hunt in this part
+of the country, if they were old enough to do so. When you are married, it
+will be different: you may do whatever your husband sanctions. But if you
+intend to hunt, you must marry a man who can keep horses."
+
+"I don't know why I should do anything so horrible as to marry without
+_that_ prospect, at least," said Gwendolen, pettishly. Her uncle's speech
+had given her annoyance, which she could not show more directly; but she
+felt that she was committing herself, and after moving carelessly to
+another part of the room, went out.
+
+"She always speaks in that way about marriage," said Mrs. Davilow; "but it
+will be different when she has seen the right person."
+
+"Her heart has never been in the least touched, that you know of?" said
+Mr. Gascoigne.
+
+Mrs. Davilow shook her head silently. "It was only last night she said to
+me, 'Mamma, I wonder how girls manage to fall in love. It is easy to make
+them do it in books. But men are too ridiculous.'"
+
+Mr. Gascoigne laughed a little, and made no further remark on the subject.
+The next morning at breakfast he said--
+
+"How are your bruises, Rex?"
+
+"Oh, not very mellow yet, sir; only beginning to turn a little."
+
+"You don't feel quite ready for a journey to Southampton?"
+
+"Not quite," answered Rex, with his heart metaphorically in his mouth.
+
+"Well, you can wait till to-morrow, and go to say goodbye to them at
+Offendene."
+
+Mrs. Gascoigne, who now knew the whole affair, looked steadily at her
+coffee lest she also should begin to cry, as Anna was doing already.
+
+Mr. Gascoigne felt that he was applying a sharp remedy to poor Rex's acute
+attack, but he believed it to be in the end the kindest. To let him know
+the hopelessness of his love from Gwendolen's own lips might be curative
+in more ways than one.
+
+"I can only be thankful that she doesn't care about him," said Mrs.
+Gascoigne, when she joined her husband in his study. "There are things in
+Gwendolen I cannot reconcile myself to. My Anna is worth two of her, with
+all her beauty and talent. It looks very ill in her that she will not help
+in the schools with Anna--not even in the Sunday-school. What you or I
+advise is of no consequence to her: and poor Fannie is completely under
+her thumb. But I know you think better of her," Mrs. Gascoigne ended with
+a deferential hesitation.
+
+"Oh, my dear, there is no harm in the girl. It is only that she has a high
+spirit, and it will not do to hold the reins too tight. The point is, to
+get her well married. She has a little too much fire in her for her
+present life with her mother and sisters. It is natural and right that she
+should be married soon--not to a poor man, but one who can give her a
+fitting position."
+
+Presently Rex, with his arm in a sling, was on his two miles' walk to
+Offendene. He was rather puzzled by the unconditional permission to see
+Gwendolen, but his father's real ground of action could not enter into his
+conjectures. If it had, he would first have thought it horribly cold-
+blooded, and then have disbelieved in his father's conclusions.
+
+When he got to the house, everybody was there but Gwendolen. The four
+girls, hearing him speak in the hall, rushed out of the library, which was
+their school-room, and hung round him with compassionate inquiries about
+his arm. Mrs. Davilow wanted to know exactly what had happened, and where
+the blacksmith lived, that she might make him a present; while Miss Merry,
+who took a subdued and melancholy part in all family affairs, doubted
+whether it would not be giving too much encouragement to that kind of
+character. Rex had never found the family troublesome before, but just now
+he wished them all away and Gwendolen there, and he was too uneasy for
+good-natured feigning. When at last he had said, "Where is Gwendolen?" and
+Mrs. Davilow had told Alice to go and see if her sister were come down,
+adding, "I sent up her breakfast this morning. She needed a long rest."
+Rex took the shortest way out of his endurance by saying, almost
+impatiently, "Aunt, I want to speak to Gwendolen--I want to see her
+alone."
+
+"Very well, dear; go into the drawing-room. I will send her there," said
+Mrs. Davilow, who had observed that he was fond of being with Gwendolen,
+as was natural, but had not thought of this as having any bearing on the
+realities of life: it seemed merely part of the Christmas holidays which
+were spinning themselves out.
+
+Rex for his part thought that the realities of life were all hanging on
+this interview. He had to walk up and down the drawing-room in expectation
+for nearly ten minutes--ample space for all imaginative fluctuations; yet,
+strange to say, he was unvaryingly occupied in thinking what and how much
+he could do, when Gwendolen had accepted him, to satisfy his father that
+the engagement was the most prudent thing in the world, since it inspired
+him with double energy for work. He was to be a lawyer, and what reason
+was there why he should not rise as high as Eldon did? He was forced to
+look at life in the light of his father's mind.
+
+But when the door opened and she whose presence he was longing for
+entered, there came over him suddenly and mysteriously a state of tremor
+and distrust which he had never felt before. Miss Gwendolen, simple as she
+stood there, in her black silk, cut square about the round white pillar of
+her throat, a black band fastening her hair which streamed backward in
+smooth silky abundance, seemed more queenly than usual. Perhaps it was
+that there was none of the latent fun and tricksiness which had always
+pierced in her greeting of Rex. How much of this was due to her
+presentiment from what he had said yesterday that he was going to talk of
+love? How much from her desire to show regret about his accident?
+Something of both. But the wisdom of ages has hinted that there is a side
+of the bed which has a malign influence if you happen to get out on it;
+and this accident befalls some charming persons rather frequently. Perhaps
+it had befallen Gwendolen this morning. The hastening of her toilet, the
+way in which Bugle used the brush, the quality of the shilling serial
+mistakenly written for her amusement, the probabilities of the coming day,
+and, in short, social institutions generally, were all objectionable to
+her. It was not that she was out of temper, but that the world was not
+equal to the demands of her fine organism.
+
+However it might be, Rex saw an awful majesty about her as she entered and
+put out her hand to him, without the least approach to a smile in eyes or
+mouth. The fun which had moved her in the evening had quite evaporated
+from the image of his accident, and the whole affair seemed stupid to her.
+But she said with perfect propriety, "I hope you are not much hurt, Rex; I
+deserve that you should reproach me for your accident."
+
+"Not at all," said Rex, feeling the soul within him spreading itself like
+an attack of illness. "There is hardly any thing the matter with me. I am
+so glad you had the pleasure: I would willingly pay for it by a tumble,
+only I was sorry to break the horse's knees."
+
+Gwendolen walked to the hearth and stood looking at the fire in the most
+inconvenient way for conversation, so that he could only get a side view
+of her face.
+
+"My father wants me to go to Southampton for the rest of the vacation,"
+said Rex, his baritone trembling a little.
+
+"Southampton! That's a stupid place to go to, isn't it?" said Gwendolen,
+chilly.
+
+"It would be to me, because you would not be there." Silence.
+
+"Should you mind about me going away, Gwendolen?"
+
+"Of course. Every one is of consequence in this dreary country," said
+Gwendolen, curtly. The perception that poor Rex wanted to be tender made
+her curl up and harden like a sea-anemone at the touch of a finger.
+
+"Are you angry with me, Gwendolen? Why do you treat me in this way all at
+once?" said Rex, flushing, and with more spirit in his voice, as if he too
+were capable of being angry.
+
+Gwendolen looked round at him and smiled. "Treat you? Nonsense! I am only
+rather cross. Why did you come so very early? You must expect to find
+tempers in dishabille."
+
+"Be as cross with me as you like--only don't treat me with indifference,"
+said Rex, imploringly. "All the happiness of my life depends on your
+loving me--if only a little--better than any one else."
+
+He tried to take her hand, but she hastily eluded his grasp and moved to
+the other end of the hearth, facing him.
+
+"Pray don't make love to me! I hate it!" she looked at him fiercely.
+
+Rex turned pale and was silent, but could not take his eyes off her, and
+the impetus was not yet exhausted that made hers dart death at him.
+Gwendolen herself could not have foreseen that she should feel in this
+way. It was all a sudden, new experience to her. The day before she had
+been quite aware that her cousin was in love with her; she did not mind
+how much, so that he said nothing about it; and if any one had asked her
+why she objected to love-making speeches, she would have said, laughingly,
+"Oh I am tired of them all in the books." But now the life of passion had
+begun negatively in her. She felt passionately averse to this volunteered
+love.
+
+To Rex at twenty the joy of life seemed at an end more absolutely than it
+can do to a man at forty. But before they had ceased to look at each
+other, he did speak again.
+
+"Is that last word you have to say to me, Gwendolen? Will it always be
+so?"
+
+She could not help seeing his wretchedness and feeling a little regret for
+the old Rex who had not offended her. Decisively, but yet with some return
+of kindness, she said--
+
+"About making love? Yes. But I don't dislike you for anything else."
+
+There was just a perceptible pause before he said a low "good-bye." and
+passed out of the room. Almost immediately after, she heard the heavy hall
+door bang behind him.
+
+Mrs. Davilow, too, had heard Rex's hasty departure, and presently came
+into the drawing-room, where she found Gwendolen seated on the low couch,
+her face buried, and her hair falling over her figure like a garment. She
+was sobbing bitterly. "My child, my child, what is it?" cried the mother,
+who had never before seen her darling struck down in this way, and felt
+something of the alarmed anguish that women, feel at the sight of
+overpowering sorrow in a strong man; for this child had been her ruler.
+Sitting down by her with circling arms, she pressed her cheek against
+Gwendolen's head, and then tried to draw it upward. Gwendolen gave way,
+and letting her head rest against her mother, cried out sobbingly, "Oh,
+mamma, what can become of my life? There is nothing worth living for!"
+
+"Why, dear?" said Mrs. Davilow. Usually she herself had been rebuked by
+her daughter for involuntary signs of despair.
+
+"I shall never love anybody. I can't love people. I hate them."
+
+"The time will come, dear, the time will come."
+
+Gwendolen was more and more convulsed with sobbing; but putting her arms
+round her mother's neck with an almost painful clinging, she said
+brokenly, "I can't bear any one to be very near me but you."
+
+Then the mother began to sob, for this spoiled child had never shown such
+dependence on her before: and so they clung to each other.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ What name doth Joy most borrow
+ When life is fair?
+ "To-morrow."
+ What name doth best fit Sorrow
+ In young despair?
+ "To-morrow."
+
+
+There was a much more lasting trouble at the rectory. Rex arrived there
+only to throw himself on his bed in a state of apparent apathy, unbroken
+till the next day, when it began to be interrupted by more positive signs
+of illness. Nothing could be said about his going to Southampton: instead
+of that, the chief thought of his mother and Anna was how to tend this
+patient who did not want to be well, and from being the brightest, most
+grateful spirit in the household, was metamorphosed into an irresponsive,
+dull-eyed creature who met all affectionate attempts with a murmur of "Let
+me alone." His father looked beyond the crisis, and believed it to be the
+shortest way out of an unlucky affair; but he was sorry for the inevitable
+suffering, and went now and then to sit by him in silence for a few
+minutes, parting with a gentle pressure of his hand on Rex's blank brow,
+and a "God bless you, my boy." Warham and the younger children used to
+peep round the edge of the door to see this incredible thing of their
+lively brother being laid low; but fingers were immediately shaken at them
+to drive them back. The guardian who was always there was Anna, and her
+little hand was allowed to rest within her brother's, though he never gave
+it a welcoming pressure. Her soul was divided between anguish for Rex and
+reproach of Gwendolen.
+
+"Perhaps it is wicked of me, but I think I never _can_ love her again,"
+came as the recurrent burden of poor little Anna's inward monody. And even
+Mrs. Gascoigne had an angry feeling toward her niece which she could not
+refrain from expressing (apologetically) to her husband.
+
+"I know of course it is better, and we ought to be thankful that she is
+not in love with the poor boy; but really. Henry, I think she is hard; she
+has the heart of a coquette. I can not help thinking that she must have
+made him believe something, or the disappointment would not have taken
+hold of him in that way. And some blame attaches to poor Fanny; she is
+quite blind about that girl."
+
+Mr. Gascoigne answered imperatively: "The less said on that point the
+better, Nancy. I ought to have been more awake myself. As to the boy, be
+thankful if nothing worse ever happens to him. Let the thing die out as
+quickly as possible; and especially with regard to Gwendolen--let it be as
+if it had never been."
+
+The rector's dominant feeling was that there had been a great escape.
+Gwendolen in love with Rex in return would have made a much harder
+problem, the solution of which might have been taken out of his hands. But
+he had to go through some further difficulty.
+
+One fine morning Rex asked for his bath, and made his toilet as usual.
+Anna, full of excitement at this change, could do nothing but listen for
+his coming down, and at last hearing his step, ran to the foot of the
+stairs to meet him. For the first time he gave her a faint smile, but it
+looked so melancholy on his pale face that she could hardly help crying.
+
+"Nannie!" he said gently, taking her hand and leading her slowly along
+with him to the drawing-room. His mother was there, and when she came to
+kiss him, he said: "What a plague I am!"
+
+Then he sat still and looked out of the bow-window on the lawn and shrubs
+covered with hoar-frost, across which the sun was sending faint occasional
+gleams:--something like that sad smile on Rex's face, Anna thought. He
+felt as if he had had a resurrection into a new world, and did not know
+what to do with himself there, the old interests being left behind. Anna
+sat near him, pretending to work, but really watching him with yearning
+looks. Beyond the garden hedge there was a road where wagons and carts
+sometimes went on field-work: a railed opening was made in the hedge,
+because the upland with its bordering wood and clump of ash-trees against
+the sky was a pretty sight. Presently there came along a wagon laden with
+timber; the horses were straining their grand muscles, and the driver
+having cracked his whip, ran along anxiously to guide the leader's head,
+fearing a swerve. Rex seemed to be shaken into attention, rose and looked
+till the last quivering trunk of the timber had disappeared, and then
+walked once or twice along the room. Mrs. Gascoigne was no longer there,
+and when he came to sit down again, Anna, seeing a return of speech in her
+brother's eyes, could not resist the impulse to bring a little stool and
+seat herself against his knee, looking up at him with an expression which
+seemed to say, "Do speak to me." And he spoke.
+
+"I'll tell you what I'm thinking of, Nannie. I will go to Canada, or
+somewhere of that sort." (Rex had not studied the character of our
+colonial possessions.)
+
+"Oh, Rex, not for always!"
+
+"Yes, to get my bread there. I should like to build a hut, and work hard
+at clearing, and have everything wild about me, and a great wide quiet."
+
+"And not take me with you?" said Anna, the big tears coming fast.
+
+"How could I?"
+
+"I should like it better than anything; and settlers go with their
+families. I would sooner go there than stay here in England. I could make
+the fires, and mend the clothes, and cook the food; and I could learn how
+to make the bread before we went. It would be nicer than anything--like
+playing at life over again, as we used to do when we made our tent with
+the drugget, and had our little plates and dishes."
+
+"Father and mother would not let you go."
+
+"Yes, I think they would, when I explained everything. It would save
+money; and papa would have more to bring up the boys with."
+
+There was further talk of the same practical kind at intervals, and it
+ended in Rex's being obliged to consent that Anna should go with him when
+he spoke to his father on the subject.
+
+Of course it was when the rector was alone in his study. Their mother
+would become reconciled to whatever he decided on, but mentioned to her
+first, the question would have distressed her.
+
+"Well, my children!" said Mr. Gascoigne, cheerfully, as they entered. It
+was a comfort to see Rex about again.
+
+"May we sit down with you a little, papa?" said Anna. "Rex has something
+to say."
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+It was a noticeable group that these three creatures made, each of them
+with a face of the same structural type--the straight brow, the nose
+suddenly straightened from an intention of being aquiline, the short upper
+lip, the short but strong and well-hung chin: there was even the same tone
+of complexion and set of the eye. The gray-haired father was at once
+massive and keen-looking; there was a perpendicular line in his brow which
+when he spoke with any force of interest deepened; and the habit of ruling
+gave him an air of reserved authoritativeness. Rex would have seemed a
+vision of his father's youth, if it had been possible to imagine Mr.
+Gascoigne without distinct plans and without command, smitten with a heart
+sorrow, and having no more notion of concealment than a sick animal; and
+Anna was a tiny copy of Rex, with hair drawn back and knotted, her face
+following his in its changes of expression, as if they had one soul
+between them.
+
+"You know all about what has upset me, father," Rex began, and Mr.
+Gascoigne nodded.
+
+"I am quite done up for life in this part of the world. I am sure it will
+be no use my going back to Oxford. I couldn't do any reading. I should
+fail, and cause you expense for nothing. I want to have your consent to
+take another course, sir."
+
+Mr. Gascoigne nodded more slowly, the perpendicular line on his brow
+deepened, and Anna's trembling increased.
+
+"If you would allow me a small outfit, I should like to go to the colonies
+and work on the land there." Rex thought the vagueness of the phrase
+prudential; "the colonies" necessarily embracing more advantages, and
+being less capable of being rebutted on a single ground than any
+particular settlement.
+
+"Oh, and with me, papa," said Anna, not bearing to be left out from the
+proposal even temporarily. "Rex would want some one to take care of him,
+you know--some one to keep house. And we shall never, either of us, be
+married. And I should cost nothing, and I should be so happy. I know it
+would be hard to leave you and mamma; but there are all the others to
+bring up, and we two should be no trouble to you any more."
+
+Anna had risen from her seat, and used the feminine argument of going
+closer to her papa as she spoke. He did not smile, but he drew her on his
+knee and held her there, as if to put her gently out of the question while
+he spoke to Rex.
+
+"You will admit that my experience gives me some power of judging for you,
+and that I can probably guide you in practical matters better than you can
+guide yourself?"
+
+Rex was obliged to say, "Yes, sir."
+
+"And perhaps you will admit--though I don't wish to press that point--that
+you are bound in duty to consider my judgment and wishes?"
+
+"I have never yet placed myself in opposition to you, sir." Rex in his
+secret soul could not feel that he was bound not to go to the colonies,
+but to go to Oxford again--which was the point in question.
+
+"But you will do so if you persist in setting your mind toward a rash and
+foolish procedure, and deafening yourself to considerations which my
+experience of life assures me of. You think, I suppose, that you have had
+a shock which has changed all your inclinations, stupefied your brains,
+unfitted you for anything but manual labor, and given you a dislike to
+society? Is that what you believe?"
+
+"Something like that. I shall never be up to the sort of work I must do to
+live in this part of the world. I have not the spirit for it. I shall
+never be the same again. And without any disrespect to you, father, I
+think a young fellow should be allowed to choose his way of life, if he
+does nobody any harm. There are plenty to stay at home, and those who like
+might be allowed to go where there are empty places."
+
+"But suppose I am convinced on good evidence--as I am--that this state of
+mind of yours is transient, and that if you went off as you propose, you
+would by-and-by repent, and feel that you had let yourself slip back from
+the point you have been gaining by your education till now? Have you not
+strength of mind enough to see that you had better act on my assurance for
+a time, and test it? In my opinion, so far from agreeing with you that you
+should be free to turn yourself into a colonist and work in your shirt-
+sleeves with spade and hatchet--in my opinion you have no right whatever
+to expatriate yourself until you have honestly endeavored to turn to
+account the education you have received here. I say nothing of the grief
+to your mother and me."
+
+"I'm very sorry; but what can I do? I can't study--that's certain," said
+Rex.
+
+"Not just now, perhaps. You will have to miss a term. I have made
+arrangements for you--how you are to spend the next two months. But I
+confess I am disappointed in you, Rex. I thought you had more sense than
+to take up such ideas--to suppose that because you have fallen into a very
+common trouble, such as most men have to go through, you are loosened from
+all bonds of duty--just as if your brain had softened and you were no
+longer a responsible being."
+
+What could Rex say? Inwardly he was in a state of rebellion, but he had no
+arguments to meet his father's; and while he was feeling, in spite of any
+thing that might be said, that he should like to go off to "the colonies"
+to-morrow, it lay in a deep fold of his consciousness that he ought to
+feel--if he had been a better fellow he would have felt--more about his
+old ties. This is the sort of faith we live by in our soul sicknesses.
+
+Rex got up from his seat, as if he held the conference to be at an end.
+"You assent to my arrangement, then?" said Mr. Gascoigne, with that
+distinct resolution of tone which seems to hold one in a vise.
+
+There was a little pause before Rex answered, "I'll try what I can do,
+sir. I can't promise." His thought was, that trying would be of no use.
+
+Her father kept Anna, holding her fast, though she wanted to follow Rex.
+"Oh, papa," she said, the tears coming with her words when the door had
+closed; "it is very hard for him. Doesn't he look ill?"
+
+"Yes, but he will soon be better; it will all blow over. And now, Anna, be
+as quiet as a mouse about it all. Never let it be mentioned when he is
+gone."
+
+"No, papa. But I would not be like Gwendolen for any thing--to have people
+fall in love with me so. It is very dreadful."
+
+Anna dared not say that she was disappointed at not being allowed to go to
+the colonies with Rex; but that was her secret feeling, and she often
+afterward went inwardly over the whole affair, saying to herself, "I
+should have done with going out, and gloves, and crinoline, and having to
+talk when I am taken to dinner--and all that!"
+
+I like to mark the time, and connect the course of individual lives with
+the historic stream, for all classes of thinkers. This was the period when
+the broadening of gauge in crinolines seemed to demand an agitation for
+the general enlargement of churches, ball-rooms, and vehicles. But Anna
+Gascoigne's figure would only allow the size of skirt manufactured for
+young ladies of fourteen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ I'll tell thee, Berthold, what men's hopes are like:
+ A silly child that, quivering with joy,
+ Would cast its little mimic fishing-line
+ Baited with loadstone for a bowl of toys
+ In the salt ocean.
+
+
+Eight months after the arrival of the family at Offendene, that is to say
+in the end of the following June, a rumor was spread in the neighborhood
+which to many persons was matter of exciting interest. It had no reference
+to the results of the American war, but it was one which touched all
+classes within a certain circuit round Wanchester: the corn-factors, the
+brewers, the horse-dealers, and saddlers, all held it a laudable thing,
+and one which was to be rejoiced in on abstract grounds, as showing the
+value of an aristocracy in a free country like England; the blacksmith in
+the hamlet of Diplow felt that a good time had come round; the wives of
+laboring men hoped their nimble boys of ten or twelve would be taken into
+employ by the gentlemen in livery; and the farmers about Diplow admitted,
+with a tincture of bitterness and reserve that a man might now again
+perhaps have an easier market or exchange for a rick of old hay or a
+wagon-load of straw. If such were the hopes of low persons not in society,
+it may be easily inferred that their betters had better reasons for
+satisfaction, probably connected with the pleasures of life rather than
+its business. Marriage, however, must be considered as coming under both
+heads; and just as when a visit of majesty is announced, the dream of
+knighthood or a baronetcy is to be found under various municipal
+nightcaps, so the news in question raised a floating indeterminate vision
+of marriage in several well-bred imaginations.
+
+The news was that Diplow Hall, Sir Hugo Mallinger's place, which had for a
+couple of years turned its white window-shutters in a painfully wall-eyed
+manner on its fine elms and beeches, its lilied pool and grassy acres
+specked with deer, was being prepared for a tenant, and was for the rest
+of the summer and through the hunting season to be inhabited in a fitting
+style both as to house and stable. But not by Sir Hugo himself: by his
+nephew, Mr. Mallinger Grandcourt, who was presumptive heir to the
+baronetcy, his uncle's marriage having produced nothing but girls. Nor was
+this the only contingency with which fortune flattered young Grandcourt,
+as he was pleasantly called; for while the chance of the baronetcy came
+through his father, his mother had given a baronial streak to his blood,
+so that if certain intervening persons slightly painted in the middle
+distance died, he would become a baron and peer of this realm.
+
+It is the uneven allotment of nature that the male bird alone has the
+tuft, but we have not yet followed the advice of hasty philosophers who
+would have us copy nature entirely in these matters; and if Mr. Mallinger
+Grandcourt became a baronet or a peer, his wife would share the title--
+which in addition to his actual fortune was certainly a reason why that
+wife, being at present unchosen, should be thought of by more than one
+person with a sympathetic interest as a woman sure to be well provided
+for.
+
+Some readers of this history will doubtless regard it as incredible that
+people should construct matrimonial prospects on the mere report that a
+bachelor of good fortune and possibilities was coming within reach, and
+will reject the statement as a mere outflow of gall: they will aver that
+neither they nor their first cousins have minds so unbridled; and that in
+fact this is not human nature, which would know that such speculations
+might turn out to be fallacious, and would therefore not entertain them.
+But, let it be observed, nothing is here narrated of human nature
+generally: the history in its present stage concerns only a few people in
+a corner of Wessex--whose reputation, however, was unimpeached, and who, I
+am in the proud position of being able to state, were all on visiting
+terms with persons of rank.
+
+There were the Arrowpoints, for example, in their beautiful place at
+Quetcham: no one could attribute sordid views in relation to their
+daughter's marriage to parents who could leave her at least half a
+million; but having affectionate anxieties about their Catherine's
+position (she having resolutely refused Lord Slogan, an unexceptionable
+Irish peer, whose estate wanted nothing but drainage and population), they
+wondered, perhaps from something more than a charitable impulse, whether
+Mr. Grandcourt was good-looking, of sound constitution, virtuous, or at
+least reformed, and if liberal-conservative, not too liberal-conservative;
+and without wishing anybody to die, thought his succession to the title an
+event to be desired.
+
+If the Arrowpoints had such ruminations, it is the less surprising that
+they were stimulated in Mr. Gascoigne, who for being a clergyman was not
+the less subject to the anxieties of a parent and guardian; and we have
+seen how both he and Mrs. Gascoigne might by this time have come to feel
+that he was overcharged with the management of young creatures who were
+hardly to be held in with bit or bridle, or any sort of metaphor that
+would stand for judicious advice.
+
+Naturally, people did not tell each other all they felt and thought about
+young Grandcourt's advent: on no subject is this openness found prudently
+practicable--not even on the generation of acids, or the destination of
+the fixed stars: for either your contemporary with a mind turned toward
+the same subjects may find your ideas ingenious and forestall you in
+applying them, or he may have other views on acids and fixed stars, and
+think ill of you in consequence. Mr. Gascoigne did not ask Mr. Arrowpoint
+if he had any trustworthy source of information about Grandcourt
+considered as a husband for a charming girl; nor did Mrs. Arrowpoint
+observe to Mrs. Davilow that if the possible peer sought a wife in the
+neighborhood of Diplow, the only reasonable expectation was that he would
+offer his hand to Catherine, who, however, would not accept him unless he
+were in all respects fitted to secure her happiness. Indeed, even to his
+wife the rector was silent as to the contemplation of any matrimonial
+result, from the probability that Mr. Grandcourt would see Gwendolen at
+the next Archery Meeting; though Mrs. Gascoigne's mind was very likely
+still more active in the same direction. She had said interjectionally to
+her sister, "It would be a mercy, Fanny, if that girl were well married!"
+to which Mrs. Davilow discerning some criticism of her darling in the
+fervor of that wish, had not chosen to make any audible reply, though she
+had said inwardly, "You will not get her to marry for your pleasure"; the
+mild mother becoming rather saucy when she identified herself with her
+daughter.
+
+To her husband Mrs. Gascoigne said, "I hear Mr. Grandcourt has got two
+places of his own, but he comes to Diplow for the hunting. It is to be
+hoped he will set a good example in the neighborhood. Have you heard what
+sort of a young man he is, Henry?"
+
+Mr. Gascoigne had not heard; at least, if his male acquaintances had
+gossiped in his hearing, he was not disposed to repeat their gossip, or to
+give it any emphasis in his own mind. He held it futile, even if it had
+been becoming, to show any curiosity as to the past of a young man whose
+birth, wealth, and consequent leisure made many habits venial which under
+other circumstances would have been inexcusable. Whatever Grandcourt had
+done, he had not ruined himself; and it is well-known that in gambling,
+for example, whether of the business or holiday sort, a man who has the
+strength of mind to leave off when he has only ruined others, is a
+reformed character. This is an illustration merely: Mr. Gascoigne had not
+heard that Grandcourt had been a gambler; and we can hardly pronounce him
+singular in feeling that a landed proprietor with a mixture of noble blood
+in his veins was not to be an object of suspicious inquiry like a reformed
+character who offers himself as your butler or footman. Reformation, where
+a man can afford to do without it, can hardly be other than genuine.
+Moreover, it was not certain on any other showing hitherto, that Mr.
+Grandcourt had needed reformation more than other young men in the ripe
+youth of five-and-thirty; and, at any rate, the significance of what he
+had been must be determined by what he actually was.
+
+Mrs. Davilow, too, although she would not respond to her sister's pregnant
+remark, could not be inwardly indifferent to an advent that might promise
+a brilliant lot for Gwendolen. A little speculation on "what may be" comes
+naturally, without encouragement--comes inevitably in the form of images,
+when unknown persons are mentioned; and Mr. Grandcourt's name raised in
+Mrs. Davilow's mind first of all the picture of a handsome, accomplished,
+excellent young man whom she would be satisfied with as a husband for her
+daughter; but then came the further speculation--would Gwendolen be
+satisfied with him? There was no knowing what would meet that girl's taste
+or touch her affections--it might be something else than excellence; and
+thus the image of the perfect suitor gave way before a fluctuating
+combination of qualities that might be imagined to win Gwendolen's heart.
+In the difficulty of arriving at the particular combination which would
+insure that result, the mother even said to herself, "It would not signify
+about her being in love, if she would only accept the right person." For
+whatever marriage had been for herself, how could she the less desire it
+for her daughter? The difference her own misfortunes made was, that she
+never dared to dwell much to Gwendolen on the desirableness of marriage,
+dreading an answer something like that of the future Madame Roland, when
+her gentle mother urging the acceptance of a suitor, said, "Tu seras
+heureuse, ma chere." "Oui, maman, comme toi."
+
+In relation to the problematic Mr. Grandcourt least of all would Mrs.
+Davilow have willingly let fall a hint of the aerial castle-building which
+she had the good taste to be ashamed of; for such a hint was likely enough
+to give an adverse poise to Gwendolen's own thought, and make her detest
+the desirable husband beforehand. Since that scene after poor Rex's
+farewell visit, the mother had felt a new sense of peril in touching the
+mystery of her child's feeling, and in rashly determining what was her
+welfare: only she could think of welfare in no other shape than marriage.
+
+The discussion of the dress that Gwendolen was to wear at the Archery
+Meeting was a relevant topic, however; and when it had been decided that
+as a touch of color on her white cashmere, nothing, for her complexion,
+was comparable to pale green--a feather which she was trying in her hat
+before the looking-glass having settled the question--Mrs. Davilow felt
+her ears tingle when Gwendolen, suddenly throwing herself into the
+attitude of drawing her bow, said with a look of comic enjoyment--
+
+"How I pity all the other girls at the Archery Meeting--all thinking of
+Mr. Grandcourt! And they have not a shadow of a chance."
+
+Mrs. Davilow had not the presence of mind to answer immediately, and
+Gwendolen turned round quickly toward her, saying, wickedly--
+
+"Now you know they have not, mamma. You and my uncle and aunt--you all
+intend him to fall in love with me."
+
+Mrs. Davilow, pigued into a little stratagem, said, "Oh, my, dear, that is
+not so certain. Miss Arrowpoint has charms which you have not."
+
+"I know, but they demand thought. My arrow will pierce him before he has
+time for thought. He will declare himself my slave--I shall send him round
+the world to bring me back the wedding ring of a happy woman--in the
+meantime all the men who are between him and the title will die of
+different diseases--he will come back Lord Grandcourt--but without the
+ring--and fall at my feet. I shall laugh at him--he will rise in
+resentment--I shall laugh more--he will call for his steed and ride to
+Quetcham, where he will find Miss Arrowpoint just married to a needy
+musician, Mrs. Arrowpoint tearing her cap off, and Mr. Arrowpoint standing
+by. Exit Lord Grandcourt, who returns to Diplow, and, like M. Jabot,
+_change de linge_."
+
+Was ever any young witch like this? You thought of hiding things from her
+--sat upon your secret and looked innocent, and all the while she knew
+by the corner of your eye that it was exactly five pounds ten you were
+sitting on! As well turn the key to keep out the damp! It was probable
+that by dint of divination she already knew more than any one else did of
+Mr. Grandcourt. That idea in Mrs. Davilow's mind prompted the sort of
+question which often comes without any other apparent reason than the
+faculty of speech and the not knowing what to do with it.
+
+"Why, what kind of a man do you imagine him to be, Gwendolen?"
+
+"Let me see!" said the witch, putting her forefinger to her lips, with a
+little frown, and then stretching out the finger with decision. "Short--
+just above my shoulder--crying to make himself tall by turning up his
+mustache and keeping his beard long--a glass in his right eye to give him
+an air of distinction--a strong opinion about his waistcoat, but uncertain
+and trimming about the weather, on which he will try to draw me out. He
+will stare at me all the while, and the glass in his eye will cause him to
+make horrible faces, especially when he smiles in a flattering way. I
+shall cast down my eyes in consequence, and he will perceive that I am not
+indifferent to his attentions. I shall dream that night that I am looking
+at the extraordinary face of a magnified insect--and the next morning he
+will make an offer of his hand; the sequel as before."
+
+"That is a portrait of some one you have seen already, Gwen. Mr.
+Grandcourt may be a delightful young man for what you know."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Gwendolen, with a high note of careless admission, taking
+off her best hat and turning it round on her hand contemplatively. "I
+wonder what sort of behavior a delightful young man would have? I know he
+would have hunters and racers, and a London house and two country-houses--
+one with battlements and another with a veranda. And I feel sure that with
+a little murdering he might get a title."
+
+The irony of this speech was of the doubtful sort that has some genuine
+belief mixed up with it. Poor Mrs. Davilow felt uncomfortable under it.
+Her own meanings being usually literal and in intention innocent; and she
+said with a distressed brow:
+
+"Don't talk in that way, child, for heaven's sake! you do read such books
+--they give you such ideas of everything. I declare when your aunt and I
+were your age we knew nothing about wickedness. I think it was better so."
+
+"Why did you not bring me up in that way, mamma?" said Gwendolen. But
+immediately perceiving in the crushed look and rising sob that she had
+given a deep wound, she tossed down her hat and knelt at her mother's feet
+crying--
+
+"Mamma, mamma! I was only speaking in fun. I meant nothing."
+
+"How could I, Gwendolen?" said poor Mrs. Davilow, unable to hear the
+retraction, and sobbing violently while she made the effort to speak.
+"Your will was always too strong for me--if everything else had been
+different."
+
+This disjoined logic was intelligible enough to the daughter. "Dear mamma,
+I don't find fault with you--I love you," said Gwendolen, really
+compunctious. "How can you help what I am? Besides, I am very charming.
+Come, now." Here Gwendolen with her handkerchief gently rubbed away her
+mother's tears. "Really--I am contented with myself. I like myself better
+than I should have liked my aunt and you. How dreadfully dull you must
+have been!"
+
+Such tender cajolery served to quiet the mother, as it had often done
+before after like collisions. Not that the collisions had often been
+repeated at the same point; for in the memory of both they left an
+association of dread with the particular topics which had occasioned them:
+Gwendolen dreaded the unpleasant sense of compunction toward her mother,
+which was the nearest approach to self-condemnation and self-distrust that
+she had known; and Mrs. Davilow's timid maternal conscience dreaded
+whatever had brought on the slightest hint of reproach. Hence, after this
+little scene, the two concurred in excluding Mr. Grandcourt from their
+conversation.
+
+When Mr. Gascoigne once or twice referred to him, Mrs. Davilow feared
+least Gwendolen should betray some of her alarming keen-sightedness about
+what was probably in her uncle's mind; but the fear was not justified.
+Gwendolen knew certain differences in the characters with which she was
+concerned as birds know climate and weather; and for the very reason that
+she was determined to evade her uncle's control, she was determined not to
+clash with him. The good understanding between them was much fostered by
+their enjoyment of archery together: Mr. Gascoigne, as one of the best
+bowmen in Wessex, was gratified to find the elements of like skill in his
+niece; and Gwendolen was the more careful not to lose the shelter of his
+fatherly indulgence, because since the trouble with Rex both Mrs.
+Gascoigne and Anna had been unable to hide what she felt to be a very
+unreasonable alienation from her. Toward Anna she took some pains to
+behave with a regretful affectionateness; but neither of them dared to
+mention Rex's name, and Anna, to whom the thought of him was part of the
+air she breathed, was ill at ease with the lively cousin who had ruined
+his happiness. She tried dutifully to repress any sign of her changed
+feeling; but who in pain can imitate the glance and hand-touch of
+pleasure.
+
+This unfair resentment had rather a hardening effect on Gwendolen, and
+threw her into a more defiant temper. Her uncle too might be offended if
+she refused the next person who fell in love with her; and one day when
+that idea was in her mind she said--
+
+"Mamma, I see now why girls are glad to be married--to escape being
+expected to please everybody but themselves."
+
+Happily, Mr. Middleton was gone without having made any avowal; and
+notwithstanding the admiration for the handsome Miss Harleth, extending
+perhaps over thirty square miles in a part of Wessex well studded with
+families whose numbers included several disengaged young men, each glad to
+seat himself by the lively girl with whom it was so easy to get on in
+conversation,--notwithstanding these grounds for arguing that Gwendolen
+was likely to have other suitors more explicit than the cautious curate,
+the fact was not so.
+
+Care has been taken not only that the trees should not sweep the stars
+down, but also that every man who admires a fair girl should not be
+enamored of her, and even that every man who is enamored should not
+necessarily declare himself. There are various refined shapes in which the
+price of corn, known to be potent cause in their relation, might, if
+inquired into, show why a young lady, perfect in person, accomplishments,
+and costume, has not the trouble of rejecting many offers; and nature's
+order is certainly benignant in not obliging us one and all to be
+desperately in love with the most admirable mortal we have ever seen.
+Gwendolen, we know, was far from holding that supremacy in the minds of
+all observers. Besides, it was but a poor eight months since she had come
+to Offendene, and some inclinations become manifest slowly, like the
+sunward creeping of plants.
+
+In face of this fact that not one of the eligible young men already in the
+neighborhood had made Gwendolen an offer, why should Mr. Grandcourt be
+thought of as likely to do what they had left undone?
+
+Perhaps because he was thought of as still more eligible; since a great
+deal of what passes for likelihood in the world is simply the reflex of a
+wish. Mr. and Mrs. Arrowpoint, for example, having no anxiety that Miss
+Harleth should make a brilliant marriage, had quite a different likelihood
+in their minds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ _1st Gent._ What woman should be? Sir, consult the taste
+ Of marriageable men. This planet's store
+ In iron, cotton, wool, or chemicals--
+ All matter rendered to our plastic skill,
+ Is wrought in shapes responsive to demand;
+ The market's pulse makes index high or low,
+ By rule sublime. Our daughters must be wives,
+ And to the wives must be what men will choose;
+ Men's taste is woman's test. You mark the phrase?
+ 'Tis good, I think?--the sense well-winged and poised
+ With t's and s's.
+ _2nd Gent._ Nay, but turn it round;
+ Give us the test of taste. A fine _menu_--
+ Is it to-day what Roman epicures
+ Insisted that a gentleman must eat
+ To earn the dignity of dining well?
+
+
+Brackenshaw Park, where the Archery Meeting was held, looked out from its
+gentle heights far over the neighboring valley to the outlying eastern
+downs and the broad, slow rise of cultivated country, hanging like a vast
+curtain toward the west. The castle which stood on the highest platform of
+the clustered hills, was built of rough-hewn limestone, full of lights and
+shadows made by the dark dust of lichens and the washings of the rain.
+Masses of beech and fir sheltered it on the north, and spread down here
+and there along the green slopes like flocks seeking the water which
+gleamed below. The archery-ground was a carefully-kept enclosure on a bit
+of table-land at the farthest end of the park, protected toward the
+southwest by tall elms and a thick screen of hollies, which kept the
+gravel walk and the bit of newly-mown turf where the targets were placed
+in agreeable afternoon shade. The Archery Hall with an arcade in front
+showed like a white temple against the greenery on the north side.
+
+What could make a better background for the flower-groups of ladies,
+moving and bowing and turning their necks as it would become the leisurely
+lilies to do if they took to locomotion. The sounds too were very pleasant
+to hear, even when the military band from Wanchester ceased to play:
+musical laughs in all the registers and a harmony of happy, friendly
+speeches, now rising toward mild excitement, now sinking to an agreeable
+murmur.
+
+No open-air amusement could be much freer from those noisy, crowding
+conditions which spoil most modern pleasures; no Archery Meeting could be
+more select, the number of friends accompanying the members being
+restricted by an award of tickets, so as to keep the maximum within the
+limits of convenience for the dinner and ball to be held in the castle.
+Within the enclosure no plebeian spectators were admitted except Lord
+Brackenshaw's tenants and their families, and of these it was chiefly the
+feminine members who used the privilege, bringing their little boys and
+girls or younger brothers and sisters. The males among them relieved the
+insipidity of the entertainment by imaginative betting, in which the stake
+was "anything you like," on their favorite archers; but the young maidens,
+having a different principle of discrimination, were considering which of
+those sweetly-dressed ladies they would choose to be, if the choice were
+allowed them. Probably the form these rural souls would most have striven
+for as a tabernacle, was some other than Gwendolen's--one with more pink
+in her cheeks and hair of the most fashionable yellow; but among the male
+judges in the ranks immediately surrounding her there was unusual
+unanimity in pronouncing her the finest girl present.
+
+No wonder she enjoyed her existence on that July day. Pre-eminence is
+sweet to those who love it, even under mediocre circumstances. Perhaps it
+was not quite mythical that a slave has been proud to be bought first; and
+probably a barn-door fowl on sale, though he may not have understood
+himself to be called the best of a bad lot, may have a self-informed
+consciousness of his relative importance, and strut consoled. But for
+complete enjoyment the outward and the inward must concur. And that
+concurrence was happening to Gwendolen.
+
+Who can deny that bows and arrows are among the prettiest weapons in the
+world for feminine forms to play with? They prompt attitudes full of grace
+and power, where that fine concentration of energy seen in all
+markmanship, is freed from associations of bloodshed. The time-honored
+British resources of "killing something" is no longer carried on with bow
+and quiver; bands defending their passes against an invading nation fight
+under another sort of shade than a cloud of arrows; and poisoned darts are
+harmless survivals either in rhetoric or in regions comfortably remote.
+Archery has no ugly smell of brimstone; breaks nobody's shins, breeds no
+athletic monsters; its only danger is that of failing, which for generous
+blood is enough to mould skilful action. And among the Brackenshaw archers
+the prizes were all of the nobler symbolic kind; not properly to be
+carried off in a parcel, degrading honor into gain; but the gold arrow and
+the silver, the gold star and the silver, to be worn for a long time in
+sign of achievement and then transferred to the next who did excellently.
+These signs of pre-eminence had the virtue of wreaths without their
+inconveniences, which might have produced a melancholy effect in the heat
+of the ball-room. Altogether the Brackenshaw Archery Club was an
+institution framed with good taste, so as not to have by necessity any
+ridiculous incidents.
+
+And to-day all incalculable elements were in its favor. There was mild
+warmth, and no wind to disturb either hair or drapery or the course of the
+arrow; all skillful preparation had fair play, and when there was a
+general march to extract the arrows, the promenade of joyous young
+creatures in light speech and laughter, the graceful movement in common
+toward a common object, was a show worth looking at. Here Gwendolen seemed
+a Calypso among her nymphs. It was in her attitudes and movements that
+every one was obliged to admit her surpassing charm.
+
+"That girl is like a high-mettled racer," said Lord Brackenshaw to young
+Clintock, one of the invited spectators.
+
+"First chop! tremendously pretty too," said the elegant Grecian, who had
+been paying her assiduous attention; "I never saw her look better."
+
+Perhaps she had never looked so well. Her face was beaming with young
+pleasure in which there was no malign rays of discontent; for being
+satisfied with her own chances, she felt kindly toward everybody and was
+satisfied with the universe. Not to have the highest distinction in rank,
+not to be marked out as an heiress, like Miss Arrowpoint, gave an added
+triumph in eclipsing those advantages. For personal recommendation she
+would not have cared to change the family group accompanying her for any
+other: her mamma's appearance would have suited an amiable duchess; her
+uncle and aunt Gascoigne with Anna made equally gratifying figures in
+their way; and Gwendolen was too full of joyous belief in herself to feel
+in the least jealous though Miss Arrowpoint was one of the best
+archeresses.
+
+Even the reappearance of the formidable Herr Klesmer, which caused some
+surprise in the rest of the company, seemed only to fall in with
+Gwendolen's inclination to be amused. Short of Apollo himself, what great
+musical _maestro_ could make a good figure at an archery meeting? There
+was a very satirical light in Gwendolen's eyes as she looked toward the
+Arrowpoint party on their first entrance, when the contrast between
+Klesmer and the average group of English country people seemed at its
+utmost intensity in the close neighborhood of his hosts--or patrons, as
+Mrs. Arrowpoint would have liked to hear them called, that she might deny
+the possibility of any longer patronizing genius, its royalty being
+universally acknowledged. The contrast might have amused a graver
+personage than Gwendolen. We English are a miscellaneous people, and any
+chance fifty of us will present many varieties of animal architecture or
+facial ornament; but it must be admitted that our prevailing expression is
+not that of a lively, impassioned race, preoccupied with the ideal and
+carrying the real as a mere make-weight. The strong point of the English
+gentleman pure is the easy style of his figure and clothing; he objects to
+marked ins and outs in his costume, and he also objects to looking
+inspired.
+
+Fancy an assemblage where the men had all that ordinary stamp of the well-
+bred Englishman, watching the entrance of Herr Klesmer--his mane of hair
+floating backward in massive inconsistency with the chimney-pot hat, which
+had the look of having been put on for a joke above his pronounced but
+well-modeled features and powerful clear-shaven mouth and chin; his tall,
+thin figure clad in a way which, not being strictly English, was all the
+worse for its apparent emphasis of intention. Draped in a loose garment
+with a Florentine _berretta_ on his head, he would have been fit to stand
+by the side of Leonardo de Vinci; but how when he presented himself in
+trousers which were not what English feeling demanded about the knees?--
+and when the fire that showed itself in his glances and the movements of
+his head, as he looked round him with curiosity, was turned into comedy by
+a hat which ruled that mankind should have well-cropped hair and a staid
+demeanor, such, for example, as Mr. Arrowsmith's, whose nullity of face
+and perfect tailoring might pass everywhere without ridicule? One feels
+why it is often better for greatness to be dead, and to have got rid of
+the outward man.
+
+Many present knew Klesmer, or knew of him; but they had only seen him on
+candle-light occasions when he appeared simply as a musician, and he had
+not yet that supreme, world-wide celebrity which makes an artist great to
+the most ordinary people by their knowledge of his great expensiveness. It
+was literally a new light for them to see him in--presented unexpectedly
+on this July afternoon in an exclusive society: some were inclined to
+laugh, others felt a little disgust at the want of judgment shown by the
+Arrowpoints in this use of an introductory card.
+
+"What extreme guys those artistic fellows usually are?" said young
+Clintock to Gwendolen. "Do look at the figure he cuts, bowing with his
+hand on his heart to Lady Brackenshaw--and Mrs. Arrowpoint's feather just
+reaching his shoulder."
+
+"You are one of the profane," said Gwendolen. "You are blind to the
+majesty of genius. Herr Klesmer smites me with awe; I feel crushed in his
+presence; my courage all oozes from me."
+
+"Ah, you understand all about his music."
+
+"No, indeed," said Gwendolen, with a light laugh; "it is he who
+understands all about mine and thinks it pitiable." Klesmer's verdict on
+her singing had been an easier joke to her since he had been struck by her
+_plastik_.
+
+"It is not addressed to the ears of the future, I suppose. I'm glad of
+that: it suits mine."
+
+"Oh, you are very kind. But how remarkably well Miss Arrowpoint looks to-
+day! She would make quite a fine picture in that gold-colored dress."
+
+"Too splendid, don't you think?"
+
+"Well, perhaps a little too symbolical--too much like the figure of Wealth
+in an allegory."
+
+This speech of Gwendolen's had rather a malicious sound, but it was not
+really more than a bubble of fun. She did not wish Miss Arrowpoint or any
+one else to be out of the way, believing in her own good fortune even more
+than in her skill. The belief in both naturally grew stronger as the
+shooting went on, for she promised to achieve one of the best scores--a
+success which astonished every one in a new member; and to Gwendolen's
+temperament one success determined another. She trod on air, and all
+things pleasant seemed possible. The hour was enough for her, and she was
+not obliged to think what she should do next to keep her life at the due
+pitch.
+
+"How does the scoring stand, I wonder?" said Lady Brackenshaw, a gracious
+personage who, adorned with two little girls and a boy of stout make, sat
+as lady paramount. Her lord had come up to her in one of the intervals of
+shooting. "It seems to me that Miss Harleth is likely to win the gold
+arrow."
+
+"Gad, I think she will, if she carries it on! she is running Juliet Fenn
+hard. It is wonderful for one in her first year. Catherine is not up to
+her usual mark," continued his lordship, turning to the heiress's mother
+who sat near. "But she got the gold arrow last time. And there's a luck
+even in these games of skill. That's better. It gives the hinder ones a
+chance."
+
+"Catherine will be very glad for others to win," said Mrs. Arrowpoint,
+"she is so magnanimous. It was entirely her considerateness that made us
+bring Herr Klesmer instead of Canon Stopley, who had expressed a wish to
+come. For her own pleasure, I am sure she would rather have brought the
+Canon; but she is always thinking of others. I told her it was not quite
+_en regle_ to bring one so far out of our own set; but she said, 'Genius
+itself is not _en regle_; it comes into the world to make new rules.' And
+one must admit that."
+
+"Ay, to be sure," said Lord Brackenshaw, in a tone of careless dismissal,
+adding quickly, "For my part, I am not magnanimous; I should like to win.
+But, confound it! I never have the chance now. I'm getting old and idle.
+The young ones beat me. As old Nestor says--the gods don't give us
+everything at one time: I was a young fellow once, and now I am getting an
+old and wise one. Old, at any rate; which is a gift that comes to
+everybody if they live long enough, so it raises no jealousy." The Earl
+smiled comfortably at his wife.
+
+"Oh, my lord, people who have been neighbors twenty years must not talk to
+each other about age," said Mrs. Arrowpoint. "Years, as the Tuscans say,
+are made for the letting of houses. But where is our new neighbor? I
+thought Mr. Grandcourt was to be here to-day."
+
+"Ah, by the way, so he was. The time's getting on too," said his lordship,
+looking at his watch. "But he only got to Diplow the other day. He came to
+us on Tuesday and said he had been a little bothered. He may have been
+pulled in another direction. Why, Gascoigne!"--the rector was just then
+crossing at a little distance with Gwendolen on his arm, and turned in
+compliance with the call--"this is a little too bad; you not only beat us
+yourself, but you bring up your niece to beat all the archeresses."
+
+"It _is_ rather scandalous in her to get the better of elder members,"
+said Mr. Gascoigne, with much inward satisfaction curling his short upper
+lip. "But it is not my doing, my lord. I only meant her to make a
+tolerable figure, without surpassing any one."
+
+"It is not my fault, either," said Gwendolen, with pretty archness. "If I
+am to aim, I can't help hitting."
+
+"Ay, ay, that may be a fatal business for some people," said Lord
+Brackenshaw, good-humoredly; then taking out his watch and looking at Mrs.
+Arrowpoint again--"The time's getting on, as you say. But Grandcourt is
+always late. I notice in town he's always late, and he's no bowman--
+understands nothing about it. But I told him he must come; he would see
+the flower of the neighborhood here. He asked about you--had seen
+Arrowpoint's card. I think you had not made his acquaintance in town. He
+has been a good deal abroad. People don't know him much."
+
+"No; we are strangers," said Mrs. Arrowpoint. "But that is not what might
+have been expected. For his uncle Sir Hugo Mallinger and I are great
+friends when we meet."
+
+"I don't know; uncles and nephews are not so likely to be seen together as
+uncles and nieces," said his lordship, smiling toward the rector. "But
+just come with me one instant, Gascoigne, will you? I want to speak a word
+about the clout-shooting."
+
+Gwendolen chose to go too and be deposited in the same group with her
+mamma and aunt until she had to shoot again. That Mr. Grandcourt might
+after all not appear on the archery-ground, had begun to enter into
+Gwendolen's thought as a possible deduction from the completeness of her
+pleasure. Under all her saucy satire, provoked chiefly by her divination
+that her friends thought of him as a desirable match for her, she felt
+something very far from indifference as to the impression she would make
+on him. True, he was not to have the slightest power over her (for
+Gwendolen had not considered that the desire to conquer is itself a sort
+of subjection); she had made up her mind that he was to be one of those
+complimentary and assiduously admiring men of whom even her narrow
+experience had shown her several with various-colored beards and various
+styles of bearing; and the sense that her friends would want her to think
+him delightful, gave her a resistant inclination to presuppose him
+ridiculous. But that was no reason why she could spare his presence: and
+even a passing prevision of trouble in case she despised and refused him,
+raised not the shadow of a wish that he should save her that trouble by
+showing no disposition to make her an offer. Mr. Grandcourt taking hardly
+any notice of her, and becoming shortly engaged to Miss Arrowpoint, was
+not a picture which flattered her imagination.
+
+Hence Gwendolen had been all ear to Lord Brackenshaw's mode of accounting
+for Grandcourt's non-appearance; and when he did arrive, no consciousness
+--not even Mrs. Arrowpoint's or Mr. Gascoigne's--was more awake to the
+fact than hers, although she steadily avoided looking toward any point
+where he was likely to be. There should be no slightest shifting of angles
+to betray that it was of any consequence to her whether the much-talked-of
+Mr. Mallinger Grandcourt presented himself or not. She became again
+absorbed in the shooting, and so resolutely abstained from looking round
+observantly that, even supposing him to have taken a conspicuous place
+among the spectators, it might be clear she was not aware of him. And all
+the while the certainty that he was there made a distinct thread in her
+consciousness. Perhaps her shooting was the better for it: at any rate, it
+gained in precision, and she at last raised a delightful storm of clapping
+and applause by three hits running in the gold--a feat which among the
+Brackenshaw arches had not the vulgar reward of a shilling poll-tax, but
+that of a special gold star to be worn on the breast. That moment was not
+only a happy one to herself--it was just what her mamma and her uncle
+would have chosen for her. There was a general falling into ranks to give
+her space that she might advance conspicuously to receive the gold star
+from the hands of Lady Brackenshaw; and the perfect movement of her fine
+form was certainly a pleasant thing to behold in the clear afternoon light
+when the shadows were long and still. She was the central object of that
+pretty picture, and every one present must gaze at her. That was enough:
+she herself was determined to see nobody in particular, or to turn her
+eyes any way except toward Lady Brackenshaw, but her thoughts undeniably
+turned in other ways. It entered a little into her pleasure that Herr
+Klesmer must be observing her at a moment when music was out of the
+question, and his superiority very far in the back-ground; for vanity is
+as ill at ease under indifference as tenderness is under a love which it
+cannot return; and the unconquered Klesmer threw a trace of his malign
+power even across her pleasant consciousness that Mr. Grandcourt was
+seeing her to the utmost advantage, and was probably giving her an
+admiration unmixed with criticism. She did not expect to admire _him_, but
+that was not necessary to her peace of mind.
+
+Gwendolen met Lady Brackenshaw's gracious smile without blushing (which
+only came to her when she was taken by surprise), but with a charming
+gladness of expression, and then bent with easy grace to have the star
+fixed near her shoulder. That little ceremony had been over long enough
+for her to have exchanged playful speeches and received congratulations as
+she moved among the groups who were now interesting themselves in the
+results of the scoring; but it happened that she stood outside examining
+the point of an arrow with rather an absent air when Lord Brackenshaw came
+up to her and said:
+
+"Miss Harleth, here is a gentleman who is not willing to wait any longer
+for an introduction. He has been getting Mrs. Davilow to send me with him.
+Will you allow me to introduce Mr. Mallinger Grandcourt?"
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II--MEETING STREAMS.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ The beginning of an acquaintance whether with persons or things is to
+ get a definite outline for our ignorance.
+
+
+Mr. Grandcourt's wish to be introduced had no suddenness for Gwendolen;
+but when Lord Brackenshaw moved aside a little for the prefigured stranger
+to come forward and she felt herself face to face with the real man, there
+was a little shock which flushed her cheeks and vexatiously deepened with
+her consciousness of it. The shock came from the reversal of her
+expectations: Grandcourt could hardly have been more unlike all her
+imaginary portraits of him. He was slightly taller than herself, and their
+eyes seemed to be on a level; there was not the faintest smile on his face
+as he looked at her, not a trace of self-consciousness or anxiety in his
+bearing: when he raised his hat he showed an extensive baldness surrounded
+with a mere fringe of reddish-blonde hair, but he also showed a perfect
+hand; the line of feature from brow to chin undisguised by beard was
+decidedly handsome, with only moderate departures from the perpendicular,
+and the slight whisker too was perpendicular. It was not possible for a
+human aspect to be freer from grimace or solicitous wrigglings: also it
+was perhaps not possible for a breathing man wide awake to look less
+animated. The correct Englishman, drawing himself up from his bow into
+rigidity, assenting severely, and seemed to be in a state of internal
+drill, suggests a suppressed vivacity, and may be suspected of letting go
+with some violence when he is released from parade; but Grandcourt's
+bearing had no rigidity, it inclined rather to the flaccid. His complexion
+had a faded fairness resembling that of an actress when bare of the
+artificial white and red; his long narrow gray eyes expressed nothing but
+indifference. Attempts at description are stupid: who can all at once
+describe a human being? even when he is presented to us we only begin that
+knowledge of his appearance which must be completed by innumerable
+impressions under differing circumstances. We recognize the alphabet; we
+are not sure of the language. I am only mentioning the point that
+Gwendolen saw by the light of a prepared contrast in the first minutes of
+her meeting with Grandcourt: they were summed up in the words, "He is not
+ridiculous." But forthwith Lord Brackenshaw was gone, and what is called
+conversation had begun, the first and constant element in it being that
+Grandcourt looked at Gwendolen persistently with a slightly exploring
+gaze, but without change of expression, while she only occasionally looked
+at him with a flash of observation a little softened by coquetry. Also,
+after her answers there was a longer or shorter pause before he spoke
+again.
+
+"I used to think archery was a great bore," Grandcourt began. He spoke
+with a fine accent, but with a certain broken drawl, as of a distinguished
+personage with a distinguished cold on his chest.
+
+"Are you converted to-day?" said Gwendolen.
+
+(Pause, during which she imagined various degrees and modes of opinion
+about herself that might be entertained by Grandcourt.)
+
+"Yes, since I saw you shooting. In things of this sort one generally sees
+people missing and simpering."
+
+"I suppose you are a first-rate shot with a rifle."
+
+(Pause, during which Gwendolen, having taken a rapid observation of
+Grandcourt, made a brief graphic description of him to an indefinite
+hearer.)
+
+"I have left off shooting."
+
+"Oh then you are a formidable person. People who have done things once and
+left them off make one feel very contemptible, as if one were using cast-
+off fashions. I hope you have not left off all follies, because I practice
+a great many."
+
+(Pause, during which Gwendolen made several interpretations of her own
+speech.)
+
+"What do you call follies?"
+
+"Well, in general I think, whatever is agreeable is called a folly. But
+you have not left off hunting, I hear."
+
+(Pause, wherein Gwendolen recalled what she had heard about Grandcourt's
+position, and decided that he was the most aristocratic-looking man she
+had ever seen.)
+
+"One must do something."
+
+"And do you care about the turf?--or is that among the things you have
+left off?"
+
+(Pause, during which Gwendolen thought that a man of extremely calm, cold
+manners might be less disagreeable as a husband than other men, and not
+likely to interfere with his wife's preferences.)
+
+"I run a horse now and then; but I don't go in for the thing as some men
+do. Are you fond of horses?"
+
+"Yes, indeed: I never like my life so well as when I am on horseback,
+having a great gallop. I think of nothing. I only feel myself strong and
+happy."
+
+(Pause, wherein Gwendolen wondered whether Grandcourt would like what she
+said, but assured herself that she was not going to disguise her tastes.)
+
+"Do you like danger?"
+
+"I don't know. When I am on horseback I never think of danger. It seems to
+me that if I broke my bones I should not feel it. I should go at anything
+that came in my way."
+
+(Pause during which Gwendolen had run through a whole hunting season with
+two chosen hunters to ride at will.)
+
+"You would perhaps like tiger-hunting or pig-sticking. I saw some of that
+for a season or two in the East. Everything here is poor stuff after
+that."
+
+"_You_ are fond of danger, then?"
+
+(Pause, wherein Gwendolen speculated on the probability that the men of
+coldest manners were the most adventurous, and felt the strength of her
+own insight, supposing the question had to be decided.)
+
+"One must have something or other. But one gets used to it."
+
+"I begin to think I am very fortunate, because everything is new to me: it
+is only that I can't get enough of it. I am not used to anything except
+being dull, which I should like to leave off as you have left off
+shooting."
+
+(Pause, during which it occurred to Gwendolen that a man of cold and
+distinguished manners might possibly be a dull companion; but on the other
+hand she thought that most persons were dull, that she had not observed
+husbands to be companions--and that after all she was not going to accept
+Grandcourt.)
+
+"Why are you dull?"
+
+"This is a dreadful neighborhood. There is nothing to be done in it. That
+is why I practiced my archery."
+
+(Pause, during which Gwendolen reflected that the life of an unmarried
+woman who could not go about and had no command of anything must
+necessarily be dull through all degrees of comparison as time went on.)
+
+"You have made yourself queen of it. I imagine you will carry the first
+prize."
+
+"I don't know that. I have great rivals. Did you not observe how well Miss
+Arrowpoint shot?"
+
+(Pause, wherein Gwendolen was thinking that men had been known to choose
+some one else than the woman they most admired, and recalled several
+experiences of that kind in novels.)
+
+"Miss Arrowpoint. No--that is, yes."
+
+"Shall we go now and hear what the scoring says? Every one is going to the
+other end now--shall we join them? I think my uncle is looking toward me.
+He perhaps wants me."
+
+Gwendolen found a relief for herself by thus changing the situation: not
+that the _tete-a-tete_ was quite disagreeable to her; but while it lasted
+she apparently could not get rid of the unwonted flush in her cheeks and
+the sense of surprise which made her feel less mistress of herself than
+usual. And this Mr. Grandcourt, who seemed to feel his own importance more
+than he did hers--a sort of unreasonableness few of us can tolerate--must
+not take for granted that he was of great moment to her, or that because
+others speculated on him as a desirable match she held herself altogether
+at his beck. How Grandcourt had filled up the pauses will be more evident
+hereafter.
+
+"You have just missed the gold arrow, Gwendolen," said Mr. Gascoigne.
+"Miss Juliet Fenn scores eight above you."
+
+"I am very glad to hear it. I should have felt that I was making myself
+too disagreeable--taking the best of everything," said Gwendolen, quite
+easily.
+
+It was impossible to be jealous of Juliet Fenn, a girl as middling as mid-
+day market in everything but her archery and plainness, in which last she
+was noticeable like her father: underhung and with receding brow
+resembling that of the more intelligent fishes. (Surely, considering the
+importance which is given to such an accident in female offspring,
+marriageable men, or what the new English calls "intending bridegrooms,"
+should look at themselves dispassionately in the glass, since their
+natural selection of a mate prettier than themselves is not certain to bar
+the effect of their own ugliness.)
+
+There was now a lively movement in the mingling groups, which carried the
+talk along with it. Every one spoke to every one else by turns, and
+Gwendolen, who chose to see what was going on around her now, observed
+that Grandcourt was having Klesmer presented to him by some one unknown to
+her--a middle-aged man, with dark, full face and fat hands, who seemed to
+be on the easiest terms with both, and presently led the way in joining
+the Arrowpoints, whose acquaintance had already been made by both him and
+Grandcourt. Who this stranger was she did not care much to know; but she
+wished to observe what was Grandcourt's manner toward others than herself.
+Precisely the same: except that he did not look much at Miss Arrowpoint,
+but rather at Klesmer, who was speaking with animation--now stretching out
+his long fingers horizontally, now pointing downward with his fore-finger,
+now folding his arms and tossing his mane, while he addressed himself
+first to one and then to the other, including Grandcourt, who listened
+with an impassive face and narrow eyes, his left fore-finger in his
+waistcoat-pocket, and his right slightly touching his thin whisker.
+
+"I wonder which style Miss Arrowpoint admires most," was a thought that
+glanced through Gwendolen's mind, while her eyes and lips gathered rather
+a mocking expression. But she would not indulge her sense of amusement by
+watching, as if she were curious, and she gave all her animation to those
+immediately around her, determined not to care whether Mr. Grandcourt came
+near her again or not.
+
+He did not come, however, and at a moment when he could propose to conduct
+Mrs. Davilow to her carriage, "Shall we meet again in the ball-room?" she
+said as he raised his hat at parting. The "yes" in reply had the usual
+slight drawl and perfect gravity.
+
+"You were wrong for once Gwendolen," said Mrs. Davilow, during their few
+minutes' drive to the castle.
+
+"In what, mamma?"
+
+"About Mr. Grandcourt's appearance and manners. You can't find anything
+ridiculous in him."
+
+"I suppose I could if I tried, but I don't want to do it," said Gwendolen,
+rather pettishly; and her mother was afraid to say more.
+
+It was the rule on these occasions for the ladies and gentlemen to dine
+apart, so that the dinner might make a time of comparative ease and rest
+for both. Indeed, the gentlemen had a set of archery stories about the
+epicurism of the ladies, who had somehow been reported to show a revolting
+masculine judgment in venison, even asking for the fat--a proof of the
+frightful rate at which corruption might go on in women, but for severe
+social restraint, and every year the amiable Lord Brackenshaw, who was
+something of a _gourmet_, mentioned Byron's opinion that a woman should
+never be seen eating,--introducing it with a confidential--"The fact is"
+as if he were for the first time admitting his concurrence in that
+sentiment of the refined poet.
+
+In the ladies' dining-room it was evident that Gwendolen was not a general
+favorite with her own sex: there were no beginnings of intimacy between
+her and other girls, and in conversation they rather noticed what she said
+than spoke to her in free exchange. Perhaps it was that she was not much
+interested in them, and when left alone in their company had a sense of
+empty benches. Mrs. Vulcany once remarked that Miss Harleth was too fond
+of the gentlemen; but we know that she was not in the least fond of them--
+she was only fond of their homage--and women did not give her homage. The
+exception to this willing aloofness from her was Miss Arrowpoint, who
+often managed unostentatiously to be by her side, and talked to her with
+quiet friendliness.
+
+"She knows, as I do, that our friends are ready to quarrel over a husband
+for us," thought Gwendolen, "and she is determined not to enter into the
+quarrel."
+
+"I think Miss Arrowpoint has the best manners I ever saw," said Mrs.
+Davilow, when she and Gwendolen were in a dressing-room with Mrs.
+Gascoigne and Anna, but at a distance where they could have their talk
+apart.
+
+"I wish I were like her," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Why? Are you getting discontented with yourself, Gwen?"
+
+"No; but I am discontented with things. She seems contented."
+
+"I am sure you ought to be satisfied to-day. You must have enjoyed the
+shooting. I saw you did."
+
+"Oh, that is over now, and I don't know what will come next," said
+Gwendolen, stretching herself with a sort of moan and throwing up her
+arms. They were bare now; it was the fashion to dance in the archery
+dress, throwing off the jacket; and the simplicity of her white cashmere
+with its border of pale green set off her form to the utmost. A thin line
+of gold round her neck, and the gold star on her breast, were her only
+ornaments. Her smooth soft hair piled up into a grand crown made a clear
+line about her brow. Sir Joshua would have been glad to take her portrait;
+and he would have had an easier task than the historian at least in this,
+that he would not have had to represent the truth of change--only to give
+stability to one beautiful moment.
+
+"The dancing will come next," said Mrs. Davilow "You We sure to enjoy
+that."
+
+"I shall only dance in the quadrille. I told Mr. Clintock so. I shall not
+waltz or polk with any one."
+
+"Why in the world do you say that all on a sudden?"
+
+"I can't bear having ugly people so near me."
+
+"Whom do you mean by ugly people?"
+
+"Oh, plenty."
+
+"Mr. Clintock, for example, is not ugly." Mrs. Davilow dared not mention
+Grandcourt.
+
+"Well, I hate woolen cloth touching me."
+
+"Fancy!" said Mrs. Davilow to her sister who now came up from the other
+end of the room. "Gwendolen says she will not waltz or polk."
+
+"She is rather given to whims, I think," said Mrs. Gascoigne, gravely. "It
+would be more becoming in her to behave as other young ladies do on such
+an occasion as this; especially when she has had the advantage of first-
+rate dancing lessons."
+
+"Why should I dance if I don't like it, aunt? It is not in the catechism."
+
+"My _dear_!" said Mrs. Gascoigne, in a tone of severe check, and Anna
+looked frightened at Gwendolen's daring. But they all passed on without
+saying any more.
+
+Apparently something had changed Gwendolen's mood since the hour of
+exulting enjoyment in the archery-ground. But she did not look the worse
+under the chandeliers in the ball-room, where the soft splendor of the
+scene and the pleasant odors from the conservatory could not but be
+soothing to the temper, when accompanied with the consciousness of being
+preeminently sought for. Hardly a dancing man but was anxious to have her
+for a partner, and each whom she accepted was in a state of melancholy
+remonstrance that she would not waltz or polk.
+
+"Are you under a vow, Miss Harleth?"--"Why are you so cruel to us all?"--
+"You waltzed with me in February."--"And you who waltz so perfectly!" were
+exclamations not without piquancy for her. The ladies who waltzed
+naturally thought that Miss Harleth only wanted to make herself
+particular; but her uncle when he overheard her refusal supported her by
+saying--
+
+"Gwendolen has usually good reasons." He thought she was certainly more
+distinguished in not waltzing, and he wished her to be distinguished. The
+archery ball was intended to be kept at the subdued pitch that suited all
+dignities clerical and secular; it was not an escapement for youthful high
+spirits, and he himself was of opinion that the fashionable dances were
+too much of a romp.
+
+Among the remonstrant dancing men, however, Mr. Grandcourt was not
+numbered. After standing up for a quadrille with Miss Arrowpoint, it
+seemed that he meant to ask for no other partner. Gwendolen observed him
+frequently with the Arrowpoints, but he never took an opportunity of
+approaching her. Mr. Gascoigne was sometimes speaking to him; but Mr.
+Gascoigne was everywhere. It was in her mind now that she would probably
+after all not have the least trouble about him: perhaps he had looked at
+her without any particular admiration, and was too much used to everything
+in the world to think of her as more than one of the girls who were
+invited in that part of the country. Of course! It was ridiculous of
+elders to entertain notions about what a man would do, without having seen
+him even through a telescope. Probably he meant to marry Miss Arrowpoint.
+Whatever might come, she, Gwendolen, was not going to be disappointed: the
+affair was a joke whichever way it turned, for she had never committed
+herself even by a silent confidence in anything Mr. Grandcourt would do.
+Still, she noticed that he did sometimes quietly and gradually change his
+position according to hers, so that he could see her whenever she was
+dancing, and if he did not admire her--so much the worse for him.
+
+This movement for the sake of being in sight of her was more direct than
+usual rather late in the evening, when Gwendolen had accepted Klesmer as a
+partner; and that wide-glancing personage, who saw everything and nothing
+by turns, said to her when they were walking, "Mr. Grandcourt is a man of
+taste. He likes to see you dancing."
+
+"Perhaps he likes to look at what is against his taste," said Gwendolen,
+with a light laugh; she was quite courageous with Klesmer now. "He may be
+so tired of admiring that he likes disgust for variety."
+
+"Those words are not suitable to your lips," said Klesmer, quickly, with
+one of his grand frowns, while he shook his hand as if to banish the
+discordant sounds.
+
+"Are you as critical of words as of music?"
+
+"Certainly I am. I should require your words to be what your face and form
+are--always among the meanings of a noble music."
+
+"That is a compliment as well as a correction. I am obliged for both. But
+do you know I am bold enough to wish to correct _you_, and require you to
+understand a joke?"
+
+"One may understand jokes without liking them," said the terrible Klesmer.
+"I have had opera books sent me full of jokes; it was just because I
+understood them that I did not like them. The comic people are ready to
+challenge a man because he looks grave. 'You don't see the witticism,
+sir?' 'No, sir, but I see what you meant.' Then I am what we call ticketed
+as a fellow without _esprit_. But, in fact," said Klesmer, suddenly
+dropping from his quick narrative to a reflective tone, with an impressive
+frown, "I am very sensible to wit and humor."
+
+"I am glad you tell me that," said Gwendolen, not without some wickedness
+of intention. But Klesmer's thoughts had flown off on the wings of his own
+statement, as their habit was, and she had the wickedness all to herself.
+"Pray, who is that standing near the card-room door?" she went on, seeing
+there the same stranger with whom Klesmer had been in animated talk on the
+archery ground. "He is a friend of yours, I think."
+
+"No, no; an amateur I have seen in town; Lush, a Mr. Lush--too fond of
+Meyerbeer and Scribe--too fond of the mechanical-dramatic."
+
+"Thanks. I wanted to know whether you thought his face and form required
+that his words should be among the meanings of noble music?" Klesmer was
+conquered, and flashed at her a delightful smile which made them quite
+friendly until she begged to be deposited by the side of her mamma.
+
+Three minutes afterward her preparations for Grandcourt's indifference
+were all canceled. Turning her head after some remark to her mother, she
+found that he had made his way up to her.
+
+"May I ask if you are tired of dancing, Miss Harleth?" he began, looking
+down with his former unperturbed expression.
+
+"Not in the least."
+
+"Will you do me the honor--the next--or another quadrille?"
+
+"I should have been very happy," said Gwendolen looking at her card, "but
+I am engaged for the next to Mr. Clintock--and indeed I perceive that I am
+doomed for every quadrille; I have not one to dispose of." She was not
+sorry to punish Mr. Grandcourt's tardiness, yet at the same time she would
+have liked to dance with him. She gave him a charming smile as she looked
+up to deliver her answer, and he stood still looking down at her with no
+smile at all.
+
+"I am unfortunate in being too late," he said, after a moment's pause.
+
+"It seemed to me that you did not care for dancing," said Gwendolen. "I
+thought it might be one of the things you had left off."
+
+"Yes, but I have not begun to dance with you," said. Grandcourt. Always
+there was the same pause before he took up his cue. "You make dancing a
+new thing, as you make archery."
+
+"Is novelty always agreeable?"
+
+"No, no--not always."
+
+"Then I don't know whether to feel flattered or not. When you had once
+danced with me there would be no more novelty in it."
+
+"On the contrary, there would probably be much more."
+
+"That is deep. I don't understand."
+
+"It is difficult to make Miss Harleth understand her power?" Here
+Grandcourt had turned to Mrs. Davilow, who, smiling gently at her
+daughter, said--
+
+"I think she does not generally strike people as slow to understand."
+
+"Mamma," said Gwendolen, in a deprecating tone, "I am adorably stupid, and
+want everything explained to me--when the meaning is pleasant."
+
+"If you are stupid, I admit that stupidity is adorable," returned
+Grandcourt, after the usual pause, and without change of tone. But clearly
+he knew what to say.
+
+"I begin to think that my cavalier has forgotten me," Gwendolen observed
+after a little while. "I see the quadrille is being formed."
+
+"He deserves to be renounced," said Grandcourt.
+
+"I think he is very pardonable," said Gwendolen.
+
+"There must have been some misunderstanding," said Mrs. Davilow. "Mr.
+Clintock was too anxious about the engagement to have forgotten it."
+
+But now Lady Brackenshaw came up and said, "Miss Harleth, Mr. Clintock has
+charged me to express to you his deep regret that he was obliged to leave
+without having the pleasure of dancing with you again. An express came
+from his father, the archdeacon; something important; he was to go. He was
+_au desespoir_."
+
+"Oh, he was very good to remember the engagement under the circumstances,"
+said Gwendolen. "I am sorry he was called away." It was easy to be
+politely sorrowful on so felicitous an occasion.
+
+"Then I can profit by Mr. Clintock's misfortune?" said Grandcourt. "May I
+hope that you will let me take his place?"
+
+"I shall be very happy to dance the next quadrille with you."
+
+The appropriateness of the event seemed an augury, and as Gwendolen stood
+up for the quadrille with Grandcourt, there was a revival in her of the
+exultation--the sense of carrying everything before her, which she had
+felt earlier in the day. No man could have walked through the quadrille
+with more irreproachable ease than Grandcourt; and the absence of all
+eagerness in his attention to her suited his partner's taste. She was now
+convinced that he meant to distinguish her, to mark his admiration of her
+in a noticeable way; and it began to appear probable that she would have
+it in her power to reject him, whence there was a pleasure in reckoning up
+the advantages which would make her rejection splendid, and in giving Mr.
+Grandcourt his utmost value. It was also agreeable to divine that this
+exclusive selection of her to dance with, from among all the unmarried
+ladies present, would attract observation; though She studiously avoided
+seeing this, and at the end of the quadrille walked away on Grandcourt's
+arm as if she had been one of the shortest sighted instead of the longest
+and widest sighted of mortals. They encountered Miss Arrowpoint, who was
+standing with Lady Brackenshaw and a group of gentlemen. The heiress
+looked at Gwendolen invitingly and said, "I hope you will vote with us,
+Miss Harleth, and Mr. Grandcourt too, though he is not an archer."
+Gwendolen and Grandcourt paused to join the group, and found that the
+voting turned on the project of a picnic archery meeting to be held in
+Cardell Chase, where the evening entertainment would be more poetic than a
+ball under, chandeliers--a feast of sunset lights along the glades and
+through the branches and over the solemn tree-tops.
+
+Gwendolen thought the scheme delightful--equal to playing Robin Hood and
+Maid Marian: and Mr. Grandcourt, when appealed to a second time, said it
+was a thing to be done; whereupon Mr. Lush, who stood behind Lady
+Brackenshaw's elbow, drew Gwendolen's notice by saying with a familiar
+look and tone to Grandcourt, "Diplow would be a good place for the
+meeting, and more convenient: there's a fine bit between the oaks toward
+the north gate."
+
+Impossible to look more unconscious of being addressed than Grandcourt;
+but Gwendolen took a new survey of the speaker, deciding, first, that he
+must be on terms of intimacy with the tenant of Diplow, and, secondly,
+that she would never, if she could help it, let him come within a yard of
+her. She was subject to physical antipathies, and Mr. Lush's prominent
+eyes, fat though not clumsy figure, and strong black gray-besprinkled hair
+of frizzy thickness, which, with the rest of his prosperous person, was
+enviable to many, created one of the strongest of her antipathies. To be
+safe from his looking at her, she murmured to Grandcourt, "I should like
+to continue walking."
+
+He obeyed immediately; but when they were thus away from any audience, he
+spoke no word for several minutes, and she, out of a half-amused, half-
+serious inclination for experiment, would not speak first. They turned
+into the large conservatory, beautifully lit up with Chinese lamps. The
+other couples there were at a distance which would not have interfered
+with any dialogue, but still they walked in silence until they had reached
+the farther end where there was a flush of pink light, and the second wide
+opening into the ball-room. Grandcourt, when they had half turned round,
+paused and said languidly--
+
+"Do you like this kind of thing?"
+
+If the situation had been described to Gwendolen half an hour before, she
+would have laughed heartily at it, and could only have imagined herself
+returning a playful, satirical answer. But for some mysterious reason--it
+was a mystery of which she had a faint wondering consciousness--she dared
+not be satirical: she had begun to feel a wand over her that made her
+afraid of offending Grandcourt.
+
+"Yes," she said, quietly, without considering what "kind of thing" was
+meant--whether the flowers, the scents, the ball in general, or this
+episode of walking with Mr. Grandcourt in particular. And they returned
+along the conservatory without farther interpretation. She then proposed
+to go and sit down in her old place, and they walked among scattered
+couples preparing for the waltz to the spot where Mrs. Davilow had been
+seated all the evening. As they approached it her seat was vacant, but she
+was coming toward it again, and, to Gwendolen's shuddering annoyance, with
+Mr. Lush at her elbow. There was no avoiding the confrontation: her mamma
+came close to her before they had reached the seats, and, after a quiet
+greeting smile, said innocently, "Gwendolen, dear, let me present Mr. Lush
+to you." Having just made the acquaintance of this personage, as an
+intimate and constant companion of Mr. Grandcourt's, Mrs. Davilow imagined
+it altogether desirable that her daughter also should make the
+acquaintance.
+
+It was hardly a bow that Gwendolen gave--rather, it was the slightest
+forward sweep of the head away from the physiognomy that inclined itself
+toward her, and she immediately moved toward her seat, saying, "I want to
+put on my burnous." No sooner had she reached it, than Mr. Lush was there,
+and had the burnous in his hand: to annoy this supercilious young lady, he
+would incur the offense of forestalling Grandcourt; and, holding up the
+garment close to Gwendolen, he said, "Pray, permit me?" But she, wheeling
+away from him as if he had been a muddy hound, glided on to the ottoman,
+saying, "No, thank you."
+
+A man who forgave this would have much Christian feeling, supposing he had
+intended to be agreeable to the young lady; but before he seized the
+burnous Mr. Lush had ceased to have that intention. Grandcourt quietly
+took the drapery from him, and Mr. Lush, with a slight bow, moved away.
+"You had perhaps better put it on," said Mr. Grandcourt, looking down on
+her without change of expression.
+
+"Thanks; perhaps it would be wise," said Gwendolen, rising, and submitting
+very gracefully to take the burnous on her shoulders.
+
+After that, Mr. Grandcourt exchanged a few polite speeches with Mrs.
+Davilow, and, in taking leave, asked permission to call at Offendene the
+next day. He was evidently not offended by the insult directed toward his
+friend. Certainly Gwendolen's refusal of the burnous from Mr. Lush was
+open to the interpretation that she wished to receive it from Mr.
+Grandcourt. But she, poor child, had no design in this action, and was
+simply following her antipathy and inclination, confiding in them as she
+did in the more reflective judgments into which they entered as sap into
+leafage. Gwendolen had no sense that these men were dark enigmas to her,
+or that she needed any help in drawing conclusions about them--Mr.
+Grandcourt at least. The chief question was, how far his character and
+ways might answer her wishes; and unless she were satisfied about that,
+she had said to herself that she would not accept his offer.
+
+Could there be a slenderer, more insignificant thread in human history
+than this consciousness of a girl, busy with her small inferences of the
+way in which she could make her life pleasant?--in a time, too, when ideas
+were with fresh vigor making armies of themselves, and the universal
+kinship was declaring itself fiercely; when women on the other side of the
+world would not mourn for the husbands and sons who died bravely in a
+common cause, and men stinted of bread on our side of the world heard of
+that willing loss and were patient: a time when the soul of man was
+walking to pulses which had for centuries been beating in him unfelt,
+until their full sum made a new life of terror or of joy.
+
+What in the midst of that mighty drama are girls and their blind visions?
+They are the Yea or Nay of that good for which men are enduring and
+fighting. In these delicate vessels is borne onward through the ages the
+treasure of human affections.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ "O gentlemen, the time of life is short;
+ To spend that shortness basely were too long,
+ If life did ride upon a dial's point,
+ Still ending at the arrival of an hour."
+ --SHAKESPEARE: _Henry IV_.
+
+
+On the second day after the Archery Meeting, Mr. Henleigh Mallinger
+Grandcourt was at his breakfast-table with Mr. Lush. Everything around
+them was agreeable: the summer air through the open windows, at which the
+dogs could walk in from the old green turf on the lawn; the soft, purplish
+coloring of the park beyond, stretching toward a mass of bordering wood;
+the still life in the room, which seemed the stiller for its sober
+antiquated elegance, as if it kept a conscious, well-bred silence, unlike
+the restlessness of vulgar furniture.
+
+Whether the gentlemen were agreeable to each other was less evident. Mr.
+Grandcourt had drawn his chair aside so as to face the lawn, and with his
+left leg over another chair, and his right elbow on the table, was smoking
+a large cigar, while his companion was still eating. The dogs--half-a-
+dozen of various kinds were moving lazily in and out, taking attitudes of
+brief attention--gave a vacillating preference first to one gentleman,
+then to the other; being dogs in such good circumstances that they could
+play at hunger, and liked to be served with delicacies which they declined
+to put in their mouths; all except Fetch, the beautiful liver-colored
+water-spaniel, which sat with its forepaws firmly planted and its
+expressive brown face turned upward, watching Grandcourt with unshaken
+constancy. He held in his lap a tiny Maltese dog with a tiny silver collar
+and bell, and when he had a hand unused by cigar or coffee-cup, it rested
+on this small parcel of animal warmth. I fear that Fetch was jealous, and
+wounded that her master gave her no word or look; at last it seemed that
+she could bear this neglect no longer, and she gently put her large silky
+paw on her master's leg. Grandcourt looked at her with unchanged face for
+half a minute, and then took the trouble to lay down his cigar while he
+lifted the unimpassioned Fluff close to his chin and gave it caressing
+pats, all the while gravely watching Fetch, who, poor thing, whimpered
+interruptedly, as if trying to repress that sign of discontent, and at
+last rested her head beside the appealing paw, looking up with piteous
+beseeching. So, at least, a lover of dogs must have interpreted Fetch, and
+Grandcourt kept so many dogs that he was reputed to love them; at any
+rate, his impulse to act just in that way started from such an
+interpretation. But when the amusing anguish burst forth in a howling
+bark, Grandcourt pushed Fetch down without speaking, and, depositing Fluff
+carelessly on the table (where his black nose predominated over a salt-
+cellar), began to look to his cigar, and found, with some annoyance
+against Fetch as the cause, that the brute of a cigar required relighting.
+Fetch, having begun to wail, found, like others of her sex, that it was
+not easy to leave off; indeed, the second howl was a louder one, and the
+third was like unto it.
+
+"Turn out that brute, will you?" said Grandcourt to Lush, without raising
+his voice or looking at him--as if he counted on attention to the smallest
+sign.
+
+And Lush immediately rose, lifted Fetch, though she was rather heavy, and
+he was not fond of stooping, and carried her out, disposing of her in some
+way that took him a couple of minutes before he returned. He then lit a
+cigar, placed himself at an angle where he could see Grandcourt's face
+without turning, and presently said--
+
+"Shall you ride or drive to Quetcham to-day?"
+
+"I am not going to Quetcham."
+
+"You did not go yesterday."
+
+Grandcourt smoked in silence for half a minute, and then said--
+
+"I suppose you sent my card and inquiries."
+
+"I went myself at four, and said you were sure to be there shortly. They
+would suppose some accident prevented you from fulfilling the intention.
+Especially if you go to-day."
+
+Silence for a couple of minutes. Then Grandcourt said, "What men are
+invited here with their wives?"
+
+Lush drew out a note-book. "The Captain and Mrs. Torrington come next
+week. Then there are Mr. Hollis and Lady Flora, and the Cushats and the
+Gogoffs."
+
+"Rather a ragged lot," remarked Grandcourt, after a while. "Why did you
+ask the Gogoffs? When you write invitations in my name, be good enough to
+give me a list, instead of bringing down a giantess on me without my
+knowledge. She spoils the look of the room."
+
+"You invited the Gogoffs yourself when you met them in Paris."
+
+"What has my meeting them in Paris to do with it? I told you to give me a
+list."
+
+Grandcourt, like many others, had two remarkably different voices.
+Hitherto we have heard him speaking in a superficial interrupted drawl
+suggestive chiefly of languor and _ennui_. But this last brief speech was
+uttered in subdued inward, yet distinct, tones, which Lush had long been
+used to recognize as the expression of a peremptory will.
+
+"Are there any other couples you would like to invite?"
+
+"Yes; think of some decent people, with a daughter or two. And one of your
+damned musicians. But not a comic fellow."
+
+"I wonder if Klesmer would consent to come to us when he leaves Quetcham.
+Nothing but first-class music will go down with Miss Arrowpoint."
+
+Lush spoke carelessly, but he was really seizing an opportunity and fixing
+an observant look on Grandcourt, who now for the first time, turned his
+eyes toward his companion, but slowly and without speaking until he had
+given two long luxuriant puffs, when he said, perhaps in a lower tone than
+ever, but with a perceptible edge of contempt--
+
+"What in the name of nonsense have I to do with Miss Arrowpoint and her
+music?"
+
+"Well, something," said Lush, jocosely. "You need not give yourself much
+trouble, perhaps. But some forms must be gone through before a man can
+marry a million."
+
+"Very likely. But I am not going to marry a million."
+
+"That's a pity--to fling away an opportunity of this sort, and knock down
+your own plans."
+
+"_Your_ plans, I suppose you mean."
+
+"You have some debts, you know, and things may turn out inconveniently
+after all. The heirship is not _absolutely_ certain."
+
+Grandcourt did not answer, and Lush went on.
+
+"It really is a fine opportunity. The father and mother ask for nothing
+better, I can see, and the daughter's looks and manners require no
+allowances, any more than if she hadn't a sixpence. She is not beautiful;
+but equal to carrying any rank. And she is not likely to refuse such
+prospects as you can offer her."
+
+"Perhaps not."
+
+"The father and mother would let you do anything you like with them."
+
+"But I should not like to do anything with them."
+
+Here it was Lush who made a little pause before speaking again, and then
+he said in a deep voice of remonstrance, "Good God, Grandcourt! after your
+experience, will you let a whim interfere with your comfortable settlement
+in life?"
+
+"Spare your oratory. I know what I am going to do."
+
+"What?" Lush put down his cigar and thrust his hands into his side
+pockets, as if he had to face something exasperating, but meant to keep
+his temper.
+
+"I am going to marry the other girl."
+
+"Have you fallen in love?" This question carried a strong sneer.
+
+"I am going to marry her."
+
+"You have made her an offer already, then?"
+
+"No."
+
+"She is a young lady with a will of her own, I fancy. Extremely well
+fitted to make a rumpus. She would know what she liked."
+
+"She doesn't like you," said Grandcourt, with the ghost of a smile.
+
+"Perfectly true," said Lush, adding again in a markedly sneering tone.
+"However, if you and she are devoted to each other, that will be enough."
+
+Grandcourt took no notice of this speech, but sipped his coffee, rose, and
+strolled out on the lawn, all the dogs following him.
+
+Lush glanced after him a moment, then resumed his cigar and lit it, but
+smoked slowly, consulting his beard with inspecting eyes and fingers, till
+he finally stroked it with an air of having arrived at some conclusion,
+and said in a subdued voice--
+
+"Check, old boy!"
+
+Lush, being a man of some ability, had not known Grandcourt for fifteen
+years without learning what sort of measures were useless with him, though
+what sort might be useful remained often dubious. In the beginning of his
+career he held a fellowship, and was near taking orders for the sake of a
+college living, but not being fond of that prospect accepted instead the
+office of traveling companion to a marquess, and afterward to young
+Grandcourt, who had lost his father early, and who found Lush so
+convenient that he had allowed him to become prime minister in all his
+more personal affairs. The habit of fifteen years had made Grandcourt more
+and more in need of Lush's handiness, and Lush more and more in need of
+the lazy luxury to which his transactions on behalf of Grandcourt made no
+interruption worth reckoning. I cannot say that the same lengthened habit
+had intensified Grandcourt's want of respect for his companion since that
+want had been absolute from the beginning, but it had confirmed his sense
+that he might kick Lush if he chose--only he never did choose to kick any
+animal, because the act of kicking is a compromising attitude, and a
+gentleman's dogs should be kicked for him. He only said things which might
+have exposed himself to be kicked if his confidant had been a man of
+independent spirit. But what son of a vicar who has stinted his wife and
+daughters of calico in order to send his male offspring to Oxford, can
+keep an independent spirit when he is bent on dining with high
+discrimination, riding good horses, living generally in the most luxuriant
+honey-blossomed clover--and all without working? Mr. Lush had passed for a
+scholar once, and had still a sense of scholarship when he was not trying
+to remember much of it; but the bachelor's and other arts which soften
+manners are a time-honored preparation for sinecures; and Lush's present
+comfortable provision was as good a sinecure in not requiring more than
+the odor of departed learning. He was not unconscious of being held
+kickable, but he preferred counting that estimate among the peculiarities
+of Grandcourt's character, which made one of his incalculable moods or
+judgments as good as another. Since in his own opinion he had never done a
+bad action, it did not seem necessary to consider whether he should be
+likely to commit one if his love of ease required it. Lush's love of ease
+was well-satisfied at present, and if his puddings were rolled toward him
+in the dust, he took the inside bits and found them relishing.
+
+This morning, for example, though he had encountered more annoyance than
+usual, he went to his private sitting-room and played a good hour on the
+violoncello.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ "Philistia, be thou glad of me!"
+
+
+Grandcourt having made up his mind to marry Miss Harleth, showed a power
+of adapting means to ends. During the next fortnight there was hardly a
+day on which by some arrangement or other he did not see her, or prove by
+emphatic attentions that she occupied his thoughts. His cousin, Mrs.
+Torrington, was now doing the honors of his house, so that Mrs. Davilow
+and Gwendolen could be invited to a large party at Diplow in which there
+were many witnesses how the host distinguished the dowerless beauty, and
+showed no solicitude about the heiress. The world--I mean Mr. Gascoigne
+and all the families worth speaking of within visiting distance of
+Pennicote--felt an assurance on the subject which in the rector's mind
+converted itself into a resolution to do his duty by his niece and see
+that the settlements were adequate. Indeed the wonder to him and Mrs.
+Davilow was that the offer for which so many suitable occasions presented
+themselves had not been already made; and in this wonder Grandcourt
+himself was not without a share. When he had told his resolution to Lush
+he had thought that the affair would be concluded more quickly, and to his
+own surprise he had repeatedly promised himself in a morning that he would
+to-day give Gwendolen the opportunity of accepting him, and had found in
+the evening that the necessary formality was still unaccomplished. This
+remarkable fact served to heighten his determination on another day. He
+had never admitted to himself that Gwendolen might refuse him, but--heaven
+help us all!--we are often unable to act on our certainties; our objection
+to a contrary issue (were it possible) is so strong that it rises like a
+spectral illusion between us and our certainty; we are rationally sure
+that the blind worm can not bite us mortally, but it would be so
+intolerable to be bitten, and the creature has a biting look--we decline
+to handle it.
+
+He had asked leave to have a beautiful horse of his brought for Gwendolen
+to ride. Mrs. Davilow was to accompany her in the carriage, and they were
+to go to Diplow to lunch, Grandcourt conducting them. It was a fine mid-
+harvest time, not too warm for a noonday ride of five miles to be
+delightful; the poppies glowed on the borders of the fields, there was
+enough breeze to move gently like a social spirit among the ears of uncut
+corn, and to wing the shadow of a cloud across the soft gray downs; here
+the sheaves were standing, there the horses were straining their muscles
+under the last load from a wide space of stubble, but everywhere the green
+pasture made a broader setting for the corn-fields, and the cattle took
+their rest under wide branches. The road lay through a bit of country
+where the dairy-farms looked much as they did in the days of our
+forefathers--where peace and permanence seemed to find a home away from
+the busy change that sent the railway train flying in the distance.
+
+But the spirit of peace and permanence did not penetrate poor Mrs.
+Davilow's mind so as to overcome her habit of uneasy foreboding. Gwendolen
+and Grandcourt cantering in front of her, and then slackening their pace
+to a conversational walk till the carriage came up with them again, made a
+gratifying sight; but it served chiefly to keep up the conflict of hopes
+and fears about her daughter's lot. Here was an irresistible opportunity
+for a lover to speak and put an end to all uncertainties, and Mrs. Davilow
+could only hope with trembling that Gwendolen's decision would be
+favorable. Certainly if Rex's love had been repugnant to her, Mr.
+Grandcourt had the advantage of being in complete contrast with Rex; and
+that he had produced some quite novel impression on her seemed evident in
+her marked abstinence from satirical observations, nay, her total silence
+about his characteristics, a silence which Mrs. Davilow did not dare to
+break. "Is he a man she would be happy with?"--was a question that
+inevitably arose in the mother's mind. "Well, perhaps as happy as she
+would be with any one else--or as most other women are"--was the answer
+with which she tried to quiet herself; for she could not imagine Gwendolen
+under the influence of any feeling which would make her satisfied in what
+we traditionally call "mean circumstances."
+
+Grandcourt's own thought was looking in the same direction: he wanted to
+have done with the uncertainty that belonged to his not having spoken. As
+to any further uncertainty--well, it was something without any reasonable
+basis, some quality in the air which acted as an irritant to his wishes.
+
+Gwendolen enjoyed the riding, but her pleasure did not break forth in
+girlish unpremeditated chat and laughter as it did on that morning with
+Rex. She spoke a little, and even laughed, but with a lightness as of a
+far-off echo: for her too there was some peculiar quality in the air--not,
+she was sure, any subjugation of her will by Mr. Grandcourt, and the
+splendid prospects he meant to offer her; for Gwendolen desired every one,
+that dignified gentleman himself included, to understand that she was
+going to do just as she liked, and that they had better not calculate on
+her pleasing them. If she chose to take this husband, she would have him
+know that she was not going to renounce her freedom, or according to her
+favorite formula, "not going to do as other women did."
+
+Grandcourt's speeches this morning were, as usual, all of that brief sort
+which never fails to make a conversational figure when the speaker is held
+important in his circle. Stopping so soon, they give signs of a suppressed
+and formidable ability so say more, and have also the meritorious quality
+of allowing lengthiness to others.
+
+"How do you like Criterion's paces?" he said, after they had entered the
+park and were slacking from a canter to a walk.
+
+"He is delightful to ride. I should like to have a leap with him, if it
+would not frighten mamma. There was a good wide channel we passed five
+minutes ago. I should like to have a gallop back and take it."
+
+"Pray do. We can take it together."
+
+"No, thanks. Mamma is so timid--if she saw me it might make her ill."
+
+"Let me go and explain. Criterion would take it without fail."
+
+"No--indeed--you are very kind--but it would alarm her too much. I dare
+take any leap when she is not by; but I do it and don't tell her about
+it."
+
+"We can let the carriage pass and then set off."
+
+"No, no, pray don't think of it any more: I spoke quite randomly," said
+Gwendolen; she began to feel a new objection to carrying out her own
+proposition.
+
+"But Mrs. Davilow knows I shall take care of you."
+
+"Yes, but she would think of you as having to take care of my broken
+neck."
+
+There was a considerable pause before Grandcourt said, looking toward her,
+"I should like to have the right always to take care of you."
+
+Gwendolen did not turn her eyes on him; it seemed to her a long while that
+she was first blushing, and then turning pale, but to Grandcourt's rate of
+judgment she answered soon enough, with the lightest flute-tone and a
+careless movement of the head, "Oh, I am not sure that I want to be taken
+care of: if I chose to risk breaking my neck, I should like to be at
+liberty to do it."
+
+She checked her horse as she spoke, and turned in her saddle, looking
+toward the advancing carriage. Her eyes swept across Grandcourt as she
+made this movement, but there was no language in them to correct the
+carelessness of her reply. At that very moment she was aware that she was
+risking something--not her neck, but the possibility of finally checking
+Grandcourt's advances, and she did not feel contented with the
+possibility.
+
+"Damn her!" thought Grandcourt, as he to checked his horse. He was not a
+wordy thinker, and this explosive phrase stood for mixed impressions which
+eloquent interpreters might have expanded into some sentences full of an
+irritated sense that he was being mystified, and a determination that this
+girl should not make a fool of him. Did she want him to throw himself at
+her feet and declare that he was dying for her? It was not by that gate
+that she could enter on the privileges he could give her. Or did she
+expect him to write his proposals? Equally a delusion. He would not make
+his offer in any way that could place him definitely in the position of
+being rejected. But as to her accepting him, she had done it already in
+accepting his marked attentions: and anything which happened to break them
+off would be understood to her disadvantage. She was merely coquetting,
+then?
+
+However, the carriage came up, and no further _tete-a-tete_ could well
+occur before their arrival at the house, where there was abundant company,
+to whom Gwendolen, clad in riding-dress, with her hat laid aside, clad
+also in the repute of being chosen by Mr. Grandcourt, was naturally a
+centre of observation; and since the objectionable Mr. Lush was not there
+to look at her, this stimulus of admiring attention heightened her
+spirits, and dispersed, for the time, the uneasy consciousness of divided
+impulses which threatened her with repentance of her own acts. Whether
+Grandcourt had been offended or not there was no judging: his manners were
+unchanged, but Gwendolen's acuteness had not gone deeper than to discern
+that his manners were no clue for her, and because these were unchanged
+she was not the less afraid of him.
+
+She had not been at Diplow before except to dine; and since certain points
+of view from the windows and the garden were worth showing, Lady Flora
+Hollis proposed after luncheon, when some of the guests had dispersed, and
+the sun was sloping toward four o'clock, that the remaining party should
+make a little exploration. Here came frequent opportunities when
+Grandcourt might have retained Gwendolen apart, and have spoken to her
+unheard. But no! He indeed spoke to no one else, but what he said was
+nothing more eager or intimate than it had been in their first interview.
+He looked at her not less than usual; and some of her defiant spirit
+having come back, she looked full at him in return, not caring--rather
+preferring--that his eyes had no expression in them.
+
+But at last it seemed as if he entertained some contrivance. After they
+had nearly made the tour of the grounds, the whole party stopped by the
+pool to be amused with Fetch's accomplishment of bringing a water lily to
+the bank like Cowper's spaniel Beau, and having been disappointed in his
+first attempt insisted on his trying again.
+
+Here Grandcourt, who stood with Gwendolen outside the group, turned
+deliberately, and fixing his eyes on a knoll planted with American shrubs,
+and having a winding path up it, said languidly--
+
+"This is a bore. Shall we go up there?"
+
+"Oh, certainly--since we are exploring," said Gwendolen. She was rather
+pleased, and yet afraid.
+
+The path was too narrow for him to offer his arm, and they walked up in
+silence. When they were on the bit of platform at the summit, Grandcourt
+said--
+
+"There is nothing to be seen here: the thing was not worth climbing."
+
+How was it that Gwendolen did not laugh? She was perfectly silent, holding
+up the folds of her robe like a statue, and giving a harder grasp to the
+handle of her whip, which she had snatched up automatically with her hat
+when they had first set off.
+
+"What sort of a place do you prefer?" said Grandcourt.
+
+"Different places are agreeable in their way. On the whole, I think, I
+prefer places that are open and cheerful. I am not fond of anything
+sombre."
+
+"Your place of Offendene is too sombre."
+
+"It is, rather."
+
+"You will not remain there long, I hope."
+
+"Oh, yes, I think so. Mamma likes to be near her sister."
+
+Silence for a short space.
+
+"It is not to be supposed that _you_ will always live there, though Mrs.
+Davilow may."
+
+"I don't know. We women can't go in search of adventures--to find out the
+North-West Passage or the source of the Nile, or to hunt tigers in the
+East. We must stay where we grow, or where the gardeners like to
+transplant us. We are brought up like the flowers, to look as pretty as we
+can, and be dull without complaining. That is my notion about the plants;
+they are often bored, and that is the reason why some of them have got
+poisonous. What do you think?" Gwendolen had run on rather nervously,
+lightly whipping the rhododendron bush in front of her.
+
+"I quite agree. Most things are bores," said Grandcourt, his mind having
+been pushed into an easy current, away from its intended track. But, after
+a moment's pause, he continued in his broken, refined drawl--
+
+"But a woman can be married."
+
+"Some women can."
+
+"You, certainly, unless you are obstinately cruel."
+
+"I am not sure that I am not both cruel and obstinate." Here Gwendolen
+suddenly turned her head and looked full at Grandcourt, whose eyes she had
+felt to be upon her throughout their conversation. She was wondering what
+the effect of looking at him would be on herself rather than on him.
+
+He stood perfectly still, half a yard or more away from her; and it
+flashed through her mind what a sort of lotus-eater's stupor had begun in
+him and was taking possession of her. Then he said--
+
+"Are you as uncertain about yourself as you make others about you?"
+
+"I am quite uncertain about myself; I don't know how uncertain others may
+be."
+
+"And you wish them to understand that you don't care?" said Grandcourt,
+with a touch of new hardness in his tone.
+
+"I did not say that," Gwendolen replied, hesitatingly, and turning her
+eyes away whipped the rhododendron bush again. She wished she were on
+horseback that she might set off on a canter. It was impossible to set off
+running down the knoll.
+
+"You do care, then," said Grandcourt, not more quickly, but with a
+softened drawl.
+
+"Ha! my whip!" said Gwendolen, in a little scream of distress. She had let
+it go--what could be more natural in a slight agitation?--and--but this
+seemed less natural in a gold-handled whip which had been left altogether
+to itself--it had gone with some force over the immediate shrubs, and had
+lodged itself in the branches of an azalea half-way down the knoll. She
+could run down now, laughing prettily, and Grandcourt was obliged to
+follow; but she was beforehand with him in rescuing the whip, and
+continued on her way to the level ground, when she paused and looked at
+Grandcourt with an exasperating brightness in her glance and a heightened
+color, as if she had carried a triumph, and these indications were still
+noticeable to Mrs. Davilow when Gwendolen and Grandcourt joined the rest
+of the party.
+
+"It is all coquetting," thought Grandcourt; "the next time I beckon she
+will come down."
+
+It seemed to him likely that this final beckoning might happen the very
+next day, when there was to be a picnic archery meeting in Cardell Chase,
+according to the plan projected on the evening of the ball.
+
+Even in Gwendolen's mind that result was one of two likelihoods that
+presented themselves alternately, one of two decisions toward which she
+was being precipitated, as if they were two sides of a boundary-line, and
+she did not know on which she should fall. This subjection to a possible
+self, a self not to be absolutely predicted about, caused her some
+astonishment and terror; her favorite key of life--doing as she liked--
+seemed to fail her, and she could not foresee what at a given moment she
+might like to do. The prospect of marrying Grandcourt really seemed more
+attractive to her than she had believed beforehand that any marriage could
+be: the dignities, the luxuries, the power of doing a great deal of what
+she liked to do, which had now come close to her, and within her choice to
+secure or to lose, took hold of her nature as if it had been the strong
+odor of what she had only imagined and longed for before. And Grandcourt
+himself? He seemed as little of a flaw in his fortunes as a lover and
+husband could possibly be. Gwendolen wished to mount the chariot and drive
+the plunging horses herself, with a spouse by her side who would fold his
+arms and give her his countenance without looking ridiculous. Certainly,
+with all her perspicacity, and all the reading which seemed to her mamma
+dangerously instructive, her judgment was consciously a little at fault
+before Grandcourt. He was adorably quiet and free from absurdities--he
+would be a husband to suit with the best appearance a woman could make.
+But what else was he? He had been everywhere, and seen everything. _That_
+was desirable, and especially gratifying as a preamble to his supreme
+preference for Gwendolen Harleth. He did not appear to enjoy anything
+much. That was not necessary: and the less he had of particular tastes, or
+desires, the more freedom his wife was likely to have in following hers.
+Gwendolen conceived that after marriage she would most probably be able to
+manage him thoroughly.
+
+How was it that he caused her unusual constraint now?--that she was less
+daring and playful in her talk with him than with any other admirer she
+had known? That absence of demonstrativeness which she was glad of, acted
+as a charm in more senses than one, and was slightly benumbing. Grandcourt
+after all was formidable--a handsome lizard of a hitherto unknown species,
+riot of the lively, darting kind. But Gwendolen knew hardly anything about
+lizards, and ignorance gives one a large range of probabilities. This
+splendid specimen was probably gentle, suitable as a boudoir pet: what may
+not a lizard be, if you know nothing to the contrary? Her acquaintance
+with Grandcourt was such that no accomplishment suddenly revealed in him
+would have surprised her. And he was so little suggestive of drama, that
+it hardly occurred to her to think with any detail how his life of thirty-
+six years had been passed: in general, she imagined him always cold and
+dignified, not likely ever to have committed himself. He had hunted the
+tiger--had he ever been in love or made love? The one experience and the
+other seemed alike remote in Gwendolen's fancy from the Mr. Grandcourt who
+had come to Diplow in order apparently to make a chief epoch in her
+destiny--perhaps by introducing her to that state of marriage which she
+had resolved to make a state of greater freedom than her girlhood. And on
+the whole she wished to marry him; he suited her purpose; her prevailing,
+deliberate intention was, to accept him.
+
+But was she going to fulfill her deliberate intention? She began to be
+afraid of herself, and to find out a certain difficulty in doing as she
+liked. Already her assertion of independence in evading his advances had
+been carried farther than was necessary, and she was thinking with some
+anxiety what she might do on the next occasion.
+
+Seated according to her habit with her back to the horses on their drive
+homeward, she was completely under the observation of her mamma, who took
+the excitement and changefulness in the expression of her eyes, her
+unwonted absence of mind and total silence, as unmistakable signs that
+something unprecedented had occurred between her and Grandcourt. Mrs.
+Davilow's uneasiness determined her to risk some speech on the subject:
+the Gascoignes were to dine at Offendene, and in what had occurred this
+morning there might be some reason for consulting the rector; not that she
+expected him anymore than herself to influence Gwendolen, but that her
+anxious mind wanted to be disburdened.
+
+"Something has happened, dear?" she began, in a tender tone of question.
+
+Gwendolen looked round, and seeming to be roused to the consciousness of
+her physical self, took off her gloves and then her hat, that the soft
+breeze might blow on her head. They were in a retired bit of the road,
+where the long afternoon shadows from the bordering trees fell across it
+and no observers were within sight. Her eyes continued to meet her
+mother's, but she did not speak.
+
+"Mr. Grandcourt has been saying something?--Tell me, dear." The last words
+were uttered beseechingly.
+
+"What am I to tell you, mamma?" was the perverse answer.
+
+"I am sure something has agitated you. You ought to confide in me, Gwen.
+You ought not to leave me in doubt and anxiety." Mrs. Davilow's eyes
+filled with tears.
+
+"Mamma, dear, please don't be miserable," said Gwendolen, with pettish
+remonstrance. "It only makes me more so. I am in doubt myself."
+
+"About Mr. Grandcourt's intentions?" said Mrs. Davilow, gathering
+determination from her alarms.
+
+"No; not at all," said Gwendolen, with some curtness, and a pretty little
+toss of the head as she put on her hat again.
+
+"About whether you will accept him, then?"
+
+"Precisely."
+
+"Have you given him a doubtful answer?"
+
+"I have given him no answer at all."
+
+"He _has_ spoken so that you could not misunderstand him?"
+
+"As far as I would let him speak."
+
+"You expect him to persevere?" Mrs. Davilow put this question rather
+anxiously, and receiving no answer, asked another: "You don't consider
+that you have discouraged him?"
+
+"I dare say not."
+
+"I thought you liked him, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, timidly.
+
+"So I do, mamma, as liking goes. There is less to dislike about him than
+about most men. He is quiet and _distingue_." Gwendolen so far spoke with
+a pouting sort of gravity; but suddenly she recovered some of her
+mischievousness, and her face broke into a smile as she added--"Indeed he
+has all the qualities that would make a husband tolerable--battlement,
+veranda, stable, etc., no grins and no glass in his eye."
+
+"Do be serious with me for a moment, dear. Am I to understand that you
+mean to accept him?"
+
+"Oh, pray, mamma, leave me to myself," said Gwendolen, with a pettish
+distress in her voice.
+
+And Mrs. Davilow said no more.
+
+When they got home Gwendolen declared that she would not dine. She was
+tired, and would come down in the evening after she had taken some rest.
+The probability that her uncle would hear what had passed did not trouble
+her. She was convinced that whatever he might say would be on the side of
+her accepting Grandcourt, and she wished to accept him if she could. At
+this moment she would willingly have had weights hung on her own caprice.
+
+Mr. Gascoigne did hear--not Gwendolen's answers repeated verbatim, but a
+softened generalized account of them. The mother conveyed as vaguely as
+the keen rector's questions would let her the impression that Gwendolen
+was in some uncertainty about her own mind, but inclined on the whole to
+acceptance. The result was that the uncle felt himself called on to
+interfere; he did not conceive that he should do his duty in witholding
+direction from his niece in a momentous crisis of this kind. Mrs. Davilow
+ventured a hesitating opinion that perhaps it would be safer to say
+nothing--Gwendolen was so sensitive (she did not like to say willful). But
+the rector's was a firm mind, grasping its first judgments tenaciously and
+acting on them promptly, whence counter-judgments were no more for him
+than shadows fleeting across the solid ground to which he adjusted
+himself.
+
+This match with Grandcourt presented itself to him as a sort of public
+affair; perhaps there were ways in which it might even strengthen the
+establishment. To the rector, whose father (nobody would have suspected
+it, and nobody was told) had risen to be a provincial corn-dealer,
+aristocratic heirship resembled regal heirship in excepting its possessor
+from the ordinary standard of moral judgments, Grandcourt, the almost
+certain baronet, the probable peer, was to be ranged with public
+personages, and was a match to be accepted on broad general grounds
+national and ecclesiastical. Such public personages, it is true, are often
+in the nature of giants which an ancient community may have felt pride and
+safety in possessing, though, regarded privately, these born eminences
+must often have been inconvenient and even noisome. But of the future
+husband personally Mr. Gascoigne was disposed to think the best. Gossip is
+a sort of smoke that comes from the dirty tobacco-pipes of of those who
+diffuse it: it proves nothing but the bad taste of the smoker. But if
+Grandcourt had really made any deeper or more unfortunate experiments in
+folly than were common in young men of high prospects, he was of an age to
+have finished them. All accounts can be suitably wound up when a man has
+not ruined himself, and the expense may be taken as an insurance against
+future error. This was the view of practical wisdom; with reference to
+higher views, repentance had a supreme moral and religious value. There
+was every reason to believe that a woman of well-regulated mind would be
+happy with Grandcourt.
+
+It was no surprise to Gwendolen on coming down to tea to be told that her
+uncle wished to see her in the dining-room. He threw aside the paper as
+she entered and greeted her with his usual kindness. As his wife had
+remarked, he always "made much" of Gwendolen, and her importance had risen
+of late. "My dear," he said, in a fatherly way, moving a chair for her as
+he held her hand, "I want to speak to you on a subject which is more
+momentous than any other with regard to your welfare. You will guess what
+I mean. But I shall speak to you with perfect directness: in such matters
+I consider myself bound to act as your father. You have no objection, I
+hope?"
+
+"Oh dear, no, uncle. You have always been very kind to me," said
+Gwendolen, frankly. This evening she was willing, if it were possible, to
+be a little fortified against her troublesome self, and her resistant
+temper was in abeyance. The rector's mode of speech always conveyed a
+thrill of authority, as of a word of command: it seemed to take for
+granted that there could be no wavering in the audience, and that every
+one was going to be rationally obedient.
+
+"It is naturally a satisfaction to me that the prospect of a marriage for
+you--advantageous in the highest degree--has presented itself so early. I
+do not know exactly what has passed between you and Mr. Grandcourt, but I
+presume there can be little doubt, from the way in which he has
+distinguished you, that he desires to make you his wife."
+
+Gwendolen did not speak immediately, and her uncle said with more
+emphasis--
+
+"Have you any doubt of that yourself, my dear?"
+
+"I suppose that is what he has been thinking of. But he may have changed
+his mind to-morrow," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Why to-morrow? Has he made advances which you have discouraged?"
+
+"I think he meant--he began to make advances--but I did not encourage
+them. I turned the conversation."
+
+"Will you confide in me so far as to tell me your reasons?"
+
+"I am not sure that I had any reasons, uncle." Gwendolen laughed rather
+artificially.
+
+"You are quite capable of reflecting, Gwendolen. You are aware that this
+is not a trivial occasion, and it concerns your establishment for life
+under circumstances which may not occur again. You have a duty here both
+to yourself and your family. I wish to understand whether you have any
+ground for hesitating as to your acceptance of Mr. Grandcourt."
+
+"I suppose I hesitate without grounds." Gwendolen spoke rather poutingly,
+and her uncle grew suspicious.
+
+"Is he disagreeable to you personally?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Have you heard anything of him which has affected you disagreeably?" The
+rector thought it impossible that Gwendolen could have heard the gossip he
+had heard, but in any case he must endeavor to put all things in the right
+light for her.
+
+"I have heard nothing about him except that he is a great match," said
+Gwendolen, with some sauciness; "and that affects me very agreeably."
+
+"Then, my dear Gwendolen, I have nothing further to say than this: you
+hold your fortune in your own hands--a fortune such as rarely happens to a
+girl in your circumstances--a fortune in fact which almost takes the
+question out of the range of mere personal feeling, and makes your
+acceptance of it a duty. If Providence offers you power and position--
+especially when unclogged by any conditions that are repugnant to you--
+your course is one of responsibility, into which caprice must not enter. A
+man does not like to have his attachment trifled with: he may not be at
+once repelled--these things are matters of individual disposition. But the
+trifling may be carried too far. And I must point out to you that in case
+Mr. Grandcourt were repelled without your having refused him--without your
+having intended ultimately to refuse him, your situation would be a
+humiliating and painful one. I, for my part, should regard you with severe
+disapprobation, as the victim of nothing else than your own coquetry and
+folly."
+
+Gwendolen became pallid as she listened to this admonitory speech. The
+ideas it raised had the force of sensations. Her resistant courage would
+not help her here, because her uncle was not urging her against her own
+resolve; he was pressing upon her the motives of dread which she already
+felt; he was making her more conscious of the risks that lay within
+herself. She was silent, and the rector observed that he had produced some
+strong effect.
+
+"I mean this in kindness, my dear." His tone had softened.
+
+"I am aware of that, uncle," said Gwendolen, rising and shaking her head
+back, as if to rouse herself out of painful passivity. "I am not foolish.
+I know that I must be married some time--before it is too late. And I
+don't see how I could do better than marry Mr. Grandcourt. I mean to
+accept him, if possible." She felt as if she were reinforcing herself by
+speaking with this decisiveness to her uncle.
+
+But the rector was a little startled by so bare a version of his own
+meaning from those young lips. He wished that in her mind his advice
+should be taken in an infusion of sentiments proper to a girl, and such as
+are presupposed in the advice of a clergyman, although he may not consider
+them always appropriate to be put forward. He wished his niece parks,
+carriages, a title--everything that would make this world a pleasant
+abode; but he wished her not to be cynical--to be, on the contrary,
+religiously dutiful, and have warm domestic affections.
+
+"My dear Gwendolen," he said, rising also, and speaking with benignant
+gravity, "I trust that you will find in marriage a new fountain of duty
+and affection. Marriage is the only true and satisfactory sphere of a
+woman, and if your marriage with Mr. Grandcourt should be happily decided
+upon, you will have, probably, an increasing power, both of rank and
+wealth, which may be used for the benefit of others. These considerations
+are something higher than romance! You are fitted by natural gifts for a
+position which, considering your birth and early prospects, could hardly
+be looked forward to as in the ordinary course of things; and I trust
+that, you will grace it, not only by those personal gifts, but by a good
+and consistent life."
+
+"I hope mamma will be the happier," said Gwendolen, in a more cheerful
+way, lifting her hands backward to her neck and moving toward the door.
+She wanted to waive those higher considerations.
+
+Mr. Gascoigne felt that he had come to a satisfactory understanding with
+his niece, and had furthered her happy settlement in life by furthering
+her engagement to Grandcourt. Meanwhile there was another person to whom
+the contemplation of that issue had been a motive for some activity, and
+who believed that he, too, on this particular day had done something
+toward bringing about a favorable decision in _his_ sense--which happened
+to be the reverse of the rector's.
+
+Mr. Lush's absence from Diplow during Gwendolen's visit had been due, not
+to any fear on his part of meeting that supercilious young lady, or of
+being abashed by her frank dislike, but to an engagement from which he
+expected important consequences. He was gone, in fact, to the Wanchester
+station to meet a lady, accompanied by a maid and two children, whom he
+put into a fly, and afterward followed to the hotel of the Golden Keys, in
+that town. An impressive woman, whom many would turn to look at again in
+passing; her figure was slim and sufficiently tall, her face rather
+emaciated, so that its sculpturesque beauty was the more pronounced, her
+crisp hair perfectly black, and her large, anxious eyes what we call
+black. Her dress was soberly correct, her age, perhaps, physically more
+advanced than the number of years would imply, but hardly less than seven-
+and-thirty. An uneasy-looking woman: her glance seemed to presuppose that
+the people and things were going to be unfavorable to her, while she was,
+nevertheless, ready to meet them with resolution. The children were
+lovely--a dark-haired girl of six or more, a fairer boy of five. When Lush
+incautiously expressed some surprise at her having brought the children,
+she said, with a sharp-toned intonation--
+
+"Did you suppose I should come wandering about here by myself? Why should
+I not bring all four if I liked?"
+
+"Oh, certainly," said Lush, with his usual fluent _nonchalance_.
+
+He stayed an hour or so in conference with her, and rode back to Diplow in
+a state of mind that was at once hopeful and busily anxious as to the
+execution of the little plan on which his hopefulness was based.
+Grandcourt's marriage to Gwendolen Harleth would not, he believed, be much
+of a good to either of them, and it would plainly be fraught with
+disagreeables to himself. But now he felt confident enough to say
+inwardly, "I will take, nay, I will lay odds that the marriage will never
+happen."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ I will not clothe myself in wreck--wear gems
+ Sawed from cramped finger-bones of women drowned;
+ Feel chilly vaporous hands of ireful ghosts
+ Clutching my necklace: trick my maiden breast
+ With orphans' heritage. Let your dead love
+ Marry it's dead.
+
+
+Gwendolen looked lovely and vigorous as a tall, newly-opened lily the next
+morning: there was a reaction of young energy in her, and yesterday's
+self-distrust seemed no more than the transient shiver on the surface of a
+full stream. The roving archery match in Cardell Chase was a delightful
+prospect for the sport's sake: she felt herself beforehand moving about
+like a wood-nymph under the beeches (in appreciative company), and the
+imagined scene lent a charm to further advances on the part of Grandcourt
+--not an impassioned lyrical Daphnis for the wood-nymph, certainly: but so
+much the better. To-day Gwendolen foresaw him making slow conversational
+approaches to a declaration, and foresaw herself awaiting and encouraging
+it according to the rational conclusion which she had expressed to her
+uncle.
+
+When she came down to breakfast (after every one had left the table except
+Mrs. Davilow) there were letters on her plate. One of them she read with a
+gathering smile, and then handed it to her mamma, who, on returning it,
+smiled also, finding new cheerfulness in the good spirits her daughter had
+shown ever since waking, and said--
+
+"You don't feel inclined to go a thousand miles away?"
+
+"Not exactly so far."
+
+"It was a sad omission not to have written again before this. Can't you
+write how--before we set out this morning?"
+
+"It is not so pressing. To-morrow will do. You see they leave town to-day.
+I must write to Dover. They will be there till Monday."
+
+"Shall I write for you, dear--if it teases you?"
+
+Gwendolen did not speak immediately, but after sipping her coffee,
+answered brusquely, "Oh no, let it be; I will write to-morrow." Then,
+feeling a touch of compunction, she looked up and said with playful
+tenderness, "Dear, old, beautiful mamma!"
+
+"Old, child, truly."
+
+"Please don't, mamma! I meant old for darling. You are hardly twenty-five
+years older than I am. When you talk in that way my life shrivels up
+before me."
+
+"One can have a great deal of happiness in twenty-five years, my dear."
+
+"I must lose no time in beginning," said Gwendolen, merrily. "The sooner I
+get my palaces and coaches the better."
+
+"And a good husband who adores you, Gwen," said Mrs. Davilow,
+encouragingly.
+
+Gwendolen put out her lips saucily and said nothing.
+
+It was a slight drawback on her pleasure in starting that the rector was
+detained by magistrate's business, and would probably not be able to get
+to Cardell Chase at all that day. She cared little that Mrs. Gascoigne and
+Anna chose not to go without him, but her uncle's presence would have
+seemed to make it a matter of course that the decision taken would be
+acted on. For decision in itself began to be formidable. Having come close
+to accepting Grandcourt, Gwendolen felt this lot of unhoped-for fullness
+rounding itself too definitely. When we take to wishing a great deal for
+ourselves, whatever we get soon turns into mere limitation and exclusion.
+Still there was the reassuring thought that marriage would be the gate
+into a larger freedom.
+
+The place of meeting was a grassy spot called Green Arbor, where a bit of
+hanging wood made a sheltering amphitheatre. It was here that the coachful
+of servants with provisions had to prepare the picnic meal; and the warden
+of the Chase was to guide the roving archers so as to keep them within the
+due distance from this centre, and hinder them from wandering beyond the
+limit which had been fixed on--a curve that might be drawn through certain
+well-known points, such as the double Oak, the Whispering Stones, and the
+High Cross. The plan was to take only a preliminary stroll before
+luncheon, keeping the main roving expedition for the more exquisite lights
+of the afternoon. The muster was rapid enough to save every one from dull
+moments of waiting, and when the groups began to scatter themselves
+through the light and shadow made here by closely neighboring beeches and
+thereby rarer oaks, one may suppose that a painter would have been glad to
+look on. This roving archery was far prettier than the stationary game,
+but success in shooting at variable marks were less favored by practice,
+and the hits were distributed among the volunteer archers otherwise than
+they would have been in target-shooting. From this cause, perhaps, as well
+as from the twofold distraction of being preoccupied and wishing not to
+betray her preoccupation, Gwendolen did not greatly distinguish herself in
+these first experiments, unless it were by the lively grace with which she
+took her comparative failure. She was in white and green as on the day of
+the former meeting, when it made an epoch for her that she was introduced
+to Grandcourt; he was continually by her side now, yet it would have been
+hard to tell from mere looks and manners that their relation to each other
+had at all changed since their first conversation. Still there were other
+grounds that made most persons conclude them to be, if not engaged
+already, on the eve of being so. And she believed this herself. As they
+were all returning toward Green Arbor in divergent groups, not thinking at
+all of taking aim but merely chattering, words passed which seemed really
+the beginning of that end--the beginning of her acceptance. Grandcourt
+said, "Do you know how long it is since I first saw you in this dress?"
+
+"The archery meeting was on the 25th, and this is the 13th," said
+Gwendolen, laughingly. "I am not good at calculating, but I will venture
+to say that it must be nearly three weeks."
+
+A little pause, and then he said, "That is a great loss of time."
+
+"That your knowing me has caused you? Pray don't be uncomplimentary; I
+don't like it."
+
+Pause again. "It is because of the gain that I feel the loss."
+
+Here Gwendolen herself let a pause. She was thinking, "He is really very
+ingenious. He never speaks stupidly." Her silence was so unusual that it
+seemed the strongest of favorable answers, and he continued:
+
+"The gain of knowing you makes me feel the time I lose in uncertainty. Do
+_you_ like uncertainty?"
+
+"I think I do, rather," said Gwendolen, suddenly beaming on him with a
+playful smile. "There is more in it."
+
+Grandcourt met her laughing eyes with a slow, steady look right into them,
+which seemed like vision in the abstract, and then said, "Do you mean more
+torment for me?"
+
+There was something so strange to Gwendolen in this moment that she was
+quite shaken out of her usual self-consciousness. Blushing and turning
+away her eyes, she said, "No, that would make me sorry."
+
+Grandcourt would have followed up this answer, which the change in her
+manner made apparently decisive of her favorable intention; but he was not
+in any way overcome so as to be unaware that they were now, within sight
+of everybody, descending the space into Green Arbor, and descending it at
+an ill-chosen point where it began to be inconveniently steep. This was a
+reason for offering his hand in the literal sense to help her; she took
+it, and they came down in silence, much observed by those already on the
+level--among others by Mrs. Arrowpoint, who happened to be standing with
+Mrs. Davilow. That lady had now made up her mind that Grandcourt's merits
+were not such as would have induced Catherine to accept him, Catherine
+having so high a standard as to have refused Lord Slogan. Hence she looked
+at the tenant of Diplow with dispassionate eyes.
+
+"Mr. Grandcourt is not equal as a man to his uncle, Sir Hugo Mallinger--
+too languid. To be sure, Mr. Grandcourt is a much younger man, but I
+shouldn't wonder if Sir Hugo were to outlive him, notwithstanding the
+difference of years. It is ill calculating on successions," concluded Mrs.
+Arrowpoint, rather too loudly.
+
+"It is indeed," said Mrs. Davilow, able to assent with quiet cheerfulness,
+for she was so well satisfied with the actual situation of affairs that
+her habitual melancholy in their general unsatisfactoriness was altogether
+in abeyance.
+
+I am not concerned to tell of the food that was eaten in that green
+refectory, or even to dwell on the stories of the forest scenery that
+spread themselves out beyond the level front of the hollow; being just now
+bound to tell a story of life at a stage when the blissful beauty of earth
+and sky entered only by narrow and oblique inlets into the consciousness,
+which was busy with a small social drama almost as little penetrated by a
+feeling of wider relations as if it had been a puppet-show. It will be
+understood that the food and champagne were of the best--the talk and
+laughter too, in the sense of belonging to the best society, where no one
+makes an invidious display of anything in particular, and the advantages
+of the world are taken with that high-bred depreciation which follows from
+being accustomed to them. Some of the gentlemen strolled a little and
+indulged in a cigar, there being a sufficient interval before, four
+o'clock--the time for beginning to rove again. Among these, strange to
+say, was Grandcourt; but not Mr. Lush, who seemed to be taking his
+pleasure quite generously to-day by making himself particularly
+serviceable, ordering everything for everybody, and by this activity
+becoming more than ever a blot on the scene to Gwendolen, though he kept
+himself amiably aloof from her, and never even looked at her obviously.
+When there was a general move to prepare for starting, it appeared that
+the bows had all been put under the charge of Lord Brackenshaw's valet,
+and Mr. Lush was concerned to save ladies the trouble of fetching theirs
+from the carriage where they were propped. He did not intend to bring
+Gwendolen's, but she, fearful lest he should do so, hurried to fetch it
+herself. The valet, seeing her approach, met her with it, and in giving it
+into her hand gave also a letter addressed to her. She asked no question
+about it, perceived at a glance that the address was in a lady's
+handwriting (of the delicate kind which used to be esteemed feminine
+before the present uncial period), and moving away with her bow in her
+hand, saw Mr. Lush coming to fetch other bows. To avoid meeting him she
+turned aside and walked with her back toward the stand of carriages,
+opening the letter. It contained these words--
+
+ If Miss Harleth is in doubt whether she should accept Mr. Grandcourt,
+ let her break from her party after they have passed the Whispering
+ Stones and return to that spot. She will then hear something to decide
+ her; but she can only hear it by keeping this letter a strict secret
+ from every one. If she does not act according to this letter, she will
+ repent, as the woman who writes it has repented. The secrecy Miss
+ Harleth will feel herself bound in honor to guard.
+
+Gwendolen felt an inward shock, but her immediate thought was, "It is come
+in time." It lay in her youthfulness that she was absorbed by the idea of
+the revelation to be made, and had not even a momentary suspicion of
+contrivance that could justify her in showing the letter. Her mind
+gathered itself up at once into the resolution, that she would manage to
+go unobserved to the Whispering Stones; and thrusting the letter into her
+pocket she turned back to rejoin the company, with that sense of having
+something to conceal which to her nature had a bracing quality and helped
+her to be mistress of herself.
+
+It was a surprise to every one that Grandcourt was not, like the other
+smokers, on the spot in time to set out roving with the rest. "We shall
+alight on him by-and-by," said Lord Brackenshaw; "he can't be gone far."
+At any rate, no man could be waited for. This apparent forgetfulness might
+be taken for the distraction of a lover so absorbed in thinking of the
+beloved object as to forget an appointment which would bring him into her
+actual presence. And the good-natured Earl gave Gwendolen a distant jocose
+hint to that effect, which she took with suitable quietude. But the
+thought in her mind was "Can he too be starting away from a decision?" It
+was not exactly a pleasant thought to her; but it was near the truth.
+"Starting away," however, was not the right expression for the languor of
+intention that came over Grandcourt, like a fit of diseased numbness, when
+an end seemed within easy reach: to desist then, when all expectation was
+to the contrary, became another gratification of mere will, sublimely
+independent of definite motive. At that moment he had begun a second large
+cigar in a vague, hazy obstinacy which, if Lush or any other mortal who
+might be insulted with impunity had interrupted by overtaking him with a
+request for his return, would have expressed itself by a slow removal of
+his cigar, to say in an undertone, "You'll be kind enough to go to the
+devil, will you?"
+
+But he was not interrupted, and the rovers set off without any visible
+depression of spirits, leaving behind only a few of the less vigorous
+ladies, including Mrs. Davilow, who preferred a quiet stroll free from
+obligation to keep up with others. The enjoyment of the day was soon at
+its highest pitch, the archery getting more spirited and the changing
+scenes of the forest from roofed grove to open glade growing lovelier with
+the lengthening shadows, and the deeply-felt but undefinable gradations of
+the mellowing afternoon. It was agreed that they were playing an
+extemporized "As you like it;" and when a pretty compliment had been
+turned to Gwendolen about her having the part of Rosalind, she felt the
+more compelled to be surpassing in loveliness. This was not very difficult
+to her, for the effect of what had happened to-day was an excitement which
+needed a vent--a sense of adventure rather than alarm, and a straining
+toward the management of her retreat, so as not to be impeded.
+
+The roving had been lasting nearly an hour before the arrival at the
+Whispering Stones, two tall conical blocks that leaned toward each other
+like gigantic gray-mantled figures. They were soon surveyed and passed by
+with the remark that they would be good ghosts on a starlit night. But a
+soft sunlight was on them now, and Gwendolen felt daring. The stones were
+near a fine grove of beeches, where the archers found plenty of marks.
+
+"How far are we from Green Arbor now?" said Gwendolen, having got in front
+by the side of the warden.
+
+"Oh, not more than half a mile, taking along the avenue we're going to
+cross up there: but I shall take round a Couple of miles, by the High
+Cross."
+
+She was falling back among the rest, when suddenly they seemed all to be
+hurrying obliquely forward under the guidance of Mr. Lush, and lingering a
+little where she was, she perceived her opportunity of slipping away. Soon
+she was out of sight, and without running she seemed to herself to fly
+along the ground and count the moments nothing till she found herself back
+again at the Whispering Stones. They turned their blank gray sides to her:
+what was there on the other side? If there were nothing after all? That
+was her only dread now--to have to turn back again in mystification; and
+walking round the right-hand stone without pause, she found herself in
+front of some one whose large dark eyes met hers at a foot's distance. In
+spite of expectation, she was startled and shrank bank, but in doing so
+she could take in the whole figure of this stranger and perceive that she
+was unmistakably a lady, and one who must have been exceedingly handsome.
+She perceived, also, that a few yards from her were two children seated on
+the grass.
+
+"Miss Harleth?" said the lady.
+
+"Yes." All Gwendolen's consciousness was wonder.
+
+"Have you accepted Mr. Grandcourt?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I have promised to tell you something. And you will promise to keep my
+secret. However you may decide you will not tell Mr. Grandcourt, or any
+one else, that you have seen me?"
+
+"I promise."
+
+"My name is Lydia Glasher. Mr. Grandcourt ought not to marry any one but
+me. I left my husband and child for him nine years ago. Those two children
+are his, and we have two others--girls--who are older. My husband is dead
+now, and Mr. Grandcourt ought to marry me. He ought to make that boy his
+heir."
+
+She looked at the boy as she spoke, and Gwendolen's eyes followed hers.
+The handsome little fellow was puffing out his cheeks in trying to blow a
+tiny trumpet which remained dumb. His hat hung backward by a string, and
+his brown purls caught the sun-rays. He was a cherub.
+
+The two women's eyes met again, and Gwendolen said proudly, "I will not
+interfere with your wishes." She looked as if she were shivering, and her
+lips were pale.
+
+"You are very attractive, Miss Harleth. But when he first knew me, I too
+was young. Since then my life has been broken up and embittered. It is not
+fair that he should be happy and I miserable, and my boy thrust out of
+sight for another."
+
+These words were uttered with a biting accent, but with a determined
+abstinence from anything violent in tone or manner. Gwendolen, watching
+Mrs. Glasher's face while she spoke, felt a sort of terror: it was as if
+some ghastly vision had come to her in a dream and said, "I am a woman's
+life."
+
+"Have you anything more to say to me?" she asked in a low tone, but still
+proud and coldly. The revulsion within her was not tending to soften her.
+Everyone seemed hateful.
+
+"Nothing. You know what I wished you to know. You can inquire about me if
+you like. My husband was Colonel Glasher."
+
+"Then I will go," said Gwendolen, moving away with a ceremonious
+inclination, which was returned with equal grace.
+
+In a few minutes Gwendolen was in the beech grove again but her party had
+gone out of sight and apparently had not sent in search of her, for all
+was solitude till she had reached the avenue pointed out by the warden.
+She determined to take this way back to Green Arbor, which she reached
+quickly; rapid movements seeming to her just now a means of suspending the
+thoughts which might prevent her from behaving with due calm. She had
+already made up her mind what step she would take.
+
+Mrs. Davilow was of course astonished to see Gwendolen returning alone,
+and was not without some uneasiness which the presence of other ladies
+hindered her from showing. In answer to her words of surprise Gwendolen
+said--
+
+"Oh, I have been rather silly. I lingered behind to look at the Whispering
+Stones, and the rest hurried on after something, so I lost sight of them.
+I thought it best to come home by the short way--the avenue that the
+warden had old me of. I'm not sorry after all. I had had enough walking."
+
+"Your party did not meet Mr. Grandcourt, I presume," said Mrs. Arrowpoint,
+not without intention.
+
+"No," said Gwendolen, with a little flash of defiance, and a light laugh.
+"And we didn't see any carvings on the trees, either. Where can he be? I
+should think he has fallen into the pool or had an apoplectic fit."
+
+With all Gwendolen's resolve not to betray any agitation, she could not
+help it that her tone was unusually high and hard, and her mother felt
+sure that something unpropitious had happened.
+
+Mrs. Arrowpoint thought that the self-confident young lady was much
+piqued, and that Mr. Grandcourt was probably seeing reason to change his
+mind.
+
+"If you have no objection, mamma, I will order the carriage," said
+Gwendolen. "I am tired. And every one will be going soon."
+
+Mrs. Davilow assented; but by the time the carriage was announced as,
+ready--the horses having to be fetched from the stables on the warden's
+premises--the roving party reappeared, and with them Mr. Grandcourt.
+
+"Ah, there you are!" said Lord Brackenshaw, going up to Gwendolen, who was
+arranging her mamma's shawl for the drive. "We thought at first you had
+alighted on Grandcourt and he had taken you home. Lush said so. But after
+that we met Grandcourt. However, we didn't suppose you could be in any
+danger. The warden said he had told you a near way back."
+
+"You are going?" said Grandcourt, coming up with his usual air, as if he
+did not conceive that there had been any omission on his part. Lord
+Brackenshaw gave place to him and moved away.
+
+"Yes, we are going," said Gwendolen, looking busily at her scarf, which
+she was arranging across her shoulders Scotch fashion.
+
+"May I call at Offendene to-morrow?"
+
+"Oh yes, if you like," said Gwendolen, sweeping him from a distance with
+her eyelashes. Her voice was light and sharp as the first touch of frost.
+
+Mrs. Davilow accepted his arm to lead her to the carriage; but while that
+was happening, Gwendolen with incredible swiftness had got in advance of
+them, and had sprung into the carriage.
+
+"I got in, mamma, because I wished to be on this side," she said,
+apologetically. But she had avoided Grandcourt's touch: he only lifted his
+hat and walked away--with the not unsatisfactory impression that she meant
+to show herself offended by his neglect.
+
+The mother and daughter drove for five minutes in silence. Then Gwendolen
+said, "I intend to join the Langens at Dover, mamma. I shall pack up
+immediately on getting home, and set off by the early train. I shall be at
+Dover almost as soon as they are; we can let them know by telegraph."
+
+"Good heavens, child! what can be your reason for saying so?"
+
+"My reason for saying it, mamma, is that I mean to do it."
+
+"But why do you mean to do it?"
+
+"I wish to go away."
+
+"Is it because you are offended with Mr. Grandcourt's odd behavior in
+walking off to-day?"
+
+"It is useless to enter into such questions. I am not going in any case to
+marry Mr. Grandcourt. Don't interest yourself further about it."
+
+"What can I say to your uncle, Gwendolen? Consider the position you place
+me in. You led him to believe only last night that you had made up your
+mind in favor of Mr. Grandcourt."
+
+"I am very sorry to cause you annoyance, mamma, dear, but I can't help
+it," said Gwendolen, with still harder resistance in her tone. "Whatever
+you or my uncle may think or do, I shall not alter my resolve, and I shall
+not tell my reason. I don't care what comes of it. I don't care if I never
+marry any one. There is nothing worth caring for. I believe all men are
+bad, and I hate them."
+
+"But need you set off in this way, Gwendolen," said Mrs. Davilow,
+miserable and helpless.
+
+"Now mamma, don't interfere with me. If you have ever had any trouble in
+your own life, remember it and don't interfere with me. If I am to be
+miserable, let it be by my own choice."
+
+The mother was reduced to trembling silence. She began to see that the
+difficulty would be lessened if Gwendolen went away.
+
+And she did go. The packing was all carefully done that evening, and not
+long after dawn the next day Mrs. Davilow accompanied her daughter to the
+railway station. The sweet dews of morning, the cows and horses looking
+over the hedges without any particular reason, the early travelers on foot
+with their bundles, seemed all very melancholy and purposeless to them
+both. The dingy torpor of the railway station, before the ticket could be
+taken, was still worse. Gwendolen had certainly hardened in the last
+twenty-four hours: her mother's trouble evidently counted for little in
+her present state of mind, which did not essentially differ from the mood
+that makes men take to worse conduct when their belief in persons or
+things is upset. Gwendolen's uncontrolled reading, though consisting
+chiefly in what are called pictures of life, had somehow not prepared her
+for this encounter with reality. Is that surprising? It is to be believed
+that attendance at the _opera bouffe_ in the present day would not leave
+men's minds entirely without shock, if the manners observed there with
+some applause were suddenly to start up in their own families.
+Perspective, as its inventor remarked, is a beautiful thing. What horrors
+of damp huts, where human beings languish, may not become picturesque
+through aerial distance! What hymning of cancerous vices may we not
+languish over as sublimest art in the safe remoteness of a strange
+language and artificial phrase! Yet we keep a repugnance to rheumatism and
+other painful effects when presented incur personal experience.
+
+Mrs. Davilow felt Gwendolen's new phase of indifference keenly, and as she
+drove back alone, the brightening morning was sadder to her than before.
+
+Mr. Grandcourt called that day at Offendene, but nobody was at home.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ "_Festina lente_--celerity should be contempered with
+ cunctation."--SIR THOMAS BROWNE.
+
+
+Gwendolen, we have seen, passed her time abroad in the new excitement of
+gambling, and in imagining herself an empress of luck, having brought from
+her late experience a vague impression that in this confused world it
+signified nothing what any one did, so that they amused themselves. We
+have seen, too, that certain persons, mysteriously symbolized as Grapnell
+& Co., having also thought of reigning in the realm of luck, and being
+also bent on amusing themselves, no matter how, had brought about a
+painful change in her family circumstances; whence she had returned home--
+carrying with her, against her inclination, a necklace which she had
+pawned and some one else had redeemed.
+
+While she was going back to England, Grandcourt was coming to find her;
+coming, that is, after his own manner--not in haste by express straight
+from Diplow to Leubronn, where she was understood to be; but so entirely
+without hurry that he was induced by the presence of some Russian
+acquaintances to linger at Baden-Baden and make various appointments with
+them, which, however, his desire to be at Leubronn ultimately caused him
+to break. Grandcourt's passions were of the intermittent, flickering kind:
+never flaming out strongly. But a great deal of life goes on without
+strong passion: myriads of cravats are carefully tied, dinners attended,
+even speeches made proposing the health of august personages without the
+zest arising from a strong desire. And a man may make a good appearance in
+high social positions--may be supposed to know the classics, to have his
+reserves on science, a strong though repressed opinion on politics, and
+all the sentiments of the English gentleman, at a small expense of vital
+energy. Also, he may be obstinate or persistent at the same low rate, and
+may even show sudden impulses which have a false air of daemonic strength
+because they seem inexplicable, though perhaps their secret lies merely in
+the want of regulated channels for the soul to move in--good and
+sufficient ducts of habit without which our nature easily turns to mere
+ooze and mud, and at any pressure yields nothing but a spurt or a puddle.
+
+Grandcourt had not been altogether displeased by Gwendolen's running away
+from the splendid chance he was holding out to her. The act had some
+piquancy for him. He liked to think that it was due to resentment of his
+careless behavior in Cardell Chase, which, when he came to consider it,
+did appear rather cool. To have brought her so near a tender admission,
+and then to have walked headlong away from further opportunities of
+winning the consent which he had made her understand him to be asking for,
+was enough to provoke a girl of spirit; and to be worth his mastering it
+was proper that she should have some spirit. Doubtless she meant him to
+follow her, and it was what he meant too. But for a whole week he took no
+measures toward starting, and did not even inquire where Miss Harleth was
+gone. Mr. Lush felt a triumph that was mingled with much distrust; for
+Grandcourt had said no word to him about her, and looked as neutral as an
+alligator; there was no telling what might turn up in the slowly-churning
+chances of his mind. Still, to have put off a decision was to have made
+room for the waste of Grandcourt's energy.
+
+The guests at Diplow felt more curiosity than their host. How was it that
+nothing more was heard of Miss Harleth? Was it credible that she had
+refused Mr. Grandcourt? Lady Flora Hollis, a lively middle-aged woman,
+well endowed with curiosity, felt a sudden interest in making a round of
+calls with Mrs. Torrington, including the rectory, Offendene, and
+Quetcham, and thus not only got twice over, but also discussed with the
+Arrowpoints, the information that Miss Harleth was gone to Leubronn, with
+some old friends, the Baron and Baroness von Langen; for the immediate
+agitation and disappointment of Mrs. Davilow and the Gascoignes had
+resolved itself into a wish that Gwendolen's disappearance should not be
+interpreted as anything eccentric or needful to be kept secret. The
+rector's mind, indeed, entertained the possibility that the marriage was
+only a little deferred, for Mrs. Davilow had not dared to tell him of the
+bitter determination with which Gwendolen had spoken. And in spite of his
+practical ability, some of his experience had petrified into maxims and
+quotations. Amaryllis fleeing desired that her hiding-place should be
+known; and that love will find out the way "over the mountain and over the
+wave" may be said without hyperbole in this age of steam. Gwendolen, he
+conceived, was an Amaryllis of excellent sense but coquettish daring; the
+question was whether she had dared too much.
+
+Lady Flora, coming back charged with news about Miss Harleth, saw no good
+reason why she should not try whether she could electrify Mr. Grandcourt
+by mentioning it to him at the table; and in doing so shot a few hints of
+a notion having got abroad that he was a disappointed adorer. Grandcourt
+heard with quietude, but with attention; and the next day he ordered Lush
+to bring about a decent reason for breaking up the party at Diplow by the
+end of another week, as he meant to go yachting to the Baltic or
+somewhere--it being impossible to stay at Diplow as if he were a prisoner
+on parole, with a set of people whom he had never wanted. Lush needed no
+clearer announcement that Grandcourt was going to Leubronn; but he might
+go after the manner of a creeping billiard-ball and stick on the way. What
+Mr. Lush intended was to make himself indispensable so that he might go
+too, and he succeeded; Gwendolen's repulsion for him being a fact that
+only am used his patron, and made him none the less willing to have Lush
+always at hand.
+
+This was how it happened that Grandcourt arrived at the _Czarina_ on the
+fifth day after Gwendolen had left Leubronn, and found there his uncle,
+Sir Hugo Mallinger, with his family, including Deronda. It is not
+necessarily a pleasure either to the reigning power or the heir
+presumptive when their separate affairs--a--touch of gout, say, in the
+one, and a touch of willfulness in the other--happen to bring them to the
+same spot. Sir Hugo was an easy-tempered man, tolerant both of differences
+and defects; but a point of view different from his own concerning the
+settlement of the family estates fretted him rather more than if it had
+concerned Church discipline or the ballot, and faults were the less venial
+for belonging to a person whose existence was inconvenient to him. In no
+case could Grandcourt have been a nephew after his own heart; but as the
+presumptive heir to the Mallinger estates he was the sign and embodiment
+of a chief grievance in the baronet's life--the want of a son to inherit
+the lands, in no portion of which had he himself more than a life-
+interest. For in the ill-advised settlement which his father, Sir Francis,
+had chosen to make by will, even Diplow with its modicum of land had been
+left under the same conditions as the ancient and wide inheritance of the
+two Toppings--Diplow, where Sir Hugo had lived and hunted through many a
+season in his younger years, and where his wife and daughters ought to
+have been able to retire after his death.
+
+This grievance had naturally gathered emphasis as the years advanced, and
+Lady Mallinger, after having had three daughters in quick succession, had
+remained for eight years till now that she was over forty without
+producing so much as another girl; while Sir Hugo, almost twenty years
+older, was at a time of life when, notwithstanding the fashionable
+retardation of most things from dinners to marriages, a man's hopefulness
+is apt to show signs of wear, until restored by second childhood.
+
+In fact, he had begun to despair of a son, and this confirmation of
+Grandcourt's interest in the estates certainly tended to make his image
+and presence the more unwelcome; but, on the other hand, it carried
+circumstances which disposed Sir Hugo to take care that the relation
+between them should be kept as friendly as possible. It led him to dwell
+on a plan which had grown up side by side with his disappointment of an
+heir; namely, to try and secure Diplow as a future residence for Lady
+Mallinger and her daughters, and keep this pretty bit of the family
+inheritance for his own offspring in spite of that disappointment. Such
+knowledge as he had of his nephew's disposition and affairs encouraged the
+belief that Grandcourt might consent to a transaction by which he would
+get a good sum of ready money, as an equivalent for his prospective
+interest in the domain of Diplow and the moderate amount of land attached
+to it. If, after all, the unhoped-for son should be born, the money would
+have been thrown away, and Grandcourt would have been paid for giving up
+interests that had turned out good for nothing; but Sir Hugo set down this
+risk as _nil_, and of late years he had husbanded his fortune so well by
+the working of mines and the sale of leases that he was prepared for an
+outlay.
+
+Here was an object that made him careful to avoid any quarrel with
+Grandcourt. Some years before, when he was making improvements at the
+Abbey, and needed Grandcourt's concurrence in his felling an obstructive
+mass of timber on the demesne, he had congratulated himself on finding
+that there was no active spite against him in his nephew's peculiar mind;
+and nothing had since occurred to make them hate each other more than was
+compatible with perfect politeness, or with any accommodation that could
+be strictly mutual.
+
+Grandcourt, on his side, thought his uncle a superfluity and a bore, and
+felt that the list of things in general would be improved whenever Sir
+Hugo came to be expunged. But he had been made aware through Lush, always
+a useful medium, of the baronet's inclinations concerning Diplow, and he
+was gratified to have the alternative of the money in his mind: even if he
+had not thought it in the least likely that he would choose to accept it,
+his sense of power would have been flattered by his being able to refuse
+what Sir Hugo desired. The hinted transaction had told for something among
+the motives which had made him ask for a year's tenancy of Diplow, which
+it had rather annoyed Sir Hugo to grant, because the excellent hunting in
+the neighborhood might decide Grandcourt not to part with his chance of
+future possession;--a man who has two places, in one of which the hunting
+is less good, naturally desiring a third where it is better. Also, Lush
+had thrown out to Sir Hugo the probability that Grandcourt would woo and
+win Miss Arrowpoint, and in that case ready money might be less of a
+temptation to him. Hence, on this unexpected meeting at Leubronn, the
+baronet felt much curiosity to know how things had been going on at
+Diplow, was bent on being as civil as possible to his nephew, and looked
+forward to some private chat with Lush.
+
+Between Deronda and Grandcourt there was a more faintly-marked but
+peculiar relation, depending on circumstances which have yet to be made
+known. But on no side was there any sign of suppressed chagrin on the
+first meeting at the _table d'hote_, an hour after Grandcourt's arrival;
+and when the quartette of gentlemen afterward met on the terrace, without
+Lady Mallinger, they moved off together to saunter through the rooms, Sir
+Hugo saying as they entered the large _saal_--
+
+"Did you play much at Baden, Grandcourt?"
+
+"No; I looked on and betted a little with some Russians there."
+
+"Had you luck?"
+
+"What did I win, Lush?"
+
+"You brought away about two hundred," said Lush.
+
+"You are not here for the sake of the play, then?" said Sir Hugo.
+
+"No; I don't care about play now. It's a confounded strain," said
+Grandcourt, whose diamond ring and demeanor, as he moved along playing
+slightly with his whisker, were being a good deal stared at by rouged
+foreigners interested in a new milord.
+
+"The fact is, somebody should invent a mill to do amusements for you, my
+dear fellow," said Sir Hugo, "as the Tartars get their praying done. But I
+agree with you; I never cared for play. It's monotonous--knits the brain
+up into meshes. And it knocks me up to watch it now. I suppose one gets
+poisoned with the bad air. I never stay here more than ten minutes. But
+where's your gambling beauty, Deronda? Have you seen her lately?"
+
+"She's gone," said Deronda, curtly.
+
+"An uncommonly fine girl, a perfect Diana," said Sir Hugo, turning to
+Grandcourt again. "Really worth a little straining to look at her. I saw
+her winning, and she took it as coolly as if she had known it all
+beforehand. The same day Deronda happened to see her losing like wildfire,
+and she bore it with immense pluck. I suppose she was cleaned out, or was
+wise enough to stop in time. How do you know she's gone?"
+
+"Oh, by the Visitor-list," said Deronda, with a scarcely perceptible
+shrug. "Vandernoodt told me her name was Harleth, and she was with the
+Baron and Baroness von Langen. I saw by the list that Miss Harleth was no
+longer there."
+
+This held no further information for Lush than that Gwendolen had been
+gambling. He had already looked at the list, and ascertained that
+Gwendolen had gone, but he had no intention of thrusting this knowledge on
+Grandcourt before he asked for it; and he had not asked, finding it enough
+to believe that the object of search would turn up somewhere or other.
+
+But now Grandcourt had heard what was rather piquant, and not a word about
+Miss Harleth had been missed by ham. After a moment's pause he said to
+Deronda--
+
+"Do you know those people--the Langens?"
+
+"I have talked with them a little since Miss Harleth went away. I knew
+nothing of them before."
+
+"Where is she gone--do you know?"
+
+"She is gone home," said Deronda, coldly, as if he wished to say no more.
+But then, from a fresh impulse, he turned to look markedly at Grandcourt,
+and added, "But it is possible you know her. Her home is not far from
+Diplow: Offendene, near Winchester."
+
+Deronda, turning to look straight at Grandcourt, who was on his left hand,
+might have been a subject for those old painters who liked contrasts of
+temperament. There was a calm intensity of life and richness of tint in
+his face that on a sudden gaze from him was rather startling, and often
+made him seem to have spoken, so that servants and officials asked him
+automatically, "What did you say, sir?" when he had been quite silent.
+Grandcourt himself felt an irritation, which he did not show except by a
+slight movement of the eyelids, at Deronda's turning round on him when he
+was not asked to do more than speak. But he answered, with his usual
+drawl, "Yes, I know her," and paused with his shoulder toward Deronda, to
+look at the gambling.
+
+"What of her, eh?" asked Sir Hugo of Lush, as the three moved on a little
+way. "She must be a new-comer at Offendene. Old Blenny lived there after
+the dowager died."
+
+"A little too much of her," said Lush, in a low, significant tone; not
+sorry to let Sir Hugo know the state of affairs.
+
+"Why? how?" said the baronet. They all moved out of the _salon_ into an
+airy promenade.
+
+"He has been on the brink of marrying her," Lush went on. "But I hope it's
+off now. She's a niece of the clergyman--Gascoigne--at Pennicote. Her
+mother is a widow with a brood of daughters. This girl will have nothing,
+and is as dangerous as gunpowder. It would be a foolish marriage. But she
+has taken a freak against him, for she ran off here without notice, when
+he had agreed to call the next day. The fact is, he's here after her; but
+he was in no great hurry, and between his caprice and hers they are likely
+enough not to get together again. But of course he has lost his chance
+with the heiress."
+
+Grandcourt joining them said, "What a beastly den this is!--a worse hole
+than Baden. I shall go back to the hotel."
+
+When Sir Hugo and Deronda were alone, the baronet began--
+
+"Rather a pretty story. That girl has something in her. She must be worth
+running after--has _de l'imprevu_. I think her appearance on the scene has
+bettered my chance of getting Diplow, whether the marriage comes off or
+not."
+
+"I should hope a marriage like that would not come off," said Deronda, in
+a tone of disgust.
+
+"What! are you a little touched with the sublime lash?" said Sir Hugo,
+putting up his glasses to help his short sight in looking at his
+companion. "Are you inclined to run after her?"
+
+"On the contrary," said Deronda, "I should rather be inclined to run away
+from her."
+
+"Why, you would easily cut out Grandcourt. A girl with her spirit would
+think you the finer match of the two," said Sir Hugo, who often tried
+Deronda's patience by finding a joke in impossible advice. (A difference
+of taste in jokes is a great strain on the affections.)
+
+"I suppose pedigree and land belong to a fine match," said Deronda,
+coldly.
+
+"The best horse will win in spite of pedigree, my boy. You remember
+Napoleon's _mot--Je suis un ancetre_" said Sir Hugo, who habitually
+undervalued birth, as men after dining well often agree that the good of
+life is distributed with wonderful equality.
+
+"I am not sure that I want to be an ancestor," said Deronda. "It doesn't
+seem to me the rarest sort of origination."
+
+"You won't run after the pretty gambler, then?" said Sir Hugo, putting
+down his glasses.
+
+"Decidedly not."
+
+This answer was perfectly truthful; nevertheless it had passed through
+Deronda's mind that under other circumstances he should have given way to
+the interest this girl had raised in him, and tried to know more of her.
+But his history had given him a stronger bias in another direction. He
+felt himself in no sense free.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ Men, like planets, have both a visible and an invisible history. The
+ astronomer threads the darkness with strict deduction, accounting so
+ for every visible arc in the wanderer's orbit; and the narrator of
+ human actions, if he did his work with the same completeness, would
+ have to thread the hidden pathways of feeling and thought which lead
+ up to every moment of action, and to those moments of intense
+ suffering which take the quality of action--like the cry of
+ Prometheus, whose chained anguish seems a greater energy than the sea
+ and sky he invokes and the deity he defies.
+
+
+Deronda's circumstances, indeed, had been exceptional. One moment had been
+burned into his life as its chief epoch--a moment full of July sunshine
+and large pink roses shedding their last petals on a grassy court enclosed
+on three sides by a gothic cloister. Imagine him in such a scene: a boy of
+thirteen, stretched prone on the grass where it was in shadow, his curly
+head propped on his arms over a book, while his tutor, also reading, sat
+on a camp-stool under shelter. Deronda's book was Sismondi's "History of
+the Italian Republics";--the lad had a passion for history, eager to know
+how time had been filled up since the flood, and how things were carried
+on in the dull periods. Suddenly he let down his left arm and looked at
+his tutor, saying in purest boyish tones--
+
+"Mr. Fraser, how was it that the popes and cardinals always had so many
+nephews?"
+
+The tutor, an able young Scotchman, who acted as Sir Hugo Mallinger's
+secretary, roused rather unwillingly from his political economy, answered
+with the clear-cut emphatic chant which makes a truth doubly telling in
+Scotch utterance--
+
+"Their own children were called nephews."
+
+"Why?" said Deronda.
+
+"It was just for the propriety of the thing; because, as you know very
+well, priests don't marry, and the children were illegitimate."
+
+Mr. Fraser, thrusting out his lower lip and making his chant of the last
+word the more emphatic for a little impatience at being interrupted, had
+already turned his eyes on his book again, while Deronda, as if something
+had stung him, started up in a sitting attitude with his back to the
+tutor.
+
+He had always called Sir Hugo Mallinger his uncle, and when it once
+occurred to him to ask about his father and mother, the baronet had
+answered, "You lost your father and mother when you were quite a little
+one; that is why I take care of you." Daniel then straining to discern
+something in that early twilight, had a dim sense of having been kissed
+very much, and surrounded by thin, cloudy, scented drapery, till his
+fingers caught in something hard, which hurt him, and he began to cry.
+Every other memory he had was of the little world in which he still lived.
+And at that time he did not mind about learning more, for he was too fond
+of Sir Hugo to be sorry for the loss of unknown parents. Life was very
+delightful to the lad, with an uncle who was always indulgent and
+cheerful--a fine man in the bright noon of life, whom Daniel thought
+absolutely perfect, and whose place was one of the finest in England, at
+once historical; romantic, and home-like: a picturesque architectural
+outgrowth from an abbey, which had still remnants of the old monastic
+trunk. Diplow lay in another county, and was a comparatively landless
+place which had come into the family from a rich lawyer on the female side
+who wore the perruque of the restoration; whereas the Mallingers had the
+grant of Monk's Topping under Henry the Eighth, and ages before had held
+the neighboring lands of King's Topping, tracing indeed their origin to a
+certain Hugues le Malingre, who came in with the Conqueror--and also
+apparently with a sickly complexion which had been happily corrected in
+his descendants. Two rows of these descendants, direct and collateral,
+females of the male line, and males of the female, looked down in the
+gallery over the cloisters on the nephew Daniel as he walked there: men in
+armor with pointed beards and arched eyebrows, pinched ladies in hoops and
+ruffs with no face to speak of; grave-looking men in black velvet and
+stuffed hips, and fair, frightened women holding little boys by the hand;
+smiling politicians in magnificent perruques, and ladies of the prize-
+animal kind, with rosebud mouths and full eyelids, according to Lely; then
+a generation whose faces were revised and embellished in the taste of
+Kneller; and so on through refined editions of the family types in the
+time of Reynolds and Romney, till the line ended with Sir Hugo and his
+younger brother Henleigh. This last had married Miss Grandcourt, and taken
+her name along with her estates, thus making a junction between two
+equally old families, impaling the three Saracens' heads proper and three
+bezants of the one with the tower and falcons _argent_ of the other, and,
+as it happened, uniting their highest advantages in the prospects of that
+Henleigh Mallinger Grandcourt who is at present more of an acquaintance to
+us than either Sir Hugo or his nephew Daniel Deronda.
+
+In Sir Hugo's youthful portrait with rolled collar and high cravat, Sir
+Thomas Lawrence had done justice to the agreeable alacrity of expression
+and sanguine temperament still to be seen in the original, but had done
+something more than justice in slightly lengthening the nose, which was in
+reality shorter than might have been expected in a Mallinger. Happily the
+appropriate nose of the family reappeared in his younger brother, and was
+to be seen in all its refined regularity in his nephew Mallinger
+Grandcourt. But in the nephew Daniel Deronda the family faces of various
+types, seen on the walls of the gallery; found no reflex. Still he was
+handsomer than any of them, and when he was thirteen might have served as
+model for any painter who wanted to image the most memorable of boys: you
+could hardly have seen his face thoroughly meeting yours without believing
+that human creatures had done nobly in times past, and might do more nobly
+in time to come. The finest childlike faces have this consecrating power,
+and make us shudder anew at all the grossness and basely-wrought griefs of
+the world, lest they should enter here and defile.
+
+But at this moment on the grass among the rose-petals, Daniel Deronda was
+making a first acquaintance with those griefs. A new idea had entered his
+mind, and was beginning to change the aspect of his habitual feelings as
+happy careless voyagers are changed with the sky suddenly threatened and
+the thought of danger arises. He sat perfectly still with his back to the
+tutor, while his face expressed rapid inward transition. The deep blush,
+which had come when he first started up, gradually subsided; but his
+features kept that indescribable look of subdued activity which often
+accompanies a new mental survey of familiar facts. He had not lived with
+other boys, and his mind showed the same blending of child's ignorance
+with surprising knowledge which is oftener seen in bright girls. Having
+read Shakespeare as well as a great deal of history, he could have talked
+with the wisdom of a bookish child about men who were born out of wedlock
+and were held unfortunate in consequence, being under disadvantages which
+required them to be a sort of heroes if they were to work themselves up to
+an equal standing with their legally born brothers. But he had never
+brought such knowledge into any association with his own lot, which had
+been too easy for him ever to think about it--until this moment when there
+had darted into his mind with the magic of quick comparison, the
+possibility that here was the secret of his own birth, and that the man
+whom he called uncle was really his father. Some children, even younger
+than Daniel, have known the first arrival of care, like an ominous
+irremovable guest in their tender lives, on the discovery that their
+parents, whom they had imagined able to buy everything, were poor and in
+hard money troubles. Daniel felt the presence of a new guest who seemed to
+come with an enigmatic veiled face, and to carry dimly-conjectured,
+dreaded revelations. The ardor which he had given to the imaginary world
+in his books suddenly rushed toward his own history and spent its
+pictorial energy there, explaining what he knew, representing the unknown.
+The uncle whom he loved very dearly took the aspect of a father who held
+secrets about him--who had done him a wrong--yes, a wrong: and what had
+become of his mother, for whom he must have been taken away?--Secrets
+about which he, Daniel, could never inquire; for to speak or to be spoken
+to about these new thoughts seemed like falling flakes of fire to his
+imagination. Those who have known an impassioned childhood will understand
+this dread of utterance about any shame connected with their parents. The
+impetuous advent of new images took possession of him with the force of
+fact for the first time told, and left him no immediate power for the
+reflection that he might be trembling at a fiction of his own. The
+terrible sense of collision between a strong rush of feeling and the dread
+of its betrayal, found relief at length in big slow tears, which fell
+without restraint until the voice of Mr. Fraser was heard saying:
+
+"Daniel, do you see that you are sitting on the bent pages of your book?"
+
+Daniel immediately moved the book without turning round, and after holding
+it before him for an instant, rose with it and walked away into the open
+grounds, where he could dry his tears unobserved. The first shock of
+suggestion past, he could remember that he had no certainty how things
+really had been, and that he had been making conjectures about his own
+history, as he had often made stories about Pericles or Columbus, just to
+fill up the blanks before they became famous. Only there came back certain
+facts which had an obstinate reality,--almost like the fragments of a
+bridge, telling you unmistakably how the arches lay. And again there came
+a mood in which his conjectures seemed like a doubt of religion, to be
+banished as an offense, and a mean prying after what he was not meant to
+know; for there was hardly a delicacy of feeling this lad was not capable
+of. But the summing-up of all his fluctuating experience at this epoch
+was, that a secret impression had come to him which had given him
+something like a new sense in relation to all the elements of his life.
+And the idea that others probably knew things concerning which they did
+not choose to mention, set up in him a premature reserve which helped to
+intensify his inward experience. His ears open now to words which before
+that July day would have passed by him unnoted; and round every trivial
+incident which imagination could connect with his suspicions, a newly-
+roused set of feelings were ready to cluster themselves.
+
+One such incident a month later wrought itself deeply into his life.
+Daniel had not only one of those thrilling boy voices which seem to bring
+an idyllic heaven and earth before our eyes, but a fine musical instinct,
+and had early made out accompaniments for himself on the piano, while he
+sang from memory. Since then he had had some teaching, and Sir Hugo, who
+delighted in the boy, used to ask for his music in the presence of guests.
+One morning after he had been singing "Sweet Echo" before a small party of
+gentlemen whom the rain had kept in the house, the baronet, passing from a
+smiling remark to his next neighbor said:
+
+"Come here, Dan!"
+
+The boy came forward with unusual reluctance. He wore an embroidered
+holland blouse which set off the rich coloring of his head and throat, and
+the resistant gravity about his mouth and eyes as he was being smiled
+upon, made their beauty the more impressive. Every one was admiring him.
+
+"What do you say to being a great singer? Should you like to be adored by
+the world and take the house by storm; like Mario and Tamberlik?"
+
+Daniel reddened instantaneously, but there was a just perceptible interval
+before he answered with angry decision--
+
+"No; I should hate it!"
+
+"Well, well, well!" said Sir Hugo, with surprised kindliness intended to
+be soothing. But Daniel turned away quickly, left the room, and going to
+his own chamber threw himself on the broad window-sill, which was a
+favorite retreat of his when he had nothing particular to do. Here he
+could see the rain gradually subsiding with gleams through the parting
+clouds which lit up a great reach of the park, where the old oaks stood
+apart from each other, and the bordering wood was pierced with a green
+glade which met the eastern sky. This was a scene which had always been
+part of his home--part of the dignified ease which had been a matter of
+course in his life. And his ardent clinging nature had appropriated it all
+with affection. He knew a great deal of what it was to be a gentleman by
+inheritance, and without thinking much about himself--for he was a boy of
+active perceptions and easily forgot his own existence in that of Robert
+Bruce--he had never supposed that he could be shut out from such a lot, or
+have a very different part in the world from that of the uncle who petted
+him. It is possible (though not greatly believed in at present) to be fond
+of poverty and take it for a bride, to prefer scoured deal, red quarries
+and whitewash for one's private surroundings, to delight in no splendor
+but what has open doors for the whole nation, and to glory in having no
+privileges except such as nature insists on; and noblemen have been known
+to run away from elaborate ease and the option of idleness, that they
+might bind themselves for small pay to hard-handed labor. But Daniel's
+tastes were altogether in keeping with his nurture: his disposition was
+one in which everyday scenes and habits beget not _ennui_ or rebellion,
+but delight, affection, aptitudes; and now the lad had been stung to the
+quick by the idea that his uncle--perhaps his father--thought of a career
+for him which was totally unlike his own, and which he knew very well was
+not thought of among possible destinations for the sons of English
+gentlemen. He had often stayed in London with Sir Hugo, who to indulge the
+boy's ear had carried him to the opera to hear the great tenors, so that
+the image of a singer taking the house by storm was very vivid to him; but
+now, spite of his musical gift, he set himself bitterly against the notion
+of being dressed up to sing before all those fine people, who would not
+care about him except as a wonderful toy. That Sir Hugo should have
+thought of him in that position for a moment, seemed to Daniel an
+unmistakable proof that there was something about his birth which threw
+him out from the class of gentlemen to which the baronet belonged. Would
+it ever be mentioned to him? Would the time come when his uncle would tell
+him everything? He shrank from the prospect: in his imagination he
+preferred ignorance. If his father had been wicked--Daniel inwardly used
+strong words, for he was feeling the injury done him as a maimed boy feels
+the crushed limb which for others is merely reckoned in an average of
+accidents--if his father had done any wrong, he wished it might never be
+spoken of to him: it was already a cutting thought that such knowledge
+might be in other minds. Was it in Mr. Fraser's? probably not, else he
+would not have spoken in that way about the pope's nephews. Daniel
+fancied, as older people do, that every one else's consciousness was as
+active as his own on a matter which was vital to him. Did Turvey the valet
+know?--and old Mrs. French the housekeeper?--and Banks the bailiff, with
+whom he had ridden about the farms on his pony?--And now there came back
+the recollection of a day some years before when he was drinking Mrs.
+Banks's whey, and Banks said to his wife with a wink and a cunning laugh,
+"He features the mother, eh?" At that time little Daniel had merely
+thought that Banks made a silly face, as the common farming men often did,
+laughing at what was not laughable; and he rather resented being winked at
+and talked of as if he did not understand everything. But now that small
+incident became information: it was to be reasoned on. How could he be
+like his mother and not like his father? His mother must have been a
+Mallinger, if Sir Hugo were his uncle. But no! His father might have been
+Sir Hugo's brother and have changed his name, as Mr. Henleigh Mallinger
+did when he married Miss Grandcourt. But then, why had he never heard Sir
+Hugo speak of his brother Deronda, as he spoke of his brother Grandcourt?
+Daniel had never before cared about the family tree--only about that
+ancestor who had killed three Saracens in one encounter. But now his mind
+turned to a cabinet of estate-maps in the library, where he had once seen
+an illuminated parchment hanging out, that Sir Hugo said was the family
+tree. The phrase was new and odd to him--he was a little fellow then--
+hardly mare than half his present age--and he gave it no precise meaning.
+He knew more now and wished that he could examine that parchment. He
+imagined that the cabinet was always locked, and longed to try it. But
+here he checked himself. He might be seen: and he would never bring
+himself near even a silent admission of the sore that had opened in him.
+
+It is in such experiences of a boy or girlhood, while elders are debating
+whether most education lies in science or literature, that the main lines
+of character are often laid down. If Daniel had been of a less ardently
+affectionate nature, the reserve about himself and the supposition that
+others had something to his disadvantage in their minds, might have turned
+into a hard, proud antagonism. But inborn lovingness was strong enough to
+keep itself level with resentment. There was hardly any creature in his
+habitual world that he was not fond of; teasing them occasionally, of
+course--all except his uncle, or "Nunc," as Sir Hugo had taught him to
+say; for the baronet was the reverse of a strait-laced man, and left his
+dignity to take care of itself. Him Daniel loved in that deep-rooted
+filial way which makes children always the happier for being in the same
+room with father or mother, though their occupations may be quite apart.
+Sir Hugo's watch-chain and seals, his handwriting, his mode of smoking and
+of talking to his dogs and horses, had all a rightness and charm about
+them to the boy which went along with the happiness of morning and
+breakfast time. That Sir Hugo had always been a Whig, made Tories and
+Radicals equally opponents of the truest and best; and the books he had
+written were all seen under the same consecration of loving belief which
+differenced what was his from what was not his, in spite of general
+resemblance. Those writings were various, from volumes of travel in the
+brilliant style, to articles on things in general, and pamphlets on
+political crises; but to Daniel they were alike in having an
+unquestionable rightness by which other people's information could be
+tested.
+
+Who cannot imagine the bitterness of a first suspicion that something in
+this object of complete love was _not_ quite right? Children demand that
+their heroes should be fleckless, and easily believe them so: perhaps a
+first discovery to the contrary is hardly a less revolutionary shock to a
+passionate child than the threatened downfall of habitual beliefs which
+makes the world seem to totter for us in maturer life.
+
+But some time after this renewal of Daniel's agitation it appeared that
+Sir Hugo must have been making a merely playful experiment in his question
+about the singing. He sent for Daniel into the library, and looking up
+from his writing as the boy entered threw himself sideways in his
+armchair. "Ah, Dan!" he said kindly, drawing one of the old embroidered
+stools close to him. "Come and sit down here."
+
+Daniel obeyed, and Sir Hugo put a gentle hand on his shoulder, looking at
+him affectionately.
+
+"What is it, my boy? Have you heard anything that has put you out of
+spirits lately?"
+
+Daniel was determined not to let the tears come, but he could not speak.
+
+"All changes are painful when people have been happy, you know," said Sir
+Hugo, lifting his hand from the boy's shoulder to his dark curls and
+rubbing them gently. "You can't be educated exactly as I wish you to be
+without our parting. And I think you will find a great deal to like at
+school."
+
+This was not what Daniel expected, and was so far a relief, which gave him
+spirit to answer--
+
+"Am I to go to school?"
+
+"Yes, I mean you to go to Eton. I wish you to have the education of an
+English gentleman; and for that it is necessary that you should go to a
+public school in preparation for the university: Cambridge I mean you to
+go to; it was my own university."
+
+Daniel's color came went.
+
+"What do you say, sirrah?" said Sir Hugo, smiling.
+
+"I should like to be a gentleman," said Daniel, with firm distinctness,
+"and go to school, if that is what a gentleman's son must do."
+
+Sir Hugo watched him silently for a few moments, thinking he understood
+now why the lad had seemed angry at the notion of becoming a singer. Then
+he said tenderly--
+
+"And so you won't mind about leaving your old Nunc?"
+
+"Yes, I shall," said Daniel, clasping Sir Hugo's caressing arm with both
+his hands. "But shan't I come home and be with you in the holidays?"
+
+"Oh yes, generally," said Sir Hugo. "But now I mean you to go at once to a
+new tutor, to break the change for you before you go to Eton."
+
+After this interview Daniel's spirit rose again. He was meant to be a
+gentleman, and in some unaccountable way it might be that his conjectures
+were all wrong. The very keenness of the lad taught him to find comfort in
+his ignorance. While he was busying his mind in the construction of
+possibilities, it became plain to him that there must be possibilities of
+which he knew nothing. He left off brooding, young joy and the spirit of
+adventure not being easily quenched within him, and in the interval before
+his going away he sang about the house, danced among the old servants,
+making them parting gifts, and insisted many times to the groom on the
+care that was to be taken of the black pony.
+
+"Do you think I shall know much less than the other boys, Mr. Fraser?"
+said Daniel. It was his bent to think that every stranger would be
+surprised at his ignorance.
+
+"There are dunces to be found everywhere," said the judicious Fraser.
+"You'll not be the biggest; but you've not, the makings of a Porson in
+you, or a Leibnitz either."
+
+"I don't want to be a Porson or a Leibnitz," said Daniel. "I would rather
+be a greater leader, like Pericles or Washington."
+
+"Ay, ay; you've a notion they did with little parsing, and less algebra,"
+said Fraser. But in reality he thought his pupil a remarkable lad, to whom
+one thing was as easy as another, if he had only a mind to it.
+
+Things went on very well with Daniel in his new world, except that a boy
+with whom he was at once inclined to strike up a close friendship talked
+to him a great deal about his home and parents, and seemed to expect a
+like expansiveness in return. Daniel immediately shrank into reserve, and
+this experience remained a check on his naturally strong bent toward the
+formation of intimate friendship. Every one, his tutor included, set him
+down as a reserved boy, though he was so good-humored and unassuming, as
+well as quick, both at study and sport, that nobody called his reserve
+disagreeable. Certainly his face had a great deal to do with that
+favorable interpretation; but in this instance the beauty of the closed
+lips told no falsehood.
+
+A surprise that came to him before his first vacation strengthened the
+silent consciousness of a grief within, which might be compared in some
+ways with Byron's susceptibility about his deformed foot. Sir Hugo wrote
+word that he was married to Miss Raymond, a sweet lady, whom Daniel must
+remember having seen. The event would make no difference about his
+spending the vacation at the Abbey; he would find Lady Mallinger a new
+friend whom he would be sure to love--and much more to the usual effect
+when a man, having done something agreeable to himself, is disposed to
+congratulate others on his own good fortune, and the deducible
+satisfactoriness of events in general.
+
+Let Sir Hugo be partly excused until the grounds of his action can be more
+fully known. The mistakes in his behavior to Deronda were due to that
+dullness toward what may be going on in other minds, especially the minds
+of children, which is among the commonest deficiencies, even in good-
+natured men like him, when life has been generally easy to themselves, and
+their energies have been quietly spent in feeling gratified. No one was
+better aware than he that Daniel was generally suspected to be his own
+son. But he was pleased with that suspicion; and his imagination had never
+once been troubled with the way in which the boy himself might be
+affected, either then or in the future, by the enigmatic aspect of his
+circumstances. He was as fond of him as could be, and meant the best by
+him. And, considering the lightness with which the preparation of young
+lives seem to lie on respectable consciences, Sir Hugo Mallinger can
+hardly be held open to exceptional reproach. He had been a bachelor till
+he was five-and-forty, had always been regarded as a fascinating man of
+elegant tastes; what could be more natural, even according to the index of
+language, than that he should have a beautiful boy like the little Deronda
+to take care of? The mother might even, perhaps, be in the great world--
+met with in Sir Hugo's residence abroad. The only person to feel any
+objection was the boy himself, who could not have been consulted. And the
+boy's objections had never been dreamed of by anybody but himself.
+
+By the time Deronda was ready to go to Cambridge, Lady Mallinger had
+already three daughters--charming babies, all three, but whose sex was
+announced as a melancholy alternative, the offspring desired being a son;
+if Sir Hugo had no son the succession must go to his nephew, Mallinger
+Grandcourt. Daniel no longer held a wavering opinion about his own birth.
+His fuller knowledge had tended to convince him that Sir Hugo was his
+father, and he conceived that the baronet, since he never approached a
+communication on the subject, wished him to have a tacit understanding of
+the fact, and to accept in silence what would be generally considered more
+than the due love and nurture. Sir Hugo's marriage might certainly have
+been felt as a new ground of resentment by some youths in Deronda's
+position, and the timid Lady Mallinger with her fast-coming little ones
+might have been images to scowl at, as likely to divert much that was
+disposable in the feelings and possessions of the baronet from one who
+felt his own claim to be prior. But hatred of innocent human obstacles was
+a form of moral stupidity not in Deronda's grain; even the indignation
+which had long mingled itself with his affection for Sir Hugo took the
+quality of pain rather than of temper; and as his mind ripened to the idea
+of tolerance toward error, he habitually liked the idea with his own
+silent grievances.
+
+The sense of an entailed disadvantage--the deformed foot doubtfully hidden
+by the shoe, makes a restlessly active spiritual yeast, and easily turns a
+self-centered, unloving nature into an Ishmaelite. But in the rarer sort,
+who presently see their own frustrated claim as one among a myriad, the
+inexorable sorrow takes the form of fellowship and makes the imagination
+tender. Deronda's early-weakened susceptibility, charged at first with
+ready indignation and resistant pride, had raised in him a premature
+reflection on certain questions of life; it had given a bias to his
+conscience, a sympathy with certain ills, and a tension of resolve in
+certain directions, who marked him off from other youths much more than
+any talents he possessed.
+
+One day near the end of the long vacation, when he had been making a tour
+in the Rhineland with his Eton tutor, and was come for a farewell stay at
+the Abbey before going to Cambridge, he said to Sir Hugo--
+
+"What do you intend me to be, sir?" They were in the library, and it was
+the fresh morning. Sir Hugo had called him in to read a letter from a
+Cambridge Don who was to be interested in him; and since the baronet wore
+an air at once business-like and leisurely, the moment seemed propitious
+for entering on a grave subject which had never yet been thoroughly
+discussed.
+
+"Whatever your inclination leads you to, my boy. I thought it right to
+give you the option of the army, but you shut the door on that, and I was
+glad. I don't expect you to choose just yet--by-and-by, when you have
+looked about you a little more and tried your mettle among older men. The
+university has a good wide opening into the forum. There are prizes to be
+won, and a bit of good fortune often gives the turn to a man's taste. From
+what I see and hear, I should think you can take up anything you like. You
+are in the deeper water with your classics than I ever got into, and if
+you are rather sick of that swimming, Cambridge is the place where you can
+go into mathematics with a will, and disport yourself on the dry sand as
+much as you like. I floundered along like a carp."
+
+"I suppose money will make some difference, sir," said Daniel blushing. "I
+shall have to keep myself by-and-by."
+
+"Not exactly. I recommend you not to be extravagant--yes, yes, I know--you
+are not inclined to that;--but you need not take up anything against the
+grain. You will have a bachelor's income--enough for you to look about
+with. Perhaps I had better tell you that you may consider yourself secure
+of seven hundred a year. You might make yourself a barrister--be a writer
+--take up politics. I confess that is what would please me best. I should
+like to have you at my elbow and pulling with me."
+
+Deronda looked embarrassed. He felt that he ought to make some sign of
+gratitude, but other feelings clogged his tongue. A moment was passing by
+in which a question about his birth was throbbing within him, and yet it
+seemed more impossible than ever that the question should find vent--more
+impossible than ever that he could hear certain things from Sir Hugo's
+lips. The liberal way in which he was dealt with was the more striking
+because the baronet had of late cared particularly for money, and for
+making the utmost of his life-interest in the estate by way of providing
+for his daughters; and as all this flashed through Daniel's mind it was
+momentarily within his imagination that the provision for him might come
+in some way from his mother. But such vaporous conjecture passed away as
+quickly as it came.
+
+Sir Hugo appeared not to notice anything peculiar in Daniel's manner, and
+presently went on with his usual chatty liveliness.
+
+"I am glad you have done some good reading outside your classics, and have
+got a grip of French and German. The truth is, unless a man can get the
+prestige and income of a Don and write donnish books, it's hardly worth
+while for him to make a Greek and Latin machine of himself and be able to
+spin you out pages of the Greek dramatists at any verse you'll give him as
+a cue. That's all very fine, but in practical life nobody does give you
+the cue for pages of Greek. In fact, it's a nicety of conversation which I
+would have you attend to--much quotation of any sort, even in English is
+bad. It tends to choke ordinary remark. One couldn't carry on life
+comfortably without a little blindness to the fact that everything had
+been said better than we can put it ourselves. But talking of Dons, I have
+seen Dons make a capital figure in society; and occasionally he can shoot
+you down a cart-load of learning in the right place, which will tell in
+politics. Such men are wanted; and if you have any turn for being a Don, I
+say nothing against it."
+
+"I think there's not much chance of that. Quicksett and Puller are both
+stronger than I am. I hope you will not be much disappointed if I don't
+come out with high honors."
+
+"No, no. I should like you to do yourself credit, but for God's sake don't
+come out as a superior expensive kind of idiot, like young Brecon, who got
+a Double First, and has been learning to knit braces ever since. What I
+wish you to get is a passport in life. I don't go against our university
+system: we want a little disinterested culture to make head against cotton
+and capital, especially in the House. My Greek has all evaporated; if I
+had to construe a verse on a sudden, I should get an apoplectic fit. But
+it formed my taste. I dare say my English is the better for it."
+
+On this point Daniel kept a respectful silence. The enthusiastic belief in
+Sir Hugo's writings as a standard, and in the Whigs as the chosen race
+among politicians, had gradually vanished along with the seraphic boy's
+face. He had not been the hardest of workers at Eton. Though some kinds of
+study and reading came as easily as boating to him, he was not of the
+material that usually makes the first-rate Eton scholar. There had sprung
+up in him a meditative yearning after wide knowledge which is likely
+always to abate ardor in the fight for prize acquirement in narrow tracks.
+Happily he was modest, and took any second-rate-*ness in himself simply as
+a fact, not as a marvel necessarily to be accounted for by a superiority.
+Still Mr. Eraser's high opinion of the lad had not been altogether belied
+by the youth: Daniel had the stamp of rarity in a subdued fervor of
+sympathy, an activity of imagination on behalf of others which did not
+show itself effusively, but was continually seen in acts of
+considerateness that struck his companions as moral eccentricity. "Deronda
+would have been first-rate if he had had more ambition," was a frequent
+remark about him. But how could a fellow push his way properly when he
+objected to swop for his own advantage, knocked under by choice when he
+was within an inch of victory, and, unlike the great Clive, would rather
+be the calf than the butcher? It was a mistake, however, to suppose that
+Deronda had not his share of ambition. We know he had suffered keenly from
+the belief that there was a tinge of dishonor in his lot; but there are
+some cases, and his was one of them, in which the sense of injury breeds--
+not the will to inflict injuries and climb over them as a ladder, but a
+hatred of all injury. He had his flashes of fierceness and could hit out
+upon occasion, but the occasions were not always what might have been
+expected. For in what related to himself his resentful impulses had been
+early checked by a mastering affectionateness. Love has a habit of saying
+"Never mind" to angry self, who, sitting down for the nonce in the lower
+place, by-and-by gets used to it. So it was that as Deronda approached
+manhood his feeling for Sir Hugo, while it was getting more and more mixed
+with criticism, was gaining in that sort of allowance which reconciles
+criticism with tenderness. The dear old beautiful home and everything
+within it, Lady Mallinger and her little ones included, were consecrated
+for the youth as they had been for the boy--only with a certain difference
+of light on the objects. The altarpiece was no longer miraculously
+perfect, painted under infallible guidance, but the human hand discerned
+in the work was appealing to a reverent tenderness safer from the gusts of
+discovery. Certainly Deronda's ambition, even in his spring-time, lay
+exceptionally aloof from conspicuous, vulgar triumph, and from other ugly
+forms of boyish energy; perhaps because he was early impassioned by ideas,
+and burned his fire on those heights. One may spend a good deal of energy
+in disliking and resisting what others pursue, and a boy who is fond of
+somebody else's pencil-case may not be more energetic than another who is
+fond of giving his own pencil-case away. Still it was not Deronda's
+disposition to escape from ugly scenes; he was more inclined to sit
+through them and take care of the fellow least able to take care of
+himself. It had helped to make him popular that he was sometimes a little
+compromised by this apparent comradeship. For a meditative interest in
+learning how human miseries are wrought--as precocious in him as another
+sort of genius in the poet who writes a Queen Mab at nineteen--was so
+infused with kindliness that it easily passed for comradeship. Enough. In
+many of our neighbors' lives there is much not only of error and lapse,
+but of a certain exquisite goodness which can never be written or even
+spoken--only divined by each of us, according to the inward instruction of
+our own privacy.
+
+The impression he made at Cambridge corresponded to his position at Eton.
+Every one interested in him agreed that he might have taken a high place
+if his motives had been of a more pushing sort, and if he had not, instead
+of regarding studies as instruments of success, hampered himself with the
+notion that they were to feed motive and opinion--a notion which set him
+criticising methods and arguing against his freight and harness when he
+should have been using all his might to pull. In the beginning his work at
+the university had a new zest for him: indifferent to the continuation of
+Eton classical drill, he applied himself vigorously to mathematics, for
+which he had shown an early aptitude under Mr. Fraser, and he had the
+delight of feeling his strength in a comparatively fresh exercise of
+thought. That delight, and the favorable opinion of his tutor, determined
+him to try for a mathematical scholarship in the Easter of his second
+year: he wished to gratify Sir Hugo by some achievement, and the study of
+the higher mathematics, having the growing fascination inherent in all
+thinking which demands intensity, was making him a more exclusive worker
+than he had been before.
+
+But here came the old check which had been growing with his growth. He
+found the inward bent toward comprehension and thoroughness diverging more
+and more from the track marked out by the standards of examination: he
+felt a heightening discontent with the wearing futility and enfeebling
+strain of a demand for excessive retention and dexterity without any
+insight into the principles which form the vital connections of knowledge.
+(Deronda's undergraduateship occurred fifteen years ago, when the
+perfection of our university methods was not yet indisputable.) In hours
+when his dissatisfaction was strong upon him he reproached himself for
+having been attracted by the conventional advantage of belonging to an
+English university, and was tempted toward the project of asking Sir Hugo
+to let him quit Cambridge and pursue a more independent line of study
+abroad. The germs of this inclination had been already stirring in his
+boyish love of universal history, which made him want to be at home in
+foreign countries, and follow in imagination the traveling students of the
+middle ages. He longed now to have the sort of apprenticeship to life
+which would not shape him too definitely, and rob him of the choice that
+might come from a free growth. One sees that Deronda's demerits were
+likely to be on the side of reflective hesitation, and this tendency was
+encouraged by his position; there was no need for him to get an immediate
+income, or to fit himself in haste for a profession; and his sensibility
+to the half-known facts of his parentage made him an excuse for lingering
+longer than others in a state of social neutrality. Other men, he inwardly
+said, had a more definite place and duties. But the project which
+flattered his inclination might not have gone beyond the stage of
+ineffective brooding, if certain circumstances had not quickened it into
+action.
+
+The circumstances arose out of an enthusiastic friendship which extended
+into his after-life. Of the same year with himself, and occupying small
+rooms close to his, was a youth who had come as an exhibitioner from
+Christ's Hospital, and had eccentricities enough for a Charles Lamb. Only
+to look at his pinched features and blonde hair hanging over his collar
+reminded one of pale quaint heads by early German painters; and when this
+faint coloring was lit up by a joke, there came sudden creases about the
+mouth and eyes which might have been moulded by the soul of an aged
+humorist. His father, an engraver of some distinction, had been dead
+eleven years, and his mother had three girls to educate and maintain on a
+meagre annuity. Hans Meyrick--he had been daringly christened after
+Holbein--felt himself the pillar, or rather the knotted and twisted trunk,
+round which these feeble climbing plants must cling. There was no want of
+ability or of honest well-meaning affection to make the prop trustworthy:
+the ease and quickness with which he studied might serve him to win prizes
+at Cambridge, as he had done among the Blue Coats, in spite of
+irregularities. The only danger was, that the incalculable tendencies in
+him might be fatally timed, and that his good intentions might be
+frustrated by some act which was not due to habit but to capricious,
+scattered impulses. He could not be said to have any one bad habit; yet at
+longer or shorter intervals he had fits of impish recklessness, and did
+things that would have made the worst habits.
+
+Hans in his right mind, however, was a lovable creature, and in Deronda he
+had happened to find a friend who was likely to stand by him with the more
+constancy, from compassion for these brief aberrations that might bring a
+long repentance. Hans, indeed, shared Deronda's rooms nearly as much as he
+used his own: to Deronda he poured himself out on his studies, his
+affairs, his hopes; the poverty of his home, and his love for the
+creatures there; the itching of his fingers to draw, and his determination
+to fight it away for the sake of getting some sort of a plum that he might
+divide with his mother and the girls. He wanted no confidence in return,
+but seemed to take Deronda as an Olympian who needed nothing--an egotism
+in friendship which is common enough with mercurial, expansive natures.
+Deronda was content, and gave Meyrick all the interest he claimed, getting
+at last a brotherly anxiety about him, looking after him in his erratic
+moments, and contriving by adroitly delicate devices not only to make up
+for his friend's lack of pence, but to save him from threatening chances.
+Such friendship easily becomes tender: the one spreads strong sheltering
+wings that delight in spreading, the other gets the warm protection which
+is also a delight. Meyrick was going in for a classical scholarship, and
+his success, in various ways momentous, was the more probable from the
+steadying influence of Deronda's friendship.
+
+But an imprudence of Meyrick's, committed at the beginning of the autumn
+term, threatened to disappoint his hopes. With his usual alternation
+between unnecessary expense and self-privation, he had given too much
+money for an old engraving which fascinated him, and to make up for it,
+had come from London in a third-class carriage with his eyes exposed to a
+bitter wind and any irritating particles the wind might drive before it.
+The consequence was a severe inflammation of the eyes, which for some time
+hung over him the threat of a lasting injury. This crushing trouble called
+out all Deronda's readiness to devote himself, and he made every other
+occupation secondary to that of being companion and eyes to Hans, working
+with him and for him at his classics, that if possible his chance of the
+classical scholarship might be saved. Hans, to keep the knowledge of his
+suffering from his mother and sisters, alleged his work as a reason for
+passing the Christmas at Cambridge, and his friend stayed up with him.
+
+Meanwhile Deronda relaxed his hold on his mathematics, and Hans,
+reflecting on this, at length said: "Old fellow, while you are hoisting me
+you are risking yourself. With your mathematical cram one may be like
+Moses or Mahomet or somebody of that sort who had to cram, and forgot in
+one day what it had taken him forty to learn."
+
+Deronda would not admit that he cared about the risk, and he had really
+been beguiled into a little indifference by double sympathy: he was very
+anxious that Hans should not miss the much-needed scholarship, and he felt
+a revival of interest in the old studies. Still, when Hans, rather late in
+the day, got able to use his own eyes, Deronda had tenacity enough to try
+hard and recover his lost ground. He failed, however; but he had the
+satisfaction of seeing Meyrick win.
+
+Success, as a sort of beginning that urged completion, might have
+reconciled Deronda to his university course; but the emptiness of all
+things, from politics to pastimes, is never so striking to us as when we
+fail in them. The loss of the personal triumph had no severity for him,
+but the sense of having spent his time ineffectively in a mode of working
+which had been against the grain, gave him a distaste for any renewal of
+the process, which turned his imagined project of quitting Cambridge into
+a serious intention. In speaking of his intention to Meyrick he made it
+appear that he was glad of the turn events had taken--glad to have the
+balance dip decidedly, and feel freed from his hesitations; but he
+observed that he must of course submit to any strong objection on the part
+of Sir Hugo.
+
+Meyrick's joy and gratitude were disturbed by much uneasiness. He believed
+in Deronda's alleged preference, but he felt keenly that in serving him
+Daniel had placed himself at a disadvantage in Sir Hugo's opinion, and he
+said mournfully, "If you had got the scholarship, Sir Hugo would have
+thought that you asked to leave us with a better grace. You have spoiled
+your luck for my sake, and I can do nothing to amend it."
+
+"Yes, you can; you are to be a first-rate fellow. I call that a first-rate
+investment of my luck."
+
+"Oh, confound it! You save an ugly mongrel from drowning, and expect him
+to cut a fine figure. The poets have made tragedies enough about signing
+one's self over to wickedness for the sake of getting something plummy; I
+shall write a tragedy of a fellow who signed himself over to be good, and
+was uncomfortable ever after."
+
+But Hans lost no time in secretly writing the history of the affair to Sir
+Hugo, making it plain that but for Deronda's generous devotion he could
+hardly have failed to win the prize he had been working for.
+
+The two friends went up to town together: Meyrick to rejoice with his
+mother and the girls in their little home at Chelsea; Deronda to carry out
+the less easy task of opening his mind to Sir Hugo. He relied a little on
+the baronet's general tolerance of eccentricities, but he expected more
+opposition than he met with. He was received with even warmer kindness
+than usual, the failure was passed over lightly, and when he detailed his
+reasons for wishing to quit the university and go to study abroad. Sir
+Hugo sat for some time in a silence which was rather meditative than
+surprised. At last he said, looking at Daniel with examination, "So you
+don't want to be an Englishman to the backbone after all?"
+
+"I want to be an Englishman, but I want to understand other points of
+view. And I want to get rid of a merely English attitude in studies."
+
+"I see; you don't want to be turned out in the same mould as every other
+youngster. And I have nothing to say against your doffing some of our
+national prejudices. I feel the better myself for having spent a good deal
+of my time abroad. But, for God's sake, keep an English cut, and don't
+become indifferent to bad tobacco! And, my dear boy, it is good to be
+unselfish and generous; but don't carry that too far. It will not do to
+give yourself to be melted down for the benefit of the tallow-trade; you
+must know where to find yourself. However, I shall put no vote on your
+going. Wait until I can get off Committee, and I'll run over with you."
+
+So Deronda went according to his will. But not before he had spent some
+hours with Hans Meyrick, and been introduced to the mother and sisters in
+the Chelsea home. The shy girls watched and registered every look of their
+brother's friend, declared by Hans to have been the salvation of him, a
+fellow like nobody else, and, in fine, a brick. They so thoroughly
+accepted Deronda as an ideal, that when he was gone the youngest set to
+work, under the criticism of the two elder girls, to paint him as Prince
+Camaralzaman.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+ "This is truth the poet sings,
+ That a sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier things."
+ --TENNYSON: _Locksley Hall_.
+
+
+On a fine evening near the end of July, Deronda was rowing himself on the
+Thames. It was already a year or more since he had come back to England,
+with the understanding that his education was finished, and that he was
+somehow to take his place in English society; but though, in deference to
+Sir Hugo's wish, and to fence off idleness, he had began to read law, this
+apparent decision had been without other result than to deepen the roots
+of indecision. His old love of boating had revived with the more force now
+that he was in town with the Mallingers, because he could nowhere else get
+the same still seclusion which the river gave him. He had a boat of his
+own at Putney, and whenever Sir Hugo did not want him, it was his chief
+holiday to row till past sunset and come in again with the stars. Not that
+he was in a sentimental stage; but he was in another sort of contemplative
+mood perhaps more common in the young men of our day--that of questioning
+whether it were worth while to take part in the battle of the world: I
+mean, of course, the young men in whom the unproductive labor of
+questioning is sustained by three or five per cent, on capital which
+somebody else has battled for. It puzzled Sir Hugo that one who made a
+splendid contrast with all that was sickly and puling should be hampered
+with ideas which, since they left an accomplished Whig like himself
+unobstructed, could be no better than spectral illusions; especially as
+Deronda set himself against authorship--a vocation which is understood to
+turn foolish thinking into funds.
+
+Rowing in his dark-blue shirt and skull-cap, his curls closely clipped,
+his mouth beset with abundant soft waves of beard, he bore only disguised
+traces of the seraphic boy "trailing clouds of glory." Still, even one who
+had never seen him since his boyhood might have looked at him with slow
+recognition, due perhaps to the peculiarity of the gaze which Gwendolen
+chose to call "dreadful," though it had really a very mild sort of
+scrutiny. The voice, sometimes audible in subdued snatches of song, had
+turned out merely a high baritone; indeed, only to look at his lithe,
+powerful frame and the firm gravity of his face would have been enough for
+an experienced guess that he had no rare and ravishing tenor such as
+nature reluctantly makes at some sacrifice. Look at his hands: they are
+not small and dimpled, with tapering fingers that seem to have only a
+deprecating touch: they are long, flexible, firmly-grasping hands, such as
+Titian has painted in a picture where he wanted to show the combination of
+refinement with force. And there is something of a likeness, too, between
+the faces belonging to the hands--in both the uniform pale-brown skin, the
+perpendicular brow, the calmly penetrating eyes. Not seraphic any longer:
+thoroughly terrestrial and manly; but still of a kind to raise belief in a
+human dignity which can afford to recognize poor relations.
+
+Such types meet us here and there among average conditions; in a workman,
+for example, whistling over a bit of measurement and lifting his eyes to
+answer our question about the road. And often the grand meanings of faces
+as well as of written words may lie chiefly in the impressions that happen
+just now to be of importance in relation to Deronda, rowing on the Thames
+in a very ordinary equipment for a young Englishman at leisure, and
+passing under Kew Bridge with no thought of an adventure in which his
+appearance was likely to play any part. In fact, he objected very strongly
+to the notion, which others had not allowed him to escape, that his
+appearance was of a kind to draw attention; and hints of this, intended to
+be complimentary, found an angry resonance in him, coming from mingled
+experiences, to which a clue has already been given. His own face in the
+glass had during many years associated for him with thoughts of some one
+whom he must be like--one about whose character and lot he continually
+wondered, and never dared to ask.
+
+In the neighborhood of Kew Bridge, between six and seven o'clock, the
+river was no solitude. Several persons were sauntering on the towing-path,
+and here and there a boat was plying. Deronda had been rowing fast to get
+over this spot, when, becoming aware of a great barge advancing toward
+him, he guided his boat aside, and rested on his oar within a couple of
+yards of the river-brink. He was all the while unconsciously continuing
+the low-toned chant which had haunted his throat all the way up the river
+--the gondolier's song in the "Otello," where Rossini has worthily set to
+music the immortal words of Dante--
+
+ "Nessun maggior dolore
+ Che ricordarsi del tempo felice
+ Nella miseria":
+[Footnote: Dante's words are best rendered by our own poet in the lines at
+the head of the chapter.]
+
+and, as he rested on his oar, the pianissimo fall of the melodic wail
+"nella miseria" was distinctly audible on the brink of the water. Three or
+four persons had paused at various spots to watch the barge passing the
+bridge, and doubtless included in their notice the young gentleman in the
+boat; but probably it was only to one ear that the low vocal sounds came
+with more significance than if they had been an insect-murmur amidst the
+sum of current noises. Deronda, awaiting the barge, now turning his head
+to the river-side, and saw at a few yards' distant from him a figure which
+might have been an impersonation of the misery he was unconsciously giving
+voice to: a girl hardly more than eighteen, of low slim figure, with most
+delicate little face, her dark curls pushed behind her ears under a large
+black hat, a long woolen cloak over her shoulders. Her hands were hanging
+down clasped before her, and her eyes were fixed on the river with a look
+of immovable, statue-like despair. This strong arrest of his attention
+made him cease singing: apparently his voice had entered her inner world
+without her taking any note of whence it came, for when it suddenly ceased
+she changed her attitude slightly, and, looking round with a frightened
+glance, met Deronda's face. It was but a couple of moments, but that
+seemed a long while for two people to look straight at each other. Her
+look was something like that of a fawn or other gentle animal before it
+turns to run away: no blush, no special alarm, but only some timidity
+which yet could not hinder her from a long look before she turned. In
+fact, it seemed to Deronda that she was only half conscious of her
+surroundings: was she hungry, or was there some other cause of
+bewilderment? He felt an outleap of interest and compassion toward her;
+but the next instant she had turned and walked away to a neighboring bench
+under a tree. He had no right to linger and watch her: poorly-dressed,
+melancholy women are common sights; it was only the delicate beauty,
+picturesque lines and color of the image that was exceptional, and these
+conditions made it more markedly impossible that he should obtrude his
+interest upon her. He began to row away and was soon far up the river; but
+no other thoughts were busy enough quite to expel that pale image of
+unhappy girlhood. He fell again and again to speculating on the probable
+romance that lay behind that loneliness and look of desolation; then to
+smile at his own share in the prejudice that interesting faces must have
+interesting adventures; then to justify himself for feeling that sorrow
+was the more tragic when it befell delicate, childlike beauty.
+
+"I should not have forgotten the look of misery if she had been ugly and
+vulgar," he said to himself. But there was no denying that the
+attractiveness of the image made it likelier to last. It was clear to him
+as an onyx cameo; the brown-black drapery, the white face with small,
+small features and dark, long-lashed eyes. His mind glanced over the girl-
+tragedies that are going on in the world, hidden, unheeded, as if they
+were but tragedies of the copse or hedgerow, where the helpless drag
+wounded wings forsakenly, and streak the shadowed moss with the red
+moment-hand of their own death. Deronda of late, in his solitary
+excursions, had been occupied chiefly with uncertainties about his own
+course; but those uncertainties, being much at their leisure, were wont to
+have such wide-sweeping connections with all life and history that the new
+image of helpless sorrow easily blent itself with what seemed to him the
+strong array of reasons why he should shrink from getting into that
+routine of the world which makes men apologize for all its wrong-doing,
+and take opinions as mere professional equipment--why he should not draw
+strongly at any thread in the hopelessly-entangled scheme of things.
+
+He used his oars little, satisfied to go with the tide and be taken back
+by it. It was his habit to indulge himself in that solemn passivity which
+easily comes with the lengthening shadows and mellow light, when thinking
+and desiring melt together imperceptibly, and what in other hours may have
+seemed argument takes the quality of passionate vision. By the time he had
+come back again with the tide past Richmond Bridge the sun was near
+setting: and the approach of his favorite hour--with its deepening
+stillness and darkening masses of tree and building between the double
+glow of the sky and the river--disposed him to linger as if they had been
+an unfinished strain of music. He looked out for a perfectly solitary spot
+where he could lodge his boat against the bank, and, throwing himself on
+his back with his head propped on the cushions, could watch out the light
+of sunset and the opening of that bead-roll which some oriental poet
+describes as God's call to the little stars, who each answer, "Here am I."
+He chose a spot in the bend of the river just opposite Kew Gardens, where
+he had a great breadth of water before him reflecting the glory of the
+sky, while he himself was in shadow. He lay with his hands behind his
+head, propped on a level with the boat's edge, so that he could see all
+round him, but could not be seen by any one at a few yards' distance; and
+for a long while he never turned his eyes from the view right in front of
+him. He was forgetting everything else in a half-speculative, half-
+involuntary identification of himself with the objects he was looking at,
+thinking how far it might be possible habitually to shift his centre till
+his own personality would be no less outside him than the landscape--when
+the sense of something moving on the bank opposite him where it was
+bordered by a line of willow bushes, made him turn his glance thitherward.
+In the first moment he had a darting presentiment about the moving figure;
+and now he could see the small face with the strange dying sunlight upon
+it. He feared to frighten her by a sudden movement, and watched her with
+motionless attention. She looked round, but seemed only to gather security
+from the apparent solitude, hid her hat among the willows, and immediately
+took off her woolen cloak. Presently she seated herself and deliberately
+dipped the cloak in the water, holding it there a little while, then
+taking it out with effort, rising from her seat as she did so. By this
+time Deronda felt sure that she meant to wrap the wet cloak round her as a
+drowning shroud; there was no longer time to hesitate about frightening
+her. He rose and seized his oar to ply across; happily her position lay a
+little below him. The poor thing, overcome with terror at this sign of
+discovery from the opposite bank, sank down on the brink again, holding
+her cloak half out of the water. She crouched and covered her face as if
+she kept a faint hope that she had not been seen, and that the boatman was
+accidentally coming toward her. But soon he was within brief space of her,
+steadying his boat against the bank, and speaking, but very gently--
+
+"Don't be afraid. You are unhappy. Pray, trust me. Tell me what I can do
+to help you."
+
+She raised her head and looked up at him. His face now was toward the
+light, and she knew it again. But she did not speak for a few moments
+which were a renewal of their former gaze at each other. At last she said
+in a low sweet voice, with an accent so distinct that it suggested
+foreignness and yet was not foreign, "I saw you before," and then added
+dreamily, after a like pause, "nella miseria."
+
+Deronda, not understanding the connection of her thoughts, supposed that
+her mind was weakened by distress and hunger.
+
+"It was you, singing?" she went on, hesitatingly--"Nessun maggior dolore."
+The mere words themselves uttered in her sweet undertones seemed to give
+the melody to Deronda's ear.
+
+"Ah, yes," he said, understanding now, "I am often singing them. But I
+fear you will injure yourself staying here. Pray let me take you in my
+boat to some place of safety. And that wet cloak--let me take it."
+
+He would not attempt to take it without her leave, dreading lest he should
+scare her. Even at his words, he fancied that she shrank and clutched the
+cloak more tenaciously. But her eyes were fixed on him with a question in
+them as she said, "You look good. Perhaps it is God's command."
+
+"Do trust me. Let me help you. I will die before I will let any harm come
+to you."
+
+She rose from her sitting posture, first dragging the saturated cloak and
+then letting it fall on the ground--it was too heavy for her tired arms.
+Her little woman's figure as she laid her delicate chilled hands together
+one over the other against her waist, and went a step backward while she
+leaned her head forward as if not to lose sight of his face, was
+unspeakably touching.
+
+"Great God!" the words escaped Deronda in a tone so low and solemn that
+they seemed like a prayer become unconsciously vocal. The agitating
+impression this forsaken girl was making on him stirred a fibre that lay
+close to his deepest interest in the fates of women--"perhaps my mother
+was like this one." The old thought had come now with a new impetus of
+mingled feeling, and urged that exclamation in which both East and West
+have for ages concentrated their awe in the presence of inexorable
+calamity.
+
+The low-toned words seemed to have some reassurance in them for the
+hearer: she stepped forward close to the boat's side, and Deronda put out
+his hand, hoping now that she would let him help her in. She had already
+put her tiny hand into his which closed around it, when some new thought
+struck her, and drawing back she said--
+
+"I have nowhere to go--nobody belonging to me in all this land."
+
+"I will take you to a lady who has daughters," said Deronda, immediately.
+He felt a sort of relief in gathering that the wretched home and cruel
+friends he imagined her to be fleeing from were not in the near
+background. Still she hesitated, and said more timidly than ever--
+
+"Do you belong to the theatre?"
+
+"No; I have nothing to do with the theatre," said Deronda, in a decided
+tone. Then beseechingly, "I will put you in perfect safety at once; with a
+lady, a good woman; I am sure she will be kind. Let us lose no time: you
+will make yourself ill. Life may still become sweet to you. There are good
+people--there are good women who will take care of you."
+
+She drew backward no more, but stepped in easily, as if she were used to
+such action, and sat down on the cushions.
+
+"You had a covering for your head," said Deronda.
+
+"My hat?" (She lifted up her hands to her head.) "It is quite hidden in
+the bush."
+
+"I will find it," said Deronda, putting out his hand deprecatingly as she
+attempted to rise. "The boat is fixed."
+
+He jumped out, found the hat, and lifted up the saturated cloak, wringing
+it and throwing it into the bottom of the boat.
+
+"We must carry the cloak away, to prevent any one who may have noticed you
+from thinking you have been drowned," he said, cheerfully, as he got in
+again and presented the old hat to her. "I wish I had any other garment
+than my coat to offer you. But shall you mind throwing it over your
+shoulders while we are on the water? It is quite an ordinary thing to do,
+when people return late and are not enough provided with wraps." He held
+out the coat toward her with a smile, and there came a faint melancholy
+smile in answer, as she took it and put it on very cleverly.
+
+"I have some biscuits--should you like them?" said Deronda.
+
+"No; I cannot eat. I had still some money left to buy bread."
+
+He began to ply his oar without further remark, and they went along
+swiftly for many minutes without speaking. She did not look at him, but
+was watching the oar, leaning forward in an attitude of repose, as if she
+were beginning to feel the comfort of returning warmth and the prospect of
+life instead of death. The twilight was deepening; the red flush was all
+gone and the little stars were giving their answer one after another. The
+moon was rising, but was still entangled among the trees and buildings.
+The light was not such that he could distinctly discern the expression of
+her features or her glance, but they were distinctly before him
+nevertheless--features and a glance which seemed to have given a fuller
+meaning for him to the human face. Among his anxieties one was dominant:
+his first impression about her, that her mind might be disordered, had not
+been quite dissipated: the project of suicide was unmistakable, and given
+a deeper color to every other suspicious sign. He longed to begin a
+conversation, but abstained, wishing to encourage the confidence that
+might induce her to speak first. At last she did speak.
+
+"I like to listen to the oar."
+
+"So do I."
+
+"If you had not come, I should have been dead now."
+
+"I cannot bear you to speak of that. I hope you will never be sorry that I
+came."
+
+"I cannot see how I shall be glad to live. The _maggior dolore_ and the
+_miseria_ have lasted longer than the _tempo felice_." She paused and then
+went on dreamily,--"_Dolore--miseria_--I think those words are alive."
+
+Deronda was mute: to question her seemed an unwarrantable freedom; he
+shrank from appearing to claim the authority of a benefactor, or to treat
+her with the less reverence because she was in distress. She went on
+musingly--
+
+"I thought it was not wicked. Death and life are one before the Eternal. I
+know our fathers slew their children and then slew themselves, to keep
+their souls pure. I meant it so. But now I am commanded to live. I cannot
+see how I shall live."
+
+"You will find friends. I will find them for you."
+
+She shook her head and said mournfully, "Not my mother and brother. I
+cannot find them."
+
+"You are English? You must be--speaking English so perfectly."
+
+She did not answer immediately, but looked at Deronda again, straining to
+see him in the double light. Until now she had been watching the oar. It
+seemed as if she were half roused, and wondered which part of her
+impression was dreaming and which waking. Sorrowful isolation had benumbed
+her sense of reality, and the power of distinguishing outward and inward
+was continually slipping away from her. Her look was full of wondering
+timidity such as the forsaken one in the desert might have lifted to the
+angelic vision before she knew whether his message was in anger or in
+pity.
+
+"You want to know if I am English?" she said at last, while Deronda was
+reddening nervously under a gaze which he felt more fully than he saw.
+
+"I want to know nothing except what you like to tell me," he said, still
+uneasy in the fear that her mind was wandering. "Perhaps it is not good
+for you to talk."
+
+"Yes, I will tell you. I am English-born. But I am a Jewess."
+
+Deronda was silent, inwardly wondering that he had not said this to
+himself before, though any one who had seen delicate-faced Spanish girls
+might simply have guessed her to be Spanish.
+
+"Do you despise me for it?" she said presently in low tones, which had a
+sadness that pierced like a cry from a small dumb creature in fear.
+
+"Why should I?" said Deronda. "I am not so foolish."
+
+"I know many Jews are bad."
+
+"So are many Christians. But I should not think it fair for you to despise
+me because of that."
+
+"My mother and brother were good. But I shall never find them. I am come a
+long way--from abroad. I ran away; but I cannot tell you--I cannot speak
+of it. I thought I might find my mother again--God would guide me. But
+then I despaired. This morning when the light came, I felt as if one word
+kept sounding within me--Never! never! But now--I begin--to think--" her
+words were broken by rising sobs--"I am commanded to live--perhaps we are
+going to her."
+
+With an outburst of weeping she buried her head on her knees. He hoped
+that this passionate weeping might relieve her excitement. Meanwhile he
+was inwardly picturing in much embarrassment how he should present himself
+with her in Park Lane--the course which he had at first unreflectingly
+determined on. No one kinder and more gentle than Lady Mallinger; but it
+was hardly probable that she would be at home; and he had a shuddering
+sense of a lackey staring at this delicate, sorrowful image of womanhood--
+of glaring lights and fine staircases, and perhaps chilling suspicious
+manners from lady's maid and housekeeper, that might scare the mind
+already in a state of dangerous susceptibility. But to take her to any
+other shelter than a home already known to him was not to be contemplated:
+he was full of fears about the issue of the adventure which had brought on
+him a responsibility all the heavier for the strong and agitating
+impression this childlike creature had made on him. But another resource
+came to mind: he could venture to take her to Mrs. Meyrick's--to the small
+house at Chelsea--where he had been often enough since his return from
+abroad to feel sure that he could appeal there to generous hearts, which
+had a romantic readiness to believe in innocent need and to help it. Hans
+Meyrick was safe away in Italy, and Deronda felt the comfort of presenting
+himself with his charge at a house where he would be met by a motherly
+figure of quakerish neatness, and three girls who hardly knew of any evil
+closer to them than what lay in history-books, and dramas, and would at
+once associate a lovely Jewess with Rebecca in "Ivanhoe," besides thinking
+that everything they did at Deronda's request would be done for their
+idol, Hans. The vision of the Chelsea home once raised, Deronda no longer
+hesitated.
+
+The rumbling thither in the cab after the stillness of the water seemed
+long. Happily his charge had been quiet since her fit of weeping, and
+submitted like a tired child. When they were in the cab, she laid down her
+hat and tried to rest her head, but the jolting movement would not let it
+rest. Still she dozed, and her sweet head hung helpless, first on one
+side, then on the other.
+
+"They are too good to have any fear about taking her in," thought Deronda.
+Her person, her voice, her exquisite utterance, were one strong appeal to
+belief and tenderness. Yet what had been the history which had brought her
+to this desolation? He was going on a strange errand--to ask shelter for
+this waif. Then there occurred to him the beautiful story Plutarch
+somewhere tells of the Delphic women: how when the Maenads, outworn with
+their torch-lit wanderings, lay down to sleep in the market-place, the
+matrons came and stood silently round them to keep guard over their
+slumbers; then, when they waked, ministered to them tenderly and saw them
+safely to their own borders. He could trust the women he was going to for
+having hearts as good.
+
+Deronda felt himself growing older this evening and entering on a new
+phase in finding a life to which his own had come--perhaps as a rescue;
+but how to make sure that snatching from death was rescue? The moment of
+finding a fellow-creature is often as full of mingled doubt and exultation
+as the moment of finding an idea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+ Life is a various mother: now she dons
+ Her plumes and brilliants, climbs the marble stairs
+ With head aloft, nor ever turns her eyes
+ On lackeys who attend her; now she dwells
+ Grim-clad, up darksome allyes, breathes hot gin,
+ And screams in pauper riot.
+
+ But to these
+ She came a frugal matron, neat and deft,
+ With cheerful morning thoughts and quick device
+ To find the much in little.
+
+
+Mrs. Meyrick's house was not noisy: the front parlor looked on the river,
+and the back on gardens, so that though she was reading aloud to her
+daughters, the window could be left open to freshen the air of the small
+double room where a lamp and two candles were burning. The candles were on
+a table apart for Kate, who was drawing illustrations for a publisher; the
+lamp was not only for the reader but for Amy and Mab, who were
+embroidering satin cushions for "the great world."
+
+Outside, the house looked very narrow and shabby, the bright light through
+the holland blind showing the heavy old-fashioned window-frame; but it is
+pleasant to know that many such grim-walled slices of space in our foggy
+London have been and still are the homes of a culture the more spotlessly
+free from vulgarity, because poverty has rendered everything like display
+an impersonal question, and all the grand shows of the world simply a
+spectacle which rouses petty rivalry or vain effort after possession.
+
+The Meyricks' was a home of that kind: and they all clung to this
+particular house in a row because its interior was filled with objects
+always in the same places, which, for the mother held memories of her
+marriage time, and for the young ones seemed as necessary and uncriticised
+a part of their world as the stars of the Great Bear seen from the back
+windows. Mrs. Meyrick had borne much stint of other matters that she might
+be able to keep some engravings specially cherished by her husband; and
+the narrow spaces of wall held a world history in scenes and heads which
+the children had early learned by heart. The chairs and tables were also
+old friends preferred to new. But in these two little parlors with no
+furniture that a broker would have cared to cheapen except the prints and
+piano, there was space and apparatus for a wide-glancing, nicely-select
+life, opened to the highest things in music, painting and poetry. I am not
+sure that in the times of greatest scarcity, before Kate could get paid-
+work, these ladies had always had a servant to light their fires and sweep
+their rooms; yet they were fastidious in some points, and could not
+believe that the manners of ladies in the fashionable world were so full
+of coarse selfishness, petty quarreling, and slang as they are represented
+to be in what are called literary photographs. The Meyricks had their
+little oddities, streaks of eccentricity from the mother's blood as well
+as the father's, their minds being like mediaeval houses with unexpected
+recesses and openings from this into that, flights of steps and sudden
+outlooks.
+
+But mother and daughters were all united by a triple bond--family love;
+admiration for the finest work, the best action; and habitual industry.
+Hans' desire to spend some of his money in making their lives more
+luxurious had been resisted by all of them, and both they and he had been
+thus saved from regrets at the threatened triumphs of his yearning for art
+over the attractions of secured income--a triumph that would by-and-by
+oblige him to give up his fellowship. They could all afford to laugh at
+his Gavarni-caricatures and to hold him blameless in following a natural
+bent which their unselfishness and independence had left without obstacle.
+It was enough for them to go on in their old way, only having a grand
+treat of opera-going (to the gallery) when Hans came home on a visit.
+
+Seeing the group they made this evening, one could hardly wish them to
+change their way of life. They were all alike small, and so in due
+proportion to their miniature rooms. Mrs. Meyrick was reading aloud from a
+French book; she was a lively little woman, half French, half Scotch, with
+a pretty articulateness of speech that seemed to make daylight in her
+hearer's understanding. Though she was not yet fifty, her rippling hair,
+covered by a quakerish net cap, was chiefly gray, but her eyebrows were
+brown as the bright eyes below them; her black dress, almost like a
+priest's cassock with its rows of buttons, suited a neat figure hardly
+five feet high. The daughters were to match the mother, except that Mab
+had Hans' light hair and complexion, with a bossy, irregular brow, and
+other quaintnesses that reminded one of him. Everything about them was
+compact, from the firm coils of their hair, fastened back _a la Chinoise_,
+to their gray skirts in Puritan nonconformity with the fashion, which at
+that time would have demanded that four feminine circumferences should
+fill all the free space in the front parlor. All four, if they had been
+wax-work, might have been packed easily in a fashionable lady's traveling
+trunk. Their faces seemed full of speech, as if their minds had been
+shelled, after the manner of horse-chestnuts, and become brightly visible.
+The only large thing of its kind in the room was Hafiz, the Persian cat,
+comfortably poised on the brown leather back of a chair, and opening his
+large eyes now and then to see that the lower animals were not in any
+mischief.
+
+The book Mrs. Meyrick had before her was Erckmann-Chatrian's _Historie
+d'un Conscrit_. She had just finished reading it aloud, and Mab, who had
+let her work fall on the ground while she stretched her head forward and
+fixed her eyes on the reader, exclaimed--
+
+"I think that is the finest story in the world."
+
+"Of course, Mab!" said Amy, "it is the last you have heard. Everything
+that pleases you is the best in its turn."
+
+"It is hardly to be called a story," said Kate. "It is a bit of history
+brought near us with a strong telescope. We can see the soldiers' faces:
+no, it is more than that--we can hear everything--we can almost hear their
+hearts beat."
+
+"I don't care what you call it," said Mab, flirting away her thimble.
+"Call it a chapter in Revelations. It makes me want to do something good,
+something grand. It makes me so sorry for everybody. It makes me like
+Schiller--I want to take the world in my arms and kiss it. I must kiss you
+instead, little mother?" She threw her arms round her mother's neck.
+
+"Whenever you are in that mood, Mab, down goes your work," said Amy. "It
+would be doing something good to finish your cushion without soiling it."
+
+"Oh--oh--oh!" groaned Mab, as she stooped to pick up her work and thimble.
+"I wish I had three wounded conscripts to take care of."
+
+"You would spill their beef-tea while you were talking," said Amy.
+
+"Poor Mab! don't be hard on her," said the mother. "Give me the embroidery
+now, child. You go on with your enthusiasm, and I will go on with the pink
+and white poppy."
+
+"Well, ma, I think you are more caustic than Amy," said Kate, while she
+drew her head back to look at her drawing.
+
+"Oh--oh--oh!" cried Mab again, rising and stretching her arms. "I wish
+something wonderful would happen. I feel like the deluge. The waters of
+the great deep are broken up, and the windows of heaven are opened. I must
+sit down and play the scales."
+
+Mab was opening the piano while the others were laughing at this climax,
+when a cab stopped before the house, and there forthwith came a quick rap
+of the knocker.
+
+"Dear me!" said Mrs. Meyrick, starting up, "it is after ten, and Phoebe is
+gone to bed." She hastened out, leaving the parlor door open.
+
+"Mr. Deronda!" The girls could hear this exclamation from their mamma. Mab
+clasped her hands, saying in a loud whisper, "There now! something _is_
+going to happen." Kate and Amy gave up their work in amazement. But
+Deronda's tone in reply was so low that they could not hear his words, and
+Mrs. Meyrick immediately closed the parlor door.
+
+"I know I am trusting to your goodness in a most extraordinary way,"
+Deronda went on, after giving his brief narrative; "but you can imagine
+how helpless I feel with a young creature like this on my hands. I could
+not go with her among strangers, and in her nervous state I should dread
+taking her into a house full of servants. I have trusted to your mercy. I
+hope you will not think my act unwarrantable."
+
+"On the contrary. You have honored me by trusting me. I see your
+difficulty. Pray bring her in. I will go and prepare the girls."
+
+While Deronda went back to the cab, Mrs. Meyrick turned into the parlor
+again and said: "Here is somebody to take care of instead of your wounded
+conscripts, Mab: a poor girl who was going to drown herself in despair.
+Mr. Deronda found her only just in time to save her. He brought her along
+in his boat, and did not know what else it would be safe to do with her,
+so he has trusted us and brought her here. It seems she is a Jewess, but
+quite refined, he says--knowing Italian and music."
+
+The three girls, wondering and expectant, came forward and stood near each
+other in mute confidence that they were all feeling alike under this
+appeal to their compassion. Mab looked rather awe-stricken, as if this
+answer to her wish were something preternatural.
+
+Meanwhile Deronda going to the door of the cab where the pale face was now
+gazing out with roused observation, said, "I have brought you to some of
+the kindest people in the world: there are daughters like you. It is a
+happy home. Will you let me take you to them?"
+
+She stepped out obediently, putting her hand in his and forgetting her
+hat; and when Deronda led her into the full light of the parlor where the
+four little women stood awaiting her, she made a picture that would have
+stirred much duller sensibilities than theirs. At first she was a little
+dazed by the sudden light, and before she had concentrated her glance he
+had put her hand into the mother's. He was inwardly rejoicing that the
+Meyricks were so small: the dark-curled head was the highest among them.
+The poor wanderer could not be afraid of these gentle faces so near hers:
+and now she was looking at each of them in turn while the mother said,
+"You must be weary, poor child."
+
+"We will take care of you--we will comfort you--we will love you," cried
+Mab, no longer able to restrain herself, and taking the small right hand
+caressingly between both her own. This gentle welcoming warmth was
+penetrating the bewildered one: she hung back just enough to see better
+the four faces in front of her, whose good will was being reflected in
+hers, not in any smile, but in that undefinable change which tells us that
+anxiety is passing in contentment. For an instant she looked up at
+Deronda, as if she were referring all this mercy to him, and then again
+turning to Mrs. Meyrick, said with more collectedness in her sweet tones
+than he had heard before--
+
+"I am a stranger. I am a Jewess. You might have thought I was wicked."
+
+"No, we are sure you are good," burst out Mab.
+
+"We think no evil of you, poor child. You shall be safe with us," said
+Mrs. Meyrick. "Come now and sit down. You must have some food, and then
+you must go to rest."
+
+The stranger looked up again at Deronda, who said--
+
+"You will have no more fears with these friends? You will rest to-night?"
+
+"Oh, I should not fear. I should rest. I think these are the ministering
+angels."
+
+Mrs. Meyrick wanted to lead her to seat, but again hanging back gently,
+the poor weary thing spoke as if with a scruple at being received without
+a further account of herself.
+
+"My name is Mirah Lapidoth. I am come a long way, all the way from Prague
+by myself. I made my escape. I ran away from dreadful things. I came to
+find my mother and brother in London. I had been taken from my mother when
+I was little, but I thought I could find her again. I had trouble--the
+houses were all gone--I could not find her. It has been a long while, and
+I had not much money. That is why I am in distress."
+
+"Our mother will be good to you," cried Mab. "See what a nice little
+mother she is!"
+
+"Do sit down now," said Kate, moving a chair forward, while Amy ran to get
+some tea.
+
+Mirah resisted no longer, but seated herself with perfect grace, crossing
+her little feet, laying her hands one over the other on her lap, and
+looking at her friends with placid reverence; whereupon Hafiz, who had
+been watching the scene restlessly came forward with tail erect and rubbed
+himself against her ankles. Deronda felt it time to go.
+
+"Will you allow me to come again and inquire--perhaps at five to-morrow?"
+he said to Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+"Yes, pray; we shall have had time to make acquaintance then."
+
+"Good-bye," said Deronda, looking down at Mirah, and putting out his hand.
+She rose as she took it, and the moment brought back to them both strongly
+the other moment when she had first taken that outstretched hand. She
+lifted her eyes to his and said with reverential fervor, "The God of our
+fathers bless you and deliver you from all evil as you have delivered me.
+I did not believe there was any man so good. None before have thought me
+worthy of the best. You found me poor and miserable, yet you have given me
+the best."
+
+Deronda could not speak, but with silent adieux to the Meyricks, hurried
+away.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III--MAIDENS CHOOSING.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ "I pity the man who can travel from Dan to Beersheba, and say, 'Tis
+ all barren': and so it is: and so is all the world to him who will not
+ cultivate the fruits it offers."--STERNE: _Sentimental Journey_.
+
+
+To say that Deronda was romantic would be to misrepresent him; but under
+his calm and somewhat self-repressed exterior there was a fervor which
+made him easily find poetry and romance among the events of every-day
+life. And perhaps poetry and romance are as plentiful as ever in the world
+except for those phlegmatic natures who I suspect would in any age have
+regarded them as a dull form of erroneous thinking. They exist very easily
+in the same room with the microscope and even in railway carriages: what
+banishes them in the vacuum in gentlemen and lady passengers. How should
+all the apparatus of heaven and earth, from the farthest firmament to the
+tender bosom of the mother who nourished us, make poetry for a mind that
+had no movements of awe and tenderness, no sense of fellowship which
+thrills from the near to the distant, and back again from the distant to
+the near?
+
+To Deronda this event of finding Mirah was as heart-stirring as anything
+that befell Orestes or Rinaldo. He sat up half the night, living again
+through the moments since he had first discerned Mirah on the river-brink,
+with the fresh and fresh vividness which belongs to emotive memory. When
+he took up a book to try and dull this urgency of inward vision, the
+printed words were no more than a network through which he saw and heard
+everything as clearly as before--saw not only the actual events of two
+hours, but possibilities of what had been and what might be which those
+events were enough to feed with the warm blood of passionate hope and
+fear. Something in his own experience caused Mirah's search after her
+mother to lay hold with peculiar force on his imagination. The first
+prompting of sympathy was to aid her in her search: if given persons were
+extant in London there were ways of finding them, as subtle as scientific
+experiment, the right machinery being set at work. But here the mixed
+feelings which belonged to Deronda's kindred experience naturally
+transfused themselves into his anxiety on behalf of Mirah.
+
+The desire to know his own mother, or to know about her, was constantly
+haunted with dread; and in imagining what might befall Mirah it quickly
+occurred to him that finding the mother and brother from whom she had been
+parted when she was a little one might turn out to be a calamity. When she
+was in the boat she said that her mother and brother were good; but the
+goodness might have been chiefly in her own ignorant innocence and
+yearning memory, and the ten or twelve years since the parting had been
+time enough for much worsening. Spite of his strong tendency to side with
+the objects of prejudice, and in general with those who got the worst of
+it, his interest had never been practically drawn toward existing Jews,
+and the facts he knew about them, whether they walked conspicuous in fine
+apparel or lurked in by-streets, were chiefly of a sort most repugnant to
+him. Of learned and accomplished Jews he took it for granted that they had
+dropped their religion, and wished to be merged in the people of their
+native lands. Scorn flung at a Jew as such would have roused all his
+sympathy in griefs of inheritance; but the indiscriminate scorn of a race
+will often strike a specimen who has well earned it on his own account,
+and might fairly be gibbeted as a rascally son of Adam. It appears that
+the Caribs, who know little of theology, regard thieving as a practice
+peculiarly connected with Christian tenets, and probably they could allege
+experimental grounds for this opinion. Deronda could not escape (who can?)
+knowing ugly stories of Jewish characteristics and occupations; and though
+one of his favorite protests was against the severance of past and present
+history, he was like others who shared his protest, in never having cared
+to reach any more special conclusions about actual Jews than that they
+retained the virtues and vices of a long-oppressed race. But now that
+Mirah's longing roused his mind to a closer survey of details, very
+disagreeable images urged themselves of what it might be to find out this
+middle-aged Jewess and her son. To be sure, there was the exquisite
+refinement and charm of the creature herself to make a presumption in
+favor of her immediate kindred, but--he must wait to know more: perhaps
+through Mrs. Meyrick he might gather some guiding hints from Mirah's own
+lips. Her voice, her accent, her looks--all the sweet purity that clothed
+her as with a consecrating garment made him shrink the more from giving
+her, either ideally or practically, an association with what was hateful
+or contaminating. But these fine words with which we fumigate and becloud
+unpleasant facts are not the language in which we think. Deronda's
+thinking went on in rapid images of what might be: he saw himself guided
+by some official scout into a dingy street; he entered through a dim
+doorway, and saw a hawk-eyed woman, rough-headed, and unwashed, cheapening
+a hungry girl's last bit of finery; or in some quarter only the more
+hideous for being smarter, he found himself under the breath of a young
+Jew talkative and familiar, willing to show his acquaintance with
+gentlemen's tastes, and not fastidious in any transactions with which they
+would favor him--and so on through the brief chapter of his experience in
+this kind. Excuse him: his mind was not apt to run spontaneously into
+insulting ideas, or to practice a form of wit which identifies Moses with
+the advertisement sheet; but he was just now governed by dread, and if
+Mirah's parents had been Christian, the chief difference would have been
+that his forebodings would have been fed with wider knowledge. It was the
+habit of his mind to connect dread with unknown parentage, and in this
+case as well as his own there was enough to make the connection
+reasonable.
+
+But what was to be done with Mirah? She needed shelter and protection in
+the fullest sense, and all his chivalrous sentiment roused itself to
+insist that the sooner and the more fully he could engage for her the
+interest of others besides himself, the better he should fulfill her
+claims on him. He had no right to provide for her entirely, though he
+might be able to do so; the very depth of the impression she had produced
+made him desire that she should understand herself to be entirely
+independent of him; and vague visions of the future which he tried to
+dispel as fantastic left their influence in an anxiety stronger than any
+motive he could give for it, that those who saw his actions closely should
+be acquainted from the first with the history of his relation to Mirah. He
+had learned to hate secrecy about the grand ties and obligations of his
+life--to hate it the more because a strong spell of interwoven
+sensibilities hindered him from breaking such secrecy. Deronda had made a
+vow to himself that--since the truths which disgrace mortals are not all
+of their own making--the truth should never be made a disgrace to another
+by his act. He was not without terror lest he should break this vow, and
+fall into the apologetic philosophy which explains the world into
+containing nothing better than one's own conduct.
+
+At one moment he resolved to tell the whole of his adventure to Sir Hugo
+and Lady Mallinger the next morning at breakfast, but the possibility that
+something quite new might reveal itself on his next visit to Mrs.
+Meyrick's checked this impulse, and he finally went to sleep on the
+conclusion that he would wait until that visit had been made.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ "It will hardly be denied that even in this frail and corrupted world,
+ we sometimes meet persons who, in their very mien and aspect, as well
+ as in the whole habit of life, manifest such a signature and stamp of
+ virtue, as to make our judgment of them a matter of intuition rather
+ than the result of continued examination."--ALEXANDER KNOX: quoted in
+ Southey's Life of Wesley.
+
+
+Mirah said that she had slept well that night; and when she came down in
+Mab's black dress, her dark hair curling in fresh fibrils as it gradually
+dried from its plenteous bath, she looked like one who was beginning to
+take comfort after the long sorrow and watching which had paled her cheek
+and made blue semicircles under her eyes. It was Mab who carried her
+breakfast and ushered her down--with some pride in the effect produced by
+a pair of tiny felt slippers which she had rushed out to buy because there
+were no shoes in the house small enough for Mirah, whose borrowed dress
+ceased about her ankles and displayed the cheap clothing that, moulding
+itself on her feet, seemed an adornment as choice as the sheaths of buds.
+The farthing buckles were bijoux.
+
+"Oh, if you please, mamma?" cried Mab, clasping her hands and stooping
+toward Mirah's feet, as she entered the parlor; "look at the slippers, how
+beautiful they fit! I declare she is like the Queen Budoor--' two delicate
+feet, the work of the protecting and all-recompensing Creator, support
+her; and I wonder how they can sustain what is above them.'"
+
+Mirah looked down at her own feet in a childlike way and then smiled at
+Mrs. Meyrick, who was saying inwardly, "One could hardly imagine this
+creature having an evil thought. But wise people would tell me to be
+cautious." She returned Mirah's smile and said, "I fear the feet have had
+to sustain their burden a little too often lately. But to-day she will
+rest and be my companion."
+
+"And she will tell you so many things and I shall not hear them," grumbled
+Mab, who felt herself in the first volume of a delightful romance and
+obliged to miss some chapters because she had to go to pupils.
+
+Kate was already gone to make sketches along the river, and Amy was away
+on business errands. It was what the mother wished, to be alone with this
+stranger, whose story must be a sorrowful one, yet was needful to be told.
+
+The small front parlor was as good as a temple that morning. The sunlight
+was on the river and soft air came in through the open window; the walls
+showed a glorious silent cloud of witnesses--the Virgin soaring amid her
+cherubic escort; grand Melancholia with her solemn universe; the Prophets
+and Sibyls; the School of Athens; the Last Supper; mystic groups where
+far-off ages made one moment; grave Holbein and Rembrandt heads; the
+Tragic Muse; last-century children at their musings or their play; Italian
+poets--all were there through the medium of a little black and white. The
+neat mother who had weathered her troubles, and come out of them with a
+face still cheerful, was sorting colored wools for her embroidery. Hafiz
+purred on the window-ledge, the clock on the mantle-piece ticked without
+hurry, and the occasional sound of wheels seemed to lie outside the more
+massive central quiet. Mrs. Meyrick thought that this quiet might be the
+best invitation to speech on the part of her companion, and chose not to
+disturb it by remark. Mirah sat opposite in her former attitude, her hands
+clasped on her lap, her ankles crossed, her eyes at first traveling slowly
+over the objects around her, but finally resting with a sort of placid
+reverence on Mrs. Meyrick. At length she began to speak softly.
+
+"I remember my mother's face better than anything; yet I was not seven
+when I was taken away, and I am nineteen now."
+
+"I can understand that," said Mrs. Meyrick. "There are some earliest
+things that last the longest."
+
+"Oh, yes, it was the earliest. I think my life began with waking up and
+loving my mother's face: it was so near to me, and her arms were round me,
+and she sang to me. One hymn she sang so often, so often: and then she
+taught me to sing it with her: it was the first I ever sang. They were
+always Hebrew hymns she sang; and because I never knew the meaning of the
+words they seemed full of nothing but our love and happiness. When I lay
+in my little bed and it was all white above me, she used to bend over me,
+between me and the white, and sing in a sweet, low voice. I can dream
+myself back into that time when I am awake, and it often comes back to me
+in my sleep--my hand is very little, I put it up to her face and she
+kisses it. Sometimes in my dreams I begin to tremble and think that we are
+both dead; but then I wake up and my hand lies like this, and for a moment
+I hardly know myself. But if I could see my mother again I should know
+her."
+
+"You must expect some change after twelve years," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+gently. "See my grey hair: ten years ago it was bright brown. The days and
+months pace over us like restless little birds, and leave the marks of
+their feet backward and forward; especially when they are like birds with
+heavy hearts-then they tread heavily."
+
+"Ah, I am sure her heart has been heavy for want of me. But to feel her
+joy if we could meet again, and I could make her know I love her and give
+her deep comfort after all her mourning! If that could be, I should mind
+nothing; I should be glad that I have lived through my trouble. I did
+despair. The world seemed miserable and wicked; none helped me so that I
+could bear their looks and words; I felt that my mother was dead, and
+death was the only way to her. But then in the last moment--yesterday,
+when I longed for the water to close over me--and I thought that death was
+the best image of mercy--then goodness came to me living, and I felt trust
+in the living. And--it is strange--but I began to hope that she was living
+too. And now I with you--here--this morning, peace and hope have come into
+me like a flood. I want nothing; I can wait; because I hope and believe
+and am grateful--oh, so grateful! You have not thought evil of me--you
+have not despised me."
+
+Mirah spoke with low-toned fervor, and sat as still as a picture all the
+while.
+
+"Many others would have felt as we do, my dear," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+feeling a mist come over her eyes as she looked at her work.
+
+"But I did not meet them--they did not come to me."
+
+"How was it that you were taken from your mother?"
+
+"Ah, I am a long while coming to that. It is dreadful to speak of, yet I
+must tell you--I must tell you everything. My father--it was he that took
+me away. I thought we were only going on a little journey; and I was
+pleased. There was a box with all my little things in. But we went on
+board a ship, and got farther and farther away from the land. Then I was
+ill; and I thought it would never end--it was the first misery, and it
+seemed endless. But at last we landed. I knew nothing then, and believed
+what my father said. He comforted me, and told me I should go back to my
+mother. But it was America we had reached, and it was long years before we
+came back to Europe. At first I often asked my father when we were going
+back; and I tried to learn writing fast, because I wanted to write to my
+mother; but one day when he found me trying to write a letter, he took me
+on his knee and told me that my mother and brother were dead; that was why
+we did not go back. I remember my brother a little; he carried me once;
+but he was not always at home. I believed my father when he said that they
+were dead. I saw them under the earth when he said they were there, with
+their eyes forever closed. I never thought of its not being true; and I
+used to cry every night in my bed for a long while. Then when she came so
+often to me, in my sleep, I thought she must be living about me though I
+could not always see her, and that comforted me. I was never afraid in the
+dark, because of that; and very often in the day I used to shut my eyes
+and bury my face and try to see her and to hear her singing. I came to do
+that at last without shutting my eyes."
+
+Mirah paused with a sweet content in her face, as if she were having her
+happy vision, while she looked out toward the river.
+
+"Still your father was not unkind to you, I hope," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+after a minute, anxious to recall her.
+
+"No; he petted me, and took pains to teach me. He was an actor; and I
+found out, after, that the 'Coburg' I used to hear of his going to at home
+was a theatre. But he had more to do with the theatre than acting. He had
+not always been an actor; he had been a teacher, and knew many languages.
+His acting was not very good; I think, but he managed the stage, and wrote
+and translated plays. An Italian lady, a singer, lived with us a long
+time. They both taught me, and I had a master besides, who made me learn
+by heart and recite. I worked quite hard, though I was so little; and I
+was not nine when I first went on the stage. I could easily learn things,
+and I was not afraid. But then and ever since I hated our way of life. My
+father had money, and we had finery about us in a disorderly way; always
+there were men and women coming and going; there was loud laughing and
+disputing, strutting, snapping of fingers, jeering, faces I did not like
+to look at--though many petted and caressed me. But then I remembered my
+mother. Even at first when I understood nothing, I shrank away from all
+those things outside me into companionship with thoughts that were not
+like them; and I gathered thoughts very fast, because I read many things--
+plays and poetry, Shakespeare and Schiller, and learned evil and good. My
+father began to believe that I might be a great singer: my voice was
+considered wonderful for a child; and he had the best teaching for me. But
+it was painful that he boasted of me, and set me to sing for show at any
+minute, as if I had been a musical box. Once when I was nine years old, I
+played the part of a little girl who had been forsaken and did not know
+it, and sat singing to herself while she played with flowers. I did it
+without any trouble; but the clapping and all the sounds of the theatre
+were hateful to me; and I never liked the praise I had, because it all
+seemed very hard and unloving: I missed the love and trust I had been born
+into. I made a life in my own thoughts quite different from everything
+about me: I chose what seemed to me beautiful out of the plays and
+everything, and made my world out of it; and it was like a sharp knife
+always grazing me that we had two sorts of life which jarred so with each
+other--women looking good and gentle on the stage, and saying good things
+as if they felt them, and directly after I saw them with coarse, ugly
+manners. My father sometimes noticed my shrinking ways; and Signora said
+one day, when I had been rehearsing, 'She will never be an artist: she has
+no notion of being anybody but herself. That does very well now, but by-
+and-by you will see--she will have no more face and action than a singing-
+bird.' My father was angry, and they quarreled. I sat alone and cried,
+because what she had said was like a long unhappy future unrolled before
+me. I did not want to be an artist; but this was what my father expected
+of me. After a while Signora left us, and a governess used to come and
+give me lessons in different things, because my father began to be afraid
+of my singing too much; but I still acted from time to time. Rebellious
+feelings grew stronger in me, and I wished to get away from this life; but
+I could not tell where to go, and I dreaded the world. Besides, I felt it
+would be wrong to leave my father: I dreaded doing wrong, for I thought I
+might get wicked and hateful to myself, in the same way that many others
+seemed hateful to me. For so long, so long I had never felt my outside
+world happy; and if I got wicked I should lose my world of happy thoughts
+where my mother lived with me. That was my childish notion all through
+those years. Oh how long they were!"
+
+Mirah fell to musing again.
+
+"Had you no teaching about what was your duty?" said Mrs. Meyrick. She did
+not like to say "religion"--finding herself on inspection rather dim as to
+what the Hebrew religion might have turned into at this date.
+
+"No--only that I ought to do what my father wished. He did not follow our
+religion at New York, and I think he wanted me not to know much about it.
+But because my mother used to take me to the synagogue, and I remembered
+sitting on her knee and looking through the railing and hearing the
+chanting and singing, I longed to go. One day when I was quite small I
+slipped out and tried to find the synagogue, but I lost myself a long
+while till a peddler questioned me and took me home. My father, missing
+me, had been much in fear, and was very angry. I too had been so
+frightened at losing myself that it was long before I thought of venturing
+out again. But after Signora left us we went to rooms where our landlady
+was a Jewess and observed her religion. I asked her to take me with her to
+the synagogue; and I read in her prayer-books and Bible, and when I had
+money enough I asked her to buy me books of my own, for these books seemed
+a closer companionship with my mother: I knew that she must have looked at
+the very words and said them. In that way I have come to know a little of
+our religion, and the history of our people, besides piecing together what
+I read in plays and other books about Jews and Jewesses; because I was
+sure my mother obeyed her religion. I had left off asking my father about
+her. It is very dreadful to say it, but I began to disbelieve him. I had
+found that he did not always tell the truth, and made promises without
+meaning to keep them; and that raised my suspicion that my mother and
+brother were still alive though he had told me they were dead. For in
+going over the past again as I got older and knew more, I felt sure that
+my mother had been deceived, and had expected to see us back again after a
+very little while; and my father taking me on his knee and telling me that
+my mother and brother were both dead seemed to me now but a bit of acting,
+to set my mind at rest. The cruelty of that falsehood sank into me, and I
+hated all untruth because of it. I wrote to my mother secretly: I knew the
+street, Colman Street, where we lived, and that it was not Blackfriars
+Bridge and the Coburg, and that our name was Cohen then, though my father
+called us Lapidoth, because, he said, it was a name of his forefathers in
+Poland. I sent my letter secretly; but no answer came, and I thought there
+was no hope for me. Our life in America did not last much longer. My
+father suddenly told me we were to pack up and go to Hamburg, and I was
+rather glad. I hoped we might get among a different sort of people, and I
+knew German quite well--some German plays almost all by heart. My father
+spoke it better than he spoke English. I was thirteen then, and I seemed
+to myself quite old--I knew so much, and yet so little. I think other
+children cannot feel as I did. I had often wished that I had been drowned
+when I was going away from my mother. But I set myself to obey and suffer:
+what else could I do? One day when we were on our voyage, a new thought
+came into my mind. I was not very ill that time, and I kept on deck a good
+deal. My father acted and sang and joked to amuse people on board, and I
+used often to hear remarks about him. One day, when I was looking at the
+sea and nobody took notice of me, I overheard a gentleman say, 'Oh, he is
+one of those clever Jews--a rascal, I shouldn't wonder. There's no race
+like them for cunning in the men and beauty in the women. I wonder what
+market he means that daughter for.' When I heard this it darted into my
+mind that the unhappiness in my life came from my being a Jewess, and that
+always to the end the world would think slightly of me and that I must
+bear it, for I should be judged by that name; and it comforted me to
+believe that my suffering was part of the affliction of my people, my part
+in the long song of mourning that has been going on through ages and ages.
+For if many of our race were wicked and made merry in their wickedness--
+what was that but part of the affliction borne by the just among them, who
+were despised for the sins of their brethren?--But you have not rejected
+me."
+
+Mirah had changed her tone in this last sentence, having suddenly
+reflected that at this moment she had reason not for complaint but for
+gratitude.
+
+"And we will try to save you from being judged unjustly by others, my poor
+child," said Mrs. Meyrick, who had now given up all attempt at going on
+with her work, and sat listening with folded hands and a face hardly less
+eager than Mab's would have been. "Go on, go on: tell me all."
+
+"After that we lived in different towns--Hamburg and Vienna, the longest.
+I began to study singing again: and my father always got money about the
+theatres. I think he brought a good deal of money from America, I never
+knew why we left. For some time he was in great spirits about my singing,
+and he made me rehearse parts and act continually. He looked forward to my
+coming out in the opera. But by-and-by it seemed that my voice would never
+be strong enough--it did not fulfill its promise. My master at Vienna
+said, 'Don't strain it further: it will never do for the public:--it is
+gold, but a thread of gold dust.' My father was bitterly disappointed: we
+were not so well off at that time. I think I have not quite told you what
+I felt about my father. I knew he was fond of me and meant to indulge me,
+and that made me afraid of hurting him; but he always mistook what would
+please me and give me happiness. It was his nature to take everything
+lightly; and I soon left off asking him any questions about things that I
+cared for much, because he always turned them off with a joke. He would
+even ridicule our own people; and once when he had been imitating their
+movements and their tones in praying, only to make others laugh, I could
+not restrain myself--for I always had an anger in my heart about my
+mother--and when we were alone, I said, 'Father, you ought not to mimic
+our own people before Christians who mock them: would it not be bad if I
+mimicked you, that they might mock you?' But he only shrugged his
+shoulders and laughed and pinched my chin, and said, 'You couldn't do it,
+my dear." It was this way of turning off everything, that made a great
+wall between me and my father, and whatever I felt most I took the most
+care to hide from him. For there were some things--when they were laughed
+at I could not bear it: the world seemed like a hell to me. Is this world
+and all the life upon it only like a farce or a vaudeville, where you find
+no great meanings? Why then are there tragedies and grand operas, where
+men do difficult things and choose to suffer? I think it is silly to speak
+of all things as a joke. And I saw that his wishing me to sing the
+greatest music, and parts in grand operas, was only wishing for what would
+fetch the greatest price. That hemmed in my gratitude for his
+affectionateness, and the tenderest feeling I had toward him was pity.
+Yes, I did sometimes pity him. He had aged and changed. Now he was no
+longer so lively. I thought he seemed worse--less good to others than to
+me. Every now and then in the latter years his gaiety went away suddenly,
+and he would sit at home silent and gloomy; or he would come in and fling
+himself down and sob, just as I have done myself when I have been in
+trouble. If I put my hand on his knee and say, 'What is the matter,
+father?' he would make no answer, but would draw my arm round his neck and
+put his arm round me and go on crying. There never came any confidence
+between us; but oh, I was sorry for him. At those moments I knew he must
+feel his life bitter, and I pressed my cheek against his head and prayed.
+Those moments were what most bound me to him; and I used to think how much
+my mother once loved him, else she would not have married him.
+
+"But soon there came the dreadful time. We had been at Pesth and we came
+back to Vienna. In spite of what my master Leo had said, my father got me
+an engagement, not at the opera, but to take singing parts at a suburb
+theatre in Vienna. He had nothing to do with the theatre then; I did not
+understand what he did, but I think he was continually at a gambling
+house, though he was careful always about taking me to the theatre. I was
+very miserable. The plays I acted in were detestable to me. Men came about
+us and wanted to talk to me: women and men seemed to look at me with a
+sneering smile; it was no better than a fiery furnace. Perhaps I make it
+worse than it was--you don't know that life: but the glare and the faces,
+and my having to go on and act and sing what I hated, and then see people
+who came to stare at me behind the scenes--it was all so much worse than
+when I was a little girl. I went through with it; I did it; I had set my
+mind to obey my father and work, for I saw nothing better that I could do.
+But I felt that my voice was getting weaker, and I knew that my acting was
+not good except when it was not really acting, but the part was one that I
+could be myself in, and some feeling within me carried me along. That was
+seldom.
+
+"Then, in the midst of all this, the news came to me one morning that my
+father had been taken to prison, and he had sent for me. He did not tell
+me the reason why he was there, but he ordered me to go to an address he
+gave me, to see a Count who would be able to get him released. The address
+was to some public rooms where I was to ask for the Count, and beg him to
+come to my father. I found him, and recognized him as a gentleman whom I
+had seen the other night for the first time behind the scenes. That
+agitated me, for I remembered his way of looking at me and kissing my
+hand--I thought it was in mockery. But I delivered my errand, and he
+promised to go immediately to my father, who came home again that very
+evening, bringing the Count with him. I now began to feel a horrible dread
+of this man, for he worried me with his attentions, his eyes were always
+on me: I felt sure that whatever else there might be in his mind toward
+me, below it all there was scorn for the Jewess and the actress. And when
+he came to me the next day in the theatre and would put my shawl around
+me, a terror took hold of me; I saw that my father wanted me to look
+pleased. The Count was neither very young nor very old; his hair and eyes
+were pale; he was tall and walked heavily, and his face was heavy and
+grave except when he looked at me. He smiled at me, and his smile went
+through me with horror: I could not tell why he was so much worse to me
+than other men. Some feelings are like our hearing: they come as sounds
+do, before we know their reason. My father talked to me about him when we
+were alone, and praised him--said what a good friend he had been. I said
+nothing, because I supposed he had got my father out of prison. When the
+Count came again, my father left the room. He asked me if I liked being on
+the stage. I said No, I only acted in obedience to my father. He always
+spoke French, and called me 'petite ange' and such things, which I felt
+insulting. I knew he meant to make love to me, and I had it firmly in my
+mind that a nobleman and one who was not a Jew could have no love for me
+that was not half contempt. But then he told me that I need not act any
+longer; he wished me to visit him at his beautiful place, where I might be
+queen of everything. It was difficult to me to speak, I felt so shaken
+with anger: I could only say, 'I would rather stay on the stage forever,'
+and I left him there. Hurrying out of the room I saw my father sauntering
+in the passage. My heart was crushed. I went past him and locked myself
+up. It had sunk into me that my father was in a conspiracy with that man
+against me. But the next day he persuaded me to come out: he said that I
+had mistaken everything, and he would explain: if I did not come out and
+act and fulfill my engagement, we should be ruined and he must starve. So
+I went on acting, and for a week or more the Count never came near me. My
+father changed our lodgings, and kept at home except when he went to the
+theatre with me. He began one day to speak discouragingly of my acting,
+and say, I could never go on singing in public--I should lose my voice--I
+ought to think of my future, and not put my nonsensical feelings between
+me and my fortune. He said, 'What will you do? You will be brought down to
+sing and beg at people's doors. You have had a splendid offer and ought to
+accept it.' I could not speak: a horror took possession of me when I
+thought of my mother and of him. I felt for the first time that I should
+not do wrong to leave him. But the next day he told me that he had put an
+end to my engagement at the theatre, and that we were to go to Prague. I
+was getting suspicious of everything, and my will was hardening to act
+against him. It took us two days to pack and get ready; and I had it in my
+mind that I might be obliged to run away from my father, and then I would
+come to London and try if it were possible to find my mother. I had a
+little money, and I sold some things to get more. I packed a few clothes
+in a little bag that I could carry with me, and I kept my mind on the
+watch. My father's silence--his letting drop that subject of the Count's
+offer--made me feel sure that there was a plan against me. I felt as if it
+had been a plan to take me to a madhouse. I once saw a picture of a
+madhouse, that I could never forget; it seemed to me very much like some
+of the life I had seen--the people strutting, quarreling, leering--the
+faces with cunning and malice in them. It was my will to keep myself from
+wickedness; and I prayed for help. I had seen what despised women were:
+and my heart turned against my father, for I saw always behind him that
+man who made me shudder. You will think I had not enough reason for my
+suspicions, and perhaps I had not, outside my own feeling; but it seemed
+to me that my mind had been lit up, and all that might be stood out clear
+and sharp. If I slept, it was only to see the same sort of things, and I
+could hardly sleep at all. Through our journey I was everywhere on the
+watch. I don't know why, but it came before me like a real event, that my
+father would suddenly leave me and I should find myself with the Count
+where I could not get away from him. I thought God was warning me: my
+mother's voice was in my soul. It was dark when we reached Prague, and
+though the strange bunches of lamps were lit it was difficult to
+distinguish faces as we drove along the street. My father chose to sit
+outside--he was always smoking now--and I watched everything in spite of
+the darkness. I do believe I could see better then than I ever did before:
+the strange clearness within seemed to have got outside me. It was not my
+habit to notice faces and figures much in the street; but this night I saw
+every one; and when we passed before a great hotel I caught sight only of
+a back that was passing in--the light of the great bunch of lamps a good
+way off fell on it. I knew it--before the face was turned, as it fell into
+shadow, I knew who it was. Help came to me. I feel sure help came. I did
+not sleep that night. I put on my plainest things--the cloak and hat I
+have worn ever since; and I sat watching for the light and the sound of
+the doors being unbarred. Some one rose early--at four o'clock, to go to
+the railway. That gave me courage. I slipped out, with my little bag under
+my cloak, and none noticed me. I had been a long while attending to the
+railway guide that I might learn the way to England; and before the sun
+had risen I was in the train for Dresden. Then I cried for joy. I did not
+know whether my money would last out, but I trusted. I could sell the
+things in my bag, and the little rings in my ears, and I could live on
+bread only. My only terror was lest my father should follow me. But I
+never paused. I came on, and on, and on, only eating bread now and then.
+When I got to Brussels I saw that I should not have enough money, and I
+sold all that I could sell; but here a strange thing happened. Putting my
+hand into the pocket of my cloak, I found a half-napoleon. Wondering and
+wondering how it came there, I remembered that on the way from Cologne
+there was a young workman sitting against me. I was frightened at every
+one, and did not like to be spoken to. At first he tried to talk, but when
+he saw that I did not like it, he left off. It was a long journey; I ate
+nothing but a bit of bread, and he once offered me some of the food he
+brought in, but I refused it. I do believe it was he who put that bit of
+gold in my pocket. Without it I could hardly have got to Dover, and I did
+walk a good deal of the way from Dover to London. I knew I should look
+like a miserable beggar-girl. I wanted not to look very miserable, because
+if I found my mother it would grieve her to see me so. But oh, how vain my
+hope was that she would be there to see me come! As soon as I set foot in
+London, I began to ask for Lambeth and Blackfriars Bridge, but they were a
+long way off, and I went wrong. At last I got to Blackfriars Bridge and
+asked for Colman Street. People shook their heads. None knew it. I saw it
+in my mind--our doorsteps, and the white tiles hung in the windows, and
+the large brick building opposite with wide doors. But there was nothing
+like it. At last when I asked a tradesman where the Coburg Theatre and
+Colman Street were, he said, 'Oh, my little woman, that's all done away
+with. The old streets have been pulled down; everything is new.' I turned
+away and felt as if death had laid a hand on me. He said: 'Stop, stop!
+young woman; what is it you're wanting with Colman Street, eh?' meaning
+well, perhaps. But his tone was what I could not bear; and how could I
+tell him what I wanted? I felt blinded and bewildered with a sudden shock.
+I suddenly felt that I was very weak and weary, and yet where could I go?
+for I looked so poor and dusty, and had nothing with me--I looked like a
+street-beggar. And I was afraid of all places where I could enter. I lost
+my trust. I thought I was forsaken. It seemed that I had been in a fever
+of hope--delirious--all the way from Prague: I thought that I was helped,
+and I did nothing but strain my mind forward and think of finding my
+mother; and now--there I stood in a strange world. All who saw me would
+think ill of me, and I must herd with beggars. I stood on the bridge and
+looked along the river. People were going on to a steamboat. Many of them
+seemed poor, and I felt as if it would be a refuge to get away from the
+streets; perhaps the boat would take me where I could soon get into a
+solitude. I had still some pence left, and I bought a loaf when I went on
+the boat. I wanted to have a little time and strength to think of life and
+death. How could I live? And now again it seemed that if ever I were to
+find my mother again, death was the way to her. I ate, that I might have
+strength to think. The boat set me down at a place along the river--I
+don't know where--and it was late in the evening. I found some large trees
+apart from the road, and I sat down under them that I might rest through
+the night. Sleep must have soon come to me, and when I awoke it was
+morning. The birds were singing, and the dew was white about me, I felt
+chill and oh, so lonely! I got up and walked and followed the river a long
+way and then turned back again. There was no reason why I should go
+anywhere. The world about me seemed like a vision that was hurrying by
+while I stood still with my pain. My thoughts were stronger than I was;
+they rushed in and forced me to see all my life from the beginning; ever
+since I was carried away from my mother I had felt myself a lost child
+taken up and used by strangers, who did not care what my life was to me,
+but only what I could do for them. It seemed all a weary wandering and
+heart-loneliness--as if I had been forced to go to merrymakings without
+the expectation of joy. And now it was worse. I was lost again, and I
+dreaded lest any stranger should notice me and speak to me. I had a terror
+of the world. None knew me; all would mistake me. I had seen so many in my
+life who made themselves glad with scorning, and laughed at another's
+shame. What could I do? This life seemed to be closing in upon me with a
+wall of fire--everywhere there was scorching that made me shrink. The high
+sunlight made me shrink. And I began to think that my despair was the
+voice of God telling me to die. But it would take me long to die of
+hunger. Then I thought of my people, how they had been driven from land to
+land and been afflicted, and multitudes had died of misery in their
+wandering--was I the first? And in the wars and troubles when Christians
+were cruelest, our fathers had sometimes slain their children and
+afterward themselves: it was to save them from being false apostates. That
+seemed to make it right for me to put an end to my life; for calamity had
+closed me in too, and I saw no pathway but to evil. But my mind got into
+war with itself, for there were contrary things in it. I knew that some
+had held it wrong to hasten their own death, though they were in the midst
+of flames; and while I had some strength left it was a longing to bear if
+I ought to bear--else where was the good of all my life? It had not been
+happy since the first years: when the light came every morning I used to
+think, 'I will bear it.' But always before I had some hope; now it was
+gone. With these thoughts I wandered and wandered, inwardly crying to the
+Most High, from whom I should not flee in death more than in life--though
+I had no strong faith that He cared for me. The strength seemed departing
+from my soul; deep below all my cries was the feeling that I was alone and
+forsaken. The more I thought the wearier I got, till it seemed I was not
+thinking at all, but only the sky and the river and the Eternal God were
+in my soul. And what was it whether I died or lived? If I lay down to die
+in the river, was it more than lying down to sleep?--for there too I
+committed my soul--I gave myself up. I could not bear memories any more; I
+could only feel what was present in me--it was all one longing to cease
+from my weary life, which seemed only a pain outside the great peace that
+I might enter into. That was how it was. When the evening came and the sun
+was gone, it seemed as if that was all I had to wait for. And a new
+strength came into me to will what I would do. You know what I did. I was
+going to die. You know what happened--did he not tell you? Faith came to
+me again; I was not forsaken. He told you how he found me?"
+
+Mrs. Meyrick gave no audible answer, but pressed her lips against Mirah's
+forehead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She's just a pearl; the mud has only washed her," was the fervid little
+woman's closing commentary when, _tete-a-tete_ with Deronda in the back
+parlor that evening, she had conveyed Mirah's story to him with much
+vividness.
+
+"What is your feeling about a search for this mother?" said Deronda. "Have
+you no fears? I have, I confess."
+
+"Oh, I believe the mother's good," said Mrs. Meyrick, with rapid
+decisiveness; "or _was_ good. She may be dead--that's my fear. A good
+woman, you may depend: you may know it by the scoundrel the father is.
+Where did the child get her goodness from? Wheaten flour has to be
+accounted for."
+
+Deronda was rather disappointed at this answer; he had wanted a
+confirmation of his own judgment, and he began to put in demurrers. The
+argument about the mother would not apply to the brother; and Mrs. Meyrick
+admitted that the brother might be an ugly likeness of the father. Then,
+as to advertising, if the name was Cohen, you might as well advertise for
+two undescribed terriers; and here Mrs. Meyrick helped him, for the idea
+of an advertisement, already mentioned to Mirah, had roused the poor
+child's terror; she was convinced that her father would see it--he saw
+everything in the papers. Certainly there were safer means than
+advertising; men might be set to work whose business it was to find
+missing persons; but Deronda wished Mrs. Meyrick to feel with him that it
+would be wiser to wait, before seeking a dubious--perhaps a deplorable
+result; especially as he was engaged to go abroad the next week for a
+couple of months. If a search were made, he would like to be at hand, so
+that Mrs. Meyrick might not be unaided in meeting any consequences--
+supposing that she would generously continue to watch over Mirah.
+
+"We should be very jealous of any one who took the task from us," said
+Mrs. Meyrick. "She will stay under my roof; there is Hans's old room for
+her."
+
+"Will she be content to wait?" said Deronda, anxiously.
+
+"No trouble there. It is not her nature to run into planning and devising:
+only to submit. See how she submitted to that father! It was a wonder to
+herself how she found the will and contrivance to run away from him. About
+finding her mother, her only notion now is to trust; since you were sent
+to save her and we are good to her, she trusts that her mother will be
+found in the same unsought way. And when she is talking I catch her
+feeling like a child."
+
+Mrs. Meyrick hoped that the sum Deronda put into her hands as a provision
+for Mirah's wants was more than would be needed; after a little while
+Mirah would perhaps like to occupy herself as the other girls did, and
+make herself independent. Deronda pleaded that she must need a long rest.
+"Oh, yes; we will hurry nothing," said Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+"Rely upon it, she shall be taken tender care of. If you like to give me
+your address abroad, I will write to let you know how we get on. It is not
+fair that we should have all the pleasure of her salvation to ourselves.
+And besides, I want to make believe that I am doing something for you as
+well as for Mirah."
+
+"That is no make-believe. What should I have done without you last night?
+Everything would have gone wrong. I shall tell Hans that the best of
+having him for a friend is, knowing his mother."
+
+After that they joined the girls in the other room, where Mirah was seated
+placidly, while the others were telling her what they knew about Mr.
+Deronda--his goodness to Hans, and all the virtues that Hans had reported
+of him.
+
+"Kate burns a pastille before his portrait every day," said Mab. "And I
+carry his signature in a little black-silk bag round my neck to keep off
+the cramp. And Amy says the multiplication-table in his name. We must all
+do something extra in honor of him, now he has brought you to us."
+
+"I suppose he is too great a person to want anything," said Mirah, smiling
+at Mab, and appealing to the graver Amy. "He is perhaps very high in the
+world?"
+
+"He is very much above us in rank," said Amy. "He is related to grand
+people. I dare say he leans on some of the satin cushions we prick our
+fingers over."
+
+"I am glad he is of high rank," said Mirah, with her usual quietness.
+
+"Now, why are you glad of that?" said Amy, rather suspicious of this
+sentiment, and on the watch for Jewish peculiarities which had not
+appeared.
+
+"Because I have always disliked men of high rank before."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Deronda is not so very high," said Kate, "He need not hinder us
+from thinking ill of the whole peerage and baronetage if we like."
+
+When he entered, Mirah rose with the same look of grateful reverence that
+she had lifted to him the evening before: impossible to see a creature
+freer at once from embarrassment and boldness. Her theatrical training had
+left no recognizable trace; probably her manners had not much changed
+since she played the forsaken child at nine years of age; and she had
+grown up in her simplicity and truthfulness like a little flower-seed that
+absorbs the chance confusion of its surrounding into its own definite
+mould of beauty. Deronda felt that he was making acquaintance with
+something quite new to him in the form of womanhood. For Mirah was not
+childlike from ignorance: her experience of evil and trouble was deeper
+and stranger than his own. He felt inclined to watch her and listen to her
+as if she had come from a far off shore inhabited by a race different from
+our own.
+
+But for that very reason he made his visit brief with his usual activity
+of imagination as to how his conduct might affect others, he shrank from
+what might seem like curiosity or the assumption of a right to know as
+much as he pleased of one to whom he had done a service. For example, he
+would have liked to hear her sing, but he would have felt the expression
+of such a wish to be rudeness in him--since she could not refuse, and he
+would all the while have a sense that she was being treated like one whose
+accomplishments were to be ready on demand. And whatever reverence could
+be shown to woman, he was bent on showing to this girl. Why? He gave
+himself several good reasons; but whatever one does with a strong
+unhesitating outflow of will has a store of motive that it would be hard
+to put into words. Some deeds seem little more than interjections which
+give vent to the long passion of a life.
+
+So Deronda soon took his farewell for the two months during which he
+expected to be absent from London, and in a few days he was on his way
+with Sir Hugo and Lady Mallinger to Leubronn.
+
+He had fulfilled his intention of telling them about Mirah. The baronet
+was decidedly of opinion that the search for the mother and brother had
+better be let alone. Lady Mallinger was much interested in the poor girl,
+observing that there was a society for the conversion of the Jews, and
+that it was to be hoped Mirah would embrace Christianity; but perceiving
+that Sir Hugo looked at her with amusement, she concluded that she had
+said something foolish. Lady Mallinger felt apologetically about herself
+as a woman who had produced nothing but daughters in a case where sons
+were required, and hence regarded the apparent contradictions of the world
+as probably due to the weakness of her own understanding. But when she was
+much puzzled, it was her habit to say to herself, "I will ask Daniel."
+Deronda was altogether a convenience in the family; and Sir Hugo too,
+after intending to do the best for him, had begun to feel that the
+pleasantest result would be to have this substitute for a son always ready
+at his elbow.
+
+This was the history of Deronda, so far as he knew it, up to the time of
+that visit to Leubronn in which he saw Gwendolen Harleth at the gaming-
+table.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+ It is a common sentence that Knowledge is power; but who hath duly
+ Considered or set forth the power of Ignorance? Knowledge slowly
+ builds up what Ignorance in an hour pulls down. Knowledge, through
+ patient and frugal centuries, enlarges discovery and makes record of
+ it; Ignorance, wanting its day's dinner, lights a fire with the
+ record, and gives a flavor to its one roast with the burned souls of
+ many generations. Knowledge, instructing the sense, refining and
+ multiplying needs, transforms itself into skill and makes life various
+ with a new six days' work; comes Ignorance drunk on the seventh, with
+ a firkin of oil and a match and an easy "Let there not be," and the
+ many-colored creation is shriveled up in blackness. Of a truth,
+ Knowledge is power, but it is a power reined by scruple, having a
+ conscience of what must be and what may be; whereas Ignorance is a
+ blind giant who, let him but wax unbound, would make it a sport to
+ seize the pillars that hold up the long-wrought fabric of human good,
+ and turn all the places of joy dark as a buried Babylon. And looking
+ at life parcel-wise, in the growth of a single lot, who having a
+ practiced vision may not see that ignorance of the true bond between
+ events, and false conceit of means whereby sequences may be compelled
+ --like that falsity of eyesight which overlooks the gradations of
+ distance, seeing that which is afar off as if it were within a step or
+ a grasp--precipitates the mistaken soul on destruction?
+
+
+It was half-past ten in the morning when Gwendolen Harleth, after her
+gloomy journey from Leubronn, arrived at the station from which she must
+drive to Offendene. No carriage or friend was awaiting her, for in the
+telegram she had sent from Dover she had mentioned a later train, and in
+her impatience of lingering at a London station she had set off without
+picturing what it would be to arrive unannounced at half an hour's drive
+from home--at one of those stations which have been fixed on not as near
+anywhere, but as equidistant from everywhere. Deposited as a _femme sole_
+with her large trunks, and having to wait while a vehicle was being got
+from the large-sized lantern called the Railway Inn, Gwendolen felt that
+the dirty paint in the waiting-room, the dusty decanter of flat water, and
+the texts in large letters calling on her to repent and be converted, were
+part of the dreary prospect opened by her family troubles; and she hurried
+away to the outer door looking toward the lane and fields. But here the
+very gleams of sunshine seemed melancholy, for the autumnal leaves and
+grass were shivering, and the wind was turning up the feathers of a cock
+and two croaking hens which had doubtless parted with their grown-up
+offspring and did not know what to do with themselves. The railway
+official also seemed without resources, and his innocent demeanor in
+observing Gwendolen and her trunks was rendered intolerable by the cast in
+his eye; especially since, being a new man, he did not know her, and must
+conclude that she was not very high in the world. The vehicle--a dirty old
+barouche--was within sight, and was being slowly prepared by an elderly
+laborer. Contemptible details these, to make part of a history; yet the
+turn of most lives is hardly to be accounted for without them. They are
+continually entering with cumulative force into a mood until it gets the
+mass and momentum of a theory or a motive. Even philosophy is not quite
+free from such determining influences; and to be dropped solitary at an
+ugly, irrelevant-looking spot, with a sense of no income on the mind,
+might well prompt a man to discouraging speculation on the origin of
+things and the reason of a world where a subtle thinker found himself so
+badly off. How much more might such trifles tell on a young lady equipped
+for society with a fastidious taste, an Indian shawl over her arm, some
+twenty cubic feet of trunks by her side, and a mortal dislike to the new
+consciousness of poverty which was stimulating her imagination of
+disagreeables? At any rate they told heavily on poor Gwendolen, and helped
+to quell her resistant spirit. What was the good of living in the midst of
+hardships, ugliness, and humiliation? This was the beginning of being at
+home again, and it was a sample of what she had to expect.
+
+Here was the theme on which her discontent rung its sad changes during her
+slow drive in the uneasy barouche, with one great trunk squeezing the meek
+driver, and the other fastened with a rope on the seat in front of her.
+Her ruling vision all the way from Leubronn had been that the family would
+go abroad again; for of course there must be some little income left--her
+mamma did not mean that they would have literally nothing. To go to a dull
+place abroad and live poorly, was the dismal future that threatened her:
+she had seen plenty of poor English people abroad and imagined herself
+plunged in the despised dullness of their ill-plenished lives, with Alice,
+Bertha, Fanny and Isabel all growing up in tediousness around her, while
+she advanced toward thirty and her mamma got more and more melancholy. But
+she did not mean to submit, and let misfortune do what it would with her:
+she had not yet quite believed in the misfortune; but weariness and
+disgust with this wretched arrival had begun to affect her like an
+uncomfortable waking, worse than the uneasy dreams which had gone before.
+The self-delight with which she had kissed her image in the glass had
+faded before the sense of futility in being anything whatever--charming,
+clever, resolute--what was the good of it all? Events might turn out
+anyhow, and men were hateful. Yes, men were hateful. But in these last
+hours, a certain change had come over their meaning. It is one thing to
+hate stolen goods, and another thing to hate them the more because their
+being stolen hinders us from making use of them. Gwendolen had begun to be
+angry with Grandcourt for being what had hindered her from marrying him,
+angry with him as the cause of her present dreary lot.
+
+But the slow drive was nearly at an end, and the lumbering vehicle coming
+up the avenue was within sight of the windows. A figure appearing under
+the portico brought a rush of new and less selfish feeling in Gwendolen,
+and when springing from the carriage she saw the dear beautiful face with
+fresh lines of sadness in it, she threw her arms round her mother's neck,
+and for the moment felt all sorrows only in relation to her mother's
+feeling about them.
+
+Behind, of course, were the sad faces of the four superfluous girls, each,
+poor thing--like those other many thousand sisters of us all--having her
+peculiar world which was of no importance to any one else, but all of them
+feeling Gwendolen's presence to be somehow a relenting of misfortune:
+where Gwendolen was, something interesting would happen; even her hurried
+submission to their kisses, and "Now go away, girls," carried the sort of
+comfort which all weakness finds in decision and authoritativeness. Good
+Miss Merry, whose air of meek depression, hitherto held unaccountable in a
+governess affectionately attached to the family, was now at the general
+level of circumstances, did not expect any greeting, but busied herself
+with the trunks and the coachman's pay; while Mrs. Davilow and Gwendolen
+hastened up-stairs and shut themselves in the black and yellow bedroom.
+
+"Never mind, mamma dear," said Gwendolen, tenderly pressing her
+handkerchief against the tears that were rolling down Mrs. Davilow's
+cheeks. "Never mind. I don't mind. I will do something. I will be
+something. Things will come right. It seemed worse because I was away.
+Come now! you must be glad because I am here."
+
+Gwendolen felt every word of that speech. A rush of compassionate
+tenderness stirred all her capability of generous resolution; and the
+self-confident projects which had vaguely glanced before her during her
+journey sprang instantaneously into new definiteness. Suddenly she seemed
+to perceive how she could be "something." It was one of her best moments,
+and the fond mother, forgetting everything below that tide mark, looked at
+her with a sort of adoration. She said--
+
+"Bless you, my good, good darling! I can be happy, if you can!"
+
+But later in the day there was an ebb; the old slippery rocks, the old
+weedy places reappeared. Naturally, there was a shrinking of courage as
+misfortune ceased to be a mere announcement, and began to disclose itself
+as a grievous tyrannical inmate. At first--that ugly drive at an end--it
+was still Offendene that Gwendolen had come home to, and all surroundings
+of immediate consequence to her were still there to secure her personal
+ease; the roomy stillness of the large solid house while she rested; all
+the luxuries of her toilet cared for without trouble to her; and a little
+tray with her favorite food brought to her in private. For she had said,
+"Keep them all away from us to-day, mamma. Let you and me be alone
+together."
+
+When Gwendolen came down into the drawing-room, fresh as a newly-dipped
+swan, and sat leaning against the cushions of the settee beside her mamma,
+their misfortune had not yet turned its face and breath upon her. She felt
+prepared to hear everything, and began in a tone of deliberate intention--
+
+"What have you thought of doing, exactly, mamma?"
+
+"Oh, my dear, the next thing to be done is to move away from this house.
+Mr. Haynes most fortunately is as glad to have it now as he would have
+been when we took it. Lord Brackenshaw's agent is to arrange everything
+with him to the best advantage for us: Bazley, you know; not at all an
+ill-natured man."
+
+"I cannot help thinking that Lord Brackenshaw would let you stay here
+rent-free, mamma," said Gwendolen, whose talents had not been applied to
+business so much as to discernment of the admiration excited by her
+charms.
+
+"My dear child, Lord Brackenshaw is in Scotland, and knows nothing about
+us. Neither your uncle nor I would choose to apply to him. Besides, what
+could we do in this house without servants, and without money to warm it?
+The sooner we are out the better. We have nothing to carry but our
+clothes, you know?"
+
+"I suppose you mean to go abroad, then?" said Gwendolen. After all, this
+is what she had familiarized her mind with.
+
+"Oh, no, dear, no. How could we travel? You never did learn anything about
+income and expenses," said Mrs. Davilow, trying to smile, and putting her
+hand on Gwendolen's as she added, mournfully, "that makes it so much
+harder for you, my pet."
+
+"But where are we to go?" said Gwendolen, with a trace of sharpness in her
+tone. She felt a new current of fear passing through her.
+
+"It is all decided. A little furniture is to be got in from the rectory--
+all that can be spared." Mrs. Davilow hesitated. She dreaded the reality
+for herself less than the shock she must give to Gwendolen, who looked at
+her with tense expectancy, but was silent.
+
+"It is Sawyer's Cottage we are to go to."
+
+At first, Gwendolen remained silent, paling with anger--justifiable anger,
+in her opinion. Then she said with haughtiness--
+
+"That is impossible. Something else than that ought to have been thought
+of. My uncle ought not to allow that. I will not submit to it."
+
+"My sweet child, what else could have been thought of? Your uncle, I am
+sure, is as kind as he can be: but he is suffering himself; he has his
+family to bring up. And do you quite understand? You must remember--we
+have nothing. We shall have absolutely nothing except what he and my
+sister give us. They have been as wise and active a possible, and we must
+try to earn something. I and the girls are going to work a table-cloth
+border for the Ladies' Charity at Winchester, and a communion cloth that
+the parishioners are to present to Pennicote Church."
+
+Mrs. Davilow went into these details timidly: but how else was she to
+bring the fact of their position home to this poor child who, alas! must
+submit at present, whatever might be in the background for her? and she
+herself had a superstition that there must be something better in the
+background.
+
+"But surely somewhere else than Sawyer's Cottage might have been found,"
+Gwendolen persisted--taken hold of (as if in a nightmare) by the image of
+this house where an exciseman had lived.
+
+"No, indeed, dear. You know houses are scarce, and we may be thankful to
+get anything so private. It is not so very bad. There are two little
+parlors and four bedrooms. You shall sit alone whenever you like."
+
+The ebb of sympathetic care for her mamma had gone so low just now, that
+Gwendolen took no notice of these deprecatory words.
+
+"I cannot conceive that all your property is gone at once, mamma. How can
+you be sure in so short a time? It is not a week since you wrote to me."
+
+"The first news came much earlier, dear. But I would not spoil your
+pleasure till it was quite necessary."
+
+"Oh, how vexatious!" said Gwendolen, coloring with fresh anger. "If I had
+known, I could have brought home the money I had won: and for want of
+knowing, I stayed and lost it. I had nearly two hundred pounds, and it
+would have done for us to live on a little while, till I could carry out
+some plan." She paused an instant and then added more impetuously,
+"Everything has gone against me. People have come near me only to blight
+me."
+
+Among the "people" she was including Deronda. If he had not interfered in
+her life she would have gone to the gaming-table again with a few
+napoleons, and might have won back her losses.
+
+"We must resign ourselves to the will of Providence, my child," said poor
+Mrs. Davilow, startled by this revelation of the gambling, but not daring
+to say more. She felt sure that "people" meant Grandcourt, about whom her
+lips were sealed. And Gwendolen answered immediately--
+
+"But I don't resign myself. I shall do what I can against it. What is the
+good of calling the people's wickedness Providence? You said in your
+letter it was Mr. Lassman's fault we had lost our money. Has he run away
+with it all?"
+
+"No, dear, you don't understand. There were great speculations: he meant
+to gain. It was all about mines and things of that sort. He risked too
+much."
+
+"I don't call that Providence: it was his improvidence with our money, and
+he ought to be punished. Can't we go to law and recover our fortune? My
+uncle ought to take measures, and not sit down by such wrongs. We ought to
+go to law."
+
+"My dear child, law can never bring back money lost in that way. Your
+uncle says it is milk spilled upon the ground. Besides, one must have a
+fortune to get any law: there is no law for people who are ruined. And our
+money has only gone along with other's people's. We are not the only
+sufferers: others have to resign themselves besides us."
+
+"But I don't resign myself to live at Sawyer's Cottage and see you working
+for sixpences and shillings because of that. I shall not do it. I shall do
+what is more befitting our rank and education."
+
+"I am sure your uncle and all of us will approve of that, dear, and admire
+you the more for it," said Mrs. Davilow, glad of an unexpected opening for
+speaking on a difficult subject. "I didn't mean that you should resign
+yourself to worse when anything better offered itself. Both your uncle and
+aunt have felt that your abilities and education were a fortune for you,
+and they have already heard of something within your reach."
+
+"What is that, mamma?" some of Gwendolen's anger gave way to interest, and
+she was not without romantic conjectures.
+
+"There are two situations that offer themselves. One is in a bishop's
+family, where there are three daughters, and the other is in quite a high
+class of school; and in both, your French, and music, and dancing--and
+then your manners and habits as a lady, are exactly what is wanted. Each
+is a hundred a year--and--just for the present,"--Mrs. Davilow had become
+frightened and hesitating,--"to save you from the petty, common way of
+living that we must go to--you would perhaps accept one of the two."
+
+"What! be like Miss Graves at Madame Meunier's? No."
+
+"I think, myself, that Dr. Monpert's would be more suitable. There could
+be no hardship in a bishop's family."
+
+"Excuse me, mamma. There are hardships everywhere for a governess. And I
+don't see that it would be pleasanter to be looked down on in a bishop's
+family than in any other. Besides, you know very well I hate teaching.
+Fancy me shut up with three awkward girls something like Alice! I would
+rather emigrate than be a governess."
+
+What it precisely was to emigrate, Gwendolen was not called on to explain.
+Mrs. Davilow was mute, seeing no outlet, and thinking with dread of the
+collision that might happen when Gwendolen had to meet her uncle and aunt.
+There was an air of reticence in Gwendolen's haughty, resistant speeches
+which implied that she had a definite plan in reserve; and her practical
+ignorance continually exhibited, could not nullify the mother's belief in
+the effectiveness of that forcible will and daring which had held mastery
+over herself.
+
+"I have some ornaments, mamma, and I could sell them," said Gwendolen.
+"They would make a sum: I want a little sum--just to go on with. I dare
+say Marshall, at Wanchester, would take them: I know he showed me some
+bracelets once that he said he had bought from a lady. Jocosa might go and
+ask him. Jocosa is going to leave us, of course. But she might do that
+first."
+
+"She would do anything she could, poor, dear soul. I have not told you
+yet--she wanted me to take all her savings--her three hundred pounds. I
+tell her to set up a little school. It will be hard for her to go into a
+new family now she has been so long with us."
+
+"Oh, recommend her for the bishop's daughter's," said Gwendolen, with a
+sudden gleam of laughter in her face. "I am sure she will do better than I
+should."
+
+"Do take care not to say such things to your uncle," said Mrs. Davilow.
+"He will be hurt at your despising what he has exerted himself about. But
+I dare say you have something else in your mind that he might not
+disapprove, if you consulted him."
+
+"There is some one else I want to consult first. Are the Arrowpoint's at
+Quetcham still, and is Herr Klesmer there? But I daresay you know nothing
+about it, poor, dear mamma. Can Jeffries go on horseback with a note?"
+
+"Oh, my dear, Jefferies is not here, and the dealer has taken the horses.
+But some one could go for us from Leek's farm. The Arrowpoints are at
+Quetcham, I know. Miss Arrowpoint left her card the other day: I could not
+see her. But I don't know about Herr Klesmer. Do you want to send before
+to-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, as soon as possible. I will write a note," said Gwendolen, rising.
+
+"What can you be thinking of, Gwen?" said Mrs. Davilow, relieved in the
+midst of her wonderment by signs of alacrity and better humor.
+
+"Don't mind what, there's a dear, good mamma," said Gwendolen, reseating
+herself a moment to give atoning caresses. "I mean to do something. Never
+mind what until it is all settled. And then you shall be comforted. The
+dear face!--it is ten years older in these three weeks. Now, now, now!
+don't cry"--Gwendolen, holding her mamma's head with both hands, kissed
+the trembling eyelids. "But mind you don't contradict me or put hindrances
+in my way. I must decide for myself. I cannot be dictated to by my uncle
+or any one else. My life is my own affair. And I think"--here her tone
+took an edge of scorn--"I think I can do better for you than let you live
+in Sawyer's Cottage."
+
+In uttering this last sentence Gwendolen again rose, and went to a desk
+where she wrote the following note to Klesmer:--
+
+ Miss Harleth presents her compliments to Herr Klesmer, and ventures
+ to request of him the very great favor that he will call upon her, if
+ possible, to-morrow. Her reason for presuming so far on his kindness
+ is of a very serious nature. Unfortunate family circumstances have
+ obliged her to take a course in which she can only turn for advice to
+ the great knowledge and judgment of Herr Klesmer.
+
+"Pray get this sent to Quetcham at once, mamma," said Gwendolen, as she
+addressed the letter. "The man must be told to wait for an answer. Let no
+time be lost."
+
+For the moment, the absorbing purpose was to get the letter dispatched;
+but when she had been assured on this point, another anxiety arose and
+kept her in a state of uneasy excitement. If Klesmer happened not to be at
+Quetcham, what could she do next? Gwendolen's belief in her star, so to
+speak, had had some bruises. Things had gone against her. A splendid
+marriage which presented itself within reach had shown a hideous flaw. The
+chances of roulette had not adjusted themselves to her claims; and a man
+of whom she knew nothing had thrust himself between her and her
+intentions. The conduct of those uninteresting people who managed the
+business of the world had been culpable just in the points most injurious
+to her in particular. Gwendolen Harleth, with all her beauty and conscious
+force, felt the close threats of humiliation: for the first time the
+conditions of this world seemed to her like a hurrying roaring crowd in
+which she had got astray, no more cared for and protected than a myriad of
+other girls, in spite of its being a peculiar hardship to her. If Klesmer
+were not at Quetcham--that would be all of a piece with the rest: the
+unwelcome negative urged itself as a probability, and set her brain
+working at desperate alternatives which might deliver her from Sawyer's
+Cottage or the ultimate necessity of "taking a situation," a phrase that
+summed up for her the disagreeables most wounding to her pride, most
+irksome to her tastes; at least so far as her experience enabled her to
+imagine disagreeables.
+
+Still Klesmer might be there, and Gwendolen thought of the result in that
+case with a hopefulness which even cast a satisfactory light over her
+peculiar troubles, as what might well enter into the biography of
+celebrities and remarkable persons. And if she had heard her immediate
+acquaintances cross-examined as to whether they thought her remarkable,
+the first who said "No" would have surprised her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+ We please our fancy with ideal webs
+ Of innovation, but our life meanwhile
+ Is in the loom, where busy passion plies
+ The shuttle to and fro, and gives our deeds
+ The accustomed pattern.
+
+
+Gwendolen's note, coming "pat betwixt too early and too late," was put
+into Klesmer's hands just when he was leaving Quetcham, and in order to
+meet her appeal to his kindness he, with some inconvenience to himself
+spent the night at Wanchester. There were reasons why he would not remain
+at Quetcham.
+
+That magnificent mansion, fitted with regard to the greatest expense, had
+in fact became too hot for him, its owners having, like some great
+politicians, been astonished at an insurrection against the established
+order of things, which we plain people after the event can perceive to
+have been prepared under their very noses.
+
+There were as usual many guests in the house, and among them one in whom
+Miss Arrowpoint foresaw a new pretender to her hand: a political man of
+good family who confidently expected a peerage, and felt on public grounds
+that he required a larger fortune to support the title properly. Heiresses
+vary, and persons interested in one of them beforehand are prepared to
+find that she is too yellow or too red, tall and toppling or short and
+square, violent and capricious or moony and insipid; but in every case it
+is taken for granted that she will consider herself an appendage to her
+fortune, and marry where others think her fortunes ought to go. Nature,
+however, not only accommodates herself ill to our favorite practices by
+making "only children" daughters, but also now and then endows the
+misplaced daughter with a clear head and a strong will. The Arrowpoints
+had already felt some anxiety owing to these endowments of their
+Catherine. She would not accept the view of her social duty which required
+her to marry a needy nobleman or a commoner on the ladder toward nobility;
+and they were not without uneasiness concerning her persistence in
+declining suitable offers. As to the possibility of her being in love with
+Klesmer they were not at all uneasy--a very common sort of blindness. For
+in general mortals have a great power of being astonished at the presence
+of an effect toward which they have done everything, and at the absence of
+an effect toward which they had done nothing but desire it. Parents are
+astonished at the ignorance of their sons, though they have used the most
+time-honored and expensive means of securing it; husbands and wives are
+mutually astonished at the loss of affection which they have taken no
+pains to keep; and all of us in our turn are apt to be astonished that our
+neighbors do not admire us. In this way it happens that the truth seems
+highly improbable. The truth is something different from the habitual lazy
+combinations begotten by our wishes. The Arrowpoints' hour of astonishment
+was come.
+
+When there is a passion between an heiress and a proud independent-
+spirited man, it is difficult for them to come to an understanding; but
+the difficulties are likely to be overcome unless the proud man secures
+himself by a constant _alibi_. Brief meetings after studied absence are
+potent in disclosure: but more potent still is frequent companionship,
+with full sympathy in taste and admirable qualities on both sides;
+especially where the one is in the position of teacher and the other is
+delightedly conscious of receptive ability which also gives the teacher
+delight. The situation is famous in history, and has no less charm now
+than it had in the days of Abelard.
+
+But this kind of comparison had not occurred to the Arrowpoints when they
+first engaged Klesmer to come down to Quetcham. To have a first-rate
+musician in your house is a privilege of wealth; Catherine's musical
+talent demanded every advantage; and she particularly desired to use her
+quieter time in the country for more thorough study. Klesmer was not yet a
+Liszt, understood to be adored by ladies of all European countries with
+the exception of Lapland: and even with that understanding it did not
+follow that he would make proposals to an heiress. No musician of honor
+would do so. Still less was it conceivable that Catherine would give him
+the slightest pretext for such daring. The large check that Mr. Arrowpoint
+was to draw in Klesmer's name seemed to make him as safe an inmate as a
+footman. Where marriage is inconceivable, a girl's sentiments are safe.
+
+Klesmer was eminently a man of honor, but marriages rarely begin with
+formal proposals, and moreover, Catherine's limit of the conceivable did
+not exactly correspond with her mother's.
+
+Outsiders might have been more apt to think that Klesmer's position was
+dangerous for himself if Miss Arrowpoint had been an acknowledged beauty;
+not taking into account that the most powerful of all beauty is that which
+reveals itself after sympathy and not before it. There is a charm of eye
+and lip which comes with every little phrase that certifies delicate
+perception or fine judgment, with every unostentatious word or smile that
+shows a heart awake to others; and no sweep of garment or turn of figure
+is more satisfying than that which enters as a restoration of confidence
+that one person is present on whom no intention will be lost. What dignity
+of meaning, goes on gathering in frowns and laughs which are never
+observed in the wrong place; what suffused adorableness in a human frame
+where there is a mind that can flash out comprehension and hands that can
+execute finely! The more obvious beauty, also adorable sometimes--one may
+say it without blasphemy--begins by being an apology for folly, and ends
+like other apologies in becoming tiresome by iteration; and that Klesmer,
+though very susceptible to it, should have a passionate attachment to Miss
+Arrowpoint, was no more a paradox than any other triumph of a manifold
+sympathy over a monotonous attraction. We object less to be taxed with the
+enslaving excess of our passions than with our deficiency in wider
+passion; but if the truth were known, our reputed intensity is often the
+dullness of not knowing what else to do with ourselves. Tannhaeuser, one
+suspects, was a knight of ill-furnished imagination, hardly of larger
+discourse than a heavy Guardsman; Merlin had certainly seen his best days,
+and was merely repeating himself, when he fell into that hopeless
+captivity; and we know that Ulysses felt so manifest an _ennui_ under
+similar circumstances that Calypso herself furthered his departure. There
+is indeed a report that he afterward left Penelope; but since she was
+habitually absorbed in worsted work, and it was probably from her that
+Telemachus got his mean, pettifogging disposition, always anxious about
+the property and the daily consumption of meat, no inference can be drawn
+from this already dubious scandal as to the relation between companionship
+and constancy.
+
+Klesmer was as versatile and fascinating as a young Ulysses on a
+sufficient acquaintance--one whom nature seemed to have first made
+generously and then to have added music as a dominant power using all the
+abundant rest, and, as in Mendelssohn, finding expression for itself not
+only in the highest finish of execution, but in that fervor of creative
+work and theoretic belief which pierces devoted purpose. His foibles of
+arrogance and vanity did not exceed such as may be found in the best
+English families; and Catherine Arrowpoint had no corresponding
+restlessness to clash with his: notwithstanding her native kindliness she
+was perhaps too coolly firm and self-sustained. But she was one of those
+satisfactory creatures whose intercourse has the charm of discovery; whose
+integrity of faculty and expression begets a wish to know what they will
+say on all subjects or how they will perform whatever they undertake; so
+that they end by raising not only a continual expectation but a continual
+sense of fulfillment--the systole and diastole of blissful companionship.
+In such cases the outward presentment easily becomes what the image is to
+the worshipper. It was not long before the two became aware that each was
+interesting to the other; but the "how far" remained a matter of doubt.
+Klesmer did not conceive that Miss Arrowpoint was likely to think of him
+as a possible lover, and she was not accustomed to think of herself as
+likely to stir more than a friendly regard, or to fear the expression of
+more from any man who was not enamored of her fortune. Each was content to
+suffer some unshared sense of denial for the sake of loving the other's
+society a little too well; and under these conditions no need had been
+felt to restrict Klesmer's visits for the last year either in country or
+in town. He knew very well that if Miss Arrowpoint had been poor he would
+have made ardent love to her instead of sending a storm through the piano,
+or folding his arms and pouring out a hyperbolical tirade about something
+as impersonal as the north pole; and she was not less aware that if it had
+been possible for Klesmer to wish for her hand she would have found
+overmastering reasons for giving it to him. Here was the safety of full
+cups, which are as secure from overflow as the half-empty, always
+supposing no disturbance. Naturally, silent feeling had not remained at
+the same point any more than the stealthly dial-hand, and in the present
+visit to Quetcham, Klesmer had begun to think that he would not come
+again; while Catherine was more sensitive to his frequent _brusquerie_,
+which she rather resented as a needless effort to assert his footing of
+superior in every sense except the conventional.
+
+Meanwhile enters the expectant peer, Mr. Bult, an esteemed party man who,
+rather neutral in private life, had strong opinions concerning the
+districts of the Niger, was much at home also in Brazils, spoke with
+decision of affairs in the South Seas, was studious of his Parliamentary
+and itinerant speeches, and had the general solidity and suffusive
+pinkness of a healthy Briton on the central table-land of life. Catherine,
+aware of a tacit understanding that he was an undeniable husband for an
+heiress, had nothing to say against him but that he was thoroughly
+tiresome to her. Mr. Bult was amiably confident, and had no idea that his
+insensibility to counterpoint could ever be reckoned against him. Klesmer
+he hardly regarded in the light of a serious human being who ought to have
+a vote; and he did not mind Miss Arrowpoint's addiction to music any more
+than her probable expenses in antique lace. He was consequently a little
+amazed at an after-dinner outburst of Klesmer's on the lack of idealism in
+English politics, which left all mutuality between distant races to be
+determined simply by the need of a market; the crusades, to his mind, had
+at least this excuse, that they had a banner of sentiment round which
+generous feelings could rally: of course, the scoundrels rallied too, but
+what then? they rally in equal force round your advertisement van of "Buy
+cheap, sell dear." On this theme Klesmer's eloquence, gesticulatory and
+other, went on for a little while like stray fireworks accidentally
+ignited, and then sank into immovable silence. Mr. Bult was not surprised
+that Klesmer's opinions should be flighty, but was astonished at his
+command of English idiom and his ability to put a point in a way that
+would have told at a constituents' dinner--to be accounted for probably by
+his being a Pole, or a Czech, or something of that fermenting sort, in a
+state of political refugeeism which had obliged him to make a profession
+of his music; and that evening in the drawing-room he for the first time
+went up to Klesmer at the piano, Miss Arrowpoint being near, and said--
+
+"I had no idea before that you were a political man."
+
+Klesmer's only answer was to fold his arms, put out his nether lip, and
+stare at Mr. Bult.
+
+"You must have been used to public speaking. You speak uncommonly well,
+though I don't agree with you. From what you said about sentiment, I fancy
+you are a Panslavist."
+
+"No; my name is Elijah. I am the Wandering Jew," said Klesmer, flashing a
+smile at Miss Arrowpoint, and suddenly making a mysterious, wind-like rush
+backward and forward on the piano. Mr. Bult felt this buffoonery rather
+offensive and Polish, but--Miss Arrowpoint being there--did not like to
+move away.
+
+"Herr Klesmer has cosmopolitan ideas," said Miss Arrowpoint, trying to
+make the best of the situation. "He looks forward to a fusion of races."
+
+"With all my heart," said Mr. Bult, willing to be gracious. "I was sure he
+had too much talent to be a mere musician."
+
+"Ah, sir, you are under some mistake there," said Klesmer, firing up. "No
+man has too much talent to be a musician. Most men have too little. A
+creative artist is no more a mere musician than a great statesman is a
+mere politician. We are not ingenious puppets, sir, who live in a box and
+look out on the world only when it is gaping for amusement. We help to
+rule the nations and make the age as much as any other public men. We
+count ourselves on level benches with legislators. And a man who speaks
+effectively through music is compelled to something more difficult than
+parliamentary eloquence."
+
+With the last word Klesmer wheeled from the piano and walked away.
+
+Miss Arrowpoint colored, and Mr. Bult observed, with his usual phlegmatic
+stolidity, "Your pianist does not think small beer of himself."
+
+"Herr Klesmer is something more than a pianist," said Miss Arrowpoint,
+apologetically. "He is a great musician in the fullest sense of the word.
+He will rank with Schubert and Mendelssohn."
+
+"Ah, you ladies understand these things," said Mr. Bult, none the less
+convinced that these things were frivolous because Klesmer had shown
+himself a coxcomb.
+
+Catherine, always sorry when Klesmer gave himself airs, found an
+opportunity the next day in the music-room to say, "Why were you so heated
+last night with Mr. Bult? He meant no harm."
+
+"You wish me to be complaisant to him?" said Klesmer, rather fiercely.
+
+"I think it is hardly worth your while to be other than civil."
+
+"You find no difficulty in tolerating him, then?--you have a respect for a
+political platitudinarian as insensible as an ox to everything he can't
+turn into political capital. You think his monumental obtuseness suited to
+the dignity of the English gentleman."
+
+"I did not say that."
+
+"You mean that I acted without dignity, and you are offended with me."
+
+"Now you are slightly nearer the truth," said Catherine, smiling.
+
+"Then I had better put my burial-clothes in my portmanteau and set off at
+once."
+
+"I don't see that. If I have to bear your criticism of my operetta, you
+should not mind my criticism of your impatience."
+
+"But I do mind it. You would have wished me to take his ignorant
+impertinence about a 'mere musician' without letting him know his place. I
+am to hear my gods blasphemed as well as myself insulted. But I beg
+pardon. It is impossible you should see the matter as I do. Even you can't
+understand the wrath of the artist: he is of another caste for you."
+
+"That is true," said Catherine, with some betrayal of feeling. "He is of a
+caste to which I look up--a caste above mine."
+
+Klesmer, who had been seated at a table looking over scores, started up
+and walked to a little distance, from which he said--
+
+"That is finely felt--I am grateful. But I had better go, all the same. I
+have made up my mind to go, for good and all. You can get on exceedingly
+well without me: your operetta is on wheels--it will go of itself. And
+your Mr. Bull's company fits me 'wie die Faust ins Auge.' I am neglecting
+my engagements. I must go off to St. Petersburg."
+
+There was no answer.
+
+"You agree with me that I had better go?" said Klesmer, with some
+irritation.
+
+"Certainly; if that is what your business and feeling prompt. I have only
+to wonder that you have consented to give us so much of your time in the
+last year. There must be treble the interest to you anywhere else. I have
+never thought of you consenting to come here as anything else than a
+sacrifice."
+
+"Why should I make the sacrifice?" said Klesmer, going to seat himself at
+the piano, and touching the keys so as to give with the delicacy of an
+echo in the far distance a melody which he had set to Heine's "Ich hab'
+dich geliebet und liebe dich noch."
+
+"That is the mystery," said Catherine, not wanting to affect anything, but
+from mere agitation. From the same cause she was tearing a piece of paper
+into minute morsels, as if at a task of utmost multiplication imposed by a
+cruel fairy.
+
+"You can conceive no motive?" said Klesmer, folding his arms.
+
+"None that seems in the least probable."
+
+"Then I shall tell you. It is because you are to me the chief woman in the
+world--the throned lady whose colors I carry between my heart and my
+armor."
+
+Catherine's hands trembled so much that she could no longer tear the
+paper: still less could her lips utter a word. Klesmer went on--
+
+"This would be the last impertinence in me, if I meant to found anything
+upon it. That is out of the question. I meant no such thing. But you once
+said it was your doom to suspect every man who courted you of being an
+adventurer, and what made you angriest was men's imputing to you the folly
+of believing that they courted you for your own sake. Did you not say so?"
+
+"Very likely," was the answer, in a low murmur.
+
+"It was a bitter word. Well, at least one man who has seen women as plenty
+as flowers in May has lingered about you for your own sake. And since he
+is one whom you can never marry, you will believe him. There is an
+argument in favor of some other man. But don't give yourself for a meal to
+a minotaur like Bult. I shall go now and pack. I shall make my excuses to
+Mrs. Arrowpoint." Klesmer rose as he ended, and walked quickly toward the
+door.
+
+"You must take this heap of manuscript," then said Catherine, suddenly
+making a desperate effort. She had risen to fetch the heap from another
+table. Klesmer came back, and they had the length of the folio sheets
+between them.
+
+"Why should I not marry the man who loves me, if I love him?" said
+Catherine. To her the effort was something like the leap of a woman from
+the deck into the lifeboat.
+
+"It would be too hard--impossible--you could not carry it through. I am
+not worth what you would have to encounter. I will not accept the
+sacrifice. It would be thought a _mesalliance_ for you and I should be
+liable to the worst accusations."
+
+"Is it the accusations you are afraid of? I am afraid of nothing but that
+we should miss the passing of our lives together."
+
+The decisive word had been spoken: there was no doubt concerning the end
+willed by each: there only remained the way of arriving at it, and
+Catherine determined to take the straightest possible. She went to her
+father and mother in the library, and told them that she had promised to
+marry Klesmer.
+
+Mrs. Arrowpoint's state of mind was pitiable. Imagine Jean Jacques, after
+his essay on the corrupting influence of the arts, waking up among
+children of nature who had no idea of grilling the raw bone they offered
+him for breakfast with the primitive flint knife; or Saint Just, after
+fervidly denouncing all recognition of pre-eminence, receiving a vote of
+thanks for the unbroken mediocrity of his speech, which warranted the
+dullest patriots in delivering themselves at equal length. Something of
+the same sort befell the authoress of "Tasso," when what she had safely
+demanded of the dead Leonora was enacted by her own Catherine. It is hard
+for us to live up to our own eloquence, and keep pace with our winged
+words, while we are treading the solid earth and are liable to heavy
+dining. Besides, it has long been understood that the proprieties of
+literature are not those of practical life. Mrs. Arrowpoint naturally
+wished for the best of everything. She not only liked to feel herself at a
+higher level of literary sentiment than the ladies with whom she
+associated; she wished not to be behind them in any point of social
+consideration. While Klesmer was seen in the light of a patronized
+musician, his peculiarities were picturesque and acceptable: but to see
+him by a sudden flash in the light of her son-in-law gave her a burning
+sense of what the world would say. And the poor lady had been used to
+represent her Catherine as a model of excellence.
+
+Under the first shock she forgot everything but her anger, and snatched at
+any phrase that would serve as a weapon.
+
+"If Klesmer has presumed to offer himself to you, your father shall
+horsewhip him off the premises. Pray, speak, Mr. Arrowpoint."
+
+The father took his cigar from his mouth, and rose to the occasion by
+saying, "This will never do, Cath."
+
+"Do!" cried Mrs. Arrowpoint; "who in their senses ever thought it would
+do? You might as well say poisoning and strangling will not do. It is a
+comedy you have got up, Catherine. Else you are mad."
+
+"I am quite sane and serious, mamma, and Herr Klesmer is not to blame. He
+never thought of my marrying him. I found out that he loved me, and loving
+him, I told him I would marry him."
+
+"Leave that unsaid, Catherine," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, bitterly. "Every one
+else will say that for you. You will be a public fable. Every one will say
+that you must have made an offer to a man who has been paid to come to the
+house--who is nobody knows what--a gypsy, a Jew, a mere bubble of the
+earth."
+
+"Never mind, mamma," said Catherine, indignant in her turn. "We all know
+he is a genius--as Tasso was."
+
+"Those times were not these, nor is Klesmer Tasso," said Mrs. Arrowpoint,
+getting more heated. "There is no sting in _that_ sarcasm, except the
+sting of undutifulness."
+
+"I am sorry to hurt you, mamma. But I will not give up the happiness of my
+life to ideas that I don't believe in and customs I have no respect for."
+
+"You have lost all sense of duty, then? You have forgotten that you are
+our only child--that it lies with you to place a great property in the
+right hands?"
+
+"What are the right hands? My grandfather gained the property in trade."
+
+"Mr. Arrowpoint, _will_ you sit by and hear this without speaking?"
+
+"I am a gentleman, Cath. We expect you to marry a gentleman," said the
+father, exerting himself.
+
+"And a man connected with the institutions of this country," said the
+mother. "A woman in your position has serious duties. Where duty and
+inclination clash, she must follow duty."
+
+"I don't deny that," said Catherine, getting colder in proportion to her
+mother's heat. "But one may say very true things and apply them falsely.
+People can easily take the sacred word duty as a name for what they desire
+any one else to do."
+
+"Your parent's desire makes no duty for you, then?"
+
+"Yes, within reason. But before I give up the happiness of my life--"
+
+"Catherine, Catherine, it will not be your happiness," said Mrs.
+Arrowpoint, in her most raven-like tones.
+
+"Well, what seems to me my happiness--before I give it up, I must see some
+better reason than the wish that I should marry a nobleman, or a man who
+votes with a party that he may be turned into a nobleman. I feel at
+liberty to marry the man I love and think worthy, unless some higher duty
+forbids."
+
+"And so it does, Catherine, though you are blinded and cannot see it. It
+is a woman's duty not to lower herself. You are lowering yourself. Mr.
+Arrowpoint, will you tell your daughter what is her duty?"
+
+"You must see, Catherine, that Klesmer is not the man for you," said Mr.
+Arrowpoint. "He won't do at the head of estates. He has a deuced foreign
+look--is an unpractical man."
+
+"I really can't see what that has to do with it, papa. The land of England
+has often passed into the hands of foreigners--Dutch soldiers, sons of
+foreign women of bad character:--if our land were sold to-morrow it would
+very likely pass into the hands of some foreign merchant on 'Change. It is
+in everybody's mouth that successful swindlers may buy up half the land in
+the country. How can I stem that tide?"
+
+"It will never do to argue about marriage, Cath," said Mr. Arrowpoint.
+"It's no use getting up the subject like a parliamentary question. We must
+do as other people do. We must think of the nation and the public good."
+
+"I can't see any public good concerned here, papa," said Catherine. "Why
+is it to be expected of any heiress that she should carry the property
+gained in trade into the hands of a certain class? That seems to be a
+ridiculous mishmash of superannuated customs and false ambition. I should
+call it a public evil. People had better make a new sort of public good by
+changing their ambitions."
+
+"That is mere sophistry, Catherine," said Mrs. Arrowpoint. "Because you
+don't wish to marry a nobleman, you are not obliged to marry a mountebank
+or a charlatan."
+
+"I cannot understand the application of such words, mamma."
+
+"No, I dare say not," rejoined Mrs. Arrowpoint, with significant scorn.
+"You have got to a pitch at which we are not likely to understand each
+other."
+
+"It can't be done, Cath," said Mr. Arrowpoint, wishing to substitute a
+better-humored reasoning for his wife's impetuosity. "A man like Klesmer
+can't marry such a property as yours. It can't be done."
+
+"It certainly will not be done," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, imperiously. "Where
+is the man? Let him be fetched."
+
+"I cannot fetch him to be insulted," said Catherine. "Nothing will be
+achieved by that."
+
+"I suppose you would wish him to know that in marrying you he will not
+marry your fortune," said Mrs. Arrowpoint.
+
+"Certainly; if it were so, I should wish him to know it."
+
+"Then you had better fetch him."
+
+Catherine only went into the music-room and said, "Come." She felt no need
+to prepare Klesmer.
+
+"Herr Klesmer," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, with a rather contemptuous
+stateliness, "it is unnecessary to repeat what has passed between us and
+our daughter. Mr. Arrowpoint will tell you our resolution."
+
+"Your marrying is out of the question," said Mr. Arrowpoint, rather too
+heavily weighted with his task, and standing in an embarrassment
+unrelieved by a cigar. "It is a wild scheme altogether. A man has been
+called out for less."
+
+"You have taken a base advantage of our confidence," burst in Mrs.
+Arrowpoint, unable to carry out her purpose and leave the burden of speech
+to her husband.
+
+Klesmer made a low bow in silent irony.
+
+"The pretension is ridiculous. You had better give it up and leave the
+house at once," continued Mr. Arrowpoint. He wished to do without
+mentioning the money.
+
+"I can give up nothing without reference to your daughter's wish," said
+Klesmer. "My engagement is to her."
+
+"It is useless to discuss the question," said Mrs. Arrowpoint. "We shall
+never consent to the marriage. If Catherine disobeys us we shall
+disinherit her. You will not marry her fortune. It is right you should
+know that."
+
+"Madam, her fortune has been the only thing I have had to regret about
+her. But I must ask her if she will not think the sacrifice greater than I
+am worthy of."
+
+"It is no sacrifice to me," said Catherine, "except that I am sorry to
+hurt my father and mother. I have always felt my fortune to be a wretched
+fatality of my life."
+
+"You mean to defy us, then?" said Mrs. Arrowpoint.
+
+"I mean to marry Herr Klesmer," said Catherine, firmly.
+
+"He had better not count on our relenting," said Mrs. Arrowpoint, whose
+manners suffered from that impunity in insult which has been reckoned
+among the privileges of women.
+
+"Madam," said Klesmer, "certain reasons forbid me to retort. But
+understand that I consider it out of the power either of you, or of your
+fortune, to confer on me anything that I value. My rank as an artist is of
+my own winning, and I would not exchange it for any other. I am able to
+maintain your daughter, and I ask for no change in my life but her
+companionship."
+
+"You will leave the house, however," said Mrs. Arrowpoint.
+
+"I go at once," said Klesmer, bowing and quitting the room.
+
+"Let there be no misunderstanding, mamma," said Catherine; "I consider
+myself engaged to Herr Klesmer, and I intend to marry him."
+
+The mother turned her head away and waved her hand in sign of dismissal.
+
+"It's all very fine," said Mr. Arrowpoint, when Catherine was gone; "but
+what the deuce are we to do with the property?"
+
+"There is Harry Brendall. He can take the name."
+
+"Harry Brendall will get through it all in no time," said Mr. Arrowpoint,
+relighting his cigar.
+
+And thus, with nothing settled but the determination of the lovers,
+Klesmer had left Quetcham.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+ Among the heirs of Art, as is the division of the promised land, each
+ has to win his portion by hard fighting: the bestowal is after the
+ manner of prophecy, and is a title without possession. To carry the
+ map of an ungotten estate in your pocket is a poor sort of copyhold.
+ And in fancy to cast his shoe over Eden is little warrant that a man
+ shall ever set the sole of his foot on an acre of his own there.
+
+ The most obstinate beliefs that mortals entertain about themselves are
+ such as they have no evidence for beyond a constant, spontaneous
+ pulsing of their self-satisfaction--as it were a hidden seed of
+ madness, a confidence that they can move the world without precise
+ notion of standing-place or lever.
+
+
+"Pray go to church, mamma," said Gwendolen the next morning. "I prefer
+seeing Herr Klesmer alone." (He had written in reply to her note that he
+would be with her at eleven.)
+
+"That is hardly correct, I think," said Mrs. Davilow, anxiously.
+
+"Our affairs are too serious for us to think of such nonsensical rules,"
+said Gwendolen, contemptuously. "They are insulting as well as
+ridiculous."
+
+"You would not mind Isabel sitting with you? She would be reading in a
+corner."
+
+"No; she could not: she would bite her nails and stare. It would be too
+irritating. Trust my judgment, mamma, I must be alone, Take them all to
+church."
+
+Gwendolen had her way, of course; only that Miss Merry and two of the
+girls stayed at home, to give the house a look of habitation by sitting at
+the dining-room windows.
+
+It was a delicious Sunday morning. The melancholy waning sunshine of
+autumn rested on the half-strown grass and came mildly through the windows
+in slanting bands of brightness over the old furniture, and the glass
+panel that reflected the furniture; over the tapestried chairs with their
+faded flower-wreaths, the dark enigmatic pictures, the superannuated organ
+at which Gwendolen had pleased herself with acting Saint Cecelia on her
+first joyous arrival, the crowd of pallid, dusty knicknacks seen through
+the open doors of the antechamber where she had achieved the wearing of
+her Greek dress as Hermione. This last memory was just now very busy in
+her; for had not Klesmer then been struck with admiration of her pose and
+expression? Whatever he had said, whatever she imagined him to have
+thought, was at this moment pointed with keenest interest for her: perhaps
+she had never before in her life felt so inwardly dependent, so
+consciously in need of another person's opinion. There was a new
+fluttering of spirit within her, a new element of deliberation in her
+self-estimate which had hitherto been a blissful gift of intuition. Still
+it was the recurrent burden of her inward soliloquy that Klesmer had seen
+but little of her, and any unfavorable conclusion of his must have too
+narrow a foundation. She really felt clever enough for anything.
+
+To fill up the time she collected her volumes and pieces of music, and
+laying them on the top of the piano, set herself to classify them. Then
+catching the reflection of her movements in the glass panel, she was
+diverted to the contemplation of the image there and walked toward it.
+Dressed in black, without a single ornament, and with the warm whiteness
+of her skin set off between her light-brown coronet of hair and her
+square-cut bodice, she might have tempted an artist to try again the Roman
+trick of a statue in black, white, and tawny marble. Seeing her image
+slowly advancing, she thought "I _am_ beautiful"--not exultingly, but with
+grave decision. Being beautiful was after all the condition on which she
+most needed external testimony. If any one objected to the turn of her
+nose or the form of her neck and chin, she had not the sense that she
+could presently show her power of attainment in these branches of feminine
+perfection.
+
+There was not much time to fill up in this way before the sound of wheels,
+the loud ring, and the opening doors assured her that she was not by any
+accident to be disappointed. This slightly increased her inward flutter.
+In spite of her self-confidence, she dreaded Klesmer as part of that
+unmanageable world which was independent of her wishes--something
+vitriolic that would not cease to burn because you smiled or frowned at
+it. Poor thing! she was at a higher crisis of her woman's fate than in her
+last experience with Grandcourt. The questioning then, was whether she
+should take a particular man as a husband. The inmost fold of her
+questioning now was whether she need take a husband at all--whether she
+could not achieve substantially for herself and know gratified ambition
+without bondage.
+
+Klesmer made his most deferential bow in the wide doorway of the
+antechamber--showing also the deference of the finest gray kerseymere
+trousers and perfect gloves (the 'masters of those who know' are happily
+altogether human). Gwendolen met him with unusual gravity, and holding out
+her hand said, "It is most kind of you to come, Herr Klesmer. I hope you
+have not thought me presumptuous."
+
+"I took your wish as a command that did me honor," said Klesmer, with
+answering gravity. He was really putting by his own affairs in order to
+give his utmost attention to what Gwendolen might have to say; but his
+temperament was still in a state of excitation from the events of
+yesterday, likely enough to give his expressions a more than usually
+biting edge.
+
+Gwendolen for once was under too great a strain of feeling to remember
+formalities. She continued standing near the piano, and Klesmer took his
+stand near the other end of it with his back to the light and his
+terribly omniscient eyes upon her. No affectation was of use, and she
+began without delay.
+
+"I wish to consult you, Herr Klesmer. We have lost all our fortune; we
+have nothing. I must get my own bread, and I desire to provide for my
+mamma, so as to save her from any hardship. The only way I can think of--
+and I should like it better than anything--is to be an actress--to go on
+the stage. But, of course, I should like to take a high position, and I
+thought--if you thought I could"--here Gwendolen became a little more
+nervous--"it would be better for me to be a singer--to study singing
+also."
+
+Klesmer put down his hat upon the piano, and folded his arms as if to
+concentrate himself.
+
+"I know," Gwendolen resumed, turning from pale to pink and back again--"I
+know that my method of singing is very defective; but I have been ill
+taught. I could be better taught; I could study. And you will understand
+my wish:--to sing and act too, like Grisi, is a much higher position.
+Naturally, I should wish to take as high rank as I can. And I can rely on
+your judgment. I am sure you will tell me the truth."
+
+Gwendolen somehow had the conviction that now she made this serious appeal
+the truth would be favorable.
+
+Still Klesmer did not speak. He drew off his gloves quickly, tossed them
+into his hat, rested his hands on his hips, and walked to the other end of
+the room. He was filled with compassion for this girl: he wanted to put a
+guard on his speech. When he turned again, he looked at her with a mild
+frown of inquiry, and said with gentle though quick utterance, "You have
+never seen anything, I think, of artists and their lives?--I mean of
+musicians, actors, artists of that kind?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Gwendolen, not perturbed by a reference to this obvious
+fact in the history of a young lady hitherto well provided for.
+
+"You are--pardon me," said Klesmer, again pausing near the piano--"in
+coming to a conclusion on such a matter as this, everything must be taken
+into consideration--you are perhaps twenty?"
+
+"I am twenty-one," said Gwendolen, a slight fear rising in her. "Do you
+think I am too old?"
+
+Klesmer pouted his under lip and shook his long fingers upward in a manner
+totally enigmatic.
+
+"Many persons begin later than others," said Gwendolen, betrayed by her
+habitual consciousness of having valuable information to bestow.
+
+Klesmer took no notice, but said with more studied gentleness than ever,
+"You have probably not thought of an artistic career until now: you did
+not entertain the notion, the longing--what shall I say?--you did not wish
+yourself an actress, or anything of that sort, till the present trouble?"
+
+"Not exactly: but I was fond of acting. I have acted; you saw me, if you
+remember--you saw me here in charades, and as Hermione," said Gwendolen,
+really fearing that Klesmer had forgotten.
+
+"Yes, yes," he answered quickly, "I remember--I remember perfectly," and
+again walked to the other end of the room, It was difficult for him to
+refrain from this kind of movement when he was in any argument either
+audible or silent.
+
+Gwendolen felt that she was being weighed. The delay was unpleasant. But
+she did not yet conceive that the scale could dip on the wrong side, and
+it seemed to her only graceful to say, "I shall be very much obliged to
+you for taking the trouble to give me your advice, whatever it maybe."
+
+"Miss Harleth," said Klesmer, turning toward her and speaking with a
+slight increase of accent, "I will veil nothing from you in this matter. I
+should reckon myself guilty if I put a false visage on things--made them
+too black or too white. The gods have a curse for him who willingly tells
+another the wrong road. And if I misled one who is so young, so beautiful
+--who, I trust, will find her happiness along the right road, I should
+regard myself as a--_Boesewicht_." In the last word Klesmer's voice had
+dropped to a loud whisper.
+
+Gwendolen felt a sinking of heart under this unexpected solemnity, and
+kept a sort of fascinated gaze on Klesmer's face, as he went on.
+
+"You are a beautiful young lady--you have been brought up in ease--you
+have done what you would--you have not said to yourself, 'I must know this
+exactly,' 'I must understand this exactly,' 'I must do this exactly,'"--in
+uttering these three terrible _musts_, Klesmer lifted up three long
+fingers in succession. "In sum, you have not been called upon to be
+anything but a charming young lady, whom it is an impoliteness to find
+fault with."
+
+He paused an instant; then resting his fingers on his hips again, and
+thrusting out his powerful chin, he said--
+
+"Well, then, with that preparation, you wish to try the life of an artist;
+you wish to try a life of arduous, unceasing work, and--uncertain praise.
+Your praise would have to be earned, like your bread; and both would come
+slowly, scantily--what do I say?--they may hardly come at all."
+
+This tone of discouragement, which Klesmer had hoped might suffice without
+anything more unpleasant, roused some resistance in Gwendolen. With a
+slight turn of her head away from him, and an air of pique, she said--
+
+"I thought that you, being an artist, would consider the life one of the
+most honorable and delightful. And if I can do nothing better?--I suppose
+I can put up with the same risks as other people do."
+
+"Do nothing better?" said Klesmer, a little fired. "No, my dear Miss
+Harleth, you could do nothing better--neither man nor woman could do
+anything better--if you could do what was best or good of its kind. I am
+not decrying the life of the true artist. I am exalting it. I say, it is
+out of the reach of any but choice organizations--natures framed to love
+perfection and to labor for it; ready, like all true lovers, to endure, to
+wait, to say, I am not yet worthy, but she--Art, my mistress--is worthy,
+and I will live to merit her. An honorable life? Yes. But the honor comes
+from the inward vocation and the hard-won achievement: there is no honor
+in donning the life as a livery."
+
+Some excitement of yesterday had revived in Klesmer and hurried him into
+speech a little aloof from his immediate friendly purpose. He had wished
+as delicately as possible to rouse in Gwendolen a sense of her unfitness
+for a perilous, difficult course; but it was his wont to be angry with the
+pretensions of incompetence, and he was in danger of getting chafed.
+Conscious of this, he paused suddenly. But Gwendolen's chief impression
+was that he had not yet denied her the power of doing what would be good
+of its kind. Klesmer's fervor seemed to be a sort of glamor such as he was
+prone to throw over things in general; and what she desired to assure him
+of was that she was not afraid of some preliminary hardships. The belief
+that to present herself in public on the stage must produce an effect such
+as she had been used to feel certain of in private life; was like a bit of
+her flesh--it was not to be peeled off readily, but must come with blood
+and pain. She said, in a tone of some insistance--
+
+"I am quite prepared to bear hardships at first. Of course no one can
+become celebrated all at once. And it is not necessary that every one
+should be first-rate--either actresses or singers. If you would be so kind
+as to tell me what steps I should take, I shall have the courage to take
+them. I don't mind going up hill. It will be easier than the dead level of
+being a governess. I will take any steps you recommend."
+
+Klesmer was convinced now that he must speak plainly.
+
+"I will tell you the steps, not that I recommend, but that will be forced
+upon you. It is all one, so far, what your goal will be--excellence,
+celebrity, second, third rateness--it is all one. You must go to town
+under the protection of your mother. You must put yourself under training
+--musical, dramatic, theatrical:--whatever you desire to do you have to
+learn"--here Gwendolen looked as if she were going to speak, but Klesmer
+lifted up his hand and said, decisively, "I know. You have exercised your
+talents--you recite--you sing--from the drawing-room _standpunkt_. My dear
+Fraeulein, you must unlearn all that. You have not yet conceived what
+excellence is: you must unlearn your mistaken admirations. You must know
+what you have to strive for, and then you must subdue your mind and body
+to unbroken discipline. Your mind, I say. For you must not be thinking of
+celebrity: put that candle out of your eyes, and look only at excellence.
+You would of course earn nothing--you could get no engagement for a long
+while. You would need money for yourself and your family. But that," here
+Klesmer frowned and shook his fingers as if to dismiss a triviality, "that
+could perhaps be found."
+
+Gwendolen turned pink and pale during this speech. Her pride had felt a
+terrible knife-edge, and the last sentence only made the smart keener. She
+was conscious of appearing moved, and tried to escape from her weakness by
+suddenly walking to a seat and pointing out a chair to Klesmer. He did not
+take it, but turned a little in order to face her and leaned against the
+piano. At that moment she wished that she had not sent for him: this first
+experience of being taken on some other ground than that of her social
+rank and her beauty was becoming bitter to her. Klesmer, preoccupied with
+a serious purpose, went on without change of tone.
+
+"Now, what sort of issue might be fairly expected from all this self-
+denial? You would ask that. It is right that your eyes should be open to
+it. I will tell you truthfully. This issue would be uncertain, and, most
+probably, would not be worth much."
+
+At these relentless words Klesmer put out his lip and looked through his
+spectacles with the air of a monster impenetrable by beauty.
+
+Gwendolen's eyes began to burn, but the dread of showing weakness urged
+her to added self-control. She compelled herself to say, in a hard tone--
+
+"You think I want talent, or am too old to begin."
+
+Klesmer made a sort of hum, and then descended on an emphatic "Yes! The
+desire and the training should have begun seven years ago--or a good deal
+earlier. A mountebank's child who helps her father to earn shillings when
+she is six years old--a child that inherits a singing throat from a long
+line of choristers and learns to sing as it learns to talk, has a likelier
+beginning. Any great achievement in acting or in music grows with the
+growth. Whenever an artist has been able to say, 'I came, I saw, I
+conquered,' it has been at the end of patient practice. Genius at first is
+little more than a great capacity for receiving discipline. Singing and
+acting, like the fine dexterity of the juggler with his cups and balls,
+require a shaping of the organs toward a finer and finer certainty of
+effect. Your muscles--your whole frame--must go like a watch, true, true
+to a hair. That is the work of spring-time, before habits have been
+determined."
+
+"I did not pretend to genius," said Gwendolen, still feeling that she
+might somehow do what Klesmer wanted to represent as impossible. "I only
+suppose that I might have a little talent--enough to improve."
+
+"I don't deny that," said Klesmer. "If you had been put in the right track
+some years ago and had worked well you might now have made a public
+singer, though I don't think your voice would have counted for much in
+public. For the stage your personal charms and intelligence might then
+have told without the present drawback of inexperience--lack of
+discipline--lack of instruction."
+
+Certainly Klesmer seemed cruel, but his feeling was the reverse of cruel.
+Our speech, even when we are most single-minded, can never take its line
+absolutely from one impulse; but Klesmer's was, as far as possible,
+directed by compassion for poor Gwendolen's ignorant eagerness to enter on
+a course of which he saw all the miserable details with a definiteness
+which he could not if he would have conveyed to her mind.
+
+Gwendolen, however, was not convinced. Her self-opinion rallied, and since
+the counselor whom she had called in gave a decision of such severe
+peremptoriness, she was tempted to think that his judgment was not only
+fallible but biased. It occurred to her that a simpler and wiser step for
+her to have taken would have been to send a letter through the post to the
+manager of a London theatre, asking him to make an appointment. She would
+make no further reference to her singing; Klesmer, she saw, had set
+himself against her singing. But she felt equal to arguing with him about
+her going on the stage, and she answered in a resistant tone--
+
+"I understood, of course, that no one can be a finished actress at once.
+It may be impossible to tell beforehand whether I should succeed; but that
+seems to me a reason why I should try. I should have thought that I might
+have taken an engagement at a theatre meanwhile, so as to earn money and
+study at the same time."
+
+"Can't be done, my dear Miss Harleth--I speak plainly--it can't be done. I
+must clear your mind of these notions which have no more resemblance to
+reality than a pantomime. Ladies and gentlemen think that when they have
+made their toilet and drawn on their gloves they are as presentable on the
+stage as in a drawing-room. No manager thinks that. With all your grace
+and charm, if you were to present yourself as an aspirant to the stage, a
+manager would either require you to pay as an amateur for being allowed to
+perform or he would tell you to go and be taught--trained to bear yourself
+on the stage, as a horse, however beautiful, must be trained for the
+circus; to say nothing of that study which would enable you to personate a
+character consistently, and animate it with the natural language of face,
+gesture, and tone. For you to get an engagement fit for you straight away
+is out of the question."
+
+"I really cannot understand that," said Gwendolen, rather haughtily--then,
+checking herself, she added in another tone--"I shall be obliged to you if
+you will explain how it is that such poor actresses get engaged. I have
+been to the theatre several times, and I am sure there were actresses who
+seemed to me to act not at all well and who were quite plain."
+
+"Ah, my dear Miss Harleth, that is the easy criticism of the buyer. We who
+buy slippers toss away this pair and the other as clumsy; but there went
+an apprenticeship to the making of them. Excuse me; you could not at
+present teach one of those actresses; but there is certainly much that she
+could teach you. For example, she can pitch her voice so as to be heard:
+ten to one you could not do it till after many trials. Merely to stand and
+move on the stage is an art--requires practice. It is understood that we
+are not now talking of a _comparse_ in a petty theatre who earns the wages
+of a needle-woman. That is out of the question for you."
+
+"Of course I must earn more than that," said Gwendolen, with a sense of
+wincing rather than of being refuted, "but I think I could soon learn to
+do tolerably well all those little things you have mentioned. I am not so
+very stupid. And even in Paris, I am sure, I saw two actresses playing
+important ladies' parts who were not at all ladies and quite ugly. I
+suppose I have no particular talent, but I _must_ think it is an
+advantage, even on the stage, to be a lady and not a perfect fright."
+
+"Ah, let us understand each other," said Klesmer, with a flash of new
+meaning. "I was speaking of what you would have to go through if you aimed
+at becoming a real artist--if you took music and the drama as a higher
+vocation in which you would strive after excellence. On that head, what I
+have said stands fast. You would find--after your education in doing
+things slackly for one-and-twenty years--great difficulties in study; you
+would find mortifications in the treatment you would get when you
+presented yourself on the footing of skill. You would be subjected to
+tests; people would no longer feign not to see your blunders. You would at
+first only be accepted on trial. You would have to bear what I may call a
+glaring insignificance: any success must be won by the utmost patience.
+You would have to keep your place in a crowd, and after all it is likely
+you would lose it and get out of sight. If you determine to face these
+hardships and still try, you will have the dignity of a high purpose, even
+though you may have chosen unfortunately. You will have some merit, though
+you may win no prize. You have asked my judgment on your chances of
+winning. I don't pretend to speak absolutely; but measuring probabilities,
+my judgment is:--you will hardly achieve more than mediocrity."
+
+Klesmer had delivered himself with emphatic rapidity, and now paused a
+moment. Gwendolen was motionless, looking at her hands, which lay over
+each other on her lap, till the deep-toned, long-drawn "_But_," with which
+he resumed, had a startling effect, and made her look at him again.
+
+"But--there are certainly other ideas, other dispositions with which a
+young lady may take up an art that will bring her before the public. She
+may rely on the unquestioned power of her beauty as a passport. She may
+desire to exhibit herself to an admiration which dispenses with skill.
+This goes a certain way on the stage: not in music: but on the stage,
+beauty is taken when there is nothing more commanding to be had. Not
+without some drilling, however: as I have said before, technicalities have
+in any case to be mastered. But these excepted, we have here nothing to do
+with art. The woman who takes up this career is not an artist: she is
+usually one who thinks of entering on a luxurious life by a short and easy
+road--perhaps by marriage--that is her most brilliant chance, and the
+rarest. Still, her career will not be luxurious to begin with: she can
+hardly earn her own poor bread independently at once, and the indignities
+she will be liable to are such as I will not speak of."
+
+"I desire to be independent," said Gwendolen, deeply stung and confusedly
+apprehending some scorn for herself in Klesmer's words. "That was my
+reason for asking whether I could not get an immediate engagement. Of
+course I cannot know how things go on about theatres. But I thought that I
+could have made myself independent. I have no money, and I will not accept
+help from any one."
+
+Her wounded pride could not rest without making this disclaimer. It was
+intolerable to her that Klesmer should imagine her to have expected other
+help from him than advice.
+
+"That is a hard saying for your friends," said Klesmer, recovering the
+gentleness of tone with which he had begun the conversation. "I have given
+you pain. That was inevitable. I was bound to put the truth, the
+unvarnished truth, before you. I have not said--I will not say--you will
+do wrong to choose the hard, climbing path of an endeavoring artist. You
+have to compare its difficulties with those of any less hazardous--any
+more private course which opens itself to you. If you take that more
+courageous resolve I will ask leave to shake hands with you on the
+strength of our freemasonry, where we are all vowed to the service of art,
+and to serve her by helping every fellow-servant."
+
+Gwendolen was silent, again looking at her hands. She felt herself very
+far away from taking the resolve that would enforce acceptance; and after
+waiting an instant or two, Klesmer went on with deepened seriousness.
+
+"Where there is the duty of service there must be the duty of accepting
+it. The question is not one of personal obligation. And in relation to
+practical matters immediately affecting your future--excuse my permitting
+myself to mention in confidence an affair of my own. I am expecting an
+event which would make it easy for me to exert myself on your behalf in
+furthering your opportunities of instruction and residence in London--
+under the care, that is, of your family--without need for anxiety on your
+part. If you resolve to take art as a bread-study, you need only undertake
+the study at first; the bread will be found without trouble. The event I
+mean is my marriage--in fact--you will receive this as a matter of
+confidence--my marriage with Miss Arrowpoint, which will more than double
+such right as I have to be trusted by you as a friend. Your friendship
+will have greatly risen in value for _her_ by your having adopted that
+generous labor."
+
+Gwendolen's face had begun to burn. That Klesmer was about to marry Miss
+Arrowpoint caused her no surprise, and at another moment she would have
+amused herself in quickly imagining the scenes that must have occurred at
+Quetcham. But what engrossed her feeling, what filled her imagination now,
+was the panorama of her own immediate future that Klesmer's words seemed
+to have unfolded. The suggestion of Miss Arrowpoint as a patroness was
+only another detail added to its repulsiveness: Klesmer's proposal to help
+her seemed an additional irritation after the humiliating judgment he had
+passed on her capabilities. His words had really bitten into her self-
+confidence and turned it into the pain of a bleeding wound; and the idea
+of presenting herself before other judges was now poisoned with the dread
+that they also might be harsh; they also would not recognize the talent
+she was conscious of. But she controlled herself, and rose from her seat
+before she made any answer. It seemed natural that she should pause. She
+went to the piano and looked absently at leaves of music, pinching up the
+corners. At last she turned toward Klesmer and said, with almost her usual
+air of proud equality, which in this interview had not been hitherto
+perceptible.
+
+"I congratulate you sincerely, Herr Klesmer. I think I never saw any one
+so admirable as Miss Arrowpoint. And I have to thank you for every sort of
+kindness this morning. But I can't decide now. If I make the resolve you
+have spoken of, I will use your permission--I will let you know. But I
+fear the obstacles are too great. In any case, I am deeply obliged to you.
+It was very bold of me to ask you to take this trouble."
+
+Klesmer's inward remark was, "She will never let me know." But with the
+most thorough respect in his manner, he said, "Command me at any time.
+There is an address on this card which will always find me with little
+delay."
+
+When he had taken up his hat and was going to make his bow, Gwendolen's
+better self, conscious of an ingratitude which the clear-seeing Klesmer
+must have penetrated, made a desperate effort to find its way above the
+stifling layers of egoistic disappointment and irritation. Looking at him
+with a glance of the old gayety, she put out her hand, and said with a
+smile, "If I take the wrong road, it will not be because of your
+flattery."
+
+"God forbid that you should take any road but one where you will find and
+give happiness!" said Klesmer, fervently. Then, in foreign fashion, he
+touched her fingers lightly with his lips, and in another minute she heard
+the sound of his departing wheels getting more distant on the gravel.
+
+Gwendolen had never in her life felt so miserable. No sob came, no passion
+of tears, to relieve her. Her eyes were burning; and the noonday only
+brought into more dreary clearness the absence of interest from her life.
+All memories, all objects, the pieces of music displayed, the open piano--
+the very reflection of herself in the glass--seemed no better than the
+packed-up shows of a departing fair. For the first time since her
+consciousness began, she was having a vision of herself on the common
+level, and had lost the innate sense that there were reasons why she
+should not be slighted, elbowed, jostled--treated like a passenger with a
+third-class ticket, in spite of private objections on her own part. She
+did not move about; the prospects begotten by disappointment were too
+oppressively preoccupying; she threw herself into the shadiest corner of a
+settee, and pressed her fingers over her burning eyelids. Every word that
+Klesmer had said seemed to have been branded into her memory, as most
+words are which bring with them a new set of impressions and make an epoch
+for us. Only a few hours before, the dawning smile of self-contentment
+rested on her lips as she vaguely imagined a future suited to her wishes:
+it seemed but the affair of a year or so for her to become the most
+approved Juliet of the time: or, if Klesmer encouraged her idea of being a
+singer, to proceed by more gradual steps to her place in the opera, while
+she won money and applause by occasional performances. Why not? At home,
+at school, among acquaintances, she had been used to have her conscious
+superiority admitted; and she had moved in a society where everything,
+from low arithmetic to high art, is of the amateur kind, politely supposed
+to fall short of perfection only because gentlemen and ladies are not
+obliged to do more than they like--otherwise they would probably give
+forth abler writings, and show themselves more commanding artists than any
+the world is at present obliged to put up with. The self-confident visions
+that had beguiled her were not of a highly exceptional kind; and she had
+at least shown some nationality in consulting the person who knew the most
+and had flattered her the least. In asking Klesmer's advice, however, she
+had rather been borne up by a belief in his latent admiration than bent on
+knowing anything more unfavorable that might have lain behind his slight
+objections to her singing; and the truth she had asked for, with an
+expectation that it would be agreeable, had come like a lacerating thong.
+
+"Too old--should have begun seven years ago--you will not, at best,
+achieve more than mediocrity--hard, incessant work, uncertain praise--
+bread coming slowly, scantily, perhaps not at all--mortifications, people
+no longer feigning not to see your blunders--glaring insignificance"--all
+these phrases rankled in her; and even more galling was the hint that she
+could only be accepted on the stage as a beauty who hoped to get a
+husband. The "indignities" that she might be visited with had no very
+definite form for her, but the mere association of anything called
+"indignity" with herself, roused a resentful alarm. And along with the
+vaguer images which were raised by those biting words, came the precise
+conception of disagreeables which her experience enabled her to imagine.
+How could she take her mamma and the four sisters to London? if it were
+not possible for her to earn money at once? And as for submitting to be a
+_protege_, and asking her mamma to submit with her to the humiliation of
+being supported by Miss Arrowpoint--that was as bad as being a governess;
+nay, worse; for suppose the end of all her study to be as worthless as
+Klesmer clearly expected it to be, the sense of favors received and never
+repaid, would embitter the miseries of disappointment. Klesmer doubtless
+had magnificent ideas about helping artists; but how could he know the
+feelings of ladies in such matters? It was all over: she had entertained a
+mistaken hope; and there was an end of it.
+
+"An end of it!" said Gwendolen, aloud, starting from her seat as she heard
+the steps and voices of her mamma and sisters coming in from church. She
+hurried to the piano and began gathering together her pieces of music with
+assumed diligence, while the expression on her pale face and in her
+burning eyes was what would have suited a woman enduring a wrong which she
+might not resent, but would probably revenge.
+
+"Well, my darling," said gentle Mrs. Davilow, entering, "I see by the
+wheel-marks that Klesmer has been here. Have you been satisfied with the
+interview?" She had some guesses as to its object, but felt timid about
+implying them.
+
+"Satisfied, mamma? oh, yes," said Gwendolen, in a high, hard tone, for
+which she must be excused, because she dreaded a scene of emotion. If she
+did not set herself resolutely to feign proud indifference, she felt that
+she must fall into a passionate outburst of despair, which would cut her
+mamma more deeply than all the rest of their calamities.
+
+"Your uncle and aunt were disappointed at not seeing you," said Mrs.
+Davilow, coming near the piano, and watching Gwendolen's movements. "I
+only said that you wanted rest."
+
+"Quite right, mamma," said Gwendolen, in the same tone, turning to put
+away some music.
+
+"Am I not to know anything now, Gwendolen? Am I always to be in the dark?"
+said Mrs. Davilow, too keenly sensitive to her daughter's manner and
+expression not to fear that something painful had occurred.
+
+"There is really nothing to tell now, mamma," said Gwendolen, in a still
+higher voice. "I had a mistaken idea about something I could do. Herr
+Klesmer has undeceived me. That is all."
+
+"Don't look and speak in that way, my dear child: I cannot bear it," said
+Mrs. Davilow, breaking down. She felt an undefinable terror.
+
+Gwendolen looked at her a moment in silence, biting her inner lip; then
+she went up to her, and putting her hands on her mamma's shoulders, said,
+with a drop in her voice to the lowest undertone, "Mamma, don't speak to
+me now. It is useless to cry and waste our strength over what can't be
+altered. You will live at Sawyer's Cottage, and I am going to the bishop's
+daughters. There is no more to be said. Things cannot be altered, and who
+cares? It makes no difference to any one else what we do. We must try not
+to care ourselves. We must not give way. I dread giving way. Help me to be
+quiet."
+
+Mrs. Davilow was like a frightened child under her daughter's face and
+voice; her tears were arrested and she went away in silence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+ "I question things but do not find
+ One that will answer to my mind:
+ And all the world appears unkind."
+ --WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+Gwendolen was glad that she had got through her interview with Klesmer
+before meeting her uncle and aunt. She had made up her mind now that there
+were only disagreeables before her, and she felt able to maintain a dogged
+calm in the face of any humiliation that might be proposed.
+
+The meeting did not happen until the Monday, when Gwendolen went to the
+rectory with her mamma. They had called at Sawyer's Cottage by the way,
+and had seen every cranny of the narrow rooms in a mid-day light,
+unsoftened by blinds and curtains; for the furnishing to be done by
+gleanings from the rectory had not yet begun.
+
+"How _shall_ you endure it, mamma?" said Gwendolen, as they walked away.
+She had not opened her lips while they were looking round at the bare
+walls and floors, and the little garden with the cabbage-stalks, and the
+yew arbor all dust and cobwebs within. "You and the four girls all in that
+closet of a room, with the green and yellow paper pressing on your eyes?
+And without me?"
+
+"It will be some comfort that you have not to bear it too, dear."
+
+"If it were not that I must get some money, I would rather be there than
+go to be a governess."
+
+"Don't set yourself against it beforehand, Gwendolen. If you go to the
+palace you will have every luxury about you. And you know how much you
+have always cared for that. You will not find it so hard as going up and
+down those steep narrow stairs, and hearing the crockery rattle through
+the house, and the dear girls talking."
+
+"It is like a bad dream," said Gwendolen, impetuously. "I cannot believe
+that my uncle will let you go to such a place. He ought to have taken some
+other steps."
+
+"Don't be unreasonable, dear child. What could he have done?"
+
+"That was for him to find out. It seems to me a very extraordinary world
+if people in our position must sink in this way all at once," said
+Gwendolen, the other worlds with which she was conversant being
+constructed with a sense of fitness that arranged her own future
+agreeably.
+
+It was her temper that framed her sentences under this entirely new
+pressure of evils: she could have spoken more suitably on the vicissitudes
+in other people's lives, though it was never her aspiration to express
+herself virtuously so much as cleverly--a point to be remembered in
+extenuation of her words, which were usually worse than she was.
+
+And, notwithstanding the keen sense of her own bruises, she was capable of
+some compunction when her uncle and aunt received her with a more
+affectionate kindness than they had ever shown before. She could not but
+be struck by the dignified cheerfulness with which they talked of the
+necessary economies in their way of living, and in the education of the
+boys. Mr. Gascoigne's worth of character, a little obscured by worldly
+opportunities--as the poetic beauty of women is obscured by the demands of
+fashionable dressing--showed itself to great advantage under this sudden
+reduction of fortune. Prompt and methodical, he had set himself not only
+to put down his carriage, but to reconsider his worn suits of clothes, to
+leave off meat for breakfast, to do without periodicals, to get Edwy from
+school and arrange hours of study for all the boys under himself, and to
+order the whole establishment on the sparest footing possible. For all
+healthy people economy has its pleasures; and the rector's spirit had
+spread through the household. Mrs. Gascoigne and Anna, who always made
+papa their model, really did not miss anything they cared about for
+themselves, and in all sincerity felt that the saddest part of the family
+losses was the change for Mrs. Davilow and her children.
+
+Anna for the first time could merge her resentment on behalf of Rex in her
+sympathy with Gwendolen; and Mrs. Gascoigne was disposed to hope that
+trouble would have a salutary effect on her niece, without thinking it her
+duty to add any bitters by way of increasing the salutariness. They had
+both been busy devising how to get blinds and curtains for the cottage out
+of the household stores; but with delicate feeling they left these matters
+in the back-ground, and talked at first of Gwendolen's journey, and the
+comfort it was to her mamma to have her at home again.
+
+In fact there was nothing for Gwendolen to take as a justification for
+extending her discontent with events to the persons immediately around
+her, and she felt shaken into a more alert attention, as if by a call to
+drill that everybody else was obeying, when her uncle began in a voice of
+firm kindness to talk to her of the efforts he had been making to get her
+a situation which would offer her as many advantages as possible. Mr.
+Gascoigne had not forgotten Grandcourt, but the possibility of further
+advances from that quarter was something too vague for a man of his good
+sense to be determined by it: uncertainties of that kind must not now
+slacken his action in doing the best he could for his niece under actual
+conditions.
+
+"I felt that there was no time to be lost, Gwendolen; for a position in a
+good family where you will have some consideration is not to be had at a
+moment's notice. And however long we waited we could hardly find one where
+you would be better off than at Bishop Mompert's. I am known to both him
+and Mrs. Mompert, and that of course is an advantage to you. Our
+correspondence has gone on favorably; but I cannot be surprised that Mrs.
+Mompert wishes to see you before making an absolute engagement. She thinks
+of arranging for you to meet her at Wanchester when she is on her way to
+town. I dare say you will feel the interview rather trying for you, my
+dear; but you will have a little time to prepare your mind."
+
+"Do you know _why_ she wants to see me, uncle?" said Gwendolen, whose mind
+had quickly gone over various reasons that an imaginary Mrs. Mompert with
+three daughters might be supposed to entertain, reasons all of a
+disagreeable kind to the person presenting herself for inspection.
+
+The rector smiled. "Don't be alarmed, my dear. She would like to have a
+more precise idea of you than my report can give. And a mother is
+naturally scrupulous about a companion for her daughters. I have told her
+you are very young. But she herself exercises a close supervision over her
+daughters' education, and that makes her less anxious as to age. She is a
+woman of taste and also of strict principle, and objects to having a
+French person in the house. I feel sure that she will think your manners
+and accomplishments as good as she is likely to find; and over the
+religious and moral tone of the education she, and indeed the bishop
+himself, will preside."
+
+Gwendolen dared not answer, but the repression of her decided dislike to
+the whole prospect sent an unusually deep flush over her face and neck,
+subsiding as quickly as it came. Anna, full of tender fears, put her
+little hand into her cousin's, and Mr. Gascoigne was too kind a man not to
+conceive something of the trial which this sudden change must be for a
+girl like Gwendolen. Bent on giving a cheerful view of things, he went on,
+in an easy tone of remark, not as if answering supposed objections--
+
+"I think so highly of the position, that I should have been tempted to try
+and get it for Anna, if she had been at all likely to meet Mrs. Mompert's
+wants. It is really a home, with a continuance of education in the highest
+sense: 'governess' is a misnomer. The bishop's views are of a more
+decidedly Low Church color than my own--he is a close friend of Lord
+Grampian's; but, though privately strict, he is not by any means narrow in
+public matters. Indeed, he has created as little dislike in his diocese as
+any bishop on the bench. He has always remained friendly to me, though
+before his promotion, when he was an incumbent of this diocese, we had a
+little controversy about the Bible Society."
+
+The rector's words were too pregnant with satisfactory meaning to himself
+for him to imagine the effect they produced in the mind of his niece.
+"Continuance of education"--"bishop's views"--"privately strict"--"Bible
+Society,"--it was as if he had introduced a few snakes at large for the
+instruction of ladies who regarded them as all alike furnished with
+poison-bags, and, biting or stinging, according to convenience. To
+Gwendolen, already shrinking from the prospect open to her, such phrases
+came like the growing heat of a burning glass--not at all as the links of
+persuasive reflection which they formed for the good uncle. She began,
+desperately, to seek an alternative.
+
+"There was another situation, I think, mamma spoke of?" she said, with
+determined self-mastery.
+
+'"Yes," said the rector, in rather a depreciatory tone; "but that is in a
+school. I should not have the same satisfaction in your taking that. It
+would be much harder work, you are aware, and not so good in any other
+respect. Besides, you have not an equal chance of getting it."
+
+"Oh dear no," said Mrs. Gascoigne, "it would be much less appropriate, You
+might not have a bedroom to yourself." And Gwendolen's memories of school
+suggested other particulars which forced her to admit to herself that this
+alternative would be no relief. She turned to her uncle again and said,
+apparently in acceptance of his ideas--
+
+"When is Mrs. Mompert likely to send for me?"
+
+"That is rather uncertain, but she has promised not to entertain any other
+proposal till she has seen you. She has entered with much feeling into
+your position. It will be within the next fortnight, probably. But I must
+be off now. I am going to let part of my glebe uncommonly well."
+
+The rector ended very cheerfully, leaving the room with the satisfactory
+conviction that Gwendolen was going to adapt herself to circumstances like
+a girl of good sense. Having spoken appropriately, he naturally supposed
+that the effects would be appropriate; being accustomed, as a household
+and parish authority, to be asked to "speak to" refractory persons, with
+the understanding that the measure was morally coercive.
+
+"What a stay Henry is to us all?" said Mrs. Gascoigne, when her husband
+had left the room.
+
+"He is indeed," said Mrs. Davilow, cordially. "I think cheerfulness is a
+fortune in itself. I wish I had it."
+
+"And Rex is just like him," said Mrs. Gascoigne. "I must tell you the
+comfort we have had in a letter from him. I must read you a little bit,"
+she added, taking the letter from her pocket, while Anna looked rather
+frightened--she did not know why, except that it had been a rule with her
+not to mention Rex before Gwendolen.
+
+The proud mother ran her eyes over the letter, seeking for sentences to
+read aloud. But apparently she had found it sown with what might seem to
+be closer allusions than she desired to the recent past, for she looked
+up, folding the letter, and saying--
+
+"However, he tells us that our trouble has made a man of him; he sees a
+reason for any amount of work: he means to get a fellowship, to take
+pupils, to set one of his brothers going, to be everything that is most
+remarkable. The letter is full of fun--just like him. He says, 'Tell
+mother she has put out an advertisement for a jolly good hard-working son,
+in time to hinder me from taking ship; and I offer myself for the place.'
+The letter came on Friday. I never saw my husband so much moved by
+anything since Rex was born. It seemed a gain to balance our loss."
+
+This letter, in fact, was what had helped both Mrs. Gascoigne and Anna to
+show Gwendolen an unmixed kindliness; and she herself felt very amiably
+about it, smiling at Anna, and pinching her chin, as much as to say,
+"Nothing is wrong with you now, is it?" She had no gratuitously ill-
+natured feeling, or egoistic pleasure in making men miserable. She only
+had an intense objection to their making her miserable.
+
+But when the talk turned on furniture for the cottage Gwendolen was not
+roused to show even a languid interest. She thought that she had done as
+much as could be expected of her this morning, and indeed felt at an
+heroic pitch in keeping to herself the struggle that was going on within
+her. The recoil of her mind from the only definite prospect allowed her,
+was stronger than even she had imagined beforehand. The idea of presenting
+herself before Mrs. Mompert in the first instance, to be approved or
+disapproved, came as pressure on an already painful bruise; even as a
+governess, it appeared she was to be tested and was liable to rejection.
+After she had done herself the violence to accept the bishop and his wife,
+they were still to consider whether they would accept her; it was at her
+peril that she was to look, speak, or be silent. And even when she had
+entered on her dismal task of self-constraint in the society of three
+girls whom she was bound incessantly to edify, the same process of
+inspection was to go on: there was always to be Mrs. Mompert's
+supervision; always something or other would be expected of her to which
+she had not the slightest inclination; and perhaps the bishop would
+examine her on serious topics. Gwendolen, lately used to the social
+successes of a handsome girl, whose lively venturesomeness of talk has the
+effect of wit, and who six weeks before would have pitied the dullness of
+the bishop rather than have been embarrassed by him, saw the life before
+her as an entrance into a penitentiary. Wild thoughts of running away to
+be an actress, in spite of Klesmer, came to her with the lure of freedom;
+but his words still hung heavily on her soul; they had alarmed her pride
+and even her maidenly dignity: dimly she conceived herself getting amongst
+vulgar people who would treat her with rude familiarity--odious men, whose
+grins and smirks would not be seen through the strong grating of polite
+society. Gwendolen's daring was not in the least that of the adventuress;
+the demand to be held a lady was in her very marrow; and when she had
+dreamed that she might be the heroine of the gaming-table, it was with the
+understanding that no one should treat her with the less consideration, or
+presume to look at her with irony as Deronda had done. To be protected and
+petted, and to have her susceptibilities consulted in every detail, had
+gone along with her food and clothing as matters of course in her life:
+even without any such warning as Klesmer's she could not have thought it
+an attractive freedom to be thrown in solitary dependence on the doubtful
+civility of strangers. The endurance of the episcopal penitentiary was
+less repulsive than that; though here too she would certainly never be
+petted or have her susceptibilities consulted. Her rebellion against this
+hard necessity which had come just to her of all people in the world--to
+her whom all circumstances had concurred in preparing for something quite
+different--was exaggerated instead of diminished as one hour followed
+another, with the imagination of what she might have expected in her lot
+and what it was actually to be. The family troubles, she thought, were
+easier for every one than for her--even for poor dear mamma, because she
+had always used herself to not enjoying. As to hoping that if she went to
+the Momperts' and was patient a little while, things might get better--it
+would be stupid to entertain hopes for herself after all that had
+happened: her talents, it appeared, would never be recognized as anything
+remarkable, and there was not a single direction in which probability
+seemed to flatter her wishes. Some beautiful girls who, like her, had read
+romances where even plain governesses are centres of attraction and are
+sought in marriage, might have solaced themselves a little by transporting
+such pictures into their own future; but even if Gwendolen's experience
+had led her to dwell on love-making and marriage as her elysium, her heart
+was too much oppressed by what was near to her, in both the past and the
+future, for her to project her anticipations very far off. She had a
+world-nausea upon her, and saw no reason all through her life why she
+should wish to live. No religious view of trouble helped her: her troubles
+had in her opinion all been caused by other people's disagreeable or
+wicked conduct; and there was really nothing pleasant to be counted on in
+the world: that was her feeling; everything else she had heard said about
+trouble was mere phrase-making not attractive enough for her to have
+caught it up and repeated it. As to the sweetness of labor and fulfilled
+claims; the interest of inward and outward activity; the impersonal
+delights of life as a perpetual discovery; the dues of courage, fortitude,
+industry, which it is mere baseness not to pay toward the common burden;
+the supreme worth of the teacher's vocation;--these, even if they had been
+eloquently preached to her, could have been no more than faintly
+apprehended doctrines: the fact which wrought upon her was her invariable
+observation that for a lady to become a governess--to "take a situation"--
+was to descend in life and to be treated at best with a compassionate
+patronage. And poor Gwendolen had never dissociated happiness from
+personal pre-eminence and _eclat_. That where these threatened to forsake
+her, she should take life to be hardly worth the having, cannot make her
+so unlike the rest of us, men or women, that we should cast her out of our
+compassion; our moments of temptation to a mean opinion of things in
+general being usually dependent on some susceptibility about ourselves and
+some dullness to subjects which every one else would consider more
+important. Surely a young creature is pitiable who has the labyrinth of
+life before her and no clue--to whom distrust in herself and her good
+fortune has come as a sudden shock, like a rent across the path that she
+was treading carelessly.
+
+In spite of her healthy frame, her irreconcilable repugnance affected her
+even physically; she felt a sort of numbness and could set about nothing;
+the least urgency, even that she should take her meals, was an irritation
+to her; the speech of others on any subject seemed unreasonable, because
+it did not include her feeling and was an ignorant claim on her. It was
+not in her nature to busy herself with the fancies of suicide to which
+disappointed young people are prone: what occupied and exasperated her was
+the sense that there was nothing for her but to live in a way she hated.
+She avoided going to the rectory again: it was too intolerable to have to
+look and talk as if she were compliant; and she could not exert herself to
+show interest about the furniture of that horrible cottage. Miss Merry was
+staying on purpose to help, and such people as Jocosa liked that sort of
+thing. Her mother had to make excuses for her not appearing, even when
+Anna came to see her. For that calm which Gwendolen had promised herself
+to maintain had changed into sick motivelessness: she thought, "I suppose
+I shall begin to pretend by-and-by, but why should I do it now?"
+
+Her mother watched her with silent distress; and, lapsing into the habit
+of indulgent tenderness, she began to think what she imagined that
+Gwendolen was thinking, and to wish that everything should give way to the
+possibility of making her darling less miserable.
+
+One day when she was in the black and yellow bedroom and her mother was
+lingering there under the pretext of considering and arranging Gwendolen's
+articles of dress, she suddenly roused herself to fetch the casket which
+contained the ornaments.
+
+"Mamma," she began, glancing over the upper layer, "I had forgotten these
+things. Why didn't you remind me of them? Do see about getting them sold.
+You will not mind about parting with them. You gave them all to me long
+ago."
+
+She lifted the upper tray and looked below.
+
+"If we can do without them, darling, I would rather keep them for you,"
+said Mrs. Davilow, seating herself beside Gwendolen with a feeling of
+relief that she was beginning to talk about something. The usual relation
+between them had become reversed. It was now the mother who tried to cheer
+the daughter. "Why, how came you to put that pocket handkerchief in here?"
+
+It was the handkerchief with the corner torn off which Gwendolen had
+thrust in with the turquoise necklace.
+
+"It happened to be with the necklace--I was in a hurry." said Gwendolen,
+taking the handkerchief away and putting it in her pocket. "Don't sell the
+necklace, mamma," she added, a new feeling having come over her about that
+rescue of it which had formerly been so offensive.
+
+"No, dear, no; it was made out of your dear father's chain. And I should
+prefer not selling the other things. None of them are of any great value.
+All my best ornaments were taken from me long ago."
+
+Mrs. Davilow colored. She usually avoided any reference to such facts
+about Gwendolen's step-father as that he had carried off his wife's
+jewelry and disposed of it. After a moment's pause she went on--
+
+"And these things have not been reckoned on for any expenses. Carry them
+with you."
+
+"That would be quite useless, mamma," said Gwendolen, coldly. "Governesses
+don't wear ornaments. You had better get me a gray frieze livery and a
+straw poke, such as my aunt's charity children wear."
+
+"No, dear, no; don't take that view of it. I feel sure the Momperts will
+like you the better for being graceful and elegant."
+
+"I am not at all sure what the Momperts will like me to be. It is enough
+that I am expected to be what they like," said Gwendolen bitterly.
+
+"If there is anything you would object to less--anything that could be
+done--instead of your going to the bishop's, do say so, Gwendolen. Tell me
+what is in your heart. I will try for anything you wish," said the mother,
+beseechingly. "Don't keep things away from me. Let us bear them together."
+
+"Oh, mamma, there is nothing to tell. I can't do anything better. I must
+think myself fortunate if they will have me. I shall get some money for
+you. That is the only thing I have to think of. I shall not spend any
+money this year: you will have all the eighty pounds. I don't know how far
+that will go in housekeeping; but you need not stitch your poor fingers to
+the bone, and stare away all the sight that the tears have left in your
+dear eyes."
+
+Gwendolen did not give any caresses with her words as she had been used to
+do. She did not even look at her mother, but was looking at the turquoise
+necklace as she turned it over her fingers.
+
+"Bless you for your tenderness, my good darling!" said Mrs. Davilow, with
+tears in her eyes. "Don't despair because there are clouds now. You are so
+young. There may be great happiness in store for you yet."
+
+"I don't see any reason for expecting it, mamma," said Gwendolen, in a
+hard tone; and Mrs. Davilow was silent, thinking as she had often thought
+before--"What did happen between her and Mr. Grandcourt?"
+
+"I _will_ keep this necklace, mamma," said Gwendolen, laying it apart and
+then closing the casket. "But do get the other things sold, even if they
+will not bring much. Ask my uncle what to do with them. I shall certainly
+not use them again. I am going to take the veil. I wonder if all the poor
+wretches who have ever taken it felt as I do."
+
+"Don't exaggerate evils, dear."
+
+"How can any one know that I exaggerate, when I am speaking of my own
+feeling? I did not say what any one else felt."
+
+She took out the torn handkerchief from her pocket again, and wrapped it
+deliberately round the necklace. Mrs. Davilow observed the action with
+some surprise, but the tone of her last words discouraged her from asking
+any question.
+
+The "feeling" Gwendolen spoke of with an air of tragedy was not to be
+explained by the mere fact that she was going to be a governess: she was
+possessed by a spirit of general disappointment. It was not simply that
+she had a distaste for what she was called on to do: the distaste spread
+itself over the world outside her penitentiary, since she saw nothing very
+pleasant in it that seemed attainable by her even if she were free.
+Naturally her grievances did not seem to her smaller than some of her male
+contemporaries held theirs to be when they felt a profession too narrow
+for their powers, and had an _a priori_ conviction that it was not worth
+while to put forth their latent abilities. Because her education had been
+less expensive than theirs, it did not follow that she should have wider
+emotions or a keener intellectual vision. Her griefs were feminine; but to
+her as a woman they were not the less hard to bear, and she felt an equal
+right to the Promethean tone.
+
+But the movement of mind which led her to keep the necklace, to fold it up
+in the handkerchief, and rise to put it in her _necessaire_, where she had
+first placed it when it had been returned to her, was more peculiar, and
+what would be called less reasonable. It came from that streak of
+superstition in her which attached itself both to her confidence and her
+terror--a superstition which lingers in an intense personality even in
+spite of theory and science; any dread or hope for self being stronger
+than all reasons for or against it. Why she should suddenly determine not
+to part with the necklace was not much clearer to her than why she should
+sometimes have been frightened to find herself in the fields alone: she
+had a confused state of emotion about Deronda--was it wounded pride and
+resentment, or a certain awe and exceptional trust? It was something vague
+and yet mastering, which impelled her to this action about the necklace.
+There, is a great deal of unmapped country within us which would have to
+be taken into account in an explanation of our gusts and storms.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+ How trace the why and wherefore in a mind reduced to the barrenness of
+ a fastidious egoism, in which all direct desires are dulled, and have
+ dwindled from motives into a vacillating expectation of motives: a
+ mind made up of moods, where a fitful impulse springs here and there
+ conspicuously rank amid the general weediness? 'Tis a condition apt to
+ befall a life too much at large, unmoulded by the pressure of
+ obligation. _Nam deteriores omnes sumus licentiae_, or, as a more
+ familiar tongue might deliver it, _"As you like" is a bad finger-
+ post._
+
+
+Potentates make known their intentions and affect the funds at a small
+expense of words. So when Grandcourt, after learning that Gwendolen had
+left Leubronn, incidentally pronounced that resort of fashion a beastly
+hole, worse than Baden, the remark was conclusive to Mr. Lush that his
+patron intended straightway to return to Diplow. The execution was sure to
+be slower than the intention, and, in fact, Grandcourt did loiter through
+the next day without giving any distinct orders about departure--perhaps
+because he discerned that Lush was expecting them: he lingered over his
+toilet, and certainly came down with a faded aspect of perfect distinction
+which made fresh complexions and hands with the blood in them, seem signs
+of raw vulgarity; he lingered on the terrace, in the gambling-rooms, in
+the reading-room, occupying himself in being indifferent to everybody and
+everything around him. When he met Lady Mallinger, however, he took some
+trouble--raised his hat, paused, and proved that he listened to her
+recommendation of the waters by replying, "Yes; I heard somebody say how
+providential it was that there always happened to be springs at gambling
+places."
+
+"Oh, that was a joke," said innocent Lady Mallinger, misled by
+Grandcourt's languid seriousness, "in imitation of the old one about the
+towns and the rivers, you know."
+
+"Ah, perhaps," said Grandcourt, without change of expression. Lady
+Mallinger thought this worth telling to Sir Hugo, who said, "Oh, my dear,
+he is not a fool. You must not suppose that he can't see a joke. He can
+play his cards as well as most of us."
+
+"He has never seemed to me a very sensible man," said Lady Mallinger, in
+excuse of herself. She had a secret objection to meeting Grandcourt, who
+was little else to her than a large living sign of what she felt to be her
+failure as a wife--the not having presented Sir Hugo with a son. Her
+constant reflection was that her husband might fairly regret his choice,
+and if he had not been very good might have treated her with some
+roughness in consequence, gentlemen naturally disliking to be
+disappointed.
+
+Deronda, too, had a recognition from Grandcourt, for which he was not
+grateful, though he took care to return it with perfect civility. No
+reasoning as to the foundations of custom could do away with the early-
+rooted feeling that his birth had been attended with injury for which his
+father was to blame; and seeing that but for this injury Grandcourt's
+prospects might have been his, he was proudly resolute not to behave in
+any way that might be interpreted into irritation on that score. He saw a
+very easy descent into mean unreasoning rancor and triumph in others'
+frustration; and being determined not to go down that ugly pit, he turned
+his back on it, clinging to the kindlier affections within him as a
+possession. Pride certainly helped him well--the pride of not recognizing
+a disadvantage for one's self which vulgar minds are disposed to
+exaggerate, such as the shabby equipage of poverty: he would not have a
+man like Grandcourt suppose himself envied by him. But there is no
+guarding against interpretation. Grandcourt did believe that Deronda, poor
+devil, who he had no doubt was his cousin by the father's side, inwardly
+winced under their mutual position; wherefore the presence of that less
+lucky person was more agreeable to him than it would otherwise have been.
+An imaginary envy, the idea that others feel their comparative deficiency,
+is the ordinary _cortege_ of egoism; and his pet dogs were not the only
+beings that Grandcourt liked to feel his power over in making them
+jealous. Hence he was civil enough to exchange several words with Deronda
+on the terrace about the hunting round Diplow, and even said, "You had
+better come over for a run or two when the season begins."
+
+Lush, not displeased with delay, amused himself very well, partly in
+gossiping with Sir Hugo and in answering his questions about Grandcourt's
+affairs so far as they might affect his willingness to part with his
+interest in Diplow. Also about Grandcourt's personal entanglements, the
+baronet knew enough already for Lush to feel released from silence on a
+sunny autumn day, when there was nothing more agreeable to do in lounging
+promenades than to speak freely of a tyrannous patron behind his back. Sir
+Hugo willingly inclined his ear to a little good-humored scandal, which he
+was fond of calling _traits de moeurs_; but he was strict in keeping such
+communications from hearers who might take them too seriously. Whatever
+knowledge he had of his nephew's secrets, he had never spoken of it to
+Deronda, who considered Grandcourt a pale-blooded mortal, but was far from
+wishing to hear how the red corpuscles had been washed out of him. It was
+Lush's policy and inclination to gratify everybody when he had no reason
+to the contrary; and the baronet always treated him well, as one of those
+easy-handled personages who, frequenting the society of gentlemen, without
+being exactly gentlemen themselves, can be the more serviceable, like the
+second-best articles of our wardrobe, which we use with a comfortable
+freedom from anxiety.
+
+"Well, you will let me know the turn of events," said Sir Hugo, "if this
+marriage seems likely to come off after all, or if anything else happens
+to make the want of money pressing. My plan would be much better for him
+than burdening Ryelands."
+
+"That's true," said Lush, "only it must not be urged on him--just placed
+in his way that the scent may tickle him. Grandcourt is not a man to be
+always led by what makes for his own interest; especially if you let him
+see that it makes for your interest too. I'm attached to him, of course.
+I've given up everything else for the sake of keeping by him, and it has
+lasted a good fifteen years now. He would not easily get any one else to
+fill my place. He's a peculiar character, is Henleigh Grandcourt, and it
+has been growing on him of late years. However, I'm of a constant
+disposition, and I've been a sort of guardian to him since he was twenty;
+an uncommonly fascinating fellow he was then, to be sure--and could be
+now, if he liked. I'm attached to him; and it would be a good deal worse
+for him if he missed me at his elbow."
+
+Sir Hugo did not think it needful to express his sympathy or even assent,
+and perhaps Lush himself did not expect this sketch of his motives to be
+taken as exact. But how can a man avoid himself as a subject in
+conversation? And he must make some sort of decent toilet in words, as in
+cloth and linen. Lush's listener was not severe: a member of Parliament
+could allow for the necessities of verbal toilet; and the dialogue went on
+without any change of mutual estimate.
+
+However, Lush's easy prospect of indefinite procrastination was cut off
+the next morning by Grandcourt's saluting him with the question--
+
+"Are you making all the arrangements for our starting by the Paris train?"
+
+"I didn't know you meant to start," said Lush, not exactly taken by
+surprise.
+
+"You might have known," said Grandcourt, looking at the burned length of
+his cigar, and speaking in that lowered tone which was usual with him when
+he meant to express disgust and be peremptory. "Just see to everything,
+will you? and mind no brute gets into the same carriage with us. And leave
+my P. P. C. at the Mallingers."
+
+In consequence they were at Paris the next day; but here Lush was
+gratified by the proposal or command that he should go straight on to
+Diplow and see that everything was right, while Grandcourt and the valet
+remained behind; and it was not until several days later that Lush
+received the telegram ordering the carriage to the Wanchester station.
+
+He had used the interim actively, not only in carrying out Grandcourt's
+orders about the stud and household, but in learning all he could of
+Gwendolen, and how things were going on at Offendene. What was the
+probable effect that the news of the family misfortunes would have on
+Grandcourt's fitful obstinacy he felt to be quite incalculable. So far as
+the girl's poverty might be an argument that she would accept an offer
+from him now in spite of any previous coyness, it might remove that bitter
+objection to risk a repulse which Lush divined to be one of Grandcourt's
+deterring motives; on the other hand, the certainty of acceptance was just
+"the sort of thing" to make him lapse hither and thither with no more
+apparent will than a moth. Lush had had his patron under close observation
+for many years, and knew him perhaps better than he knew any other
+subject; but to know Grandcourt was to doubt what he would do in any
+particular case. It might happen that he would behave with an apparent
+magnanimity, like the hero of a modern French drama, whose sudden start
+into moral splendor after much lying and meanness, leaves you little
+confidence as to any part of his career that may follow the fall of the
+curtain. Indeed, what attitude would have been more honorable for a final
+scene than that of declining to seek an heiress for her money, and
+determining to marry the attractive girl who had none? But Lush had some
+general certainties about Grandcourt, and one was that of all inward
+movements those of generosity were least likely to occur in him. Of what
+use, however, is a general certainty that an insect will not walk with his
+head hindmost, when what you need to know is the play of inward stimulus
+that sends him hither and thither in a network of possible paths? Thus
+Lush was much at fault as to the probable issue between Grandcourt and
+Gwendolen, when what he desired was a perfect confidence that they would
+never be married. He would have consented willingly that Grandcourt should
+marry an heiress, or that he should marry Mrs. Glasher: in the one match
+there would have been the immediate abundance that prospective heirship
+could not supply, in the other there would have been the security of the
+wife's gratitude, for Lush had always been Mrs. Glasher's friend; and that
+the future Mrs. Grandcourt should not be socially received could not
+affect his private comfort. He would not have minded, either, that there
+should be no marriage in question at all; but he felt himself justified in
+doing his utmost to hinder a marriage with a girl who was likely to bring
+nothing but trouble to her husband--not to speak of annoyance if not
+ultimate injury to her husband's old companion, whose future Mr. Lush
+earnestly wished to make as easy as possible, considering that he had well
+deserved such compensation for leading a dog's life, though that of a dog
+who enjoyed many tastes undisturbed, and who profited by a large
+establishment. He wished for himself what he felt to be good, and was not
+conscious of wishing harm to any one else; unless perhaps it were just now
+a little harm to the inconvenient and impertinent Gwendolen. But the
+easiest-humored of luxury and music, the toad-eater the least liable to
+nausea, must be expected to have his susceptibilities. And Mr. Lush was
+accustomed to be treated by the world in general as an apt, agreeable
+fellow: he had not made up his mind to be insulted by more than one
+person.
+
+With this imperfect preparation of a war policy, Lush was awaiting
+Grandcourt's arrival, doing little more than wondering how the campaign
+would begin. The first day Grandcourt was much occupied with the stables,
+and amongst other things he ordered a groom to put a side-saddle on
+Criterion and let him review the horse's paces. This marked indication of
+purpose set Lush on considering over again whether he should incur the
+ticklish consequences of speaking first, while he was still sure that no
+compromising step had been taken; and he rose the next morning almost
+resolved that if Grandcourt seemed in as good a humor as yesterday and
+entered at all into talk, he would let drop the interesting facts about
+Gwendolen and her family, just to see how they would work, and to get some
+guidance. But Grandcourt did not enter into talk, and in answer to a
+question even about his own convenience, no fish could have maintained a
+more unwinking silence. After he had read his letters he gave various
+orders to be executed or transmitted by Lush, and then thrust his shoulder
+toward that useful person, who accordingly rose to leave the room. But
+before he was out of the door Grandcourt turned his head slightly and gave
+a broken, languid "Oh."
+
+"What is it?" said Lush, who, it must have been observed, did not take his
+dusty puddings with a respectful air.
+
+"Shut the door, will you? I can't speak into the corridor."
+
+Lush closed the door, came forward, and chose to sit down.
+
+After a little pause Grandcourt said, "Is Miss Harleth at Offendene?" He
+was quite certain that Lush had made it his business to inquire about her,
+and he had some pleasure in thinking that Lush did not want _him_ to
+inquire.
+
+"Well, I hardly know," said Lush, carelessly. "The family's utterly done
+up. They and the Gascoignes too have lost all their money. It's owing to
+some rascally banking business. The poor mother hasn't a _sou_, it seems.
+She and the girls have to huddle themselves into a little cottage like a
+laborer's."
+
+"Don't lie to me, if you please," said Grandcourt, in his lowest audible
+tone. "It's not amusing, and it answers no other purpose."
+
+"What do you mean?" said Lush, more nettled than was common with him--the
+prospect before him being more than commonly disturbing.
+
+"Just tell me the truth, will you?"
+
+"It's no invention of mine. I have heard the story from several--Bazley,
+Brackenshaw's man, for one. He is getting a new tenant for Offendene."
+
+"I don't mean that. Is Miss Harleth there, or is she not?" said
+Grandcourt, in his former tone.
+
+"Upon my soul, I can't tell," said Lush, rather sulkily. "She may have
+left yesterday. I heard she had taken a situation as governess; she may be
+gone to it for what I know. But if you wanted to see her no doubt the
+mother would send for her back." This sneer slipped off his tongue without
+strict intention.
+
+"Send Hutchins to inquire whether she will be there tomorrow." Lush did
+not move. Like many persons who have thought over beforehand what they
+shall say in given cases, he was impelled by an unexpected irritation to
+say some of those prearranged things before the cases were given.
+Grandcourt, in fact, was likely to get into a scrape so tremendous that it
+was impossible to let him take the first step toward it without
+remonstrance. Lush retained enough caution to use a tone of rational
+friendliness, still he felt his own value to his patron, and was prepared
+to be daring.
+
+"It would be as well for you to remember, Grandcourt, that you are coming
+under closer fire now. There can be none of the ordinary flirting done,
+which may mean everything or nothing. You must make up your mind whether
+you wish to be accepted; and more than that, how you would like being
+refused. Either one or the other. You can't be philandering after her
+again for six weeks."
+
+Grandcourt said nothing, but pressed the newspaper down on his knees and
+began to light another cigar. Lush took this as a sign that he was willing
+to listen, and was the more bent on using the opportunity; he wanted, if
+possible, to find out which would be the more potent cause of hesitation--
+probable acceptance or probable refusal.
+
+"Everything has a more serious look now than it had before. There is her
+family to be provided for. You could not let your wife's mother live in
+beggary. It will be a confoundedly hampering affair. Marriage will pin you
+down in a way you haven't been used to; and in point of money you have not
+too much elbow-room. And after all, what will you get by it? You are
+master over your estates, present or future, as far as choosing your heir
+goes; it's a pity to go on encumbering them for a mere whim, which you may
+repent of in a twelvemonth. I should be sorry to see you making a mess of
+your life in that way. If there were anything solid to be gained by the
+marriage, that would be a different affair."
+
+Lush's tone had gradually become more and more unctuous in its
+friendliness of remonstrance, and he was almost in danger of forgetting
+that he was merely gambling in argument. When he left off, Grandcourt took
+his cigar out of his mouth, and looking steadily at the moist end while he
+adjusted the leaf with his delicate finger-tips, said--
+
+"I knew before that you had an objection to my marrying Miss Harleth."
+Here he made a little pause before he continued. "But I never considered
+that a reason against it."
+
+"I never supposed you did," answered Lush, not unctuously but dryly. "It
+was not _that_ I urged as a reason. I should have thought it might have
+been a reason against it, after all your experience, that you would be
+acting like the hero of a ballad, and making yourself absurd--and all for
+what? You know you couldn't make up your mind before. It's impossible you
+can care much about her. And as for the tricks she is likely to play, you
+may judge of that from what you heard at Leubronn. However, what I wished
+to point out to you was, that there can be no shilly-shally now."
+
+"Perfectly," said Grandcourt, looking round at Lush and fixing him with
+narrow eyes; "I don't intend that there should be. I dare say it's
+disagreeable to you. But if you suppose I care a damn for that you are
+most stupendously mistaken."
+
+"Oh, well," said Lush, rising with his hands in his pockets, and feeling
+some latent venom still within him, "if you have made up your mind!--only
+there's another aspect of the affair. I have been speaking on the
+supposition that it was absolutely certain she would accept you, and that
+destitution would have no choice. But I am not so sure that the young lady
+is to be counted on. She is kittle cattle to shoe, I think. And she had
+her reasons for running away before." Lush had moved a step or two till he
+stood nearly in front of Grandcourt, though at some distance from him. He
+did not feel himself much restrained by consequences, being aware that the
+only strong hold he had on his present position was his serviceableness;
+and even after a quarrel the want of him was likely sooner or later to
+recur. He foresaw that Gwendolen would cause him to be ousted for a time,
+and his temper at this moment urged him to risk a quarrel.
+
+"She had her reasons," he repeated more significantly.
+
+"I had come to that conclusion before," said Grandcourt, with contemptuous
+irony.
+
+"Yes, but I hardly think you know what her reasons were."
+
+"You do, apparently," said Grandcourt, not betraying by so much as an
+eyelash that he cared for the reasons.
+
+"Yes, and you had better know too, that you may judge of the influence you
+have over her if she swallows her reasons and accepts you. For my own part
+I would take odds against it. She saw Lydia in Cardell Chase and heard the
+whole story."
+
+Grandcourt made no immediate answer, and only went on smoking. He was so
+long before he spoke that Lush moved about and looked out of the windows,
+unwilling to go away without seeing some effect of his daring move. He had
+expected that Grandcourt would tax him with having contrived the affair,
+since Mrs. Glasher was then living at Gadsmere, a hundred miles off, and
+he was prepared to admit the fact: what he cared about was that Grandcourt
+should be staggered by the sense that his intended advances must be made
+to a girl who had that knowledge in her mind and had been scared by it. At
+length Grandcourt, seeing Lush turn toward him, looked at him again and
+said, contemptuously, "What follows?"
+
+Here certainly was a "mate" in answer to Lush's "check:" and though his
+exasperation with Grandcourt was perhaps stronger than it had ever been
+before, it would have been idiocy to act as if any further move could be
+useful. He gave a slight shrug with one shoulder, and was going to walk
+away, when Grandcourt, turning on his seat toward the table, said, as
+quietly as if nothing had occurred, "Oblige me by pushing that pen and
+paper here, will you?"
+
+No thunderous, bullying superior could have exercised the imperious spell
+that Grandcourt did. Why, instead of being obeyed, he had never been told
+to go to a warmer place, was perhaps a mystery to those who found
+themselves obeying him. The pen and paper were pushed to him, and as he
+took them he said, "Just wait for this letter."
+
+He scrawled with ease, and the brief note was quickly addressed. "Let
+Hutchins go with it at once, will you?" said Grandcourt, pushing the
+letter away from him.
+
+As Lush had expected, it was addressed to Miss Harleth, Offendene. When
+his irritation had cooled down he was glad there had been no explosive
+quarrel; but he felt sure that there was a notch made against him, and
+that somehow or other he was intended to pay. It was also clear to him
+that the immediate effect of his revelation had been to harden
+Grandcourt's previous determination. But as to the particular movements
+that made this process in his baffling mind, Lush could only toss up his
+chin in despair of a theory.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+ He brings white asses laden with the freight
+ Of Tyrian vessels, purple, gold and balm,
+ To bribe my will: I'll bid them chase him forth,
+ Nor let him breathe the taint of his surmise
+ On my secure resolve.
+ Ay, 'tis secure:
+ And therefore let him come to spread his freight.
+ For firmness hath its appetite and craves
+ The stronger lure, more strongly to resist;
+ Would know the touch of gold to fling it off;
+ Scent wine to feel its lip the soberer;
+ Behold soft byssus, ivory, and plumes
+ To say, "They're fair, but I will none of them,"
+ And flout Enticement in the very face.
+
+
+Mr. Gascoigne one day came to Offendene with what he felt to be the
+satisfactory news that Mrs. Mompert had fixed Tuesday in the following
+week for her interview with Gwendolen at Wanchester. He said nothing of
+his having incidentally heard that Mr. Grandcourt had returned to Diplow;
+knowing no more than she did that Leubronn had been the goal of her
+admirer's journeying, and feeling that it would be unkind uselessly to
+revive the memory of a brilliant prospect under the present reverses. In
+his secret soul he thought of his niece's unintelligible caprice with
+regret, but he vindicated her to himself by considering that Grandcourt
+had been the first to behave oddly, in suddenly walking away when there
+had the best opportunity for crowning his marked attentions. The rector's
+practical judgment told him that his chief duty to his niece now was to
+encourage her resolutely to face the change in her lot, since there was no
+manifest promise of any event that would avert it.
+
+"You will find an interest in varied experience, my dear, and I have no
+doubt you will be a more valuable woman for having sustained such a part
+as you are called to."
+
+"I cannot pretend to believe that I shall like it," said Gwendolen, for
+the first time showing her uncle some petulance. "But I am quite aware
+that I am obliged to bear it."
+
+She remembered having submitted to his admonition on a different occasion
+when she was expected to like a very different prospect.
+
+"And your good sense will teach you to behave suitably under it," said Mr.
+Gascoigne, with a shade more gravity. "I feel sure that Mrs. Mompert will
+be pleased with you. You will know how to conduct yourself to a woman who
+holds in all senses the relation of a superior to you. This trouble has
+come on you young, but that makes it in some respects easier, and there is
+a benefit in all chastisement if we adjust our minds to it."
+
+This was precisely what Gwendolen was unable to do; and after her uncle
+was gone, the bitter tears, which had rarely come during the late trouble,
+rose and fell slowly as she sat alone. Her heart denied that the trouble
+was easier because she was young. When was she to have any happiness, if
+it did not come while she was young? Not that her visions of possible
+happiness for herself were as unmixed with necessary evil as they used to
+be--not that she could still imagine herself plucking the fruits of life
+without suspicion of their core. But this general disenchantment with the
+world--nay, with herself, since it appeared that she was not made for easy
+pre-eminence--only intensified her sense of forlornness; it was a visibly
+sterile distance enclosing the dreary path at her feet, in which she had
+no courage to tread. She was in that first crisis of passionate youthful
+rebellion against what is not fitly called pain, but rather the absence of
+joy--that first rage of disappointment in life's morning, which we whom
+the years have subdued are apt to remember but dimly as part of our own
+experience, and so to be intolerant of its self-enclosed unreasonableness
+and impiety. What passion seems more absurd, when we have got outside it
+and looked at calamity as a collective risk, than this amazed anguish that
+I and not Thou, He or She, should be just the smitten one? Yet perhaps
+some who have afterward made themselves a willing fence before the breast
+of another, and have carried their own heart-wound in heroic silence--some
+who have made their deeds great, nevertheless began with this angry
+amazement at their own smart, and on the mere denial of their fantastic
+desires raged as if under the sting of wasps which reduced the universe
+for them to an unjust infliction of pain. This was nearly poor Gwendolen's
+condition. What though such a reverse as hers had often happened to other
+girls? The one point she had been all her life learning to care for was,
+that it had happened to _her_: it was what _she_ felt under Klesmer's
+demonstration that she was not remarkable enough to command fortune by
+force of will and merit; it was what _she_ would feel under the rigors of
+Mrs. Mompert's constant expectation, under the dull demand that she should
+be cheerful with three Miss Momperts, under the necessity of showing
+herself entirely submissive, and keeping her thoughts to herself. To be a
+queen disthroned is not so hard as some other down-stepping: imagine one
+who had been made to believe in his own divinity finding all homage
+withdrawn, and himself unable to perform a miracle that would recall the
+homage and restore his own confidence. Something akin to this illusion and
+this helplessness had befallen the poor spoiled child, with the lovely
+lips and eyes and the majestic figure--which seemed now to have no magic
+in them.
+
+She rose from the low ottoman where she had been sitting purposeless, and
+walked up and down the drawing-room, resting her elbow on one palm while
+she leaned down her cheek on the other, and a slow tear fell. She thought,
+"I have always, ever since I was little, felt that mamma was not a happy
+woman; and now I dare say I shall be more unhappy than she has been."
+
+Her mind dwelt for a few moments on the picture of herself losing her
+youth and ceasing to enjoy--not minding whether she did this or that: but
+such picturing inevitably brought back the image of her mother.
+
+"Poor mamma! it will be still worse for her now. I can get a little money
+for her--that is all I shall care about now." And then with an entirely
+new movement of her imagination, she saw her mother getting quite old and
+white, and herself no longer young but faded, and their two faces meeting
+still with memory and love, and she knowing what was in her mother's mind
+--"Poor Gwen too is sad and faded now"--and then, for the first time, she
+sobbed, not in anger, but with a sort of tender misery.
+
+Her face was toward the door, and she saw her mother enter. She barely saw
+that; for her eyes were large with tears, and she pressed her handkerchief
+against them hurriedly. Before she took it away she felt her mother's arms
+round her, and this sensation, which seemed a prolongation of her inward
+vision, overcame her will to be reticent; she sobbed anew in spite of
+herself, as they pressed their cheeks together.
+
+Mrs. Davilow had brought something in her hand which had already caused
+her an agitating anxiety, and she dared not speak until her darling had
+become calmer. But Gwendolen, with whom weeping had always been a painful
+manifestation to be resisted, if possible, again pressed her handkerchief
+against her eyes, and, with a deep breath, drew her head backward and
+looked at her mother, who was pale and tremulous.
+
+"It was nothing, mamma," said Gwendolen, thinking that her mother had been
+moved in this way simply by finding her in distress. "It is all over now."
+
+But Mrs. Davilow had withdrawn her arms, and Gwendolen perceived a letter
+in her hand.
+
+"What is that letter?--worse news still?" she asked, with a touch of
+bitterness.
+
+"I don't know what you will think it, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, keeping
+the letter in her hand. "You will hardly guess where it comes from."
+
+"Don't ask me to guess anything," said Gwendolen, rather impatiently, as
+if a bruise were being pressed.
+
+"It is addressed to you, dear."
+
+Gwendolen gave the slightest perceptible toss of the head.
+
+"It comes from Diplow," said Mrs. Davilow, giving her the letter.
+
+She knew Grandcourt's indistinct handwriting, and her mother was not
+surprised to see her blush deeply; but watching her as she read, and
+wondering much what was the purport of the letter, she saw the color die
+out. Gwendolen's lips even were pale as she turned the open note toward
+her mother. The words were few and formal:
+
+Mr. Grandcourt presents his compliments to Miss Harleth, and begs to know
+whether he may be permitted to call at Offendene tomorrow after two and to
+see her alone. Mr. Grandcourt has just returned from Leubronn, where he
+had hoped to find Miss Harleth.
+
+Mrs. Davilow read, and then looked at her daughter inquiringly, leaving
+the note in her hand. Gwendolen let it fall to the floor, and turned away.
+
+"It must be answered, darling," said Mrs. Davilow, timidly. "The man
+waits."
+
+Gwendolen sank on the settee, clasped her hands, and looked straight
+before her, not at her mother. She had the expression of one who had been
+startled by a sound and was listening to know what would come of it. The
+sudden change of the situation was bewildering. A few minutes before she
+was looking along an inescapable path of repulsive monotony, with hopeless
+inward rebellion against the imperious lot which left her no choice: and
+lo, now, a moment of choice was come. Yet--was it triumph she felt most or
+terror? Impossible for Gwendolen not to feel some triumph in a tribute to
+her power at a time when she was first tasting the bitterness of
+insignificance: again she seemed to be getting a sort of empire over her
+own life. But how to use it? Here came the terror. Quick, quick, like
+pictures in a book beaten open with a sense of hurry, came back vividly,
+yet in fragments, all that she had gone through in relation to Grandcourt
+--the allurements, the vacillations, the resolve to accede, the final
+repulsion; the incisive face of that dark-eyed lady with the lovely boy:
+her own pledge (was it a pledge not to marry him?)--the new disbelief in
+the worth of men and things for which that scene of disclosure had become
+a symbol. That unalterable experience made a vision at which in the first
+agitated moment, before tempering reflections could suggest themselves,
+her native terror shrank.
+
+Where was the good of choice coming again? What did she wish? Anything
+different? No! And yet in the dark seed-growths of consciousness a new
+wish was forming itself--"I wish I had never known it!" Something,
+anything she wished for that would have saved her from the dread to let
+Grandcourt come.
+
+It was no long while--yet it seemed long to Mrs. Davilow, before she
+thought it well to say, gently--
+
+"It will be necessary for you to write, dear. Or shall I write an answer
+for you--which you will dictate?"
+
+"No, mamma," said Gwendolen, drawing a deep breath. "But please lay me out
+the pen and paper."
+
+That was gaining time. Was she to decline Grandcourt's visit--close the
+shutters--not even look out on what would happen?--though with the
+assurance that she should remain just where she was? The young activity
+within her made a warm current through her terror and stirred toward
+something that would be an event--toward an opportunity
+in which she could look and speak with the former effectiveness.
+The interest of the morrow was no longer at a deadlock.
+
+"There is really no reason on earth why you should be so
+alarmed at the man's waiting a few minutes, mamma," said
+Gwendolen, remonstrantly, as Mrs. Davilow, having prepared
+the writing materials, looked toward her expectantly. "Servants expect
+nothing else than to wait. It is not to be supposed that I must write on
+the instant."
+
+"No, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, in the tone of one corrected, turning to
+sit down and take up a bit of work that lay at hand; "he can wait another
+quarter of an hour, if you like."
+
+If was very simple speech and action on her part, but it was what might
+have been subtly calculated. Gwendolen felt a contradictory desire to be
+hastened: hurry would save her from deliberate choice.
+
+"I did not mean him to wait long enough for that needlework to be
+finished," she said, lifting her hands to stroke the backward curves of
+her hair, while she rose from her seat and stood still.
+
+"But if you don't feel able to decide?" said Mrs. Davilow, sympathizingly.
+
+"I _must_ decide," said Gwendolen, walking to the writing-table and
+seating herself. All the while there was a busy undercurrent in her, like
+the thought of a man who keeps up a dialogue while he is considering how
+he can slip away. Why should she not let him come? It bound her to
+nothing. He had been to Leubronn after her: of course he meant a direct
+unmistakable renewal of the suit which before had been only implied. What
+then? She could reject him. Why was she to deny herself the freedom of
+doing this--which she would like to do?
+
+"If Mr. Grandcourt has only just returned from Leubronn," said Mrs.
+Davilow, observing that Gwendolen leaned back in her chair after taking
+the pen in her hand--"I wonder whether he has heard of our misfortunes?"
+
+"That could make no difference to a man in his position," said Gwendolen,
+rather contemptuously,
+
+"It would to some men," said Mrs. Davilow. "They would not like to take a
+wife from a family in a state of beggary almost, as we are. Here we are at
+Offendene with a great shell over us, as usual. But just imagine his
+finding us at Sawyer's Cottage. Most men are afraid of being bored or
+taxed by a wife's family. If Mr. Grandcourt did know, I think it a strong
+proof of his attachment to you."
+
+Mrs. Davilow spoke with unusual emphasis: it was the first time she had
+ventured to say anything about Grandcourt which would necessarily seem
+intended as an argument in favor of him, her habitual impression being
+that such arguments would certainly be useless and might be worse. The
+effect of her words now was stronger than she could imagine. They raised a
+new set of possibilities in Gwendolen's mind--a vision of what Grandcourt
+might do for her mother if she, Gwendolen, did--what she was no going to
+do. She was so moved by a new rush of ideas that, like one conscious of
+being urgently called away, she felt that the immediate task must be
+hastened: the letter must be written, else it might be endlessly deferred.
+After all, she acted in a hurry, as she had wished to do. To act in a
+hurry was to have a reason for keeping away from an absolute decision, and
+to leave open as many issues as possible.
+
+She wrote: "Miss Harleth presents her compliments to Mr. Grandcourt. She
+will be at home after two o'clock to-morrow."
+
+Before addressing the note she said, "Pray ring the bell, mamma, if there
+is any one to answer it." She really did not know who did the work of the
+house.
+
+It was not till after the letter had been taken away and Gwendolen had
+risen again, stretching out one arm and then resting it on her head, with
+a low moan which had a sound of relief in it, that Mrs. Davilow ventured
+to ask--
+
+"What did you say, Gwen?"
+
+"I said that I should be at home," answered Gwendolen, rather loftily.
+Then after a pause, "You must not expect, because Mr. Grandcourt is
+coming, that anything is going to happen, mamma."
+
+"I don't allow myself to expect anything, dear. I desire you to follow
+your own feeling. You have never told me what that was."
+
+"What is the use of telling?" said Gwendolen, hearing a reproach in that
+true statement. "When I have anything pleasant to tell, you may be sure I
+will tell you."
+
+"But Mr. Grandcourt will consider that you have already accepted him, in
+allowing him to come. His note tells you plainly enough that he is coming
+to make you an offer."
+
+"Very well; and I wish to have the pleasure of refusing him."
+
+Mrs. Davilow looked up in wonderment, but Gwendolen implied her wish not
+to be questioned further by saying--
+
+"Put down that detestable needle-work, and let us walk in the avenue. I am
+stifled."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+ Desire has trimmed the sails, and Circumstance
+ Brings but the breeze to fill them.
+
+
+While Grandcourt on his beautiful black Yarico, the groom behind him on
+Criterion, was taking the pleasant ride from Diplow to Offendene,
+Gwendolen was seated before the mirror while her mother gathered up the
+lengthy mass of light-brown hair which she had been carefully brushing.
+
+"Only gather it up easily and make a coil, mamma," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Let me bring you some ear-rings, Gwen," said Mrs. Davilow, when the hair
+was adjusted, and they were both looking at the reflection in the glass.
+It was impossible for them not to notice that the eyes looked brighter
+than they had done of late, that there seemed to be a shadow lifted from
+the face, leaving all the lines once more in their placid youthfulness.
+The mother drew some inference that made her voice rather cheerful. "You
+do want your earrings?"
+
+"No, mamma; I shall not wear any ornaments, and I shall put on my black
+silk. Black is the only wear when one is going to refuse an offer," said
+Gwendolen, with one of her old smiles at her mother, while she rose to
+throw off her dressing-gown.
+
+"Suppose the offer is not made after all," said Mrs. Davilow, not without
+a sly intention.
+
+"Then that will be because I refuse it beforehand," said Gwendolen. "It
+comes to the same thing."
+
+There was a proud little toss of the head as she said this; and when she
+walked down-stairs in her long black robes, there was just that firm poise
+of head and elasticity of form which had lately been missing, as in a
+parched plant. Her mother thought, "She is quite herself again. It must be
+pleasure in his coming. Can her mind be really made up against him?"
+
+Gwendolen would have been rather angry if that thought had been uttered;
+perhaps all the more because through the last twenty hours, with a brief
+interruption of sleep, she had been so occupied with perpetually
+alternating images and arguments for and against the possibility of her
+marrying Grandcourt, that the conclusion which she had determined on
+beforehand ceased to have any hold on her consciousness: the alternate dip
+of counterbalancing thoughts begotten of counterbalancing desires had
+brought her into a state in which no conclusion could look fixed to her.
+She would have expressed her resolve as before; but it was a form out of
+which the blood had been sucked--no more a part of quivering life than the
+"God's will be done" of one who is eagerly watching chances. She did not
+mean to accept Grandcourt; from the first moment of receiving his letter
+she had meant to refuse him; still, that could not but prompt her to look
+the unwelcome reasons full in the face until she had a little less awe of
+them, could not hinder her imagination from filling out her knowledge in
+various ways, some of which seemed to change the aspect of what she knew.
+By dint of looking at a dubious object with a constructive imagination,
+who can give it twenty different shapes. Her indistinct grounds of
+hesitation before the interview at the Whispering Stones, at present
+counted for nothing; they were all merged in the final repulsion. If it
+had not been for that day in Cardell Chase, she said to herself now, there
+would have been no obstacle to her marrying Grandcourt. On that day and
+after it, she had not reasoned and balanced; she had acted with a force of
+impulse against which all questioning was no more than a voice against a
+torrent. The impulse had come--not only from her maidenly pride and
+jealousy, not only from the shock of another woman's calamity thrust close
+on her vision, but--from her dread of wrong-doing, which was vague, it was
+true, and aloof from the daily details of her life, but not the less
+strong. Whatever was accepted as consistent with being a lady she had no
+scruple about; but from the dim region of what was called disgraceful,
+wrong, guilty, she shrunk with mingled pride and terror; and even apart
+from shame, her feeling would have made her place any deliberate injury of
+another in the region of guilt.
+
+But now--did she know exactly what was the state of the case with regard
+to Mrs. Glasher and her children? She had given a sort of promise--had
+said, "I will not interfere with your wishes." But would another woman who
+married Grandcourt be in fact the decisive obstacle to her wishes, or be
+doing her and her boy any real injury? Might it not be just as well, nay
+better, that Grandcourt should marry? For what could not a woman do when
+she was married, if she knew how to assert herself? Here all was
+constructive imagination. Gwendolen had about as accurate a conception of
+marriage--that is to say, of the mutual influences, demands, duties of man
+and woman in the state of matrimony--as she had of magnetic currents and
+the law of storms.
+
+"Mamma managed baldly," was her way of summing up what she had seen of her
+mother's experience: she herself would manage quite differently. And the
+trials of matrimony were the last theme into which Mrs. Davilow could
+choose to enter fully with this daughter.
+
+"I wonder what mamma and my uncle would say if they knew about Mrs.
+Glasher!" thought Gwendolen in her inward debating; not that she could
+imagine herself telling them, even if she had not felt bound to silence.
+"I wonder what anybody would say; or what they would say to Mr.
+Grandcourt's marrying some one else and having other children!" To
+consider what "anybody" would say, was to be released from the difficulty
+of judging where everything was obscure to her when feeling had ceased to
+be decisive. She had only to collect her memories, which proved to her
+that "anybody" regarded the illegitimate children as more rightfully to be
+looked shy on and deprived of social advantages than illegitimate fathers.
+The verdict of "anybody" seemed to be that she had no reason to concern
+herself greatly on behalf of Mrs. Glasher and her children.
+
+But there was another way in which they had caused her concern. What
+others might think, could not do away with a feeling which in the first
+instance would hardly be too strongly described as indignation and
+loathing that she should have been expected to unite herself with an
+outworn life, full of backward secrets which must have been more keenly
+felt than any association with _her_. True, the question of love on her
+own part had occupied her scarcely at all in relation to Grandcourt. The
+desirability of marriage for her had always seemed due to other feeling
+than love; and to be enamored was the part of the man, on whom the
+advances depended. Gwendolen had found no objection to Grandcourt's way of
+being enamored before she had had that glimpse of his past, which she
+resented as if it had been a deliberate offense against her. His advances
+to _her_ were deliberate, and she felt a retrospective disgust for them.
+Perhaps other men's lives were of the same kind--full of secrets which
+made the ignorant suppositions of the women they wanted to marry a farce
+at which they were laughing in their sleeves.
+
+These feelings of disgust and indignation had sunk deep; and though other
+troublous experience in the last weeks had dulled them from passion into
+remembrance, it was chiefly their reverberating activity which kept her
+firm to the understanding with herself, that she was not going to accept
+Grandcourt. She had never meant to form a new determination; she had only
+been considering what might be thought or said. If anything could have
+induced her to change, it would have been the prospect of making all
+things easy for "poor mamma:" that, she admitted, was a temptation. But
+no! she was going to refuse him. Meanwhile, the thought that he was coming
+to be refused was inspiriting: she had the white reins in her hands again;
+there was a new current in her frame, reviving her from the beaten-down
+consciousness in which she had been left by the interview with Klesmer.
+She was not now going to crave an opinion of her capabilities; she was
+going to exercise her power.
+
+Was this what made her heart palpitate annoyingly when she heard the
+horse's footsteps on the gravel?--when Miss Merry, who opened the door to
+Grandcourt, came to tell her that he was in the drawing-room? The hours of
+preparation and the triumph of the situation were apparently of no use:
+she might as well have seen Grandcourt coming suddenly on her in the midst
+of her despondency. While walking into the drawing-room, she had to
+concentrate all her energy in that self-control, which made her appear
+gravely gracious--as she gave her hand to him, and answered his hope that
+she was quite well in a voice as low and languid as his own. A moment
+afterward, when they were both of them seated on two of the wreath-painted
+chairs--Gwendolen upright with downcast eyelids, Grandcourt about two
+yards distant, leaning one arm over the back of his chair and looking at
+her, while he held his hat in his left hand--any one seeing them as a
+picture would have concluded that they were in some stage of love-making
+suspense. And certainly the love-making had begun: she already felt
+herself being wooed by this silent man seated at an agreeable distance,
+with the subtlest atmosphere of attar of roses and an attention bent
+wholly on her. And he also considered himself to be wooing: he was not a
+man to suppose that his presence carried no consequences; and he was
+exactly the man to feel the utmost piquancy in a girl whom he had not
+found quite calculable.
+
+"I was disappointed not to find you at Leubronn," he began, his usual
+broken drawl having just a shade of amorous languor in it. "The place was
+intolerable without you. A mere kennel of a place. Don't you think so?"
+
+"I can't judge what it would be without myself," said Gwendolen, turning
+her eyes on him, with some recovered sense of mischief. "_With_ myself I
+like it well enough to have stayed longer, if I could. But I was obliged
+to come home on account of family troubles."
+
+"It was very cruel of you to go to Leubronn," said Grandcourt, taking no
+notice of the troubles, on which Gwendolen--she hardly knew why--wished
+that there should be a clear understanding at once. "You must have known
+that it would spoil everything: you knew you were the heart and soul of
+everything that went on. Are you quite reckless about me?"
+
+It would be impossible to say "yes" in a tone that would be taken
+seriously; equally impossible to say "no;" but what else could she say? In
+her difficulty, she turned down her eyelids again and blushed over face
+and neck. Grandcourt saw her in a new phase, and believed that she was
+showing her inclination. But he was determined that she should show it
+more decidedly.
+
+"Perhaps there is some deeper interest? Some attraction--some engagement--
+which it would have been only fair to make me aware of? Is there any man
+who stands between us?"
+
+Inwardly the answer framed itself. "No; but there is a woman." Yet how
+could she utter this? Even if she had not promised that woman to be
+silent, it would have been impossible for her to enter on the subject with
+Grandcourt. But how could she arrest his wooing by beginning to make a
+formal speech--"I perceive your intention--it is most flattering, etc."? A
+fish honestly invited to come and be eaten has a clear course in
+declining, but how if it finds itself swimming against a net? And apart
+from the network, would she have dared at once to say anything decisive?
+Gwendolen had not time to be clear on that point. As it was, she felt
+compelled to silence, and after a pause, Grandcourt said--
+
+"Am I to understand that some one else is preferred?"
+
+Gwendolen, now impatient of her own embarrassment, determined to rush at
+the difficulty and free herself. She raised her eyes again and said with
+something of her former clearness and defiance, "No"--wishing him to
+understand, "What then? I may not be ready to take _you_." There was
+nothing that Grandcourt could not understand which he perceived likely to
+affect his _amour propre_.
+
+"The last thing I would do, is to importune you. I should not hope to win
+you by making myself a bore. If there were no hope for me, I would ask you
+to tell me so at once, that I might just ride away to--no matter where."
+
+Almost to her own astonishment, Gwendolen felt a sudden alarm at the image
+of Grandcourt finally riding away. What would be left her then? Nothing
+but the former dreariness. She liked him to be there. She snatched at the
+subject that would defer any decisive answer.
+
+"I fear you are not aware of what has happened to us. I have lately had to
+think so much of my mamma's troubles, that other subjects have been quite
+thrown into the background. She has lost all her fortune, and we are going
+to leave this place. I must ask you to excuse my seeming preoccupied."
+
+In eluding a direct appeal Gwendolen recovered some of her self-
+possession. She spoke with dignity and looked straight at Grandcourt,
+whose long, narrow, impenetrable eyes met hers, and mysteriously arrested
+them: mysteriously; for the subtly-varied drama between man and woman is
+often such as can hardly be rendered in words put together like dominoes,
+according to obvious fixed marks. The word of all work, Love, will no more
+express the myriad modes of mutual attraction, than the word Thought can
+inform you what is passing through your neighbor's mind. It would be hard
+to tell on which side--Gwendolen's or Grandcourt's--the influence was more
+mixed. At that moment his strongest wish was to be completely master of
+this creature--this piquant combination of maidenliness and mischief: that
+she knew things which had made her start away from him, spurred him to
+triumph over that repugnance; and he was believing that he should triumph.
+And she--ah, piteous equality in the need to dominate!--she was overcome
+like the thirsty one who is drawn toward the seeming water in the desert,
+overcome by the suffused sense that here in this man's homage to her lay
+the rescue from helpless subjection to an oppressive lot.
+
+All the while they were looking at each other; and Grandcourt said, slowly
+and languidly, as if it were of no importance, other things having been
+settled--
+
+"You will tell me now, I hope, that Mrs. Davilow's loss of fortune will
+not trouble you further. You will trust me to prevent it from weighing
+upon her. You will give me the claim to provide against that."
+
+The little pauses and refined drawlings with which this speech was
+uttered, gave time for Gwendolen to go through the dream of a life. As the
+words penetrated her, they had the effect of a draught of wine, which
+suddenly makes all things easier, desirable things not so wrong, and
+people in general less disagreeable. She had a momentary phantasmal love
+for this man who chose his words so well, and who was a mere incarnation
+of delicate homage. Repugnance, dread, scruples--these were dim as
+remembered pains, while she was already tasting relief under the immediate
+pain of hopelessness. She imagined herself already springing to her
+mother, and being playful again. Yet when Grandcourt had ceased to speak,
+there was an instant in which she was conscious of being at the turning of
+the ways.
+
+"You are very generous," she said, not moving her eyes, and speaking with
+a gentle intonation.
+
+"You accept what will make such things a matter of course?" said
+Grandcourt, without any new eagerness. "You consent to become my wife?"
+
+This time Gwendolen remained quite pale. Something made her rise from her
+seat in spite of herself and walk to a little distance. Then she turned
+and with her hands folded before her stood in silence.
+
+Grandcourt immediately rose too, resting his hat on the chair, but still
+keeping hold of it. The evident hesitation of this destitute girl to take
+his splendid offer stung him into a keenness of interest such as he had
+not known for years. None the less because he attributed her hesitation
+entirely to her knowledge about Mrs. Glasher. In that attitude of
+preparation, he said--
+
+"Do you command me to go?" No familiar spirit could have suggested to him
+more effective words.
+
+"No," said Gwendolen. She could not let him go: that negative was a
+clutch. She seemed to herself to be, after all, only drifted toward the
+tremendous decision--but drifting depends on something besides the
+currents when the sails have been set beforehand.
+
+"You accept my devotion?" said Grandcourt, holding his hat by his side and
+looking straight into her eyes, without other movement. Their eyes meeting
+in that way seemed to allow any length of pause: but wait as long as she
+would, how could she contradict herself! What had she detained him for? He
+had shut out any explanation.
+
+"Yes," came as gravely from Gwendolen's lips as if she had been answering
+to her name in a court of justice. He received it gravely, and they still
+looked at each other in the same attitude. Was there ever such a way
+before of accepting the bliss-giving "Yes"? Grandcourt liked better to be
+at that distance from her, and to feel under a ceremony imposed by an
+indefinable prohibition that breathed from Gwendolen's bearing.
+
+But he did at length lay down his hat and advance to take her hand, just
+pressing his lips upon it and letting it go again. She thought his
+behavior perfect, and gained a sense of freedom which made her almost
+ready to be mischievous. Her "Yes" entailed so little at this moment that
+there was nothing to screen the reversal of her gloomy prospects; her
+vision was filled by her own release from the Momperts, and her mother's
+release from Sawyer's Cottage. With a happy curl of the lips, she said--
+
+"Will you not see mamma? I will fetch her."
+
+"Let us wait a little," said Grandcourt, in his favorite attitude, having
+his left forefinger and thumb in his waist-coat pocket, and with his right
+hand caressing his whisker, while he stood near Gwendolen and looked at
+her--not unlike a gentleman who has a felicitous introduction at an
+evening party.
+
+"Have you anything else to say to me," said Gwendolen, playfully.
+
+"Yes--I know having things said to you is a great bore," said Grandcourt,
+rather sympathetically.
+
+"Not when they are things I like to hear."
+
+"Will it bother you to be asked how soon we can be married?"
+
+"I think it will, to-day," said Gwendolen, putting up her chin saucily.
+
+"Not to-day, then, but to-morrow. Think of it before I come to-morrow. In
+a fortnight--or three weeks--as soon as possible."
+
+"Ah, you think you will be tired of my company," said Gwendolen. "I notice
+when people are married the husband is not so much with his wife as when
+they are engaged. But perhaps I shall like that better, too."
+
+She laughed charmingly.
+
+"You shall have whatever you like," said Grandcourt.
+
+"And nothing that I don't like?--please say that; because I think I
+dislike what I don't like more than I like what I like," said Gwendolen,
+finding herself in the woman's paradise, where all her nonsense is
+adorable.
+
+Grandcourt paused; these were subtilties in which he had much experience
+of his own. "I don't know--this is such a brute of a world, things are
+always turning up that one doesn't like. I can't always hinder your being
+bored. If you like to ride Criterion, I can't hinder his coming down by
+some chance or other."
+
+"Ah, my friend Criterion, how is he?"
+
+"He is outside: I made the groom ride him, that you might see him. He had
+the side-saddle on for an hour or two yesterday. Come to the window and
+look at him."
+
+They could see the two horses being taken slowly round the sweep, and the
+beautiful creatures, in their fine grooming, sent a thrill of exultation
+through Gwendolen. They were the symbols of command and luxury, in
+delightful contrast with the ugliness of poverty and humiliation at which
+she had lately been looking close.
+
+"Will you ride Criterion to-morrow?" said Grandcourt. "If you will,
+everything shall be arranged."
+
+"I should like it of all things," said Gwendolen. "I want to lose myself
+in a gallop again. But now I must go and fetch mamma."
+
+"Take my arm to the door, then," said Grandcourt, and she accepted. Their
+faces were very near each other, being almost on a level, and he was
+looking at her. She thought his manners as a lover more agreeable than any
+she had seen described. She had no alarm lest he meant to kiss her, and
+was so much at her ease, that she suddenly paused in the middle of the
+room and said half archly, half earnestly--
+
+"Oh, while I think of it--there is something I dislike that you can save
+me from. I do _not_ like Mr. Lush's company."
+
+"You shall not have it. I'll get rid of him."
+
+"You are not fond of him yourself?"
+
+"Not in the least. I let him hang on me because he has always been a poor
+devil," said Grandcourt, in an _adagio_ of utter indifference. "They got
+him to travel with me when I was a lad. He was always that coarse-haired
+kind of brute--sort of cross between a hog and a _dilettante_."
+
+Gwendolen laughed. All that seemed kind and natural enough: Grandcourt's
+fastidiousness enhanced the kindness. And when they reached the door, his
+way of opening it for her was the perfection of easy homage. Really, she
+thought, he was likely to be the least disagreeable of husbands.
+
+Mrs. Davilow was waiting anxiously in her bed-room when Gwendolen entered,
+stepped toward her quickly, and kissing her on both cheeks said in a low
+tone, "Come down, mamma, and see Mr. Grandcourt. I am engaged to him."
+
+"My darling child," said Mrs. Davilow, with a surprise that was rather
+solemn than glad.
+
+"Yes," said Gwendolen, in the same tone, and with a quickness which
+implied that it was needless to ask questions. "Everything is settled. You
+are not going to Sawyer's Cottage, I am not going to be inspected by Mrs.
+Mompert, and everything is to be as I like. So come down with me
+immediately."
+
+
+
+
+BOOK IV--GWENDOLEN GETS HER CHOICE.
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+ "Il est plus aise de connoitre l'homme en general que de connoitre un
+ homme en particulier.--LA ROCHEFOUCAULD."
+
+
+An hour after Grandcourt had left, the important news of Gwendolen's
+engagement was known at the rectory, and Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne, with
+Anna, spent the evening at Offendene.
+
+"My dear, let me congratulate you on having created a strong attachment,"
+said the rector. "You look serious, and I don't wonder at it: a lifelong
+union is a solemn thing. But from the way Mr. Grandcourt has acted and
+spoken I think we may already see some good arising out of our adversity.
+It has given you an opportunity of observing your future husband's
+delicate liberality."
+
+Mr. Gascoigne referred to Grandcourt's mode of implying that he would
+provide for Mrs. Davilow--a part of the love-making which Gwendolen had
+remembered to cite to her mother with perfect accuracy.
+
+"But I have no doubt that Mr. Grandcourt would have behaved quite as
+handsomely if you had not gone away to Germany, Gwendolen, and had been
+engaged to him, as you no doubt might have been, more than a month ago,"
+said Mrs. Gascoigne, feeling that she had to discharge a duty on this
+occasion. "But now there is no more room for caprice; indeed, I trust you
+have no inclination to any. A woman has a great debt of gratitude to a man
+who perseveres in making her such an offer. But no doubt you feel
+properly."
+
+"I am not at all sure that I do, aunt," said Gwendolen, with saucy
+gravity. "I don't know everything it is proper to feel on being engaged."
+
+The rector patted her shoulder and smiled as at a bit of innocent
+naughtiness, and his wife took his behavior as an indication that she was
+not to be displeased. As for Anna, she kissed Gwendolen and said, "I do
+hope you will be happy," but then sank into the background and tried to
+keep the tears back too. In the late days she had been imagining a little
+romance about Rex--how if he still longed for Gwendolen her heart might be
+softened by trouble into love, so that they could by-and-by be married.
+And the romance had turned to a prayer that she, Anna, might be able to
+rejoice like a good sister, and only think of being useful in working for
+Gwendolen, as long as Rex was not rich. But now she wanted grace to
+rejoice in something else. Miss Merry and the four girls, Alice with the
+high shoulders, Bertha and Fanny the whisperers, and Isabel the listener,
+were all present on this family occasion, when everything seemed
+appropriately turning to the honor and glory of Gwendolen, and real life
+was as interesting as "Sir Charles Grandison." The evening passed chiefly
+in decisive remarks from the rector, in answer to conjectures from the two
+elder ladies. According to him, the case was not one in which he could
+think it his duty to mention settlements: everything must, and doubtless
+would safely be left to Mr. Grandcourt.
+
+"I should like to know exactly what sort of places Ryelands and Gadsmere
+are," said Mrs. Davilow.
+
+"Gadsmere, I believe, is a secondary place," said Mr. Gascoigne; "But
+Ryelands I know to be one of our finest seats. The park is extensive and
+the woods of a very valuable order. The house was built by Inigo Jones,
+and the ceilings are painted in the Italian style. The estate is said to
+be worth twelve thousand a year, and there are two livings, one a rectory,
+in the gift of the Grandcourts. There may be some burdens on the land.
+Still, Mr. Grandcourt was an only child."
+
+"It would be most remarkable," said Mrs. Gascoigne, "if he were to become
+Lord Stannery in addition to everything else. Only think: there is the
+Grandcourt estate, the Mallinger estate, _and_ the baronetcy, _and_ the
+peerage,"--she was marking off the items on her fingers, and paused on the
+fourth while she added, "but they say there will be no land coming to him
+with the peerage." It seemed a pity there was nothing for the fifth
+finger.
+
+"The peerage," said the rector, judiciously, "must be regarded as a remote
+chance. There are two cousins between the present peer and Mr. Grandcourt.
+It is certainly a serious reflection how death and other causes do
+sometimes concentrate inheritances on one man. But an excess of that kind
+is to be deprecated. To be Sir Mallinger Grandcourt Mallinger--I suppose
+that will be his style--with corresponding properties, is a valuable
+talent enough for any man to have committed to him. Let us hope it will be
+well used."
+
+"And what a position for the wife, Gwendolen!" said Mrs. Gascoigne; "a
+great responsibility indeed. But you must lose no time in writing to Mrs.
+Mompert, Henry. It is a good thing that you have an engagement of marriage
+to offer as an excuse, else she might feel offended. She is rather a high
+woman."
+
+"I am rid of that horror," thought Gwendolen, to whom the name of Mompert
+had become a sort of Mumbo-jumbo. She was very silent through the evening,
+and that night could hardly sleep at all in her little white bed. It was a
+rarity in her strong youth to be wakeful: and perhaps a still greater
+rarity for her to be careful that her mother should not know of her
+restlessness. But her state of mind was altogether new: she who had been
+used to feel sure of herself, and ready to manage others, had just taken a
+decisive step which she had beforehand thought that she would not take--
+nay, perhaps, was bound not to take. She could not go backward now; she
+liked a great deal of what lay before her; and there was nothing for her
+to like if she went back. But her resolution was dogged by the shadow of
+that previous resolve which had at first come as the undoubting movement
+of her whole being. While she lay on her pillow with wide-open eyes,
+"looking on darkness which the blind do see," she was appalled by the idea
+that she was going to do what she had once started away from with
+repugnance. It was new to her that a question of right or wrong in her
+conduct should rouse her terror; she had known no compunction that atoning
+caresses and presents could not lay to rest. But here had come a moment
+when something like a new consciousness was awaked. She seemed on the edge
+of adopting deliberately, as a notion for all the rest of her life, what
+she had rashly said in her bitterness, when her discovery had driven her
+away to Leubronn:--that it did not signify what she did; she had only to
+amuse herself as best she could. That lawlessness, that casting away of
+all care for justification, suddenly frightened her: it came to her with
+the shadowy array of possible calamity behind it--calamity which had
+ceased to be a mere name for her; and all the infiltrated influences of
+disregarded religious teaching, as well as the deeper impressions of
+something awful and inexorable enveloping her, seemed to concentrate
+themselves in the vague conception of avenging power. The brilliant
+position she had longed for, the imagined freedom she would create for
+herself in marriage, the deliverance from the dull insignificance of her
+girlhood--all immediately before her; and yet they had come to her hunger
+like food with the taint of sacrilege upon it, which she must snatch with
+terror. In the darkness and loneliness of her little bed, her more
+resistant self could not act against the first onslaught of dread after
+her irrevocable decision. That unhappy-faced woman and her children--
+Grandcourt and his relations with her--kept repeating themselves in her
+imagination like the clinging memory of a disgrace, and gradually
+obliterated all other thought, leaving only the consciousness that she had
+taken those scenes into her life. Her long wakefulness seemed a delirium;
+a faint, faint light penetrated beside the window-curtain; the chillness
+increased. She could bear it no longer, and cried "Mamma!"
+
+"Yes, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, immediately, in a wakeful voice.
+
+"Let me come to you."
+
+She soon went to sleep on her mother's shoulder, and slept on till late,
+when, dreaming of a lit-up ball-room, she opened her eyes on her mother
+standing by the bedside with a small packet in her hand.
+
+"I am sorry to wake you, darling, but I thought it better to give you this
+at once. The groom has brought Criterion; he has come on another horse,
+and says he is to stay here."
+
+Gwendolen sat up in bed and opened the packet. It was a delicate enameled
+casket, and inside was a splendid diamond ring with a letter which
+contained a folded bit of colored paper and these words:--
+
+ Pray wear this ring when I come at twelve in sign of our betrothal. I
+ enclose a check drawn in the name of Mr. Gascoigne, for immediate
+ expenses. Of course Mrs. Davilow will remain at Offendene, at least
+ for some time. I hope, when I come, you will have granted me an early
+ day, when you may begin to command me at a shorter distance.
+
+ Yours devotedly,
+
+ H. M. GRANDCOURT.
+
+The checks was for five hundred pounds, and Gwendolen turned it toward her
+mother, with the letter.
+
+"How very kind and delicate!" said Mrs. Davilow, with much feeling. "But I
+really should like better not to be dependent on a son-in-law. I and the
+girls could get along very well."
+
+"Mamma, if you say that again, I will not marry him," said Gwendolen,
+angrily.
+
+"My dear child, I trust you are not going to marry only for my sake," said
+Mrs. Davilow, depreciatingly.
+
+Gwendolen tossed her head on the pillow away from her mother, and let the
+ring lie. She was irritated at this attempt to take away a motive. Perhaps
+the deeper cause of her irritation was the consciousness that she was not
+going to marry solely for her mamma's sake--that she was drawn toward the
+marriage in ways against which stronger reasons than her mother's
+renunciation were yet not strong enough to hinder her. She had waked up to
+the signs that she was irrevocably engaged, and all the ugly visions, the
+alarms, the arguments of the night, must be met by daylight, in which
+probably they would show themselves weak. "What I long for is your
+happiness, dear," continued Mrs. Davilow, pleadingly. "I will not say
+anything to vex you. Will you not put on the ring?"
+
+For a few moments Gwendolen did not answer, but her thoughts were active.
+At last she raised herself with a determination to do as she would do if
+she had started on horseback, and go on with spirit, whatever ideas might
+be running in her head.
+
+"I thought the lover always put on the betrothal ring himself," she said
+laughingly, slipping the ring on her finger, and looking at it with a
+charming movement of her head. "I know why he has sent it," she added,
+nodding at her mamma.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"He would rather make me put it on than ask me to let him do it. Aha! he
+is very proud. But so am I. We shall match each other. I should hate a man
+who went down on his knees, and came fawning on me. He really is not
+disgusting."
+
+"That is very moderate praise, Gwen."
+
+"No, it is not, for a man," said Gwendolen gaily. "But now I must get up
+and dress. Will you come and do my hair, mamma, dear," she went on,
+drawing down her mamma's face to caress it with her own cheeks, "and not
+be so naughty any more as to talk of living in poverty? You must bear to
+be made comfortable, even if you don't like it. And Mr. Grandcourt behaves
+perfectly, now, does he not?"
+
+"Certainly he does," said Mrs. Davilow, encouraged, and persuaded that
+after all Gwendolen was fond of her betrothed. She herself thought him a
+man whose attentions were likely to tell on a girl's feeling. Suitors must
+often be judged as words are, by the standing and the figure they make in
+polite society: it is difficult to know much else of them. And all the
+mother's anxiety turned not on Grandcourt's character, but on Gwendolen's
+mood in accepting him.
+
+The mood was necessarily passing through a new phase this morning. Even in
+the hour of making her toilet, she had drawn on all the knowledge she had
+for grounds to justify her marriage. And what she most dwelt on was the
+determination, that when she was Grandcourt's wife, she would urge him to
+the most liberal conduct toward Mrs. Glasher's children.
+
+"Of what use would it be to her that I should not marry him? He could have
+married her if he liked; but he did _not_ like. Perhaps she is to blame
+for that. There must be a great deal about her that I know nothing of. And
+he must have been good to her in many ways, else she would not have wanted
+to marry him."
+
+But that last argument at once began to appear doubtful. Mrs. Glasher
+naturally wished to exclude other children who would stand between
+Grandcourt and her own: and Gwendolen's comprehension of this feeling
+prompted another way of reconciling claims.
+
+"Perhaps we shall have no children. I hope we shall not. And he might
+leave the estate to the pretty little boy. My uncle said that Mr.
+Grandcourt could do as he liked with the estates. Only when Sir Hugo
+Mallinger dies there will be enough for two."
+
+This made Mrs. Glasher appear quite unreasonable in demanding that her boy
+should be sole heir; and the double property was a security that
+Grandcourt's marriage would do her no wrong, when the wife was Gwendolen
+Harleth with all her proud resolution not to be fairly accused. This
+maiden had been accustomed to think herself blameless; other persons only
+were faulty.
+
+It was striking, that in the hold which this argument of her doing no
+wrong to Mrs. Glasher had taken on her mind, her repugnance to the idea of
+Grandcourt's past had sunk into a subordinate feeling. The terror she had
+felt in the night-watches at overstepping the border of wickedness by
+doing what she had at first felt to be wrong, had dulled any emotions
+about his conduct. She was thinking of him, whatever he might be, as a man
+over whom she was going to have indefinite power; and her loving him
+having never been a question with her, any agreeableness he had was so
+much gain. Poor Gwendolen had no awe of unmanageable forces in the state
+of matrimony, but regarded it as altogether a matter of management, in
+which she would know how to act. In relation to Grandcourt's past she
+encouraged new doubts whether he were likely to have differed much from
+other men; and she devised little schemes for learning what was expected
+of men in general.
+
+But whatever else might be true in the world, her hair was dressed
+suitably for riding, and she went down in her riding-habit, to avoid delay
+before getting on horseback. She wanted to have her blood stirred once
+more with the intoxication of youth, and to recover the daring with which
+she had been used to think of her course in life. Already a load was
+lifted off her; for in daylight and activity it was less oppressive to
+have doubts about her choice, than to feel that she had no choice but to
+endure insignificance and servitude.
+
+"Go back and make yourself look like a duchess, mamma," she said, turning
+suddenly as she was going down-stairs. "Put your point-lace over your
+head. I must have you look like a duchess. You must not take things
+humbly."
+
+When Grandcourt raised her left hand gently and looked at the ring, she
+said gravely, "It was very good of you to think of everything and send me
+that packet."
+
+"You will tell me if there is anything I forget?" he said, keeping the
+hand softly within his own. "I will do anything you wish."
+
+"But I am very unreasonable in my wishes," said Gwendolen, smiling.
+
+"Yes, I expect that. Women always are."
+
+"Then I will not be unreasonable," said Gwendolen, taking away her hand
+and tossing her head saucily. "I will not be told that I am what women
+always are."
+
+"I did not say that," said Grandcourt, looking at her with his usual
+gravity. "You are what no other woman is."
+
+"And what is that, pray?" said Gwendolen, moving to a distance with a
+little air of menace.
+
+Grandcourt made his pause before he answered. "You are the woman I love."
+
+"Oh, what nice speeches!" said Gwendolen, laughing. The sense of that love
+which he must once have given to another woman under strange circumstances
+was getting familiar.
+
+"Give me a nice speech in return. Say when we are to be married."
+
+"Not yet. Not till we have had a gallop over the downs. I am so thirsty
+for that, I can think of nothing else. I wish the hunting had begun.
+Sunday the twentieth, twenty-seventh, Monday, Tuesday." Gwendolen was
+counting on her fingers with the prettiest nod while she looked at
+Grandcourt, and at last swept one palm over the other while she said
+triumphantly, "It will begin in ten days!"
+
+"Let us be married in ten days, then," said Grandcourt, "and we shall not
+be bored about the stables."
+
+"What do women always say in answer to that?" said Gwendolen,
+mischievously.
+
+"They agree to it," said the lover, rather off his guard.
+
+"Then I will not!" said Gwendolen, taking up her gauntlets and putting
+them on, while she kept her eyes on him with gathering fun in them.
+
+The scene was pleasant on both sides. A cruder lover would have lost the
+view of her pretty ways and attitudes, and spoiled all by stupid attempts
+at caresses, utterly destructive of drama. Grandcourt preferred the drama;
+and Gwendolen, left at ease, found her spirits rising continually as she
+played at reigning. Perhaps if Klesmer had seen more of her in this
+unconscious kind of acting, instead of when she was trying to be
+theatrical, he might have rated her chance higher.
+
+When they had had a glorious gallop, however, she was in a state of
+exhilaration that disposed her to think well of hastening the marriage
+which would make her life all of apiece with this splendid kind of
+enjoyment. She would not debate any more about an act to which she had
+committed herself; and she consented to fix the wedding on that day three
+weeks, notwithstanding the difficulty of fulfilling the customary laws of
+the _trousseau_.
+
+Lush, of course, was made aware of the engagement by abundant signs,
+without being formally told. But he expected some communication as a
+consequence of it, and after a few days he became rather impatient under
+Grandcourt's silence, feeling sure that the change would affect his
+personal prospects, and wishing to know exactly how. His tactics no longer
+included any opposition--which he did not love for its own sake. He might
+easily cause Grandcourt a great deal of annoyance, but it would be to his
+own injury, and to create annoyance was not a motive with him. Miss
+Gwendolen he would certainly not have been sorry to frustrate a little,
+but--after all there was no knowing what would come. It was nothing new
+that Grandcourt should show a perverse wilfulness; yet in his freak about
+this girl he struck Lush rather newly as something like a man who was
+_fey_--led on by an ominous fatality; and that one born to his fortune
+should make a worse business of his life than was necessary, seemed really
+pitiable. Having protested against the marriage, Lush had a second-sight
+for its evil consequences. Grandcourt had been taking the pains to write
+letters and give orders himself instead of employing Lush, and appeared to
+be ignoring his usefulness, even choosing, against the habit of years, to
+breakfast alone in his dressing-room. But a _tete-a-tete_ was not to be
+avoided in a house empty of guests; and Lush hastened to use an
+opportunity of saying--it was one day after dinner, for there were
+difficulties in Grandcourt's dining at Offendene--
+
+"And when is the marriage to take place?"
+
+Grandcourt, who drank little wine, had left the table and was lounging,
+while he smoked, in an easy chair near the hearth, where a fire of oak
+boughs was gaping to its glowing depths, and edging them with a delicate
+tint of ashes delightful to behold. The chair of red-brown velvet brocade
+was a becoming back-ground for his pale-tinted, well-cut features and
+exquisite long hands. Omitting the cigar, you might have imagined him a
+portrait by Moroni, who would have rendered wonderfully the impenetrable
+gaze and air of distinction; and a portrait by that great master would
+have been quite as lively a companion as Grandcourt was disposed to be.
+But he answered without unusual delay.
+
+"On the tenth."
+
+"I suppose you intend to remain here."
+
+"We shall go to Ryelands for a little while; but we shall return here for
+the sake of the hunting."
+
+After this word there was the languid inarticulate sound frequent with
+Grandcourt when he meant to continue speaking, and Lush waited for
+something more. Nothing came, and he was going to put another question,
+when the inarticulate sound began again and introduced the mildly uttered
+suggestion--
+
+"You had better make some new arrangement for yourself."
+
+"What! I am to cut and run?" said Lush, prepared to be good-tempered on
+the occasion.
+
+"Something of that kind."
+
+"The bride objects to me. I hope she will make up to you for the want of
+my services."
+
+"I can't help your being so damnably disagreeable to women," said
+Grandcourt, in soothing apology.
+
+"To one woman, if you please."
+
+"It makes no difference since she is the one in question."
+
+"I suppose I am not to be turned adrift after fifteen years without some
+provision."
+
+"You must have saved something out of me."
+
+"Deuced little. I have often saved something for you."
+
+"You can have three hundred a year. But you must live in town and be ready
+to look after things when I want you. I shall be rather hard up."
+
+"If you are not going to be at Ryelands this winter, I might run down
+there and let you know how Swinton goes on."
+
+"If you like. I don't care a toss where you are, so that you keep out of
+sight."
+
+"Much obliged," said Lush, able to take the affair more easily than he had
+expected. He was supported by the secret belief that he should by-and-by
+be wanted as much as ever.
+
+"Perhaps you will not object to packing up as soon as possible," said
+Grandcourt. "The Torringtons are coming, and Miss Harleth will be riding
+over here."
+
+"With all my heart. Can't I be of use in going to Gadsmere."
+
+"No. I am going myself."
+
+"About your being rather hard up. Have you thought of that plan--"
+
+"Just leave me alone, will you?" said Grandcourt, in his lowest audible
+tone, tossing his cigar into the fire, and rising to walk away.
+
+He spent the evening in the solitude of the smaller drawing-room, where,
+with various new publications on the table of the kind a gentleman may
+like to have on hand without touching, he employed himself (as a
+philosopher might have done) in sitting meditatively on the sofa and
+abstaining from literature--political, comic, cynical, or romantic. In
+this way hours may pass surprisingly soon, without the arduous invisible
+chase of philosophy; not from love of thought, but from hatred of effort--
+from a state of the inward world, something like premature age, where the
+need for action lapses into a mere image of what has been, is, and may or
+might be; where impulse is born and dies in a phantasmal world, pausing in
+rejection of even a shadowy fulfillment. That is a condition which often
+comes with whitening hair; and sometimes, too, an intense obstinacy and
+tenacity of rule, like the main trunk of an exorbitant egoism, conspicuous
+in proportion as the varied susceptibilities of younger years are stripped
+away.
+
+But Grandcourt's hair, though he had not much of it, was of a fine, sunny
+blonde, and his moods were not entirely to be explained as ebbing energy.
+We mortals have a strange spiritual chemistry going on within us, so that
+a lazy stagnation or even a cottony milkiness may be preparing one knows
+not what biting or explosive material. The navvy waking from sleep and
+without malice heaving a stone to crush the life out of his still sleeping
+comrade, is understood to lack the trained motive which makes a character
+fairly calculable in its actions; but by a roundabout course even a
+gentleman may make of himself a chancy personage, raising an uncertainty
+as to what he may do next, that sadly spoils companionship.
+
+Grandcourt's thoughts this evening were like the circlets one sees in a
+dark pool, continually dying out and continually started again by some
+impulse from below the surface. The deeper central impulse came from the
+image of Gwendolen; but the thoughts it stirred would be imperfectly
+illustrated by a reference to the amatory poets of all ages. It was
+characteristic that he got none of his satisfaction from the belief that
+Gwendolen was in love with him; and that love had overcome the jealous
+resentment which had made her run away from him. On the contrary, he
+believed that this girl was rather exceptional in the fact that, in spite
+of his assiduous attention to her, she was not in love with him; and it
+seemed to him very likely that if it had not been for the sudden poverty
+which had come over her family, she would not have accepted him. From the
+very first there had been an exasperating fascination in the tricksiness
+with which she had--not met his advances, but--wheeled away from them. She
+had been brought to accept him in spite of everything--brought to kneel
+down like a horse under training for the arena, though she might have an
+objection to it all the while. On the whole, Grandcourt got more pleasure
+out of this notion than he could have done out of winning a girl of whom
+he was sure that she had a strong inclination for him personally. And yet
+this pleasure in mastering reluctance flourished along with the habitual
+persuasion that no woman whom he favored could be quite indifferent to his
+personal influence; and it seemed to him not unlikely that by-and-by
+Gwendolen might be more enamored of him than he of her. In any case, she
+would have to submit; and he enjoyed thinking of her as his future wife,
+whose pride and spirit were suited to command every one but himself. He
+had no taste for a woman who was all tenderness to him, full of
+petitioning solicitude and willing obedience. He meant to be master of a
+woman who would have liked to master him, and who perhaps would have been
+capable of mastering another man.
+
+Lush, having failed in his attempted reminder to Grandcourt, thought it
+well to communicate with Sir Hugo, in whom, as a man having perhaps
+interest enough to command the bestowal of some place where the work was
+light, gentlemanly, and not ill-paid, he was anxious to cultivate a sense
+of friendly obligation, not feeling at all secure against the future need
+of such a place. He wrote the following letter, and addressed it to Park
+Lane, whither he knew the family had returned from Leubronn:--
+
+ MY DEAR SIR HUGO--Since we came home the marriage has been absolutely
+ decided on, and is to take place in less than three weeks. It is so
+ far the worse for him that her mother has lately lost all her fortune,
+ and he will have to find supplies. Grandcourt, I know, is feeling the
+ want of cash; and unless some other plan is resorted to, he will be
+ raising money in a foolish way. I am going to leave Diplow
+ immediately, and I shall not be able to start the topic. What I should
+ advise is, that Mr. Deronda, who I know has your confidence, should
+ propose to come and pay a short visit here, according to invitation
+ (there are going to be other people in the house), and that you should
+ put him fully in possession of your wishes and the possible extent of
+ your offer. Then, that he should introduce the subject to Grandcourt
+ so as not to imply that you suspect any particular want of money on
+ his part, but only that there is a strong wish on yours, What I have
+ formerly said to him has been in the way of a conjecture that you
+ might be willing to give a good sum for his chance of Diplow; but if
+ Mr. Deronda came armed with a definite offer, that would take another
+ sort of hold. Ten to one he will not close for some time to come; but
+ the proposal will have got a stronger lodgment in his mind; and though
+ at present he has a great notion of the hunting here, I see a
+ likelihood, under the circumstances, that he will get a distaste for
+ the neighborhood, and there will be the notion of the money sticking
+ by him without being urged. I would bet on your ultimate success. As I
+ am not to be exiled to Siberia, but am to be within call, it is
+ possible that, by and by, I may be of more service to you. But at
+ present I can think of no medium so good as Mr. Deronda. Nothing puts
+ Grandcourt in worse humor than having the lawyers thrust their paper
+ under his nose uninvited.
+
+ Trusting that your visit to Leubronn has put you in excellent
+ condition for the winter, I remain, my dear Sir Hugo,
+
+ Yours very faithfully,
+
+ THOMAS CRANMER LUSH.
+
+Sir Hugo, having received this letter at breakfast, handed it to Deronda,
+who, though he had chambers in town, was somehow hardly ever in them, Sir
+Hugo not being contented without him. The chatty baronet would have liked
+a young companion even if there had been no peculiar reasons for
+attachment between them: one with a fine harmonious unspoiled face fitted
+to keep up a cheerful view of posterity and inheritance generally,
+notwithstanding particular disappointments; and his affection for Deronda
+was not diminished by the deep-lying though not obtrusive difference in
+their notions and tastes. Perhaps it was all the stronger; acting as the
+same sort of difference does between a man and a woman in giving a
+piquancy to the attachment which subsists in spite of it. Sir Hugo did not
+think unapprovingly of himself; but he looked at men and society from a
+liberal-menagerie point of view, and he had a certain pride in Deronda's
+differing from him, which, if it had found voice, might have said--"You
+see this fine young fellow--not such as you see every day, is he?--he
+belongs to me in a sort of way. I brought him up from a child; but you
+would not ticket him off easily, he has notions of his own, and he's as
+far as the poles asunder from what I was at his age." This state of
+feeling was kept up by the mental balance in Deronda, who was moved by an
+affectionateness such as we are apt to call feminine, disposing him to
+yield in ordinary details, while he had a certain inflexibility of
+judgment, and independence of opinion, held to be rightfully masculine.
+
+When he had read the letter, he returned it without speaking, inwardly
+wincing under Lush's mode of attributing a neutral usefulness to him in
+the family affairs.
+
+"What do you say, Dan? It would be pleasant enough for you. You have not
+seen the place for a good many years now, and you might have a famous run
+with the harriers if you went down next week," said Sir Hugo.
+
+"I should not go on that account," said Deronda, buttering his bread
+attentively. He had an objection to this transparent kind of
+persuasiveness, which all intelligent animals are seen to treat with
+indifference. If he went to Diplow he should be doing something
+disagreeable to oblige Sir Hugo.
+
+"I think Lush's notion is a good one. And it would be a pity to lose the
+occasion."
+
+"That is a different matter--if you think my going of importance to your
+object," said Deronda, still with that aloofness of manner which implied
+some suppression. He knew that the baronet had set his heart on the
+affair.
+
+"Why, you will see the fair gambler, the Leubronn Diana, I shouldn't
+wonder," said Sir Hugo, gaily. "We shall have to invite her to the Abbey,
+when they are married," he added, turning to Lady Mallinger, as if she too
+had read the letter.
+
+"I cannot conceive whom you mean," said Lady Mallinger, who in fact had
+not been listening, her mind having been taken up with her first sips of
+coffee, the objectionable cuff of her sleeve, and the necessity of
+carrying Theresa to the dentist--innocent and partly laudable
+preoccupations, as the gentle lady's usually were. Should her appearance
+be inquired after, let it be said that she had reddish blonde hair (the
+hair of the period), a small Roman nose, rather prominent blue eyes and
+delicate eyelids, with a figure which her thinner friends called fat, her
+hands showing curves and dimples like a magnified baby's.
+
+"I mean that Grandcourt is going to marry the girl you saw at Leubronn--
+don't you remember her--the Miss Harleth who used to play at roulette."
+
+"Dear me! Is that a good match for him?"
+
+"That depends on the sort of goodness he wants," said Sir Hugo, smiling.
+"However, she and her friends have nothing, and she will bring him
+expenses. It's a good match for my purposes, because if I am willing to
+fork out a sum of money, he may be willing to give up his chance of
+Diplow, so that we shall have it out and out, and when I die you will have
+the consolation of going to the place you would like to go to--wherever I
+may go."
+
+"I wish you would not talk of dying in that light way, dear."
+
+"It's rather a heavy way, Lou, for I shall have to pay a heavy sum--forty
+thousand, at least."
+
+"But why are we to invite them to the Abbey?" said Lady Mallinger. "I do
+_not_ like women who gamble, like Lady Cragstone."
+
+"Oh, you will not mind her for a week. Besides, she is not like Lady
+Cragstone because she gambled a little, any more than I am like a broker
+because I'm a Whig. I want to keep Grandcourt in good humor, and to let
+him see plenty of this place, that he may think the less of Diplow. I
+don't know yet whether I shall get him to meet me in this matter. And if
+Dan were to go over on a visit there, he might hold out the bait to him.
+It would be doing me a great service." This was meant for Deronda.
+
+"Daniel is not fond of Mr. Grandcourt, I think, is he?" said Lady
+Mallinger, looking at Deronda inquiringly.
+
+"There is no avoiding everybody one doesn't happen to be fond of," said
+Deronda. "I will go to Diplow--I don't know that I have anything better to
+do--since Sir Hugo wishes it."
+
+"That's a trump!" said Sir Hugo, well pleased. "And if you don't find it
+very pleasant, it's so much experience. Nothing used to come amiss to me
+when I was young. You must see men and manners."
+
+"Yes; but I have seen that man, and something of his manners too," said
+Deronda.
+
+"Not nice manners, I think," said Lady Mallinger.
+
+"Well, you see they succeed with your sex," said Sir Hugo, provokingly.
+"And he was an uncommonly good-looking fellow when he was two or three and
+twenty--like his father. He doesn't take after his father in marrying the
+heiress, though. If he had got Miss Arrowpoint and my land too, confound
+him, he would have had a fine principality."
+
+Deronda, in anticipating the projected visit, felt less disinclination
+than when consenting to it. The story of that girl's marriage did interest
+him: what he had heard through Lush of her having run away from the suit
+of the man she was now going to take as a husband, had thrown a new sort
+of light on her gambling; and it was probably the transition from that
+fevered worldliness into poverty which had urged her acceptance where she
+must in some way have felt repulsion. All this implied a nature liable to
+difficulty and struggle--elements of life which had a predominant
+attraction for his sympathy, due perhaps to his early pain in dwelling on
+the conjectured story of his own existence. Persons attracted him, as Hans
+Meyrick had done, in proportion to the possibility of his defending them,
+rescuing them, telling upon their lives with some sort of redeeming
+influence; and he had to resist an inclination, easily accounted for, to
+withdraw coldly from the fortunate. But in the movement which had led him
+to repurchase Gwendolen's necklace for her, and which was at work in him
+still, there was something beyond his habitual compassionate fervor--
+something due to the fascination of her womanhood. He was very open to
+that sort of charm, and mingled it with the consciously Utopian pictures
+of his own future; yet any one able to trace the folds of his character
+might have conceived that he would be more likely than many less
+passionate men to love a woman without telling her of it. Sprinkle food
+before a delicate-eared bird: there is nothing he would more willingly
+take, yet he keeps aloof, because of his sensibility to checks which to
+you are imperceptible. And one man differs from another, as we all differ
+from the Bosjesman, in a sensibility to checks, that come from variety of
+needs, spiritual or other. It seemed to foreshadow that capability of
+reticence in Deronda that his imagination was much occupied with two
+women, to neither of whom would he have held it possible that he should
+ever make love. Hans Meyrick had laughed at him for having something of
+the knight-errant in his disposition; and he would have found his proof if
+he had known what was just now going on in Deronda's mind about Mirah and
+Gwendolen.
+
+Deronda wrote without delay to announce his visit to Diplow, and received
+in reply a polite assurance that his coming would give great pleasure.
+That was not altogether untrue. Grandcourt thought it probable that the
+visit was prompted by Sir Hugo's desire to court him for a purpose which
+he did not make up his mind to resist; and it was not a disagreeable idea
+to him that this fine fellow, whom he believed to be his cousin under the
+rose, would witness, perhaps with some jealousy, Henleigh Mallinger
+Grandcourt play the commanding part of betrothed lover to a splendid girl
+whom the cousin had already looked at with admiration.
+
+Grandcourt himself was not jealous of anything unless it threatened his
+mastery--which he did not think himself likely to lose.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+ "Surely whoever speaks to me in the right voice,
+ him or her I shall follow.
+ As the water follows the moon, silently,
+ with fluid steps anywhere around the globe."
+ --WALT WHITMAN.
+
+
+"Now my cousins are at Diplow," said Grandcourt, "will you go there?--to-
+morrow? The carriage shall come for Mrs. Davilow. You can tell me what you
+would like done in the rooms. Things must be put in decent order while we
+are away at Ryelands. And to-morrow is the only day."
+
+He was sitting sideways on a sofa in the drawing-room at Offendene, one
+hand and elbow resting on the back, and the other hand thrust between his
+crossed knees--in the attitude of a man who is much interested in watching
+the person next to him. Gwendolen, who had always disliked needlework, had
+taken to it with apparent zeal since her engagement, and now held a piece
+of white embroidery which, on examination, would have shown many false
+stitches. During the last eight or nine days their hours had been chiefly
+spent on horseback, but some margin had always been left for this more
+difficult sort of companionship, which, however, Gwendolen had not found
+disagreeable. She was very well satisfied with Grandcourt. His answers to
+her lively questions about what he had seen and done in his life, bore
+drawling very well. From the first she had noticed that he knew what to
+say; and she was constantly feeling not only that he had nothing of the
+fool in his composition, but that by some subtle means he communicated to
+her the impression that all the folly lay with other people, who did what
+he did not care to do. A man who seems to have been able to command the
+best, has a sovereign power of depreciation. Then Grandcourt's behavior as
+a lover had hardly at all passed the limit of an amorous homage which was
+inobtrusive as a wafted odor of roses, and spent all its effects in a
+gratified vanity. One day, indeed, he had kissed not her cheek but her
+neck a little below her ear; and Gwendolen, taken by surprise, had started
+up with a marked agitation which made him rise too and say, "I beg your
+pardon--did I annoy you?" "Oh, it was nothing," said Gwendolen, rather
+afraid of herself, "only I cannot bear--to be kissed under my ear." She
+sat down again with a little playful laugh, but all the while she felt her
+heart beating with a vague fear: she was no longer at liberty to flout him
+as she had flouted poor Rex. Her agitation seemed not uncomplimentary, and
+he had been contented not to transgress again.
+
+To-day a slight rain hindered riding; but to compensate, a package had
+come from London, and Mrs. Davilow had just left the room after bringing
+in for admiration the beautiful things (of Grandcourt's ordering) which
+lay scattered about on the tables. Gwendolen was just then enjoying the
+scenery of her life. She let her hands fall on her lap, and said with a
+pretty air of perversity--
+
+"Why is to-morrow the only day?"
+
+"Because the next day is the first with the hounds," said Grandcourt.
+
+"And after that?"
+
+"After that I must go away for a couple of days--it's a bore--but I shall
+go one day and come back the next." Grandcourt noticed a change in her
+face, and releasing his hand from under his knees, he laid it on hers, and
+said, "You object to my going away?"
+
+"It's no use objecting," said Gwendolen, coldly. She was resisting to the
+utmost her temptation to tell him that she suspected to whom he was going
+--the temptation to make a clean breast, speaking without restraint.
+
+"Yes it is," said Grandcourt, enfolding her hand. "I will put off going.
+And I will travel at night, so as only to be away one day." He thought
+that he knew the reason of what he inwardly called this bit of temper, and
+she was particularly fascinating to him at this moment.
+
+"Then don't put off going, but travel at night," said Gwendolen, feeling
+that she could command him, and finding in this peremptoriness a small
+outlet for her irritation.
+
+"Then you will go to Diplow to-morrow?"
+
+"Oh, yes, if you wish it," said Gwendolen, in a high tone of careless
+assent. Her concentration in other feelings had really hindered her from
+taking notice that her hand was being held.
+
+"How you treat us poor devils of men!" said Grandcourt, lowering his tone.
+"We are always getting the worst of it."
+
+"_Are_ you?" said Gwendolen, in a tone of inquiry, looking at him more
+naively than usual. She longed to believe this commonplace _badinage_ as
+the serious truth about her lover: in that case, she too was justified. If
+she knew everything, Mrs. Glasher would appear more blamable than
+Grandcourt. "_Are_ you always getting the worst?"
+
+"Yes. Are you as kind to me as I am to you?" said Grandcourt, looking into
+her eyes with his narrow gaze.
+
+Gwendolen felt herself stricken. She was conscious of having received so
+much, that her sense of command was checked, and sank away in the
+perception that, look around her as she might, she could not turn back: it
+was as if she had consented to mount a chariot where another held the
+reins; and it was not in her nature to leap out in the eyes of the world.
+She had not consented in ignorance, and all she could say now would be a
+confession that she had not been ignorant. Her right to explanation was
+gone. All she had to do now was to adjust herself, so that the spikes of
+that unwilling penance which conscience imposed should not gall her. With
+a sort of mental shiver, she resolutely changed her mental attitude. There
+had been a little pause, during which she had not turned away her eyes;
+and with a sudden break into a smile, she said--
+
+"If I were as kind to you as you are to me, that would spoil your
+generosity: it would no longer be as great as it could be--and it is that
+now."
+
+"Then I am not to ask for one kiss," said Grandcourt, contented to pay a
+large price for this new kind of love-making, which introduced marriage by
+the finest contrast.
+
+"Not one?" said Gwendolen, getting saucy, and nodding at him defiantly.
+
+He lifted her little left hand to his lips, and then released it
+respectfully. Clearly it was faint praise to say of him that he was not
+disgusting: he was almost charming; and she felt at this moment that it
+was not likely she could ever have loved another man better than this one.
+His reticence gave her some inexplicable, delightful consciousness.
+
+"Apropos," she said, taking up her work again, "is there any one besides
+Captain and Mrs. Torrington at Diplow?--or do you leave them _tete-a-
+tete_? I suppose he converses in cigars, and she answers with her
+chignon."
+
+"She has a sister with her," said Grandcourt, with his shadow of a smile,
+"and there are two men besides--one of them you know, I believe."
+
+"Ah, then, I have a poor opinion of him," said Gwendolen, shaking her
+head.
+
+"You saw him at Leubronn--young Deronda--a young fellow with the
+Mallingers."
+
+Gwendolen felt as if her heart were making a sudden gambol, and her
+fingers, which tried to keep a firm hold on her work got cold.
+
+"I never spoke to him," she said, dreading any discernible change in
+herself. "Is he not disagreeable?"
+
+"No, not particularly," said Grandcourt, in his most languid way. "He
+thinks a little too much of himself. I thought he had been introduced to
+you."
+
+"No. Some one told me his name the evening before I came away? that was
+all. What is he?"
+
+"A sort of ward of Sir Hugo Mallinger's. Nothing of any consequence."
+
+"Oh, poor creature! How very unpleasant for him!" said Gwendolen, speaking
+from the lip, and not meaning any sarcasm. "I wonder if it has left off
+raining!" she added, rising and going to look out of the window.
+
+Happily it did not rain the next day, and Gwendolen rode to Diplow on
+Criterion as she had done on that former day when she returned with her
+mother in the carriage. She always felt the more daring for being in her
+riding-dress; besides having the agreeable belief that she looked as well
+as possible in it--a sustaining consciousness in any meeting which seems
+formidable. Her anger toward Deronda had changed into a superstitious
+dread--due, perhaps, to the coercion he had exercised over her thought--
+lest the first interference of his in her life might foreshadow some
+future influence. It is of such stuff that superstitions are commonly
+made: an intense feeling about ourselves which makes the evening star
+shine at us with a threat, and the blessing of a beggar encourage us. And
+superstitions carry consequences which often verify their hope or their
+foreboding.
+
+The time before luncheon was taken up for Gwendolen by going over the
+rooms with Mrs. Torrington and Mrs. Davilow; and she thought it likely
+that if she saw Deronda, there would hardly be need for more than a bow
+between them. She meant to notice him as little as possible.
+
+And after all she found herself under an inward compulsion too strong for
+her pride. From the first moment of their being in the room together, she
+seemed to herself to be doing nothing but notice him; everything else was
+automatic performance of an habitual part.
+
+When he took his place at lunch, Grandcourt had said, "Deronda, Miss
+Harleth tells me you were not introduced to her at Leubronn?"
+
+"Miss Harleth hardly remembers me, I imagine," said Deronda, looking at
+her quite simply, as they bowed. "She was intensely occupied when I saw
+her."
+
+Now, did he suppose that she had not suspected him of being the person
+who redeemed her necklace?
+
+"On the contrary. I remember you very well," said Gwendolen, feeling
+rather nervous, but governing herself and looking at him in return with
+new examination. "You did not approve of my playing at roulette."
+
+"How did you come to that conclusion?" said Deronda, gravely.
+
+"Oh, you cast an evil eye on my play," said Gwendolen, with a turn of her
+head and a smile. "I began to lose as soon as you came to look on. I had
+always been winning till then."
+
+"Roulette in such a kennel as Leubronn is a horrid bore," said Grandcourt.
+
+"_I_ found it a bore when I began to lose," said Gwendolen. Her face was
+turned toward Grandcourt as she smiled and spoke, but she gave a sidelong
+glance at Deronda, and saw his eyes fixed on her with a look so gravely
+penetrating that it had a keener edge for her than his ironical smile at
+her losses--a keener edge than Klesmer's judgment. She wheeled her neck
+round as if she wanted to listen to what was being said by the rest, while
+she was only thinking of Deronda. His face had that disturbing kind of
+form and expression which threatens to affect opinion--as if one's
+standard was somehow wrong. (Who has not seen men with faces of this
+corrective power till they frustrated it by speech or action?) His voice,
+heard now for the first time, was to Grandcourt's toneless drawl, which
+had been in her ears every day, as the deep notes of a violoncello to the
+broken discourse of poultry and other lazy gentry in the afternoon
+sunshine. Grandcourt, she inwardly conjectured, was perhaps right in
+saying that Deronda thought too much of himself:--a favorite way of
+explaining a superiority that humiliates. However the talk turned on the
+rinderpest and Jamaica, and no more was said about roulette. Grandcourt
+held that the Jamaica negro was a beastly sort of baptist Caliban; Deronda
+said he had always felt a little with Caliban, who naturally had his own
+point of view and could sing a good song; Mrs. Davilow observed that her
+father had an estate in Barbadoes, but that she herself had never been in
+the West Indies; Mrs. Torrington was sure she should never sleep in her
+bed if she lived among blacks; her husband corrected her by saying that
+the blacks would be manageable enough if it were not for the half-breeds;
+and Deronda remarked that the whites had to thank themselves for the half-
+breeds.
+
+While this polite pea-shooting was going on, Gwendolen trifled with her
+jelly, and looked at every speaker in turn that she might feel at ease in
+looking at Deronda.
+
+"I wonder what he thinks of me, really? He must have felt interested in
+me, else he would not have sent me my necklace. I wonder what he thinks of
+my marriage? What notions has he to make him so grave about things? Why is
+he come to Diplow?"
+
+These questions ran in her mind as the voice of an uneasy longing to be
+judged by Deronda with unmixed admiration--a longing which had had its
+seed in her first resentment at his critical glance. Why did she care so
+much about the opinion of this man who was "nothing of any consequence"?
+She had no time to find the reason--she was too much engaged in caring. In
+the drawing-room, when something had called Grandcourt away, she went
+quite unpremeditatedly up to Deronda, who was standing at a table apart,
+turning over some prints, and said to him--
+
+"Shall you hunt to-morrow, Mr. Deronda?"
+
+"Yes, I believe so."
+
+"You don't object to hunting, then?"
+
+"I find excuses for it. It is a sin I am inclined to--when I can't get
+boating or cricketing."
+
+"Do you object to my hunting?" said Gwendolen, with a saucy movement of
+the chin.
+
+"I have no right to object to anything you choose to do."
+
+"You thought you had a right to object to my gambling," persisted
+Gwendolen.
+
+"I was sorry for it. I am not aware that I told you of my objection," said
+Deronda, with his usual directness of gaze--a large-eyed gravity, innocent
+of any intention. His eyes had a peculiarity which has drawn many men into
+trouble; they were of a dark yet mild intensity which seemed to express a
+special interest in every one on whom he fixed them, and might easily help
+to bring on him those claims which ardently sympathetic people are often
+creating in the minds of those who need help. In mendicant fashion we make
+the goodness of others a reason for exorbitant demands on them. That sort
+of effect was penetrating Gwendolen.
+
+"You hindered me from gambling again," she answered. But she had no sooner
+spoken than she blushed over face and neck; and Deronda blushed, too,
+conscious that in the little affair of the necklace he had taken a
+questionable freedom.
+
+It was impossible to speak further; and she turned away to a window,
+feeling that she had stupidly said what she had not meant to say, and yet
+being rather happy that she had plunged into this mutual understanding.
+Deronda also did not like it. Gwendolen seemed more decidedly attractive
+than before; and certainly there had been changes going on within her
+since that time at Leubronn: the struggle of mind attending a conscious
+error had wakened something like a new soul, which had better, but also
+worse, possibilities than her former poise of crude self-confidence: among
+the forces she had come to dread was something within her that troubled
+satisfaction.
+
+That evening Mrs. Davilow said, "Was it really so, or only a joke of
+yours, about Mr. Deronda's spoiling your play, Gwen?"
+
+Her curiosity had been excited, and she could venture to ask a question
+that did not concern Mr. Grandcourt.
+
+"Oh, it merely happened that he was looking on when I began to lose," said
+Gwendolen, carelessly. "I noticed him."
+
+"I don't wonder at that: he is a striking young man. He puts me in mind of
+Italian paintings. One would guess, without being told, that there was
+foreign blood in his veins."
+
+"Is there?" said Gwendolen.
+
+"Mrs. Torrington says so. I asked particularly who he was, and she told me
+that his mother was some foreigner of high rank."
+
+"His mother?" said Gwendolen, rather sharply. "Then who was his father?"
+
+"Well--every one says he is the son of Sir Hugo Mallinger, who brought him
+up; though he passes for a ward. She says, if Sir Hugo Mallinger could
+have done as he liked with his estates, he would have left them to this
+Mr. Deronda, since he has no legitimate son."
+
+Gwendolen was silent; but her mother observed so marked an effect in her
+face that she was angry with herself for having repeated Mrs. Torrington's
+gossip. It seemed, on reflection, unsuited to the ear of her daughter, for
+whom Mrs. Davilow disliked what is called knowledge of the world; and
+indeed she wished that she herself had not had any of it thrust upon her.
+
+An image which had immediately arisen in Gwendolen's mind was that of the
+unknown mother--no doubt a dark-eyed woman--probably sad. Hardly any face
+could be less like Deronda's than that represented as Sir Hugo's in a
+crayon portrait at Diplow. A dark-eyed woman, no longer young, had become
+"stuff o' the conscience" to Gwendolen.
+
+That night when she had got into her little bed, and only a dim light was
+burning, she said--
+
+"Mamma, have men generally children before they are married?"
+
+"No, dear, no," said Mrs. Davilow. "Why do you ask such a question?" (But
+she began to think that she saw the why.)
+
+"If it were so, I ought to know," said Gwendolen, with some indignation.
+
+"You are thinking of what I said about Mr. Deronda and Sir Hugo Mallinger.
+That is a very unusual case, dear."
+
+"Does Lady Mallinger know?"
+
+"She knows enough to satisfy her. That is quite clear, because Mr. Deronda
+has lived with them."
+
+"And people think no worse of him?"
+
+"Well, of course he is under some disadvantage: it is not as if he were
+Lady Mallinger's son. He does not inherit the property, and he is not of
+any consequence in the world. But people are not obliged to know anything
+about his birth; you see, he is very well received."
+
+"I wonder whether he knows about it; and whether he is angry with his
+father?"
+
+"My dear child, why should you think of that?"
+
+"Why?" said Gwendolen, impetuously, sitting up in her bed. "Haven't
+children reason to be angry with their parents? How can they help their
+parents marrying or not marrying?"
+
+But a consciousness rushed upon her, which made her fall back again on her
+pillow. It was not only what she would have felt months before--that she
+might seem to be reproaching her mother for that second marriage of hers;
+what she chiefly felt now was, that she had been led on to a condemnation
+which seemed to make her own marriage a forbidden thing.
+
+There was no further talk, and till sleep came over her Gwendolen lay
+struggling with the reasons against that marriage--reasons which pressed
+upon her newly now that they were unexpectedly mirrored in the story of a
+man whose slight relations with her had, by some hidden affinity, bitten
+themselves into the most permanent layers of feeling. It was
+characteristic that, with all her debating, she was never troubled by the
+question whether the indefensibleness of her marriage did not include the
+fact that she had accepted Grandcourt solely as a man whom it was
+convenient for her to marry, not in the least as one to whom she would be
+binding herself in duty. Gwendolen's ideas were pitiably crude; but many
+grand difficulties of life are apt to force themselves on us in our
+crudity. And to judge wisely, I suppose we must know how things appear to
+the unwise; that kind of appearance making the larger part of the world's
+history.
+
+In the morning there was a double excitement for her. She was going to
+hunt, from which scruples about propriety had threatened to hinder her,
+until it was found that Mrs. Torrington was horsewoman enough to accompany
+her--going to hunt for the first time since her escapade with Rex; and she
+was going again to see Deronda, in whom, since last night, her interest
+had so gathered that she expected, as people do about revealed
+celebrities, to see something in his appearance which she had missed
+before.
+
+What was he going to be? What sort of life had he before him--he being
+nothing of any consequence? And with only a little difference in events he
+might have been as important as Grandcourt, nay--her imagination
+inevitably went into that direction--might have held the very estates
+which Grandcourt was to have. But now, Deronda would probably some day see
+her mistress of the Abbey at Topping, see her bearing the title which
+would have been his own wife's. These obvious, futile thoughts of what
+might have been, made a new epoch for Gwendolen. She, whose unquestionable
+habit it had been to take the best that came to her for less than her own
+claim, had now to see the position which tempted her in a new light, as a
+hard, unfair exclusion of others. What she had now heard about Deronda
+seemed to her imagination to throw him into one group with Mrs. Glasher
+and her children; before whom she felt herself in an attitude of apology--
+she who had hitherto been surrounded by a group that in her opinion had
+need be apologetic to her. Perhaps Deronda himself was thinking of these
+things. Could he know of Mrs. Glasher? If he knew that she knew, he would
+despise her; but he could have no such knowledge. Would he, without that,
+despise her for marrying Grandcourt? His possible judgment of her actions
+was telling on her as importunately as Klesmer's judgment of her powers;
+but she found larger room for resistance to a disapproval of her marriage,
+because it is easier to make our conduct seem justifiable to ourselves
+than to make our ability strike others. "How can I help it?" is not our
+favorite apology for incompetency. But Gwendolen felt some strength in
+saying--
+
+"How can I help what other people have done? Things would not come right
+if I were to turn round now and declare that I would not marry Mr.
+Grandcourt." And such turning round was out of the question. The horses in
+the chariot she had mounted were going at full speed.
+
+This mood of youthful, elated desperation had a tidal recurrence. She
+could dare anything that lay before her sooner than she could choose to go
+backward, into humiliation; and it was even soothing to think that there
+would now be as much ill-doing in the one as in the other. But the
+immediate delightful fact was the hunt, where she would see Deronda, and
+where he would see her; for always lurking ready to obtrude before other
+thoughts about him was the impression that he was very much interested in
+her. But to-day she was resolved not to repeat her folly of yesterday, as
+if she were anxious to say anything to him. Indeed, the hunt would be too
+absorbing.
+
+And so it was for a long while. Deronda was there, and within her sight
+very often; but this only added to the stimulus of a pleasure which
+Gwendolen had only once before tasted, and which seemed likely always to
+give a delight independent of any crosses, except such as took away the
+chance of riding. No accident happened to throw them together; the run
+took them within convenient reach of home, and the agreeable sombreness of
+the gray November afternoon, with a long stratum of yellow light in the
+west, Gwendolen was returning with the company from Diplow, who were
+attending her on the way to Offendene. Now the sense of glorious
+excitement was over and gone, she was getting irritably disappointed that
+she had had no opportunity of speaking to Deronda, whom she would not see
+again, since he was to go away in a couple of days. What was she going to
+say? That was not quite certain. She wanted to speak to him. Grandcourt
+was by her side; Mrs. Torrington, her husband, and another gentleman in
+advance; and Deronda's horse she could hear behind. The wish to speak to
+him and have him speaking to her was becoming imperious; and there was no
+chance of it unless she simply asserted her will and defied everything.
+Where the order of things could give way to Miss Gwendolen, it must be
+made to do so. They had lately emerged from a wood of pines and beeches,
+where the twilight stillness had a repressing effect, which increased her
+impatience. The horse-hoofs again heard behind at some little distance
+were a growing irritation. She reined in her horse and looked behind her;
+Grandcourt after a few paces, also paused; but she, waving her whip and
+nodding sideways with playful imperiousness, said, "Go on! I want to speak
+to Mr. Deronda."
+
+Grandcourt hesitated; but that he would have done after any proposition.
+It was an awkward situation for him. No gentleman, before marriage; could
+give the emphasis of refusal to a command delivered in this playful way.
+He rode on slowly, and she waited till Deronda came up. He looked at her
+with tacit inquiry, and she said at once, letting her horse go alongside
+of his--
+
+"Mr. Deronda, you must enlighten my ignorance. I want to know why you
+thought it wrong for me to gamble. Is it because I am a woman?"
+
+"Not altogether; but I regretted it the more because you were a woman,"
+said Deronda, with an irrepressible smile. Apparently it must be
+understood between them now that it was he who sent the necklace. "I think
+it would be better for men not to gamble. It is a besotting kind of taste,
+likely to turn into a disease. And, besides, there is something revolting
+to me in raking a heap of money together, and internally chuckling over
+it, when others are feeling the loss of it. I should even call it base, if
+it were more than an exceptional lapse. There are enough inevitable turns
+of fortune which force us to see that our gain is another's loss:--that is
+one of the ugly aspects of life. One would like to reduce it as much as
+one could, not get amusement out of exaggerating it." Deronda's voice had
+gathered some indignation while he was speaking.
+
+"But you do admit that we can't help things," said Gwendolen, with a drop
+in her tone. The answer had not been anything like what she had expected.
+"I mean that things are so in spite of us; we can't always help it that
+our gain is another's loss."
+
+"Clearly. Because of that, we should help it where we can."
+
+Gwendolen, biting her lip inside, paused a moment, and then forcing
+herself to speak with an air of playfulness again, said--
+
+"But why should you regret it more because I am a woman?"
+
+"Perhaps because we need that you should be better than we are."
+
+"But suppose _we_ need that men should be better than we are," said
+Gwendolen with a little air of "check!"
+
+"That is rather a difficulty," said Deronda, smiling. "I suppose I should
+have said, we each of us think it would be better for the other to be
+good."
+
+"You see, I needed you to be better than I was--and you thought so," said
+Gwendolen, nodding and laughing, while she put her horse forward and
+joined Grandcourt, who made no observation.
+
+"Don't you want to know what I had to say to Mr. Deronda?" said Gwendolen,
+whose own pride required her to account for her conduct.
+
+"A--no," said Grandcourt, coldly.
+
+"Now that is the first impolite word you have spoken--that you don't wish
+to hear what I had to say," said Gwendolen, playing at a pout.
+
+"I wish to hear what you say to me--not to other men," said Grandcourt.
+
+"Then you wish to hear this. I wanted to make him tell me why he objected
+to my gambling, and he gave me a little sermon."
+
+"Yes--but excuse me the sermon." If Gwendolen imagined that Grandcourt
+cared about her speaking to Deronda, he wished her to understand that she
+was mistaken. But he was not fond of being told to ride on. She saw he was
+piqued, but did not mind. She had accomplished her object of speaking
+again to Deronda before he raised his hat and turned with the rest toward
+Diplow, while her lover attended her to Offendene, where he was to bid
+farewell before a whole day's absence on the unspecified journey.
+Grandcourt had spoken truth in calling the journey a bore: he was going by
+train to Gadsmere.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+ No penitence and no confessional,
+ No priest ordains it, yet they're forced to sit
+ Amid deep ashes of their vanished years.
+
+
+Imagine a rambling, patchy house, the best part built of gray stone, and
+red-tiled, a round tower jutting at one of the corners, the mellow
+darkness of its conical roof surmounted by a weather-cock making an
+agreeable object either amidst the gleams and greenth of summer or the
+low-hanging clouds and snowy branches of winter: the ground shady with
+spreading trees: a great tree flourishing on one side, backward some
+Scotch firs on a broken bank where the roots hung naked, and beyond, a
+rookery: on the other side a pool overhung with bushes, where the water-
+fowl fluttered and screamed: all around, a vast meadow which might be
+called a park, bordered by an old plantation and guarded by stone ledges
+which looked like little prisons. Outside the gate the country, once
+entirely rural and lovely, now black with coal mines, was chiefly peopled
+by men and brethren with candles stuck in their hats, and with a diabolic
+complexion which laid them peculiarly open to suspicion in the eyes of the
+children at Gadsmere--Mrs. Glasher's four beautiful children, who had
+dwelt there for about three years. Now, in November, when the flower-beds
+were empty, the trees leafless, and the pool blackly shivering, one might
+have said that the place was sombrely in keeping with the black roads and
+black mounds which seemed to put the district in mourning;--except when
+the children were playing on the gravel with the dogs for their
+companions. But Mrs. Glasher, under her present circumstances, liked
+Gadsmere as well as she would have liked any other abode. The complete
+seclusion of the place, which the unattractiveness of the country secured,
+was exactly to her taste. When she drove her two ponies with a waggonet
+full of children, there were no gentry in carriages to be met, only men of
+business in gigs; at church there were no eyes she cared to avoid, for the
+curate's wife and the curate himself were either ignorant of anything to
+her disadvantage, or ignored it: to them she was simply a widow lady, the
+tenant of Gadsmere; and the name of Grandcourt was of little interest in
+that district compared with the names of Fletcher and Gawcome, the lessees
+of the collieries.
+
+It was full ten years since the elopement of an Irish officer's beautiful
+wife with young Grandcourt, and a consequent duel where the bullets
+wounded the air only, had made some little noise. Most of those who
+remembered the affair now wondered what had become of that Mrs. Glasher,
+whose beauty and brilliancy had made her rather conspicuous to them in
+foreign places, where she was known to be living with young Grandcourt.
+
+That he should have disentangled himself from that connection seemed only
+natural and desirable. As to her, it was thought that a woman who was
+understood to have forsaken her child along with her husband had probably
+sunk lower. Grandcourt had of course got weary of her. He was much given
+to the pursuit of women: but a man in his position would by this time
+desire to make a suitable marriage with the fair young daughter of a noble
+house. No one talked of Mrs. Glasher now, any more than they talked of the
+victim in a trial for manslaughter ten years before: she was a lost vessel
+after whom nobody would send out an expedition of search; but Grandcourt
+was seen in harbor with his colors flying, registered as seaworthy as
+ever.
+
+Yet, in fact, Grandcourt had never disentangled himself from Mrs. Glasher.
+His passion for her had been the strongest and most lasting he had ever
+known; and though it was now as dead as the music of a cracked flute, it
+had left a certain dull disposedness, which, on the death of her husband
+three years before, had prompted in him a vacillating notion of marrying
+her, in accordance with the understanding often expressed between them
+during the days of his first ardor. At that early time Grandcourt would
+willingly have paid for the freedom to be won by a divorce; but the
+husband would not oblige him, not wanting to be married again himself, and
+not wishing to have his domestic habits printed in evidence.
+
+The altered poise which the years had brought in Mrs. Glasher was just the
+reverse. At first she was comparatively careless about the possibility of
+marriage. It was enough that she had escaped from a disagreeable husband
+and found a sort of bliss with a lover who had completely fascinated her--
+young, handsome, amorous, and living in the best style, with equipage and
+conversation of the kind to be expected in young men of fortune who have
+seen everything. She was an impassioned, vivacious woman, fond of
+adoration, exasperated by five years of marital rudeness; and the sense of
+release was so strong upon her that it stilled anxiety for more than she
+actually enjoyed. An equivocal position was of no importance to her then;
+she had no envy for the honors of a dull, disregarded wife: the one spot
+which spoiled her vision of her new pleasant world, was the sense that she
+left her three-year-old boy, who died two years afterward, and whose first
+tones saying "mamma" retained a difference from those of the children that
+came after. But now the years had brought many changes besides those in
+the contour of her cheek and throat; and that Grandcourt should marry her
+had become her dominant desire. The equivocal position which she had not
+minded about for herself was now telling upon her through her children,
+whom she loved with a devotion charged with the added passion of
+atonement. She had no repentance except in this direction. If Grandcourt
+married her, the children would be none the worse off for what had passed:
+they would see their mother in a dignified position, and they would be at
+no disadvantage with the world: her son could be made his father's heir.
+It was the yearning for this result which gave the supreme importance to
+Grandcourt's feeling for her; her love for him had long resolved itself
+into anxiety that he should give her the unique, permanent claim of a
+wife, and she expected no other happiness in marriage than the
+satisfaction of her maternal love and pride--including her pride for
+herself in the presence of her children. For the sake of that result she
+was prepared even with a tragic firmness to endure anything quietly in
+marriage; and she had acuteness enough to cherish Grandcourt's flickering
+purpose negatively, by not molesting him with passionate appeals and with
+scene-making. In her, as in every one else who wanted anything of him, his
+incalculable turns, and his tendency to harden under beseeching, had
+created a reasonable dread:--a slow discovery, of which no presentiment
+had been given in the bearing of a youthful lover with a fine line of face
+and the softest manners. But reticence had necessarily cost something to
+this impassioned woman, and she was the bitterer for it. There is no
+quailing--even that forced on the helpless and injured--which has not an
+ugly obverse: the withheld sting was gathering venom. She was absolutely
+dependent on Grandcourt; for though he had been always liberal in expenses
+for her, he had kept everything voluntary on his part; and with the goal
+of marriage before her, she would ask for nothing less. He had said that
+he would never settle anything except by will; and when she was thinking
+of alternatives for the future it often occurred to her that, even if she
+did not become Grandcourt's wife, he might never have a son who would have
+a legitimate claim on him, and the end might be that her son would be made
+heir to the best part of his estates. No son at that early age could
+promise to have more of his father's physique. But her becoming
+Grandcourt's wife was so far from being an extravagant notion of
+possibility, that even Lush had entertained it, and had said that he would
+as soon bet on it as on any other likelihood with regard to his familiar
+companion. Lush, indeed, on inferring that Grandcourt had a preconception
+of using his residence at Diplow in order to win Miss Arrowpoint, had
+thought it well to fan that project, taking it as a tacit renunciation of
+the marriage with Mrs. Glasher, which had long been a mark for the
+hovering and wheeling of Grandcourt's caprice. But both prospects had been
+negatived by Gwendolen's appearance on the scene; and it was natural
+enough for Mrs. Glasher to enter with eagerness into Lush's plan of
+hindering that new danger by setting up a barrier in the mind of the girl
+who was being sought as a bride. She entered into it with an eagerness
+which had passion in it as well as purpose, some of the stored-up venom
+delivering itself in that way.
+
+After that, she had heard from Lush of Gwendolen's departure, and the
+probability that all danger from her was got rid of; but there had been no
+letter to tell her that the danger had returned and had become a
+certainty. She had since then written to Grandcourt, as she did
+habitually, and he had been longer than usual in answering. She was
+inferring that he might intend coming to Gadsmere at the time when he was
+actually on the way; and she was not without hope--what construction of
+another's mind is not strong wishing equal to?--that a certain sickening
+from that frustrated courtship might dispose him to slip the more easily
+into the old track of intention.
+
+Grandcourt had two grave purposes in coming to Gadsmere: to convey the
+news of his approaching marriage in person, in order to make this first
+difficulty final; and to get from Lydia his mother's diamonds, which long
+ago he had confided to her and wished her to wear. Her person suited
+diamonds, and made them look as if they were worth some of the money given
+for them. These particular diamonds were not mountains of light--they were
+mere peas and haricots for the ears, neck and hair; but they were worth
+some thousands, and Grandcourt necessarily wished to have them for his
+wife. Formerly when he had asked Lydia to put them into his keeping again,
+simply on the ground that they would be safer and ought to be deposited at
+the bank, she had quietly but absolutely refused, declaring that they were
+quite safe; and at last had said, "If you ever marry another woman I will
+give them up to her: are you going to marry another woman?" At that time
+Grandcourt had no motive which urged him to persist, and he had this grace
+in him, that the disposition to exercise power either by cowing or
+disappointing others or exciting in them a rage which they dared not
+express--a disposition which was active in him as other propensities
+became languid--had always been in abeyance before Lydia. A severe
+interpreter might say that the mere facts of their relation to each other,
+the melancholy position of this woman who depended on his will, made a
+standing banquet for his delight in dominating. But there was something
+else than this in his forbearance toward her: there was the surviving
+though metamorphosed effect of the power she had had over him; and it was
+this effect, the fitful dull lapse toward solicitations that once had the
+zest now missing from life, which had again and again inclined him to
+espouse a familiar past rather than rouse himself to the expectation of
+novelty. But now novelty had taken hold of him and urged him to make the
+most of it.
+
+Mrs. Glasher was seated in the pleasant room where she habitually passed
+her mornings with her children round her. It had a square projecting
+window and looked on broad gravel and grass, sloping toward a little brook
+that entered the pool. The top of a low, black cabinet, the old oak table,
+the chairs in tawny leather, were littered with the children's toys, books
+and garden garments, at which a maternal lady in pastel looked down from
+the walls with smiling indulgence. The children were all there. The three
+girls, seated round their mother near the widow, were miniature portraits
+of her--dark-eyed, delicate-featured brunettes with a rich bloom on their
+cheeks, their little nostrils and eyebrows singularly finished as if they
+were tiny women, the eldest being barely nine. The boy was seated on the
+carpet at some distance, bending his blonde head over the animals from a
+Noah's ark, admonishing them separately in a voice of threatening command,
+and occasionally licking the spotted ones to see if the colors would hold.
+Josephine, the eldest, was having her French lesson; and the others, with
+their dolls on their laps, sat demurely enough for images of the Madonna.
+Mrs. Glasher's toilet had been made very carefully--each day now she said
+to herself that Grandcourt might come in. Her head, which, spite of
+emaciation, had an ineffaceable beauty in the fine profile, crisp curves
+of hair, and clearly-marked eyebrows, rose impressively above her bronze-
+colored silk and velvet, and the gold necklace which Grandcourt had first
+clasped round her neck years ago. Not that she had any pleasure in her
+toilet; her chief thought of herself seen in the glass was, "How
+changed!"--but such good in life as remained to her she would keep. If her
+chief wish were fulfilled, she could imagine herself getting the
+comeliness of a matron fit for the highest rank. The little faces beside
+her, almost exact reductions of her own, seemed to tell of the blooming
+curves which had once been where now was sunken pallor. But the children
+kissed the pale cheeks and never found them deficient. That love was now
+the one end of her life.
+
+Suddenly Mrs. Glasher turned away her head from Josephine's book and
+listened. "Hush, dear! I think some one is coming."
+
+Henleigh the boy jumped up and said, "Mamma, is it the miller with my
+donkey?"
+
+He got no answer, and going up to his mamma's knee repeated his question
+in an insistent tone. But the door opened, and the servant announced Mr.
+Grandcourt. Mrs. Glasher rose in some agitation. Henleigh frowned at him
+in disgust at his not being the miller, and the three little girls lifted
+up their dark eyes to him timidly. They had none of them any particular
+liking for this friend of mamma's--in fact, when he had taken Mrs.
+Glasher's hand and then turned to put his other hand on Henleigh's head,
+that energetic scion began to beat the friend's arm away with his fists.
+The little girls submitted bashfully to be patted under the chin and
+kissed, but on the whole it seemed better to send them into the garden,
+where they were presently dancing and chatting with the dogs on the
+gravel.
+
+"How far are you come?" said Mrs. Glasher, as Grandcourt put away his hat
+and overcoat.
+
+"From Diplow," he answered slowly, seating himself opposite her and
+looking at her with an unnoting gaze which she noted.
+
+"You are tired, then."
+
+"No, I rested at the Junction--a hideous hole. These railway journeys are
+always a confounded bore. But I had coffee and smoked."
+
+Grandcourt drew out his handkerchief, rubbed his face, and in returning
+the handkerchief to his pocket looked at his crossed knee and blameless
+boot, as if any stranger were opposite to him, instead of a woman
+quivering with a suspense which every word and look of his was to incline
+toward hope or dread. But he was really occupied with their interview and
+what it was likely to include. Imagine the difference in rate of emotion
+between this woman whom the years had worn to a more conscious dependence
+and sharper eagerness, and this man whom they were dulling into a more
+neutral obstinacy.
+
+"I expected to see you--it was so long since I had heard from you. I
+suppose the weeks seem longer at Gadsmere than they do at Diplow," said
+Mrs. Glasher. She had a quick, incisive way of speaking that seemed to go
+with her features, as the tone and _timbre_ of a violin go with its form.
+
+"Yes," drawled Grandcourt. "But you found the money paid into the bank."
+
+"Oh, yes," said Mrs. Glasher, curtly, tingling with impatience. Always
+before--at least she fancied so--Grandcourt had taken more notice of her
+and the children than he did to-day.
+
+"Yes," he resumed, playing with his whisker, and at first not looking at
+her, "the time has gone on at rather a rattling pace with me; generally it
+is slow enough. But there has been a good deal happening, as you know"--
+here he turned his eyes upon her.
+
+"What do I know?" said she, sharply.
+
+He left a pause before he said, without change of manner, "That I was
+thinking of marrying. You saw Miss Harleth?"
+
+"_She_ told you that?"
+
+The pale cheeks looked even paler, perhaps from the fierce brightness in
+the eyes above them.
+
+"No. Lush told me," was the slow answer. It was as if the thumb-screw and
+the iron boot were being placed by creeping hands within sight of the
+expectant victim.
+
+"Good God! say at once that you are going to marry her," she burst out,
+passionately, her knees shaking and her hands tightly clasped.
+
+"Of course, this kind of thing must happen some time or other, Lydia,"
+said he; really, now the thumb-screw was on, not wishing to make the pain
+worse.
+
+"You didn't always see the necessity."
+
+"Perhaps not. I see it now."
+
+In those few under-toned words of Grandcourt's she felt as absolute a
+resistance as if her thin fingers had been pushing at a fast shut iron
+door. She knew her helplessness, and shrank from testing it by any appeal
+--shrank from crying in a dead ear and clinging to dead knees, only to see
+the immovable face and feel the rigid limbs. She did not weep nor speak;
+she was too hard pressed by the sudden certainty which had as much of
+chill sickness in it as of thought and emotion. The defeated clutch of
+struggling hope gave her in these first moments a horrible sensation. At
+last she rose, with a spasmodic effort, and, unconscious of every thing
+but her wretchedness, pressed her forehead against the hard, cold glass of
+the window. The children, playing on the gravel, took this as a sign that
+she wanted them, and, running forward, stood in front of her with their
+sweet faces upturned expectantly. This roused her: she shook her head at
+them, waved them off, and overcome with this painful exertion, sank back
+in the nearest chair.
+
+Grandcourt had risen too. He was doubly annoyed--at the scene itself, and
+at the sense that no imperiousness of his could save him from it; but the
+task had to be gone through, and there was the administrative necessity of
+arranging things so that there should be as little annoyance as possible
+in the future. He was leaning against the corner of the fire-place. She
+looked up at him and said, bitterly--
+
+"All this is of no consequence to you. I and the children are importunate
+creatures. You wish to get away again and be with Miss Harleth."
+
+"Don't make the affair more disagreeable than it need be. Lydia. It is of
+no use to harp on things that can't be Altered. Of course, its deucedly
+disagreeable to me to see you making yourself miserable. I've taken this
+journey to tell you what you must make up your mind to:--you and the
+children will be provided for as usual;--and there's an end of it."
+
+Silence. She dared not answer. This woman with the intense, eager look had
+had the iron of the mother's anguish in her soul, and it had made her
+sometimes capable of a repression harder than shrieking and struggle. But
+underneath the silence there was an outlash of hatred and vindictiveness:
+she wished that the marriage might make two others wretched, besides
+herself. Presently he went on--
+
+"It will be better for you. You may go on living here. But I think of by-
+and-by settling a good sum on you and the children, and you can live where
+you like. There will be nothing for you to complain of then. Whatever
+happens, you will feel secure. Nothing could be done beforehand. Every
+thing has gone on in a hurry."
+
+Grandcourt ceased his slow delivery of sentences. He did not expect her to
+thank him, but he considered that she might reasonably be contented; if it
+were possible for Lydia to be contented. She showed no change, and after a
+minute he said--
+
+"You have never had any reason to fear that I should be illiberal. I don't
+care a curse about the money."
+
+"If you did care about it, I suppose you would not give it us," said
+Lydia. The sarcasm was irrepressible.
+
+"That's a devilishly unfair thing to say," Grandcourt replied, in a lower
+tone; "and I advise you not to say that sort of thing again."
+
+"Should you punish me by leaving the children in beggary?" In spite of
+herself, the one outlet of venom had brought the other.
+
+"There is no question about leaving the children in beggary," said
+Grandcourt, still in his low voice. "I advise you not to say things that
+you will repent of."
+
+"I am used to repenting," said she, bitterly. "Perhaps you will repent.
+You have already repented of loving me."
+
+"All this will only make it uncommonly difficult for us to meet again.
+What friend have you besides me?"
+
+"Quite true."
+
+The words came like a low moan. At the same moment there flashed through
+her the wish that after promising himself a better happiness than that he
+had had with her, he might feel a misery and loneliness which would drive
+him back to her to find some memory of a time when he was young, glad, and
+hopeful. But no! he would go scathless; it was she that had to suffer.
+
+With this the scorching words were ended. Grandcourt had meant to stay
+till evening; he wished to curtail his visit, but there was no suitable
+train earlier than the one he had arranged to go by, and he had still to
+speak to Lydia on the second object of his visit, which like a second
+surgical operation seemed to require an interval. The hours had to go by;
+there was eating to be done; the children came in--all this mechanism of
+life had to be gone through with the dreary sense of constraint which is
+often felt in domestic quarrels of a commoner kind. To Lydia it was some
+slight relief for her stifled fury to have the children present: she felt
+a savage glory in their loveliness, as if it would taunt Grandcourt with
+his indifference to her and them--a secret darting of venom which was
+strongly imaginative. He acquitted himself with all the advantage of a man
+whose grace of bearing has long been moulded on an experience of boredom--
+nursed the little Antonia, who sat with her hands crossed and eyes
+upturned to his bald head, which struck her as worthy of observation--and
+propitiated Henleigh by promising him a beautiful saddle and bridle. It
+was only the two eldest girls who had known him as a continual presence;
+and the intervening years had overlaid their infantine memories with a
+bashfulness which Grandcourt's bearing was not likely to dissipate. He and
+Lydia occasionally, in the presence of the servants, made a conventional
+remark; otherwise they never spoke; and the stagnant thought in
+Grandcourt's mind all the while was of his own infatuation in having given
+her those diamonds, which obliged him to incur the nuisance of speaking
+about them. He had an ingrained care for what he held to belong to his
+caste, and about property he liked to be lordly; also he had a
+consciousness of indignity to himself in having to ask for anything in the
+world. But however he might assert his independence of Mrs. Glasher's
+past, he had made a past for himself which was a stronger yoke than any he
+could impose. He must ask for the diamonds which he had promised to
+Gwendolen.
+
+At last they were alone again, with the candles above them, face to face
+with each other. Grandcourt looked at his watch, and then said, in an
+apparently indifferent drawl, "There is one thing I had to mention, Lydia.
+My diamonds--you have them."
+
+"Yes, I have them," she answered promptly, rising and standing with her
+arms thrust down and her fingers threaded, while Grandcourt sat still. She
+had expected the topic, and made her resolve about it. But she meant to
+carry out her resolve, if possible, without exasperating him. During the
+hours of silence she had longed to recall the words which had only widened
+the breach between them.
+
+"They are in this house, I suppose?"
+
+"No; not in this house."
+
+"I thought you said you kept them by you."
+
+"When I said so it was true. They are in the bank at Dudley."
+
+"Get them away, will you? I must make an arrangement for your delivering
+them to some one."
+
+"Make no arrangement. They shall be delivered to the person you intended
+them for. _I_ will make the arrangement."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"What I say. I have always told you that I would give them up to your
+wife. I shall keep my word. She is not your wife yet."
+
+"This is foolery," said Grandcourt, with undertoned disgust. It was too
+irritating that this indulgence of Lydia had given her a sort of mastery
+over him in spite of dependent condition.
+
+She did not speak. He also rose now, but stood leaning against the mantle-
+piece with his side-face toward her.
+
+"The diamonds must be delivered to me before my marriage," he began again.
+
+"What is your wedding-day?"
+
+"The tenth. There is no time to be lost."
+
+"And where do you go after the marriage?"
+
+He did not reply except by looking more sullen. Presently he said, "You
+must appoint a day before then, to get them from the bank and meet me--or
+somebody else I will commission;--it's a great nuisance, Mention a day."
+
+"No; I shall not do that. They shall be delivered to her safely. I shall
+keep my word."
+
+"Do you mean to say," said Grandcourt, just audibly, turning to face her,
+"that you will not do as I tell you?"
+
+"Yes, I mean that," was the answer that leaped out, while her eyes flashed
+close to him. The poor creature was immediately conscious that if her
+words had any effect on her own lot, the effect must be mischievous, and
+might nullify all the remaining advantage of her long patience. But the
+word had been spoken.
+
+He was in a position the most irritating to him. He could not shake her
+nor touch her hostilely; and if he could, the process would not bring his
+mother's diamonds. He shrank from the only sort of threat that would
+frighten her--if she believed it. And in general, there was nothing he
+hated more than to be forced into anything like violence even in words:
+his will must impose itself without trouble. After looking at her for a
+moment, he turned his side-face toward her again, leaning as before, and
+said--
+
+"Infernal idiots that women are!"
+
+"Why will you not tell me where you are going after the marriage? I could
+be at the wedding if I liked, and learn in that way," said Lydia, not
+shrinking from the one suicidal form of threat within her power.
+
+"Of course, if you like, you can play the mad woman," said Grandcourt,
+with _sotto voce_ scorn. "It is not to be supposed that you will wait to
+think what good will come of it--or what you owe to me."
+
+He was in a state of disgust and embitterment quite new in the history of
+their relation to each other. It was undeniable that this woman, whose
+life he had allowed to send such deep suckers into his, had a terrible
+power of annoyance in her; and the rash hurry of his proceedings had left
+her opportunities open. His pride saw very ugly possibilities threatening
+it, and he stood for several minutes in silence reviewing the situation--
+considering how he could act upon her. Unlike himself she was of a direct
+nature, with certain simple strongly-colored tendencies, and there was one
+often-experienced effect which he thought he could count upon now. As Sir
+Hugo had said of him, Grandcourt knew how to play his cards upon occasion.
+
+He did not speak again, but looked at his watch, rang the bell, and
+ordered the vehicle to be brought round immediately. Then he removed
+farther from her, walked as if in expectation of a summons, and remained
+silent without turning his eyes upon her.
+
+She was suffering the horrible conflict of self-reproach and tenacity. She
+saw beforehand Grandcourt leaving her without even looking at her again--
+herself left behind in lonely uncertainty--hearing nothing from him--not
+knowing whether she had done her children harm--feeling that she had
+perhaps made him hate her;--all the wretchedness of a creature who had
+defeated her own motives. And yet she could not bear to give up a purpose
+which was a sweet morsel to her vindictiveness. If she had not been a
+mother she would willingly have sacrificed herself to her revenge--to what
+she felt to be the justice of hindering another from getting happiness by
+willingly giving her over to misery. The two dominant passions were at
+struggle. She must satisfy them both.
+
+"Don't let us part in anger, Henleigh," she began, without changing her
+voice or attitude: "it is a very little thing I ask. If I were refusing to
+give anything up that you call yours it would be different: that would be
+a reason for treating me as if you hated me. But I ask such a little
+thing. If you will tell me where you are going on the wedding-day I will
+take care that the diamonds shall be delivered to her without scandal.
+Without scandal," she repeated entreatingly.
+
+"Such preposterous whims make a woman odious," said Grandcourt, not giving
+way in look or movement. "What is the use of talking to mad people?"
+
+"Yes, I am foolish--loneliness has made me foolish--indulge me." Sobs rose
+as she spoke. "If you will indulge me in this one folly I will be very
+meek--I will never trouble you." She burst into hysterical crying, and
+said again almost with a scream--"I will be very meek after that."
+
+There was a strange mixture of acting and reality in this passion. She
+kept hold of her purpose as a child might tighten its hand over a small
+stolen thing, crying and denying all the while. Even Grandcourt was
+wrought upon by surprise: this capricious wish, this childish violence,
+was as unlike Lydia's bearing as it was incongruous with her person. Both
+had always had a stamp of dignity on them. Yet she seemed more manageable
+in this state than in her former attitude of defiance. He came close up to
+her again, and said, in his low imperious tone, "Be quiet, and hear what I
+tell you, I will never forgive you if you present yourself again and make
+a scene."
+
+She pressed her handkerchief against her face, and when she could speak
+firmly said, in the muffled voice that follows sobbing, "I will not--if
+you will let me have my way--I promise you not to thrust myself forward
+again. I have never broken my word to you--how many have you broken to me?
+When you gave me the diamonds to wear you were not thinking of having
+another wife. And I now give them up--I don't reproach you--I only ask you
+to let me give them up in my own way. Have I not borne it well? Everything
+is to be taken away from me, and when I ask for a straw, a chip--you deny
+it me." She had spoken rapidly, but after a little pause she said more
+slowly, her voice freed from its muffled tone: "I will not bear to have it
+denied me."
+
+Grandcourt had a baffling sense that he had to deal with something like
+madness; he could only govern by giving way. The servant came to say the
+fly was ready. When the door was shut again Grandcourt said sullenly, "We
+are going to Ryelands then."
+
+"They shall be delivered to her there," said Lydia, with decision.
+
+"Very well, I am going." He felt no inclination even to take her hand: she
+had annoyed him too sorely. But now that she had gained her point, she was
+prepared to humble herself that she might propitiate him.
+
+"Forgive me; I will never vex you again," she said, with beseeching looks.
+Her inward voice said distinctly--"It is only I who have to forgive." Yet
+she was obliged to ask forgiveness.
+
+"You had better keep that promise. You have made me feel uncommonly ill
+with your folly," said Grandcourt, apparently choosing this statement as
+the strongest possible use of language.
+
+"Poor thing!" cried Lydia, with a faint smile;--was he aware of the minor
+fact that he made her feel ill this morning?
+
+But with the quick transition natural to her, she was now ready to coax
+him if he would let her, that they might part in some degree reconciled.
+She ventured to lay her hand on his shoulder, and he did not move away
+from her: she had so far succeeded in alarming him, that he was not sorry
+for these proofs of returned subjection.
+
+"Light a cigar," she said, soothingly, taking the case from his breast-
+pocket and opening it.
+
+Amidst such caressing signs of mutual fear they parted. The effect that
+clung and gnawed within Grandcourt was a sense of imperfect mastery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+ "A wild dedication of yourselves
+ To unpath'd waters, undreamed shores."
+ --SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+On the day when Gwendolen Harleth was married and became Mrs. Grandcourt,
+the morning was clear and bright, and while the sun was low a slight frost
+crisped the leaves. The bridal party was worth seeing, and half Pennicote
+turned out to see it, lining the pathway up to the church. An old friend
+of the rector's performed the marriage ceremony, the rector himself acting
+as father, to the great advantage of the procession. Only two faces, it
+was remarked, showed signs of sadness--Mrs. Davilow's and Anna's. The
+mother's delicate eyelids were pink, as if she had been crying half the
+night; and no one was surprised that, splendid as the match was, she
+should feel the parting from a daughter who was the flower of her children
+and of her own life. It was less understood why Anna should be troubled
+when she was being so well set off by the bridesmaid's dress. Every one
+else seemed to reflect the brilliancy of the occasion--the bride most of
+all. Of her it was agreed that as to figure and carriage she was worthy to
+be a "lady o' title": as to face, perhaps it might be thought that a title
+required something more rosy; but the bridegroom himself not being fresh-
+colored--being indeed, as the miller's wife observed, very much of her own
+husband's complexion--the match was the more complete. Anyhow he must be
+very fond of her; and it was to be hoped that he would never cast it up to
+her that she had been going out to service as a governess, and her mother
+to live at Sawyer's Cottage--vicissitudes which had been much spoken of in
+the village. The miller's daughter of fourteen could not believe that high
+gentry behaved badly to their wives, but her mother instructed her--"Oh,
+child, men's men: gentle or simple, they're much of a muchness. I've heard
+my mother say Squire Pelton used to take his dogs and a long whip into his
+wife's room, and flog 'em there to frighten her; and my mother was lady's-
+maid there at the very time."
+
+"That's unlucky talk for a wedding, Mrs. Girdle," said the tailor. "A
+quarrel may end wi' the whip, but it begins wi' the tongue, and it's the
+women have got the most o' that."
+
+"The Lord gave it 'em to use, I suppose," said Mrs. Girdle. "_He_ never
+meant you to have it all your own way."
+
+"By what I can make out from the gentleman as attends to the grooming at
+Offendene," said the tailor, "this Mr. Grandcourt has wonderful little
+tongue. Everything must be done dummy-like without his ordering."
+
+"Then he's the more whip, I doubt," said Mrs. Girdle. "_She's_ got tongue
+enough, I warrant her. See, there they come out together!"
+
+"What wonderful long corners she's got to her eyes!" said the tailor. "She
+makes you feel comical when she looks at you."
+
+Gwendolen, in fact, never showed more elasticity in her bearing, more
+lustre in her long brown glance: she had the brilliancy of strong
+excitement, which will sometimes come even from pain. It was not pain,
+however, that she was feeling: she had wrought herself up to much the same
+condition as that in which she stood at the gambling-table when Deronda
+was looking at her, and she began to lose. There was an enjoyment in it:
+whatever uneasiness a growing conscience had created was disregarded as an
+ailment might have been, amidst the gratification of that ambitious vanity
+and desire for luxury within her which it would take a great deal of slow
+poisoning to kill. This morning she could not have said truly that she
+repented her acceptance of Grandcourt, or that any fears in hazy
+perspective could hinder the glowing effect of the immediate scene in
+which she was the central object. That she was doing something wrong--that
+a punishment might be hanging over her--that the woman to whom she had
+given a promise and broken it, was thinking of her in bitterness and
+misery with a just reproach--that Deronda with his way of looking into
+things very likely despised her for marrying Grandcourt, as he had
+despised her for gambling--above all, that the cord which united her with
+this lover and which she had heretofore held by the hand, was now being
+flung over her neck,--all this yeasty mingling of dimly understood facts
+with vague but deep impressions, and with images half real, half
+fantastic, had been disturbing her during the weeks of her engagement. Was
+that agitating experience nullified this morning? No: it was surmounted
+and thrust down with a sort of exulting defiance as she felt herself
+standing at the game of life with many eyes upon her, daring everything to
+win much--or if to lose, still with _eclat_ and a sense of importance. But
+this morning a losing destiny for herself did not press upon her as a
+fear: she thought that she was entering on a fuller power of managing
+circumstances--with all the official strength of marriage, which some
+women made so poor a use of. That intoxication of youthful egoism out of
+which she had been shaken by trouble, humiliation, and a new sense of
+culpability, had returned upon her under a newly-fed strength of the old
+fumes. She did not in the least present the ideal of the tearful,
+tremulous bride. Poor Gwendolen, whom some had judged much too forward and
+instructed in the world's ways!--with her erect head and elastic footstep
+she was walking among illusions; and yet, too, there was an under-
+consciousness of her that she was a little intoxicated.
+
+"Thank God you bear it so well, my darling!" said Mrs. Davilow, when she
+had helped Gwendolen to doff her bridal white and put on her traveling
+dress. All the trembling had been done by the poor mother, and her
+agitation urged Gwendolen doubly to take the morning as if it were a
+triumph.
+
+"Why, you might have said that, if I had been going to Mrs. Mompert's, you
+dear, sad, incorrigible mamma!" said Gwendolen just putting her hands to
+her mother's cheeks with laughing tenderness--then retreating a little and
+spreading out her arms as if to exhibit herself: "Here am I--Mrs.
+Grandcourt! what else would you have me, but what I am sure to be? You
+know you were ready to die with vexation when you thought that I would not
+be Mrs. Grandcourt."
+
+"Hush, hush, my child, for heaven's sake!" said Mrs. Davilow, almost in a
+whisper. "How can I help feeling it when I am parting from you. But I can
+bear anything gladly if you are happy."
+
+"Not gladly, mamma, no!" said Gwendolen, shaking her head, with a bright
+smile. "Willingly you would bear it, but always sorrowfully. Sorrowing is
+your sauce; you can take nothing without it." Then, clasping her mother's
+shoulders and raining kisses first on one cheek and then on the other
+between her words, she said, gaily, "And you shall sorrow over my having
+everything at my beck---and enjoying everything glorious--splendid houses
+--and horses--and diamonds, I shall have diamonds--and going to court--and
+being Lady Certainly--and Lady Perhaps--and grand here--and tantivy there
+--and always loving you better than anybody else in the world."
+
+"My sweet child!--But I shall not be jealous if you love your husband
+better; and he will expect to be first."
+
+Gwendolen thrust out her lips and chin with a pretty grimace, saying,
+"Rather a ridiculous expectation. However, I don't mean to treat him ill,
+unless he deserves it."
+
+Then the two fell into a clinging embrace, and Gwendolen could not hinder
+a rising sob when she said, "I wish you were going with me, mamma."
+
+But the slight dew on her long eyelashes only made her the more charming
+when she gave her hand to Grandcourt to be led to the carriage.
+
+The rector looked in on her to give a final "Good-bye; God bless you; we
+shall see you again before long," and then returned to Mrs. Davilow,
+saying half cheerfully, half solemnly--
+
+"Let us be thankful, Fanny. She is in a position well suited to her, and
+beyond what I should have dared to hope for. And few women can have been
+chosen more entirely for their own sake. You should feel yourself a happy
+mother."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a railway journey of some fifty miles before the new husband and
+wife reached the station near Ryelands. The sky had veiled itself since
+the morning, and it was hardly more than twilight when they entered the
+park-gates, but still Gwendolen, looking out of the carriage-window as
+they drove rapidly along, could see the grand outlines and the nearer
+beauties of the scene--the long winding drive bordered with evergreens
+backed by huge gray stems: then the opening of wide grassy spaces and
+undulations studded with dark clumps; till at last came a wide level where
+the white house could be seen, with a hanging wood for a back-ground, and
+the rising and sinking balustrade of a terrace in front.
+
+Gwendolen had been at her liveliest during the journey, chatting
+incessantly, ignoring any change in their mutual position since yesterday;
+and Grandcourt had been rather ecstatically quiescent, while she turned
+his gentle seizure of her hand into a grasp of his hand by both hers, with
+an increased vivacity as of a kitten that will not sit quiet to be petted.
+She was really getting somewhat febrile in her excitement; and now in this
+drive through the park her usual susceptibility to changes of light and
+scenery helped to make her heart palpitate newly. Was it at the novelty
+simply, or the almost incredible fulfilment about to be given to her
+girlish dreams of being "somebody"--walking through her own furlong of
+corridor and under her own ceilings of an out-of-sight loftiness, where
+her own painted Spring was shedding painted flowers, and her own fore-
+shortened Zephyrs were blowing their trumpets over her; while her own
+servants, lackeys in clothing but men in bulk and shape, were as nought in
+her presence, and revered the propriety of her insolence to them:--being
+in short the heroine of an admired play without the pains of art? Was it
+alone the closeness of this fulfilment which made her heart flutter? or
+was it some dim forecast, the insistent penetration of suppressed
+experience, mixing the expectation of a triumph with the dread of a
+crisis? Hers was one of the natures in which exultation inevitably
+carries an infusion of dread ready to curdle and declare itself.
+
+She fell silent in spite of herself as they approached the gates, and when
+her husband said, "Here we are at home!" and for the first time kissed her
+on the lips, she hardly knew of it: it was no more than the passive
+acceptance of a greeting in the midst of an absorbing show. Was not all
+her hurrying life of the last three months a show, in which her
+consciousness was a wondering spectator? After the half-willful excitement
+of the day, a numbness had come over her personality.
+
+But there was a brilliant light in the hall--warmth, matting, carpets,
+full-length portraits, Olympian statues, assiduous servants. Not many
+servants, however: only a few from Diplow in addition to those constantly
+in charge of the house; and Gwendolen's new maid, who had come with her,
+was taken under guidance by the housekeeper. Gwendolen felt herself being
+led by Grandcourt along a subtly-scented corridor, into an ante-room where
+she saw an open doorway sending out a rich glow of light and color.
+
+"These are our dens," said Grandcourt. "You will like to be quiet here
+till dinner. We shall dine early."
+
+He pressed her hand to his lips and moved away, more in love than he had
+ever expected to be.
+
+Gwendolen, yielded up her hat and mantle, threw herself into a chair by
+the glowing hearth, and saw herself repeated in glass panels with all her
+faint-green satin surroundings. The housekeeper had passed into this
+boudoir from the adjoining dressing-room and seemed disposed to linger,
+Gwendolen thought, in order to look at the new mistress of Ryelands, who,
+however, being impatient for solitude said to her, "Will you tell Hudson
+when she has put out my dress to leave everything? I shall not want her
+again, unless I ring."
+
+The housekeeper, coming forward, said, "Here is a packet, madam, which I
+was ordered to give into nobody's hands but yours, when you were alone.
+The person who brought it said it was a present particularly ordered by
+Mr. Grandcourt; but he was not to know of its arrival till he saw you wear
+it. Excuse me, madam; I felt it right to obey orders."
+
+Gwendolen took the packet and let it lie on her lap till she heard the
+doors close. It came into her mind that the packet might contain the
+diamonds which Grandcourt had spoken of as being deposited somewhere and
+to be given to her on her marriage. In this moment of confused feeling and
+creeping luxurious languor she was glad of this diversion--glad of such an
+event as having her own diamonds to try on.
+
+Within all the sealed paper coverings was a box, but within the box there
+_was_ a jewel-case; and now she felt no doubt that she had the diamonds.
+But on opening the case, in the same instant that she saw them gleam she
+saw a letter lying above them. She knew the handwriting of the address. It
+was as if an adder had lain on them. Her heart gave a leap which seemed to
+have spent all her strength; and as she opened the bit of thin paper, it
+shook with the trembling of her hands. But it was legible as print, and
+thrust its words upon her.
+
+ These diamonds, which were once given with ardent love to Lydia
+ Glasher, she passes on to you. You have broken your word to her, that
+ you might possess what was hers. Perhaps you think of being happy, as
+ she once was, and of having beautiful children such as hers, who will
+ thrust hers aside. God is too just for that. The man you have married
+ has a withered heart. His best young love was mine: you could not take
+ that from me when you took the rest. It is dead: but I am the grave
+ in which your chance of happiness is buried as well as mine. You had
+ your warning. You have chosen to injure me and my children. He had
+ meant to marry me. He would have married me at last, if you had not
+ broken your word. You will have your punishment. I desire it with all
+ my soul.
+
+ Will you give him this letter to set him against me and ruin us more--
+ me and my children? Shall you like to stand before your husband with
+ these diamonds on you, and these words of mine in his thoughts and
+ yours? Will he think you have any right to complain when he has made
+ you miserable? You took him with your eyes open. The willing wrong you
+ have done me will be your curse.
+
+It seemed at first as if Gwendolen's eyes were spell-bound in reading the
+horrible words of the letter over and over again as a doom of penance; but
+suddenly a new spasm of terror made her lean forward and stretch out the
+paper toward the fire, lest accusation and proof at once should meet all
+eyes. It flew like a feather from her trembling fingers and was caught up
+in a great draught of flame. In her movement the casket fell on the floor
+and the diamonds rolled out. She took no notice, but fell back in her
+chair again helpless. She could not see the reflections of herself then;
+they were like so many women petrified white; but coming near herself you
+might have seen the tremor in her lips and hands. She sat so for a long
+while, knowing little more than that she was feeling ill, and that those
+written words kept repeating themselves to her.
+
+Truly here were poisoned gems, and the poison had entered into this poor
+young creature.
+
+After that long while, there was a tap at the door and Grandcourt entered,
+dressed for dinner. The sight of him brought a new nervous shock, and
+Gwendolen screamed again and again with hysterical violence. He had
+expected to see her dressed and smiling, ready to be led down. He saw her
+pallid, shrieking as it seemed with terror, the jewels scattered around
+her on the floor. Was it a fit of madness?
+
+In some form or other the furies had crossed his threshold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+ In all ages it hath been a favorite text that a potent love hath the
+ nature of an isolated fatality, whereto the mind's opinions and wonted
+ resolves are altogether alien; as, for example, Daphnis his frenzy,
+ wherein it had little availed him to have been convinced of Heraclitus
+ his doctrine; or the philtre-bred passion of Tristan, who, though he
+ had been as deep as Duns Scotus, would have had his reasoning marred
+ by that cup too much; or Romeo in his sudden taking for Juliet,
+ wherein any objections he might have held against Ptolemy had made
+ little difference to his discourse under the balcony. Yet all love is
+ not such, even though potent; nay, this passion hath as large scope as
+ any for allying itself with every operation of the soul: so that it
+ shall acknowledge an effect from the imagined light of unproven
+ firmaments, and have its scale set to the grander orbits of what hath
+ been and shall be.
+
+
+Deronda, on his return to town, could assure Sir Hugo of his having lodged
+in Grandcourt's mind a distinct understanding that he could get fifty
+thousand pounds by giving up a prospect which was probably distant, and
+not absolutely certain; but he had no further sign of Grandcourt's
+disposition in the matter than that he was evidently inclined to keep up
+friendly communications.
+
+"And what did you think of the future bride on a nearer survey?" said Sir
+Hugo.
+
+"I thought better of her than I did in Leubronn. Roulette was not a good
+setting for her; it brought out something of the demon. At Dinlow she
+seemed much more womanly and attractive--less hard and self-possessed. I
+thought her mouth and eyes had quite a different expression."
+
+"Don't flirt with her too much, Dan," said Sir Hugo, meaning to be
+agreeably playful. "If you make Grandcourt savage when they come to the
+Abbey at Christmas, it will interfere with my affairs."
+
+"I can stay in town, sir."
+
+"No, no. Lady Mallinger and the children can't do without you at
+Christmas. Only don't make mischief--unless you can get up a duel, and
+manage to shoot Grandcourt, which might be worth a little inconvenience."
+
+"I don't think you ever saw me flirt," said Deronda, not amused.
+
+"Oh, haven't I, though?" said Sir Hugo, provokingly. "You are always
+looking tenderly at the women, and talking to them in a Jesuitical way.
+You are a dangerous young fellow--a kind of Lovelace who will make the
+Clarissas run after you instead of you running after them."
+
+What was the use of being exasperated at a tasteless joke?--only the
+exasperation comes before the reflection on utility. Few friendly remarks
+are more annoying than the information that we are always seeming to do
+what we never mean to do. Sir Hugo's notion of flirting, it was to be
+hoped, was rather peculiar; for his own part, Deronda was sure that he had
+never flirted. But he was glad that the baronet had no knowledge about the
+repurchase of Gwendolen's necklace to feed his taste for this kind of
+rallying.
+
+He would be on his guard in future; for example, in his behavior at Mrs.
+Meyrick's, where he was about to pay his first visit since his arrival
+from Leubronn. For Mirah was certainly a creature in whom it was difficult
+not to show a tender kind of interest both by looks and speech.
+
+Mrs. Meyrick had not failed to send Deronda a report of Mirah's well-being
+in her family. "We are getting fonder of her every day," she had written.
+"At breakfast-time we all look toward the door with expectation to see her
+come in; and we watch her and listen to her as if she were a native from a
+new country. I have not heard a word from her lips that gives me a doubt
+about her. She is quite contented and full of gratitude. My daughters are
+learning from her, and they hope to get her other pupils; for she is
+anxious not to eat the bread of idleness, but to work, like my girls. Mab
+says our life has become like a fairy tale, and all she is afraid of is
+that Mirah will turn into a nightingale again and fly away from us. Her
+voice is just perfect: not loud and strong, but searching and melting,
+like the thoughts of what has been. That is the way old people like me
+feel a beautiful voice."
+
+But Mrs. Meyrick did not enter into particulars which would have required
+her to say that Amy and Mab, who had accompanied Mirah to the synagogue,
+found the Jewish faith less reconcilable with their wishes in her case
+than in that of Scott's Rebecca. They kept silence out of delicacy to
+Mirah, with whom her religion was too tender a subject to be touched
+lightly; but after a while Amy, who was much of a practical reformer,
+could not restrain a question.
+
+"Excuse me, Mirah, but _does_ it seem quite right to you that the women
+should sit behind rails in a gallery apart?"
+
+"Yes, I never thought of anything else," said Mirah, with mild surprise.
+
+"And you like better to see the men with their hats on?" said Mab,
+cautiously proposing the smallest item of difference.
+
+"Oh, yes. I like what I have always seen there, because it brings back to
+me the same feelings--the feelings I would not part with for anything else
+in the world."
+
+After this, any criticism, whether of doctrine or practice, would have
+seemed to these generous little people an inhospitable cruelty. Mirah's
+religion was of one fibre with her affections, and had never presented
+itself to her as a set of propositions.
+
+"She says herself she is a very bad Jewess, and does not half know her
+people's religion," said Amy, when Mirah was gone to bed. "Perhaps it
+would gradually melt away from her, and she would pass into Christianity
+like the rest of the world, if she got to love us very much, and never
+found her mother. It is so strange to be of the Jews' religion now."
+
+"Oh, oh, oh!" cried Mab. "I wish I were not such a hideous Christian. How
+can an ugly Christian, who is always dropping her work, convert a
+beautiful Jewess, who has not a fault?"
+
+"It may be wicked of me," said shrewd Kate, "but I cannot help wishing
+that her mother may not be found. There might be something unpleasant."
+
+"I don't think it, my dear," said Mrs. Meyrick. "I believe Mirah is cut
+out after the pattern of her mother. And what a joy it would be to her to
+have such a daughter brought back again! But a mother's feelings are not
+worth reckoning, I suppose" (she shot a mischievous glance at her own
+daughters), "and a dead mother is worth more that a living one?"
+
+"Well, and so she may be, little mother," said Kate; "but we would rather
+hold you cheaper, and have you alive."
+
+Not only the Meyricks, whose various knowledge had been acquired by the
+irregular foraging to which clever girls have usually been reduced, but
+Deronda himself, with all his masculine instruction, had been roused by
+this apparition of Mirah to the consciousness of knowing hardly anything
+about modern Judaism or the inner Jewish history. The Chosen People have
+been commonly treated as a people chosen for the sake of somebody else;
+and their thinking as something (no matter exactly what) that ought to
+have been entirely otherwise; and Deronda, like his neighbors, had
+regarded Judaism as a sort of eccentric fossilized form which an
+accomplished man might dispense with studying, and leave to specialists.
+But Mirah, with her terrified flight from one parent, and her yearning
+after the other, had flashed on him the hitherto neglected reality that
+Judaism was something still throbbing in human lives, still making for
+them the only conceivable vesture of the world; and in the idling
+excursion on which he immediately afterward set out with Sir Hugo he began
+to look for the outsides of synagogues, and the title of books about the
+Jews. This awakening of a new interest--this passing from the supposition
+that we hold the right opinions on a subject we are careless about, to a
+sudden care for it, and a sense that our opinions were ignorance--is an
+effectual remedy for _ennui_, which, unhappily, cannot be secured on a
+physician's prescription; but Deronda had carried it with him, and endured
+his weeks of lounging all the better. It was on this journey that he first
+entered a Jewish synagogue--at Frankfort--where his party rested on a
+Friday. In exploring the Juden-gasse, which he had seen long before, he
+remembered well enough its picturesque old houses; what his eyes chiefly
+dwelt on now were the human types there; and his thought, busily
+connecting them with the past phases of their race, stirred that fibre of
+historic sympathy which had helped to determine in him certain traits
+worth mentioning for those who are interested in his future. True, when a
+young man has a fine person, no eccentricity of manners, the education of
+a gentleman, and a present income, it is not customary to feel a prying
+curiosity about his way of thinking, or his peculiar tastes. He may very
+well be settled in life as an agreeable clever young fellow without
+passing a special examination on those heads. Later, when he is getting
+rather slovenly and portly, his peculiarities are more distinctly
+discerned, and it is taken as a mercy if they are not highly
+objectionable. But any one wishing to understand the effect of after-
+events on Deronda should know a little more of what he was at five-and-
+twenty than was evident in ordinary intercourse.
+
+It happened that the very vividness of his impressions had often made him
+the more enigmatic to his friends, and had contributed to an apparent
+indefiniteness in his sentiments. His early-wakened sensibility and
+reflectiveness had developed into a many-sided sympathy, which threatened
+to hinder any persistent course of action: as soon as he took up any
+antagonism, though only in thought, he seemed to himself like the Sabine
+warriors in the memorable story--with nothing to meet his spear but flesh
+of his flesh, and objects that he loved. His imagination had so wrought
+itself to the habit of seeing things as they probably appeared to others,
+that a strong partisanship, unless it were against an immediate
+oppression, had become an insincerity for him. His plenteous, flexible
+sympathy had ended by falling into one current with that reflective
+analysis which tends to neutralize sympathy. Few men were able to keep
+themselves clearer of vices than he; yet he hated vices mildly, being used
+to think of them less in the abstract than as a part of mixed human
+natures having an individual history, which it was the bent of his mind to
+trace with understanding and pity. With the same innate balance he was
+fervidly democratic in his feeling for the multitude, and yet, through his
+affections and imagination, intensely conservative; voracious of
+speculations on government and religion, yet both to part with long-
+sanctioned forms which, for him, were quick with memories and sentiments
+that no argument could lay dead. We fall on the leaning side; and Deronda
+suspected himself of loving too well the losing causes of the world.
+Martyrdom changes sides, and he was in danger of changing with it, having
+a strong repugnance to taking up that clue of success which the order of
+the world often forces upon us and makes it treason against the common
+weal to reject. And yet his fear of falling into an unreasoning narrow
+hatred made a check for him: he apologized for the heirs of privilege; he
+shrank with dislike from the loser's bitterness and the denunciatory tone
+of the unaccepted innovator. A too reflective and diffusive sympathy was
+in danger of paralyzing in him that indignation against wrong and that
+selectness of fellowship which are the conditions of moral force; and in
+the last few years of confirmed manhood he had become so keenly aware of
+this that what he most longed for was either some external event, or some
+inward light, that would urge him into a definite line of action, and
+compress his wandering energy. He was ceasing to care for knowledge--he
+had no ambition for practice--unless they could both be gathered up into
+one current with his emotions; and he dreaded, as if it were a dwelling-
+place of lost souls, that dead anatomy of culture which turns the universe
+into a mere ceaseless answer to queries, and knows, not everything, but
+everything else about everything--as if one should be ignorant of nothing
+concerning the scent of violets except the scent itself for which one had
+no nostril. But how and whence was the needed event to come?--the
+influence that would justify partiality, and make him what he longed to
+be, yet was unable to make himself--an organic part of social life,
+instead of roaming in it like a yearning disembodied spirit, stirred with
+a vague social passion, but without fixed local habitation to render
+fellowship real? To make a little difference for the better was what he
+was not contented to live without; but how to make it? It is one thing to
+see your road, another to cut it. He found some of the fault in his birth
+and the way he had been brought up, which had laid no special demands on
+him and had given him no fixed relationship except one of a doubtful kind;
+but he did not attempt to hide from himself that he had fallen into a
+meditative numbness, and was gliding farther and farther from that life of
+practically energetic sentiment which he would have proclaimed (if he had
+been inclined to proclaim anything) to be the best of all life, and for
+himself the only way worth living. He wanted some way of keeping emotion
+and its progeny of sentiments--which make the savors of life--substantial
+and strong in the face of a reflectiveness that threatened to nullify all
+differences. To pound the objects of sentiment into small dust, yet keep
+sentiment alive and active, was something like the famous recipe for
+making cannon--to first take a round hole and then enclose it with iron;
+whatever you do keeping fast hold of your round hole. Yet how distinguish
+what our will may wisely save in its completeness, from the heaping of
+cat-mummies and the expensive cult of enshrined putrefactions?
+
+Something like this was the common under-current in Deronda's mind while
+he was reading law or imperfectly attending to polite conversation.
+Meanwhile he had not set about one function in particular with zeal and
+steadiness. Not an admirable experience, to be proposed as an ideal; but a
+form of struggle before break of day which some young men since the
+patriarch have had to pass through, with more or less of bruising if not
+laming.
+
+I have said that under his calm exterior he had a fervor which made him
+easily feel the presence of poetry in everyday events; and the forms of
+the Juden-gasse, rousing the sense of union with what is remote, set him
+musing on two elements of our historic life which that sense raises into
+the same region of poetry;--the faint beginnings of faiths and
+institutions, and their obscure lingering decay; the dust and withered
+remnants with which they are apt to be covered, only enhancing for the
+awakened perception the impressiveness either of a sublimely penetrating
+life, as in the twin green leaves that will become the sheltering tree, or
+of a pathetic inheritance in which all the grandeur and the glory have
+become a sorrowing memory.
+
+This imaginative stirring, as he turned out of the Juden-gasse, and
+continued to saunter in the warm evening air, meaning to find his way to
+the synagogue, neutralized the repellent effect of certain ugly little
+incidents on his way. Turning into an old book-shop to ask the exact time
+of service at the synagogue, he was affectionately directed by a
+precocious Jewish youth, who entered cordially into his wanting, not the
+fine new building of the Reformed but the old Rabbinical school of the
+orthodox; and then cheated him like a pure Teuton, only with more amenity,
+in his charge for a book quite out of request as one "nicht so leicht zu
+bekommen." Meanwhile at the opposite counter a deaf and grisly tradesman
+was casting a flinty look at certain cards, apparently combining
+advantages of business with religion, and shoutingly proposed to him in
+Jew-dialect by a dingy man in a tall coat hanging from neck to heel, a bag
+in hand, and a broad low hat surmounting his chosen nose--who had no
+sooner disappeared than another dingy man of the same pattern issued from
+the background glooms of the shop and also shouted in the same dialect. In
+fact, Deronda saw various queer-looking Israelites not altogether without
+guile, and just distinguishable from queer-looking Christians of the same
+mixed _morale_. In his anxiety about Mirah's relatives, he had lately been
+thinking of vulgar Jews with a sort of personal alarm. But a little
+comparison will often diminish our surprise and disgust at the aberrations
+of Jews and other dissidents whose lives do not offer a consistent or
+lovely pattern of their creed; and this evening Deronda, becoming more
+conscious that he was falling into unfairness and ridiculous exaggeration,
+began to use that corrective comparison: he paid his thaler too much,
+without prejudice to his interests in the Hebrew destiny, or his wish to
+find the _Rabbinische Schule_, which he arrived at by sunset, and entered
+with a good congregation of men.
+
+He happened to take his seat in a line with an elderly man from whom he
+was distant enough to glance at him more than once as rather a noticeable
+figure--his ample white beard and felt hat framing a profile of that fine
+contour which may as easily be Italian as Hebrew. He returned Deronda's
+notice till at last their eyes met; an undesirable chance with unknown
+persons, and a reason to Deronda for not looking again; but he immediately
+found an open prayer-book pushed toward him and had to bow his thanks.
+However, the congregation had mustered, the reader had mounted to the
+_almemor_ or platform, and the service began. Deronda, having looked
+enough at the German translation of the Hebrew in the book before him to
+know that he was chiefly hearing Psalms and Old Testament passages or
+phrases, gave himself up to that strongest effect of chanted liturgies
+which is independent of detailed verbal meaning--like the effect of an
+Allegri's _Miserere_ or a Palestrina's _Magnificat_. The most powerful
+movement of feeling with a liturgy is the prayer which seeks for nothing
+special, but is a yearning to escape from the limitations of our own
+weakness and an invocation of all Good to enter and abide with us; or else
+a self-oblivious lifting up of Gladness, a _Gloria in excelsis_ that such
+Good exists; both the yearning and the exaltation gathering their utmost
+force from the sense of communion in a form which has expressed them both,
+for long generations of struggling fellow-men. The Hebrew liturgy, like
+others, has its transitions of litany, lyric, proclamation, dry statement
+and blessing; but this evening, all were one for Deronda: the chant of the
+_Chazaris_ or Reader's grand wide-ranging voice with its passage from
+monotony to sudden cries, the outburst of sweet boys' voices from the
+little choir, the devotional swaying of men's bodies backward and forward,
+the very commonness of the building and shabbiness of the scene where a
+national faith, which had penetrated the thinking of half the world, and
+moulded the splendid forms of that world's religion, was finding a remote,
+obscure echo--all were blent for him as one expression of a binding
+history, tragic and yet glorious. He wondered at the strength of his own
+feeling; it seemed beyond the occasion--what one might imagine to be a
+divine influx in the darkness, before there was any vision to interpret.
+The whole scene was a coherent strain, its burden a passionate regret,
+which, if he had known the liturgy for the Day of Reconciliation, he might
+have clad in its authentic burden; "Happy the eye which saw all these
+things; but verily to hear only of them afflicts our soul. Happy the eye
+that saw our temple and the joy of our congregation; but verily to hear
+only of them afflicts our soul. Happy the eye that saw the fingers when
+tuning every kind of song; but verily to hear only of them afflicts our
+soul."
+
+But with the cessation of the devotional sounds and the movement of many
+indifferent faces and vulgar figures before him there darted into his mind
+the frigid idea that he had probably been alone in his feeling, and
+perhaps the only person in the congregation for whom the service was more
+than a dull routine. There was just time for this chilling thought before
+he had bowed to his civil neighbor and was moving away with the rest--when
+he felt a hand on his arm, and turning with the rather unpleasant
+sensation which this abrupt sort of claim is apt to bring, he saw close to
+him the white-bearded face of that neighbor, who said to him in German,
+"Excuse me, young gentleman--allow me--what is your parentage--your
+mother's family--her maiden name?"
+
+Deronda had a strongly resistant feeling: he was inclined to shake off
+hastily the touch on his arm; but he managed to slip it away and said
+coldly, "I am an Englishman."
+
+The questioner looked at him dubiously still for an instant, then just
+lifted his hat and turned away; whether under a sense of having made a
+mistake or of having been repulsed, Deronda was uncertain. In his walk
+back to the hotel he tried to still any uneasiness on the subject by
+reflecting that he could not have acted differently. How could he say that
+he did not know the name of his mother's family to that total stranger?--
+who indeed had taken an unwarrantable liberty in the abruptness of his
+question, dictated probably by some fancy of likeness such as often occurs
+without real significance. The incident, he said to himself, was trivial;
+but whatever import it might have, his inward shrinking on the occasion
+was too strong for him to be sorry that he had cut it short. It was a
+reason, however, for his not mentioning the synagogue to the Mallingers--
+in addition to his usual inclination to reticence on anything that the
+baronet would have been likely to call Quixotic enthusiasm. Hardly any man
+could be more good-natured than Sir Hugo; indeed in his kindliness
+especially to women, he did actions which others would have called
+romantic; but he never took a romantic view of them, and in general smiled
+at the introduction of motives on a grand scale, or of reasons that lay
+very far off. This was the point of strongest difference between him and
+Deronda, who rarely ate at breakfast without some silent discursive flight
+after grounds for filling up his day according to the practice of his
+contemporaries.
+
+This halt at Frankfort was taken on their way home, and its impressions
+were kept the more actively vibrating in him by the duty of caring for
+Mirah's welfare. That question about his parentage, which if he had not
+both inwardly and outwardly shaken it off as trivial, would have seemed a
+threat rather than a promise of revelation, and reinforced his anxiety as
+to the effect of finding Mirah's relatives and his resolve to proceed with
+caution. If he made any unpleasant discovery, was he bound to a disclosure
+that might cast a new net of trouble around her? He had written to Mrs.
+Meyrick to announce his visit at four o'clock, and he found Mirah seated
+at work with only Mrs. Meyrick and Mab, the open piano, and all the
+glorious company of engravings. The dainty neatness of her hair and dress,
+the glow of tranquil happiness in a face where a painter need have changed
+nothing if he had wanted to put it in front of the host singing "peace on
+earth and good will to men," made a contrast to his first vision of her
+that was delightful to Deronda's eyes. Mirah herself was thinking of it,
+and immediately on their greeting said--
+
+"See how different I am from the miserable creature by the river! all
+because you found me and brought me to the very best."
+
+"It was my good chance to find you," said Deronda. "Any other man would
+have been glad to do what I did."
+
+"That is not the right way to be thinking about it," said Mirah, shaking
+her head with decisive gravity, "I think of what really was. It was you,
+and not another, who found me and were good to me."
+
+"I agree with Mirah," said Mrs. Meyrick. "Saint Anybody is a bad saint to
+pray to."
+
+"Besides, Anybody could not have brought me to you," said Mirah, smiling
+at Mrs. Meyrick. "And I would rather be with you than with any one else in
+the world except my mother. I wonder if ever a poor little bird, that was
+lost and could not fly, was taken and put into a warm nest where was a
+mother and sisters who took to it so that everything came naturally, as if
+it had been always there. I hardly thought before that the world could
+ever be as happy and without fear as it is to me now." She looked
+meditative a moment, and then said, "sometimes I am a _little_ afraid."
+
+"What is it you are afraid of?" said Deronda with anxiety.
+
+"That when I am turning at the corner of a street I may meet my father. It
+seems dreadful that I should be afraid of meeting him. That is my only
+sorrow," said Mirah, plaintively.
+
+"It is surely not very probable," said Deronda, wishing that it were less
+so; then, not to let the opportunity escape--"Would it be a great grief to
+you now if you were never to meet your mother?"
+
+She did not answer immediately, but meditated again, with her eyes fixed
+on the opposite wall. Then she turned them on Deronda and said firmly, as
+if she had arrived at the exact truth, "I want her to know that I have
+always loved her, and if she is alive I want to comfort her. She may be
+dead. If she were I should long to know where she was buried; and to know
+whether my brother lives, so that we can remember her together. But I will
+try not to grieve. I have thought much for so many years of her being
+dead. And I shall have her with me in my mind, as I have always had. We
+can never be really parted. I think I have never sinned against her. I
+have always tried not to do what would hurt her. Only, she might be sorry
+that I was not a good Jewess."
+
+"In what way are you not a good Jewess?" said Deronda.
+
+"I am ignorant, and we never observed the laws, but lived among Christians
+just as they did. But I have heard my father laugh at the strictness of
+the Jews about their food and all customs, and their not liking
+Christians. I think my mother was strict; but she could never want me not
+to like those who are better to me than any of my own people I have ever
+known. I think I could obey in other things that she wished but not in
+that. It is so much easier to me to share in love than in hatred. I
+remember a play I read in German--since I have been here it has come into
+my mind--where the heroine says something like that."
+
+"Antigone," said Deronda.
+
+"Ah, you know it. But I do not believe that my mother would wish me not to
+love my best friends. She would be grateful to them." Here Mirah had
+turned to Mrs. Meyrick, and with a sudden lighting up of her whole
+countenance, she said, "Oh, if we ever do meet and know each other as we
+are now, so that I could tell what would comfort her--I should be so full
+of blessedness my soul would know no want but to love her!"
+
+"God bless you, child!" said Mrs. Meyrick, the words escaping
+involuntarily from her motherly heart. But to relieve the strain of
+feeling she looked at Deronda and said, "It is curious that Mirah, who
+remembers her mother so well it is as if she saw her, cannot recall her
+brother the least bit--except the feeling of having been carried by him
+when she was tired, and of his being near her when she was in her mother's
+lap. It must be that he was rarely at home. He was already grown up. It is
+a pity her brother should be quite a stranger to her."
+
+"He is good; I feel sure Ezra is good," said Mirah, eagerly. "He loved my
+mother--he would take care of her. I remember more of him than that. I
+remember my mother's voice once calling, 'Ezra!' and then his answering
+from a distance 'Mother!'"--Mirah had changed her voice a little in each
+of these words and had given them a loving intonation--"and then he came
+close to us. I feel sure he is good. I have always taken comfort from
+that."
+
+It was impossible to answer this either with agreement or doubt. Mrs.
+Meyrick and Deronda exchanged a quick glance: about this brother she felt
+as painfully dubious as he did. But Mirah went on, absorbed in her
+memories--
+
+"Is it not wonderful how I remember the voices better than anything else?
+I think they must go deeper into us than other things. I have often
+fancied heaven might be made of voices."
+
+"Like your singing--yes," said Mab, who had hitherto kept a modest
+silence, and now spoke bashfully, as was her wont in the presence of
+Prince Camaralzaman--"Ma, do ask Mirah to sing. Mr. Deronda has not heard
+her."
+
+"Would it be disagreeable to you to sing now?" said Deronda, with a more
+deferential gentleness than he had ever been conscious of before.
+
+"Oh, I shall like it," said Mirah. "My voice has come back a little with
+rest."
+
+Perhaps her ease of manner was due to something more than the simplicity
+of her nature. The circumstances of her life made her think of everything
+she did as work demanded from her, in which affectation had nothing to do;
+and she had begun her work before self-consciousness was born.
+
+She immediately rose and went to the piano--a somewhat worn instrument
+that seemed to get the better of its infirmities under the firm touch of
+her small fingers as she preluded. Deronda placed himself where he could
+see her while she sang; and she took everything as quietly as if she had
+been a child going to breakfast.
+
+Imagine her--it is always good to imagine a human creature in whom bodily
+loveliness seems as properly one with the entire being as the bodily
+loveliness of those wondrous transparent orbs of life that we find in the
+sea--imagine her with her dark hair brushed from her temples, but yet
+showing certain tiny rings there which had cunningly found their own way
+back, the mass of it hanging behind just to the nape of the little neck in
+curly fibres, such as renew themselves at their own will after being
+bathed into straightness like that of water-grasses. Then see the perfect
+cameo her profile makes, cut in a duskish shell, where by some happy
+fortune there pierced a gem-like darkness for the eye and eyebrow; the
+delicate nostrils defined enough to be ready for sensitive movements, the
+finished ear, the firm curves of the chin and neck, entering into the
+expression of a refinement which was not feebleness.
+
+She sang Beethoven's "Per pieta non dirmi addio" with a subdued but
+searching pathos which had that essential of perfect singing, the making
+one oblivious of art or manner, and only possessing one with the song. It
+was the sort of voice that gives the impression of being meant like a
+bird's wooing for an audience near and beloved. Deronda began by looking
+at her, but felt himself presently covering his eyes with his hand,
+wanting to seclude the melody in darkness; then he refrained from what
+might seem oddity, and was ready to meet the look of mute appeal which she
+turned toward him at the end.
+
+"I think I never enjoyed a song more than that," he said, gratefully.
+
+"You like my singing? I am so glad," she said, with a smile of delight.
+"It has been a great pain to me, because it failed in what it was wanted
+for. But now we think I can use it to get my bread. I have really been
+taught well. And now I have two pupils, that Miss Meyrick found for me.
+They pay me nearly two crowns for their two lessons."
+
+"I think I know some ladies who would find you many pupils after
+Christmas," said Deronda. "You would not mind singing before any one who
+wished to hear you?"
+
+"Oh no, I want to do something to get money. I could teach reading and
+speaking, Mrs. Meyrick thinks. But if no one would learn of me, that is
+difficult." Mirah smiled with a touch of merriment he had not seen in her
+before. "I dare say I should find her poor--I mean my mother. I should
+want to get money for her. And I can not always live on charity; though"--
+here she turned so as to take all three of her companions in one glance--
+"it is the sweetest charity in all the world."
+
+"I should think you can get rich," said Deronda, smiling. "Great ladies
+will perhaps like you to teach their daughters, We shall see. But now do
+sing again to us."
+
+She went on willingly, singing with ready memory various things by
+Gordigiani and Schubert; then, when she had left the piano, Mab said,
+entreatingly, "Oh, Mirah, if you would not mind singing the little hymn."
+
+"It is too childish," said Mirah. "It is like lisping."
+
+"What is the hymn?" said Deronda.
+
+"It is the Hebrew hymn she remembers her mother singing over her when she
+lay in her cot," said Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+"I should like very much to hear it," said Deronda, "if you think I am
+worthy to hear what is so sacred."
+
+"I will sing it if you like," said Mirah, "but I don't sing real words--
+only here and there a syllable like hers--the rest is lisping. Do you know
+Hebrew? because if you do, my singing will seem childish nonsense."
+
+Deronda shook his head. "It will be quite good Hebrew to me."
+
+Mirah crossed her little feet and hands in her easiest attitude, and then
+lifted up her head at an angle which seemed to be directed to some
+invisible face bent over her, while she sang a little hymn of quaint
+melancholy intervals, with syllables that really seemed childish lisping
+to her audience; the voice in which she gave it forth had gathered even a
+sweeter, more cooing tenderness than was heard in her other songs.
+
+"If I were ever to know the real words, I should still go on in my old way
+with them," said Mirah, when she had repeated the hymn several times.
+
+"Why not?" said Deronda. "The lisped syllables are very full of meaning."
+
+"Yes, indeed," said Mrs. Meyrick. "A mother hears something of a lisp in
+her children's talk to the very last. Their words are not just what
+everybody else says, though they may be spelled the same. If I were to
+live till my Hans got old, I should still see the boy in him. A mother's
+love, I often say, is like a tree that has got all the wood in it, from
+the very first it made."
+
+"Is not that the way with friendship, too?" said Deronda, smiling. "We
+must not let the mothers be too arrogant."
+
+The little woman shook her head over her darning.
+
+"It is easier to find an old mother than an old friend. Friendships begin
+with liking or gratitude--roots that can be pulled up. Mother's love
+begins deeper down."
+
+"Like what you were saying about the influence of voices," said Deronda,
+looking at Mirah. "I don't think your hymn would have had more expression
+for me if I had known the words. I went to the synagogue at Frankfort
+before I came home, and the service impressed me just as much as if I had
+followed the words--perhaps more."
+
+"Oh, was it great to you? Did it go to your heart?" said Mirah, eagerly.
+"I thought none but our people would feel that. I thought it was all shut
+away like a river in a deep valley, where only heaven saw--I mean---" she
+hesitated feeling that she could not disentangle her thought from its
+imagery.
+
+"I understand," said Deronda. "But there is not really such a separation--
+deeper down, as Mrs. Meyrick says. Our religion is chiefly a Hebrew
+religion; and since Jews are men, their religious feelings must have much
+in common with those of other men--just as their poetry, though in one
+sense peculiar, has a great deal in common with the poetry of other
+nations. Still it is to be expected that a Jew would feel the forms of his
+people's religion more than one of another race--and yet"--here Deronda
+hesitated in his turn--"that is perhaps not always so."
+
+"Ah no," said Mirah, sadly. "I have seen that. I have seen them mock. Is
+it not like mocking your parents?--like rejoicing in your parents' shame?"
+
+"Some minds naturally rebel against whatever they were brought up in, and
+like the opposite; they see the faults in what is nearest to them," said
+Deronda apologetically.
+
+"But you are not like that," said Mirah, looking at him with unconscious
+fixedness.
+
+"No, I think not," said Deronda; "but you know I was not brought up as a
+Jew."
+
+"Ah, I am always forgetting," said Mirah, with a look of disappointed
+recollection, and slightly blushing.
+
+Deronda also felt rather embarrassed, and there was an awkward pause,
+which he put an end to by saying playfully--
+
+"Whichever way we take it, we have to tolerate each other; for if we all
+went in opposition to our teaching, we must end in difference, just the
+same."
+
+"To be sure. We should go on forever in zig-zags," said Mrs. Meyrick. "I
+think it is very weak-minded to make your creed up by the rule of the
+contrary. Still one may honor one's parents, without following their
+notions exactly, any more than the exact cut of their clothing. My father
+was a Scotch Calvinist and my mother was a French Calvinist; I am neither
+quite Scotch, nor quite French, nor two Calvinists rolled into one, yet I
+honor my parents' memory."
+
+"But I could not make myself not a Jewess," said Mirah, insistently, "even
+if I changed my belief."
+
+"No, my dear. But if Jews and Jewesses went on changing their religion,
+and making no difference between themselves and Christians, there would
+come a time when there would be no Jews to be seen," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+taking that consummation very cheerfully.
+
+"Oh, please not to say that," said Mirah, the tears gathering. "It is the
+first unkind thing you ever said. I will not begin that. I will never
+separate myself from my mother's people. I was forced to fly from my
+father; but if he came back in age and weakness and want, and needed me,
+should I say, 'This is not my father'? If he had shame, I must share it.
+It was he who was given to me for my father, and not another. And so it is
+with my people. I will always be a Jewess. I will love Christians when
+they are good, like you. But I will always cling to my people. I will
+always worship with them."
+
+As Mirah had gone on speaking she had become possessed with a sorrowful
+passion--fervent, not violent. Holding her little hands tightly clasped
+and looking at Mrs. Meyrick with beseeching, she seemed to Deronda a
+personification of that spirit which impelled men after a long inheritance
+of professed Catholicism to leave wealth and high place and risk their
+lives in flight, that they might join their own people and say, "I am a
+Jew."
+
+"Mirah, Mirah, my dear child, you mistake me!" said Mrs. Meyrick, alarmed.
+"God forbid I should want you to do anything against your conscience. I
+was only saying what might be if the world went on. But I had better have
+left the world alone, and not wanted to be over-wise. Forgive me, come! we
+will not try to take you from anybody you feel has more right to you."
+
+"I would do anything else for you. I owe you my life," said Mirah, not yet
+quite calm.
+
+"Hush, hush, now," said Mrs. Meyrick. "I have been punished enough for
+wagging my tongue foolishly--making an almanac for the Millennium, as my
+husband used to say."
+
+"But everything in the world must come to an end some time. We must bear
+to think of that," said Mab, unable to hold her peace on this point. She
+had already suffered from a bondage of tongue which threatened to become
+severe if Mirah were to be too much indulged in this inconvenient
+susceptibility to innocent remarks.
+
+Deronda smiled at the irregular, blonde face, brought into strange
+contrast by the side of Mirah's--smiled, Mab thought, rather sarcastically
+as he said, "That 'prospect of everything coming to an end will not guide
+us far in practice. Mirah's feelings, she tells us, are concerned with
+what is."
+
+Mab was confused and wished she had not spoken, since Mr. Deronda seemed
+to think that she had found fault with Mirah; but to have spoken once is a
+tyrannous reason for speaking again, and she said--
+
+"I only meant that we must have courage to hear things, else there is
+hardly anything we can talk about." Mab felt herself unanswerable here,
+inclining to the opinion of Socrates: "What motive has a man to live, if
+not for the pleasure of discourse?"
+
+Deronda took his leave soon after, and when Mrs. Meyrick went outside with
+him to exchange a few words about Mirah, he said, "Hans is to share my
+chambers when he comes at Christmas."
+
+"You have written to Rome about that?" said Mrs. Meyrick, her face
+lighting up. "How very good and thoughtful of you! You mentioned Mirah,
+then?"
+
+"Yes, I referred to her. I concluded he knew everything from you."
+
+"I must confess my folly. I have not yet written a word about her. I have
+always been meaning to do it, and yet have ended my letter without saying
+a word. And I told the girls to leave it to me. However!--Thank you a
+thousand times."
+
+Deronda divined something of what was in the mother's mind, and his
+divination reinforced a certain anxiety already present in him. His inward
+colloquy was not soothing. He said to himself that no man could see this
+exquisite creature without feeling it possible to fall in love with her;
+but all the fervor of his nature was engaged on the side of precaution.
+There are personages who feel themselves tragic because they march into a
+palpable morass, dragging another with them, and then cry out against all
+the gods. Deronda's mind was strongly set against imitating them.
+
+"I have my hands on the reins now," he thought, "and I will not drop them.
+I shall go there as little as possible."
+
+He saw the reasons acting themselves out before him. How could he be
+Mirah's guardian and claim to unite with Mrs. Meyrick, to whose charge he
+had committed her, if he showed himself as a lover--whom she did not love
+--whom she would not marry? And if he encouraged any germ of lover's
+feeling in himself it would lead up to that issue. Mirah's was not a
+nature that would bear dividing against itself; and even if love won her
+consent to marry a man who was not of her race and religion, she would
+never be happy in acting against that strong native bias which would still
+reign in her conscience as remorse.
+
+Deronda saw these consequences as we see any danger of marring our own
+work well begun. It was a delight to have rescued this child acquainted
+with sorrow, and to think of having placed her little feet in protected
+paths. The creature we help to save, though only a half-reared linnet,
+bruised and lost by the wayside--how we watch and fence it, and dote on
+its signs of recovery! Our pride becomes loving, our self is a not-self
+for whose sake we become virtuous, when we set to some hidden work of
+reclaiming a life from misery and look for our triumph in the secret joy--
+"This one is the better for me."
+
+"I would as soon hold out my finger to be bitten off as set about spoiling
+her peace," said Deronda. "It was one of the rarest bits of fortune that I
+should have had friends like the Meyricks to place her with--generous,
+delicate friends without any loftiness in their ways, so that her
+dependence on them is not only safety but happiness. There could be no
+refuge to replace that, if it were broken up. But what is the use of my
+taking the vows and settling everything as it should be, if that marplot
+Hans comes and upsets it all?"
+
+Few things were more likely. Hans was made for mishaps: his very limbs
+seemed more breakable than other people's--his eyes more of a resort for
+uninvited flies and other irritating guests. But it was impossible to
+forbid Hans's coming to London. He was intending to get a studio there and
+make it his chief home; and to propose that he should defer coming on some
+ostensible ground, concealing the real motive of winning time for Mirah's
+position to become more confirmed and independent, was impracticable.
+Having no other resource Deronda tried to believe that both he and Mrs.
+Meyrick were foolishly troubling themselves about one of those endless
+things called probabilities, which never occur; but he did not quite
+succeed in his trying; on the contrary, he found himself going inwardly
+through a scene where on the first discovery of Han's inclination he gave
+him a very energetic warning--suddenly checked, however, by the suspicion
+of personal feeling that his warmth might be creating in Hans. He could
+come to no result, but that the position was peculiar, and that he could
+make no further provision against dangers until they came nearer. To save
+an unhappy Jewess from drowning herself, would not have seemed a startling
+variation among police reports; but to discover in her so rare a creature
+as Mirah, was an exceptional event which might well bring exceptional
+consequences. Deronda would not let himself for a moment dwell on any
+supposition that the consequences might enter deeply into his own life.
+The image of Mirah had never yet had that penetrating radiation which
+would have been given to it by the idea of her loving him. When this sort
+of effluence is absent from the fancy (whether from the fact or not) a man
+may go far in devotedness without perturbation.
+
+As to the search for Mirah's mother and brother, Deronda took what she had
+said to-day as a warrant for deferring any immediate measures. His
+conscience was not quite easy in this desire for delay, any more than it
+was quite easy in his not attempting to learn the truth about his own
+mother: in both cases he felt that there might be an unfulfilled duty to a
+parent, but in both cases there was an overpowering repugnance to the
+possible truth, which threw a turning weight into the scale of argument.
+
+"At least, I will look about," was his final determination. "I may find
+some special Jewish machinery. I will wait till after Christmas."
+
+What should we all do without the calendar, when we want to put off a
+disagreeable duty? The admirable arrangements of the solar system, by
+which our time is measured, always supply us with a term before which it
+is hardly worth while to set about anything we are disinclined to.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+ "No man," says a Rabbi, by way of indisputable instance, "may turn the
+ bones of his father and mother into spoons"--sure that his hearers
+ felt the checks against that form of economy. The market for spoons
+ has never expanded enough for any one to say, "Why not?" and to argue
+ that human progress lies in such an application of material. The only
+ check to be alleged is a sentiment, which will coerce none who do not
+ hold that sentiments are the better part of the world's wealth.
+
+
+Deronda meanwhile took to a less fashionable form of exercise than riding
+in Rotton Row. He went often rambling in those parts of London which are
+most inhabited by common Jews. He walked to the synagogues at times of
+service, he looked into shops, he observed faces:--a process not very
+promising of particular discovery. Why did he not address himself to an
+influential Rabbi or other member of a Jewish community, to consult on the
+chances of finding a mother named Cohen, with a son named Ezra, and a lost
+daughter named Mirah? He thought of doing so--after Christmas. The fact
+was, notwithstanding all his sense of poetry in common things, Deronda,
+where a keen personal interest was aroused, could not, more than the rest
+of us, continuously escape suffering from the pressure of that hard
+unaccommodating Actual, which has never consulted our taste and is
+entirely unselect. Enthusiasm, we know, dwells at ease among ideas,
+tolerates garlic breathed in the middle ages, and sees no shabbiness in
+the official trappings of classic processions: it gets squeamish when
+ideals press upon it as something warmly incarnate, and can hardly face
+them without fainting. Lying dreamily in a boat, imagining one's self in
+quest of a beautiful maiden's relatives in Cordova elbowed by Jews in the
+time of Ibn-Gebirol, all the physical incidents can be borne without
+shock. Or if the scenery of St. Mary Axe and Whitechapel were
+imaginatively transported to the borders of the Rhine at the end of the
+eleventh century, when in the ears listening for the signals of the
+Messiah, the Hep! Hep! Hep! of the Crusaders came like the bay of blood-
+hounds; and in the presence of those devilish missionaries with sword and
+firebrand the crouching figure of the reviled Jew turned round erect,
+heroic, flashing with sublime constancy in the face of torture and death--
+what would the dingy shops and unbeautiful faces signify to the thrill of
+contemplative emotion? But the fervor of sympathy with which we
+contemplate a grandiose martyrdom is feeble compared with the enthusiasm
+that keeps unslacked where there is no danger, no challenge--nothing but
+impartial midday falling on commonplace, perhaps half-repulsive, objects
+which are really the beloved ideas made flesh. Here undoubtedly lies the
+chief poetic energy:--in the force of imagination that pierces or exalts
+the solid fact, instead of floating among cloud-pictures. To glory in a
+prophetic vision of knowledge covering the earth, is an easier exercise of
+believing imagination than to see its beginning in newspaper placards,
+staring at you from the bridge beyond the corn-fields; and it might well
+happen to most of us dainty people that we were in the thick of the battle
+of Armageddon without being aware of anything more than the annoyance of a
+little explosive smoke and struggling on the ground immediately about us.
+
+It lay in Deronda's nature usually to contemn the feeble, fastidious
+sympathy which shrinks from the broad life of mankind; but now, with Mirah
+before him as a living reality, whose experience he had to care for, he
+saw every common Jew and Jewess in the light of a comparison with her, and
+had a presentiment of the collision between her idea of the unknown mother
+and brother and the discovered fact--a presentiment all the keener in him
+because of a suppressed consciousness that a not unlike possibility of
+collision might lie hidden in his own lot. Not that he would have looked
+with more complacency of expectation at wealthy Jews, outdoing the lords
+of the Philistines in their sports; but since there was no likelihood of
+Mirah's friends being found among that class, their habits did not
+immediately affect him. In this mood he rambled, without expectation of a
+more pregnant result than a little preparation of his own mind, perhaps
+for future theorizing as well as practice--very much as if, Mirah being
+related to Welsh miners, he had gone to look more closely at the ways of
+those people, not without wishing at the same time to get a little light
+of detail on the history of Strikes.
+
+He really did not long to find anybody in particular; and when, as his
+habit was, he looked at the name over a shop door, he was well content
+that it was not Ezra Cohen. I confess, he particularly desired that Ezra
+Cohen should not keep a shop. Wishes are held to be ominous; according to
+which belief the order of the world is so arranged that if you have an
+impious objection to a squint, your offspring is the more likely to be
+born with one; also, that if you happened to desire a squint you would not
+get it. This desponding view of probability the hopeful entirely reject,
+taking their wishes as good and sufficient security for all kinds of
+fulfilment. Who is absolutely neutral? Deronda happening one morning to
+turn into a little side street out of the noise and obstructions of
+Holborn, felt the scale dip on the desponding side.
+
+He was rather tired of the streets and had paused to hail a hansom cab
+which he saw coming, when his attention was caught by some fine old clasps
+in chased silver displayed in the window at his right hand. His first
+thought was that Lady Mallinger, who had a strictly Protestant taste for
+such Catholic spoils, might like to have these missal-clasps turned into a
+bracelet: then his eyes traveled over the other contents of the window,
+and he saw that the shop was that kind of pawnbroker's where the lead is
+given to jewelry, lace and all equivocal objects introduced as _bric-a-
+brac_. A placard in one corner announced--_Watches and Jewlery exchanged
+and repaired_. But his survey had been noticed from within, and a figure
+appeared at the door, looking round at him and saying in a tone of cordial
+encouragement, "Good day, sir." The instant was enough for Deronda to see
+the face, unmistakably Jewish, belonged to a young man about thirty, and
+wincing from the shopkeeper's persuasiveness that would probably follow,
+he had no sooner returned the "good day," than he passed to the other side
+of the street and beckoned to the cabman to draw up there. From that
+station he saw the name over the shop window--Ezra Cohen.
+
+There might be a hundred Ezra Cohens lettered above shop windows, but
+Deronda had not seen them. Probably the young man interested in a possible
+customer was Ezra himself; and he was about the age to be expected in
+Mirah's brother, who was grown up while she was still a little child. But
+Deronda's first endeavor as he drove homeward was to convince himself that
+there was not the slightest warrantable presumption of this Ezra being
+Mirah's brother; and next, that even if, in spite of good reasoning, he
+turned out to be that brother, while on inquiry the mother was found to be
+dead, it was not his--Deronda's--duty to make known the discovery to
+Mirah. In inconvenient disturbance of this conclusion there came his
+lately-acquired knowledge that Mirah would have a religious desire to know
+of her mother's death, and also to learn whether her brother were living.
+How far was he justified in determining another life by his own notions?
+Was it not his secret complaint against the way in which others had
+ordered his own life, that he had not open daylight on all its relations,
+so that he had not, like other men, the full guidance of primary duties?
+
+The immediate relief from this inward debate was the reflection that he
+had not yet made any real discovery, and that by looking into the facts
+more closely he should be certified that there was no demand on him for
+any decision whatever. He intended to return to that shop as soon as he
+could conveniently, and buy the clasps for Lady Mallinger. But he was
+hindered for several days by Sir Hugo, who, about to make an after-dinner
+speech on a burning topic, wanted Deronda to forage for him on the legal
+part of the question, besides wasting time every day on argument which
+always ended in a drawn battle. As on many other questions, they held
+different sides, but Sir Hugo did not mind this, and when Deronda put his
+point well, said, with a mixture of satisfaction and regret--
+
+"Confound it, Dan! why don't you make an opportunity of saying these
+things in public? You're wrong, you know. You won't succeed. You've got
+the massive sentiment--the heavy artillery of the country against you. But
+it's all the better ground for a young man to display himself on. When I
+was your age, I should have taken it. And it would be quite as well for
+you to be in opposition to me here and there. It would throw you more into
+relief. If you would seize an occasion of this sort to make an impression,
+you might be in Parliament in no time. And you know that would gratify
+me."
+
+"I am sorry not to do what would gratify you, sir," said Deronda. "But I
+cannot persuade myself to look at politics as a profession."
+
+"Why not? if a man is not born into public life by his position in the
+country, there's no way for him but to embrace it by his own efforts. The
+business of the country must be done--her Majesty's Government carried on,
+as the old Duke said. And it never could be, my boy, if everybody looked
+at politics as if they were prophecy, and demanded an inspired vocation.
+If you are to get into Parliament, it won't do to sit still and wait for a
+call either from heaven or constituents."
+
+"I don't want to make a living out of opinions," said Deronda; "especially
+out of borrowed opinions. Not that I mean to blame other men. I dare say
+many better fellows than I don't mind getting on to a platform to praise
+themselves, and giving their word of honor for a party."
+
+"I'll tell you what, Dan," said Sir Hugo, "a man who sets his face against
+every sort of humbug is simply a three-cornered, impracticable fellow.
+There's a bad style of humbug, but there is also a good style--one that
+oils the wheels and makes progress possible. If you are to rule men, you
+must rule them through their own ideas; and I agree with the Archbishop at
+Naples who had a St. Januarius procession against the plague. It's no use
+having an Order in Council against popular shallowness. There is no action
+possible without a little acting."
+
+"One may be obliged to give way to an occasional necessity," said Deronda.
+"But it is one thing to say, 'In this particular case I am forced to put
+on this foolscap and grin,' and another to buy a pocket foolscap and
+practice myself in grinning. I can't see any real public expediency that
+does not keep an ideal before it which makes a limit of deviation from the
+direct path. But if I were to set up for a public man I might mistake my
+success for public expediency."
+
+It was after this dialogue, which was rather jarring to him, that Deronda
+set out on his meditated second visit to Ezra Cohen's. He entered the
+street at the end opposite to the Holborn entrance, and an inward
+reluctance slackened his pace while his thoughts were transferring what he
+had just been saying about public expediency to the entirely private
+difficulty which brought him back again into this unattractive
+thoroughfare. It might soon become an immediate practical question with
+him how far he could call it a wise expediency to conceal the fact of
+close kindred. Such questions turning up constantly in life are often
+decided in a rough-and-ready way; and to many it will appear an over-
+refinement in Deronda that he should make any great point of a matter
+confined to his own knowledge. But we have seen the reasons why he had
+come to regard concealment as a bane of life, and the necessity of
+concealment as a mark by which lines of action were to be avoided. The
+prospect of being urged against the confirmed habit of his mind was
+naturally grating. He even paused here and there before the most plausible
+shop-windows for a gentleman to look into, half inclined to decide that he
+would not increase his knowledge about that modern Ezra, who was certainly
+not a leader among his people--a hesitation which proved how, in a man
+much given to reasoning, a bare possibility may weigh more than the best-
+clad likelihood; for Deronda's reasoning had decided that all likelihood
+was against this man's being Mirah's brother.
+
+One of the shop-windows he paused before was that of a second-hand book-
+shop, where, on a narrow table outside, the literature of the ages was
+represented in judicious mixture, from the immortal verse of Homer to the
+mortal prose of the railway novel. That the mixture was judicious was
+apparent from Deronda's finding in it something that he wanted--namely,
+that wonderful bit of autobiography, the life of the Polish Jew, Salomon
+Maimon; which, as he could easily slip it into his pocket, he took from
+its place, and entered the shop to pay for, expecting to see behind the
+counter a grimy personage showing that _nonchalance_ about sales which
+seems to belong universally to the second-hand book-business. In most
+other trades you find generous men who are anxious to sell you their wares
+for your own welfare; but even a Jew will not urge Simson's Euclid on you
+with an affectionate assurance that you will have pleasure in reading it,
+and that he wishes he had twenty more of the article, so much is it in
+request. One is led to fear that a secondhand bookseller may belong to
+that unhappy class of men who have no belief in the good of what they get
+their living by, yet keep conscience enough to be morose rather than
+unctuous in their vocation.
+
+But instead of the ordinary tradesman, he saw, on the dark background of
+books in the long narrow shop, a figure that was somewhat startling in its
+unusualness. A man in threadbare clothing, whose age was difficult to
+guess--from the dead yellowish flatness of the flesh, something like an
+old ivory carving--was seated on a stool against some bookshelves that
+projected beyond the short counter, doing nothing more remarkable than
+reading yesterday's _Times_; but when he let the paper rest on his lap and
+looked at the incoming customer, the thought glanced through Deronda that
+precisely such a physiognomy as that might possibly have been seen in a
+prophet of the Exile, or in some New Hebrew poet of the mediaeval time. It
+was a fine typical Jewish face, wrought into intensity of expression
+apparently by a strenuous eager experience in which all the satisfaction
+had been indirect and far off, and perhaps by some bodily suffering also,
+which involved that absence of ease in the present. The features were
+clear-cut, not large; the brow not high but broad, and fully defined by
+the crisp black hair. It might never have been a particularly handsome
+face, but it must always have been forcible; and now with its dark, far-
+off gaze, and yellow pallor in relief on the gloom of the backward shop,
+one might have imagined one's self coming upon it in some past prison of
+the Inquisition, which a mob had suddenly burst upon; while the look fixed
+on an incidental customer seemed eager and questioning enough to have been
+turned on one who might have been a messenger either of delivery or of
+death. The figure was probably familiar and unexciting enough to the
+inhabitants of this street; but to Deronda's mind it brought so strange a
+blending of the unwonted with the common, that there was a perceptible
+interval of mutual observation before he asked his question; "What is the
+price of this book?"
+
+After taking the book and examining the fly-leaves without rising, the
+supposed bookseller said, "There is no mark, and Mr. Ram is not in now. I
+am keeping the shop while he is gone to dinner. What are you disposed to
+give for it?" He held the book close on his lap with his hand on it and
+looked examiningly at Deronda, over whom there came the disagreeable idea,
+that possibly this striking personage wanted to see how much could be got
+out of a customer's ignorance of prices. But without further reflection he
+said, "Don't you know how much it is worth?"
+
+"Not its market-price. May I ask have you read it?"
+
+"No. I have read an account of it, which makes me want to buy it."
+
+"You are a man of learning--you are interested in Jewish history?" This
+was said in a deepened tone of eager inquiry.
+
+"I am certainly interested in Jewish history," said Deronda, quietly,
+curiosity overcoming his dislike to the sort of inspection as well as
+questioning he was under.
+
+But immediately the strange Jew rose from his sitting posture, and Deronda
+felt a thin hand pressing his arm tightly, while a hoarse, excited voice,
+not much above a loud whisper, said--
+
+"You are perhaps of our race?"
+
+Deronda colored deeply, not liking the grasp, and then answered with a
+slight shake of the head, "No." The grasp was relaxed, the hand withdrawn,
+the eagerness of the face collapsed into uninterested melancholy, as if
+some possessing spirit which had leaped into the eyes and gestures had
+sunk back again to the inmost recesses of the frame; and moving further
+off as he held out the little book, the stranger said in a tone of distant
+civility, "I believe Mr. Ram will be satisfied with half-a-crown, sir."
+
+The effect of this change on Deronda--he afterward smiled when he recalled
+it--was oddly embarrassing and humiliating, as if some high dignitary had
+found him deficient and given him his _conge_. There was nothing further
+to be said, however: he paid his half-crown and carried off his _Salomon
+Maimon's Lebensgeschichte_ with a mere "good-morning."
+
+He felt some vexation at the sudden arrest of the interview, and the
+apparent prohibition that he should know more of this man, who was
+certainly something out of the common way--as different probably as a Jew
+could well be from Ezra Cohen, through whose door Deronda was presently
+entering, and whose flourishing face glistening on the way to fatness was
+hanging over the counter in negotiation with some one on the other side of
+the partition, concerning two plated stoppers and three teaspoons, which
+lay spread before him. Seeing Deronda enter, he called out "Mother!
+Mother!" and then with a familiar nod and smile, said, "Coming, sir--
+coming directly."
+
+Deronda could not help looking toward the door from the back with some
+anxiety, which was not soothed when he saw a vigorous woman beyond fifty
+enter and approach to serve him. Not that there was anything very
+repulsive about her: the worst that could be said was that she had that
+look of having made her toilet with little water, and by twilight, which
+is common to unyouthful people of her class, and of having presumably
+slept in her large earrings, if not in her rings and necklace. In fact,
+what caused a sinking of heart in Deronda was, her not being so coarse and
+ugly as to exclude the idea of her being Mirah's mother. Any one who has
+looked at a face to try and discern signs of known kinship in it will
+understand his process of conjecture--how he tried to think away the fat
+which had gradually disguised the outlines of youth, and to discern what
+one may call the elementary expressions of the face. He was sorry to see
+no absolute negative to his fears. Just as it was conceivable that this
+Ezra, brought up to trade, might resemble the scapegrace father in
+everything but his knowledge and talent, so it was not impossible that
+this mother might have had a lovely refined daughter whose type of feature
+and expression was like Mirah's. The eyebrows had a vexatious similarity
+of line; and who shall decide how far a face may be masked when the
+uncherishing years have thrust it far onward in the ever-new procession of
+youth and age? The good-humor of the glance remained and shone out in a
+motherly way at Deronda, as she said, in a mild guttural tone--
+
+"How can I serve you, sir?"
+
+"I should like to look at the silver clasps in the window," said Deronda;
+"the larger ones, please, in the corner there."
+
+They were not quite easy to get at from the mother's station, and the son
+seeing this called out, "I'll reach 'em, mother; I'll reach 'em," running
+forward with alacrity, and then handing the clasps to Deronda with the
+smiling remark--
+
+"Mother's too proud: she wants to do everything herself. That's why I
+called her to wait on you, sir. When there's a particular gentleman
+customer, sir, I daren't do any other than call her. But I can't let her
+do herself mischief with stretching."
+
+Here Mr. Cohen made way again for his parent, who gave a little guttural,
+amiable laugh while she looked at Deronda, as much as to say, "This boy
+will be at his jokes, but you see he's the best son in the world," and
+evidently the son enjoyed pleasing her, though he also wished to convey an
+apology to his distinguished customer for not giving him the advantage of
+his own exclusive attention.
+
+Deronda began to examine the clasps as if he had many points to observe
+before he could come to a decision.
+
+"They are only three guineas, sir," said the mother, encouragingly.
+
+"First-rate workmanship, sir--worth twice the money; only I get 'em a
+bargain from Cologne," said the son, parenthetically, from a distance.
+
+Meanwhile two new customers entered, and the repeated call, "Addy!"
+brought from the back of the shop a group that Deronda turned frankly to
+stare at, feeling sure that the stare would be held complimentary. The
+group consisted of a black-eyed young woman who carried a black-eyed
+little one, its head already covered with black curls, and deposited it on
+the counter, from which station it looked round with even more than the
+usual intelligence of babies: also a robust boy of six and a younger girl,
+both with black eyes and black-ringed hair--looking more Semitic than
+their parents, as the puppy lions show the spots of far-off progenitors.
+The young woman answering to "Addy"--a sort of paroquet in a bright blue
+dress, with coral necklace and earrings, her hair set up in a huge bush--
+looked as complacently lively and unrefined as her husband; and by a
+certain difference from the mother deepened in Deronda the unwelcome
+impression that the latter was not so utterly common a Jewess as to
+exclude her being the mother of Mirah. While that thought was glancing
+through his mind, the boy had run forward into the shop with an energetic
+stamp, and setting himself about four feet from Deronda, with his hands in
+the pockets of his miniature knickerbockers, looked at him with a
+precocious air of survey. Perhaps it was chiefly with a diplomatic design
+to linger and ingratiate himself that Deronda patted the boy's head,
+saying--
+
+"What is your name, sirrah?"
+
+"Jacob Alexander Cohen," said the small man, with much ease and
+distinctness.
+
+"You are not named after your father, then?"
+
+"No, after my grandfather; he sells knives and razors and scissors--my
+grandfather does," said Jacob, wishing to impress the stranger with that
+high connection. "He gave me this knife." Here a pocket-knife was drawn
+forth, and the small fingers, both naturally and artificially dark, opened
+two blades and a cork-screw with much quickness.
+
+"Is not that a dangerous plaything?" said Deronda, turning to the
+grandmother.
+
+"_He_'ll never hurt himself, bless you!" said she, contemplating her
+grandson with placid rapture.
+
+"Have _you_ got a knife?" says Jacob, coming closer. His small voice was
+hoarse in its glibness, as if it belonged to an aged commercial soul,
+fatigued with bargaining through many generations.
+
+"Yes. Do you want to see it?" said Deronda, taking a small penknife from
+his waistcoat-pocket.
+
+Jacob seized it immediately and retreated a little, holding the two knives
+in his palms and bending over them in meditative comparison. By this time
+the other clients were gone, and the whole family had gathered to the
+spot, centering their attention on the marvelous Jacob: the father,
+mother, and grandmother behind the counter, with baby held staggering
+thereon, and the little girl in front leaning at her brother's elbow to
+assist him in looking at the knives.
+
+"Mine's the best," said Jacob, at last, returning Deronda's knife as if he
+had been entertaining the idea of exchange and had rejected it.
+
+Father and mother laughed aloud with delight. "You won't find Jacob
+choosing the worst," said Mr. Cohen, winking, with much confidence in the
+customer's admiration. Deronda, looking at the grandmother, who had only
+an inward silent laugh, said--
+
+"Are these the only grandchildren you have?"
+
+"All. This is my only son," she answered in a communicative tone,
+Deronda's glance and manner as usual conveying the impression of
+sympathetic interest--which on this occasion answered his purpose well.
+It seemed to come naturally enough that he should say--
+
+"And you have no daughter?"
+
+There was an instantaneous change in the mother's face. Her lips closed
+more firmly, she looked down, swept her hands outward on the counter, and
+finally turned her back on Deronda to examine some Indian handkerchiefs
+that hung in pawn behind her. Her son gave a significant glance, set up
+his shoulders an instant and just put his fingers to his lips,--then said
+quickly, "I think you're a first-rate gentleman in the city, sir, if I may
+be allowed to guess."
+
+"No," said Deronda, with a preoccupied air, "I have nothing to do with the
+city."
+
+"That's a bad job. I thought you might be the young principal of a first-
+rate firm," said Mr. Cohen, wishing to make amends for the check on his
+customer's natural desire to know more of him and his. "But you understand
+silver-work, I see."
+
+"A little," said Deronda, taking up the clasps a moment and laying them
+down again. That unwelcome bit of circumstantial evidence had made his
+mind busy with a plan which was certainly more like acting than anything
+he had been aware of in his own conduct before. But the bare possibility
+that more knowledge might nullify the evidence now overpowered the
+inclination to rest in uncertainty.
+
+"To tell you the truth," he went on, "my errand is not so much to buy as
+to borrow. I dare say you go into rather heavy transactions occasionally."
+
+"Well, sir, I've accommodated gentlemen of distinction--I'm proud to say
+it. I wouldn't exchange my business with any in the world. There's none
+more honorable, nor more charitable, nor more necessary for all classes,
+from the good lady who wants a little of the ready for the baker, to a
+gentleman like yourself, sir, who may want it for amusement. I like my
+business, I like my street, and I like my shop. I wouldn't have it a door
+further down. And I wouldn't be without a pawn-shop, sir, to be the Lord
+Mayor. It puts you in connection with the world at large. I say it's like
+the government revenue--it embraces the brass as well as the gold of the
+country. And a man who doesn't get money, sir, can't accommodate. Now,
+what can I do for _you_, sir?"
+
+If an amiable self-satisfaction is the mark of earthly bliss, Solomon in
+all his glory was a pitiable mortal compared with Mr. Cohen--clearly one
+of those persons, who, being in excellent spirits about themselves, are
+willing to cheer strangers by letting them know it. While he was
+delivering himself with lively rapidity, he took the baby from his wife
+and holding it on his arm presented his features to be explored by its
+small fists. Deronda, not in a cheerful mood, was rashly pronouncing this
+Ezra Cohen to be the most unpoetic Jew he had ever met with in books or
+life: his phraseology was as little as possible like that of the Old
+Testament: and no shadow of a suffering race distinguished his vulgarity
+of soul from that of a prosperous, pink-and-white huckster of the purest
+English lineage. It is naturally a Christian feeling that a Jew ought not
+to be conceited. However, this was no reason for not persevering in his
+project, and he answered at once in adventurous ignorance of
+technicalities--
+
+"I have a fine diamond ring to offer as security--not with me at this
+moment, unfortunately, for I am not in the habit of wearing it. But I will
+come again this evening and bring it with me. Fifty pounds at once would
+be a convenience to me."
+
+"Well, you know, this evening is the Sabbath, young gentleman," said
+Cohen, "and I go to the _Shool_. The shop will be closed. But
+accommodation is a work of charity; if you can't get here before, and are
+any ways pressed--why, I'll look at your diamond. You're perhaps from the
+West End--a longish drive?"
+
+"Yes; and your Sabbath begins early at this season. I could be here by
+five--will that do?" Deronda had not been without hope that by asking to
+come on a Friday evening he might get a better opportunity of observing
+points in the family character, and might even be able to put some
+decisive question.
+
+Cohen assented; but here the marvelous Jacob, whose _physique_ supported a
+precocity that would have shattered a Gentile of his years, showed that he
+had been listening with much comprehension by saying, "You are coming
+again. Have you got any more knives at home?"
+
+"I think I have one," said Deronda, smiling down at him.
+
+"Has it two blades and a hook--and a white handle like that?" said Jacob,
+pointing to the waistcoat-pocket.
+
+"I dare say it has?"
+
+"Do you like a cork-screw?" said Jacob, exhibiting that article in his own
+knife again, and looking up with serious inquiry.
+
+"Yes," said Deronda, experimentally.
+
+"Bring your knife, then, and we'll shwop," said Jacob, returning the knife
+to his pocket, and stamping about with the sense that he had concluded a
+good transaction.
+
+The grandmother had now recovered her usual manners, and the whole family
+watched Deronda radiantly when he caressingly lifted the little girl, to
+whom he had not hitherto given attention, and seating her on the counter,
+asked for her name also. She looked at him in silence, and put her fingers
+to her gold earrings, which he did not seem to have noticed.
+
+"Adelaide Rebekah is her name," said her mother, proudly. "Speak to the
+gentleman, lovey."
+
+"Shlav'm Shabbes fyock on," said Adelaide Rebekah.
+
+"Her Sabbath frock, she means," said the father, in explanation. "She'll
+have her Sabbath frock on this evening."
+
+"And will you let me see you in it, Adelaide?" said Deronda, with that
+gentle intonation which came very easily to him.
+
+"Say yes, lovey--yes, if you please, sir," said her mother, enchanted with
+this handsome young gentleman, who appreciated remarkable children.
+
+"And will you give me a kiss this evening?" said Deronda with a hand on
+each of her little brown shoulders.
+
+Adelaide Rebekah (her miniature crinoline and monumental features
+corresponded with the combination of her names) immediately put up her
+lips to pay the kiss in advance; whereupon her father rising in still more
+glowing satisfaction with the general meritoriousness of his
+circumstances, and with the stranger who was an admiring witness, said
+cordially--
+
+"You see there's somebody will be disappointed if you don't come this
+evening, sir. You won't mind sitting down in our family place and waiting
+a bit for me, if I'm not in when you come, sir? I'll stretch a point to
+accommodate a gent of your sort. Bring the diamond, and I'll see what I
+can do for you."
+
+Deronda thus left the most favorable impression behind him, as a
+preparation for more easy intercourse. But for his own part those
+amenities had been carried on under the heaviest spirits. If these were
+really Mirah's relatives, he could not imagine that even her fervid filial
+piety could give the reunion with them any sweetness beyond such as could
+be found in the strict fulfillment of a painful duty. What did this
+vaunting brother need? And with the most favorable supposition about the
+hypothetic mother, Deronda shrank from the image of a first meeting
+between her and Mirah, and still more from the idea of Mirah's
+domestication with this family. He took refuge in disbelief. To find an
+Ezra Cohen when the name was running in your head was no more
+extraordinary than to find a Josiah Smith under like circumstances; and as
+to the coincidence about the daughter, it would probably turn out to be a
+difference. If, however, further knowledge confirmed the more undesirable
+conclusion, what would be wise expediency?--to try and determine the best
+consequences by concealment, or to brave other consequences for the sake
+of that openness which is the sweet fresh air of our moral life.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+ "Er ist geheissen
+ Israel. Ihn hat verwandelt
+ Hexenspruch in elnen Hund.
+ * * * * *
+ Aber jeden Freitag Abend,
+ In der Daemmrungstunde, ploetzlich
+ Weicht der Zauber, und der Hund
+ Wird aufs Neu' ein menschlich Wesen."
+ --HEINE: _Prinzessin Sabbaz_.
+
+
+When Deronda arrived at five o'clock, the shop was closed and the door was
+opened for him by the Christian servant. When she showed him into the room
+behind the shop he was surprised at the prettiness of the scene. The house
+was old, and rather extensive at the back: probably the large room he how
+entered was gloomy by daylight, but now it was agreeably lit by a fine old
+brass lamp with seven oil-lights hanging above the snow-white cloth spread
+on the central table, The ceiling and walls were smoky, and all the
+surroundings were dark enough to throw into relief the human figures,
+which had a Venetian glow of coloring. The grandmother was arrayed in
+yellowish brown with a large gold chain in lieu of the necklace, and by
+this light her yellow face with its darkly-marked eyebrows and framing
+roll of gray hair looked as handsome as was necessary for picturesque
+effect. Young Mrs. Cohen was clad in red and black, with a string of large
+artificial pearls wound round and round her neck: the baby lay asleep in
+the cradle under a scarlet counterpane; Adelaide Rebekah was in braided
+amber, and Jacob Alexander was in black velveteen with scarlet stockings.
+As the four pairs of black eyes all glistened a welcome at Deronda, he was
+almost ashamed of the supercilious dislike these happy-looking creatures
+had raised in him by daylight. Nothing could be more cordial than the
+greeting he received, and both mother and grandmother seemed to gather
+more dignity from being seen on the private hearth, showing hospitality.
+He looked round with some wonder at the old furniture: the oaken bureau
+and high side-table must surely be mere matters of chance and economy, and
+not due to the family taste. A large dish of blue and yellow ware was set
+up on the side-table, and flanking it were two old silver vessels; in
+front of them a large volume in darkened vellum with a deep-ribbed back.
+In the corner at the farther end was an open door into an inner room,
+where there was also a light.
+
+Deronda took in these details by parenthetic glances while he met Jacob's
+pressing solicitude about the knife. He had taken the pains to buy one
+with the requisites of the hook and white handle, and produced it on
+demand, saying,--
+
+"Is that the sort of thing you want, Jacob?"
+
+It was subjected to a severe scrutiny, the hook and blades were opened,
+and the article of barter with the cork-screw was drawn forth for
+comparison.
+
+"Why do you like a hook better than a cork-screw?" said Deronda.
+
+"'Caush I can get hold of things with a hook. A corkscrew won't go into
+anything but corks. But it's better for you, you can draw corks."
+
+"You agree to change, then?" said Deronda, observing that the grandmother
+was listening with delight.
+
+"What else have you got in your pockets?" said Jacob, with deliberative
+seriousness.
+
+"Hush, hush, Jacob, love," said the grandmother. And Deronda, mindful of
+discipline, answered--
+
+"I think I must not tell you that. Our business was with the knives."
+
+Jacob looked up into his face scanningly for a moment or two, and
+apparently arriving at his conclusions, said gravely--
+
+"I'll shwop," handing the cork-screw knife to Deronda, who pocketed it
+with corresponding gravity.
+
+Immediately the small son of Shem ran off into the next room, whence his
+voice was heard in rapid chat; and then ran back again--when, seeing his
+father enter, he seized a little velveteen hat which lay on a chair and
+put it on to approach him. Cohen kept on his own hat, and took no notice
+of the visitor, but stood still while the two children went up to him and
+clasped his knees: then he laid his hands on each in turn and uttered his
+Hebrew benediction; whereupon the wife, who had lately taken baby from the
+cradle, brought it up to her husband and held it under his outstretched
+hands, to be blessed in its sleep. For the moment, Deronda thought that
+this pawnbroker, proud of his vocation, was not utterly prosaic.
+
+"Well, sir, you found your welcome in my family, I think," said Cohen,
+putting down his hat and becoming his former self. "And you've been
+punctual. Nothing like a little stress here," he added, tapping his side
+pocket as he sat down. "It's good for us all in our turn. I've felt it
+when I've had to make up payments. I began to fit every sort of box. It's
+bracing to the mind. Now then! let us see, let us see."
+
+"That is the ring I spoke of," said Deronda, taking it from his finger. "I
+believe it cost a hundred pounds. It will be a sufficient pledge to you
+for fifty, I think. I shall probably redeem it in a month or so."
+
+Cohen's glistening eyes seemed to get a little nearer together as he met
+the ingenuous look of this crude young gentleman, who apparently supposed
+that redemption was a satisfaction to pawnbrokers. He took the ring,
+examined and returned it, saying with indifference, "Good, good. We'll
+talk of it after our meal. Perhaps you'll join us, if you've no objection.
+Me and my wife'll feel honored, and so will mother; won't you, mother?"
+
+The invitation was doubly echoed, and Deronda gladly accepted it. All now
+turned and stood round the table. No dish was at present seen except one
+covered with a napkin; and Mrs. Cohen had placed a china bowl near her
+husband that he might wash his hands in it. But after putting on his hat
+again, he paused, and called in a loud voice, "Mordecai!"
+
+Can this be part of the religious ceremony? thought Deronda, not knowing
+what might be expected of the ancient hero. But he heard a "Yes" from the
+next room, which made him look toward the open door; and there, to his
+astonishment, he saw the figure of the enigmatic Jew whom he had this
+morning met with in the book-shop. Their eyes met, and Mordecai looked as
+much surprised as Deronda--neither in his surprise making any sign of
+recognition. But when Mordecai was seating himself at the end of the
+table, he just bent his head to the guest in a cold and distant manner, as
+if the disappointment of the morning remained a disagreeable association
+with this new acquaintance.
+
+Cohen now washed his hands, pronouncing Hebrew words the while: afterward,
+he took off the napkin covering the dish and disclosed the two long flat
+loaves besprinkled with seed--the memorial of the manna that fed the
+wandering forefathers--and breaking off small pieces gave one to each of
+the family, including Adelaide Rebekah, who stood on the chair with her
+whole length exhibited in her amber-colored garment, her little Jewish
+nose lengthened by compression of the lip in the effort to make a suitable
+appearance. Cohen then uttered another Hebrew blessing, and after that,
+the male heads were uncovered, all seated themselves, and the meal went on
+without any peculiarity that interested Deronda. He was not very conscious
+of what dishes he ate from; being preoccupied with a desire to turn the
+conversation in a way that would enable him to ask some leading question;
+and also thinking of Mordecai, between whom and himself there was an
+exchange of fascinated, half furtive glances. Mordecai had no handsome
+Sabbath garment, but instead of the threadbare rusty black coat of the
+morning he wore one of light drab, which looked as if it had once been a
+handsome loose paletot now shrunk with washing; and this change of
+clothing gave a still stronger accentuation to his dark-haired, eager face
+which might have belonged to the prophet Ezekiel--also probably not modish
+in the eyes of contemporaries. It was noticeable that the thin tails of
+the fried fish were given to Mordecai; and in general the sort of share
+assigned to a poor relation--no doubt a "survival" of prehistoric
+practice, not yet generally admitted to be superstitious.
+
+Mr. Cohen kept up the conversation with much liveliness, introducing as
+subjects always in taste (the Jew is proud of his loyalty) the Queen and
+the Royal Family, the Emperor and Empress of the French--into which both
+grandmother and wife entered with zest. Mrs. Cohen the younger showed an
+accurate memory of distinguished birthdays; and the elder assisted her son
+in informing the guest of what occurred when the Emperor and Empress were
+in England and visited the city ten years before.
+
+"I dare say you know all about it better than we do, sir," said Cohen,
+repeatedly, by way of preface to full information; and the interesting
+statements were kept up in a trio.
+
+"Our baby is named _Eu_genie Esther," said young Mrs. Cohen, vivaciously.
+
+"It's wonderful how the Emperor's like a cousin of mine in the face," said
+the grandmother; "it struck me like lightning when I caught sight of him.
+I couldn't have thought it."
+
+"Mother, and me went to see the Emperor and Empress at the Crystal
+Palace," said Mr. Cohen. "I had a fine piece of work to take care of,
+mother; she might have been squeezed flat--though she was pretty near as
+lusty then as she is now. I said if I had a hundred mothers I'd never take
+one of 'em to see the Emperor and Empress at the Crystal Palace again; and
+you may think a man can't afford it when he's got but one mother--not if
+he'd ever so big an insurance on her." He stroked his mother's shoulder
+affectionately, and chuckled a little at his own humor.
+
+"Your mother has been a widow a long while, perhaps," said Deronda,
+seizing his opportunity. "That has made your care for her the more
+needful."
+
+"Ay, ay, it's a good many _yore-zeit_ since I had to manage for her and
+myself," said Cohen quickly. "I went early to it. It's that makes you a
+sharp knife."
+
+"What does--what makes a sharp knife, father?" said Jacob, his cheek very
+much swollen with sweet-cake.
+
+The father winked at his guest and said, "Having your nose put on the
+grindstone."
+
+Jacob slipped from his chair with the piece of sweet-cake in his hand, and
+going close up to Mordecai, who had been totally silent hitherto, said,
+"What does that mean--putting my nose to the grindstone?"
+
+"It means that you are to bear being hurt without making a noise," said
+Mordecai, turning his eyes benignantly on the small face close to his.
+Jacob put the corner of the cake into Mordecai's mouth as an invitation to
+bite, saying meanwhile, "I shan't though," and keeping his eyes on the
+cake to observe how much of it went in this act of generosity. Mordecai
+took a bite and smiled, evidently meaning to please the lad, and the
+little incident made them both look more lovable. Deronda, however, felt
+with some vexation that he had taken little by his question.
+
+"I fancy that is the right quarter for learning," said he, carrying on the
+subject that he might have an excuse for addressing Mordecai, to whom he
+turned and said, "You have been a great student, I imagine?"
+
+"I have studied," was the quiet answer. "And you?--You know German by the
+book you were buying."
+
+"Yes, I have studied in Germany. Are you generally engaged in
+bookselling?" said Deronda.
+
+"No; I only go to Mr. Ram's shop every day to keep it while he goes to
+meals," said Mordecai, who was now looking at Deronda with what seemed a
+revival of his original interest: it seemed as if the face had some
+attractive indication for him which now neutralized the former
+disappointment. After a slight pause, he said, "Perhaps you know Hebrew?"
+
+"I am sorry to say, not at all."
+
+Mordecai's countenance fell: he cast down his eyelids, looking at his
+hands, which lay crossed before him, and said no more. Deronda had now
+noticed more decisively than in their former interview a difficulty in
+breathing, which he thought must be a sign of consumption.
+
+"I've had something else to do than to get book-learning." said Mr.
+Cohen,--"I've had to make myself knowing about useful things. I know
+stones well,"--here he pointed to Deronda's ring. "I'm not afraid of
+taking that ring of yours at my own valuation. But now," he added, with a
+certain drop in his voice to a lower, more familiar nasal, "what do you
+want for it?"
+
+"Fifty or sixty pounds," Deronda answered, rather too carelessly.
+
+Cohen paused a little, thrust his hands into his pockets, fixed on Deronda
+a pair of glistening eyes that suggested a miraculous guinea-pig, and
+said, "Couldn't do you that. Happy to oblige, but couldn't go that
+lengths. Forty pound--say forty--I'll let you have forty on it."
+
+Deronda was aware that Mordecai had looked up again at the words implying
+a monetary affair, and was now examining him again, while he said, "Very
+well, I shall redeem it in a month or so."
+
+"Good. I'll make you out the ticket by-and-by," said Cohen, indifferently.
+Then he held up his finger as a sign that conversation must be deferred.
+He, Mordecai and Jacob put on their hats, and Cohen opened a thanksgiving,
+which was carried on by responses, till Mordecai delivered himself alone
+at some length, in a solemn chanting tone, with his chin slightly uplifted
+and his thin hands clasped easily before him. Not only in his accent and
+tone, but in his freedom from the self-consciousness which has reference
+to others' approbation, there could hardly have been a stronger contrast
+to the Jew at the other end of the table. It was an unaccountable
+conjunction--the presence among these common, prosperous, shopkeeping
+types, of a man who, in an emaciated threadbare condition, imposed a
+certain awe on Deronda, and an embarrassment at not meeting his
+expectations.
+
+No sooner had Mordecai finished his devotional strain, than rising, with a
+slight bend of his head to the stranger, he walked back into his room, and
+shut the door behind him.
+
+"That seems to be rather a remarkable man," said Deronda, turning to
+Cohen, who immediately set up his shoulders, put out his tongue slightly,
+and tapped his own brow. It was clearly to be understood that Mordecai did
+not come up to the standard of sanity which was set by Mr. Cohen's view of
+men and things.
+
+"Does he belong to your family?" said Deronda.
+
+This idea appeared to be rather ludicrous to the ladies as well as to
+Cohen, and the family interchanged looks of amusement.
+
+"No, no," said Cohen. "Charity! charity! he worked for me, and when he got
+weaker and weaker I took him in. He's an incumbrance; but he brings a
+blessing down, and he teaches the boy. Besides, he does the repairing at
+the watches and jewelry."
+
+Deronda hardly abstained from smiling at this mixture of kindliness and
+the desire to justify it in the light of a calculation; but his
+willingness to speak further of Mordecai, whose character was made the
+more enigmatically striking by these new details, was baffled. Mr. Cohen
+immediately dismissed the subject by reverting to the "accommodation,"
+which was also an act of charity, and proceeded to make out the ticket,
+get the forty pounds, and present them both in exchange for the diamond
+ring. Deronda, feeling that it would be hardly delicate to protract his
+visit beyond the settlement of the business which was its pretext, had to
+take his leave, with no more decided result than the advance of forty
+pounds and the pawn-ticket in his breast-pocket, to make a reason for
+returning when he came up to town after Christmas. He was resolved that he
+would then endeavor to gain a little more insight into the character and
+history of Mordecai; from whom also he might gather something decisive
+about the Cohens--for example, the reason why it was forbidden to ask Mrs.
+Cohen the elder whether she had a daughter.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK V.--MORDECAI.
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+ Were uneasiness of conscience measured by extent of crime, human
+ history had been different, and one should look to see the contrivers
+ of greedy wars and the mighty marauders of the money-market in one
+ troop of self-lacerating penitents with the meaner robber and cut-
+ purse and the murderer that doth his butchery in small with his own
+ hand. No doubt wickedness hath its rewards to distribute; but who so
+ wins in this devil's game must needs be baser, more cruel, more brutal
+ than the order of this planet will allow for the multitude born of
+ woman, the most of these carrying a form of conscience--a fear which
+ is the shadow of justice, a pity which is the shadow of love--that
+ hindereth from the prize of serene wickedness, itself difficult of
+ maintenance in our composite flesh.
+
+
+On the twenty-ninth of December Deronda knew that the Grandcourts had
+arrived at the Abbey, but he had had no glimpse of them before he went to
+dress for dinner. There had been a splendid fall of snow, allowing the
+party of children the rare pleasures of snow-balling and snow-building,
+and in the Christmas holidays the Mallinger girls were content with no
+amusement unless it were joined in and managed by "cousin," as they had
+always called Deronda. After that outdoor exertion he had been playing
+billiards, and thus the hours had passed without his dwelling at all on
+the prospect of meeting Gwendolen at dinner. Nevertheless that prospect
+was interesting to him; and when, a little tired and heated with working
+at amusement, he went to his room before the half-hour bell had rung, he
+began to think of it with some speculation on the sort of influence her
+marriage with Grandcourt would have on her, and on the probability that
+there would be some discernible shades of change in her manner since he
+saw her at Diplow, just as there had been since his first vision of her at
+Leubronn.
+
+"I fancy there are some natures one could see growing or degenerating
+every day, if one watched them," was his thought. "I suppose some of us go
+on faster than others: and I am sure she is a creature who keeps strong
+traces of anything that has once impressed her. That little affair of the
+necklace, and the idea that somebody thought her gambling wrong, had
+evidently bitten into her. But such impressibility leads both ways: it may
+drive one to desperation as soon as to anything better. And whatever
+fascinations Grandcourt may have for capricious tastes--good heavens! who
+can believe that he would call out the tender affections in daily
+companionship? One might be tempted to horsewhip him for the sake of
+getting some show of passion into his face and speech. I'm afraid she
+married him out of ambition--to escape poverty. But why did she run out of
+his way at first? The poverty came after, though. Poor thing! she may have
+been urged into it. How can one feel anything else than pity for a young
+creature like that--full of unused life--ignorantly rash--hanging all her
+blind expectations on that remnant of a human being."
+
+Doubtless the phrases which Deronda's meditation applied to the bridegroom
+were the less complimentary for the excuses and pity in which it clad the
+bride. His notion of Grandcourt as a "remnant" was founded on no
+particular knowledge, but simply on the impression which ordinary polite
+intercourse had given him that Grandcourt had worn out all his natural
+healthy interest in things.
+
+In general, one may be sure that whenever a marriage of any mark takes
+place, male acquaintances are likely to pity the bride, female
+acquaintances the bridegroom: each, it is thought, might have done better;
+and especially where the bride is charming, young gentlemen on the scene
+are apt to conclude that she can have no real attachment to a fellow so
+uninteresting to themselves as her husband, but has married him on other
+grounds. Who, under such circumstances, pities the husband? Even his
+female friends are apt to think his position retributive: he should have
+chosen some one else. But perhaps Deronda may be excused that he did not
+prepare any pity for Grandcourt, who had never struck acquaintances as
+likely to come out of his experiences with more suffering than he
+inflicted; whereas, for Gwendolen, young, headlong, eager for pleasure,
+fed with the flattery which makes a lovely girl believe in her divine
+right to rule--how quickly might life turn from expectancy to a bitter
+sense of the irremediable! After what he had seen of her he must have had
+rather dull feelings not to have looked forward with some interest to her
+entrance into the room. Still, since the honeymoon was already three weeks
+in the distance, and Gwendolen had been enthroned, not only at Ryeland's,
+but at Diplow, she was likely to have composed her countenance with
+suitable manifestation or concealment, not being one who would indulge the
+curious by a helpless exposure of her feelings.
+
+A various party had been invited to meet the new couple; the old
+aristocracy was represented by Lord and Lady Pentreath; the old gentry by
+young Mr. and Mrs. Fitzadam of the Worcestershire branch of the Fitzadams;
+politics and the public good, as specialized in the cider interest, by Mr.
+Fenn, member for West Orchards, accompanied by his two daughters; Lady
+Mallinger's family, by her brother, Mr. Raymond, and his wife; the useful
+bachelor element by Mr. Sinker, the eminent counsel, and by Mr.
+Vandernoodt, whose acquaintance Sir Hugo had found pleasant enough at
+Leubronn to be adopted in England.
+
+All had assembled in the drawing-room before the new couple appeared.
+Meanwhile, the time was being passed chiefly in noticing the children--
+various little Raymonds, nephews and nieces of Lady Mallinger's with her
+own three girls, who were always allowed to appear at this hour. The scene
+was really delightful--enlarged by full-length portraits with deep
+backgrounds, inserted in the cedar paneling--surmounted by a ceiling that
+glowed with the rich colors of the coats of arms ranged between the
+sockets--illuminated almost as much by the red fire of oak-boughs as by
+the pale wax-lights--stilled by the deep-piled carpet and by the high
+English breeding that subdues all voices; while the mixture of ages, from
+the white-haired Lord and Lady Pentreath to the four-year-old Edgar
+Raymond, gave a varied charm to the living groups. Lady Mallinger, with
+fair matronly roundness and mildly prominent blue eyes, moved about in her
+black velvet, carrying a tiny white dog on her arm as a sort of finish to
+her costume; the children were scattered among the ladies, while most of
+the gentlemen were standing rather aloof, conversing with that very
+moderate vivacity observable during the long minutes before dinner.
+Deronda was a little out of the circle in a dialogue fixed upon him by Mr.
+Vandernoodt, a man of the best Dutch blood imported at the revolution: for
+the rest, one of those commodious persons in society who are nothing
+particular themselves, but are understood to be acquainted with the best
+in every department; close-clipped, pale-eyed, _nonchalant_, as good a
+foil as could well be found to the intense coloring and vivid gravity of
+Deronda.
+
+He was talking of the bride and bridegroom, whose appearance was being
+waited for. Mr. Vandernoodt was an industrious gleaner of personal
+details, and could probably tell everything about a great philosopher or
+physicist except his theories or discoveries; he was now implying that he
+had learned many facts about Grandcourt since meeting him at Leubronn.
+
+"Men who have seen a good deal of life don't always end by choosing their
+wives so well. He has had rather an anecdotic history--gone rather deep
+into pleasures, I fancy, lazy as he is. But, of course, you know all about
+him."
+
+"No, really," said Deronda, in an indifferent tone. "I know little more of
+him than that he is Sir Hugo's nephew."
+
+But now the door opened and deferred any satisfaction of Mr. Vandernoodt's
+communicativeness.
+
+The scene was one to set off any figure of distinction that entered on it,
+and certainly when Mr. and Mrs. Grandcourt entered, no beholder could deny
+that their figures had distinction. The bridegroom had neither more nor
+less easy perfection of costume, neither more nor less well-cut
+impassibility of face, than before his marriage. It was to be supposed of
+him that he would put up with nothing less than the best in outward
+equipment, wife included; and the bride was what he might have been
+expected to choose. "By George, I think she's handsomer, if anything!"
+said Mr. Vandernoodt. And Deronda was of the same opinion, but he said
+nothing. The white silk and diamonds--it may seem strange, but she did
+wear diamonds on her neck, in her ears, in her hair--might have something
+to do with the new imposingness of her beauty, which flashed on him as
+more unquestionable if not more thoroughly satisfactory than when he had
+first seen her at the gaming-table. Some faces which are peculiar in their
+beauty are like original works of art: for the first time they are almost
+always met with question. But in seeing Gwendolen at Diplow, Deronda had
+discerned in her more than he had expected of that tender appealing charm
+which we call womanly. Was there any new change since then? He distrusted
+his impressions; but as he saw her receiving greetings with what seemed a
+proud cold quietude and a superficial smile, there seemed to be at work
+within her the same demonic force that had possessed her when she took him
+in her resolute glance and turned away a loser from the gaming-table.
+There was no time for more of a conclusion--no time even for him to give
+his greeting before the summons to dinner.
+
+He sat not far from opposite to her at table, and could sometimes hear
+what she said in answer to Sir Hugo, who was at his liveliest in
+conversation with her; but though he looked toward her with the intention
+of bowing, she gave him no opportunity of doing so for some time. At last
+Sir Hugo, who might have imagined that they had already spoken to each
+other, said, "Deronda, you will like to hear what Mrs. Grandcourt tells me
+about your favorite Klesmer."
+
+Gwendolen's eyelids had been lowered, and Deronda, already looking at her,
+thought he discovered a quivering reluctance as she was obliged to raise
+them and return his unembarrassed bow and smile, her own smile being one
+of the lip merely. It was but an instant, and Sir Hugo continued without
+pause--
+
+"The Arrowpoints have condoned the marriage, and he is spending the
+Christmas with his bride at Quetcham."
+
+"I suppose he will be glad of it for the sake of his wife, else I dare say
+he would not have minded keeping at a distance," said Deronda.
+
+"It's a sort of troubadour story," said Lady Pentreath, an easy, deep-
+voiced old lady; "I'm glad to find a little romance left among us. I think
+our young people now are getting too worldly wise."
+
+"It shows the Arrowpoints' good sense, however, to have adopted the
+affair, after the fuss in the paper," said Sir Hugo. "And disowning your
+own child because of a _mesalliance_ is something like disowning your one
+eye: everybody knows it's yours, and you have no other to make an
+appearance with."
+
+"As to _mesalliance_, there's no blood on any side," said Lady Pentreath.
+"Old Admiral Arrowpoint was one of Nelson's men, you know--a doctor's son.
+And we all know how the mother's money came."
+
+"If they were any _mesalliance_ in the case, I should say it was on
+Klesmer's side," said Deronda.
+
+"Ah, you think it is a case of the immortal marrying the mortal. What is
+your opinion?" said Sir Hugo, looking at Gwendolen.
+
+"I have no doubt that Herr Klesmer thinks himself immortal. But I dare say
+his wife will burn as much incense before him as he requires," said
+Gwendolen. She had recovered any composure that she might have lost.
+
+"Don't you approve of a wife burning incense before her husband?" said Sir
+Hugo, with an air of jocoseness.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Gwendolen, "if it were only to make others believe in
+him." She paused a moment and then said with more gayety, "When Herr
+Klesmer admires his own genius, it will take off some of the absurdity if
+his wife says Amen."
+
+"Klesmer is no favorite of yours, I see," said Sir Hugo.
+
+"I think very highly of him, I assure you," said Gwendolen. "His genius is
+quite above my judgment, and I know him to be exceedingly generous."
+
+She spoke with the sudden seriousness which is often meant to correct an
+unfair or indiscreet sally, having a bitterness against Klesmer in her
+secret soul which she knew herself unable to justify. Deronda was
+wondering what he should have thought of her if he had never heard of her
+before: probably that she put on a little hardness and defiance by way of
+concealing some painful consciousness--if, indeed, he could imagine her
+manners otherwise than in the light of his suspicion. But why did she not
+recognize him with more friendliness?
+
+Sir Hugo, by way of changing the subject, said to her, "Is not this a
+beautiful room? It was part of the refectory of the Abbey. There was a
+division made by those pillars and the three arches, and afterward they
+were built up. Else it was half as large again originally. There used to
+be rows of Benedictines sitting where we are sitting. Suppose we were
+suddenly to see the lights burning low and the ghosts of the old monks
+rising behind all our chairs!"
+
+"Please don't!" said Gwendolen, with a playful shudder. "It is very nice
+to come after ancestors and monks, but they should know their places and
+keep underground. I should be rather frightened to go about this house all
+alone. I suppose the old generations must be angry with us because we have
+altered things so much."
+
+"Oh, the ghosts must be of all political parties," said Sir Hugo. "And
+those fellows who wanted to change things while they lived and couldn't do
+it must be on our side. But if you would not like to go over the house
+alone, you will like to go in company, I hope. You and Grandcourt ought to
+see it all. And we will ask Deronda to go found with us. He is more
+learned about it than I am." The baronet was in the most complaisant of
+humors.
+
+Gwendolen stole a glance at Deronda, who must have heard what Sir Hugo
+said, for he had his face turned toward them helping himself to an
+_entree_; but he looked as impassive as a picture. At the notion of
+Deronda's showing her and Grandcourt the place which was to be theirs, and
+which she with painful emphasis remembered might have been his (perhaps,
+if others had acted differently), certain thoughts had rushed in--thoughts
+repeated within her, but now returning on an occasion embarrassingly new;
+and was conscious of something furtive and awkward in her glance which Sir
+Hugo must have noticed. With her usual readiness of resource against
+betrayal, she said, playfully, "You don't know how much I am afraid of Mr.
+Deronda."
+
+"How's that? Because you think him too learned?" said Sir Hugo, whom the
+peculiarity of her glance had not escaped.
+
+"No. It is ever since I first saw him at Leubronn. Because when he came to
+look on at the roulette-table, I began to lose. He cast an evil eye on my
+play. He didn't approve it. He has told me so. And now whatever I do
+before him, I am afraid he will cast an evil eye upon it."
+
+"Gad! I'm rather afraid of him myself when he doesn't approve," said Sir
+Hugo, glancing at Deronda; and then turning his face toward Gwendolen, he
+said less audibly, "I don't think ladies generally object to have his eyes
+upon them." The baronet's small chronic complaint of facetiousness was at
+this moment almost as annoying to Gwendolen as it often was to Deronda.
+
+"I object to any eyes that are critical," she said, in a cool, high voice,
+with a turn of her neck. "Are there many of these old rooms left in the
+Abbey?"
+
+"Not many. There is a fine cloistered court with a long gallery above it.
+But the finest bit of all is turned into stables. It is part of the old
+church. When I improved the place I made the most of every other bit; but
+it was out of my reach to change the stables, so the horses have the
+benefit of the fine old choir. You must go and see it."
+
+"I shall like to see the horses as well as the building," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Oh, I have no stud to speak of. Grandcourt will look with contempt at my
+horses," said Sir Hugo. "I've given up hunting, and go on in a jog-trot
+way, as becomes an old gentlemen with daughters. The fact is, I went in
+for doing too much at this place. We all lived at Diplow for two years
+while the alterations were going on: Do you like Diplow?"
+
+"Not particularly," said Gwendolen, with indifference. One would have
+thought that the young lady had all her life had more family seats than
+she cared to go to.
+
+"Ah! it will not do after Ryelands," said Sir Hugo, well pleased.
+"Grandcourt, I know, took it for the sake of the hunting. But he found
+something so much better there," added the baronet, lowering his voice,
+"that he might well prefer it to any other place in the world."
+
+"It has one attraction for me," said Gwendolen, passing over this
+compliment with a chill smile, "that it is within reach of Offendene."
+
+"I understand that," said Sir Hugo, and then let the subject drop.
+
+What amiable baronet can escape the effect of a strong desire for a
+particular possession? Sir Hugo would have been glad that Grandcourt, with
+or without reason, should prefer any other place to Diplow; but inasmuch
+as in the pure process of wishing we can always make the conditions of our
+gratification benevolent, he did wish that Grandcourt's convenient disgust
+for Diplow should not be associated with his marriage with this very
+charming bride. Gwendolen was much to the baronet's taste, but, as he
+observed afterward to Lady Mallinger, he should never have taken her for a
+young girl who had married beyond her expectations.
+
+Deronda had not heard much of this conversation, having given his
+attention elsewhere, but the glimpses he had of Gwendolen's manner
+deepened the impression that it had something newly artificial.
+
+Later, in the drawing-room, Deronda, at somebody's request, sat down to
+the piano and sang. Afterward, Mrs. Raymond took his place; and on rising
+he observed that Gwendolen had left her seat, and had come to this end of
+the room, as if to listen more fully, but was now standing with her back
+to every one, apparently contemplating a fine cowled head carved in ivory
+which hung over a small table. He longed to go to her and speak. Why
+should he not obey such an impulse, as he would have done toward any other
+lady in the room? Yet he hesitated some moments, observing the graceful
+lines of her back, but not moving.
+
+If you have any reason for not indulging a wish to speak to a fair woman,
+it is a bad plan to look long at her back: the wish to see what it screens
+becomes the stronger. There may be a very sweet smile on the other side.
+Deronda ended by going to the end of the small table, at right angles to
+Gwendolen's position, but before he could speak she had turned on him no
+smile, but such an appealing look of sadness, so utterly different from
+the chill effort of her recognition at table, that his speech was checked.
+For what was an appreciative space of time to both, though the observation
+of others could not have measured it, they looked at each other--she
+seeming to take the deep rest of confession, he with an answering depth of
+sympathy that neutralized all other feelings.
+
+"Will you not join in the music?" he said by way of meeting the necessity
+for speech.
+
+That her look of confession had been involuntary was shown by that just
+perceptible shake and change of countenance with which she roused herself
+to reply calmly, "I join in it by listening. I am fond of music."
+
+"Are you not a musician?"
+
+"I have given a great deal of time to music. But I have not talent enough
+to make it worth while. I shall never sing again."
+
+"But if you are fond of music, it will always be worth while in private,
+for your own delight. I make it a virtue to be content with my
+middlingness," said Deronda, smiling; "it is always pardonable, so that
+one does not ask others to take it for superiority."
+
+"I cannot imitate you," said Gwendolen, recovering her tone of artificial
+vivacity. "To be middling with me is another phrase for being dull. And
+the worst fault I have to find with the world is, that it is dull. Do you
+know, I am going to justify gambling in spite of you. It is a refuge from
+dullness."
+
+"I don't admit the justification," said Deronda. "I think what we call the
+dullness of things is a disease in ourselves. Else how can any one find an
+intense interest in life? And many do."
+
+"Ah, I see! The fault I find in the world is my own fault," said
+Gwendolen, smiling at him. Then after a moment, looking up at the ivory
+again, she said, "Do _you_ never find fault with the world or with
+others?"
+
+"Oh, yes. When I am in a grumbling mood."
+
+"And hate people? Confess you hate them when they stand in your way--when
+their gain is your loss? That is your own phrase, you know."
+
+"We are often standing in each other's way when we can't help it. I think
+it is stupid to hate people on that ground."
+
+"But if they injure you and could have helped it?" said Gwendolen with a
+hard intensity unaccountable in incidental talk like this.
+
+Deronda wondered at her choice of subjects. A painful impression arrested
+his answer a moment, but at last he said, with a graver, deeper
+intonation, "Why, then, after all, I prefer my place to theirs."
+
+"There I believe you are right," said Gwendolen, with a sudden little
+laugh, and turned to join the group at the piano.
+
+Deronda looked around for Grandcourt, wondering whether he followed his
+bride's movements with any attention; but it was rather undiscerning to
+him to suppose that he could find out the fact. Grandcourt had a delusive
+mood of observing whatever had an interest for him, which could be
+surpassed by no sleepy-eyed animal on the watch for prey. At that moment
+he was plunged in the depth of an easy chair, being talked to by Mr.
+Vandernoodt, who apparently thought the acquaintance of such a bridegroom
+worth cultivating; and an incautious person might have supposed it safe to
+telegraph secrets in front of him, the common prejudice being that your
+quick observer is one whose eyes have quick movements. Not at all. If you
+want a respectable witness who will see nothing inconvenient, choose a
+vivacious gentleman, very much on the alert, with two eyes wide open, a
+glass in one of them, and an entire impartiality as to the purpose of
+looking. If Grandcourt cared to keep any one under his power he saw them
+out of the corners of his long narrow eyes, and if they went behind him he
+had a constructive process by which he knew what they were doing there. He
+knew perfectly well where his wife was, and how she was behaving. Was he
+going to be a jealous husband? Deronda imagined that to be likely; but his
+imagination was as much astray about Grandcourt as it would have been
+about an unexplored continent where all the species were peculiar. He did
+not conceive that he himself was a likely subject of jealousy, or that he
+should give any pretext for it; but the suspicion that a wife is not happy
+naturally leads one to speculate on the husband's private deportment; and
+Deronda found himself after one o'clock in the morning in the rather
+ludicrous position of sitting up severely holding a Hebrew grammar in his
+hands (for somehow, in deference to Mordecai, he had begun to study
+Hebrew), with the consciousness that he had been in that attitude nearly
+an hour, and had thought of nothing but Gwendolen and her husband. To be
+an unusual young man means for the most part to get a difficult mastery
+over the usual, which is often like the sprite of ill-luck you pack up
+your goods to escape from, and see grinning at you from the top of your
+luggage van. The peculiarities of Deronda's nature had been acutely
+touched by the brief incident and words which made the history of his
+intercourse with Gwendolen; and this evening's slight addition had given
+them an importunate recurrence. It was not vanity--it was ready sympathy
+that had made him alive to a certain appealingness in her behavior toward
+him; and the difficulty with which she had seemed to raise her eyes to bow
+to him, in the first instance, was to be interpreted now by that
+unmistakable look of involuntary confidence which she had afterward turned
+on him under the consciousness of his approach.
+
+"What is the use of it all?" thought Deronda, as he threw down his
+grammar, and began to undress. "I can't do anything to help her--nobody
+can, if she has found out her mistake already. And it seems to me that she
+has a dreary lack of the ideas that might help her. Strange and piteous to
+human flesh like that might be, wrapped round with fine raiment, her ears
+pierced for gems, her head held loftily, her mouth all smiling pretence,
+the poor soul within her sitting in sick distaste of all things! But what
+do I know of her? There may be a demon in her to match the worst husband,
+for what I can tell. She was clearly an ill-educated, worldly girl:
+perhaps she is a coquette."
+
+This last reflection, not much believed in, was a self-administered dose
+of caution, prompted partly by Sir Hugo's much-contemned joking on the
+subject of flirtation. Deronda resolved not to volunteer any _tete-a-tete_
+with Gwendolen during the days of her stay at the Abbey; and he was
+capable of keeping a resolve in spite of much inclination to the contrary.
+
+But a man cannot resolve about a woman's actions, least of all about those
+of a woman like Gwendolen, in whose nature there was a combination of
+proud reserve with rashness, of perilously poised terror with defiance,
+which might alternately flatter and disappoint control. Few words could
+less represent her than "coquette." She had native love of homage, and
+belief in her own power; but no cold artifice for the sake of enslaving.
+And the poor thing's belief in her power, with her other dreams before
+marriage, had often to be thrust aside now like the toys of a sick child,
+which it looks at with dull eyes, and has no heart to play with, however
+it may try.
+
+The next day at lunch Sir Hugo said to her, "The thaw has gone on like
+magic, and it's so pleasant out of doors just now--shall we go and see the
+stables and the other odd bits about the place?"
+
+"Yes, pray," said Gwendolen. "You will like to see the stables, Henleigh?"
+she added, looking at her husband.
+
+"Uncommonly," said Grandcourt, with an indifference which seemed to give
+irony to the word, as he returned her look. It was the first time Deronda
+had seen them speak to each other since their arrival, and he thought
+their exchange of looks as cold or official as if it had been a a ceremony
+to keep up a charter. Still, the English fondness for reserve will account
+for much negation; and Grandcourt's manners with an extra veil of reserve
+over them might be expected to present the extreme type of the national
+taste.
+
+"Who else is inclined to make the tour of the house and premises?" said
+Sir Hugo. "The ladies must muffle themselves; there is only just about
+time to do it well before sunset. You will go, Dan, won't you?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Deronda, carelessly, knowing that Sir Hugo would think any
+excuse disobliging.
+
+"All meet in the library, then, when they are ready--say in half an hour,"
+said the baronet. Gwendolen made herself ready with wonderful quickness,
+and in ten minutes came down into the library in her sables, plume, and
+little thick boots. As soon as she entered the room she was aware that
+some one else was there: it was precisely what she had hoped for. Deronda
+was standing with his back toward her at the far end of the room, and was
+looking over a newspaper. How could little thick boots make any noise on
+an Axminster carpet? And to cough would have seemed an intended signaling
+which her pride could not condescend to; also, she felt bashful about
+walking up to him and letting him know that she was there, though it was
+her hunger to speak to him which had set her imagination on constructing
+this chance of finding him, and had made her hurry down, as birds hover
+near the water which they dare not drink. Always uneasily dubious about
+his opinion of her, she felt a peculiar anxiety to-day, lest he might
+think of her with contempt, as one triumphantly conscious of being
+Grandcourt's wife, the future lady of this domain. It was her habitual
+effort now to magnify the satisfactions of her pride, on which she
+nourished her strength; but somehow Deronda's being there disturbed them
+all. There was not the faintest touch of coquetry in the attitude of her
+mind toward him: he was unique to her among men, because he had impressed
+her as being not her admirer but her superior: in some mysterious way he
+was becoming a part of her conscience, as one woman whose nature is an
+object of reverential belief may become a new conscience to a man.
+
+And now he would not look round and find out that she was there! The paper
+crackled in his hand, his head rose and sank, exploring those stupid
+columns, and he was evidently stroking his beard; as if this world were a
+very easy affair to her. Of course all the rest of the company would soon
+be down, and the opportunity of her saying something to efface her
+flippancy of the evening before, would be quite gone. She felt sick with
+irritation--so fast do young creatures like her absorb misery through
+invisible suckers of their own fancies--and her face had gathered that
+peculiar expression which comes with a mortification to which tears are
+forbidden.
+
+At last he threw down the paper and turned round.
+
+"Oh, you are there already," he said, coming forward a step or two: "I
+must go and put on my coat."
+
+He turned aside and walked out of the room. This was behaving quite badly.
+Mere politeness would have made him stay to exchange some words before
+leaving her alone. It was true that Grandcourt came in with Sir Hugo
+immediately after, so that the words must have been too few to be worth
+anything. As it was, they saw him walking from the library door.
+
+"A--you look rather ill," said Grandcourt, going straight up to her,
+standing in front of her, and looking into her eyes. "Do you feel equal to
+the walk?"
+
+"Yes, I shall like it," said Gwendolen, without the slightest movement
+except this of the lips.
+
+"We could put off going over the house, you know, and only go out of
+doors," said Sir Hugo, kindly, while Grandcourt turned aside.
+
+"Oh, dear no!" said Gwendolen, speaking with determination; "let us put
+off nothing. I want a long walk."
+
+The rest of the walking party--two ladies and two gentlemen besides
+Deronda--had now assembled; and Gwendolen rallying, went with due
+cheerfulness by the side of Sir Hugo, paying apparently an equal attention
+to the commentaries Deronda was called upon to give on the various
+architectural fragments, to Sir Hugo's reasons for not attempting to
+remedy the mixture of the undisguised modern with the antique--which in
+his opinion only made the place the more truly historical. On their way to
+the buttery and kitchen they took the outside of the house and paused
+before a beautiful pointed doorway, which was the only old remnant in the
+east front.
+
+"Well, now, to my mind," said Sir Hugo, "that is more interesting standing
+as it is in the middle of what is frankly four centuries later, than if
+the whole front had been dressed up in a pretense of the thirteenth
+century. Additions ought to smack of the time when they are made and carry
+the stamp of their period. I wouldn't destroy any old bits, but that
+notion of reproducing the old is a mistake, I think. At least, if a man
+likes to do it he must pay for his whistle. Besides, where are you to stop
+along that road--making loopholes where you don't want to peep, and so on?
+You may as well ask me to wear out the stones with kneeling; eh,
+Grandcourt?"
+
+"A confounded nuisance," drawled Grandcourt. "I hate fellows wanting to
+howl litanies--acting the greatest bores that have ever existed."
+
+"Well, yes, that's what their romanticism must come to," said Sir Hugo, in
+a tone of confidential assent--"that is if they carry it out logically."
+
+"I think that way of arguing against a course because it may be ridden
+down to an absurdity would soon bring life to a standstill," said Deronda.
+"It is not the logic of human action, but of a roasting-jack, that must go
+on to the last turn when it has been once wound up. We can do nothing
+safely without some judgment as to where we are to stop."
+
+"I find the rule of the pocket the best guide," said Sir Hugo, laughingly.
+"And as for most of your new-old building, you had need to hire men to
+scratch and chip it all over artistically to give it an elderly-looking
+surface; which at the present rate of labor would not answer."
+
+"Do you want to keep up the old fashions, then, Mr. Deronda?" said
+Gwendolen, taking advantage of the freedom of grouping to fall back a
+little, while Sir Hugo and Grandcourt went on.
+
+"Some of them. I don't see why we should not use our choice there as we do
+elsewhere--or why either age or novelty by itself is an argument for or
+against. To delight in doing things because our fathers did them is good
+if it shuts out nothing better; it enlarges the range of affection--and
+affection is the broadest basis of good in life."
+
+"Do you think so?" said Gwendolen with a little surprise. "I should have
+thought you cared most about ideas, knowledge, wisdom, and all that."
+
+"But to care about _them_ is a sort of affection," said Deronda, smiling
+at her sudden _naivete_. "Call it attachment; interest, willing to bear a
+great deal for the sake of being with them and saving them from injury. Of
+course, it makes a difference if the objects of interest are human beings;
+but generally in all deep affections the objects are a mixture--half
+persons and half ideas--sentiments and affections flow in together."
+
+"I wonder whether I understand that," said Gwendolen, putting up her chin
+in her old saucy manner. "I believe I am not very affectionate; perhaps
+you mean to tell me, that is the reason why I don't see much good in
+life."
+
+"No, I did _not_ mean to tell you that; but I admit that I should think it
+true if I believed what you say of yourself," said Deronda, gravely.
+
+Here Sir Hugo and Grandcourt turned round and paused.
+
+"I never can get Mr. Deronda to pay me a compliment," said Gwendolen. "I
+have quite a curiosity to see whether a little flattery can be extracted
+from him."
+
+"Ah!" said Sir Hugo, glancing at Deronda, "the fact is, it is useless to
+flatter a bride. We give it up in despair. She has been so fed on sweet
+speeches that every thing we say seems tasteless."
+
+"Quite true," said Gwendolen, bending her head and smiling. "Mr.
+Grandcourt won me by neatly-turned compliments. If there had been one word
+out of place it would have been fatal."
+
+"Do you hear that?" said Sir Hugo, looking at the husband.
+
+"Yes," said Grandcourt, without change of countenance. "It's a deucedly
+hard thing to keep up, though."
+
+All this seemed to Sir Hugo a natural playfulness between such a husband
+and wife; but Deronda wondered at the misleading alternations in
+Gwendolen's manner, which at one moment seemed to excite sympathy by
+childlike indiscretion, at another to repel it by proud concealment. He
+tried to keep out of her way by devoting himself to Miss Juliet Fenn, a
+young lady whose profile had been so unfavorably decided by circumstances
+over which she had no control, that Gwendolen some months ago had felt it
+impossible to be jealous of her. Nevertheless, when they were seeing the
+kitchen--a part of the original building in perfect preservation--the
+depth of shadow in the niches of the stone-walls and groined vault, the
+play of light from the huge glowing fire on polished tin, brass, and
+copper, the fine resonance that came with every sound of voice or metal,
+were all spoiled for Gwendolen, and Sir Hugo's speech about them was made
+rather importunate, because Deronda was discoursing to the other ladies
+and kept at a distance from her. It did not signify that the other
+gentlemen took the opportunity of being near her: of what use in the world
+was their admiration while she had an uneasy sense that there was some
+standard in Deronda's mind which measured her into littleness? Mr.
+Vandernoodt, who had the mania of always describing one thing while you
+were looking at another, was quite intolerable with his insistence on Lord
+Blough's kitchen, which he had seen in the north.
+
+"Pray don't ask us to see two kitchens at once. It makes the heat double.
+I must really go out of it," she cried at last, marching resolutely into
+the open air, and leaving the others in the rear. Grandcourt was already
+out, and as she joined him, he said--
+
+"I wondered how long you meant to stay in that damned place"--one of the
+freedoms he had assumed as a husband being the use of his strongest
+epithets. Gwendolen, turning to see the rest of the party approach, said--
+
+"It was certainly rather too warm in one's wraps."
+
+They walked on the gravel across a green court, where the snow still lay
+in islets on the grass, and in masses on the boughs of the great cedar and
+the crenelated coping of the stone walls, and then into a larger court,
+where there was another cedar, to find the beautiful choir long ago turned
+into stables, in the first instance perhaps after an impromptu fashion by
+troopers, who had a pious satisfaction in insulting the priests of Baal
+and the images of Ashtoreth, the queen of heaven. The exterior--its west
+end, save for the stable door, walled in with brick and covered with ivy--
+was much defaced, maimed of finial and gurgoyle, the friable limestone
+broken and fretted, and lending its soft gray to a powdery dark lichen;
+the long windows, too, were filled in with brick as far as the springing
+of the arches, the broad clerestory windows with wire or ventilating
+blinds. With the low wintry afternoon sun upon it, sending shadows from
+the cedar boughs, and lighting up the touches of snow remaining on every
+ledge, it had still a scarcely disturbed aspect of antique solemnity,
+which gave the scene in the interior rather a startling effect; though,
+ecclesiastical or reverential indignation apart, the eyes could hardly
+help dwelling with pleasure on its piquant picturesqueness. Each finely-
+arched chapel was turned into a stall, where in the dusty glazing of the
+windows there still gleamed patches of crimson, orange, blue, and palest
+violet; for the rest, the choir had been gutted, the floor leveled, paved,
+and drained according to the most approved fashion, and a line of loose
+boxes erected in the middle: a soft light fell from the upper windows on
+sleek brown or gray flanks and haunches; on mild equine faces looking out
+with active nostrils over the varnished brown boarding; on the hay hanging
+from racks where the saints once looked down from the altar-pieces, and on
+the pale golden straw scattered or in heaps; on a little white-and-liver-
+colored spaniel making his bed on the back of an elderly hackney, and on
+four ancient angels, still showing signs of devotion like mutilated
+martyrs--while over all, the grand pointed roof, untouched by reforming
+wash, showed its lines and colors mysteriously through veiling shadow and
+cobweb, and a hoof now and then striking against the boards seemed to fill
+the vault with thunder, while outside there was the answering bay of the
+blood-hounds.
+
+"Oh, this is glorious!" Gwendolen burst forth, in forgetfulness of
+everything but the immediate impression: there had been a little
+intoxication for her in the grand spaces of courts and building, and the
+fact of her being an important person among them. "This _is_ glorious!
+Only I wish there were a horse in every one of the boxes. I would ten
+times rather have these stables than those at Diplow."
+
+But she had no sooner said this than some consciousness arrested her, and
+involuntarily she turned her eyes toward Deronda, who oddly enough had
+taken off his felt hat and stood holding it before him as if they had
+entered a room or an actual church. He, like others, happened to be
+looking at her, and their eyes met--to her intense vexation, for it seemed
+to her that by looking at him she had betrayed the reference of her
+thoughts, and she felt herself blushing: she exaggerated the impression
+that even Sir Hugo as well as Deronda would have of her bad taste in
+referring to the possession of anything at the Abbey: as for Deronda, she
+had probably made him despise her. Her annoyance at what she imagined to
+be the obviousness of her confusion robbed her of her usual facility in
+carrying it off by playful speech, and turning up her face to look at the
+roof, she wheeled away in that attitude. If any had noticed her blush as
+significant, they had certainly not interpreted it by the secret windings
+and recesses of her feeling. A blush is no language: only a dubious flag-
+signal which may mean either of two contradictories. Deronda alone had a
+faint guess at some part of her feeling; but while he was observing her he
+was himself under observation.
+
+"Do you take off your hat to horses?" said Grandcourt, with a slight
+sneer.
+
+"Why not?" said Deronda, covering himself. He had really taken off the hat
+automatically, and if he had been an ugly man might doubtless have done so
+with impunity; ugliness having naturally the air of involuntary exposure,
+and beauty, of display.
+
+Gwendolen's confusion was soon merged in the survey of the horses, which
+Grandcourt politely abstained from appraising, languidly assenting to Sir
+Hugo's alternate depreciation and eulogy of the same animal, as one that
+he should not have bought when he was younger, and piqued himself on his
+horses, but yet one that had better qualities than many more expensive
+brutes.
+
+"The fact is, stables dive deeper and deeper into the pocket nowadays, and
+I am very glad to have got rid of that _demangeaison_," said Sir Hugo, as
+they were coming out.
+
+"What is a man to do, though?" said Grandcourt. "He must ride. I don't see
+what else there is to do. And I don't call it riding to sit astride a set
+of brutes with every deformity under the sun."
+
+This delicate diplomatic way of characterizing Sir Hugo's stud did not
+require direct notice; and the baronet, feeling that the conversation had
+worn rather thin, said to the party generally, "Now we are going to see
+the cloister--the finest bit of all--in perfect preservation; the monks
+might have been walking there yesterday."
+
+But Gwendolen had lingered behind to look at the kenneled blood-hounds,
+perhaps because she felt a little dispirited; and Grandcourt waited for
+her.
+
+"You had better take my arm," he said, in his low tone of command; and she
+took it.
+
+"It's a great bore being dragged about in this way, and no cigar," said
+Grandcourt.
+
+"I thought you would like it."
+
+"Like it!--one eternal chatter. And encouraging those ugly girls--inviting
+one to meet such monsters. How that _fat_ Deronda can bear looking at
+her----"
+
+"Why do you call him _fat_? Do you object to him so much?"
+
+"Object? no. What do I care about his being a _fat_? It's of no
+consequence to me. I'll invite him to Diplow again if you like."
+
+"I don't think he would come. He is too clever and learned to care about
+_us_," said Gwendolen, thinking it useful for her husband to be told
+(privately) that it was possible for him to be looked down upon.
+
+"I never saw that make much difference in a man. Either he is a gentleman,
+or he is not," said Grandcourt.
+
+That a new husband and wife should snatch, a moment's _tete-a-tete_ was
+what could be understood and indulged; and the rest of the party left them
+in the rear till, re-entering the garden, they all paused in that
+cloistered court where, among the falling rose-petals thirteen years
+before, we saw a boy becoming acquainted with his first sorrow. This
+cloister was built of a harder stone than the church, and had been in
+greater safety from the wearing weather. It was a rare example of a
+northern cloister with arched and pillard openings not intended for
+glazing, and the delicately-wrought foliage of the capitals seemed still
+to carry the very touches of the chisel. Gwendolen had dropped her
+husband's arm and joined the other ladies, to whom Deronda was noticing
+the delicate sense which had combined freedom with accuracy in the
+imitation of natural forms.
+
+"I wonder whether one oftener learns to love real objects through their
+representations, or the representations through the real objects," he
+said, after pointing out a lovely capital made by the curled leaves of
+greens, showing their reticulated under-side with the firm gradual swell
+of its central rib. "When I was a little fellow these capitals taught me
+to observe and delight in the structure of leaves."
+
+"I suppose you can see every line of them with your eyes shut," said
+Juliet Fenn.
+
+"Yes. I was always repeating them, because for a good many years this
+court stood for me as my only image of a convent, and whenever I read of
+monks and monasteries, this was my scenery for them."
+
+"You must love this place very much," said Miss Fenn, innocently, not
+thinking of inheritance. "So many homes are like twenty others. But this
+is unique, and you seem to know every cranny of it. I dare say you could
+never love another home so well."
+
+"Oh, I carry it with me," said Deronda, quietly, being used to all
+possible thoughts of this kind. "To most men their early home is no more
+than a memory of their early years, and I'm not sure but they have the
+best of it. The image is never marred. There's no disappointment in
+memory, and one's exaggerations are always on the good side."
+
+Gwendolen felt sure that he spoke in that way out of delicacy to her and
+Grandcourt--because he knew they must hear him; and that he probably
+thought of her as a selfish creature who only cared about possessing
+things in her own person. But whatever he might say, it must have been a
+secret hardship to him that any circumstances of his birth had shut him
+out from the inheritance of his father's position; and if he supposed that
+she exulted in her husband's taking it, what could he feel for her but
+scornful pity? Indeed it seemed clear to her that he was avoiding her, and
+preferred talking to others--which nevertheless was not kind in him.
+
+With these thoughts in her mind she was prevented by a mixture of pride
+and timidity from addressing him again, and when they were looking at the
+rows of quaint portraits in the gallery above the cloisters, she kept up
+her air of interest and made her vivacious remarks without any direct
+appeal to Deronda. But at the end she was very weary of her assumed
+spirits, and Grandcourt turned into the billiard-room, she went to the
+pretty boudoir which had been assigned to her, and shut herself up to look
+melancholy at her ease. No chemical process shows a more wonderful
+activity than the transforming influence of the thoughts we imagine to be
+going on in another. Changes in theory, religion, admirations, may begin
+with a suspicion of dissent or disapproval, even when the grounds of
+disapproval are but matter of searching conjecture.
+
+Poor Gwendolen was conscious of an uneasy, transforming process--all the
+old nature shaken to its depths, its hopes spoiled, its pleasures
+perturbed, but still showing wholeness and strength in the will to
+reassert itself. After every new shock of humiliation she tried to adjust
+herself and seize her old supports--proud concealment, trust in new
+excitements that would make life go by without much thinking; trust in
+some deed of reparation to nullify her self-blame and shield her from a
+vague, ever-visiting dread of some horrible calamity; trust in the
+hardening effect of use and wont that would make her indifferent to her
+miseries.
+
+Yes--miseries. This beautiful, healthy young creature, with her two-and-
+twenty years and her gratified ambition, no longer felt inclined to kiss
+her fortunate image in the glass. She looked at it with wonder that she
+could be so miserable. One belief which had accompanied her through her
+unmarried life as a self-cajoling superstition, encouraged by the
+subordination of every one about her--the belief in her own power of
+dominating--was utterly gone. Already, in seven short weeks, which seemed
+half her life, her husband had gained a mastery which she could no more
+resist than she could have resisted the benumbing effect from the touch of
+a torpedo. Gwendolen's will had seemed imperious in its small girlish
+sway; but it was the will of a creature with a large discourse of
+imaginative fears: a shadow would have been enough to relax its hold. And
+she had found a will like that of a crab or a boa-constrictor, which goes
+on pinching or crushing without alarm at thunder. Not that Grandcourt was
+without calculation of the intangible effects which were the chief means
+of mastery; indeed, he had a surprising acuteness in detecting that
+situation of feeling in Gwendolen which made her proud and rebellious
+spirit dumb and helpless before him.
+
+She had burned Lydia Glasher's letter with an instantaneous terror lest
+other eyes should see it, and had tenaciously concealed from Grandcourt
+that there was any other cause of her violent hysterics than the
+excitement and fatigue of the day: she had been urged into an implied
+falsehood. "Don't ask me--it was my feeling about everything--it was the
+sudden change from home." The words of that letter kept repeating
+themselves, and hung on her consciousness with the weight of a prophetic
+doom. "I am the grave in which your chance of happiness is buried as well
+as mine. You had your warning. You have chosen to injure me and my
+children. He had meant to marry me. He would have married me at last, if
+you had not broken your word. You will have your punishment. I desire it
+with all my soul. Will you give him this letter to set him against me and
+ruin us more--me and my children? Shall you like to stand before your
+husband with these diamonds on you, and these words of mine in his
+thoughts and yours? Will he think you have any right to complain when he
+has made you miserable? You took him with your eyes open. The willing
+wrong you have done me will be your curse."
+
+The words had nestled their venomous life within her, and stirred
+continually the vision of the scene at the Whispering Stones. That scene
+was now like an accusing apparition: she dreaded that Grandcourt should
+know of it--so far out of her sight now was that possibility she had once
+satisfied herself with, of speaking to him about Mrs. Glasher and her
+children, and making them rich amends. Any endurance seemed easier than
+the mortal humiliation of confessing that she knew all before she married
+him, and in marrying him had broken her word. For the reasons by which she
+had justified herself when the marriage tempted her, and all her easy
+arrangement of her future power over her husband to make him do better
+than he might be inclined to do, were now as futile as the burned-out
+lights which set off a child's pageant. Her sense of being blameworthy was
+exaggerated by a dread both definite and vague. The definite dread was
+lest the veil of secrecy should fall between her and Grandcourt, and give
+him the right to taunt her. With the reading of that letter had begun her
+husband's empire of fear.
+
+And her husband all the while knew it. He had not, indeed, any distinct
+knowledge of her broken promise, and would not have rated highly the
+effect of that breach on her conscience; but he was aware not only of what
+Lush had told him about the meeting at the Whispering Stones, but also of
+Gwendolen's concealment as to the cause of her sudden illness. He felt
+sure that Lydia had enclosed something with the diamonds, and that this
+something, whatever it was, had at once created in Gwendolen a new
+repulsion for him and a reason for not daring to manifest it. He did not
+greatly mind, or feel as many men might have felt, that his hopes in
+marriage were blighted: he had wanted to marry Gwendolen, and he was not a
+man to repent. Why should a gentleman whose other relations in life are
+carried on without the luxury of sympathetic feeling, be supposed to
+require that kind of condiment in domestic life? What he chiefly felt was
+that a change had come over the conditions of his mastery, which, far from
+shaking it, might establish it the more thoroughly. And it was
+established. He judged that he had not married a simpleton unable to
+perceive the impossibility of escape, or to see alternative evils: he had
+married a girl who had spirit and pride enough not to make a fool of
+herself by forfeiting all the advantages of a position which had attracted
+her; and if she wanted pregnant hints to help her in making up her mind
+properly he would take care not to withhold them.
+
+Gwendolen, indeed, with all that gnawing trouble in her consciousness, had
+hardly for a moment dropped the sense that it was her part to bear herself
+with dignity, and appear what is called happy. In disclosure of
+disappointment or sorrow she saw nothing but a humiliation which would
+have been vinegar to her wounds. Whatever her husband might have come at
+last to be to her, she meant to wear the yoke so as not to be pitied. For
+she did think of the coming years with presentiment: she was frightened at
+Grandcourt. The poor thing had passed from her girlish sauciness of
+superiority over this inert specimen of personal distinction into an
+amazed perception of her former ignorance about the possible mental
+attitude of a man toward the woman he sought in marriage--of her present
+ignorance as to what their life with each other might turn into. For
+novelty gives immeasurableness to fear, and fills the early time of all
+sad changes with phantoms of the future. Her little coquetries, voluntary
+or involuntary, had told on Grandcourt during courtship, and formed a
+medium of communication between them, showing him in the light of a
+creature such as she could understand and manage: But marriage had
+nulified all such interchange, and Grandcourt had become a blank
+uncertainty to her in everything but this, that he would do just what he
+willed, and that she had neither devices at her command to determine his
+will, nor any rational means of escaping it.
+
+What had occurred between them and her wearing the diamonds was typical.
+One evening, shortly before they came to the Abbey, they were going to
+dine at Brackenshaw Castle. Gwendolen had said to herself that she would
+never wear those diamonds: they had horrible words clinging and crawling
+about them, as from some bad dream, whose images lingered on the perturbed
+sense. She came down dressed in her white, with only a streak of gold and
+a pendant of emeralds, which Grandcourt had given her, round her neck, and
+the little emerald stars in her ears.
+
+Grandcourt stood with his back to the fire and looked at her as she
+entered.
+
+"Am I altogether as you like?" she said, speaking rather gaily. She was
+not without enjoyment in this occasion of going to Brackenshaw Castle with
+her new dignities upon her, as men whose affairs are sadly involved will
+enjoy dining out among persons likely to be under a pleasant mistake about
+them.
+
+"No," said Grandcourt.
+
+Gwendolen felt suddenly uncomfortable, wondering what was to come. She was
+not unprepared for some struggle about the diamonds; but suppose he were
+going to say, in low, contemptuous tones, "You are not in any way what I
+like." It was very bad for her to be secretly hating him; but it would be
+much worse when he gave the first sign of hating her.
+
+"Oh, mercy!" she exclaimed, the pause lasting till she could bear it no
+longer. "How am I to alter myself?"
+
+"Put on the diamonds," said Grandcourt, looking straight at her with his
+narrow glance.
+
+Gwendolen paused in her turn, afraid of showing any emotion, and feeling
+that nevertheless there was some change in her eyes as they met his. But
+she was obliged to answer, and said as indifferently as she could, "Oh,
+please not. I don't think diamonds suit me."
+
+"What you think has nothing to do with it," said Grandcourt, his _sotto
+voce_ imperiousness seeming to have an evening quietude and finish, like
+his toilet. "I wish you to wear the diamonds."
+
+"Pray excuse me; I like these emeralds," said Gwendolen, frightened in
+spite of her preparation. That white hand of his which was touching his
+whisker was capable, she fancied, of clinging round her neck and
+threatening to throttle her; for her fear of him, mingling with the vague
+foreboding of some retributive calamity which hung about her life, had
+reached a superstitious point.
+
+"Oblige me by telling me your reason for not wearing the diamonds when I
+desire it," said Grandcourt. His eyes were still fixed upon her, and she
+felt her own eyes narrowing under them as if to shut out an entering pain.
+
+Of what use was the rebellion within her? She could say nothing that would
+not hurt her worse than submission. Turning slowing and covering herself
+again, she went to her dressing-room. As she reached out the diamonds it
+occurred to her that her unwillingness to wear them might have already
+raised a suspicion in Grandcourt that she had some knowledge about them
+which he had not given her. She fancied that his eyes showed a delight in
+torturing her. How could she be defiant? She had nothing to say that would
+touch him--nothing but what would give him a more painful grasp on her
+consciousness.
+
+"He delights in making the dogs and horses quail: that is half his
+pleasure in calling them his," she said to herself, as she opened the
+jewel-case with a shivering sensation.
+
+"It will come to be so with me; and I shall quail. What else is there for
+me? I will not say to the world, 'Pity me.'"
+
+She was about to ring for her maid when she heard the door open behind
+her. It was Grandcourt who came in.
+
+"You want some one to fasten them," he said, coming toward her.
+
+She did not answer, but simply stood still, leaving him to take out the
+ornaments and fasten them as he would. Doubtless he had been used to
+fasten them on some one else. With a bitter sort of sarcasm against
+herself, Gwendolen thought, "What a privilege this is, to have robbed
+another woman of!"
+
+"What makes you so cold?" said Grandcourt, when he had fastened the last
+ear-ring. "Pray put plenty of furs on. I hate to see a woman come into a
+room looking frozen. If you are to appear as a bride at all, appear
+decently."
+
+This martial speech was not exactly persuasive, but it touched the quick
+of Gwendolen's pride and forced her to rally. The words of the bad dream
+crawled about the diamonds still, but only for her: to others they were
+brilliants that suited her perfectly, and Grandcourt inwardly observed
+that she answered to the rein.
+
+"Oh, yes, mamma, quite happy," Gwendolen had said on her return to Diplow.
+"Not at all disappointed in Ryelands. It is a much finer place than this--
+larger in every way. But don't you want some more money?"
+
+"Did you not know that Mr. Grandcourt left me a letter on your wedding-
+day? I am to have eight hundred a year. He wishes me to keep Offendene for
+the present, while you are at Diplow. But if there were some pretty
+cottage near the park at Ryelands we might live there without much
+expense, and I should have you most of the year, perhaps."
+
+"We must leave that to Mr. Grandcourt, mamma."
+
+"Oh, certainly. It is exceedingly handsome of him to say that he will pay
+the rent for Offendene till June. And we can go on very well--without any
+man-servant except Crane, just for out-of-doors. Our good Merry will stay
+with us and help me to manage everything. It is natural that Mr.
+Grandcourt should wish me to live in a good style of house in your
+neighborhood, and I cannot decline. So he said nothing about it to you?"
+
+"No; he wished me to hear it from you, I suppose."
+
+Gwendolen in fact had been very anxious to have some definite knowledge of
+what would be done for her mother, but at no moment since her marriage had
+she been able to overcome the difficulty of mentioning the subject to
+Grandcourt. Now, however, she had a sense of obligation which would not
+let her rest without saying to him, "It is very good of you to provide for
+mamma. You took a great deal on yourself in marrying a girl who had
+nothing but relations belonging to her."
+
+Grandcourt was smoking, and only said carelessly, "Of course I was not
+going to let her live like a gamekeeper's mother."
+
+"At least he is not mean about money," thought Gwendolen, "and mamma is
+the better off for my marriage."
+
+She often pursued the comparison between what might have been, if she had
+not married Grandcourt, and what actually was, trying to persuade herself
+that life generally was barren of satisfaction, and that if she had chosen
+differently she might now have been looking back with a regret as bitter
+as the feeling she was trying to argue away. Her mother's dullness, which
+used to irritate her, she was at present inclined to explain as the
+ordinary result of woman's experience. True, she still saw that she would
+"manage differently from mamma;" but her management now only meant that
+she would carry her troubles with spirit, and let none suspect them. By
+and by she promised herself that she should get used to her heart-sores,
+and find excitements that would carry her through life, as a hard gallop
+carried her through some of the morning hours. There was gambling: she had
+heard stories at Leubronn of fashionable women who gambled in all sorts of
+ways. It seemed very flat to her at this distance, but perhaps if she
+began to gamble again, the passion might awake. Then there was the
+pleasure of producing an effect by her appearance in society: what did
+celebrated beauties do in town when their husbands could afford display?
+All men were fascinated by them: they had a perfect equipage and toilet,
+walked into public places, and bowed, and made the usual answers, and
+walked out again, perhaps they bought china, and practiced
+accomplishments. If she could only feel a keen appetite for those
+pleasures--could only believe in pleasure as she used to do!
+Accomplishments had ceased to have the exciting quality of promising any
+pre-eminence to her; and as for fascinated gentlemen--adorers who might
+hover round her with languishment, and diversify married life with the
+romantic stir of mystery, passion, and danger, which her French reading
+had given her some girlish notion of--they presented themselves to her
+imagination with the fatal circumstance that, instead of fascinating her
+in return, they were clad in her own weariness and disgust. The admiring
+male, rashly adjusting the expression of his features and the turn of his
+conversation to her supposed tastes, had always been an absurd object to
+her, and at present seemed rather detestable. Many courses are actually
+pursued--follies and sins both convenient and inconvenient--without
+pleasure or hope of pleasure; but to solace ourselves with imagining any
+course beforehand, there must be some foretaste of pleasure in the shape
+of appetite; and Gwendolen's appetite had sickened. Let her wander over
+the possibilities of her life as she would, an uncertain shadow dogged
+her. Her confidence in herself and her destiny had turned into remorse and
+dread; she trusted neither herself nor her future.
+
+This hidden helplessness gave fresh force to the hold Deronda had from the
+first taken on her mind, as one who had an unknown standard by which he
+judged her. Had he some way of looking at things which might be a new
+footing for her--an inward safeguard against possible events which she
+dreaded as stored-up retribution? It is one of the secrets in that change
+of mental poise which has been fitly named conversion, that to many among
+us neither heaven nor earth has any revelation till some personality
+touches theirs with a peculiar influence, subduing them into
+receptiveness. It had been Gwendolen's habit to think of the persons
+around her as stale books, too familiar to be interesting. Deronda had lit
+up her attention with a sense of novelty: not by words only, but by
+imagined facts, his influence had entered into the current of that self-
+suspicion and self-blame which awakens a new consciousness.
+
+"I wish he could know everything about me without my telling him," was one
+of her thoughts, as she sat leaning over the end of a couch, supporting
+her head with her hand, and looking at herself in a mirror--not in
+admiration, but in a sad kind of companionship. "I wish he knew that I am
+not so contemptible as he thinks me; that I am in deep trouble, and want
+to be something better if I could." Without the aid of sacred ceremony or
+costume, her feelings had turned this man, only a few years older than
+herself, into a priest; a sort of trust less rare than the fidelity that
+guards it. Young reverence for one who is also young is the most coercive
+of all: there is the same level of temptation, and the higher motive is
+believed in as a fuller force--not suspected to be a mere residue from
+weary experience.
+
+But the coercion is often stronger on the one who takes the reverence.
+Those who trust us educate us. And perhaps in that ideal consecration of
+Gwendolen's, some education was being prepared for Deronda.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+ "Rien ne pese tant qu'un secret
+ Le porter loin est difficile aux dames:
+ Et je scais mesme sur ce fait
+ Bon nombre d'hommes qui sont femmes."
+ --LA FONTAINE.
+
+
+Meanwhile Deronda had been fastened and led off by Mr. Vandernoodt, who
+wished for a brisker walk, a cigar, and a little gossip. Since we cannot
+tell a man his own secrets, the restraint of being in his company often
+breeds a desire to pair off in conversation with some more ignorant
+person, and Mr. Vandernoodt presently said--
+
+"What a washed-out piece of cambric Grandcourt is! But if he is a favorite
+of yours, I withdraw the remark."
+
+"Not the least in the world," said Deronda.
+
+"I thought not. One wonders how he came to have a great passion again; and
+he must have had--to marry in this way. Though Lush, his old chum, hints
+that he married this girl out of obstinacy. By George! it was a very
+accountable obstinacy. A man might make up his mind to marry her without
+the stimulus of contradiction. But he must have made himself a pretty
+large drain of money, eh?"
+
+"I know nothing of his affairs."
+
+"What! not of the other establishment he keeps up?"
+
+"Diplow? Of course. He took that of Sir Hugo. But merely for the year."
+
+"No, no; not Diplow: Gadsmere. Sir Hugo knows, I'll answer for it."
+
+Deronda said nothing. He really began to feel some curiosity, but he
+foresaw that he should hear what Mr. Vandernoodt had to tell, without the
+condescension of asking.
+
+"Lush would not altogether own to it, of course. He's a confident and go-
+between of Grandcourt's. But I have it on the best authority. The fact is,
+there's another lady with four children at Gadsmere. She has had the upper
+hand of him these ten years and more, and by what I can understand has it
+still--left her husband for him, and used to travel with him everywhere.
+Her husband's dead now; I found a fellow who was in the same regiment with
+him, and knew this Mrs. Glasher before she took wing. A fiery dark-eyed
+woman--a noted beauty at that time--he thought she was dead. They say she
+has Grandcourt under her thumb still, and it's a wonder he didn't marry
+her, for there's a very fine boy, and I understand Grandcourt can do
+absolutely as he pleases with the estates. Lush told me as much as that."
+
+"What right had he to marry this girl?" said Deronda, with disgust.
+
+Mr. Vandernoodt, adjusting the end of his cigar, shrugged his shoulders
+and put out his lips.
+
+"_She_ can know nothing of it," said Deronda, emphatically. But that
+positive statement was immediately followed by an inward query--"Could she
+have known anything of it?"
+
+"It's rather a piquant picture," said Mr. Vandernoodt--"Grandcourt between
+two fiery women. For depend upon it this light-haired one has plenty of
+devil in her. I formed that opinion of her at Leubronn. It's a sort of
+Medea and Creuesa business. Fancy the two meeting! Grandcourt is a new kind
+of Jason: I wonder what sort of a part he'll make of it. It's a dog's part
+at best. I think I hear Ristori now, saying, 'Jasone! Jasone!' These fine
+women generally get hold of a stick."
+
+"Grandcourt can bite, I fancy," said Deronda. "He is no stick."
+
+"No, no; I meant Jason. I can't quite make out Grandcourt. But he's a keen
+fellow enough--uncommonly well built too. And if he comes into all this
+property, the estates will bear dividing. This girl, whose friends had
+come to beggary, I understand, may think herself lucky to get him. I don't
+want to be hard on a man because he gets involved in an affair of that
+sort. But he might make himself more agreeable. I was telling him a
+capital story last night, and he got up and walked away in the middle. I
+felt inclined to kick him. Do you suppose that is inattention or
+insolence, now?"
+
+"Oh, a mixture. He generally observes the forms: but he doesn't listen
+much," said Deronda. Then, after a moment's pause, he went on, "I should
+think there must be some exaggeration or inaccuracy in what you have heard
+about this lady at Gadsmere."
+
+"Not a bit, depend upon it; it has all lain snug of late years. People
+have forgotten all about it. But there the nest is, and the birds are in
+it. And I know Grandcourt goes there. I have good evidence that he goes
+there. However, that's nobody's business but his own. The affair has sunk
+below the surface."
+
+"I wonder you could have learned so much about it," said Deronda, rather
+drily.
+
+"Oh, there are plenty of people who knew all about it; but such stories
+get packed away like old letters. They interest me. I like to know the
+manners of my time--contemporary gossip, not antediluvian. These Dryasdust
+fellows get a reputation by raking up some small scandal about Semiramis
+or Nitocris, and then we have a thousand and one poems written upon it by
+all the warblers big and little. But I don't care a straw about the _faux
+pas_ of the mummies. You do, though. You are one of the historical men--
+more interested in a lady when she's got a rag face and skeleton toes
+peeping out. Does that flatter your imagination?"
+
+"Well, if she had any woes in her love, one has the satisfaction of
+knowing that she's well out of them."
+
+"Ah, you are thinking of the Medea, I see."
+
+Deronda then chose to point to some giant oaks worth looking at in their
+bareness. He also felt an interest in this piece of contemporary gossip,
+but he was satisfied that Mr. Vandernoodt had no more to tell about it.
+
+Since the early days when he tried to construct the hidden story of his
+own birth, his mind had perhaps never been so active in weaving
+probabilities about any private affair as it had now begun to be about
+Gwendolen's marriage. This unavowed relation of Grandcourt's--could she
+have gained some knowledge of it, which caused her to shrink from the
+match--a shrinking finally overcome by the urgence of poverty? He could
+recall almost every word she had said to him, and in certain of these
+words he seemed to discern that she was conscious of having done some
+wrong--inflicted some injury. His own acute experience made him alive to
+the form of injury which might affect the unavowed children and their
+mother. Was Mrs. Grandcourt, under all her determined show of
+satisfaction, gnawed by a double, a treble-headed grief--self-reproach,
+disappointment, jealousy? He dwelt especially on all the slight signs of
+self-reproach: he was inclined to judge her tenderly, to excuse, to pity.
+He thought he had found a key now by which to interpret her more clearly:
+what magnifying of her misery might not a young creature get into who had
+wedded her fresh hopes to old secrets! He thought he saw clearly enough
+now why Sir Hugo had never dropped any hint of this affair to him; and
+immediately the image of this Mrs. Glasher became painfully associated
+with his own hidden birth. Gwendolen knowing of that woman and her
+children, marrying Grandcourt, and showing herself contented, would have
+been among the most repulsive of beings to him; but Gwendolen tasting the
+bitterness of remorse for having contributed to their injury was brought
+very near to his fellow-feeling. If it were so, she had got to a common
+plane of understanding with him on some difficulties of life which a woman
+is rarely able to judge of with any justice or generosity; for, according
+to precedent, Gwendolen's view of her position might easily have been no
+other than that her husband's marriage with her was his entrance on the
+path of virtue, while Mrs. Glasher represented his forsaken sin. And
+Deronda had naturally some resentment on behalf of the Hagars and
+Ishmaels.
+
+Undeniably Deronda's growing solicitude about Gwendolen depended chiefly
+on her peculiar manner toward him; and I suppose neither man nor woman
+would be the better for an utter insensibility to such appeals. One sign
+that his interest in her had changed its footing was that he dismissed any
+caution against her being a coquette setting snares to involve him in a
+vulgar flirtation, and determined that he would not again evade any
+opportunity of talking to her. He had shaken off Mr. Vandernoodt, and got
+into a solitary corner in the twilight; but half an hour was long enough
+to think of those possibilities in Gwendolen's position and state of mind;
+and on forming the determination not to avoid her, he remembered that she
+was likely to be at tea with the other ladies in the drawing-room. The
+conjecture was true; for Gwendolen, after resolving not to go down again
+for the next four hours, began to feel, at the end of one, that in
+shutting herself up she missed all chances of seeing and hearing, and that
+her visit would only last two days more. She adjusted herself, put on her
+little air of self-possession, and going down, made herself resolutely
+agreeable. Only ladies were assembled, and Lady Pentreath was amusing them
+with a description of a drawing-room under the Regency, and the figure
+that was cut by ladies and gentlemen in 1819, the year she was presented--
+when Deronda entered.
+
+"Shall I be acceptable?" he said. "Perhaps I had better go back and look
+for the others. I suppose they are in the billiard-room."
+
+"No, no; stay where you are," said Lady Pentreath. "They were all getting
+tired of me; let us hear what _you_ have to say."
+
+"That is rather an embarrassing appeal," said Deronda, drawing up a chair
+near Lady Mallinger's elbow at the tea-table. "I think I had better take
+the opportunity of mentioning our songstress," he added, looking at Lady
+Mallinger--"unless you have done so."
+
+"Oh, the little Jewess!" said Lady Mallinger. "No, I have not mentioned
+her. It never entered my head that any one here wanted singing lessons."
+
+"All ladies know some one else who wants singing lessons," said Deronda.
+"I have happened to find an exquisite singer,"--here he turned to Lady
+Pentreath. "She is living with some ladies who are friends of mine--the
+mother and sisters of a man who was my chum at Cambridge. She was on the
+stage at Vienna; but she wants to leave that life, and maintain herself by
+teaching."
+
+"There are swarms of those people, aren't there?" said the old lady. "Are
+her lessons to be very cheap or very expensive? Those are the two baits I
+know of."
+
+"There is another bait for those who hear her," said Deronda. "Her singing
+is something quite exceptional, I think. She has had such first-rate
+teaching--or rather first-rate instinct with her teaching--that you might
+imagine her singing all came by nature."
+
+"Why did she leave the stage, then?" said Lady Pentreath. "I'm too old to
+believe in first-rate people giving up first-rate chances."
+
+"Her voice was too weak. It is a delicious voice for a room. You who put
+up with my singing of Schubert would be enchanted with hers," said
+Deronda, looking at Mrs. Raymond. "And I imagine she would not object to
+sing at private parties or concerts. Her voice is quite equal to that."
+
+"I am to have her in my drawing-room when we go up to town," said Lady
+Mallinger. "You shall hear her then. I have not heard her myself yet; but
+I trust Daniel's recommendation. I mean my girls to have lessons of her."
+
+"Is it a charitable affair?" said Lady Pentreath. "I can't bear charitable
+music."
+
+Lady Mallinger, who was rather helpless in conversation, and felt herself
+under an engagement not to tell anything of Mirah's story, had an
+embarrassed smile on her face, and glanced at Deronda.
+
+"It is a charity to those who want to have a good model of feminine
+singing," said Deronda. "I think everybody who has ears would benefit by a
+little improvement on the ordinary style. If you heard Miss Lapidoth"--
+here he looked at Gwendolen--"perhaps you would revoke your resolution to
+give up singing."
+
+"I should rather think my resolution would be confirmed," said Gwendolen.
+"I don't feel able to follow your advice of enjoying my own middlingness."
+
+"For my part," said Deronda, "people who do anything finely always
+inspirit me to try. I don't mean that they make me believe I can do it as
+well. But they make the thing, whatever it may be, seem worthy to be done.
+I can bear to think my own music not good for much, but the world would be
+more dismal if I thought music itself not good for much. Excellence
+encourages one about life generally; it shows the spiritual wealth of the
+world."
+
+"But then, if we can't imitate it, it only makes our own life seem the
+tamer," said Gwendolen, in a mood to resent encouragement founded on her
+own insignificance.
+
+"That depends on the point of view, I think," said Deronda. "We should
+have a poor life of it if we were reduced for all our pleasure to our own
+performances. A little private imitation of what is good is a sort of
+private devotion to it, and most of us ought to practice art only in the
+light of private study--preparation to understand and enjoy what the few
+can do for us. I think Miss Lapidoth is one of the few."
+
+"She must be a very happy person, don't you think?" said Gwendolen, with a
+touch of sarcasm, and a turn of her neck toward Mrs. Raymond.
+
+"I don't know," answered the independent lady; "I must hear more of her
+before I say that."
+
+"It may have been a bitter disappointment to her that her voice failed her
+for the stage," said Juliet Fenn, sympathetically.
+
+"I suppose she's past her best, though," said the deep voice of Lady
+Pentreath.
+
+"On the contrary, she has not reached it," said Deronda. "She is barely
+twenty."
+
+"And very pretty," interposed Lady Mallinger, with an amiable wish to help
+Deronda. "And she has very good manners. I'm sorry she's a bigoted Jewess;
+I should not like it for anything else, but it doesn't matter in singing."
+
+"Well, since her voice is too weak for her to scream much, I'll tell Lady
+Clementina to set her on my nine granddaughters," said Lady Pentreath;
+"and I hope she'll convince eight of them that they have not voice enough
+to sing anywhere but at church. My notion is, that many of our girls
+nowadays want lessons not to sing."
+
+"I have had my lessons in that," said Gwendolen, looking at Deronda. "You
+see Lady Pentreath is on my side."
+
+While she was speaking, Sir Hugo entered with some of the other gentlemen,
+including Grandcourt, and standing against the group at the low tea-table
+said--
+
+"What imposition is Deronda putting on you, ladies--slipping in among you
+by himself?"
+
+"Wanting to pass off an obscurity on us as better than any celebrity,"
+said Lady Pentreath--"a pretty singing Jewess who is to astonish these
+young people. You and I, who heard Catalani in her prime, are not so
+easily astonished."
+
+Sir Hugo listened with his good-humored smile as he took a cup of tea from
+his wife, and then said, "Well, you know, a Liberal is bound to think that
+there have been singers since Catalani's time."
+
+"Ah, you are younger than I am. I dare say you are one of the men who ran
+after Alcharisi. But she married off and left you all in the lurch."
+
+"Yes, yes; it's rather too bad when these great singers marry themselves
+into silence before they have a crack in their voices. And the husband is
+a public robber. I remember Leroux saying, 'A man might as well take down
+a fine peal of church bells and carry them off to the steppes," said Sir
+Hugo, setting down his cup and turning away, while Deronda, who had moved
+from his place to make room for others, and felt that he was not in
+request, sat down a little apart. Presently he became aware that, in the
+general dispersion of the group, Gwendolen had extricated herself from the
+attentions of Mr. Vandernoodt and had walked to the piano, where she stood
+apparently examining the music which lay on the desk. Will any one be
+surprised at Deronda's concluding that she wished him to join her? Perhaps
+she wanted to make amends for the unpleasant tone of resistance with which
+she had met his recommendation of Mirah, for he had noticed that her first
+impulse often was to say what she afterward wished to retract. He went to
+her side and said--
+
+"Are you relenting about the music and looking for something to play or
+sing?"
+
+"I am not looking for anything, but I _am_ relenting," said Gwendolen,
+speaking in a submissive tone.
+
+"May I know the reason?"
+
+"I should like to hear Miss Lapidoth and have lessons from her, since you
+admire her so much,--that is, of course, when we go to town. I mean
+lessons in rejoicing at her excellence and my own deficiency," said
+Gwendolen, turning on him a sweet, open smile.
+
+"I shall be really glad for you to see and hear her," said Deronda,
+returning the smile in kind.
+
+"Is she as perfect in every thing else as in her music?"
+
+"I can't vouch for that exactly. I have not seen enough of her. But I have
+seen nothing in her that I could wish to be different. She has had an
+unhappy life. Her troubles began in early childhood, and she has grown up
+among very painful surroundings. But I think you will say that no
+advantages could have given her more grace and truer refinement."
+
+"I wonder what sort of trouble hers were?"
+
+"I have not any very precise knowledge. But I know that she was on the
+brink of drowning herself in despair."
+
+"And what hindered her?" said Gwendolen, quickly, looking at Deronda.
+
+"Some ray or other came--which made her feel that she ought to live--that
+it was good to live," he answered, quietly. "She is full of piety, and
+seems capable of submitting to anything when it takes the form of duty."
+
+"Those people are not to be pitied," said Gwendolen, impatiently. "I have
+no sympathy with women who are always doing right. I don't believe in
+their great sufferings." Her fingers moved quickly among the edges of the
+music.
+
+"It is true," said Deronda, "that the consciousness of having done wrong
+is something deeper, more bitter. I suppose we faulty creatures can never
+feel so much for the irreproachable as for those who are bruised in the
+struggle with their own faults. It is a very ancient story, that of the
+lost sheep--but it comes up afresh every day."
+
+"That is a way of speaking--it is not acted upon, it is not real," said
+Gwendolen, bitterly. "You admire Miss Lapidoth because you think her
+blameless, perfect. And you know you would despise a woman who had done
+something you thought very wrong."
+
+"That would depend entirely upon her own view of what she had done," said
+Deronda.
+
+"You would be satisfied if she were very wretched, I suppose," said
+Gwendolen, impetuously.
+
+"No, not satisfied--full of sorrow for her. It was not a mere way of
+speaking. I did not mean to say that the finer nature is not more
+adorable; I meant that those who would be comparatively uninteresting
+beforehand may become worthier of sympathy when they do something that
+awakens in them a keen remorse. Lives are enlarged in different ways. I
+dare say some would never get their eyes opened if it were not for a
+violent shock from the consequences of their own actions. And when they
+are suffering in that way one must care for them more than, for the
+comfortably self-satisfied." Deronda forgot everything but his vision of
+what Gwendolen's experience had probably been, and urged by compassion let
+his eyes and voice express as much interest as they would.
+
+Gwendolen had slipped on to the music-stool, and looked up at him with
+pain in her long eyes, like a wounded animal asking for help.
+
+"Are you persuading Mrs. Grandcourt to play to us, Dan?" said Sir Hugo,
+coming up and putting his hand on Deronda's shoulder with a gentle,
+admonitory pinch.
+
+"I cannot persuade myself," said Gwendolen, rising.
+
+Others had followed Sir Hugo's lead, and there was an end of any liability
+to confidences for that day. But the next was New Year's Eve; and a grand
+dance, to which the chief tenants were invited, was to be held in the
+picture-gallery above the cloister--the sort of entertainment in which
+numbers and general movement may create privacy. When Gwendolen was
+dressing, she longed, in remembrance of Leubronn, to put on the old
+turquoise necklace for her sole ornament; but she dared not offend her
+husband by appearing in that shabby way on an occasion when he would
+demand her utmost splendor. Determined to wear the memorial necklace
+somehow, she wound it thrice round her wrist and made a bracelet of it--
+having gone to her room to put it on just before the time of entering the
+ball-room.
+
+It was always a beautiful scene, this dance on New Year's Eve, which had
+been kept up by the family tradition as nearly in the old fashion as
+inexorable change would allow. Red carpet was laid down for the occasion:
+hot-house plants and evergreens were arranged in bowers at the extremities
+and in every recess of the gallery; and the old portraits stretching back
+through generations, even to the pre-portraying period, made a piquant
+line of spectators. Some neighboring gentry, major and minor, were
+invited; and it was certainly an occasion when a prospective master and
+mistress of Abbott's and King's Topping might see their future glory in an
+agreeable light, as a picturesque provincial supremacy with a rent-roll
+personified by the most prosperous-looking tenants. Sir Hugo expected
+Grandcourt to feel flattered by being asked to the Abbey at a time which
+included this festival in honor of the family estate; but he also hoped
+that his own hale appearance might impress his successor with the probable
+length of time that would elapse before the succession came, and with the
+wisdom of preferring a good actual sum to a minor property that must be
+waited for. All present, down to the least important farmer's daughter,
+knew that they were to see "young Grandcourt," Sir Hugo's nephew, the
+presumptive heir and future baronet, now visiting the Abbey with his bride
+after an absence of many years; any coolness between uncle and nephew
+having, it is understood, given way to a friendly warmth. The bride
+opening the ball with Sir Hugo was necessarily the cynosure of all eyes;
+and less than a year before, if some magic mirror could have shown
+Gwendolen her actual position, she would have imagined herself moving in
+it with a glow of triumphant pleasure, conscious that she held in her
+hands a life full of favorable chances which her cleverness and spirit
+would enable her to make the best of. And now she was wondering that she
+could get so little joy out of the exultation to which she had been
+suddenly lifted, away from the distasteful petty empire of her girlhood
+with its irksome lack of distinction and superfluity of sisters. She would
+have been glad to be even unreasonably elated, and to forget everything
+but the flattery of the moment; but she was like one courting sleep, in
+whom thoughts insist like willful tormentors.
+
+Wondering in this way at her own dullness, and all the while longing for
+an excitement that would deaden importunate aches, she was passing through
+files of admiring beholders in the country-dance with which it was
+traditional to open the ball, and was being generally regarded by her own
+sex as an enviable woman. It was remarked that she carried herself with a
+wonderful air, considering that she had been nobody in particular, and
+without a farthing to her fortune. If she had been a duke's daughter, or
+one of the royal princesses, she could not have taken the honors of the
+evening more as a matter of course. Poor Gwendolen! It would by-and-by
+become a sort of skill in which she was automatically practiced to hear
+this last great gambling loss with an air of perfect self-possession.
+
+The next couple that passed were also worth looking at. Lady Pentreath had
+said, "I shall stand up for one dance, but I shall choose my partner. Mr.
+Deronda, you are the youngest man, I mean to dance with you. Nobody is old
+enough to make a good pair with me. I must have a contrast." And the
+contrast certainly set off the old lady to the utmost. She was one of
+those women who are never handsome till they are old, and she had had the
+wisdom to embrace the beauty of age as early as possible. What might have
+seemed harshness in her features when she was young, had turned now into a
+satisfactory strength of form and expression which defied wrinkles, and
+was set off by a crown of white hair; her well-built figure was well
+covered with black drapery, her ears and neck comfortably caressed with
+lace, showing none of those withered spaces which one would think it a
+pitiable condition of poverty to expose. She glided along gracefully
+enough, her dark eyes still with a mischievous smile in them as she
+observed the company. Her partner's young richness of tint against the
+flattened hues and rougher forms of her aged head had an effect something
+like that of a fine flower against a lichenous branch. Perhaps the tenants
+hardly appreciated this pair. Lady Pentreath was nothing more than a
+straight, active old lady: Mr. Deronda was a familiar figure regarded with
+friendliness; but if he had been the heir, it would have been regretted
+that his face was not as unmistakably English as Sir Hugo's.
+
+Grandcourt's appearance when he came up with Lady Mallinger was not
+impeached with foreignness: still the satisfaction in it was not complete.
+It would have been matter of congratulation if one who had the luck to
+inherit two old family estates had had move hair, a fresher color, and a
+look of greater animation; but that fine families dwindled off into
+females, and estates ran together into the single heirship of a mealy-
+complexioned male, was a tendency in things which seemed to be accounted
+for by a citation of other instances. It was agreed that Mr. Grandcourt
+could never be taken for anything but what he was--a born gentleman; and
+that, in fact, he looked like an heir. Perhaps the person least
+complacently disposed toward him at that moment was Lady Mallinger, to
+whom going in procession up this country-dance with Grandcourt was a
+blazonment of herself as the infelicitous wife who had produced nothing
+but daughters, little better than no children, poor dear things, except
+for her own fondness and for Sir Hugo's wonderful goodness to them. But
+such inward discomfort could not prevent the gentle lady from looking fair
+and stout to admiration, or her full blue eyes from glancing mildly at her
+neighbors. All the mothers and fathers held it a thousand pities that she
+had not had a. fine boy, or even several--which might have been expected,
+to look at her when she was first married.
+
+The gallery included only three sides of the quadrangle, the fourth being
+shut off as a lobby or corridor: one side was used for dancing, and the
+opposite side for the supper-table, while the intermediate part was less
+brilliantly lit, and fitted with comfortable seats. Later in the evening
+Gwendolen was in one of these seats, and Grandcourt was standing near her.
+They were not talking to each other: she was leaning backward in her
+chair, and he against the wall; and Deronda, happening to observe this,
+went up to ask her if she had resolved not to dance any more. Having
+himself been doing hard duty in this way among the guests, he thought he
+had earned the right to sink for a little while into the background, and
+he had spoken little to Gwendolen since their conversation at the piano
+the day before. Grandcourt's presence would only make it the easier to
+show that pleasure in talking to her even about trivialities which would
+be a sign of friendliness; and he fancied that her face looked blank. A
+smile beamed over it as she saw him coming, and she raised herself from
+her leaning posture. Grandcourt had been grumbling at the _ennui_ of
+staying so long in this stupid dance, and proposing that they should
+vanish: she had resisted on the ground of politeness--not without being a
+little frightened at the probability that he was silently, angry with her.
+She had her reason for staying, though she had begun to despair of the
+opportunity for the sake of which she had put the old necklace on her
+wrist. But now at last Deronda had come.
+
+"Yes; I shall not dance any more. Are you not glad?" she said, with some
+gayety, "you might have felt obliged humbly to offer yourself as a
+partner, and I feel sure you have danced more than you like already."
+
+"I will not deny that," said Deronda, "since you have danced as much as
+you like."
+
+"But will you take trouble for me in another way, and fetch me a glass of
+that fresh water?"
+
+It was but a few steps that Deronda had to go for the water. Gwendolen was
+wrapped in the lightest, softest of white woolen burnouses, under which
+her hands were hidden. While he was gone she had drawn off her glove,
+which was finished with a lace ruffle, and when she put up her hand to
+take the glass and lifted it to her mouth, the necklace-bracelet, which in
+its triple winding adapted itself clumsily to her wrist, was necessarily
+conspicuous. Grandcourt saw it, and saw that it was attracting Deronda's
+notice.
+
+"What is that hideous thing you have got on your wrist?" said the husband.
+
+"That?" said Gwendolen, composedly, pointing to the turquoises, while she
+still held the glass; "it is an old necklace I like to wear. I lost it
+once, and someone found it for me."
+
+With that she gave the glass again to Deronda, who immediately carried it
+away, and on returning said, in order to banish any consciousness about
+the necklace--
+
+"It is worth while for you to go and look out at one of the windows on
+that side. You can see the finest possible moonlight on the stone pillars
+and carving, and shadows waving across it in the wind."
+
+"I should like to see it. Will you go?" said Gwendolen, looking up at her
+husband.
+
+He cast his eyes down at her, and saying, "No, Deronda will take you,"
+slowly moved from his leaning attitude, and walked away.
+
+Gwendolen's face for a moment showed a fleeting vexation: she resented
+this show of indifference toward her. Deronda felt annoyed, chiefly for
+her sake; and with a quick sense, that it would relieve her most to behave
+as if nothing peculiar had occurred, he said, "Will you take my arm and
+go, while only servants are there?" He thought that he understood well her
+action in drawing his attention to the necklace: she wished him to infer
+that she had submitted her mind to rebuke--her speech and manner had from
+the first fluctuated toward that submission--and that she felt no
+lingering resentment. Her evident confidence in his interpretation of her
+appealed to him as a peculiar claim.
+
+When they were walking together, Gwendolen felt as it the annoyance which
+had just happened had removed another film of reserve from between them,
+and she had more right than before to be as open as she wished. She did
+not speak, being filled with the sense of silent confidence, until they
+were in front of the window looking out on the moonlit court. A sort of
+bower had been made round the window, turning it into a recess. Quitting
+his arm, she folded her hands in her burnous, and pressed her brow against
+the glass. He moved slightly away, and held the lapels of his coat with
+his thumbs under the collar as his manner was: he had a wonderful power of
+standing perfectly still, and in that position reminded one sometimes of
+Dante's _spiriti magni con occhi tardi e gravi_. (Doubtless some of these
+danced in their youth, doubted of their own vocation, and found their own
+times too modern.) He abstained from remarking on the scene before them,
+fearing that any indifferent words might jar on her: already the calm
+light and shadow, the ancient steadfast forms, and aloofness enough from
+those inward troubles which he felt sure were agitating her. And he judged
+aright: she would have been impatient of polite conversation. The
+incidents of the last minute or two had receded behind former thoughts
+which she had imagined herself uttering to Deronda, which now urged
+themselves to her lips. In a subdued voice, she said--
+
+"Suppose I had gambled again, and lost the necklace again, what should you
+have thought of me?"
+
+"Worse than I do now."
+
+"Then you are mistaken about me. You wanted me not to do that--not to make
+my gain out of another's loss in that way--and I have done a great deal
+worse."
+
+"I can't imagine temptations," said Deronda. "Perhaps I am able to
+understand what you mean. At least I understand self-reproach." In spite
+of preparation he was almost alarmed at Gwendolen's precipitancy of
+confidence toward him, in contrast with her habitual resolute concealment.
+
+"What should you do if you were like me--feeling that you were wrong and
+miserable, and dreading everything to come?" It seemed that she was
+hurrying to make the utmost use of this opportunity to speak as she would.
+
+"That is not to be amended by doing one thing only--but many," said
+Deronda, decisively.
+
+"What?" said Gwendolen, hastily, moving her brow from the glass and
+looking at him.
+
+He looked full at her in return, with what she thought was severity. He
+felt that it was not a moment in which he must let himself be tender, and
+flinch from implying a hard opinion.
+
+"I mean there are many thoughts and habits that may help us to bear
+inevitable sorrow. Multitudes have to bear it."
+
+She turned her brow to the window again, and said impatiently, "You must
+tell me then what to think and what to do; else why did you not let me go
+on doing as I liked and not minding? If I had gone on gambling I might
+have won again, and I might have got not to care for anything else. You
+would not let me do that. Why shouldn't I do as I like, and not mind?
+Other people do." Poor Gwendolen's speech expressed nothing very clearly
+except her irritation.
+
+"I don't believe you would ever get not to mind," said Deronda, with deep-
+toned decision. "If it were true that baseness and cruelty made an escape
+from pain, what difference would that make to people who can't be quite
+base or cruel? Idiots escape some pain; but you can't be an idiot. Some
+may do wrong to another without remorse; but suppose one does feel
+remorse? I believe you could never lead an injurious life--all reckless
+lives are injurious, pestilential--without feeling remorse." Deronda's
+unconscious fervor had gathered as he went on: he was uttering thoughts
+which he had used for himself in moments of painful meditation.
+
+"Then tell me what better I can do," said Gwendolen, insistently.
+
+"Many things. Look on other lives besides your own. See what their
+troubles are, and how they are borne. Try to care about something in this
+vast world besides the gratification of small selfish desires. Try to care
+for what is best in thought and action--something that is good apart from
+the accidents of your own lot."
+
+For an instant or two Gwendolen was mute. Then, again moving her brow from
+the glass, she said--
+
+"You mean that I am selfish and ignorant."
+
+He met her fixed look in silence before he answered firmly--"You will not
+go on being selfish and ignorant!"
+
+She did not turn away her glance or let her eyelids fall, but a change
+came over her face--that subtle change in nerve and muscle which will
+sometimes give a childlike expression even to the elderly: it is the
+subsidence of self-assertion.
+
+"Shall I lead you back?" said Deronda, gently, turning and offering her
+his arm again. She took it silently, and in that way they came in sight of
+Grandcourt, who was walking slowly near their former place. Gwendolen went
+up to him and said, "I am ready to go now. Mr. Deronda will excuse us to
+Lady Mallinger."
+
+"Certainly," said Deronda. "Lord and Lady Pentreath disappeared some time
+ago."
+
+Grandcourt gave his arm in silent compliance, nodding over his shoulder to
+Deronda, and Gwendolen too only half turned to bow and say, "Thanks." The
+husband and wife left the gallery and paced the corridors in silence. When
+the door had closed on them in the boudoir, Grandcourt threw himself into
+a chair and said, with undertoned peremptoriness, "Sit down." She, already
+in the expectation of something unpleasant, had thrown off her burnous
+with nervous unconsciousness, and immediately obeyed. Turning his eyes
+toward her, he began--
+
+"Oblige me in future by not showing whims like a mad woman in a play."
+
+"What do you mean?" said Gwendolen.
+
+"I suppose there is some understanding between you and Deronda about that
+thing you have on your wrist. If you have anything to say to him, say it.
+But don't carry on a telegraphing which other people are supposed not to
+see. It's damnably vulgar."
+
+"You can know all about the necklace," said Gwendolen, her angry pride
+resisting the nightmare of fear.
+
+"I don't want to know. Keep to yourself whatever you like." Grandcourt
+paused between each sentence, and in each his speech seemed to become more
+preternaturally distinct in its inward tones. "What I care to know I shall
+know without your telling me. Only you will please to behave as becomes my
+wife. And not make a spectacle of yourself."
+
+"Do you object to my talking to Mr. Deronda?"
+
+"I don't care two straws about Deronda, or any other conceited hanger-on.
+You may talk to him as much as you like. He is not going to take my place.
+You are my wife. And you will either fill your place properly--to the
+world and to me--or you will go to the devil."
+
+"I never intended anything but to fill my place properly," said Gwendolen,
+with bitterest mortification in her soul.
+
+"You put that thing on your wrist, and hid it from me till you wanted him
+to see it. Only fools go into that deaf and dumb talk, and think they're
+secret. You will understand that you are not to compromise yourself.
+Behave with dignity. That's all I have to say."
+
+With that last word Grandcourt rose, turned his back to the fire and
+looked down on her. She was mute. There was no reproach that she dared to
+fling back at him in return for these insulting admonitions, and the very
+reason she felt them to be insulting was that their purport went with the
+most absolute dictate of her pride. What she would least like to incur was
+the making a fool of herself and being compromised. It was futile and
+irrelevant to try and explain that Deronda too had only been a monitor--
+the strongest of all monitors. Grandcourt was contemptuous, not jealous;
+contemptuously certain of all the subjection he cared for. Why could she
+not rebel and defy him? She longed to do it. But she might as well have
+tried to defy the texture of her nerves and the palpitation of her heart.
+Her husband had a ghostly army at his back, that could close round her
+wherever she might turn. She sat in her splendid attire, like a white
+image of helplessness, and he seemed to gratify himself with looking at
+her. She could not even make a passionate exclamation, or throw up her
+arms, as she would have done in her maiden days. The sense of his scorn
+kept her still.
+
+"Shall I ring?" he said, after what seemed to her a long while. She moved
+her head in assent, and after ringing he went to his dressing-room.
+
+Certain words were gnawing within her. "The wrong you have done me will be
+your own curse." As he closed the door, the bitter tears rose, and the
+gnawing words provoked an answer: "Why did you put your fangs into me and
+not into him?" It was uttered in a whisper, as the tears came up silently.
+But she immediately pressed her handkerchief against her eyes, and checked
+her tendency to sob.
+
+The next day, recovered from the shuddering fit of this evening scene, she
+determined to use the charter which Grandcourt had scornfully given her,
+and to talk as much as she liked with Deronda; but no opportunities
+occurred, and any little devices she could imagine for creating them were
+rejected by her pride, which was now doubly active. Not toward Deronda
+himself--she was singularly free from alarm lest he should think her
+openness wanting in dignity: it was part of his power over her that she
+believed him free from all misunderstanding as to the way in which she
+appealed to him; or rather, that he should misunderstand her had never
+entered into her mind. But the last morning came, and still she had never
+been able to take up the dropped thread of their talk, and she was without
+devices. She and Grandcourt were to leave at three o'clock. It was too
+irritating that after a walk in the grounds had been planned in Deronda's
+hearing, he did not present himself to join in it. Grandcourt was gone
+with Sir Hugo to King's Topping, to see the old manor-house; others of the
+gentlemen were shooting; she was condemned to go and see the decoy and the
+waterfowl, and everything else that she least wanted to see, with the
+ladies, with old Lord Pentreath and his anecdotes, with Mr. Vandernoodt
+and his admiring manners. The irritation became too strong for her;
+without premeditation, she took advantage of the winding road to linger a
+little out of sight, and then set off back to the house, almost running
+when she was safe from observation. She entered by a side door, and the
+library was on her left hand; Deronda, she knew, was often there; why
+might she not turn in there as well as into any other room in the house?
+She had been taken there expressly to see the illuminated family tree, and
+other remarkable things--what more natural than that she should like to
+look in again? The thing most to be feared was that the room would be
+empty of Deronda, for the door was ajar. She pushed it gently, and looked
+round it. He was there, writing busily at a distant table, with his back
+toward the door (in fact, Sir Hugo had asked him to answer some
+constituents' letters which had become pressing). An enormous log fire,
+with the scent of Russia from the books, made the great room as warmly
+odorous as a private chapel in which the censors have been swinging. It
+seemed too daring to go in--too rude to speak and interrupt him; yet she
+went in on the noiseless carpet, and stood still for two or three minutes,
+till Deronda, having finished a letter, pushed it aside for signature, and
+threw himself back to consider whether there were anything else for him to
+do, or whether he could walk out for the chance of meeting the party which
+included Gwendolen, when he heard her voice saying, "Mr. Deronda."
+
+It was certainly startling. He rose hastily, turned round, and pushed away
+his chair with a strong expression of surprise.
+
+"Am I wrong to come in?" said Gwendolen.
+
+"I thought you were far on your walk," said Deronda.
+
+"I turned back," said Gwendolen.
+
+"Do you intend to go out again? I could join you now, if you would allow
+me."
+
+"No; I want to say something, and I can't stay long," said Gwendolen,
+speaking quickly in a subdued tone, while she walked forward and rested
+her arms and muff on the back of the chair he had pushed away from him. "I
+want to tell you that it is really so--I can't help feeling remorse for
+having injured others. That was what I meant when I said that I had done
+worse than gamble again and pawn the necklace again--something more
+injurious, as you called it. And I can't alter it. I am punished, but I
+can't alter it. You said I could do many things. Tell me again. What
+should you do--what should you feel if you were in my place?"
+
+The hurried directness with which she spoke--the absence of all her little
+airs, as if she were only concerned to use the time in getting an answer
+that would guide her, made her appeal unspeakably touching.
+
+Deronda said,--"I should feel something of what you feel--deep sorrow."
+
+"But what would you try to do?" said Gwendolen, with urgent quickness.
+
+"Order my life so as to make any possible amends, and keep away from doing
+any sort of injury again," said Deronda, catching her sense that the time
+for speech was brief.
+
+"But I can't--I can't; I must go on," said Gwendolen, in a passionate loud
+whisper. "I have thrust out others--I have made my gain out of their loss
+--tried to make it--tried. And I must go on. I can't alter it."
+
+It was impossible to answer this instantaneously. Her words had confirmed
+his conjecture, and the situation of all concerned rose in swift images
+before him. His feeling for those who had been thrust out sanctioned her
+remorse; he could not try to nullify it, yet his heart was full of pity
+for her. But as soon as he could he answered--taking up her last words--
+
+"That is the bitterest of all--to wear the yoke of our own wrong-doing.
+But if you submitted to that as men submit to maiming or life-long
+incurable disease?--and made the unalterable wrong a reason for more
+effort toward a good, that may do something to counterbalance the evil?
+One who has committed irremediable errors may be scourged by that
+consciousness into a higher course than is common. There are many
+examples. Feeling what it is to have spoiled one life may well make us
+long to save other lives from being spoiled."
+
+"But you have not wronged any one, or spoiled their lives," said
+Gwendolen, hastily. "It is only others who have wronged _you_."
+
+Deronda colored slightly, but said immediately--"I suppose our keen
+feeling for ourselves might end in giving us a keen feeling for others,
+if, when we are suffering acutely, we were to consider that others go
+through the same sharp experience. That is a sort of remorse before
+commission. Can't you understand that?"
+
+"I think I do--now," said Gwendolen. "But you were right--I _am_ selfish.
+I have never thought much of any one's feelings, except my mother's. I
+have not been fond of people. But what can I do?" she went on, more
+quickly. "I must get up in the morning and do what every one else does. It
+is all like a dance set beforehand. I seem to see all that can be--and I
+am tired and sick of it. And the world is all confusion to me"--she made a
+gesture of disgust. "You say I am ignorant. But what is the good of trying
+to know more, unless life were worth more?"
+
+"This good," said Deronda promptly, with a touch of indignant severity,
+which he was inclined to encourage as his own safeguard; "life _would_ be
+worth more to you: some real knowledge would give you an interest in the
+world beyond the small drama of personal desires. It is the curse of your
+life--forgive me--of so many lives, that all passion is spent in that
+narrow round, for want of ideas and sympathies to make a larger home for
+it. Is there any single occupation of mind that you care about with
+passionate delight or even independent interest?"
+
+Deronda paused, but Gwendolen, looking startled and thrilled as by an
+electric shock, said nothing, and he went on more insistently--
+
+"I take what you said of music for a small example--it answers for all
+larger things--you will not cultivate it for the sake of a private joy in
+it. What sort of earth or heaven would hold any spiritual wealth in it for
+souls pauperized by inaction? If one firmament has no stimulus for our
+attention and awe, I don't see how four would have it. We should stamp
+every possible world with the flatness of our own inanity--which is
+necessarily impious, without faith or fellowship. The refuge you are
+needing from personal trouble is the higher, the religious life, which
+holds an enthusiasm for something more than our own appetites and
+vanities. The few may find themselves in it simply by an elevation of
+feeling; but for us who have to struggle for our wisdom, the higher life
+must be a region in which the affections are clad with knowledge."
+
+The half-indignant remonstrance that vibrated in Deronda's voice came, as
+often happens, from the habit of inward argument with himself rather than
+from severity toward Gwendolen: but it had a more beneficial effect on her
+than any soothings. Nothing is feebler than the indolent rebellion of
+complaint; and to be roused into self-judgment is comparative activity.
+For the moment she felt like a shaken child--shaken out of its wailing
+into awe, and she said humbly--
+
+"I will try. I will think."
+
+They both stood silent for a minute, as if some third presence had
+arrested them,--for Deronda, too, was under that sense of pressure which
+is apt to come when our own winged words seem to be hovering around us,
+--till Gwendolen began again--
+
+"You said affection was the best thing, and I have hardly any--none about
+me. If I could, I would have mamma; but that is impossible. Things have
+changed to me so--in such a short time. What I used not to like I long for
+now. I think I am almost getting fond of the old things now they are
+gone." Her lip trembled.
+
+"Take the present suffering as a painful letting in of light," said
+Deronda, more gently. "You are conscious of more beyond the round of your
+own inclinations--you know more of the way in which your life presses on
+others, and their life on yours. I don't think you could have escaped the
+painful process in some form or other."
+
+"But it is a very cruel form," said Gwendolen, beating her foot on the
+ground with returning agitation. "I am frightened at everything. I am
+frightened at myself. When my blood is fired I can do daring things--take
+any leap; but that makes me frightened at myself." She was looking at
+nothing outside her; but her eyes were directed toward the window, away
+from Deronda, who, with quick comprehension said--
+
+"Turn your fear into a safeguard. Keep your dread fixed on the idea of
+increasing that remorse which is so bitter to you. Fixed meditation may do
+a great deal toward defining our longing or dread. We are not always in a
+state of strong emotion, and when we are calm we can use our memories and
+gradually change the bias of our fear, as we do our tastes. Take your fear
+as a safeguard. It is like quickness of hearing. It may make consequences
+passionately present to you. Try to take hold of your sensibility, and use
+it as if it were a faculty, like vision." Deronda uttered each sentence
+more urgently; he felt as if he were seizing a faint chance of rescuing
+her from some indefinite danger.
+
+"Yes, I know; I understand what you mean," said Gwendolen in her loud
+whisper, not turning her eyes, but lifting up her small gloved hand and
+waving it in deprecation of the notion that it was easy to obey that
+advice. "But if feelings rose--there are some feelings--hatred and anger--
+how can I be good when they keep rising? And if there came a moment when I
+felt stifled and could bear it no longer----" She broke off, and with
+agitated lips looked at Deronda, but the expression on his face pierced
+her with an entirely new feeling. He was under the baffling difficulty of
+discerning, that what he had been urging on her was thrown into the pallid
+distance of mere thought before the outburst of her habitual emotion. It
+was as if he saw her drowning while his limbs were bound. The pained
+compassion which was spread over his features as he watched her, affected
+her with a compunction unlike any she had felt before, and in a changed
+and imploring tone she said--
+
+"I am grieving you. I am ungrateful. You _can_ help me. I will think of
+everything. I will try. Tell me--it will not be a pain to you that I have
+dared to speak of my trouble to you? You began it, you know, when you
+rebuked me." There was a melancholy smile on her lips as she said that,
+but she added more entreatingly, "It will not be a pain to you?"
+
+"Not if it does anything to save you from an evil to come," said Deronda,
+with strong emphasis; "otherwise, it will be a lasting pain."
+
+"No--no--it shall not be. It may be--it shall be better with me because I
+have known you." She turned immediately, and quitted the room.
+
+When she was on the first landing of the staircase, Sir Hugo passed across
+the hall on his way to the library, and saw her. Grandcourt was not with
+him.
+
+Deronda, when the baronet entered, was standing in his ordinary attitude,
+grasping his coat-collar, with his back to the table, and with that
+indefinable expression by which we judge that a man is still in the shadow
+of a scene which he has just gone through. He moved, however, and began to
+arrange the letters.
+
+"Has Mrs. Grandcourt been in here?" said Sir Hugo.
+
+"Yes, she has."
+
+"Where are the others?"
+
+"I believe she left them somewhere in the grounds."
+
+After a moment's silence, in which Sir Hugo looked at a letter without
+reading it, he said "I hope you are not playing with fire, Dan--you
+understand me?"
+
+"I believe I do, sir," said Deronda, after a slight hesitation, which had
+some repressed anger in it. "But there is nothing answering to your
+metaphor--no fire, and therefore no chance of scorching."
+
+Sir Hugo looked searchingly at him, and then said, "So much the better.
+For, between ourselves, I fancy there may be some hidden gunpowder in that
+establishment."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+ _Aspern._ Pardon, my lord--I speak for Sigismund.
+ _Fronsberg._ For him? Oh, ay--for him I always hold
+ A pardon safe in bank, sure he will draw
+ Sooner or later on me. What his need?
+ Mad project broken? fine mechanic wings
+ That would not fly? durance, assault on watch,
+ Bill for Epernay, not a crust to eat?
+ _Aspern._ Oh, none of these, my lord; he has escaped
+ From Circe's herd, and seeks to win the love
+ Of your fair ward Cecilia: but would win
+ First your consent. You frown.
+ _Fronsberg._ Distinguish words.
+ I said I held a pardon, not consent.
+
+
+In spite of Deronda's reasons for wishing to be in town again--reasons in
+which his anxiety for Mirah was blent with curiosity to know more of the
+enigmatic Mordecai--he did not manage to go up before Sir Hugo, who
+preceded his family that he might be ready for the opening of Parliament
+on the sixth of February. Deronda took up his quarters in Park Lane, aware
+that his chambers were sufficiently tenanted by Hans Meyrick. This was
+what he expected; but he found other things not altogether according to
+his expectations.
+
+Most of us remember Retzsch's drawing of destiny in the shape of
+Mephistopheles playing at chess with man for his soul, a game in which we
+may imagine the clever adversary making a feint of unintended moves so as
+to set the beguiled mortal on carrying his defensive pieces away from the
+true point of attack. The fiend makes preparation his favorite object of
+mockery, that he may fatally persuade us against our taking out
+waterproofs when he is well aware the sky is going to clear, foreseeing
+that the imbecile will turn this delusion into a prejudice against
+waterproofs instead of giving a closer study to the weather-signs. It is a
+peculiar test of a man's metal when, after he has painfully adjusted
+himself to what seems a wise provision, he finds all his mental precaution
+a little beside the mark, and his excellent intentions no better than
+miscalculated dovetails, accurately cut from a wrong starting-point. His
+magnanimity has got itself ready to meet misbehavior, and finds quite a
+different call upon it. Something of this kind happened to Deronda.
+
+His first impression was one of pure pleasure and amusement at finding his
+sitting-room transformed into an _atelier_ strewed with miscellaneous
+drawings and with the contents of two chests from Rome, the lower half of
+the windows darkened with baize, and the blonde Hans in his weird youth as
+the presiding genius of the littered place--his hair longer than of old,
+his face more whimsically creased, and his high voice as usual getting
+higher under the excitement of rapid talk. The friendship of the two had
+been kept up warmly since the memorable Cambridge time, not only by
+correspondence but by little episodes of companionship abroad and in
+England, and the original relation of confidence on one side and
+indulgence on the other had been developed in practice, as is wont to be
+the case where such spiritual borrowing and lending has been well begun.
+
+"I knew you would like to see my casts and antiquities," said Hans, after
+the first hearty greetings and inquiries, "so I didn't scruple to unlade
+my chests here. But I've found two rooms at Chelsea not many hundred yards
+from my mother and sisters, and I shall soon be ready to hang out there--
+when they've scraped the walls and put in some new lights. That's all I'm
+waiting for. But you see I don't wait to begin work: you can't conceive
+what a great fellow I'm going to be. The seed of immortality has sprouted
+within me."
+
+"Only a fungoid growth, I dare say--a growing disease in the lungs," said
+Deronda, accustomed to treat Hans in brotherly fashion. He was walking
+toward some drawings propped on the ledge of his bookcases; five rapidly-
+sketched heads--different aspects of the same face. He stood at a
+convenient distance from them, without making any remark. Hans, too, was
+silent for a minute, took up his palette and began touching the picture on
+his easel.
+
+"What do you think of them?" he said at last.
+
+"The full face looks too massive; otherwise the likenesses are good," said
+Deronda, more coldly than was usual with him.
+
+"No, it is not too massive," said Hans, decisively. "I have noted that.
+There is always a little surprise when one passes from the profile to the
+full face. But I shall enlarge her scale for Berenice. I am making a
+Berenice series--look at the sketches along there--and now I think of it,
+you are just the model I want for the Agrippa." Hans, still with pencil
+and palette in hand, had moved to Deronda's side while he said this, but
+he added hastily, as if conscious of a mistake, "No, no, I forgot; you
+don't like sitting for your portrait, confound you! However, I've picked
+up a capital Titus. There are to be five in the series. The first is
+Berenice clasping the knees of Gessius Florus and beseeching him to spare
+her people; I've got that on the easel. Then, this, where she is standing
+on the Xystus with Agrippa, entreating the people not to injure themselves
+by resistance."
+
+"Agrippa's legs will never do," said Deronda.
+
+"The legs are good realistically," said Hans, his face creasing drolly;
+"public men are often shaky about the legs--' Their legs, the emblem of
+their various thought,' as somebody says in the 'Rehearsal.'"
+
+"But these are as impossible as the legs of Raphael's Alcibiades," said
+Deronda.
+
+"Then they are good ideally," said Hans. "Agrippa's legs were possibly
+bad; I idealize that and make them impossibly bad. Art, my Eugenius, must
+intensify. But never mind the legs now: the third sketch in the series is
+Berenice exulting in the prospects of being Empress of Rome, when the news
+has come that Vespasian is declared Emperor and her lover Titus his
+successor."
+
+"You must put a scroll in her mouth, else people will not understand that.
+You can't tell that in a picture."
+
+"It will make them feel their ignorance then--an excellent aesthetic
+effect. The fourth is, Titus sending Berenice away from Rome after she has
+shared his palace for ten years--both reluctant, both sad--_invitus
+invitam_, as Suetonius hath it. I've found a model for the Roman brute."
+
+"Shall you make Berenice look fifty? She must have been that."
+
+"No, no; a few mature touches to show the lapse of time. Dark-eyed beauty
+wears well, hers particularly. But now, here is the fifth: Berenice seated
+lonely on the ruins of Jerusalem. That is pure imagination. That is what
+ought to have been--perhaps was. Now, see how I tell a pathetic negative.
+Nobody knows what became of her--that is finely indicated by the series
+coming to a close. There is no sixth picture." Here Hans pretended to
+speak with a gasping sense of sublimity, and drew back his head with a
+frown, as if looking for a like impression on Deronda. "I break off in the
+Homeric style. The story is chipped off, so to speak, and passes with a
+ragged edge into nothing--_le neant_; can anything be more sublime,
+especially in French? The vulgar would desire to see her corpse and
+burial--perhaps her will read and her linen distributed. But now come and
+look at this on the easel. I have made some way there."
+
+"That beseeching attitude is really good," said Deronda, after a moment's
+contemplation. "You have been very industrious in the Christmas holidays;
+for I suppose you have taken up the subject since you came to London."
+Neither of them had yet mentioned Mirah.
+
+"No," said Hans, putting touches to his picture, "I made up my mind to the
+subject before. I take that lucky chance for an augury that I am going to
+burst on the world as a great painter. I saw a splendid woman in the
+Trastevere--the grandest women there are half Jewesses--and she set me
+hunting for a fine situation of a Jewess at Rome. Like other men of vast
+learning, I ended by taking what lay on the surface. I'll show you a
+sketch of the Trasteverina's head when I can lay my hands on it."
+
+"I should think she would be a more suitable model for Berenice," said
+Deronda, not knowing exactly how to express his discontent.
+
+"Not a bit of it. The model ought to be the most beautiful Jewess in the
+world, and I have found her."
+
+"Have you made yourself sure that she would like to figure in that
+character? I should think no woman would be more abhorrent to her. Does
+she quite know what you are doing?"
+
+"Certainly. I got her to throw herself precisely into this attitude.
+Little mother sat for Gessius Florus, and Mirah clasped her knees." Here
+Hans went a little way off and looked at the effect of his touches.
+
+"I dare say she knows nothing about Berenice's history," said Deronda,
+feeling more indignation than he would have been able to justify.
+
+"Oh, yes, she does--ladies' edition. Berenice was a fervid patriot, but
+was beguiled by love and ambition into attaching herself to the arch-enemy
+of her people. Whence the Nemesis. Mirah takes it as a tragic parable, and
+cries to think what the penitent Berenice suffered as she wandered back to
+Jerusalem and sat desolate amidst desolation. That was her own phrase. I
+couldn't find it in my heart to tell her I invented that part of the
+story."
+
+"Show me your Trasteverina," said Deronda, chiefly in order to hinder
+himself from saying something else.
+
+"Shall you mind turning over that folio?" said Hans. "My studies of heads
+are all there. But they are in confusion. You will perhaps find her next
+to a crop-eared undergraduate."
+
+After Deronda had been turning over the drawings a minute or two, he
+said--
+
+"These seem to be all Cambridge heads and bits of country. Perhaps I had
+better begin at the other end."
+
+"No; you'll find her about the middle. I emptied one folio into another."
+
+"Is this one of your undergraduates?" said Deronda, holding up a drawing.
+"It's an unusually agreeable face."
+
+"That! Oh, that's a man named Gascoigne--Rex Gascoigne. An uncommonly good
+fellow; his upper lip, too, is good. I coached him before he got his
+scholarship. He ought to have taken honors last Easter. But he was ill,
+and has had to stay up another year. I must look him up. I want to know
+how he's going on."
+
+"Here she is, I suppose," said Deronda, holding up a sketch of the
+Trasteverina.
+
+"Ah," said Hans, looking at it rather contemptuously, "too coarse. I was
+unregenerate then."
+
+Deronda was silent while he closed the folio, leaving the Trasteverina
+outside. Then clasping his coat-collar, and turning toward Hans, he said,
+"I dare say my scruples are excessive, Meyrick, but I must ask you to
+oblige me by giving up this notion."
+
+Hans threw himself into a tragic attitude, and screamed, "What! my series
+--my immortal Berenice series? Think of what you are saying, man--
+destroying, as Milton says, not a life but an immortality. Wait before
+you, answer, that I may deposit the implements of my art and be ready to
+uproot my hair."
+
+Here Hans laid down his pencil and palette, threw himself backward into a
+great chair, and hanging limply over the side, shook his long hair over
+his face, lifted his hooked fingers on each side his head, and looked up
+with comic terror at Deronda, who was obliged to smile, as he said--
+
+"Paint as many Berenices as you like, but I wish you could feel with me--
+perhaps you will, on reflection--that you should choose another model."
+
+"Why?" said Hans, standing up, and looking serious again.
+
+"Because she may get into such a position that her face is likely to be
+recognized. Mrs. Meyrick and I are anxious for her that she should be
+known as an admirable singer. It is right, and she wishes it, that she
+should make herself independent. And she has excellent chances. One good
+introduction is secured already, and I am going to speak to Klesmer. Her
+face may come to be very well known, and--well, it is useless to attempt
+to explain, unless you feel as I do. I believe that if Mirah saw the
+circumstances clearly, she would strongly object to being exhibited in
+this way--to allowing herself to be used as a model for a heroine of this
+sort."
+
+As Hans stood with his thumbs in the belt of his blouse, listening to this
+speech, his face showed a growing surprise melting into amusement, that at
+last would have its way in an explosive laugh: but seeing that Deronda
+looked gravely offended, he checked himself to say, "Excuse my laughing,
+Deronda. You never gave me an advantage over you before. If it had been
+about anything but my own pictures, I should have swallowed every word
+because you said it. And so you actually believe that I should get my five
+pictures hung on the line in a conspicuous position, and carefully studied
+by the public? Zounds, man! cider-cup and conceit never gave me half such
+a beautiful dream. My pictures are likely to remain as private as the
+utmost hypersensitiveness could desire."
+
+Hans turned to paint again as a way of filling up awkward pauses. Deronda
+stood perfectly still, recognizing his mistake as to publicity, but also
+conscious that his repugnance was not much diminished. He was the reverse
+of satisfied either with himself or with Hans; but the power of being
+quiet carries a man well through moments of embarrassment. Hans had a
+reverence for his friend which made him feel a sort of shyness at
+Deronda's being in the wrong; but it were not in his nature to give up
+anything readily, though it were only a whim--or rather, especially if it
+were a whim, and he presently went on, painting the while--
+
+"But even supposing I had a public rushing after my pictures as if they
+were a railway series including nurses, babies and bonnet-boxes, I can't
+see any justice in your objection. Every painter worth remembering has
+painted the face he admired most, as often as he could. It is a part of
+his soul that goes out into his pictures. He diffuses its influence in
+that way. He puts what he hates into a caricature. He puts what he adores
+into some sacred, heroic form. If a man could paint the woman he loves a
+thousand times as the Stella Marts to put courage into the sailors on
+board a thousand ships, so much the more honor to her. Isn't that better
+than painting a piece of staring immodesty and calling it by a worshipful
+name?"
+
+"Every objection can be answered if you take broad ground enough, Hans: no
+special question of conduct can be properly settled in that way," said
+Deronda, with a touch of peremptoriness. "I might admit all your
+generalities, and yet be right in saying you ought not to publish Mirah's
+face as a model for Berenice. But I give up the question of publicity. I
+was unreasonable there." Deronda hesitated a moment. "Still, even as a
+private affair, there might be good reasons for your not indulging
+yourself too much in painting her from the point of view you mention. You
+must feel that her situation at present is a very delicate one; and until
+she is in more independence, she should be kept as carefully as a bit of
+Venetian glass, for fear of shaking her out of the safe place she is
+lodged in. Are you quite sure of your own discretion? Excuse me, Hans. My
+having found her binds me to watch over her. Do you understand me?"
+
+"Perfectly," said Hans, turning his face into a good-humored smile. "You
+have the very justifiable opinion of me that I am likely to shatter all
+the glass in my way, and break my own skull into the bargain. Quite fair.
+Since I got into the scrape of being born, everything I have liked best
+has been a scrape either for myself or somebody else. Everything I have
+taken to heartily has somehow turned into a scrape. My painting is the
+last scrape; and I shall be all my life getting out of it. You think now I
+shall get into a scrape at home. No; I am regenerate. You think I must be
+over head and ears in love with Mirah. Quite right; so I am. But you think
+I shall scream and plunge and spoil everything. There you are mistaken--
+excusably, but transcendently mistaken. I have undergone baptism by
+immersion. Awe takes care of me. Ask the little mother."
+
+"You don't reckon a hopeless love among your scrapes, then," said Deronda,
+whose voice seemed to get deeper as Hans's went higher.
+
+"I don't mean to call mine hopeless," said Hans, with provoking coolness,
+laying down his tools, thrusting his thumbs into his belt, and moving away
+a little, as if to contemplate his picture more deliberately.
+
+"My dear fellow, you are only preparing misery for yourself," said
+Deronda, decisively. "She would not marry a Christian, even if she loved
+him. Have you heard her--of course you have--heard her speak of her people
+and her religion?"
+
+"That can't last," said Hans. "She will see no Jew who is tolerable. Every
+male of that race is insupportable,--'insupportably advancing'--his nose."
+
+"She may rejoin her family. That is what she longs for. Her mother and
+brother are probably strict Jews."
+
+"I'll turn proselyte, if she wishes it," said Hans, with a shrug and a
+laugh.
+
+"Don't talk nonsense, Hans. I thought you professed a serious love for
+her," said Deronda, getting heated.
+
+"So I do. You think it desperate, but I don't."
+
+"I know nothing; I can't tell what has happened. We must be prepared for
+surprises. But I can hardly imagine a greater surprise to me than that
+there should have seemed to be anything in Mirah's sentiments for you to
+found a romantic hope on." Deronda felt that he was too contemptuous.
+
+"I don't found my romantic hopes on a woman's sentiments," said Hans,
+perversely inclined to be the merrier when he was addressed with gravity.
+"I go to science and philosophy for my romance. Nature designed Mirah to
+fall in love with me. The amalgamation of races demands it--the mitigation
+of human ugliness demands it--the affinity of contrasts assures it. I am
+the utmost contrast to Mirah--a bleached Christian, who can't sing two
+notes in tune. Who has a chance against me?"
+
+"I see now; it was all _persiflage_. You don't mean a word you say,
+Meyrick," said Deronda, laying his hand on Meyrick's shoulder, and
+speaking in a tone of cordial relief. "I was a wiseacre to answer you
+seriously."
+
+"Upon my honor I do mean it, though," said Hans, facing round and laying
+his left hand on Deronda's shoulder, so that their eyes fronted each other
+closely. "I am at the confessional. I meant to tell you as soon as you
+came. My mother says you are Mirah's guardian, and she thinks herself
+responsible to you for every breath that falls on Mirah in her house.
+Well, I love her--I worship her--I won't despair--I mean to deserve her."
+
+"My dear fellow, you can't do it," said Deronda, quickly.
+
+"I should have said, I mean to try."
+
+"You can't keep your resolve, Hans. You used to resolve what you would do
+for your mother and sisters."
+
+"You have a right to reproach me, old fellow," said Hans, gently.
+
+"Perhaps I am ungenerous," said Deronda, not apologetically, however. "Yet
+it can't be ungenerous to warn you that you are indulging mad, Quixotic
+expectations."
+
+"Who will be hurt but myself, then?" said Hans, putting out his lip. "I am
+not going to say anything to her unless I felt sure of the answer. I dare
+not ask the oracles: I prefer a cheerful caliginosity, as Sir Thomas
+Browne might say. I would rather run my chance there and lose, than be
+sure of winning anywhere else. And I don't mean to swallow the poison of
+despair, though you are disposed to thrust it on me. I am giving up wine,
+so let me get a little drunk on hope and vanity."
+
+"With all my heart, if it will do you any good," said Deronda, loosing
+Hans's shoulder, with a little push. He made his tone kindly, but his
+words were from the lip only. As to his real feeling he was silenced.
+
+He was conscious of that peculiar irritation which will sometimes befall
+the man whom others are inclined to trust as a mentor--the irritation of
+perceiving that he is supposed to be entirely off the same plane of desire
+and temptation as those who confess to him. Our guides, we pretend, must
+be sinless: as if those were not often the best teachers who only
+yesterday got corrected for their mistakes. Throughout their friendship
+Deronda had been used to Hans's egotism, but he had never before felt
+intolerant of it: when Hans, habitually pouring out his own feelings and
+affairs, had never cared for any detail in return, and, if he chanced to
+know any, and soon forgotten it. Deronda had been inwardly as well as
+outwardly indulgent--nay, satisfied. But now he had noted with some
+indignation, all the stronger because it must not be betrayed, Hans's
+evident assumption that for any danger of rivalry or jealousy in relation
+to Mirah, Deronda was not as much out of the question as the angel
+Gabriel. It is one thing to be resolute in placing one's self out of the
+question, and another to endure that others should perform that exclusion
+for us. He had expected that Hans would give him trouble: what he had not
+expected was that the trouble would have a strong element of personal
+feeling. And he was rather ashamed that Hans's hopes caused him uneasiness
+in spite of his well-warranted conviction that they would never be
+fulfilled. They had raised an image of Mirah changing; and however he
+might protest that the change would not happen, the protest kept up the
+unpleasant image. Altogether poor Hans seemed to be entering into
+Deronda's experience in a disproportionate manner--going beyond his part
+of rescued prodigal, and rousing a feeling quite distinct from
+compassionate affection.
+
+When Deronda went to Chelsea he was not made as comfortable as he ought to
+have been by Mrs. Meyrick's evident release from anxiety about the beloved
+but incalculable son. Mirah seemed livelier than before, and for the first
+time he' saw her laugh. It was when they were talking of Hans, he being
+naturally the mother's first topic. Mirah wished to know if Deronda had
+seen Mr. Hans going through a sort of character piece without changing his
+dress.
+
+"He passes from one figure to another as if he were a bit of flame where
+you fancied the figures without seeing them," said Mirah, full of her
+subject; "he is so wonderfully quick. I used never to like comic things on
+the stage--they were dwelt on too long; but all in one minute Mr. Hans
+makes himself a blind bard, and then Rienzi addressing the Romans, and
+then an opera-dancer, and then a desponding young gentleman--I am sorry
+for them all, and yet I laugh, all in one"--here Mirah gave a little laugh
+that might have entered into a song.
+
+"We hardly thought that Mirah could laugh till Hans came," said Mrs.
+Meyrick, seeing that Deronda, like herself, was observing the pretty
+picture.
+
+"Hans seems in great force just now," said Deronda in a tone of
+congratulation. "I don't wonder at his enlivening you."
+
+"He's been just perfect ever since he came back," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+keeping to herself the next clause--"if it will but last."
+
+"It is a great happiness," said Mirah, "to see the son and brother come
+into this dear home. And I hear them all talk about what they did together
+when they were little. That seems like heaven, and to have a mother and
+brother who talk in that way. I have never had it."
+
+"Nor I," said Deronda, involuntarily.
+
+"No?" said Mirah, regretfully. "I wish you had. I wish you had had every
+good." The last words were uttered with a serious ardor as if they had
+been part of a litany, while her eyes were fixed on Deronda, who with his
+elbow on the back of his chair was contemplating her by the new light of
+the impression she had made on Hans, and the possibility of her being
+attracted by that extraordinary contrast. It was no more than what had
+happened on each former visit of his, that Mirah appeared to enjoy
+speaking of what she felt very much as a little girl fresh from school
+pours forth spontaneously all the long-repressed chat for which she has
+found willing ears. For the first time in her life Mirah was among those
+whom she entirely trusted, and her original visionary impression that
+Deronda was a divinely-sent messenger hung about his image still, stirring
+always anew the disposition to reliance and openness. It was in this way
+she took what might have been the injurious flattery of admiring attention
+into which her helpless dependence had been suddenly transformed. Every
+one around her watched for her looks and words, and the effect on her was
+simply that of having passed from a trifling imprisonment into an
+exhilarating air which made speech and action a delight. To her mind it
+was all a gift from others' goodness. But that word of Deronda's implying
+that there had been some lack in his life which might be compared with
+anything she had known in hers, was an entirely new inlet of thought about
+him. After her first expression of sorrowful surprise she went on--
+
+"But Mr. Hans said yesterday that you thought so much of others you hardly
+wanted anything for yourself. He told us a wonderful story of Buddha
+giving himself to the famished tigress to save her and her little ones
+from starving. And he said you were like Buddha. That is what we all
+imagine of you."
+
+"Pray don't imagine that," said Deronda, who had lately been finding such
+suppositions rather exasperating. "Even if it were true that I thought so
+much of others, it would not follow that I had no wants for myself. When
+Buddha let the tigress eat him he might have been very hungry himself."
+
+"Perhaps if he was starved he would not mind so much about being eaten,"
+said Mab, shyly.
+
+"Please don't think that, Mab; it takes away the beauty of the action,"
+said Mirah.
+
+"But if it were true, Mirah?" said the rational Amy, having a half-holiday
+from her teaching; "you always take what is beautiful as if it were true."
+
+"So it is," said Mirah, gently. "If people have thought what is the most
+beautiful and the best thing, it must be true. It is always there."
+
+"Now, Mirah, what do you mean?" said Amy.
+
+"I understand her," said Deronda, coming to the rescue.
+
+"It is a truth in thought though it may never have been carried out in
+action. It lives as an idea. Is that it?" He turned to Mirah, who was
+listening with a blind look in her lovely eyes.
+
+"It must be that, because you understand me, but I cannot quite explain,"
+said Mirah, rather abstractedly--still searching for some expression.
+
+"But _was_ it beautiful for Buddha to let the tiger eat him?" said Amy,
+changing her ground. "It would be a bad pattern."
+
+"The world would get full of fat tigers," said Mab.
+
+Deronda laughed, but defended the myth. "It is like a passionate word," he
+said; "the exaggeration is a flash of fervor. It is an extreme image of
+what is happening every day-the transmutation of self."
+
+"I think I can say what I mean, now," said Mirah, who had not heard the
+intermediate talk. "When the best thing comes into our thoughts, it is
+like what my mother has been to me. She has been just as really with me as
+all the other people about me--often more really with me."
+
+Deronda, inwardly wincing under this illustration, which brought other
+possible realities about that mother vividly before him, presently turned
+the conversation by saying, "But we must not get too far away from
+practical matters. I came, for one thing, to tell of an interview I had
+yesterday, which I hope Mirah will find to have been useful to her. It was
+with Klesmer, the great pianist."
+
+"Ah?" said Mrs. Meyrick, with satisfaction. "You think he will help her?"
+
+"I hope so. He is very much occupied, but has promised to fix a time for
+receiving and hearing Miss Lapidoth, as we must learn to call her"--here
+Deronda smiled at Mirah--"If she consents to go to him."
+
+"I shall be very grateful," said Mirah. "He wants to hear me sing, before
+he can judge whether I ought to be helped."
+
+Deronda was struck with her plain sense about these matters of practical
+concern.
+
+"It will not be at all trying to you, I hope, if Mrs. Meyrick will kindly
+go with you to Klesmer's house."
+
+"Oh, no, not at all trying. I have been doing that all my life--I mean,
+told to do things that others may judge of me. And I have gone through a
+bad trial of that sort. I am prepared to bear it, and do some very small
+thing. Is Klesmer a severe man?"
+
+"He is peculiar, but I have not had experience enough of him to know
+whether he would be what you would call severe."
+
+"I know he is kind-hearted--kind in action, if not in speech."
+
+"I have been used to be frowned at and not praised," said Mirah.
+
+"By the by, Klesmer frowns a good deal," said Deronda, "but there is often
+a sort of smile in his eyes all the while. Unhappily he wears spectacles,
+so you must catch him in the right light to see the smile."
+
+"I shall not be frightened," said Mirah. "If he were like a roaring lion,
+he only wants me to sing. I shall do what I can."
+
+"Then I feel sure you will not mind being invited to sing in Lady
+Mallinger's drawing-room," said Deronda. "She intends to ask you next
+month, and will invite many ladies to hear you, who are likely to want
+lessons from you for their daughters."
+
+"How fast we are mounting!" said Mrs. Meyrick, with delight. "You never
+thought of getting grand so quickly, Mirah."
+
+"I am a little frightened at being called Miss Lapidoth," said Mirah,
+coloring with a new uneasiness. "Might I be called Cohen?"
+
+"I understand you," said Deronda, promptly. "But I assure you, you must
+not be called Cohen. The name is inadmissible for a singer. This is one
+of the trifles in which we must conform to vulgar prejudice. We could
+choose some other name, however--such as singers ordinarily choose--an
+Italian or Spanish name, which would suit your _physique_." To Deronda
+just now the name Cohen was equivalent to the ugliest of yellow badges.
+
+Mirah reflected a little, anxiously, then said, "No. If Cohen will not do,
+I will keep the name I have been called by. I will not hide myself. I have
+friends to protect me. And now--if my father were very miserable and
+wanted help--no," she said, looking at Mrs. Meyrick, "I should think,
+then, that he was perhaps crying as I used to see him, and had nobody to
+pity him, and I had hidden myself from him. He had none belonging to him
+but me. Others that made friends with him always left him."
+
+"Keep to what you feel right, my dear child," said Mrs. Meyrick. "_I_
+would not persuade you to the contrary." For her own part she had no
+patience or pity for that father, and would have left him to his crying.
+
+Deronda was saying to himself, "I am rather base to be angry with Hans.
+How can he help being in love with her? But it is too absurdly
+presumptuous for him even to frame the idea of appropriating her, and a
+sort of blasphemy to suppose that she could possibly give herself to him."
+
+What would it be for Daniel Deronda to entertain such thoughts? He was not
+one who could quite naively introduce himself where he had just excluded
+his friend, yet it was undeniable that what had just happened made a new
+stage in his feeling toward Mirah. But apart from other grounds for self-
+repression, reasons both definite and vague made him shut away that
+question as he might have shut up a half-opened writing that would have
+carried his imagination too far, and given too much shape to
+presentiments. Might there not come a disclosure which would hold the
+missing determination of his course? What did he really know about his
+origin? Strangely in these latter months when it seemed right that he
+should exert his will in the choice of a destination, the passion of his
+nature had got more and more locked by this uncertainty. The disclosure
+might bring its pain, indeed the likelihood seemed to him to be all on
+that side; but if it helped him to make his life a sequence which would
+take the form of duty--if it saved him from having to make an arbitrary
+selection where he felt no preponderance of desire? Still more, he wanted
+to escape standing as a critic outside the activities of men, stiffened
+into the ridiculous attitude of self-assigned superiority. His chief
+tether was his early inwrought affection for Sir Hugo, making him
+gratefully deferential to wishes with which he had little agreement: but
+gratitude had been sometimes disturbed by doubts which were near reducing
+it to a fear of being ungrateful. Many of us complain that half our
+birthright is sharp duty: Deronda was more inclined to complain that he
+was robbed of this half; yet he accused himself, as he would have accused
+another, of being weakly self-conscious and wanting in resolve. He was the
+reverse of that type painted for us in Faulconbridge and Edmund of
+Gloster, whose coarse ambition for personal success is inflamed by a
+defiance of accidental disadvantages. To Daniel the words Father and
+Mother had the altar-fire in them; and the thought of all closest
+relations of our nature held still something of the mystic power which had
+made his neck and ears burn in boyhood. The average man may regard this
+sensibility on the question of birth as preposterous and hardly credible;
+but with the utmost respect for his knowledge as the rock from which all
+other knowledge is hewn, it must be admitted that many well-proved facts
+are dark to the average man, even concerning the action of his own heart
+and the structure of his own retina. A century ago he and all his
+forefathers had not had the slightest notion of that electric discharge by
+means of which they had all wagged their tongues mistakenly; any more than
+they were awake to the secluded anguish of exceptional sensitiveness into
+which many a carelessly-begotten child of man is born.
+
+Perhaps the ferment was all the stronger in Deronda's mind because he had
+never had a confidant to whom he could open himself on these delicate
+subjects. He had always been leaned on instead of being invited to lean.
+Sometimes he had longed for the sort of friend to whom he might possibly
+unfold his experience: a young man like himself who sustained a private
+grief and was not too confident about his own career; speculative enough
+to understand every moral difficulty, yet socially susceptible, as he
+himself was, and having every outward sign of equality either in bodily or
+spiritual wrestling;--for he had found it impossible to reciprocate
+confidences with one who looked up to him. But he had no expectation of
+meeting the friend he imagined. Deronda's was not one of those
+quiveringly-poised natures that lend themselves to second-sight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+ There be who hold that the deeper tragedy were a Prometheus Bound not
+ _after_ but _before_ he had well got the celestial fire into
+ the _narthex_ whereby it might be conveyed to mortals: thrust by
+ the Kratos and Bia of instituted methods into a solitude of despised
+ ideas, fastened in throbbing helplessness by the fatal pressure of
+ poverty and disease--a solitude where many pass by, but none regard.
+
+
+"Second-sight" is a flag over disputed ground. But it is matter of
+knowledge that there are persons whose yearnings, conceptions--nay,
+traveled conclusions--continually take the form of images which have a
+foreshadowing power; the deed they would do starts up before them in
+complete shape, making a coercive type; the event they hunger for or dread
+rises into vision with a seed-like growth, feeding itself fast on
+unnumbered impressions. They are not always the less capable of the
+argumentative process, nor less sane than the commonplace calculators of
+the market: sometimes it may be that their natures have manifold openings,
+like the hundred-gated Thebes, where there may naturally be a greater and
+more miscellaneous inrush than through a narrow beadle-watched portal. No
+doubt there are abject specimens of the visionary, as there is a minim
+mammal which you might imprison in the finger of your glove. That small
+relative of the elephant has no harm in him; but what great mental or
+social type is free from specimens whose insignificance is both ugly and
+noxious? One is afraid to think of all that the genus "patriot" embraces;
+or of the elbowing there might be at the day of judgment for those who
+ranked as authors, and brought volumes either in their hands or on trucks.
+
+This apology for inevitable kinship is meant to usher in some facts about
+Mordecai, whose figure had bitten itself into Deronda's mind as a new
+question which he felt an interest in getting answered. But the interest
+was no more than a vaguely-expectant suspense: the consumptive-looking
+Jew, apparently a fervid student of some kind, getting his crust by a
+quiet handicraft, like Spinoza, fitted into none of Deronda's
+anticipations.
+
+It was otherwise with the effect of their meeting on Mordecai. For many
+winters, while he had been conscious of an ebbing physical life, and as
+widening spiritual loneliness, all his passionate desire had concentrated
+itself in the yearning for some young ear into which he could pour his
+mind as a testament, some soul kindred enough to accept the spiritual
+product of his own brief, painful life, as a mission to be executed. It
+was remarkable that the hopefulness which is often the beneficent illusion
+of consumptive patients, was in Mordecai wholly diverted from the prospect
+of bodily recovery and carried into the current of this yearning for
+transmission. The yearning, which had panted upward from out of over-
+whelming discouragements, had grown into a hope--the hope into a confident
+belief, which, instead of being checked by the clear conception he had of
+his hastening decline, took rather the intensity of expectant faith in a
+prophecy which has only brief space to get fulfilled in.
+
+Some years had now gone since he had first begun to measure men with a
+keen glance, searching for a possibility which became more and more a
+distinct conception. Such distinctness as it had at first was reached
+chiefly by a method of contrast: he wanted to find a man who differed from
+himself. Tracing reasons in that self for the rebuffs he had met with and
+the hindrances that beset him, he imagined a man who would have all the
+elements necessary for sympathy with him, but in an embodiment unlike his
+own: he must be a Jew, intellectually cultured, morally fervid--in all
+this a nature ready to be plenished from Mordecai's; but his face and
+frame must be beautiful and strong, he must have been used to all the
+refinements of social life, his voice must flow with a full and easy
+current, his circumstances be free from sordid need: he must glorify the
+possibilities of the Jew, not sit and wonder as Mordecai did, bearing the
+stamp of his people amid the sign of poverty and waning breath. Sensitive
+to physical characteristics, he had, both abroad and in England, looked
+at pictures as well as men, and in a vacant hour he had sometimes lingered
+in the National Gallery in search of paintings which might feed his
+hopefulness with grave and noble types of the human form, such as might
+well belong to men of his own race. But he returned in disappointment. The
+instances are scattered but thinly over the galleries of Europe, in which
+the fortune or selection even of the chief masters has given to art a face
+at once young, grand, and beautiful, where, if there is any melancholy, it
+is no feeble passivity, but enters into the foreshadowed capability of
+heroism.
+
+Some observant persons may perhaps remember his emaciated figure, and dark
+eyes deep in their sockets, as he stood in front of a picture that had
+touched him either to new or habitual meditation: he commonly wore a cloth
+cap with black fur round it, which no painter would have asked him to take
+off. But spectators would be likely to think of him as an odd-looking Jew
+who probably got money out of pictures; and Mordecai, when he looked at
+them, was perfectly aware of the impression he made. Experience had
+rendered him morbidly alive to the effect of a man's poverty and other
+physical disadvantages in cheapening his ideas, unless they are those of a
+Peter the Hermit who has a tocsin for the rabble. But he was too sane and
+generous to attribute his spiritual banishment solely to the excusable
+prejudices of others; certain incapacities of his own had made the
+sentence of exclusion; and hence it was that his imagination had
+constructed another man who would be something more ample than the second
+soul bestowed, according to the notion of the Cabbalists, to help out the
+insufficient first--who would be a blooming human life, ready to
+incorporate all that was worthiest in an existence whose visible, palpable
+part was burning itself fast away. His inward need for the conception of
+this expanded, prolonged self was reflected as an outward necessity. The
+thoughts of his heart (that ancient phrase best shadows the truth) seemed
+to him too precious, too closely interwoven with the growth of things not
+to have a further destiny. And as the more beautiful, the stronger, the
+more executive self took shape in his mind, he loved it beforehand with an
+affection half identifying, half contemplative and grateful.
+
+Mordecai's mind wrought so constantly in images, that his coherent trains
+of thought often resembled the significant dreams attributed to sleepers
+by waking persons in their most inventive moments: nay, they often
+resembled genuine dreams in their way of breaking off the passage from the
+known to the unknown. Thus, for a long while, he habitually thought of the
+Being answering to his need as one distantly approaching or turning his
+back toward him, darkly painted against a golden sky. The reason of the
+golden sky lay in one of Mordecai's habits. He was keenly alive to some
+poetic aspects of London; and a favorite resort of his, when strength and
+leisure allowed, was to some of the bridges, especially about sunrise or
+sunset. Even when he was bending over watch-wheels and trinkets, or seated
+in a small upper room looking out on dingy bricks and dingy cracked
+windows, his imagination spontaneously planted him on some spot where he
+had a far-stretching scene; his thoughts went on in wide spaces; and
+whenever he could, he tried to have in reality the influences of a large
+sky. Leaning on the parapet of Blackfriar's Bridge, and gazing
+meditatively, the breadth and calm of the river, with its long vista half
+hazy, half luminous, the grand dim masses of tall forms of buildings which
+were the signs of world-commerce, the oncoming of boats and barges from
+the still distance into sound and color, entered into his mood and blent
+themselves indistinguishably with his thinking, as a fine symphony to
+which we can hardly be said to listen, makes a medium that bears up our
+spiritual wings. Thus it happened that the figure representative of
+Mordecai's longing was mentally seen darkened by the excess of light in
+the aerial background. But in the inevitable progress of his imagination
+toward fuller detail, he ceased to see the figure with its back toward
+him. It began to advance, and a face became discernible; the words youth,
+beauty, refinement, Jewish birth, noble gravity, turned into hardly
+individual but typical form and color: gathered from his memory of faces
+seen among the Jews of Holland and Bohemia, and from the paintings which
+revived that memory. Reverently let it be said of this mature spiritual
+need that it was akin to the boy's and girl's picturing of the future
+beloved; but the stirrings of such young desire are feeble compared with
+the passionate current of an ideal life straining to embody itself, made
+intense by resistance to imminent dissolution. The visionary form became a
+companion and auditor; keeping a place not only in the waking imagination,
+but in those dreams of lighter slumber of which it is truest to say, "I
+sleep, but my heart waketh"--when the disturbing trivial story of
+yesterday is charged with the impassioned purpose of years.
+
+Of late the urgency of irremediable time, measured by the gradual choking
+of life, had turned Mordecai's trust into an agitated watch for the
+fulfillment that must be at hand. Was the bell on the verge of tolling,
+the sentence about to be executed? The deliverer's footstep must be near--
+the deliverer who was to rescue Mordecai's spiritual travail from
+oblivion, and give it an abiding-place in the best heritage of his people.
+An insane exaggeration of his own value, even if his ideas had been as
+true and precious as those of Columbus or Newton, many would have counted
+this yearning, taking it as the sublimer part for a man to say, "If not I,
+then another," and to hold cheap the meaning of his own life. But the
+fuller nature desires to be an agent, to create, and not merely to look
+on: strong love hungers to bless, and not merely to behold blessing. And
+while there is warmth enough in the sun to feed an energetic life, there
+will still be men to feel, "I am lord of this moment's change, and will
+charge it with my soul."
+
+But with that mingling of inconsequence which belongs to us all, and not
+unhappily, since it saves us from many effects of mistake, Mordecai's
+confidence in the friend to come did not suffice to make him passive, and
+he tried expedients, pathetically humble, such as happened to be within
+his reach, for communicating something of himself. It was now two years
+since he had taken up his abode under Ezra Cohen's roof, where he was
+regarded with much good-will as a compound of workman, dominie, vessel of
+charity, inspired idiot, man of piety, and (if he were inquired into)
+dangerous heretic. During that time little Jacob had advanced into
+knickerbockers, and into that quickness of apprehension which has been
+already made manifest in relation to hardware and exchange. He had also
+advanced in attachment to Mordecai, regarding him as an inferior, but
+liking him none the worse, and taking his helpful cleverness as he might
+have taken the services of an enslaved Djinn. As for Mordecai, he had
+given Jacob his first lessons, and his habitual tenderness easily turned
+into the teacher's fatherhood. Though he was fully conscious of the
+spiritual distance between the parents and himself, and would never have
+attempted any communication to them from his peculiar world, the boy moved
+him with that idealizing affection which merges the qualities of the
+individual child in the glory of childhood and the possibilities of a long
+future. And this feeling had drawn him on, at first without premeditation,
+and afterward with conscious purpose, to a sort of outpouring in the ear
+of the boy which might have seemed wild enough to any excellent man of
+business who overheard it. But none overheard when Jacob went up to
+Mordecai's room one day, for example, in which there was little work to be
+done, or at an hour when the work was ended, and after a brief lesson in
+English reading or in numeration, was induced to remain standing at his
+teacher's knees, or chose to jump astride them, often to the patient
+fatigue of the wasted limbs. The inducement was perhaps the mending of a
+toy, or some little mechanical device in which Mordecai's well-practiced
+finger-tips had an exceptional skill; and with the boy thus tethered, he
+would begin to repeat a Hebrew poem of his own, into which years before he
+had poured his first youthful ardors for that conception of a blended past
+and future which was the mistress of his soul, telling Jacob to say the
+words after him.
+
+"The boy will get them engraved within him," thought Mordecai; "it is a
+way of printing."
+
+None readier than Jacob at this fascinating game of imitating
+unintelligible words; and if no opposing diversion occurred he would
+sometimes carry on his share in it as long as the teacher's breath would
+last out. For Mordecai threw into each repetition the fervor befitting a
+sacred occasion. In such instances, Jacob would show no other distraction
+than reaching out and surveying the contents of his pockets; or drawing
+down the skin of his cheeks to make his eyes look awful, and rolling his
+head to complete the effect; or alternately handling his own nose and
+Mordecai's as if to test the relation of their masses. Under all this the
+fervid reciter would not pause, satisfied if the young organs of speech
+would submit themselves. But most commonly a sudden impulse sent Jacob
+leaping away into some antic or active amusement, when, instead of
+following the recitation he would return upon the foregoing words most
+ready to his tongue, and mouth or gabble, with a see-saw suited to the
+action of his limbs, a verse on which Mordecai had spent some of his too
+scanty heart's blood. Yet he waited with such patience as a prophet needs,
+and began his strange printing again undiscouraged on the morrow, saying
+inwardly--
+
+"My words may rule him some day. Their meaning may flash out on him. It is
+so with a nation--after many days."
+
+Meanwhile Jacob's sense of power was increased and his time enlivened by a
+store of magical articulation with which he made the baby crow, or drove
+the large cat into a dark corner, or promised himself to frighten any
+incidental Christian of his own years. One week he had unfortunately seen
+a street mountebank, and this carried off his muscular imitativeness in
+sad divergence from New Hebrew poetry, after the model of Jehuda ha-Levi.
+Mordecai had arrived at a fresh passage in his poem; for as soon as Jacob
+had got well used to one portion, he was led on to another, and a fresh
+combination of sounds generally answered better in keeping him fast for a
+few minutes. The consumptive voice, generally a strong high baritone, with
+its variously mingling hoarseness, like a haze amidst illuminations, and
+its occasional incipient gasp had more than the usual excitement, while it
+gave forth Hebrew verses with a meaning something like this:--
+
+ "Away from me the garment of forgetfulness.
+ Withering the heart;
+ The oil and wine from presses of the Goyim,
+ Poisoned with scorn.
+ Solitude is on the sides of Mount Nebo,
+ In its heart a tomb:
+ There the buried ark and golden cherubim
+ Make hidden light:
+ There the solemn gaze unchanged,
+ The wings are spread unbroken:
+ Shut beneath in silent awful speech
+ The Law lies graven.
+ Solitude and darkness are my covering,
+ And my heart a tomb;
+ Smite and shatter it, O Gabriel!
+ Shatter it as the clay of the founder
+ Around the golden image."
+
+In the absorbing enthusiasm with which Mordecai had intoned rather than
+spoken this last invocation, he was unconscious that Jacob had ceased to
+follow him and had started away from his knees; but pausing he saw, as by
+a sudden flash, that the lad had thrown himself on his hands with his feet
+in the air, mountebank fashion, and was picking up with his lips a bright
+farthing which was a favorite among his pocket treasures. This might have
+been reckoned among the tricks Mordecai was used to, but at this moment it
+jarred him horribly, as if it had been a Satanic grin upon his prayer.
+
+"Child! child!" he called out with a strange cry that startled Jacob to
+his feet, and then he sank backward with a shudder, closing his eyes.
+
+"What?" said Jacob, quickly. Then, not getting an immediate answer, he
+pressed Mordecai's knees with a shaking movement, in order to rouse him.
+Mordecai opened his eyes with a fierce expression in them, leaned forward,
+grasped the little shoulders, and said in a quick, hoarse whisper--
+
+"A curse is on your generation, child. They will open the mountain and
+drag forth the golden wings and coin them into money, and the solemn faces
+they will break up into ear-rings for wanton women! And they shall get
+themselves a new name, but the angel of ignominy, with the fiery brand,
+shall know them, and their heart shall be the tomb of dead desires that
+turn their life to rottenness."
+
+The aspect and action of Mordecai were so new and mysterious to Jacob--
+they carried such a burden of obscure threat--it was as if the patient,
+indulgent companion had turned into something unknown and terrific: the
+sunken dark eyes and hoarse accents close to him, the thin grappling
+fingers, shook Jacob's little frame into awe, and while Mordecai was
+speaking he stood trembling with a sense that the house was tumbling in
+and they were not going to have dinner any more. But when the terrible
+speech had ended and the pinch was relaxed, the shock resolved itself into
+tears; Jacob lifted up his small patriarchal countenance and wept aloud.
+This sign of childish grief at once recalled Mordecai to his usual gentle
+self: he was not able to speak again at present, but with a maternal
+action he drew the curly head toward him and pressed it tenderly against
+his breast. On this Jacob, feeling the danger well-nigh over, howled at
+ease, beginning to imitate his own performance and improve upon it--a sort
+of transition from impulse into art often observable. Indeed, the next day
+he undertook to terrify Adelaide Rebekah in like manner, and succeeded
+very well.
+
+But Mordecai suffered a check which lasted long, from the consciousness of
+a misapplied agitation; sane as well as excitable, he judged severely his
+moments of aberration into futile eagerness, and felt discredited with
+himself. All the more his mind was strained toward the discernment of that
+friend to come, with whom he would have a calm certainty of fellowship and
+understanding.
+
+It was just then that, in his usual midday guardianship of the old book-
+shop, he was struck by the appearance of Deronda, and it is perhaps
+comprehensible now why Mordecai's glance took on a sudden eager interest
+as he looked at the new-comer: he saw a face and frame which seemed to him
+to realize the long-conceived type. But the disclaimer of Jewish birth was
+for the moment a backward thrust of double severity, the particular
+disappointment tending to shake his confidence in the more indefinite
+expectation. Nevertheless, when he found Deronda seated at the Cohens'
+table, the disclaimer was for the moment nullified: the first impression
+returned with added force, seeming to be guaranteed by this second meeting
+under circumstance more peculiar than the former; and in asking Deronda if
+he knew Hebrew, Mordecai was so possessed by the new inrush of belief,
+that he had forgotten the absence of any other condition to the
+fulfillment of his hopes. But the answering "No" struck them all down
+again, and the frustration was more painful than before. After turning his
+back on the visitor that Sabbath evening, Mordecai went through days of a
+deep discouragement, like that of men on a doomed ship, who having
+strained their eyes after a sail, and beheld it with rejoicing, behold it
+never advance, and say, "Our sick eyes make it." But the long-contemplated
+figure had come as an emotional sequence of Mordecai's firmest theoretic
+convictions; it had been wrought from the imagery of his most passionate
+life; and it inevitably reappeared--reappeared in a more specific self-
+asserting form than ever. Deronda had that sort of resemblance to the
+preconceived type which a finely individual bust or portrait has to the
+more generalized copy left in our minds after a long interval: we renew
+our memory with delight, but we hardly know with how much correction. And
+now, his face met Mordecai's inward gaze as it had always belonged to the
+awaited friend, raying out, moreover, some of that influence which belongs
+to breathing flesh; till by-and-by it seemed that discouragement had
+turned into a new obstinacy of resistance, and the ever-recurrent vision
+had the force of an outward call to disregard counter-evidence, and keep
+expectation awake. It was Deronda now who was seen in the often painful
+night-watches, when we are all liable to be held with the clutch of a
+single thought--whose figure, never with its back turned, was seen in
+moments of soothed reverie or soothed dozing, painted on that golden sky
+which was the doubly blessed symbol of advancing day and of approaching
+rest.
+
+Mordecai knew that the nameless stranger was to come and redeem his ring;
+and, in spite of contrary chances, the wish to see him again was growing
+into a belief that he should see him. In the January weeks, he felt an
+increasing agitation of that subdued hidden quality which hinders nervous
+people from any steady occupation on the eve of an anticipated change. He
+could not go on with his printing of Hebrew on little Jacob's mind; or
+with his attendance at a weekly club, which was another effort of the same
+forlorn hope: something else was coming. The one thing he longed for was
+to get as far as the river, which he could do but seldom and with
+difficulty. He yearned with a poet's yearning for the wide sky, the far-
+reaching vista of bridges, the tender and fluctuating lights on the water
+which seems to breathe with a life that can shiver and mourn, be comforted
+and rejoice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+ "Vor den Wissenden sich stellen
+ Sicher ist's in alien Faellen!
+ Wenn du lange dich gequaelet
+ Weiss er gleich wo dir es fehlet;
+ Auch auf Beifall darfst du hoffen,
+ Denn er weiss wo du's getroffen,"
+ --GOETHE: _West-oestlicker Divan_.
+
+
+Momentous things happened to Deronda the very evening of that visit to the
+small house at Chelsea, when there was the discussion about Mirah's public
+name. But for the family group there, what appeared to be the chief
+sequence connected with it occurred two days afterward. About four o'clock
+wheels paused before the door, and there came one of those knocks with an
+accompanying ring which serve to magnify the sense of social existence in
+a region where the most enlivening signals are usually those of the
+muffin-man. All the girls were at home, and the two rooms were thrown
+together to make space for Kate's drawing, as well as a great length of
+embroidery which had taken the place of the satin cushions--a sort of
+_piece de resistance_ in the courses of needlework, taken up by any clever
+fingers that happened to be at liberty. It stretched across the front room
+picturesquely enough, Mrs. Meyrick bending over it on one corner, Mab in
+the middle, and Amy at the other end. Mirah, whose performances in point
+of sewing were on the make-shift level of the tailor-bird's, her education
+in that branch having been much neglected, was acting as reader to the
+party, seated on a camp-stool; in which position she also served Kate as
+model for a title-page vignette, symbolizing a fair public absorbed in the
+successive volumes of the family tea-table. She was giving forth with
+charming distinctness the delightful Essay of Elia, "The Praise of
+Chimney-Sweeps," and all we're smiling over the "innocent blackness," when
+the imposing knock and ring called their thoughts to loftier spheres, and
+they looked up in wonderment.
+
+"Dear me!" said Mrs. Meyrick; "can it be Lady Mallinger? Is there a grand
+carriage, Amy?"
+
+"No--only a hansom cab. It must be a gentleman."
+
+"The Prime Minister, I should think," said Kate dryly. "Hans says the
+greatest man in London may get into a hansom cab."
+
+"Oh, oh, oh!" cried Mab. "Suppose it should be Lord Russell!"
+
+The five bright faces were all looking amused when the old maid-servant
+bringing in a card distractedly left the parlor-door open, and there was
+seen bowing toward Mrs. Meyrick a figure quite unlike that of the
+respected Premier--tall and physically impressive even in his kid and
+kerseymere, with massive face, flamboyant hair, and gold spectacles: in
+fact, as Mrs. Meyrick saw from the card, _Julius Klesmer_.
+
+Even embarrassment could hardly have made the "little mother" awkward, but
+quick in her perceptions she was at once aware of the situation, and felt
+well satisfied that the great personage had come to Mirah instead of
+requiring her to come to him; taking it as a sign of active interest. But
+when he entered, the rooms shrank into closets, the cottage piano, Mab
+thought, seemed a ridiculous toy, and the entire family existence as petty
+and private as an establishment of mice in the Tuileries. Klesmer's
+personality, especially his way of glancing round him, immediately
+suggested vast areas and a multitudinous audience, and probably they made
+the usual scenery of his consciousness, for we all of us carry on our
+thinking in some habitual locus where there is a presence of other souls,
+and those who take in a larger sweep than their neighbors are apt to seem
+mightily vain and affected. Klesmer was vain, but not more so than many
+contemporaries of heavy aspect, whose vanity leaps out and startles one
+like a spear out of a walking-stick; as to his carriage and gestures,
+these were as natural to him as the length of his fingers; and the rankest
+affectation he could have shown would have been to look diffident and
+demure. While his grandiose air was making Mab feel herself a ridiculous
+toy to match the cottage piano, he was taking in the details around him
+with a keen and thoroughly kind sensibility. He remembered a home no
+longer than this on the outskirts of Bohemia; and in the figurative
+Bohemia too he had had large acquaintance with the variety and romance
+which belong to small incomes. He addressed Mrs. Meyrick with the utmost
+deference.
+
+"I hope I have not taken too great a freedom. Being in the neighborhood, I
+ventured to save time by calling. Our friend, Mr. Deronda, mentioned to me
+an understanding that I was to have the honor of becoming acquainted with
+a young lady here--Miss Lapidoth."
+
+Klesmer had really discerned Mirah in the first moment of entering, but,
+with subtle politeness, he looked round bowingly at the three sisters as
+if he were uncertain which was the young lady in question.
+
+"Those are my daughters: this is Miss Lapidoth," said Mrs. Meyrick, waving
+her hand toward Mirah.
+
+"Ah," said Klesmer, in a tone of gratified expectation, turning a radiant
+smile and deep bow to Mirah, who, instead of being in the least taken by
+surprise, had a calm pleasure in her face. She liked the look of Klesmer,
+feeling sure that he would scold her, like a great musician and a kind
+man.
+
+"You will not object to beginning our acquaintance by singing to me," he
+added, aware that they would all be relieved by getting rid of
+preliminaries.
+
+"I shall be very glad. It is good of you to be willing to listen to me,"
+said Mirah, moving to the piano. "Shall I accompany myself?"
+
+"By all means," said Klesmer, seating himself, at Mrs. Meyrick's
+invitation, where he could have a good view of the singer. The acute
+little mother would not have acknowledged the weakness, but she really
+said to herself, "He will like her singing better if he sees her."
+
+All the feminine hearts except Mirah's were beating fast with anxiety,
+thinking Klesmer terrific as he sat with his listening frown on, and only
+daring to look at him furtively. If he did say anything severe it would be
+so hard for them all. They could only comfort themselves with thinking
+that Prince Camaralzaman, who had heard the finest things, preferred
+Mirah's singing to any other:--also she appeared to be doing her very
+best, as if she were more instead of less at ease than usual.
+
+The song she had chosen was a fine setting of some words selected from
+Leopardi's grand Ode to Italy:--
+
+ "_O patria mia, vedo le mura c gli archi
+ E le colonne e i simula-cri e l'erme
+ Torridegli avi nostri_"--
+
+This was recitative: then followed--
+
+ "_Ma la gloria--non vedo_"--
+
+a mournful melody, a rhythmic plaint. After this came a climax of devout
+triumph--passing from the subdued adoration of a happy Andante in the
+words--
+
+ "_Beatissimi voi.
+ Che offriste il petto alle nemiche lance
+ Per amor di costei che al sol vi diede_"--
+
+to the joyous outburst of an exultant Allegro in--
+
+ "_Oh viva, oh viva:
+ Beatissimi voi
+ Mentre nel monde si favelli o scriva._"
+
+When she had ended, Klesmer said after a moment--
+
+"That is Joseph Leo's music."
+
+"Yes, he was my last master--at Vienna: so fierce and so good," said
+Mirah, with a melancholy smile. "He prophesied that my voice would not do
+for the stage. And he was right."
+
+"_Con_tinue, if you please," said Klesmer, putting out his lips and
+shaking his long fingers, while he went on with a smothered articulation
+quite unintelligible to the audience.
+
+The three girls detested him unanimously for not saying one word of
+praise. Mrs. Meyrick was a little alarmed.
+
+Mirah, simply bent on doing what Klesmer desired, and imagining that he
+would now like to hear her sing some German, went through Prince
+Radzivill's music to Gretchen's songs in the "Faust," one after the other
+without any interrogatory pause. When she had finished he rose and walked
+to the extremity of the small space at command, then walked back to the
+piano, where Mirah had risen from her seat and stood looking toward him
+with her little hands crossed before her, meekly awaiting judgment; then
+with a sudden unknitting of his brow and with beaming eyes, he stretched
+out his hand and said abruptly, "Let us shake hands: you are a musician."
+
+Mab felt herself beginning to cry, and all the three girls held Klesmer
+adorable. Mrs. Meyrick took a long breath.
+
+But straightway the frown came again, the long hand, back uppermost, was
+stretched out in quite a different sense to touch with finger-tip the back
+of Mirah's, and with protruded lip he said--
+
+"Not for great tasks. No high roofs. We are no skylarks. We must be
+modest." Klesmer paused here. And Mab ceased to think him adorable: "as if
+Mirah had shown the least sign of conceit!"
+
+Mirah was silent, knowing that there was a specific opinion to be waited
+for, and Klesmer presently went on--"I would not advise--I would not
+further your singing in any larger space than a private drawing-room. But
+you will do there. And here in London that is one of the best careers
+open. Lessons will follow. Will you come and sing at a private concert at
+my house on Wednesday?"
+
+"Oh, I shall be grateful," said Mirah, putting her hands together
+devoutly. "I would rather get my bread in that way than by anything more
+public. I will try to improve. What should I work at most?"
+
+Klesmer made a preliminary answer in noises which sounded like words
+bitten in two and swallowed before they were half out, shaking his fingers
+the while, before he said, quite distinctly, "I shall introduce you to
+Astorga: he is the foster-father of good singing and will give you
+advice." Then addressing Mrs. Meyrick, he added, "Mrs. Klesmer will call
+before Wednesday, with your permission."
+
+"We shall feel that to be a great kindness," said Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+"You will sing to her," said Klesmer, turning again to Mirah. "She is a
+thorough musician, and has a soul with more ears to it than you will often
+get in a musician. Your singing will satisfy her:--
+
+ 'Vor den Wissenden sich stellen;'
+
+you know the rest?"
+
+ "'Sicher ist's in alien Faellen.'"
+
+said Mirah, promptly. And Klesmer saying "Schoen!" put out his hand again
+as a good-bye.
+
+He had certainly chosen the most delicate way of praising Mirah, and the
+Meyrick girls had now given him all their esteem. But imagine Mab's
+feeling when suddenly fixing his eyes on her, he said decisively, "That
+young lady is musical, I see!" She was a mere blush and sense of
+scorching.
+
+"Yes," said Mirah, on her behalf. "And she has a touch."
+
+"Oh, please, Mirah--a scramble, not a touch," said Mab, in anguish, with a
+horrible fear of what the next thing might be: this dreadful divining
+personage--evidently Satan in gray trousers--might order her to sit down
+to the piano, and her heart was like molten wax in the midst of her. But
+this was cheap payment for her amazed joy when Klesmer said benignantly,
+turning to Mrs. Meyrick, "Will she like to accompany Miss Lapidoth and
+hear the music on Wednesday?"
+
+"There could hardly be a greater pleasure for her," said Mrs. Meyrick.
+"She will be most glad and grateful."
+
+Thereupon Klesmer bowed round to the three sisters more grandly than they
+had ever been bowed to before. Altogether it was an amusing picture--the
+little room with so much of its diagonal taken up in Klesmer's magnificent
+bend to the small feminine figures like images a little less than life-
+size, the grave Holbein faces on the walls, as many as were not otherwise
+occupied, looking hard at this stranger who by his face seemed a dignified
+contemporary of their own, but whose garments seemed a deplorable mockery
+of the human form.
+
+Mrs. Meyrick could not help going out of the room with Klesmer and closing
+the door behind her. He understood her, and said with a frowning nod--
+
+"She will do: if she doesn't attempt too much and her voice holds out, she
+can make an income. I know that is the great point: Deronda told me. You
+are taking care of her. She looks like a good girl."
+
+"She is an angel," said the warm-hearted woman.
+
+"No," said Klesmer, with a playful nod; "she is a pretty Jewess: the
+angels must not get the credit of her. But I think she has found a
+guardian angel," he ended, bowing himself out in this amiable way.
+
+The four young creatures had looked at each other mutely till the door
+banged and Mrs. Meyrick re-entered. Then there was an explosion. Mab
+clapped her hands and danced everywhere inconveniently; Mrs. Meyrick
+kissed Mirah and blessed her; Amy said emphatically, "We can never get her
+a new dress before Wednesday!" and Kate exclaimed, "Thank heaven my table
+is not knocked over!"
+
+Mirah had reseated herself on the music-stool without speaking, and the
+tears were rolling down her cheeks as she looked at her friends.
+
+"Now, now, Mab!" said Mrs. Meyrick; "come and sit down reasonably and let
+us talk?"
+
+"Yes, let us talk," said Mab, cordially, coming back to her low seat and
+caressing her knees. "I am beginning to feel large again. Hans said he was
+coming this afternoon. I wish he had been here--only there would have been
+no room for him. Mirah, what are you looking sad for?"
+
+"I am too happy," said Mirah. "I feel so full of gratitude to you all; and
+he was so very kind."
+
+"Yes, at last," said Mab, sharply. "But he might have said something
+encouraging sooner. I thought him dreadfully ugly when he sat frowning,
+and only said, '_Con_tinue.' I hated him all the long way from the top of
+his hair to the toe of his polished boot."
+
+"Nonsense, Mab; he has a splendid profile," said Kate.
+
+"_Now_, but not _then_. I cannot bear people to keep their minds bottled
+up for the sake of letting them off with a pop. They seem to grudge making
+you happy unless they can make you miserable beforehand. However, I
+forgive him everything," said Mab, with a magnanimous air, "but he has
+invited me. I wonder why he fixed on me as the musical one? Was it because
+I have a bulging forehead, ma, and peep from under it like a newt from
+under a stone?"
+
+"It was your way of listening to the singing, child," said Mrs. Meyrick.
+"He has magic spectacles and sees everything through them, depend upon it.
+But what was that German quotation you were so ready with, Mirah--you
+learned puss?"
+
+"Oh, that was not learning," said Mirah, her tearful face breaking into an
+amused smile. "I said it so many times for a lesson. It means that it is
+safer to do anything--singing or anything else--before those who know and
+understand all about it."
+
+"That was why you were not one bit frightened, I suppose," said Amy. "But
+now, what we have to talk about is a dress for you on Wednesday."
+
+"I don't want anything better than this black merino," said Mirah, rising
+to show the effect. "Some white gloves and some new _bottines_." She put
+out her little foot, clad in the famous felt slipper.
+
+"There comes Hans," said Mrs. Meyrick. "Stand still, and let us hear what
+he says about the dress. Artists are the best people to consult about such
+things."
+
+"You don't consult me, ma," said Kate, lifting up her eyebrow with a
+playful complainingness. "I notice mothers are like the people I deal
+with--the girls' doings are always priced low."
+
+"My dear child, the boys are such a trouble--we could never put up with
+them, if we didn't make believe they were worth more," said Mrs. Meyrick,
+just as her boy entered. "Hans, we want your opinion about Mirah's dress.
+A great event has happened. Klesmer has been here, and she is going to
+sing at his house on Wednesday among grand people. She thinks this dress
+will do."
+
+"Let me see," said Hans. Mirah in her childlike way turned toward him to
+be looked at; and he, going to a little further distance, knelt with one
+knee on a hassock to survey her.
+
+"This would be thought a very good stage-dress for me," she said,
+pleadingly, "in a part where I was to come on as a poor Jewess and sing to
+fashionable Christians."
+
+"It would be effective," said Hans, with a considering air; "it would
+stand out well among the fashionable _chiffons_."
+
+"But you ought not to claim all the poverty on your side, Mirah," said
+Amy. "There are plenty of poor Christians and dreadfully rich Jews and
+fashionable Jewesses."
+
+"I didn't mean any harm," said Mirah. "Only I have been used to thinking
+about my dress for parts in plays. And I almost always had a part with a
+plain dress."
+
+"That makes me think it questionable," said Hans, who had suddenly become
+as fastidious and conventional on this occasion as he had thought Deronda
+was, apropos of the Berenice-pictures. "It looks a little too theatrical.
+We must not make you a _role_ of the poor Jewess--or of being a Jewess at
+all." Hans had a secret desire to neutralize the Jewess in private life,
+which he was in danger of not keeping secret.
+
+"But it is what I am really. I am not pretending anything. I shall never
+be anything else," said Mirah. "I always feel myself a Jewess."
+
+"But we can't feel that about you," said Hans, with a devout look. "What
+does it signify whether a perfect woman is a Jewess or not?"
+
+"That is your kind way of praising me; I never was praised so before,"
+said Mirah, with a smile, which was rather maddening to Hans and made him
+feel still more of a cosmopolitan.
+
+"People don't think of me as a British Christian," he said, his face
+creasing merrily. "They think of me as an imperfectly handsome young man
+and an unpromising painter."
+
+"But you are wandering from the dress," said Amy. "If that will not do,
+how are we to get another before Wednesday? and to-morrow Sunday?"
+
+"Indeed this will do," said Mirah, entreatingly. "It is all real, you
+know," here she looked at Hans--"even if it seemed theatrical. Poor
+Berenice sitting on the ruins--any one might say that was theatrical, but
+I know that this is just what she would do."
+
+"I am a scoundrel," said Hans, overcome by this misplaced trust. "That is
+my invention. Nobody knows that she did that. Shall you forgive me for not
+saying so before?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Mirah, after a momentary pause of surprise. "You knew it
+was what she would be sure to do--a Jewess who had not been faithful--who
+had done what she did and was penitent. She could have no joy but to
+afflict herself; and where else would she go? I think it is very beautiful
+that you should enter so into what a Jewess would feel."
+
+"The Jewesses of that time sat on ruins," said Hans, starting up with a
+sense of being checkmated. "That makes them convenient for pictures."
+
+"But the dress--the dress," said Amy; "is it settled?"
+
+"Yes; is it not?" said Mirah, looking doubtfully at Mrs. Meyrick, who in
+her turn looked up at her son, and said, "What do you think, Hans?"
+
+"That dress will not do," said Hans, decisively. "She is not going to sit
+on ruins. You must jump into a cab with her, little mother, and go to
+Regent Street. It's plenty of time to get anything you like--a black silk
+dress such as ladies wear. She must not be taken for an object of charity.
+She has talents to make people indebted to her."
+
+"I think it is what Mr. Deronda would like--for her to have a handsome
+dress," said Mrs. Meyrick, deliberating.
+
+"Of course it is," said Hans, with some sharpness. "You may take my word
+for what a gentleman would feel."
+
+"I wish to do what Mr. Deronda would like me to do," said Mirah, gravely,
+seeing that Mrs. Meyrick looked toward her; and Hans, turning on his heel,
+went to Kate's table and took up one of her drawings as if his interest
+needed a new direction.
+
+"Shouldn't you like to make a study of Klesmer's head, Hans?" said Kate.
+"I suppose you have often seen him?"
+
+"Seen him!" exclaimed Hans, immediately throwing back his head and mane,
+seating himself at the piano and looking round him as if he were surveying
+an amphitheatre, while he held his fingers down perpendicularly toward the
+keys. But then in another instant he wheeled round on the stool, looked at
+Mirah and said, half timidly--"Perhaps you don't like this mimicry; you
+must always stop my nonsense when you don't like it."
+
+Mirah had been smiling at the swiftly-made image, and she smiled still,
+but with a touch of something else than amusement, as she said--"Thank
+you. But you have never done anything I did not like. I hardly think he
+could, belonging to you," she added, looking at Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+In this way Hans got food for his hope. How could the rose help it when
+several bees in succession took its sweet odor as a sign of personal
+attachment?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+ "Within the soul a faculty abides,
+ That with interpositions, which would hide
+ And darken, so can deal, that they become
+ Contingencies of pomp; and serve to exalt
+ Her native brightness, as the ample moon.
+ In the deep stillness of a summer even.
+ Rising behind a thick and lofty grove.
+ Into a substance glorious as her own,
+ Yea, with her own incorporated, by power
+ Capacious and serene."
+ --WORDSWORTH: _Excursion_, B. IV.
+
+
+Deronda came out of the narrow house at Chelsea in a frame of mind that
+made him long for some good bodily exercise to carry off what he was
+himself inclined to call the fumes of his temper. He was going toward the
+city, and the sight of the Chelsea Stairs with the waiting boats at once
+determined him to avoid the irritating inaction of being driven in a cab,
+by calling a wherry and taking an oar.
+
+His errand was to go to Ram's book-shop, where he had yesterday arrived
+too late for Mordecai's midday watch, and had been told that he invariably
+came there again between five and six. Some further acquaintance with
+this, remarkable inmate of the Cohens was particularly desired by Deronda
+as a preliminary to redeeming his ring: he wished that their conversation
+should not again end speedily with that drop of Mordecai's interest which
+was like the removal of a drawbridge, and threatened to shut out any easy
+communication in future. As he got warmed with the use of the oar, fixing
+his mind on the errand before him and the ends he wanted to achieve on
+Mirah's account, he experienced, as was wont with him, a quick change of
+mental light, shifting his point of view to that of the person whom he had
+been thinking of hitherto chiefly as serviceable to his own purposes, and
+was inclined to taunt himself with being not much better than an enlisting
+sergeant, who never troubles himself with the drama that brings him the
+needful recruits.
+
+"I suppose if I got from this man the information I am most anxious
+about," thought Deronda, "I should be contented enough if he felt no
+disposition to tell me more of himself, or why he seemed to have some
+expectation from me which was disappointed. The sort of curiosity he stirs
+would die out; and yet it might be that he had neared and parted as one
+can imagine two ships doing, each freighted with an exile who would have
+recognized the other if the two could have looked out face to face. Not
+that there is any likelihood of a peculiar tie between me and this poor
+fellow, whose voyage, I fancy, must soon be over. But I wonder whether
+there is much of that momentous mutual missing between people who
+interchange blank looks, or even long for one another's absence in a
+crowded place. However, one makes one's self chances of missing by going
+on the recruiting sergeant's plan."
+
+When the wherry was approaching Blackfriars Bridge, where Deronda meant to
+land, it was half-past four, and the gray day was dying gloriously, its
+western clouds all broken into narrowing purple strata before a wide-
+spreading saffron clearness, which in the sky had a monumental calm, but
+on the river, with its changing objects, was reflected as a luminous
+movement, the alternate flash of ripples or currents, the sudden glow of
+the brown sail, the passage of laden barges from blackness into color,
+making an active response to that brooding glory.
+
+Feeling well heated by this time, Deronda gave up the oar and drew over
+him again his Inverness cape. As he lifted up his head while fastening the
+topmost button his eyes caught a well-remembered face looking toward him
+over the parapet of the bridge--brought out by the western light into
+startling distinctness and brilliancy--an illuminated type of bodily
+emaciation and spiritual eagerness. It was the face of Mordecai, who also,
+in his watch toward the west, had caught sight of the advancing boat, and
+had kept it fast within his gaze, at first simply because it was
+advancing, then with a recovery of impressions that made him quiver as
+with a presentiment, till at last the nearing figure lifted up its face
+toward him--the face of his visions--and then immediately, with white
+uplifted hand, beckoned again and again.
+
+For Deronda, anxious that Mordecai should recognize and await him, had
+lost no time before signaling, and the answer came straightway. Mordecai
+lifted his cap and waved it--feeling in that moment that his inward
+prophecy was fulfilled. Obstacles, incongruities, all melted into the
+sense of completion with which his soul was flooded by this outward
+satisfaction of his longing. His exultation was not widely different from
+that of the experimenter, bending over the first stirrings of change that
+correspond to what in the fervor of concentrated prevision his thought has
+foreshadowed. The prefigured friend had come from the golden background,
+and had signaled to him: this actually was: the rest was to be.
+
+In three minutes Deronda had landed, had paid his boatman, and was joining
+Mordecai, whose instinct it was to stand perfectly still and wait for him.
+
+"I was very glad to see you standing here," said Deronda, "for I was
+intending to go on to the book-shop and look for you again. I was there
+yesterday--perhaps they mentioned it to you?"
+
+"Yes," said Mordecai; "that was the reason I came to the bridge."
+
+This answer, made with simple gravity, was startlingly mysterious to
+Deronda. Were the peculiarities of this man really associated with any
+sort of mental alienation, according to Cohen's hint?
+
+"You knew nothing of my being at Chelsea?" he said, after a moment.
+
+"No; but I expected you to come down the river. I have been waiting for
+you these five years." Mordecai's deep-sunk eyes were fixed on those of
+the friend who had at last arrived with a look of affectionate dependence,
+at once pathetic and solemn. Deronda's sensitiveness was not the less
+responsive because he could not but believe that this strangely-disclosed
+relation was founded on an illusion.
+
+"It will be a satisfaction to me if I can be of any real use to you," he
+answered, very earnestly. "Shall we get into a cab and drive to--wherever
+you wish to go? You have probably had walking enough with your short
+breath."
+
+"Let us go to the book-shop. It will soon be time for me to be there. But
+now look up the river," said Mordecai, turning again toward it and
+speaking in undertones of what may be called an excited calm--so absorbed
+by a sense of fulfillment that he was conscious of no barrier to a
+complete understanding between him and Deronda. "See the sky, how it is
+slowly fading. I have always loved this bridge: I stood on it when I was a
+little boy. It is a meeting-place for the spiritual messengers. It is
+true--what the Masters said--that each order of things has its angel: that
+means the full message of each from what is afar. Here I have listened to
+the messages of earth and sky; when I was stronger I used to stay and
+watch for the stars in the deep heavens. But this time just about sunset
+was always what I loved best. It has sunk into me and dwelt with me--
+fading, slowly fading: it was my own decline: it paused--it Waited, till
+at last it brought me my new life--my new self--who will live when this
+breath is all breathed out."
+
+Deronda did not speak. He felt himself strangely wrought upon. The first-
+prompted suspicion that Mordecai might be liable to hallucinations of
+thought--might have become a monomaniac on some subject which had given
+too severe a strain to his diseased organism--gave way to a more
+submissive expectancy. His nature was too large, too ready to conceive
+regions beyond his own experience, to rest at once in the easy
+explanation, "madness," whenever a consciousness showed some fullness and
+conviction where his own was blank. It accorded with his habitual
+disposition that he should meet rather than resist any claim on him in the
+shape of another's need; and this claim brought with it a sense of
+solemnity which seemed a radiation from Mordecai, as utterly nullifying
+his outward poverty and lifting him into authority as if he had been that
+preternatural guide seen in the universal legend, who suddenly drops his
+mean disguise and stands a manifest Power. That impression was the more
+sanctioned by a sort of resolved quietude which the persuasion of
+fulfillment had produced in Mordecai's manner. After they had stood a
+moment in silence he said, "Let us go now," and when they were riding he
+added, "We will get down at the end of the street and walk to the shop.
+You can look at the books, and Mr. Ram will be going away directly and
+leave us alone."
+
+It seemed that this enthusiast was just as cautious, just as much alive to
+judgments in other minds as if he had been that antipode of all enthusiasm
+called "a man of the world."
+
+While they were rattling along in the cab, Mirah was still present with
+Deronda in the midst of this strange experience, but he foresaw that the
+course of conversation would be determined by Mordecai, not by himself: he
+was no longer confident what questions he should be able to ask; and with
+a reaction on his own mood, he inwardly said, "I suppose I am in a state
+of complete superstition, just as if I were awaiting the destiny that
+could interpret the oracle. But some strong relation there must be between
+me and this man, since he feels it strongly. Great heaven! what relation
+has proved itself more potent in the world than faith even when mistaken--
+than expectation even when perpetually disappointed? Is my side of the
+relation to be disappointing or fulfilling?--well, if it is ever possible
+for me to fulfill I will not disappoint."
+
+In ten minutes the two men, with as intense a consciousness as if they had
+been two undeclared lovers, felt themselves alone in the small gas-lit
+book-shop and turned face to face, each baring his head from an
+instinctive feeling that they wished to see each other fully. Mordecai
+came forward to lean his back against the little counter, while Deronda
+stood against the opposite wall hardly more than four feet off. I wish I
+could perpetuate those two faces, as Titian's "Tribute Money" has
+perpetuated two types presenting another sort of contrast. Imagine--we all
+of us can--the pathetic stamp of consumption with its brilliancy of glance
+to which the sharply-defined structure of features reminding one of a
+forsaken temple, give already a far-off look as of one getting unwillingly
+out of reach; and imagine it on a Jewish face naturally accentuated for
+the expression of an eager mind--the face of a man little above thirty,
+but with that age upon it which belongs to time lengthened by suffering,
+the hair and beard, still black, throwing out the yellow pallor of the
+skin, the difficult breathing giving more decided marking to the mobile
+nostril, the wasted yellow hands conspicuous on the folded arms: then give
+to the yearning consumptive glance something of the slowly dying mother's
+look, when her one loved son visits her bedside, and the flickering power
+of gladness leaps out as she says, "My boy!"--for the sense of spiritual
+perpetuation in another resembles that maternal transference of self.
+
+Seeing such a portrait you would see Mordecai. And opposite to him was a
+face not more distinctively oriental than many a type seen among what we
+call the Latin races; rich in youthful health, and with a forcible
+masculine gravity in its repose, that gave the value of judgment to the
+reverence with which he met the gaze of this mysterious son of poverty who
+claimed him as a long-expected friend. The more exquisite quality of
+Deronda's nature--that keenly perceptive sympathetic emotiveness which ran
+along with his speculative tendency--was never more thoroughly tested. He
+felt nothing that could be called belief in the validity of Mordecai's
+impressions concerning him or in the probability of any greatly effective
+issue: what he felt was a profound sensibility to a cry from the depths of
+another and accompanying that, the summons to be receptive instead of
+superciliously prejudging. Receptiveness is a rare and massive power, like
+fortitude; and this state of mind now gave Deronda's face its utmost
+expression of calm benignant force--an expression which nourished
+Mordecai's confidence and made an open way before him. He began to speak.
+
+"You cannot know what has guided me to you and brought us together at this
+moment. You are wondering."
+
+"I am not impatient," said Deronda. "I am ready to listen to whatever you
+may wish to disclose."
+
+"You see some of the reasons why I needed you," said Mordecai, speaking
+quietly, as if he wished to reserve his strength. "You see that I am
+dying. You see that I am as one shut up behind bars by the wayside, who if
+he spoke to any would be met only by head-shaking and pity. The day is
+closing--the light is fading--soon we should not have been able to discern
+each other. But you have come in time."
+
+"I rejoice that I am come in time," said Deronda, feelingly. He would not
+say, "I hope you are not mistaken in me,"--the very word "mistaken," he
+thought, would be a cruelty at that moment.
+
+"But the hidden reasons why I need you began afar off," said Mordecai;
+"began in my early years when I was studying in another land. Then ideas,
+beloved ideas, came to me, because I was a Jew. They were a trust to
+fulfill, because I was a Jew. They were an inspiration, because I was a
+Jew, and felt the heart of my race beating within me. They were my life; I
+was not fully born till then. I counted this heart, and this breath, and
+this right hand"--Mordecai had pathetically pressed his hand upon his
+breast, and then stretched its wasted fingers out before him--"I counted
+my sleep and my waking, and the work I fed my body with, and the sights
+that fed my eyes--I counted them but as fuel to the divine flame. But I
+had done as one who wanders and engraves his thought in rocky solitudes,
+and before I could change my course came care and labor and disease, and
+blocked the way before me, and bound me with the iron that eats itself
+into the soul. Then I said, 'How shall I save the life within me from
+being stifled with this stifled breath?'"
+
+Mordecai paused to rest that poor breath which had been taxed by the
+rising excitement of his speech, And also he wished to check that
+excitement. Deronda dared not speak the very silence in the narrow space
+seemed alive with mingled awe and compassion before this struggling
+fervor. And presently Mordecai went on--
+
+"But you may misunderstand me. I speak not as an ignorant dreamer--as one
+bred up in the inland valleys, thinking ancient thoughts anew, and not
+knowing them ancient, never having stood by the great waters where the
+world's knowledge passes to and fro. English is my mother-tongue, England
+is the native land of this body, which is but as a breaking pot of earth
+around the fruit-bearing tree, whose seed might make the desert rejoice.
+But my true life was nourished in Holland at the feet of my mother's
+brother, a Rabbi skilled in special learning: and when he died I went to
+Hamburg to study, and afterwards to Goettingen, that I might take a larger
+outlook on my people, and on the Gentile world, and drank knowledge at all
+sources. I was a youth; I felt free; I saw our chief seats in Germany; I
+was not then in utter poverty. And I had possessed myself of a handicraft.
+For I said, I care not if my lot be as that of Joshua ben Chananja: after
+the last destruction he earned his bread by making needles, but in his
+youth he had been a singer on the steps of the Temple, and had a memory of
+what was before the glory departed. I said, let my body dwell in poverty,
+and my hands be as the hands of the toiler: but let my soul be as a temple
+of remembrance where the treasures of knowledge enter and the inner
+sanctuary is hope. I knew what I chose. They said, 'He feeds himself on
+visions,' and I denied not; for visions are the creators and feeders of
+the world. I see, I measure the world as it is, which the vision will
+create anew. You are not listening to one who raves aloof from the lives
+of his fellows."
+
+Mordecai paused, and Deronda, feeling that the pause was expectant, said,
+"Do me the justice to believe that I was not inclined to call your words
+raving. I listen that I may know, without prejudgment. I have had
+experience which gives me a keen interest in the story of a spiritual
+destiny embraced willingly, and embraced in youth."
+
+"A spiritual destiny embraced willingly--in youth?" Mordecai repeated in a
+corrective tone. "It was the soul fully born within me, and it came in my
+boyhood. It brought its own world--a mediaeval world, where there are men
+who made the ancient language live again in new psalms of exile. They had
+absorbed the philosophy of the Gentile into the faith of the Jew, and they
+still yearned toward a center for our race. One of their souls was born
+again within me, and awakened amid the memories of their world. It
+traveled into Spain and Provence; it debated with Aben-Ezra; it took ship
+with Jehuda ha-Levi; it heard the roar of the Crusaders and the shrieks of
+tortured Israel. And when its dumb tongue was loosed, it spoke the speech
+they had made alive with the new blood of their ardor, their sorrow, and
+their martyred trust: it sang with the cadence of their strain."
+
+Mordecai paused again, and then said in a loud, hoarse whisper--
+
+"While it is imprisoned in me, it will never learn another."
+
+"Have you written entirely in Hebrew, then?" said Deronda, remembering
+with some anxiety the former question as to his own knowledge of that
+tongue.
+
+"Yes--yes," said Mordecai, in a tone of deep sadness: "in my youth I
+wandered toward that solitude, not feeling that it was a solitude. I had
+the ranks of the great dead around me; the martyrs gathered and listened.
+But soon I found that the living were deaf to me. At first I saw my life
+spread as a long future: I said part of my Jewish heritage is an
+unbreaking patience; part is skill to seek divers methods and find a
+rooting-place where the planters despair. But there came new messengers
+from the Eternal. I had to bow under the yoke that presses on the great
+multitude born of woman: family troubles called me--I had to work, to
+care, not for myself alone. I was left solitary again; but already the
+angel of death had turned to me and beckoned, and I felt his skirts
+continually on my path. I loosed not my effort. I besought hearing and
+help. I spoke; I went to men of our people--to the rich in influence or
+knowledge, to the rich in other wealth. But I found none to listen with
+understanding. I was rebuked for error; I was offered a small sum in
+charity. No wonder. I looked poor; I carried a bundle of Hebrew manuscript
+with me; I said, our chief teachers are misleading the hope of our race.
+Scholar and merchant were both too busy to listen. Scorn stood as
+interpreter between me and them. One said, 'The book of Mormon would never
+have answered in Hebrew; and if you mean to address our learned men, it is
+not likely you can teach them anything.' He touched a truth there."
+
+The last words had a perceptible irony in their hoarsened tone.
+
+"But though you had accustomed yourself to write in Hebrew, few, surely,
+can use English better," said Deronda, wanting to hint consolation in a
+new effort for which he could smooth the way.
+
+Mordecai shook his head slowly, and answered--
+
+"Too late--too late. I can write no more. My writing would be like this
+gasping breath. But the breath may wake the fount of pity--the writing
+not. If I could write now and used English, I should be as one who beats a
+board to summon those who have been used to no signal but a bell. My soul
+has an ear to hear the faults of its own speech. New writing of mine would
+be like this body"--Mordecai spread his arms--"within it there might be
+the Ruach-ha-kodesh--the breath of divine thought--but, men would smile at
+it and say, 'A poor Jew!' and the chief smilers would be of my own
+people."
+
+Mordecai let his hands fall, and his head sink in melancholy: for the
+moment he had lost hold of his hope. Despondency, conjured up by his own
+words, had floated in and hovered above him with eclipsing wings. He had
+sunk into momentary darkness,
+
+"I feel with you--I feel strongly with you," said Deronda, in a clear deep
+voice which was itself a cordial, apart from the words of sympathy. "But
+forgive me if I speak hastily--for what you have actually written there
+need be no utter burial. The means of publication are within reach. If you
+will rely on me, I can assure you of all that is necessary to that end."
+
+"That is not enough," said Mordecai, quickly, looking up again with the
+flash of recovered memory and confidence. "That is not all my trust in
+you. You must be not only a hand to me, but a soul--believing my belief--
+being moved by my reasons--hoping my hope-seeing the vision I point to--
+beholding a glory where I behold it!"--Mordecai had taken a step nearer as
+he spoke, and now laid his hand on Deronda's arm with a tight grasp; his
+face little more than a foot off had something like a pale flame in it--an
+intensity of reliance that acted as a peremptory claim, while he went on--
+"You will be my life: it will be planted afresh; it will grow. You shall
+take the inheritance; it has been gathering for ages. The generations are
+crowding on my narrow life as a bridge: what has been and what is to be
+are meeting there; and the bridge is breaking. But I have found you. You
+have come in time, You will take the inheritance which the base son
+refuses because of the tombs which the plow and harrow may not pass over
+or the gold-seeker disturb: you will take the sacred inheritance of the
+Jew." Deronda had become as pallid as Mordecai. Quick as an alarm of flood
+or fire, there spread within him not only a compassionate dread of
+discouraging this fellowman who urged a prayer as one in the last agony,
+but also tie opposing dread of fatally feeding an illusion, and being
+hurried on to a self-committal which might turn into a falsity. The
+peculiar appeal to his tenderness overcame the repulsion that most of us
+experience under a grasp and speech which assumed to dominate. The
+difficulty to him was to inflict the accents of hesitation and doubt on
+this ardent suffering creature, who was crowding too much of his brief
+being into a moment of perhaps extravagant trust. With exquisite instinct,
+Deronda, before he opened his lips, placed his palm gently on Mordecai's
+straining hand--an act just then equal to many speeches. And after that he
+said, without haste, as if conscious that he might be wrong--
+
+"Do you forget what I told you when we first saw each other? Do you
+remember that I said I was not of your race?"
+
+"It can't be true," Mordecai whispered immediately, with no sign of shock.
+The sympathetic hand still upon him had fortified the feeling which was
+stronger than those words of denial. There was a perceptible pause,
+Deronda feeling it impossible to answer, conscious indeed that the
+assertion "It can't be true"--had the pressure of argument for him.
+Mordecai, too entirely possessed by the supreme importance of the relation
+between himself and Deronda to have any other care in his speech, followed
+up that assertion by a second, which came to his lips as a mere sequence
+of his long-cherished conviction--"You are not sure of your own origin."
+
+"How do you know that?" said Daniel, with an habitual shrinking which made
+him remove his hands from Mordecai's, who also relaxed his hold, and fell
+back into his former leaning position.
+
+"I know it--I know it; what is my life else?" said Mordecai, with a low
+cry of impatience. "Tell me everything: tell me why you deny?"
+
+He could have no conception what that demand was to the hearer--how
+probingly it touched the hidden sensibility, the vividly conscious
+reticence of years; how the uncertainty he was insisting on as part of his
+own hope had always for Daniel been a threatening possibility of painful
+revelation about his mother. But the moment had influences which were not
+only new but solemn to Deronda; any evasion here might turn out to be a
+hateful refusal of some task that belonged to him, some act of due
+fellowship; in any case it would be a cruel rebuff to a being who was
+appealing to him as a forlorn hope under the shadow of a coming doom.
+After a few moments, he said, with a great effort over himself--determined
+to tell all the truth briefly--
+
+"I have never known my mother. I have no knowledge about her. I have never
+called any man father. But I am convinced that my father is an
+Englishman."
+
+Deronda's deep tones had a tremor in them as he uttered this confession;
+and all the while there was an undercurrent of amazement in him at the
+strange circumstances under which he uttered it. It seemed as if Mordecai
+were hardly overrating his own power to determine the action of the friend
+whom he had mysteriously chosen.
+
+"It will be seen--it will be declared," said Mordecai, triumphantly. "The
+world grows, and its frame is knit together by the growing soul; dim, dim
+at first, then clearer and more clear, the consciousness discerns remote
+stirrings. As thoughts move within us darkly, and shake us before they are
+fully discerned--so events--so beings: they are knit with us in the growth
+of the world. You have risen within me like a thought not fully spelled;
+my soul is shaken before the words are all there. The rest will come--it
+will come.".
+
+"We must not lose sight of the fact that the outward event has not always
+been a fulfillment of the firmest faith," said Deronda, in a tone that was
+made hesitating by the painfully conflicting desires, not to give any
+severe blow to Mordecai, and not to give his confidence a sanction which
+might have the severest of blows in reserve.
+
+Mordecai's face, which had been illuminated to the utmost in that last
+declaration of his confidence, changed under Deronda's words, not only
+into any show of collapsed trust: the force did not disappear from the
+expression, but passed from the triumphant into the firmly resistant.
+
+"You would remind me that I may be under an illusion--that the history of
+our people's trust has been full of illusion. I face it all." Here
+Mordecai paused a moment. Then bending his head a little forward, he said,
+in his hoarse whisper, "_So if might be with my trust, if you would make
+it an illusion. But you will not._"
+
+The very sharpness with which these words penetrated Deronda made him feel
+the more that here was a crisis in which he must be firm.
+
+"What my birth was does not lie in my will," he answered. "My sense of
+claims on me cannot be independent of my knowledge there. And I cannot
+promise you that I will try to hasten a disclosure. Feelings which have
+struck root through half my life may still hinder me from doing what I
+have never been able to do. Everything must be waited for. I must know
+more of the truth about my own life, and I must know more of what it would
+become if it were made a part of yours."
+
+Mordecai had folded his arms again while Deronda was speaking, and now
+answered with equal firmness, though with difficult breathing--
+
+"You _shall_ know. What are we met for, but that you should know. Your
+doubts lie as light as dust on my belief. I know the philosophies of this
+time and of other times; if I chose I could answer a summons before their
+tribunals. I could silence the beliefs which are the mother-tongue of my
+soul and speak with the rote-learned language of a system, that gives you
+the spelling of all things, sure of its alphabet covering them all. I
+could silence them: may not a man silence his awe or his love, and take to
+finding reasons, which others demand? But if his love lies deeper than any
+reasons to be found? Man finds his pathways: at first they were foot
+tracks, as those of the beast in the wilderness: now they are swift and
+invisible: his thought dives through the ocean, and his wishes thread the
+air: has he found all the pathways yet? What reaches him, stays with him,
+rules him: he must accept it, not knowing its pathway. Say, my expectation
+of you has grown but as false hopes grow. That doubt is in your mind?
+Well, my expectation was there, and you are come. Men have died of thirst.
+But I was thirsty, and the water is on my lips? What are doubts to me? In
+the hour when you come to me and say, 'I reject your soul: I know that I
+am not a Jew: we have no lot in common'--I shall not doubt. I shall be
+certain--certain that I have been deluded. That hour will never come!"
+
+Deronda felt a new chord sounding in his speech: it was rather imperious
+than appealing--had more of conscious power than of the yearning need
+which had acted as a beseeching grasp on him before. And usually, though
+he was the reverse of pugnacious, such a change of attitude toward him
+would have weakened his inclination to admit a claim. But here there was
+something that balanced his resistance and kept it aloof. This strong man
+whose gaze was sustainedly calm and his finger-nails pink with health, who
+was exercised in all questioning, and accused of excessive mental
+independence, still felt a subduing influence over him in the tenacious
+certitude of the fragile creature before him, whose pallid yellow nostril
+was tense with effort as his breath labored under the burthen of eager
+speech. The influence seemed to strengthen the bond of sympathetic
+obligation. In Deronda at this moment the desire to escape what might turn
+into a trying embarrassment was no more likely to determine action than
+the solicitations of indolence are likely to determine it in one with whom
+industry is a daily law. He answered simply--
+
+"It is my wish to meet and satisfy your wishes wherever that is possible
+to me. It is certain to me at least that I desire not to undervalue your
+toil and your suffering. Let me know your thoughts. But where can we
+meet?"
+
+"I have thought of that," said Mordecai. "It is not hard for you to come
+into this neighborhood later in the evening? You did so once."
+
+"I can manage it very well occasionally," said Deronda. "You live under
+the same roof with the Cohens, I think?"
+
+Before Mordecai could answer, Mr. Ram re-entered to take his place behind
+the counter. He was an elderly son of Abraham, whose childhood had fallen
+on the evil times at the beginning of this century, and who remained amid
+this smart and instructed generation as a preserved specimen, soaked
+through and through with the effect of the poverty and contempt which were
+the common heritage of most English Jews seventy years ago. He had none of
+the oily cheerfulness observable in Mr. Cohen's aspect: his very features
+--broad and chubby--showed that tendency to look mongrel without due
+cause, which, in a miscellaneous London neighborhood, may perhaps be
+compared with the marvels of imitation in insects, and may have been
+nature's imperfect effort on behalf of the pure Caucasian to shield him
+from the shame and spitting to which purer features would have been exposed
+in the times of zeal. Mr. Ram dealt ably in books, in the same way that he
+would have dealt in tins of meat and other commodities--without knowledge
+or responsibility as to the proportion of rottenness or nourishment they
+might contain. But he believed in Mordecai's learning as something
+marvellous, and was not sorry that his conversation should be sought by a
+bookish gentleman, whose visits had twice ended in a purchase. He greeted
+Deronda with a crabbed good-will, and, putting on large silver spectacles,
+appeared at once to abstract himself in the daily accounts.
+
+But Deronda and Mordecai were soon in the street together, and without any
+explicit agreement as to their direction, were walking toward Ezra
+Cohen's.
+
+"We can't meet there: my room is too narrow," said Mordecai, taking up the
+thread of talk where they had dropped it. "But there is a tavern not far
+from here where I sometimes go to a club. It is the _Hand and Banner_, in
+the street at the next turning, five doors down. We can have the parlor
+there any evening."
+
+"We can try that for once," said Deronda. "But you will perhaps let me
+provide you with some lodging, which would give you more freedom and
+comfort than where you are."
+
+"No; I need nothing. My outer life is as nought. I will take nothing less
+precious from you than your soul's brotherhood. I will think of nothing
+else yet. But I am glad you are rich. You did not need money on that
+diamond ring. You had some other motive for bringing it."
+
+Deronda was a little startled by this clear-sightedness; but before he
+could reply Mordecai added--"it is all one. Had you been in need of the
+money, the great end would have been that we should meet again. But you
+are rich?" he ended, in a tone of interrogation.
+
+"Not rich, except in the sense that every one is rich who has more than he
+needs for himself."
+
+"I desired that your life should be free," said Mordecai, dreamily--"mine
+has been a bondage."
+
+It was clear that he had no interest in the fact of Deronda's appearance
+at the Cohens' beyond its relation to his own ideal purpose. Despairing of
+leading easily up to the question he wished to ask, Deronda determined to
+put it abruptly, and said--
+
+"Can you tell me why Mrs. Cohen, the mother, must not be spoken to about
+her daughter?"
+
+There was no immediate answer, and he thought that he should have to
+repeat the question. The fact was that Mordecai had heard the words, but
+had to drag his mind to a new subject away from his passionate
+preoccupation. After a few moments, he replied with a careful effort such
+as he would have used if he had been asked the road to Holborn---
+
+"I know the reason. But I will not speak even of trivial family affairs
+which I have heard in the privacy of the family. I dwell in their tent as
+in a sanctuary. Their history, so far as they injure none other, is their
+own possession."
+
+Deronda felt the blood mounting to his cheeks as a sort of rebuke he was
+little used to, and he also found himself painfully baffled where he had
+reckoned with some confidence on getting decisive knowledge. He became the
+more conscious of emotional strain from the excitements of the day; and
+although he had the money in his pocket to redeem his ring, he recoiled
+from the further task of a visit to the Cohens', which must be made not
+only under the former uncertainty, but under a new disappointment as to
+the possibility of its removal.
+
+"I will part from you now," he said, just before they could reach Cohen's
+door; and Mordecai paused, looking up at him with an anxious fatigued face
+under the gaslight.
+
+"When will you come back?" he said, with slow emphasis.
+
+"May I leave that unfixed? May I ask for you at the Cohens' any evening
+after your hour at the book-shop? There is no objection, I suppose, to
+their knowing that you and I meet in private?"
+
+"None," said Mordecai. "But the days I wait now are longer than the years
+of my strength. Life shrinks: what was but a tithe is now the half. My
+hope abides in you."
+
+"I will be faithful," said Deronda--he could not have left those words
+unuttered. "I will come the first evening I can after seven: on Saturday
+or Monday, if possible. Trust me."
+
+He put out his ungloved hand. Mordecai, clasping it eagerly, seemed to
+feel a new instreaming of confidence, and he said with some recovered
+energy--"This is come to pass, and the rest will come."
+
+That was their good-bye.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VI---REVELATIONS
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+ "This, too is probable, according to that saying of Agathon: 'It is a
+ part of probability that many improbable things will happen.'"
+ --ARISTOTLE: _Poetics_.
+
+
+Imagine the conflict in a mind like Deronda's given not only to feel
+strongly but to question actively, on the evening after the interview with
+Mordecai. To a young man of much duller susceptibilities the adventure
+might have seemed enough out of the common way to divide his thoughts; but
+it had stirred Deronda so deeply, that with the usual reaction of his
+intellect he began to examine the grounds of his emotion, and consider how
+far he must resist its guidance. The consciousness that he was half
+dominated by Mordecai's energetic certitude, and still more by his fervent
+trust, roused his alarm. It was his characteristic bias to shrink from the
+moral stupidity of valuing lightly what had come close to him, and of
+missing blindly in his own life of to-day the crisis which he recognized
+as momentous and sacred in the historic life of men. If he had read of
+this incident as having happened centuries ago in Rome, Greece, Asia
+Minor, Palestine, Cairo, to some man young as himself, dissatisfied with
+his neutral life, and wanting some closer fellowship, some more special
+duty to give him ardor for the possible consequences of his work, it would
+have appeared to him quite natural that the incident should have created a
+deep impression on that far-off man, whose clothing and action would have
+been seen in his imagination as part of an age chiefly known to us through
+its more serious effects. Why should he be ashamed of his own agitated
+feeling merely because he dressed for dinner, wore a white tie, and lived
+among people who might laugh at his owning any conscience in the matter,
+as the solemn folly of taking himself to seriously?--that bugbear of
+circles in which the lack of grave emotion passes for wit. From such
+cowardice before modish ignorance and obtuseness, Deronda shrank. But he
+also shrank from having his course determined by mere contagion, without
+consent of reason; or from allowing a reverential pity for spiritual
+struggle to hurry him along a dimly-seen path.
+
+What, after all, had really happened? He knew quite accurately the answer
+Sir Hugo would have given: "A consumptive Jew, possessed by a fanaticism
+which obstacles and hastening death intensified, had fixed on Deronda as
+the antitype of some visionary image, the offspring of wedded hope and
+despair: despair of his own life, irrepressible hope in the propagation of
+his fanatical beliefs. The instance was perhaps odd, exceptional in its
+form, but substantially it was not rare. Fanaticism was not so common as
+bankruptcy, but taken in all its aspects it was abundant enough. While
+Mordecai was waiting on the bridge for the fulfillment of his visions,
+another man was convinced that he had the mathematical key of the universe
+which would supersede Newton, and regarded all known physicists as
+conspiring to stifle his discovery and keep the universe locked; another,
+that he had the metaphysical key, with just that hair's-breadth of
+difference from the old wards which would make it fit exactly. Scattered
+here and there in every direction you might find a terrible person, with
+more or less power of speech, and with an eye either glittering or
+preternaturally dull, on the look-out for the man who must hear him; and
+in most cases he had volumes which it was difficult to get printed, or if
+printed to get read. This Mordecai happened to have a more pathetic
+aspect, a more passionate, penetrative speech than was usual with such
+monomaniacs; he was more poetical than a social reformer with colored
+views of the new moral world in parallelograms, or than an enthusiast in
+sewage; still he came under the same class. It would be only right and
+kind to indulge him a little, to comfort him with such help as was
+practicable; but what likelihood was there that his notions had the sort
+of value he ascribed to them? In such cases a man of the world knows what
+to think beforehand. And as to Mordecai's conviction that he had found a
+new executive self, it might be preparing for him the worst of
+disappointments--that which presents itself as final."
+
+Deronda's ear caught all these negative whisperings; nay, he repeated them
+distinctly to himself. It was not the first but it was the most pressing
+occasion on which he had had to face this question of the family likeness
+among the heirs of enthusiasm, whether prophets or dreamers of dreams,
+whether the
+
+ "Great benefactors of mankind, deliverers,"
+
+or the devotees of phantasmal discovery--from the first believer in his
+own unmanifested inspiration, down to the last inventor of an ideal
+machine that will achieve perpetual motion. The kinship of human passion,
+the sameness of mortal scenery, inevitably fill fact with burlesque and
+parody. Error and folly have had their hecatombs of martyrs. Reduce the
+grandest type of man hitherto known to an abstract statement of his
+qualities and efforts, and he appears in dangerous company: say that, like
+Copernicus and Galileo, he was immovably convinced in the face of hissing
+incredulity; but so is the contriver of perpetual motion. We cannot fairly
+try the spirits by this sort of test. If we want to avoid giving the dose
+of hemlock or the sentence of banishment in the wrong case, nothing will
+do but a capacity to understand the subject-matter on which the immovable
+man is convinced, and fellowship with human travail, both near and afar,
+to hinder us from scanning and deep experience lightly. Shall we say, "Let
+the ages try the spirits, and see what they are worth?" Why, we are the
+beginning of the ages, which can only be just by virtue of just judgments
+in separate human breasts--separate yet combined. Even steam-engines could
+not have got made without that condition, but must have stayed in the mind
+of James Watt.
+
+This track of thinking was familiar enough to Deronda to have saved him
+from any contemptuous prejudgment of Mordecai, even if their communication
+had been free from that peculiar claim on himself strangely ushered in by
+some long-growing preparation in the Jew's agitated mind. This claim,
+indeed, considered in what is called a rational way, might seem
+justifiably dismissed as illusory and even preposterous; but it was
+precisely what turned Mordecai's hold on him from an appeal to his ready
+sympathy into a clutch on his struggling conscience. Our consciences are
+not all of the same pattern, an inner deliverance of fixed laws they are
+the voice of sensibilities as various as our memories (which also have
+their kinship and likeness). And Deronda's conscience included
+sensibilities beyond the common, enlarged by his early habit of thinking
+himself imaginatively into the experience of others.
+
+What was the claim this eager soul made upon him?--"You must believe my
+beliefs--be moved by my reasons--hope my hopes--see the vision I point to
+--behold a glory where I behold it!" To take such a demand in the light of
+an obligation in any direct sense would have been preposterous--to have
+seemed to admit it would have been dishonesty; and Deronda, looking on the
+agitation of those moments, felt thankful that in the midst of his
+compassion he had preserved himself from the bondage of false concessions.
+The claim hung, too, on a supposition which might be--nay, probably was--
+in discordance with the full fact: the supposition that he, Deronda, was
+of Jewish blood. Was there ever a more hypothetic appeal?
+
+But since the age of thirteen Deronda had associated the deepest
+experience of his affections with what was a pure supposition, namely,
+that Sir Hugo was his father: that was a hypothesis which had been the
+source of passionate struggle within him; by its light he had been
+accustomed to subdue feelings and to cherish them. He had been well used
+to find a motive in a conception which might be disproved; and he had been
+also used to think of some revelation that might influence his view of the
+particular duties belonging to him. To be in a state of suspense, which
+was also one of emotive activity and scruple, was a familiar attitude of
+his conscience.
+
+And now, suppose that wish-begotten belief in his Jewish birth, and that
+extravagant demand of discipleship, to be the foreshadowing of an actual
+discovery and a genuine spiritual result: suppose that Mordecai's ideas
+made a real conquest over Deronda's conviction? Nay, it was conceivable
+that as Mordecai needed and believed that, he had found an active
+replenishment of himself, so Deronda might receive from Mordecai's mind
+the complete ideal shape of that personal duty and citizenship which lay
+in his own thought like sculptured fragments certifying some beauty
+yearned after but not traceable by divination.
+
+As that possibility presented itself in his meditations, he was aware that
+it would be called dreamy, and began to defend it. If the influence he
+imagined himself submitting to had been that of some honored professor,
+some authority in a seat of learning, some philosopher who had been
+accepted as a voice of the age, would a thorough receptiveness toward
+direction have been ridiculed? Only by those who hold it a sign of
+weakness to be obliged for an idea, and prefer to hint that they have
+implicitly held in a more correct form whatever others have stated with a
+sadly short-coming explicitness. After all, what was there but vulgarity
+in taking the fact that Mordecai was a poor Jewish workman, and that he
+was to be met perhaps on a sanded floor in the parlor of the _Hand and
+Banner_ as a reason for determining beforehand that there was not some
+spiritual force within him that might have a determining effect on a
+white-handed gentleman? There is a legend told of the Emperor Domitian,
+that having heard of a Jewish family, of the house of David, whence the
+ruler of the world was to spring, he sent for its members in alarm, but
+quickly released them on observing that they had the hands of work-people
+--being of just the opposite opinion with that Rabbi who stood waiting at
+the gate of Rome in confidence that the Messiah would be found among the
+destitute who entered there. Both Emperor and Rabbi were wrong in their
+trust of outward signs: poverty and poor clothes are no sign of
+inspiration, said Deronda to his inward objector, but they have gone with
+it in some remarkable cases. And to regard discipleship as out of the
+question because of them, would be mere dullness of imagination.
+
+A more plausible reason for putting discipleship out of the question was
+the strain of visionary excitement in Mordecai, which turned his wishes
+into overmastering impressions, and made him read outward facts as
+fulfillment. Was such a temper of mind likely to accompany that wise
+estimate of consequences which is the only safeguard from fatal error,
+even to ennobling motive? But it remained to be seen whether that rare
+conjunction existed or not in Mordecai: perhaps his might be one of the
+natures where a wise estimate of consequences is fused in the fires of
+that passionate belief which determines the consequences it believes in.
+The inspirations of the world have come in that way too: even strictly-
+measuring science could hardly have got on without that forecasting ardor
+which feels the agitations of discovery beforehand, and has a faith in its
+preconception that surmounts many failures of experiment. And in relation
+to human motives and actions, passionate belief has a fuller efficacy.
+Here enthusiasm may have the validity of proof, and happening in one soul,
+give the type of what will one day be general.
+
+At least, Deronda argued, Mordecai's visionary excitability was hardly a
+reason for concluding beforehand that he was not worth listening to except
+for pity sake. Suppose he had introduced himself as one of the strictest
+reasoners. Do they form a body of men hitherto free from false conclusions
+and illusory speculations? The driest argument has its hallucinations, too
+hastily concluding that its net will now at last be large enough to hold
+the universe. Men may dream in demonstrations, and cut out an illusory
+world in the shape of axioms, definitions, and propositions, with a final
+exclusion of fact signed Q.E.D. No formulas for thinking will save us
+mortals from mistake in our imperfect apprehension of the matter to be
+thought about. And since the unemotional intellect may carry us into a
+mathematical dreamland where nothing is but what is not, perhaps an
+emotional intellect may have absorbed into its passionate vision of
+possibilities some truth of what will be--the more comprehensive massive
+life feeding theory with new material, as the sensibility of the artist
+seizes combinations which science explains and justifies. At any rate,
+presumptions to the contrary are not to be trusted. We must be patient
+with the inevitable makeshift of our human thinking, whether in its sum
+total or in the separate minds that have made the sum. Columbus had some
+impressions about himself which we call superstitions, and used some
+arguments which we disapprove; but he had also some sound physical
+conceptions, and he had the passionate patience of genius to make them
+tell on mankind. The world has made up its mind rather contemptuously
+about those who were deaf to Columbus.
+
+"My contempt for them binds me to see that I don't adopt their mistake on
+a small scale," said Deronda, "and make myself deaf with the assumption
+that there cannot be any momentous relation between this Jew and me,
+simply because he has clad it in illusory notions. What I can be to him,
+or he to me, may not at all depend on his persuasion about the way we came
+together. To me the way seems made up of plainly discernible links. If I
+had not found Mirah, it is probable that I should not have begun to be
+specially interested in the Jews, and certainly I should not have gone on
+that loitering search after an Ezra Cohen which made me pause at Ram's
+book-shop and ask the price of _Maimon_. Mordecai, on his side, had his
+visions of a disciple, and he saw me by their light; I corresponded well
+enough with the image his longing had created. He took me for one of his
+race. Suppose that his impression--the elderly Jew at Frankfort seemed to
+have something like it--suppose in spite of all presumptions to the
+contrary, that his impression should somehow be proved true, and that I
+should come actually to share any of the ideas he is devoted to? This is
+the only question which really concerns the effect of our meeting on my
+life.
+
+"But if the issue should be quite different?--well, there will be
+something painful to go through. I shall almost inevitably have to be an
+active cause of that poor fellow's crushing disappointment. Perhaps this
+issue is the one I had need prepare myself for. I fear that no tenderness
+of mine can make his suffering lighter. Would the alternative--that I
+should not disappoint him--be less painful to me?"
+
+Here Deronda wavered. Feelings had lately been at work within him which
+had very much modified the reluctance he would formerly have had to think
+of himself as probably a Jew. And, if you like, he was romantic. That
+young energy and spirit of adventure which have helped to create the
+world-wide legions of youthful heroes going to seek the hidden tokens of
+their birth and its inheritance of tasks, gave him a certain quivering
+interest in the bare possibility that he was entering on a track like--all
+the more because the track was one of thought as well as action.
+
+"The bare possibility." He could not admit it to be more. The belief that
+his father was an Englishman only grew firmer under the weak assaults of
+unwarranted doubt. And that a moment should ever come in which that belief
+was declared a delusion, was something of which Deronda would not say, "I
+should be glad." His life-long affection for Sir Hugo, stronger than all
+his resentment, made him shrink from admitting that wish.
+
+Which way soever the truth might lie, he repeated to himself what he had
+said to Mordecai--that he could not without farther reasons undertake to
+hasten its discovery. Nay, he was tempted now to regard his uncertainty as
+a condition to be cherished for the present. If further intercourse
+revealed nothing but illusions as what he was expected to share in, the
+want of any valid evidence that he was a Jew might save Mordecai the worst
+shock in the refusal of fraternity. It might even be justifiable to use
+the uncertainty on this point in keeping up a suspense which would induce
+Mordecai to accept those offices of friendship that Deronda longed to urge
+on him.
+
+These were the meditations that busied Deronda in the interval of four
+days before he could fulfill his promise to call for Mordecai at Ezra
+Cohen's, Sir Hugo's demands on him often lasting to an hour so late as to
+put the evening expedition to Holborn out of the question.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+ "Wenn es eine Stutenleiter von Leiden giebt, so hat Israel die hoechste
+ Staffel erstiegen; wen die Dauer der Schmerzen und die Geduld, mit
+ welcher sie ertragen werden, adeln, so nehmen es die Juden mit den
+ Hochgeborenen aller Laender auf; wenn eine Literatur reich genannt
+ wird, die wenige klassische Trauerspiele besitzt, welcher Platz
+ gebuehrt dann einer Tragodie die anderthalb Jahrtausende wahrt,
+ gedichtet und dargestellt von den Helden selber?"--ZUNZ: _Die
+ Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters._
+
+
+"If there are ranks in suffering, Israel takes precedence of all the
+nations--if the duration of sorrows and the patience with which they are
+borne ennoble, the Jews are among the aristocracy of every land--if a
+literature is called rich in the possession of a few classic tragedies,
+what shall we say to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years,
+in which the poets and the actors were also the heroes?"
+
+Deronda had lately been reading that passage of Zunz, and it occurred to
+him by way of contrast when he was going to the Cohens, who certainly bore
+no obvious stamp of distinction in sorrow or in any other form of
+aristocracy. Ezra Cohen was not clad in the sublime pathos of the martyr,
+and his taste for money-getting seemed to be favored with that success
+which has been the most exasperating difference in the greed of Jews
+during all the ages of their dispersion. This Jeshurun of a pawnbroker was
+not a symbol of the great Jewish tragedy; and yet was there not something
+typical in the fact that a life like Mordecai's--a frail incorporation of
+the national consciousness, breathing with difficult breath--was nested in
+the self-gratulating ignorant prosperity of the Cohens?
+
+Glistening was the gladness in their faces when Deronda reappeared among
+them. Cohen himself took occasion to intimate that although the diamond
+ring, let alone a little longer, would have bred more money, he did not
+mind _that_--not a sixpence--when compared with the pleasure of the women
+and children in seeing a young gentleman whose first visit had been so
+agreeable that they had "done nothing but talk of it ever since." Young
+Mrs. Cohen was very sorry that baby was asleep, and then very glad that
+Adelaide was not yet gone to bed, entreating Deronda not to stay in the
+shop, but to go forthwith into the parlor to see "mother and the
+children." He willingly accepted the invitation, having provided himself
+with portable presents; a set of paper figures for Adelaide, and an ivory
+cup and ball for Jacob.
+
+The grandmother had a pack of cards before her and was making "plates"
+with the children. A plate had just been thrown down and kept itself
+whole.
+
+"Stop!" said Jacob, running to Deronda as he entered. "Don't tread on my
+plate. Stop and see me throw it up again."
+
+Deronda complied, exchanging a smile of understanding with the
+grandmother, and the plate bore several tossings before it came to pieces;
+then the visitor was allowed to come forward and seat himself. He observed
+that the door from which Mordecai had issued on the former visit was now
+closed, but he wished to show his interest in the Cohens before disclosing
+a yet stronger interest in their singular inmate.
+
+It was not until he had Adelaide on his knee, and was setting up the paper
+figures in their dance on the table, while Jacob was already practicing
+with the cup and ball, that Deronda said--
+
+"Is Mordecai in just now?"
+
+"Where is he, Addy?" said Cohen, who had seized an interval of business to
+come and look on.
+
+"In the workroom there," said his wife, nodding toward the closed door.
+
+"The fact is, sir," said Cohen, "we don't know what's come to him this
+last day or two. He's always what I may call a little touched, you know"--
+here Cohen pointed to his own forehead--"not quite so rational in all
+things, like you and me; but he's mostly wonderful regular and industrious
+so far as a poor creature can be, and takes as much delight in the boy as
+anybody could. But this last day or two he's been moving about like a
+sleep-walker, or else sitting as still as a wax figure."
+
+"It's the disease, poor dear creature," said the grandmother, tenderly. "I
+doubt whether he can stand long against it."
+
+"No; I think its only something he's got in his head." said Mrs. Cohen the
+younger. "He's been turning over writing continually, and when I speak to
+him it takes him ever so long to hear and answer."
+
+"You may think us a little weak ourselves," said Cohen, apologetically.
+"But my wife and mother wouldn't part with him if he was a still worse
+encumbrance. It isn't that we don't know the long and short of matters,
+but it's our principle. There's fools do business at a loss and don't know
+it. I'm not one of 'em."
+
+"Oh, Mordecai carries a blessing inside him," said the grandmother.
+
+"He's got something the matter inside him," said Jacob, coming up to
+correct this erratum of his grandmother's. "He said he couldn't talk to
+me, and he wouldn't have a bit o' bun."
+
+"So far from wondering at your feeling for him," said Deronda, "I already
+feel something of the same sort myself. I have lately talked to him at
+Ram's book-shop--in fact, I promised to call for him here, that we might
+go out together."
+
+"That's it, then!" said Cohen, slapping his knee. "He's been expecting
+you, and it's taken hold of him. I suppose he talks about his learning to
+you. It's uncommonly kind of _you_, sir; for I don't suppose there's much
+to be got out of it, else it wouldn't have left him where he is. But
+there's the shop." Cohen hurried out, and Jacob, who had been listening
+inconveniently near to Deronda's elbow, said to him with obliging
+familiarity, "I'll call Mordecai for you, if you like."
+
+"No, Jacob," said his mother; "open the door for the gentleman, and let
+him go in himself Hush! don't make a noise."
+
+Skillful Jacob seemed to enter into the play, and turned the handle of the
+door as noiselessly as possible, while Deronda went behind him and stood
+on the threshold. The small room was lit only by a dying fire and one
+candle with a shade over it. On the board fixed under the window, various
+objects of jewelry were scattered: some books were heaped in the corner
+beyond them. Mordecai was seated on a high chair at the board with his
+back to the door, his hands resting on each other and on the board, a
+watch propped on a stand before him. He was in a state of expectation as
+sickening as that of a prisoner listening for the delayed deliverance--
+when he heard Deronda's voice saying, "I am come for you. Are you ready?"
+
+Immediately he turned without speaking, seized his furred cap which lay
+near, and moved to join Deronda. It was but a moment before they were both
+in the sitting-room, and Jacob, noticing the change in his friend's air
+and expression, seized him by the arm and said, "See my cup and ball!"
+sending the ball up close to Mordecai's face, as something likely to cheer
+a convalescent. It was a sign of the relieved tension in Mordecai's mind
+that he could smile and say, "Fine, fine!"
+
+"You have forgotten your greatcoat and comforter," said young Mrs. Cohen,
+and he went back into the work-room and got them.
+
+"He's come to life again, do you see?" said Cohen, who had re-entered--
+speaking in an undertone. "I told you so: I'm mostly right." Then in his
+usual voice, "Well, sir, we mustn't detain you now, I suppose; but I hope
+this isn't the last time we shall see you."
+
+"Shall you come again?" said Jacob, advancing. "See, I can catch the ball;
+I'll bet I catch it without stopping, if you come again."
+
+"He has clever hands," said Deronda, looking at the grandmother. "Which
+side of the family does he get them from?"
+
+But the grandmother only nodded towards her son, who said promptly, "My
+side. My wife's family are not in that line. But bless your soul! ours is
+a sort of cleverness as good as gutta percha; you can twist it which way
+you like. There's nothing some old gentlemen won't do if you set 'em to
+it." Here Cohen winked down at Jacob's back, but it was doubtful whether
+this judicious allusiveness answered its purpose, for its subject gave a
+nasal whinnying laugh and stamped about singing, "Old gentlemen, old
+gentlemen," in chiming cadence.
+
+Deronda thought, "I shall never know anything decisive about these people
+until I ask Cohen pointblank whether he lost a sister named Mirah when she
+was six years old." The decisive moment did not yet seem easy for him to
+face. Still his first sense of repulsion at the commonness of these people
+was beginning to be tempered with kindlier feeling. However unrefined
+their airs and speech might be, he was forced to admit some moral
+refinement in their treatment of the consumptive workman, whose mental
+distinction impressed them chiefly as a harmless, silent raving.
+
+"The Cohens seem to have an affection for you," said Deronda, as soon as
+he and Mordecai were off the doorstep.
+
+"And I for them," was the immediate answer. "They have the heart of the
+Israelite within them, though they are as the horse and the mule, without
+understanding beyond the narrow path they tread."
+
+"I have caused you some uneasiness, I fear," said Deronda, "by my slowness
+in fulfilling my promise. I wished to come yesterday, but I found it
+impossible."
+
+"Yes--yes, I trusted you. But it is true I have been uneasy, for the
+spirit of my youth has been stirred within me, and this body is not strong
+enough to bear the beating of its wings. I am as a man bound and
+imprisoned through long years: behold him brought to speech of his fellow
+and his limbs set free: he weeps, he totters, the joy within him threatens
+to break and overthrow the tabernacle of flesh."
+
+"You must not speak too much in this evening air," said Deronda, feeling
+Mordecai's words of reliance like so many cords binding him painfully.
+"Cover your mouth with the woolen scarf. We are going to the _Hand and
+Banner_, I suppose, and shall be in private there?"
+
+"No, that is my trouble that you did not come yesterday. For this is the
+evening of the club I spoke of, and we might not have any minutes alone
+until late, when all the rest are gone. Perhaps we had better seek another
+place. But I am used to that only. In new places the outer world presses
+on me and narrows the inward vision. And the people there are familiar
+with my face."
+
+"I don't mind the club if I am allowed to go in," said Deronda. "It is
+enough that you like this place best. If we have not enough time I will
+come again. What sort of club is it?"
+
+"It is called 'The Philosophers.' They are few--like the cedars of
+Lebanon--poor men given to thought. But none so poor as I am: and
+sometimes visitors of higher worldly rank have been brought. We are
+allowed to introduce a friend, who is interested in our topics. Each
+orders beer or some other kind of drink, in payment for the room. Most of
+them smoke. I have gone when I could, for there are other men of my race
+who come, and sometimes I have broken silence. I have pleased myself with
+a faint likeness between these poor philosophers and the Masters who
+handed down the thought of our race--the great Transmitters, who labored
+with their hands for scant bread, but preserved and enlarged for us the
+heritage of memory, and saved the soul of Israel alive as a seed among the
+tombs. The heart pleases itself with faint resemblances."
+
+"I shall be very glad to go and sit among them, if that will suit you. It
+is a sort of meeting I should like to join in," said Deronda, not without
+relief in the prospect of an interval before he went through the strain of
+his next private conversation with Mordecai.
+
+In three minutes they had opened the glazed door with the red curtain, and
+were in the little parlor, hardly much more than fifteen feet square,
+where the gaslight shone through a slight haze of smoke on what to Deronda
+was a new and striking scene. Half-a-dozen men of various ages, from
+between twenty and thirty to fifty, all shabbily dressed, most of them
+with clay pipes in their mouths, were listening with a look of
+concentrated intelligence to a man in a pepper-and-salt dress, with blonde
+hair, short nose, broad forehead and general breadth, who, holding his
+pipe slightly uplifted in the left hand, and beating his knee with the
+right, was just finishing a quotation from Shelley (the comparison of the
+avalanche in his "Prometheus Unbound")
+
+ "As thought by thought is piled, till some great truth
+ Is loosened, and the nations echo round."
+
+The entrance of the new-comers broke the fixity of attention, and called
+for re-arrangement of seats in the too narrow semicircle round the fire-
+place and the table holding the glasses, spare pipes and tobacco. This was
+the soberest of clubs; but sobriety is no reason why smoking and "talking
+something" should be less imperiously needed as a means of getting a
+decent status in company and debate. Mordecai was received with welcoming
+voices which had a slight cadence of compassion in them, but naturally all
+glances passed immediately to his companion.
+
+"I have brought a friend who is interested in our subjects," said
+Mordecai. "He has traveled and studied much."
+
+"Is the gentlemen anonymous? Is he a Great 'Unknown?'" said the broad-
+chested quoter of Shelley, with a humorous air.
+
+"My name is Daniel Deronda. I am unknown, but not in any sense great." The
+smile breaking over the stranger's grave face as he said this was so
+agreeable that there was a general indistinct murmur, equivalent to a
+"Hear, hear," and the broad man said--
+
+"You recommend the name, sir, and are welcome. Here, Mordecai, come to
+this corner against me," he added, evidently wishing to give the coziest
+place to the one who most needed it.
+
+Deronda was well satisfied to get a seat on the opposite side, where his
+general survey of the party easily included Mordecai, who remained an
+eminently striking object in this group of sharply-characterized figures,
+more than one of whom, even to Daniel's little exercised discrimination,
+seemed probably of Jewish descent.
+
+In fact pure English blood (if leech or lancet can furnish us with the
+precise product) did not declare itself predominantly in the party at
+present assembled. Miller, the broad man, an exceptional second-hand
+bookseller who knew the insides of books, had at least grand-parents who
+called themselves German, and possibly far-away ancestors who denied
+themselves to be Jews; Buchan, the saddler, was Scotch; Pash, the
+watchmaker, was a small, dark, vivacious, triple-baked Jew; Gideon, the
+optical instrument maker, was a Jew of the red-haired, generous-featured
+type easily passing for Englishmen of unusually cordial manners: and
+Croop, the dark-eyed shoemaker, was probably more Celtic than he knew.
+Only three would have been discernable everywhere as Englishman: the wood-
+inlayer Goodwin, well-built, open-faced, pleasant-voiced; the florid
+laboratory assistant Marrables; and Lily, the pale, neat-faced copying-
+clerk, whose light-brown hair was set up in a small parallelogram above
+his well-filled forehead, and whose shirt, taken with an otherwise seedy
+costume, had a freshness that might be called insular, and perhaps even
+something narrower.
+
+Certainly a company select of the select among poor men, being drawn
+together by a taste not prevalent even among the privileged heirs of
+learning and its institutions; and not likely to amuse any gentleman in
+search of crime or low comedy as the ground of interest in people whose
+weekly income is only divisible into shillings. Deronda, even if he had
+not been more than usually inclined to gravity under the influence of what
+was pending between him and Mordecai, would not have set himself to find
+food for laughter in the various shades of departure from the tone of
+polished society sure to be observable in the air and talk of these men
+who had probably snatched knowledge as most of us snatch indulgences,
+making the utmost of scant opportunity. He looked around him with the
+quiet air of respect habitual to him among equals, ordered whisky and
+water, and offered the contents of his cigar-case, which,
+characteristically enough, he always carried and hardly ever used for his
+own behoof, having reasons for not smoking himself, but liking to indulge
+others. Perhaps it was his weakness to be afraid of seeming straight-
+laced, and turning himself into a sort of diagram instead of a growth
+which can exercise the guiding attraction of fellowship. That he made a
+decidedly winning impression on the company was proved by their showing
+themselves no less at ease than before, and desirous of quickly resuming
+their interrupted talk.
+
+"This is what I call one of our touch-and-go nights, sir," said Miller,
+who was implicitly accepted as a sort of moderator--on addressing Deronda
+by way of explanation, and nodding toward each person whose name he
+mentioned. "Sometimes we stick pretty close to the point. But tonight our
+friend Pash, there, brought up the law of progress; and we got on
+statistics; then Lily, there, saying we knew well enough before counting
+that in the same state of society the same sort of things would happen,
+and it was no more wonder that quantities should remain the same, than
+that qualities should remain the same, for in relation to society numbers
+are qualities--the number of drunkards is a quality in society--the
+numbers are an index to the qualities, and give us no instruction, only
+setting us to consider the causes of difference between different social
+states--Lily saying this, we went off on the causes of social change, and
+when you came in I was going upon the power of ideas, which I hold to be
+the main transforming cause."
+
+"I don't hold with you there, Miller," said Goodwin, the inlayer, more
+concerned to carry on the subject than to wait for a word from the new
+guest. "For either you mean so many sorts of things by ideas that I get no
+knowledge by what you say, any more than if you said light was a cause; or
+else you mean a particular sort of ideas, and then I go against your
+meaning as too narrow. For, look at it in one way, all actions men put a
+bit of thought into are ideas--say, sowing seed, or making a canoe, or
+baking clay; and such ideas as these work themselves into life and go on
+growing with it, but they can't go apart from the material that set them
+to work and makes a medium for them. It's the nature of wood and stone
+yielding to the knife that raises the idea of shaping them, and with
+plenty of wood and stone the shaping will go on. I look at it, that such
+ideas as are mixed straight away with all the other elements of life are
+powerful along with 'em. The slower the mixing, the less power they have.
+And as to the causes of social change, I look at it in this way--ideas are
+a sort of parliament, but there's a commonwealth outside and a good deal
+of the commonwealth is working at change without knowing what the
+parliament is doing."
+
+"But if you take ready mixing as your test of power," said Pash, "some of
+the least practical ideas beat everything. They spread without being
+understood, and enter into the language without being thought of."
+
+"They may act by changing the distribution of gases," said Marrables;
+"instruments are getting so fine now, men may come to register the spread
+of a theory by observed changes in the atmosphere and corresponding
+changes in the nerves."
+
+"Yes," said Pash, his dark face lighting up rather impishly, "there is the
+idea of nationalities; I dare say the wild asses are snuffing it, and
+getting more gregarious."
+
+"You don't share that idea?" said Deronda, finding a piquant incongruity
+between Pash's sarcasm and the strong stamp of race on his features.
+
+"Say, rather, he does not share that spirit," said Mordecai, who had
+turned a melancholy glance on Pash. "Unless nationality is a feeling, what
+force can it have as an idea?"
+
+"Granted, Mordecai," said Pash, quite good-humoredly. "And as the feeling
+of nationality is dying, I take the idea to be no better than a ghost,
+already walking to announce the death."
+
+"A sentiment may seem to be dying and yet revive into strong life," said
+Deronda. "Nations have revived. We may live to see a great outburst of
+force in the Arabs, who are being inspired with a new zeal."
+
+"Amen, amen," said Mordecai, looking at Deronda with a delight which was
+the beginning of recovered energy: his attitude was more upright, his face
+was less worn.
+
+"That may hold with backward nations," said Pash, "but with us in Europe
+the sentiment of nationality is destined to die out. It will last a little
+longer in the quarters where oppression lasts, but nowhere else. The whole
+current of progress is setting against it."
+
+"Ay," said Buchan, in a rapid thin Scotch tone which was like the letting
+in of a little cool air on the conversation, "ye've done well to bring us
+round to the point. Ye're all agreed that societies change--not always and
+everywhere--but on the whole and in the long run. Now, with all deference,
+I would beg t' observe that we have got to examine the nature of changes
+before we have a warrant to call them progress, which word is supposed to
+include a bettering, though I apprehend it to be ill-chosen for that
+purpose, since mere motion onward may carry us to a bog or a precipice.
+And the questions I would put are three: Is all change in the direction of
+progress? if not, how shall we discern which change is progress and which
+not? and thirdly, how far and in what way can we act upon the course of
+change so as to promote it where it is beneficial, and divert it where it
+is injurious?"
+
+But Buchan's attempt to impose his method on the talk was a failure. Lily
+immediately said--
+
+"Change and progress are merged in the idea of development. The laws of
+development are being discovered, and changes taking place according to
+them are necessarily progressive; that is to say, it we have any notion of
+progress or improvement opposed to them, the notion is a mistake."
+
+"I really can't see how you arrive at that sort of certitude about changes
+by calling them development," said Deronda. "There will still remain the
+degrees of inevitableness in relation to our own will and acts, and the
+degrees of wisdom in hastening or retarding; there will still remain the
+danger of mistaking a tendency which should be resisted for an inevitable
+law that we must adjust ourselves to,--which seems to me as bad a
+superstition or false god as any that has been set up without the
+ceremonies of philosophising."
+
+"That is a truth," said Mordecai. "Woe to the men who see no place for
+resistance in this generation! I believe in a growth, a passage, and a new
+unfolding of life whereof the seed is more perfect, more charged with the
+elements that are pregnant with diviner form. The life of a people grows,
+it is knit together and yet expanded, in joy and sorrow, in thought and
+action; it absorbs the thought of other nations into its own forms, and
+gives back the thought as new wealth to the world; it is a power and an
+organ in the great body of the nations. But there may come a check, an
+arrest; memories may be stifled, and love may be faint for the lack of
+them; or memories may shrink into withered relics--the soul of a people,
+whereby they know themselves to be one, may seem to be dying for want of
+common action. But who shall say, 'The fountain of their life is dried up,
+they shall forever cease to be a nation?' Who shall say it? Not he who
+feels the life of his people stirring within his own. Shall he say, 'That
+way events are wending, I will not resist?' His very soul is resistance,
+and is as a seed of fire that may enkindle the souls of multitudes, and
+make a new pathway for events."
+
+"I don't deny patriotism," said Gideon, "but we all know you have a
+particular meaning, Mordecai. You know Mordecai's way of thinking, I
+suppose." Here Gideon had turned to Deronda, who sat next to him, but
+without waiting for an answer he went on. "I'm a rational Jew myself. I
+stand by my people as a sort of family relations, and I am for keeping up
+our worship in a rational way. I don't approve of our people getting
+baptised, because I don't believe in a Jew's conversion to the Gentile
+part of Christianity. And now we have political equality, there's no
+excuse for a pretense of that sort. But I am for getting rid of all of our
+superstitions and exclusiveness. There's no reason now why we shouldn't
+melt gradually into the populations we live among. That's the order of the
+day in point of progress. I would as soon my children married Christians
+as Jews. And I'm for the old maxim, 'A man's country is where he's well
+off.'"
+
+"That country's not so easy to find, Gideon," said the rapid Pash, with a
+shrug and grimace. "You get ten shillings a-week more than I do, and have
+only half the number of children. If somebody will introduce a brisk trade
+in watches among the 'Jerusalem wares,' I'll go--eh, Mordecai, what do you
+say?"
+
+Deronda, all ear for these hints of Mordecai's opinion, was inwardly
+wondering at his persistence in coming to this club. For an enthusiastic
+spirit to meet continually the fixed indifference of men familiar with the
+object of his enthusiasm is the acceptance of a slow martyrdom, beside
+which the fate of a missionary tomahawked without any considerate
+rejection of his doctrines seems hardly worthy of compassion. But Mordecai
+gave no sign of shrinking: this was a moment of spiritual fullness, and he
+cared more for the utterance of his faith than for its immediate
+reception. With a fervor which had no temper in it, but seemed rather the
+rush of feeling in the opportunity of speech, he answered Pash:--
+
+"What I say is, let every man keep far away from the brotherhood and
+inheritance he despises. Thousands on thousands of our race have mixed
+with the Gentiles as Celt with Saxon, and they may inherit the blessing
+that belongs to the Gentile. You cannot follow them. You are one of the
+multitudes over this globe who must walk among the nations and be known as
+Jews, and with words on their lips which mean, 'I wish I had not been born
+a Jew, I disown any bond with the long travail of my race, I will outdo
+the Gentile in mocking at our separateness,' they all the while feel
+breathing on them the breath of contempt because they are Jews, and they
+will breathe it back poisonously. Can a fresh-made garment of citizenship
+weave itself straightway into the flesh and change the slow deposit of
+eighteen centuries? What is the citizenship of him who walks among a
+people he has no hardy kindred and fellowship with, and has lost the sense
+of brotherhood with his own race? It is a charter of selfish ambition and
+rivalry in low greed. He is an alien of spirit, whatever he may be in
+form; he sucks the blood of mankind, he is not a man, sharing in no loves,
+sharing in no subjection of the soul, he mocks it all. Is it not truth I
+speak, Pash?"
+
+"Not exactly, Mordecai," said Pash, "if you mean that I think the worse of
+myself for being a Jew. What I thank our fathers for is that there are
+fewer blockheads among us than among other races. But perhaps you are
+right in thinking the Christians don't like me so well for it."
+
+"Catholics and Protestants have not liked each other much better," said
+the genial Gideon. "We must wait patiently for prejudices to die out. Many
+of our people are on a footing with the best, and there's been a good
+filtering of our blood into high families. I am for making our
+expectations rational."
+
+"And so am I!" said Mordecai, quickly, leaning forward with the eagerness
+of one who pleads in some decisive crisis, his long, thin hands clasped
+together on his lap. "I, too, claim to be a rational Jew. But what is it
+to be rational--what is it to feel the light of the divine reason growing
+stronger within and without? It is to see more and more of the hidden
+bonds that bind and consecrate change as a dependent growth--yea,
+consecrate it with kinship: the past becomes my parent and the future
+stretches toward me the appealing arms of children. Is it rational to
+drain away the sap of special kindred that makes the families of men rich
+in interchanged wealth, and various as the forests are various with the
+glory of the cedar and the palm? When it is rational to say, 'I know not
+my father or my mother, let my children be aliens to me, that no prayer of
+mine may touch them,' then it will be rational for the Jew to say, 'I will
+seek to know no difference between me and the Gentile, I will not cherish
+the prophetic consciousness of our nationality--let the Hebrew cease to
+be, and let all his memorials be antiquarian trifles, dead as the wall-
+paintings of a conjectured race. Yet let his child learn by rote the
+speech of the Greek, where he abjures his fellow-citizens by the bravery
+of those who fought foremost at Marathon--let him learn to say that was
+noble in the Greek, that is the spirit of an immortal nation! But the Jew
+has no memories that bind him to action; let him laugh that his nation is
+degraded from a nation; let him hold the monuments of his law which
+carried within its frame the breath of social justice, of charity, and of
+household sanctities--let him hold the energy of the prophets, the patient
+care of the Masters, the fortitude of martyred generations, as mere stuff
+for a professorship. The business of the Jew in all things is to be even
+as the rich Gentile."
+
+Mordecai threw himself back in his chair, and there was a moment's
+silence. Not one member of the club shared his point of view or his
+emotion; but his whole personality and speech had on them the effect of a
+dramatic representation which had some pathos in it, though no practical
+consequences; and usually he was at once indulged and contradicted.
+Deronda's mind went back upon what must have been the tragic pressure of
+outward conditions hindering this man, whose force he felt to be telling
+on himself, from making any world for his thought in the minds of others--
+like a poet among people of a strange speech, who may have a poetry of
+their own, but have no ear for his cadence, no answering thrill to his
+discovery of the latent virtues in his mother tongue.
+
+The cool Buchan was the first to speak, and hint the loss of time. "I
+submit," said he, "that ye're traveling away from the questions I put
+concerning progress."
+
+"Say they're levanting, Buchan," said Miller, who liked his joke, and
+would not have objected to be called Voltairian. "Never mind. Let us have
+a Jewish night; we've not had one for a long while. Let us take the
+discussion on Jewish ground. I suppose we've no prejudice here; we're all
+philosophers; and we like our friends Mordecai, Pash, and Gideon, as well
+as if they were no more kin to Abraham than the rest of us. We're all
+related through Adam, until further showing to the contrary, and if you
+look into history we've all got some discreditable forefathers. So I mean
+no offence when I say I don't think any great things of the part the
+Jewish people have played in the world. What then? I think they were
+iniquitously dealt by in past times. And I suppose we don't want any men
+to be maltreated, white, black, brown, or yellow--I know I've just given
+my half-crown to the contrary. And that reminds me, I've a curious old
+German book--I can't read it myself, but a friend of mine was reading out
+of it to me the other day--about the prejudicies against the Jews, and the
+stories used to be told against 'em, and what do you think one was? Why,
+that they're punished with a bad odor in their bodies; and _that_, says
+the author, date 1715 (I've just been pricing and marking the book this
+very morning)--that is true, for the ancients spoke of it. But then, he
+says, the other things are fables, such as that the odor goes away all at
+once when they're baptized, and that every one of the ten tribes, mind
+you, all the ten being concerned in the crucifixion, has got a particular
+punishment over and above the smell:--Asher, I remember, has the right arm
+a handbreadth shorter than the left, and Naphthali has pig's ears and a
+smell of live pork. What do you think of that? There's been a good deal of
+fun made of rabbinical fables, but in point of fables my opinion is, that
+all over the world it's six of one and half-a-dozen of the other. However,
+as I said before, I hold with the philosophers of the last century that
+the Jews have played no great part as a people, though Pash will have it
+they're clever enough to beat all the rest of the world. But if so, I ask,
+why haven't they done it?"
+
+"For the same reason that the cleverest men in the country don't get
+themselves or their ideas into Parliament," said the ready Pash; "because
+the blockheads are too many for 'em."
+
+"That is a vain question," said Mordecai, "whether our people would beat
+the rest of the world. Each nation has its own work, and is a member of
+the world, enriched by the work of each. But it is true, as Jehuda-ha-Levi
+first said, that Israel is the heart of mankind, if we mean by heart the
+core of affection which binds a race and its families in dutiful love, and
+the reverence for the human body which lifts the needs of our animal life
+into religion, and the tenderness which is merciful to the poor and weak
+and to the dumb creature that wears the yoke for us."
+
+"They're not behind any nation in arrogance," said Lily; "and if they have
+got in the rear, it has not been because they were over-modest."
+
+"Oh, every nation brags in its turn," said Miller.
+
+"Yes," said Pash, "and some of them in the Hebrew text."
+
+"Well, whatever the Jews contributed at one time, they are a stand-still
+people," said Lily. "They are the type of obstinate adherence to the
+superannuated. They may show good abilities when they take up liberal
+ideas, but as a race they have no development in them."
+
+"That is false!" said Mordecai, leaning forward again with his former
+eagerness. "Let their history be known and examined; let the seed be
+sifted, let its beginning be traced to the weed of the wilderness--the
+more glorious will be the energy that transformed it. Where else is there
+a nation of whom it may be as truly said that their religion and law and
+moral life mingled as the stream of blood in the heart and made one
+growth--where else a people who kept and enlarged their spiritual store at
+the very time when they are hated with a hatred as fierce as the forest
+fires that chase the wild beast from his covert? There is a fable of the
+Roman, that swimming to save his life he held the roll of his writings
+between his teeth and saved them from the waters. But how much more than
+that is true of our race? They struggled to keep their place among the
+nations like heroes--yea, when the hand was hacked off, they clung with
+their teeth; but when the plow and the harrow had passed over the last
+visible signs of their national covenant, and the fruitfulness of their
+land was stifled with the blood of the sowers and planters, they said,
+'The spirit is alive, let us make it a lasting habitation--lasting because
+movable--so that it may be carried from generation to generation, and our
+sons unborn may be rich in the things that have been, and possess a hope
+built on an unchangeable foundation.' They said it and they wrought it,
+though often breathing with scant life, as in a coffin, or as lying
+wounded amid a heap of slain. Hooted and scared like the unknown dog, the
+Hebrew made himself envied for his wealth and wisdom, and was bled of them
+to fill the bath of Gentile luxury; he absorbed knowledge, he diffused it;
+his dispersed race was a new Phoenicia working the mines of Greece and
+carrying their products to the world. The native spirit of our tradition
+was not to stand still, but to use records as a seed and draw out the
+compressed virtues of law and prophecy; and while the Gentile, who had
+said, 'What is yours is ours, and no longer yours,' was reading the letter
+of our law as a dark inscription, or was turning its parchments into shoe-
+soles for an army rabid with lust and cruelty, our Masters were still
+enlarging and illuminating with fresh-fed interpretation. But the
+dispersion was wide, the yoke of oppression was a spiked torture as well
+as a load; the exile was forced afar among brutish people, where the
+consciousness of his race was no clearer to him than the light of the sun
+to our fathers in the Roman persecution, who had their hiding-place in a
+cave, and knew not that it was day save by the dimmer burning of their
+candles. What wonder that multitudes of our people are ignorant, narrow,
+superstitious? What wonder?"
+
+Here Mordecai, whose seat was next the fireplace, rose and leaned his arm
+on the little shelf; his excitement had risen, though his voice, which had
+begun with unusual strength, was getting hoarser.
+
+"What wonder? The night is unto them, that they have no vision; in their
+darkness they are unable to divine; the sun is gone down over the
+prophets, and the day is dark above them; their observances are as
+nameless relics. But which among the chief of the Gentile nations has not
+an ignorant multitude? They scorn our people's ignorant observance; but
+the most accursed ignorance is that which has no observance--sunk to the
+cunning greed of the fox, to which all law is no more than a trap or the
+cry of the worrying hound. There is a degradation deep down below the
+memory that has withered into superstition. In the multitudes of the
+ignorant on three continents who observe our rites and make the confession
+of the divine Unity, the soul of Judaism is not dead. Revive the organic
+centre: let the unity of Israel which has made the growth and form of its
+religion be an outward reality. Looking toward a land and a polity, our
+dispersed people in all the ends of the earth may share the dignity of a
+national life which has a voice among the peoples of the East and the
+West--which will plant the wisdom and skill of our race so that it may be,
+as of old, a medium of transmission and understanding. Let that come to
+pass, and the living warmth will spread to the weak extremities of Israel,
+and superstition will vanish, not in the lawlessness of the renegade, but
+in the illumination of great facts which widen feeling, and make all
+knowledge alive as the young offspring of beloved memories."
+
+Mordecai's voice had sunk, but with the hectic brilliancy of his gaze it
+was not the less impressive. His extraordinary excitement was certainly
+due to Deronda's presence: it was to Deronda that he was speaking, and the
+moment had a testamentary solemnity for him which rallied all his powers.
+Yet the presence of those other familiar men promoted expression, for they
+embodied the indifference which gave a resistant energy to his speech. Not
+that he looked at Deronda: he seemed to see nothing immediately around
+him, and if any one had grasped him he would probably not have known it.
+Again the former words came back to Deronda's mind,--"You must hope my
+hopes--see the vision I point to--behold a glory where I behold it." They
+came now with gathered pathos. Before him stood, as a living, suffering
+reality, what hitherto he had only seen as an effort of imagination,
+which, in its comparative faintness, yet carried a suspicion, of being
+exaggerated: a man steeped in poverty and obscurity, weakened by disease,
+consciously within the shadow of advancing death, but living an intense
+life in an invisible past and future, careless of his personal lot, except
+for its possible making some obstruction to a conceived good which he
+would never share except as a brief inward vision--a day afar off, whose
+sun would never warm him, but into which he threw his soul's desire, with
+a passion often wanting to the personal motives of healthy youth. It was
+something more than a grandiose transfiguration of the parental love that
+toils, renounces, endures, resists the suicidal promptings of despair--all
+because of the little ones, whose future becomes present to the yearning
+gaze of anxiety.
+
+All eyes were fixed on Mordecai as he sat down again, and none with
+unkindness; but it happened that the one who felt the most kindly was the
+most prompted to speak in opposition. This was the genial and rational
+Gideon, who also was not without a sense that he was addressing the guest
+of the evening. He said--
+
+"You have your own way of looking at things, Mordecai, and as you say,
+your own way seems to you rational. I know you don't hold with the
+restoration of Judea by miracle, and so on; but you are as well aware as I
+am that the subject has been mixed with a heap of nonsense both by Jews
+and Christians. And as to the connection of our race with Palestine, it
+has been perverted by superstition till it's as demoralizing as the old
+poor-law. The raff and scum go there to be maintained like able-bodied
+paupers, and to be taken special care of by the angel Gabriel when they
+die. It's no use fighting against facts. We must look where they point;
+that's what I call rationality. The most learned and liberal men among us
+who are attached to our religion are for clearing our liturgy of all such
+notions as a literal fulfillment of the prophecies about restoration, and
+so on. Prune it of a few useless rites and literal interpretations of that
+sort, and our religion is the simplest of all religions, and makes no
+barrier, but a union, between us and the rest of the world."
+
+"As plain as a pike-staff," said Pash, with an ironical laugh. "You pluck
+it up by the roots, strip off the leaves and bark, shave off the knots,
+and smooth it at top and bottom; put it where you will, it will do no
+harm, it will never sprout. You may make a handle of it, or you may throw
+it on the bonfire of scoured rubbish. I don't see why our rubbish is to be
+held sacred any more than the rubbish of Brahmanism or Buddhism."
+
+"No," said Mordecai, "no, Pash, because you have lost the heart of the
+Jew. Community was felt before it was called good. I praise no
+superstition, I praise the living fountains of enlarging belief. What is
+growth, completion, development? You began with that question, I apply it
+to the history of our people. I say that the effect of our separateness
+will not be completed and have its highest transformation unless our race
+takes on again the character of a nationality. That is the fulfillment of
+the religious trust that moulded them into a people, whose life has made
+half the inspiration of the world. What is it to me that the ten tribes
+are lost untraceably, or that multitudes of the children of Judah have
+mixed themselves with the Gentile populations as a river with rivers?
+Behold our people still! Their skirts spread afar; they are torn and
+soiled and trodden on; but there is a jeweled breastplate. Let the wealthy
+men, the monarchs of commerce, the learned in all knowledge, the skilful
+in all arts, the speakers, the political counselors, who carry in their
+veins the Hebrew blood which has maintained its vigor in all climates, and
+the pliancy of the Hebrew genius for which difficulty means new device--
+let them say, 'we will lift up a standard, we will unite in a labor hard
+but glorious like that of Moses and Ezra, a labor which shall be a worthy
+fruit of the long anguish whereby our fathers maintained their
+separateness, refusing the ease of falsehood.' They have wealth enough to
+redeem the soil from debauched and paupered conquerors; they have the
+skill of the statesman to devise, the tongue of the orator to persuade.
+And is there no prophet or poet among us to make the ears of Christian
+Europe tingle with shame at the hideous obloquy of Christian strife which
+the Turk gazes at as at the fighting of beasts to which he has lent an
+arena? There is store of wisdom among us to found a new Jewish polity,
+grand, simple, just, like the old--a republic where there is equality of
+protection, an equality which shone like a star on the forehead of our
+ancient community, and gave it more than the brightness of Western freedom
+amid the despotisms of the East. Then our race shall have an organic
+centre, a heart and brain to watch and guide and execute; the outraged Jew
+shall have a defense in the court of nations, as the outraged Englishman
+of America. And the world will gain as Israel gains. For there will be a
+community in the van of the East which carries the culture and the
+sympathies of every great nation in its bosom: there will be a land set
+for a halting-place of enmities, a neutral ground for the East as Belgium
+is for the West. Difficulties? I know there are difficulties. But let the
+spirit of sublime achievement move in the great among our people, and the
+work will begin."
+
+"Ay, we may safely admit that, Mordecai," said Pash. "When there are great
+men on 'Change, and high-flying professors converted to your doctrine,
+difficulties will vanish like smoke."
+
+Deronda, inclined by nature to take the side of those on whom the arrows
+of scorn were falling, could not help replying to Pash's outfling, and
+said--
+
+"If we look back to the history of efforts which have made great changes,
+it is astonishing how many of them seemed hopeless to those who looked on
+in the beginning.
+
+"Take what we have all heard and seen something of--the effort after the
+unity of Italy, which we are sure soon to see accomplished to the very
+last boundary. Look into Mazzini's account of his first yearning, when he
+was a boy, after a restored greatness and a new freedom to Italy, and of
+his first efforts as a young man to rouse the same feelings in other young
+men, and get them to work toward a united nationality. Almost everything
+seemed against him; his countrymen were ignorant or indifferent,
+governments hostile, Europe incredulous. Of course the scorners often
+seemed wise. Yet you see the prophecy lay with him. As long as there is a
+remnant of national consciousness, I suppose nobody will deny that there
+may be a new stirring of memories and hopes which may inspire arduous
+action."
+
+"Amen," said Mordecai, to whom Deronda's words were a cordial. "What is
+needed is the leaven--what is needed is the seed of fire. The heritage of
+Israel is beating in the pulses of millions; it lives in their veins as a
+power without understanding, like the morning exultation of herds; it is
+the inborn half of memory, moving as in a dream among writings on the
+walls, which it sees dimly but cannot divide into speech. Let the torch of
+visible community be lit! Let the reason of Israel disclose itself in a
+great outward deed, and let there be another great migration, another
+choosing of Israel to be a nationality whose members may still stretch to
+the ends of the earth, even as the sons of England and Germany, whom
+enterprise carries afar, but who still have a national hearth and a
+tribunal of national opinion. Will any say 'It cannot be'? Baruch Spinoza
+had not a faithful Jewish heart, though he had sucked the life of his
+intellect at the breasts of Jewish tradition. He laid bare his father's
+nakedness and said, 'They who scorn him have the higher wisdom.' Yet
+Baruch Spinoza confessed, he saw not why Israel should not again be a
+chosen nation. Who says that the history and literature of our race are
+dead? Are they not as living as the history and literature of Greece and
+Rome, which have inspired revolutions, enkindled the thought of Europe,
+and made the unrighteous powers tremble? These were an inheritance dug
+from the tomb. Ours is an inheritance that has never ceased to quiver in
+millions of human frames."
+
+Mordecai had stretched his arms upward, and his long thin hands quivered
+in the air for a moment after he had ceased to speak. Gideon was certainly
+a little moved, for though there was no long pause before he made a remark
+in objection, his tone was more mild and deprecatory than before; Pash,
+meanwhile, pressing his lips together, rubbing his black head with both
+his hands and wrinkling his brow horizontally, with the expression of one
+who differs from every speaker, but does not think it worth while to say
+so. There is a sort of human paste that when it comes near the fire of
+enthusiasm is only baked into harder shape.
+
+"It may seem well enough on one side to make so much of our memories and
+inheritance as you do, Mordecai," said Gideon; "but there's another side.
+It isn't all gratitude and harmless glory. Our people have inherited a
+good deal of hatred. There's a pretty lot of curses still flying about,
+and stiff settled rancor inherited from the times of persecution. How will
+you justify keeping one sort of memory and throwing away the other? There
+are ugly debts standing on both sides."
+
+"I justify the choice as all other choice is justified," said Mordecai. "I
+cherish nothing for the Jewish nation, I seek nothing for them, but the
+good which promises good to all the nations. The spirit of our religious
+life, which is one with our national life, is not hatred of aught but
+wrong. The Master has said, an offence against man is worse than an
+offence against God. But what wonder if there is hatred in the breasts of
+Jews, who are children of the ignorant and oppressed--what wonder, since
+there is hatred in the breasts of Christians? Our national life was a
+growing light. Let the central fire be kindled again, and the light will
+reach afar. The degraded and scorned of our race will learn to think of
+their sacred land, not as a place for saintly beggary to await death in
+loathsome idleness, but as a republic where the Jewish spirit manifests
+itself in a new order founded on the old, purified and enriched by the
+experience our greatest sons have gathered from the life of the ages. How
+long is it?--only two centuries since a vessel carried over the ocean the
+beginning of the great North American nation. The people grew like meeting
+waters--they were various in habit and sect--there came a time, a century
+ago, when they needed a polity, and there were heroes of peace among them.
+What had they to form a polity with but memories of Europe, corrected by
+the vision of a better? Let our wise and wealthy show themselves heroes.
+They have the memories of the East and West, and they have the full vision
+of a better. A new Persia with a purified religion magnified itself in art
+and wisdom. So will a new Judaea, poised between East and West--a covenant
+of reconciliation. Will any say, the prophetic vision of your race has
+been hopelessly mixed with folly and bigotry: the angel of progress has no
+message for Judaism--it is a half-buried city for the paid workers to lay
+open--the waters are rushing by it as a forsaken field? I say that the
+strongest principle of growth lies in human choice. The sons of Judah have
+to choose that God may again choose them. The Messianic time is the time
+when Israel shall will the planting of the national ensign. The Nile
+overflowed and rushed onward: the Egyptian could not choose the overflow,
+but he chose to work and make channels for the fructifying waters, and
+Egypt became the land of corn. Shall man, whose soul is set in the royalty
+of discernment and resolve, deny his rank and say, I am an onlooker, ask
+no choice or purpose of me? That is the blasphemy of this time. The divine
+principle of our race is action, choice, resolved memory. Let us
+contradict the blasphemy, and help to will our own better future and the
+better future of the world--not renounce our higher gift and say, 'Let us
+be as if we were not among the populations;' but choose our full heritage,
+claim the brotherhood of our nation, and carry into it a new brotherhood
+with the nations of the Gentiles. The vision is there; it will be
+fulfilled."
+
+With the last sentence, which was no more than a loud whisper, Mordecai
+let his chin sink on his breast and his eyelids fall. No one spoke. It was
+not the first time that he had insisted on the same ideas, but he was seen
+to-night in a new phase. The quiet tenacity of his ordinary self differed
+as much from his present exaltation of mood as a man in private talk,
+giving reasons for a revolution of which no sign is discernable, differs
+from one who feels himself an agent in a revolution begun. The dawn of
+fulfillment brought to his hope by Deronda's presence had wrought
+Mordecai's conception into a state of impassioned conviction, and he had
+found strength in his excitement to pour forth the unlocked floods of
+emotive argument, with a sense of haste as at a crisis which must be
+seized. But now there had come with the quiescence of fatigue a sort of
+thankful wonder that he had spoken--a contemplation of his life as a
+journey which had come at last to this bourne. After a great excitement,
+the ebbing strength of impulse is apt to leave us in this aloofness from
+our active self. And in the moments after Mordecai had sunk his head, his
+mind was wandering along the paths of his youth, and all the hopes which
+had ended in bringing him hither.
+
+Every one felt that the talk was ended, and the tone of phlegmatic
+discussion made unseasonable by Mordecai's high-pitched solemnity. It was
+as if they had come together to hear the blowing of the _shophar_, and had
+nothing to do now but to disperse. The movement was unusually general, and
+in less than ten minutes the room was empty of all except Mordecai and
+Deronda. "Good-nights" had been given to Mordecai, but it was evident he
+had not heard them, for he remained rapt and motionless. Deronda would not
+disturb this needful rest, but waited for a spontaneous movement.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+ "My spirit is too weak; mortality
+ Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep,
+ And each imagined pinnacle and steep
+ Of godlike hardship tells me I must die
+ Like a sick eagle looking at the sky."
+ --KEATS.
+
+
+After a few minutes the unwonted stillness had penetrated Mordecai's
+consciousness, and he looked up at Deronda, not in the least with
+bewilderment and surprise, but with a gaze full of reposing satisfaction.
+Deronda rose and placed his chair nearer, where there could be no imagined
+need for raising the voice. Mordecai felt the action as a patient feels
+the gentleness that eases his pillow. He began to speak in a low tone, as
+if he were only thinking articulately, not trying to reach an audience.
+
+"In the doctrine of the Cabbala, souls are born again and again in new
+bodies till they are perfected and purified, and a soul liberated from a
+worn-out body may join the fellow-soul that needs it, that they may be
+perfected together, and their earthly work accomplished. Then they will
+depart from the mortal region, and leave place for new souls to be born
+out of the store in the eternal bosom. It is the lingering imperfection of
+the souls already born into the mortal region that hinders the birth of
+new souls and the preparation of the Messianic time:--thus the mind has
+given shape to what is hidden, as the shadow of what is known, and has
+spoken truth, though it were only in parable. When my long-wandering soul
+is liberated from this weary body, it will join yours, and its work will
+be perfected."
+
+Mordecai's pause seemed an appeal which Deronda's feeling would not let
+him leave unanswered. He tried to make it truthful; but for Mordecai's ear
+it was inevitably filled with unspoken meaning. He only said--
+
+"Everything I can in conscience do to make your life effective I will do."
+
+"I know it," said Mordecai, in a tone of quiet certainty which dispenses
+with further assurance. "I heard it. You see it all--you are by my side on
+the mount of vision, and behold the paths of fulfillment which others
+deny."
+
+He was silent a moment or two, and then went on meditatively--
+
+"You will take up my life where it was broken. I feel myself back in that
+day when my life was broken. The bright morning sun was on the quay--it
+was at Trieste--the garments of men from all nations shone like jewels--
+the boats were pushing off--the Greek vessel that would land us at Beyrout
+was to start in an hour. I was going with a merchant as his clerk and
+companion. I said, I shall behold the lands and people of the East, and I
+shall speak with a fuller vision. I breathed then as you do, without
+labor; I had the light step and the endurance of youth, I could fast, I
+could sleep on the hard ground. I had wedded poverty, and I loved my
+bride--for poverty to me was freedom. My heart exulted as if it had been
+the heart of Moses ben Maimon, strong with the strength of three score
+years, and knowing the work that was to fill them. It was the first time I
+had been south; the soul within me felt its former sun; and standing on
+the quay, where the ground I stood on seemed to send forth light, and the
+shadows had an azure glory as of spirits become visible, I felt myself in
+the flood of a glorious life, wherein my own small year-counted existence
+seemed to melt, so that I knew it not; and a great sob arose within me as
+at the rush of waters that were too strong a bliss. So I stood there
+awaiting my companion; and I saw him not till he said: 'Ezra, I have been
+to the post and there is your letter.'"
+
+"Ezra!" exclaimed Deronda, unable to contain himself.
+
+"Ezra," repeated Mordecai, affirmatively, engrossed in memory. "I was
+expecting a letter; for I wrote continually to my mother. And that sound
+of my name was like the touch of a wand that recalled me to the body
+wherefrom I had been released as it were to mingle with the ocean of human
+existence, free from the pressure of individual bondage. I opened the
+letter; and the name came again as a cry that would have disturbed me in
+the bosom of heaven, and made me yearn to reach where that sorrow was--
+'Ezra, my son!'"
+
+Mordecai paused again, his imagination arrested by the grasp of that long-
+passed moment. Deronda's mind was almost breathlessly suspended on what
+was coming. A strange possibility had suddenly presented itself.
+Mordecai's eyes were cast down in abstracted contemplation, and in a few
+moments he went on--
+
+"She was a mother of whom it might have come--yea, might have come to be
+said, 'Her children arise up and call her blessed.' In her I understood
+the meaning of that Master who, perceiving the footsteps of his mother,
+rose up and said, 'The Majesty of the Eternal cometh near!' And that
+letter was her cry from the depths of anguish and desolation--the cry of a
+mother robbed of her little ones. I was her eldest. Death had taken four
+babes one after the other. Then came, late, my little sister, who was,
+more than all the rest, the desire of my mother's eyes; and the letter was
+a piercing cry to me--'Ezra, my son, I am robbed of her. He has taken her
+away and left disgrace behind. They will never come again.'"--Here Mordecai
+lifted his eyes suddenly, laid his hand on Deronda's arm, and said, "Mine
+was the lot of Israel. For the sin of the father my soul must go into
+exile. For the sin of the father the work was broken, and the day of
+fulfilment delayed. She who bore me was desolate, disgraced, destitute. I
+turned back. On the instant I turned--her spirit and the spirit of her
+fathers, who had worthy Jewish hearts, moved within me, and drew me. God,
+in whom dwells the universe, was within me as the strength of obedience.
+I turned and traveled with hardship--to save the scant money which she
+would need. I left the sunshine, and traveled into freezing cold. In the
+last stage I spent a night in exposure to cold and snow. And that was the
+beginning of this slow death."
+
+Mordecai let his eyes wander again and removed his hand. Deronda
+resolutely repressed the questions which urged themselves within him.
+While Mordecai was in this state of emotion, no other confidence must be
+sought than what came spontaneously: nay, he himself felt a kindred
+emotion which made him dread his own speech as too momentous.
+
+"But I worked. We were destitute--every thing had been seized. And she was
+ill: the clutch of anguish was too strong for her, and wrought with some
+lurking disease. At times she could not stand for the beating of her
+heart, and the images in her brain became as chambers of terror, where she
+beheld my sister reared in evil. In the dead of night I heard her crying
+for her child. Then I rose, and we stretched forth our arms together and
+prayed. We poured forth our souls in desire that Mirah might be delivered
+from evil."
+
+"Mirah?" Deronda repeated, wishing to assure, himself that his ears had
+not been deceived by a forecasting imagination. "Did you say Mirah?"
+
+"That was my little sister's name. After we had prayed for her, my mother
+would rest awhile. It lasted hardly four years, and in the minute before
+she died, we were praying the same prayer--I aloud, she silently. Her soul
+went out upon its wings."
+
+"Have you never since heard of your sister?" said Deronda, as quietly as
+he could.
+
+"Never. Never have I heard whether she was delivered according to our
+prayer. I know not, I know not. Who shall say where the pathways lie? The
+poisonous will of the wicked is strong. It poisoned my life--it is slowly
+stifling this breath. Death delivered my mother, and I felt it a
+blessedness that I was alone in the winters of suffering. But what are the
+winters now?--they are far off"--here Mordecai again rested his hand on
+Deronda's arm, and looked at him with that joy of the hectic patient which
+pierces us to sadness--"there is nothing to wail in the withering of my
+body. The work will be the better done. Once I said the work of this
+beginning was mine, I am born to do it. Well, I shall do it. I shall live
+in you. I shall live in you."
+
+His grasp had become convulsive in its force, and Deronda, agitated as he
+had never been before--the certainty that this was Mirah's brother
+suffusing his own strange relation to Mordecai with a new solemnity and
+tenderness--felt his strong young heart beating faster and his lips
+paling. He shrank from speech. He feared, in Mordecai's present state of
+exaltation (already an alarming strain on his feeble frame), to utter a
+word of revelation about Mirah. He feared to make an answer below that
+high pitch of expectation which resembled a flash from a dying fire,
+making watchers fear to see it die the faster. His dominant impulse was to
+do as he had once done before: he laid his firm, gentle hand on the hand
+that grasped him. Mordecai's, as if it had a soul of its own--for he was
+not distinctly willing to do what he did--relaxed its grasp, and turned
+upward under Deronda's. As the two palms met and pressed each other
+Mordecai recovered some sense of his surroundings, and said--
+
+"Let us go now. I cannot talk any longer."
+
+And in fact they parted at Cohen's door without having spoken to each
+other again--merely with another pressure of the hands.
+
+Deronda felt a weight on him which was half joy, half anxiety. The joy of
+finding in Mirah's brother a nature even more than worthy of that relation
+to her, had the weight of solemnity and sadness; the reunion of brother
+and sister was in reality the first stage of a supreme parting--like that
+farewell kiss which resembles greeting, that last glance of love which
+becomes the sharpest pang of sorrow. Then there was the weight of anxiety
+about the revelation of the fact on both sides, and the arrangements it
+would be desirable to make beforehand. I suppose we should all have felt
+as Deronda did, without sinking into snobbishness or the notion that the
+primal duties of life demand a morning and an evening suit, that it was an
+admissible desire to free Mirah's first meeting with her brother from all
+jarring outward conditions. His own sense of deliverance from the dreaded
+relationship of the other Cohens, notwithstanding their good nature, made
+him resolve if possible to keep them in the background for Mirah, until
+her acquaintance with them would be an unmarred rendering of gratitude for
+any kindness they had shown to her brother. On all accounts he wished to
+give Mordecai's surroundings not only more suited to his frail bodily
+condition, but less of a hindrance to easy intercourse, even apart from
+the decisive prospect of Mirah's taken up her abode with her brother, and
+tending him through the precious remnant of his life. In the heroic drama,
+great recognitions are not encumbered with these details; and certainly
+Deronda had as reverential an interest in Mordecai and Mirah as he could
+have had in the offspring of Agamemnon; but he was caring for destinies
+still moving in the dim streets of our earthly life, not yet lifted among
+the constellations, and his task presented itself to him as difficult and
+delicate, especially in persuading Mordecai to change his abode and
+habits. Concerning Mirah's feeling and resolve he had no doubt: there
+would be a complete union of sentiment toward the departed mother, and
+Mirah would understand her brother's greatness. Yes, greatness: that was
+the word which Deronda now deliberately chose to signify the impression
+that Mordecai had made on him. He said to himself, perhaps rather
+defiantly toward the more negative spirit within him, that this man,
+however erratic some of his interpretations might be--this consumptive
+Jewish workman in threadbare clothing, lodged by charity, delivering
+himself to hearers who took his thoughts without attaching more
+consequences to them than the Flemings to the ethereal chimes ringing
+above their market-places--had the chief elements of greatness; a mind
+consciously, energetically moving with the larger march of human
+destinies, but not the less full of conscience and tender heart for the
+footsteps that tread near and need a leaning-place; capable of conceiving
+and choosing a life's task with far-off issues, yet capable of the
+unapplauded heroism which turns off the road of achievement at the call of
+the nearer duty whose effect lies within the beatings of the hearts that
+are close to us, as the hunger of the unfledged bird to the breast of its
+parent.
+
+Deronda to-night was stirred with, the feeling that the brief remnant of
+this fervid life had become his charge. He had been peculiarly wrought on
+by what he had seen at the club of the friendly indifference which
+Mordecai must have gone on encountering. His own experience of the small
+room that ardor can make for itself in ordinary minds had had the effect
+of increasing his reserve; and while tolerance was the easiest attitude to
+him, there was another bent in him also capable of becoming a weakness--
+the dislike to appear exceptional or to risk an ineffective insistance on
+his own opinion. But such caution appeared contemptible to him just now,
+when he, for the first time, saw in a complete picture and felt as a
+reality the lives that burn themselves out in solitary enthusiasm: martyrs
+of obscure circumstance, exiled in the rarity of their own minds, whose
+deliverances in other ears are no more than a long passionate soliloquy--
+unless perhaps at last, when they are nearing the invisible shores, signs
+of recognition and fulfilment may penetrate the cloud of loneliness; or
+perhaps it may be with them as with the dying Copernicus made to touch the
+first printed copy of his book when the sense of touch was gone, seeing it
+only as a dim object through the deepening dusk.
+
+Deronda had been brought near to one of those spiritual exiles, and it was
+in his nature to feel the relation as a strong chain, nay, to feel his
+imagination moving without repugnance in the direction of Mordecai's
+desires. With all his latent objection to schemes only definite in their
+generality and nebulous in detail--in the poise of his sentiments he felt
+at one with this man who had made a visionary selection of him: the lines
+of what may be called their emotional theory touched. He had not the
+Jewish consciousness, but he had a yearning, grown the stronger for the
+denial which had been his grievance, after the obligation of avowed filial
+and social ties. His feeling was ready for difficult obedience. In this
+way it came that he set about his new task ungrudgingly; and again he
+thought of Mrs. Meyrick as his chief helper. To her first he must make
+known the discovery of Mirah's brother, and with her he must consult on
+all preliminaries of bringing the mutually lost together. Happily the best
+quarter for a consumptive patient did not lie too far off the small house
+at Chelsea, and the first office Deronda had to perform for this Hebrew
+prophet who claimed him as a spiritual inheritor, was to get him a healthy
+lodging. Such is the irony of earthly mixtures, that the heroes have not
+always had carpets and teacups of their own; and, seen through the open
+window by the mackerel-vender, may have been invited with some hopefulness
+to pay three hundred per cent, in the form of fourpence. However,
+Deronda's mind was busy with a prospective arrangement for giving a
+furnished lodging some faint likeness to a refined home by dismantling his
+own chambers of his best old books in vellum, his easiest chair, and the
+bas-reliefs of Milton and Dante.
+
+But was not Mirah to be there? What furniture can give such finish to a
+room as a tender woman's face?--and is there any harmony of tints that has
+such stirrings of delight as the sweet modulation of her voice? Here is
+one good, at least, thought Deronda, that comes to Mordecai from his
+having fixed his imagination on me. He has recovered a perfect sister,
+whose affection is waiting for him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+ Fairy folk a-listening
+ Hear the seed sprout in the spring.
+ And for music to their dance
+ Hear the hedgerows wake from trance,
+ Sap that trembles into buds
+ Sending little rhythmic floods
+ Of fairy sound in fairy ears.
+ Thus all beauty that appears
+ Has birth as sound to finer sense
+ And lighter-clad intelligence.
+
+
+And Gwendolen? She was thinking of Deronda much more than he was thinking
+of her--often wondering what were his ideas "about things," and how his
+life was occupied. But a lap-dog would be necessarily at a loss in framing
+to itself the motives and adventures of doghood at large; and it was as
+far from Gwendolen's conception that Deronda's life could be determined by
+the historical destiny of the Jews, as that he could rise into the air on
+a brazen horse, and so vanish from her horizon in the form of a twinkling
+star.
+
+With all the sense of inferiority that had been forced upon her, it was
+inevitable that she should imagine a larger place for herself in his
+thoughts than she actually possessed. They must be rather old and wise
+persons who are not apt to see their own anxiety or elation about
+themselves reflected in other minds; and Gwendolen, with her youth and
+inward solitude, may be excused for dwelling on signs of special interest
+in her shown by the one person who had impressed her with the feeling of
+submission, and for mistaking the color and proportion of those signs in
+the mind of Deronda.
+
+Meanwhile, what would he tell her that she ought to do? "He said, I must
+get more interest in others, and more knowledge, and that I must care
+about the best things--but how am I to begin?" She wondered what books he
+would tell her to take up to her own room, and recalled the famous writers
+that she had either not looked into or had found the most unreadable, with
+a half-smiling wish that she could mischievously ask Deronda if they were
+not the books called "medicine for the mind." Then she repented of her
+sauciness, and when she was safe from observation carried up a
+miscellaneous selection--Descartes, Bacon, Locke, Butler, Burke, Guizot--
+knowing, as a clever young lady of education, that these authors were
+ornaments of mankind, feeling sure that Deronda had read them, and hoping
+that by dipping into them all in succession, with her rapid understanding
+she might get a point of view nearer to his level.
+
+But it was astonishing how little time she found for these vast mental
+excursions. Constantly she had to be on the scene as Mrs. Grandcourt, and
+to feel herself watched in that part by the exacting eyes of a husband who
+had found a motive to exercise his tenacity--that of making his marriage
+answer all the ends he chose, and with the more completeness the more he
+discerned any opposing will in her. And she herself, whatever rebellion
+might be going on within her, could not have made up her mind to failure
+in her representation. No feeling had yet reconciled her for a moment to
+any act, word, or look that would be a confession to the world: and what
+she most dreaded in herself was any violent impulse that would make an
+involuntary confession: it was the will to be silent in every other
+direction that had thrown the more impetuosity into her confidences toward
+Deronda, to whom her thought continually turned as a help against herself.
+Her riding, her hunting, her visiting and receiving of visits, were all
+performed in a spirit of achievement which served instead of zest and
+young gladness, so that all around Diplow, in those weeks of the new year,
+Mrs. Grandcourt was regarded as wearing her honors with triumph.
+
+"She disguises it under an air of taking everything as a matter of
+course," said Mrs. Arrowpoint. "A stranger might suppose that she had
+condescended rather than risen. I always noticed that doubleness in her."
+
+To her mother most of all Gwendolen was bent on acting complete
+satisfaction, and poor Mrs. Davilow was so far deceived that she took the
+unexpected distance at which she was kept, in spite of what she felt to be
+Grandcourt's handsome behavior in providing for her, as a comparative
+indifference in her daughter, now that marriage had created new interests.
+To be fetched to lunch and then to dinner along with the Gascoignes, to be
+driven back soon after breakfast the next morning, and to have brief calls
+from Gwendolen in which her husband waited for her outside either on
+horseback or sitting in the carriage, was all the intercourse allowed to
+her mother.
+
+The truth was, that the second time Gwendolen proposed to invite her
+mother with Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne, Grandcourt had at first been silent,
+and then drawled, "We can't be having _those people_ always. Gascoigne
+talks too much. Country clergy are always bores--with their confounded
+fuss about everything."
+
+That speech was full of foreboding for Gwendolen. To have her mother
+classed under "those people" was enough to confirm the previous dread of
+bringing her too near. Still, she could not give the true reasons--she
+could not say to her mother, "Mr. Grandcourt wants to recognize you as
+little as possible; and besides it is better you should not see much of my
+married life, else you might find out that I am miserable." So she waived
+as lightly as she could every allusion to the subject; and when Mrs.
+Davilow again hinted the possibility of her having a house close to
+Ryelands, Gwendolen said, "It would not be so nice for you as being near
+the rectory here, mamma. We shall perhaps be very little at Ryelands. You
+would miss my aunt and uncle."
+
+And all the while this contemptuous veto of her husband's on any intimacy
+with her family, making her proudly shrink from giving them the aspect of
+troublesome pensioners, was rousing more inward inclination toward them.
+She had never felt so kindly toward her uncle, so much disposed to look
+back on his cheerful, complacent activity and spirit of kind management,
+even when mistaken, as more of a comfort than the neutral loftiness which
+was every day chilling her. And here perhaps she was unconsciously finding
+some of that mental enlargement which it was hard to get from her
+occasional dashes into difficult authors, who instead of blending
+themselves with her daily agitations required her to dismiss them.
+
+It was a delightful surprise one day when Mr. and Mrs. Gascoigne were at
+Offendene to see Gwendolen ride up without her husband--with the groom
+only. All, including the four girls and Miss Merry, seated in the dining-
+room at lunch, could see the welcome approach; and even the elder ones
+were not without something of Isabel's romantic sense that the beautiful
+sister on the splendid chestnut, which held its head as if proud to bear
+her, was a sort of Harriet Byron or Miss Wardour reappearing out of her
+"happiness ever after."
+
+Her uncle went to the door to give her his hand, and she sprang from her
+horse with an air of alacrity which might well encourage that notion of
+guaranteed happiness; for Gwendolen was particularly bent to-day on
+setting her mother's heart at rest, and her unusual sense of freedom in
+being able to make this visit alone enabled her to bear up under the
+pressure of painful facts which were urging themselves anew. The seven
+family kisses were not so tiresome as they used to be.
+
+"Mr. Grandcourt is gone out, so I determined to fill up the time by coming
+to you, mamma," said Gwendolen, as she laid down her hat and seated
+herself next to her mother; and then looking at her with a playfully
+monitory air, "That is a punishment to you for not wearing better lace on
+your head. You didn't think I should come and detect you--you dreadfully
+careless-about-yourself mamma!" She gave a caressing touch to the dear
+head.
+
+"Scold me, dear," said Mrs. Davilow, her delicate worn face flushing with
+delight. "But I wish there was something you could eat after your ride--
+instead of these scraps. Let Jocosa make you a cup of chocolate in your
+old way. You used to like that."
+
+Miss Merry immediately rose and went out, though Gwendolen said, "Oh, no,
+a piece of bread, or one of those hard biscuits. I can't think about
+eating. I am come to say good-bye."
+
+"What! going to Ryelands again?" said Mr. Gascoigne.
+
+"No, we are going to town," said Gwendolen, beginning to break up a piece
+of bread, but putting no morsel into her mouth.
+
+"It is rather early to go to town," said Mrs. Gascoigne, "and Mr.
+Grandcourt not in Parliament."
+
+"Oh, there is only one more day's hunting to be had, and Henleigh has some
+business in town with lawyers, I think," said Gwendolen. "I am very glad.
+I shall like to go to town."
+
+"You will see your house in Grosvenor Square," said Mrs. Davilow. She and
+the girls were devouring with their eyes every movement of their goddess,
+soon to vanish.
+
+"Yes," said Gwendolen, in a tone of assent to the interest of that
+expectation. "And there is so much to be seen and done in town."
+
+"I wish, my dear Gwendolen," said Mr. Gascoigne, in a kind of cordial
+advice, "that you would use your influence with Mr. Grandcourt to induce
+him to enter Parliament. A man of his position should make his weight felt
+in politics. The best judges are confident that the ministry will have to
+appeal to the country on this question of further Reform, and Mr.
+Grandcourt should be ready for the opportunity. I am not quite sure that
+his opinions and mine accord entirely; I have not heard him express
+himself very fully. But I don't look at the matter from that point of
+view. I am thinking of your husband's standing in the country. And he has
+now come to that stage of life when a man like him should enter into
+public affairs. A wife has great influence with her husband. Use yours in
+that direction, my dear."
+
+The rector felt that he was acquitting himself of a duty here, and giving
+something like the aspect of a public benefit to his niece's match. To
+Gwendolen the whole speech had the flavor of bitter comedy. If she had
+been merry, she must have laughed at her uncle's explanation to her that
+he had not heard Grandcourt express himself very fully on politics. And
+the wife's great influence! General maxims about husbands and wives seemed
+now of a precarious usefulness. Gwendolen herself had once believed in her
+future influence as an omnipotence in managing--she did not know exactly
+what. But her chief concern at present was to give an answer that would be
+felt appropriate.
+
+"I should be very glad, uncle. But I think Mr. Grandcourt would not like
+the trouble of an election--at least, unless it could be without his
+making speeches. I thought candidates always made speeches."
+
+"Not necessarily--to any great extent," said Mr. Gascoigne. "A man of
+position and weight can get on without much of it. A county member need
+have very little trouble in that way, and both out of the House and in it
+is liked the better for not being a speechifier. Tell Mr. Grandcourt that
+I say so."
+
+"Here comes Jocosa with my chocolate after all," said Gwendolen, escaping
+from a promise to give information that would certainly have been received
+in a way inconceivable to the good rector, who, pushing his chair a little
+aside from the table and crossing his leg, looked as well as it he felt
+like a worthy specimen of a clergyman and magistrate giving experienced
+advice. Mr. Gascoigne had come to the conclusion that Grandcourt was a
+proud man, but his own self-love, calmed through life by the consciousness
+of his general value and personal advantages, was not irritable enough to
+prevent him from hoping the best about his niece's husband because her
+uncle was kept rather haughtily at a distance. A certain aloofness must be
+allowed to the representative of an old family; you would not expect him
+to be on intimate terms even with abstractions. But Mrs. Gascoigne was
+less dispassionate on her husband's account, and felt Grandcourt's
+haughtiness as something a little blameable in Gwendolen.
+
+"Your uncle and Anna will very likely be in town about Easter," she said,
+with a vague sense of expressing a slight discontent. "Dear Rex hopes to
+come out with honors and a fellowship, and he wants his father and Anna to
+meet him in London, that they may be jolly together, as he says. I
+shouldn't wonder if Lord Brackenshaw invited them, he has been so very
+kind since he came back to the Castle."
+
+"I hope my uncle will bring Ann to stay in Grosvenor Square," said
+Gwendolen, risking herself so far, for the sake of the present moment, but
+in reality wishing that she might never be obliged to bring any of her
+family near Grandcourt again. "I am very glad of Rex's good fortune."
+
+"We must not be premature, and rejoice too much beforehand," said the
+rector, to whom this topic was the happiest in the world, and altogether
+allowable, now that the issue of that little affair about Gwendolen had
+been so satisfactory. "Not but that I am in correspondence with impartial
+judges, who have the highest hopes about my son, as a singularly clear-
+headed young man. And of his excellent disposition and principle I have
+had the best evidence."
+
+"We shall have him a great lawyer some time," said Mrs. Gascoigne.
+
+"How very nice!" said Gwendolen, with a concealed scepticism as to
+niceness in general, which made the word quite applicable to lawyers.
+
+"Talking of Lord Brackenshaw's kindness," said Mrs. Davilow, "you don't
+know how delightful he has been, Gwendolen. He has begged me to consider
+myself his guest in this house till I can get another that I like--he did
+it in the most graceful way. But now a house has turned up. Old Mr. Jodson
+is dead, and we can have his house. It is just what I want; small, but
+with nothing hideous to make you miserable thinking about it. And it is
+only a mile from the Rectory. You remember the low white house nearly
+hidden by the trees, as we turn up the lane to the church?"
+
+"Yes, but you have no furniture, poor mamma," said Gwendolen, in a
+melancholy tone.
+
+"Oh, I am saving money for that. You know who has made me rather rich,
+dear," said Mrs. Davilow, laying her hand on Gwendolen's. "And Jocosa
+really makes so little do for housekeeping--it is quite wonderful."
+
+"Oh, please let me go up-stairs with you and arrange my hat, mamma," said
+Gwendolen, suddenly putting up her hand to her hair and perhaps creating a
+desired disarrangement. Her heart was swelling, and she was ready to cry.
+Her mother _must_ have been worse off, if it had not been for Grandcourt.
+"I suppose I shall never see all this again," said Gwendolen, looking
+round her, as they entered the black and yellow bedroom, and then throwing
+herself into a chair in front of the glass with a little groan as of
+bodily fatigue. In the resolve not to cry she had become very pale.
+
+"You are not well, dear?" said Mrs. Davilow.
+
+"No; that chocolate has made me sick," said Gwendolen, putting up her hand
+to be taken.
+
+"I should be allowed to come to you if you were ill, darling," said Mrs.
+Davilow, rather timidly, as she pressed the hand to her bosom. Something
+had made her sure today that her child loved her--needed her as much as
+ever.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Gwendolen, leaning her head against her mother, though
+speaking as lightly as she could. "But you know I never am ill. I am as
+strong as possible; and you must not take to fretting about me, but make
+yourself as happy as you can with the girls. They are better children to
+you than I have been, you know." She turned up her face with a smile.
+
+"You have always been good, my darling. I remember nothing else."
+
+"Why, what did I ever do that was good to you, except marry Mr.
+Grandcourt?" said Gwendolen, starting up with a desperate resolve to be
+playful, and keep no more on the perilous edge of agitation. "And I should
+not have done that unless it had pleased myself." She tossed up her chin,
+and reached her hat.
+
+"God forbid, child! I would not have had you marry for my sake. Your
+happiness by itself is half mine."
+
+"Very well," said Gwendolen, arranging her hat fastidiously, "then you
+will please to consider that you are half happy, which is more than I am
+used to seeing you." With the last words she again turned with her old
+playful smile to her mother. "Now I am ready; but oh, mamma, Mr.
+Grandcourt gives me a quantity of money, and expects me to spend it, and I
+can't spend it; and you know I can't bear charity children and all that;
+and here are thirty pounds. I wish the girls would spend it for me on
+little things for themselves when you go to the new house. Tell them so."
+Gwendolen put the notes into her mother's hands and looked away hastily,
+moving toward the door.
+
+"God bless you, dear," said Mrs. Davilow. "It will please them so that you
+should have thought of them in particular."
+
+"Oh, they are troublesome things; but they don't trouble me now," said
+Gwendolen, turning and nodding playfully. She hardly understood her own
+feeling in this act toward her sisters, but at any rate she did not wish
+it to be taken as anything serious. She was glad to have got out of the
+bedroom without showing more signs of emotion, and she went through the
+rest of her visit and all the good-byes with a quiet propriety that made
+her say to herself sarcastically as she rode away, "I think I am making a
+very good Mrs. Grandcourt."
+
+She believed that her husband had gone to Gadsmere that day--had inferred
+this, as she had long ago inferred who were the inmates of what he had
+described as "a dog-hutch of a place in a black country;" and the strange
+conflict of feeling within her had had the characteristic effect of
+sending her to Offendene with a tightened resolve--a form of excitement
+which was native to her.
+
+She wondered at her own contradictions. Why should she feel it bitter to
+her that Grandcourt showed concern for the beings on whose account she
+herself was undergoing remorse? Had she not before her marriage inwardly
+determined to speak and act on their behalf?--and since he had lately
+implied that he wanted to be in town because he was making arrangements
+about his will, she ought to have been glad of any sign that he kept a
+conscience awake toward those at Gadsmere; and yet, now that she was a
+wife, the sense that Grandcourt was gone to Gadsmere was like red heat
+near a burn. She had brought on herself this indignity in her own eyes--
+this humiliation of being doomed to a terrified silence lest her husband
+should discover with what sort of consciousness she had married him; and
+as she had said to Deronda, she "must go on." After the intense moments of
+secret hatred toward this husband who from the very first had cowed her,
+there always came back the spiritual pressure which made submission
+inevitable. There was no effort at freedoms that would not bring fresh and
+worse humiliation. Gwendolen could dare nothing except an impulsive
+action--least of all could she dare premeditatedly a vague future in which
+the only certain condition was indignity. It spite of remorse, it still
+seemed the worst result of her marriage that she should in any way make a
+spectacle of herself; and her humiliation was lightened by her thinking
+that only Mrs. Glasher was aware of the fact which caused it. For
+Gwendolen had never referred the interview at the Whispering Stones to
+Lush's agency; her disposition to vague terror investing with shadowy
+omnipresence any threat of fatal power over her, and so hindering her from
+imagining plans and channels by which news had been conveyed to the woman
+who had the poisoning skill of a sorceress. To Gwendolen's mind the secret
+lay with Mrs. Glasher, and there were words in the horrible letter which
+implied that Mrs. Glasher would dread disclosure to the husband, as much
+as the usurping Mrs. Grandcourt.
+
+Something else, too, she thought of as more of a secret from her husband
+than it really was--namely that suppressed struggle of desperate rebellion
+which she herself dreaded. Grandcourt could not indeed fully imagine how
+things affected Gwendolen: he had no imagination of anything in her but
+what affected the gratification of his own will; but on this point he had
+the sensibility which seems like divination. What we see exclusively we
+are apt to see with some mistake of proportions; and Grandcourt was not
+likely to be infallible in his judgments concerning this wife who was
+governed by many shadowy powers, to him nonexistent. He magnified her
+inward resistance, but that did not lessen his satisfaction in the mastery
+of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+ Behold my lady's carriage stop the way.
+ With powdered lacquey and with charming bay;
+ She sweeps the matting, treads the crimson stair.
+ Her arduous function solely "to be there."
+ Like Sirious rising o'er the silent sea.
+ She hides her heart in lustre loftily.
+
+
+So the Grandcourts were in Grosvenor Square in time to receive a card for
+the musical party at Lady Mallinger's, there being reasons of business
+which made Sir Hugo know beforehand that his ill-beloved nephew was coming
+up. It was only a third evening after their arrival, and Gwendolen made
+rather an absent-minded acquaintance with her new ceilings and furniture,
+preoccupied with the certainty that she was going to speak to Deronda
+again, and also to see the Miss Lapidoth who had gone through so much, and
+was "capable of submitting to anything in the form of duty." For Gwendolen
+had remembered nearly every word that Deronda had said about Mirah, and
+especially that phrase, which she repeated to herself bitterly, having an
+ill-defined consciousness that her own submission was something very
+different. She would have been obliged to allow, if any one had said it to
+her, that what she submitted to could not take the shape of duty, but was
+submission to a yoke drawn on her by an action she was ashamed of, and
+worn with a strength of selfish motives that left no weight for duty to
+carry.
+
+The drawing-rooms in Park Lane, all white, gold, and pale crimson, were
+agreeably furnished, and not crowded with guests, before Mr. and Mrs.
+Grandcourt entered; and more than half an hour of instrumental music was
+being followed by an interval of movement and chat. Klesmer was there with
+his wife, and in his generous interest for Mirah he proposed to accompany
+her singing of Leo's "_O patria mia_," which he had before recommended her
+to choose, as more distinctive of her than better known music. He was
+already at the piano, and Mirah was standing there conspicuously, when
+Gwendolen, magnificent in her pale green velvet and poisoned diamonds, was
+ushered to a seat of honor well in view of them. With her long sight and
+self-command she had the rare power of quickly distinguishing persons and
+objects on entering a full room, and while turning her glance toward Mirah
+she did not neglect to exchange a bow with Klesmer as she passed. The
+smile seemed to each a lightning-flash back on that morning when it had
+been her ambition to stand as the "little Jewess" was standing, and survey
+a grand audience from the higher rank of her talent--instead of which she
+was one of the ordinary crowd in silk and gems, whose utmost performance
+it must be to admire or find fault. "He thinks I am in the right road
+now," said the lurking resentment within her.
+
+Gwendolen had not caught sight of Deronda in her passage, and while she
+was seated acquitting herself in chat with Sir Hugo, she glanced round her
+with careful ease, bowing a recognition here and there, and fearful lest
+an anxious-looking exploration in search of Deronda might be observed by
+her husband, and afterward rebuked as something "damnably vulgar." But all
+traveling, even that of a slow gradual glance round a room, brings a
+liability to undesired encounters, and amongst the eyes that met
+Gwendolen's, forcing her into a slight bow, were those of the "amateur too
+fond of Meyerbeer," Mr. Lush, whom Sir Hugo continued to find useful as a
+half-caste among gentlemen. He was standing near her husband, who,
+however, turned a shoulder toward him, and was being understood to listen
+to Lord Pentreath. How was it that at this moment, for the first time,
+there darted through Gwendolen, like a disagreeable sensation, the idea
+that this man knew all about her husband's life? He had been banished from
+her sight, according to her will, and she had been satisfied; he had sunk
+entirely into the background of her thoughts, screened away from her by
+the agitating figures that kept up an inward drama in which Lush had no
+place. Here suddenly he reappeared at her husband's elbow, and there
+sprang up in her, like an instantaneously fabricated memory in a dream,
+the sense of his being connected with the secrets that made her wretched.
+She was conscious of effort in turning her head away from him, trying to
+continue her wandering survey as if she had seen nothing of more
+consequence than the picture on the wall, till she discovered Deronda. But
+he was not looking toward her, and she withdrew her eyes from him, without
+having got any recognition, consoling herself with the assurance that he
+must have seen her come in. In fact, he was not standing far from the door
+with Hans Meyrick, whom he had been careful to bring into Lady Mallinger's
+list. They were both a little more anxious than was comfortable lest Mirah
+should not be heard to advantage. Deronda even felt himself on the brink
+of betraying emotion, Mirah's presence now being linked with crowding
+images of what had gone before and was to come after--all centering in the
+brother he was soon to reveal to her; and he had escaped as soon as he
+could from the side of Lady Pentreath, who had said in her violoncello
+voice--
+
+"Well, your Jewess is pretty--there's no denying that. But where is her
+Jewish impudence? She looks as demure as a nun. I suppose she learned that
+on the stage."
+
+He was beginning to feel on Mirah's behalf something of what he had felt
+for himself in his seraphic boyish time, when Sir Hugo asked him if he
+would like to be a great singer--an indignant dislike to her being
+remarked on in a free and easy way, as if she were an imported commodity
+disdainfully paid for by the fashionable public, and he winced the more
+because Mordecai, he knew, would feel that the name "Jewess" was taken as
+a sort of stamp like the lettering of Chinese silk. In this susceptible
+mood he saw the Grandcourts enter, and was immediately appealed to by Hans
+about "that Vandyke duchess of a beauty." Pray excuse Deronda that in this
+moment he felt a transient renewal of his first repulsion from Gwendolen,
+as if she and her beauty and her failings were to blame for the
+undervaluing of Mirah as a woman--a feeling something like class
+animosity, which affection for what is not fully recognized by others,
+whether in persons or in poetry, rarely allows us to escape. To Hans
+admiring Gwendolen with his habitual hyperbole, he answered, with a
+sarcasm that was not quite good-natured--
+
+"I thought you could admire no style of woman but your Berenice."
+
+"That is the style I worship--not admire," said Hans. "Other styles of
+women I might make myself wicked for, but for Berenice I could make
+myself--well, pretty good, which is something much more difficult."
+
+"Hush," said Deronda, under the pretext that the singing was going to
+begin. He was not so delighted with the answer as might have been
+expected, and was relieved by Hans's movement to a more advanced spot.
+
+Deronda had never before heard Mirah sing "_O patria mia_." He knew well
+Leopardi's fine Ode to Italy (when Italy sat like a disconsolate mother in
+chains, hiding her face on her knees and weeping), and the few selected
+words were filled for him with the grandeur of the whole, which seemed to
+breath an inspiration through the music. Mirah singing this, made Mordecai
+more than ever one presence with her. Certain words not included in the
+song nevertheless rang within Deronda as harmonies from the invisible--
+
+ "Non ti difende
+ Nessun de tuoi! L'armi, qua l'armi: io solo
+ Combattero, procombero sol io"--
+[Footnote: Do none of thy children defend thee? Arms! bring me arms! alone
+I will fight, alone I will fall.]
+
+they seemed the very voice of that heroic passion which is falsely said to
+devote itself in vain when it achieves the god-like end of manifesting
+unselfish love. And that passion was present to Deronda now as the vivid
+image of a man dying helplessly away from the possibility of battle.
+
+Mirah was equal to his wishes. While the general applause was sounding,
+Klesmer gave a more valued testimony, audible to her only--"Good, good--
+the crescendo better than before." But her chief anxiety was to know that
+she had satisfied Mr. Deronda: any failure on her part this evening would
+have pained her as an especial injury to him. Of course all her prospects
+were due to what he had done for her; still, this occasion of singing in
+the house that was his home brought a peculiar demand. She looked toward
+him in the distance, and he saw that she did; but he remained where he
+was, and watched the streams of emulous admirers closing round her, till
+presently they parted to make way for Gwendolen, who was taken up to be
+introduced by Mrs. Klesmer. Easier now about "the little Jewess," Daniel
+relented toward poor Gwendolen in her splendor, and his memory went back,
+with some penitence for his momentary hardness, over all the signs and
+confessions that she too needed a rescue, and one much more difficult than
+that of the wanderer by the river--a rescue for which he felt himself
+helpless. The silent question--"But is it not cowardly to make that a
+reason for turning away?" was the form in which he framed his resolve to
+go near her on the first opportunity, and show his regard for her past
+confidence, in spite of Sir Hugo's unwelcome hints.
+
+Klesmer, having risen to Gwendolen as she approached, and being included
+by her in the opening conversation with Mirah, continued near them a
+little while, looking down with a smile, which was rather in his eyes than
+on his lips, at the piquant contrast of the two charming young creatures
+seated on the red divan. The solicitude seemed to be all on the side of
+the splendid one.
+
+"You must let me say how much I am obliged to you," said Gwendolen. "I had
+heard from Mr. Deronda that I should have a great treat in your singing,
+but I was too ignorant to imagine how great."
+
+"You are very good to say so," answered Mirah, her mind chiefly occupied
+in contemplating Gwendolen. It was like a new kind of stage-experience to
+her to be close to genuine grand ladies with genuine brilliants and
+complexions, and they impressed her vaguely as coming out of some unknown
+drama, in which their parts perhaps got more tragic as they went on.
+
+"We shall all want to learn of you--I, at least," said Gwendolen. "I sing
+very badly, as Herr Klesmer will tell you,"--here she glanced upward to
+that higher power rather archly, and continued--"but I have been rebuked
+for not liking to middling, since I can be nothing more. I think that is a
+different doctrine from yours?" She was still looking at Klesmer, who said
+quickly--
+
+"Not if it means that it would be worth while for you to study further,
+and for Miss Lapidoth to have the pleasure of helping you." With that he
+moved away, and Mirah taking everything with _naive_ seriousness, said--
+
+"If you think I could teach you, I shall be very glad. I am anxious to
+teach, but I have only just begun. If I do it well, it must be by
+remembering how my master taught me."
+
+Gwendolen was in reality too uncertain about herself to be prepared for
+this simple promptitude of Mirah's, and in her wish to change the subject,
+said, with some lapse from the good taste of her first address--
+
+"You have not been long in London, I think?--but you were perhaps
+introduced to Mr. Deronda abroad?"
+
+"No," said Mirah; "I never saw him before I came to England in the
+summer."
+
+"But he has seen you often and heard you sing a great deal, has he not?"
+said Gwendolen, led on partly by the wish to hear anything about Deronda,
+and partly by the awkwardness which besets the readiest person, in
+carrying on a dialogue when empty of matter. "He spoke of you to me with
+the highest praise. He seemed to know you quite well."
+
+"Oh, I was poor and needed help," said Mirah, in a new tone of feeling,
+"and Mr. Deronda has given me the best friends in the world. That is the
+only way he came to know anything about me--because he was sorry for me. I
+had no friends when I came. I was in distress. I owe everything to him."
+
+Poor Gwendolen, who had wanted to be a struggling artist herself, could
+nevertheless not escape the impression that a mode of inquiry which would
+have been rather rude toward herself was an amiable condescension to this
+Jewess who was ready to give her lessons. The only effect on Mirah, as
+always on any mention of Deronda, was to stir reverential gratitude and
+anxiety that she should be understood to have the deepest obligation to
+him.
+
+But both he and Hans, who were noticing the pair from a distance, would
+have felt rather indignant if they had known that the conversation had led
+up to Mirah's representation of herself in this light of neediness. In the
+movement that prompted her, however, there was an exquisite delicacy,
+which perhaps she could not have stated explicitly--the feeling that she
+ought not to allow any one to assume in Deronda a relation of more
+equality or less generous interest toward her than actually existed. Her
+answer was delightful to Gwendolen: she thought of nothing but the ready
+compassion which in another form she had trusted in and found herself; and
+on the signals that Klesmer was about to play she moved away in much
+content, entirely without presentiment that this Jewish _protege_ would
+ever make a more important difference in her life than the possible
+improvement of her singing--if the leisure and spirits of a Mrs.
+Grandcourt would allow of other lessons than such as the world was giving
+her at rather a high charge.
+
+With her wonted alternation from resolute care of appearances to some rash
+indulgence of an impulse, she chose, under the pretext of getting farther
+from the instrument, not to go again to her former seat, but placed
+herself on a settee where she could only have one neighbor. She was nearer
+to Deronda than before: was it surprising that he came up in time to shake
+hands before the music began--then, that after he had stood a little while
+by the elbow of the settee at the empty end, the torrent-like confluences
+of bass and treble seemed, like a convulsion of nature, to cast the
+conduct of petty mortals into insignificance, and to warrant his sitting
+down?
+
+But when at the end of Klesmer's playing there came the outburst of talk
+under which Gwendolen had hoped to speak as she would to Deronda, she
+observed that Mr. Lush was within hearing, leaning against the wall close
+by them. She could not help her flush of anger, but she tried to have only
+an air of polite indifference in saying--
+
+"Miss Lapidoth is everything you described her to be."
+
+"You have been very quick in discovering that," said Deronda, ironically.
+
+"I have not found out all the excellencies you spoke of--I don't mean
+that," said Gwendolen; "but I think her singing is charming, and herself,
+too. Her face is lovely--not in the least common; and she is such a
+complete little person. I should think she will be a great success."
+
+This speech was grating on Deronda, and he would not answer it, but looked
+gravely before him. She knew that he was displeased with her, and she was
+getting so impatient under the neighborhood of Mr. Lush, which prevented
+her from saying any word she wanted to say, that she meditated some
+desperate step to get rid of it, and remained silent, too. That constraint
+seemed to last a long while, neither Gwendolen nor Deronda looking at the
+other, till Lush slowly relieved the wall of his weight, and joined some
+one at a distance.
+
+Gwendolen immediately said, "You despise me for talking artificially."
+
+"No," said Deronda, looking at her coolly; "I think that is quite
+excusable sometimes. But I did not think what you were last saying was
+altogether artificial."
+
+"There was something in it that displeased you," said Gwendolen. "What was
+it?"
+
+"It is impossible to explain such things," said Deronda. "One can never
+communicate niceties of feeling about words and manner."
+
+"You think I am shut out from understanding them," said Gwendolen, with a
+slight tremor in her voice, which she was trying to conquer. "Have I shown
+myself so very dense to everything you have said?" There was an
+indescribable look of suppressed tears in her eyes, which were turned on
+him.
+
+"Not at all," said Deronda, with some softening of voice. "But experience
+differs for different people. We don't all wince at the same things. I
+have had plenty of proof that you are not dense." He smiled at her.
+
+"But one may feel things and are not able to do anything better for all
+that," said Gwendolen, not smiling in return--the distance to which
+Deronda's words seemed to throw her chilling her too much. "I begin to
+think we can only get better by having people about us who raise good
+feelings. You must not be surprised at anything in me. I think it is too
+late for me to alter. I don't know how to set about being wise, as you
+told me to be."
+
+"I seldom find I do any good by my preaching. I might as well have kept
+from meddling," said Deronda, thinking rather sadly that his interference
+about that unfortunate necklace might end in nothing but an added pain to
+him in seeing her after all hardened to another sort of gambling than
+roulette.
+
+"Don't say that," said Gwendolen, hurriedly, feeling that this might be
+her only chance of getting the words uttered, and dreading the increase of
+her own agitation. "If you despair of me, I shall despair. Your saying
+that I should not go on being selfish and ignorant has been some strength
+to me. If you say you wish you had not meddled--that means you despair of
+me and forsake me. And then you will decide for me that I shall not be
+good. It is you who will decide; because you might have made me different
+by keeping as near to me as you could, and believing in me."
+
+She had not been looking at him as she spoke, but at the handle of the fan
+which she held closed. With the last words she rose and left him,
+returning to her former place, which had been left vacant; while every one
+was settling into quietude in expectation of Mirah's voice, which
+presently, with that wonderful, searching quality of subdued song in which
+the melody seems simply an effect of the emotion, gave forth, _Per pieta
+non dirmi addio_.
+
+In Deronda's ear the strain was for the moment a continuance of
+Gwendolen's pleading--a painful urging of something vague and difficult,
+irreconcilable with pressing conditions, and yet cruel to resist. However
+strange the mixture in her of a resolute pride and a precocious air of
+knowing the world, with a precipitate, guileless indiscretion, he was
+quite sure now that the mixture existed. Sir Hugo's hints had made him
+alive to dangers that his own disposition might have neglected; but that
+Gwendolen's reliance on him was unvisited by any dream of his being a man
+who could misinterpret her was as manifest as morning, and made an appeal
+which wrestled with his sense of present dangers, and with his foreboding
+of a growing incompatible claim on him in her mind. There was a
+foreshadowing of some painful collision: on the one side the grasp of
+Mordecai's dying hand on him, with all the ideals and prospects it
+aroused; on the other the fair creature in silk and gems, with her hidden
+wound and her self-dread, making a trustful effort to lean and find
+herself sustained. It was as if he had a vision of himself besought with
+outstretched arms and cries, while he was caught by the waves and
+compelled to mount the vessel bound for a far-off coast. That was the
+strain of excited feeling in him that went along with the notes of Mirah's
+song; but when it ceased he moved from his seat with the reflection that
+he had been falling into an exaggeration of his own importance, and a
+ridiculous readiness to accept Gwendolen's view of himself, as if he could
+really have any decisive power over her.
+
+"What an enviable fellow you are," said Hans to him, "sitting on a sofa
+with that young duchess, and having an interesting quarrel with her!"
+
+"Quarrel with her?" repeated Deronda, rather uncomfortably.
+
+"Oh, about theology, of course; nothing personal. But she told you what
+you ought to think, and then left you with a grand air which was
+admirable. Is she an Antinomian--if so, tell her I am an Antinomian
+painter, and introduce me. I should like to paint her and her husband. He
+has the sort of handsome _physique_ that the Duke ought to have in
+_Lucrezia Borgia_--if it could go with a fine baritone, which it can't."
+
+Deronda devoutly hoped that Hans's account of the impression his dialogue
+with Gwendolen had made on a distant beholder was no more than a bit of
+fantastic representation, such as was common with him.
+
+And Gwendolen was not without her after-thoughts that her husband's eyes
+might have been on her, extracting something to reprove--some offence
+against her dignity as his wife; her consciousness telling her that she
+had not kept up the perfect air of equability in public which was her own
+ideal. But Grandcourt made no observation on her behavior. All he said as
+they were driving home was--
+
+"Lush will dine with us among the other people to-morrow. You will treat
+him civilly."
+
+Gwendolen's heart began to beat violently. The words that she wanted to
+utter, as one wants to return a blow, were. "You are breaking your promise
+to me--the first promise you made me." But she dared not utter them. She
+was as frightened at a quarrel as if she had foreseen that it would end
+with throttling fingers on her neck. After a pause, she said in the tone
+rather of defeat than resentment--
+
+"I thought you did not intend him to frequent the house again."
+
+"I want him just now. He is useful to me; and he must be treated civilly."
+
+Silence. There may come a moment when even an excellent husband who has
+dropped smoking under more or less of a pledge during courtship, for the
+first time will introduce his cigar-smoke between himself and his wife,
+with the tacit understanding that she will have to put up with it. Mr.
+Lush was, so to speak, a very large cigar.
+
+If these are the sort of lovers' vows at which Jove laughs, he must have a
+merry time of it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLXL
+
+ "If any one should importune me to give a reason why I loved him, I
+ feel it could no otherwise be expressed than by making answer,
+ 'Because it was he, because it was I.' There is, beyond what I am able
+ to say, I know not what inexplicable power that brought on this
+ union."--MONTAIGNE: _On Friendship_.
+
+
+The time had come to prepare Mordecai for the revelation of the restored
+sister and for the change of abode which was desirable before Mirah's
+meeting with her brother. Mrs. Meyrick, to whom Deronda had confided
+everything except Mordecai's peculiar relation to himself, had been active
+in helping him to find a suitable lodging in Brompton, not many minutes'
+walk from her own house, so that the brother and sister would be within
+reach of her motherly care. Her happy mixture of Scottish fervor and
+Gallic liveliness had enabled her to keep the secret close from the girls
+as well as from Hans, any betrayal to them being likely to reach Mirah in
+some way that would raise an agitating suspicion, and spoil the important
+opening of that work which was to secure her independence, as we rather
+arbitrarily call one of the more arduous and dignified forms of our
+dependence. And both Mrs. Meyrick and Deronda had more reasons than they
+could have expressed for desiring that Mirah should be able to maintain
+herself. Perhaps "the little mother" was rather helped in her secrecy by
+some dubiousness in her sentiment about the remarkable brother described
+to her; and certainly if she felt any joy and anticipatory admiration, it
+was due to her faith in Deronda's judgment. The consumption was a
+sorrowful fact that appealed to her tenderness; but how was she to be very
+glad of an enthusiasm which, to tell the truth, she could only contemplate
+as Jewish pertinacity, and as rather an undesirable introduction among
+them all of a man whose conversation would not be more modern and
+encouraging than that of Scott's Covenanters? Her mind was anything but
+prosaic, and had her soberer share of Mab's delight in the romance of
+Mirah's story and of her abode with them; but the romantic or unusual in
+real life requires some adaptation. We sit up at night to read about
+Sakya-Mouni, St. Francis, or Oliver Cromwell; but whether we should be
+glad for any one at all like them to call on us the next morning, still
+more, to reveal himself as a new relation, is quite another affair.
+Besides, Mrs. Meyrick had hoped, as her children did, that the intensity
+of Mirah's feeling about Judaism would slowly subside, and be merged in
+the gradually deepening current of loving interchange with her new
+friends. In fact, her secret favorite continuation of the romance had been
+no discovery of Jewish relations, but something much more favorable to the
+hopes she discerned in Hans. And now--here was a brother who would dip
+Mirah's mind over again in the deepest dye of Jewish sentiment. She could
+not help saying to Deronda--
+
+"I am as glad as you are that the pawnbroker is not her brother: there are
+Ezras and Ezras in the world; and really it is a comfort to think that all
+Jews are not like those shopkeepers who _will not_ let you get out of
+their shops: and besides, what he said to you about his mother and sister
+makes me bless him. I am sure he's good. But I never did like anything
+fanatical. I suppose I heard a little too much preaching in my youth and
+lost my palate for it."
+
+"I don't think you will find that Mordecai obtrudes any preaching," said
+Deronda. "He is not what I should call fanatical. I call a man fanatical
+when his enthusiasm is narrow and hoodwinked, so that he has no sense of
+proportions, and becomes unjust and unsympathetic to men who are out of
+his own track. Mordecai is an enthusiast; I should like to keep that word
+for the highest order of minds--those who care supremely for grand and
+general benefits to mankind. He is not a strictly orthodox Jew, and is
+full of allowances for others; his conformity in many things is an
+allowance for the condition of other Jews. The people he lives with are as
+fond of him as possible, and they can't in the least understand his
+ideas."
+
+"Oh, well, I can live up to the level of the pawnbroker's mother, and like
+him for what I see to be good in him; and for what I don't see the merits
+of I will take your word. According to your definition, I suppose one
+might be fanatical in worshipping common-sense; for my poor husband used
+to say the world would be a poor place if there were nothing but common-
+sense in it. However, Mirah's brother will have good bedding--that I have
+taken care of; and I shall have this extra window pasted up with paper to
+prevent draughts." (The conversation was taking place in the destined
+lodging.) "It is a comfort to think that the people of the house are no
+strangers to me--no hypocritical harpies. And when the children know, we
+shall be able to make the rooms much prettier."
+
+"The next stage of the affair is to tell all to Mordecai, and get him to
+move--which may be a more difficult business," said Deronda.
+
+"And will you tell Mirah before I say anything to the children?" said Mrs.
+Meyrick. But Deronda hesitated, and she went on in a tone of persuasive
+deliberation--"No, I think not. Let me tell Hans and the girls the evening
+before, and they will be away the next morning?"
+
+"Yes, that will be best. But do justice to my account of Mordecai--or
+Ezra, as I suppose Mirah will wish to call him: don't assist their
+imagination by referring to Habakkuk Mucklewrath," said Deronda, smiling--
+Mrs. Meyrick herself having used the comparison of the Covenanters.
+
+"Trust me, trust me," said the little mother. "I shall have to persuade
+them so hard to be glad, that I shall convert myself. When I am frightened
+I find it a good thing to have somebody to be angry with for not being
+brave: it warms the blood."
+
+Deronda might have been more argumentative or persuasive about the view to
+be taken of Mirah's brother, if he had been less anxiously preoccupied
+with the more important task immediately before him, which he desired to
+acquit himself of without wounding the Cohens. Mordecai, by a memorable
+answer, had made it evident that he would be keenly alive to any
+inadvertance in relation to their feelings. In the interval, he had been
+meeting Mordecai at the _Hand and Banner_, but now after due reflection he
+wrote to him saying that he had particular reasons for wishing to see him
+in his own home the next evening, and would beg to sit with him in his
+workroom for an hour, if the Cohens would not regard it as an intrusion.
+He would call with the understanding that if there were any objection,
+Mordecai would accompany him elsewhere. Deronda hoped in this way to
+create a little expectation that would have a preparatory effect.
+
+He was received with the usual friendliness, some additional costume in
+the women and children, and in all the elders a slight air of wondering
+which even in Cohen was not allowed to pass the bounds of silence--the
+guest's transactions with Mordecai being a sort of mystery which he was
+rather proud to think lay outside the sphere of light which enclosed his
+own understanding. But when Deronda said, "I suppose Mordecai is at home
+and expecting me," Jacob, who had profited by the family remarks, went up
+to his knee and said, "What do you want to talk to Mordecai about?"
+
+"Something that is very interesting to him," said Deronda, pinching the
+lad's ear, "but that you can't understand."
+
+"Can you say this?" said Jacob, immediately giving forth a string of his
+rote-learned Hebrew verses with a wonderful mixture of the throaty and the
+nasal, and nodding his small head at his hearer, with a sense of giving
+formidable evidence which might rather alter their mutual position.
+
+"No, really," said Deronda, keeping grave; "I can't say anything like it."
+
+"I thought not," said Jacob, performing a dance of triumph with his small
+scarlet legs, while he took various objects out of the deep pockets of his
+knickerbockers and returned them thither, as a slight hint of his
+resources; after which, running to the door of the workroom, he opened it
+wide, set his back against it, and said, "Mordecai, here's the young
+swell"--a copying of his father's phrase, which seemed to him well fitted
+to cap the recitation of Hebrew.
+
+He was called back with hushes by mother and grandmother, and Deronda,
+entering and closing the door behind him, saw that a bit of carpet had
+been laid down, a chair placed, and the fire and lights attended to, in
+sign of the Cohens' respect. As Mordecai rose to greet him, Deronda was
+struck with the air of solemn expectation in his face, such as would have
+seemed perfectly natural if his letter had declared that some revelation
+was to be made about the lost sister. Neither of them spoke, till Deronda,
+with his usual tenderness of manner, had drawn the vacant chair from the
+opposite side of the hearth and had seated himself near to Mordecai, who
+then said, in a tone of fervid certainty--
+
+"You are coming to tell me something that my soul longs for."
+
+"It is true I have something very weighty to tell you--something I trust
+that you will rejoice in," said Deronda, on his guard against the
+probability that Mordecai had been preparing himself for something quite
+different from the fact.
+
+"It is all revealed--it is made clear to you," said Mordecai, more
+eagerly, leaning forward with clasped hands. "You are even as my brother
+that sucked the breasts of my mother--the heritage is yours--there is no
+doubt to divide us."
+
+"I have learned nothing new about myself," said Deronda. The
+disappointment was inevitable: it was better not to let the feeling be
+strained longer in a mistaken hope.
+
+Mordecai sank back in his chair, unable for the moment to care what was
+really coming. The whole day his mind had been in a state of tension
+toward one fulfillment. The reaction was sickening and he closed his eyes.
+
+"Except," Deronda went on gently, after a pause,--"except that I had
+really some time ago come into another sort of hidden connection with you,
+besides what you have spoken of as existing in your own feeling."
+
+The eyes were not opened, but there was a fluttering in the lids.
+
+"I had made the acquaintance of one in whom you are interested."
+
+"One who is closely related to your departed mother," Deronda went on
+wishing to make the disclosure gradual; but noticing a shrinking movement
+in Mordecai, he added--"whom she and you held dear above all others."
+
+Mordecai, with a sudden start, laid a spasmodic grasp on Deronda's wrist;
+there was a great terror in him. And Deronda divined it. A tremor was
+perceptible in his clear tones as he said--
+
+"What was prayed for has come to pass: Mirah has been delivered from
+evil."
+
+Mordecai's grasp relaxed a little, but he was panting with a tearless sob.
+
+Deronda went on: "Your sister is worthy of the mother you honored."
+
+He waited there, and Mordecai, throwing himself backward in his chair,
+again closed his eyes, uttering himself almost inaudibly for some minutes
+in Hebrew, and then subsiding into a happy-looking silence. Deronda,
+watching the expression in his uplifted face, could have imagined that he
+was speaking with some beloved object: there was a new suffused sweetness,
+something like that on the faces of the beautiful dead. For the first time
+Deronda thought he discerned a family resemblance to Mirah.
+
+Presently when Mordecai was ready to listen, the rest was told. But in
+accounting for Mirah's flight he made the statement about the father's
+conduct as vague as he could, and threw the emphasis on her yearning to
+come to England as the place where she might find her mother. Also he kept
+back the fact of Mirah's intention to drown herself, and his own part in
+rescuing her; merely describing the home she had found with friends of
+his, whose interest in her and efforts for her he had shared. What he
+dwelt on finally was Mirah's feeling about her mother and brother; and in
+relation to this he tried to give every detail.
+
+"It was in search of them," said Deronda, smiling, "that I turned into
+this house: the name Ezra Cohen was just then the most interesting name in
+the world to me. I confess I had fear for a long while. Perhaps you will
+forgive me now for having asked you that question about the elder Mrs.
+Cohen's daughter. I cared very much what I should find Mirah's friends to
+be. But I had found a brother worthy of her when I knew that her Ezra was
+disguised under the name of Mordecai."
+
+"Mordecai is really my name--Ezra Mordecai Cohen."
+
+"Is there any kinship between this family and yours?" said Deronda.
+
+"Only the kinship of Israel. My soul clings to these people, who have
+sheltered me and given me succor out of the affection that abides in
+Jewish hearts, as sweet odor in things long crushed and hidden from the
+outer air. It is good for me to bear with their ignorance and be bound to
+them in gratitude, that I may keep in mind the spiritual poverty of the
+Jewish million, and not put impatient knowledge in the stead of loving
+wisdom."
+
+"But you don't feel bound to continue with them now there is a closer tie
+to draw you?" said Deronda, not without fear that he might find an
+obstacle to overcome. "It seems to me right now--is it not?--that you
+should live with your sister; and I have prepared a home to take you to in
+the neighborhood of her friends, that she may join you there. Pray grant
+me this wish. It will enable me to be with you often in the hours when
+Mirah is obliged to leave you. That is my selfish reason. But the chief
+reason is, that Mirah will desire to watch over you, and that you ought to
+give her the guardianship of a brother's presence. You shall have books
+about you. I shall want to learn of you, and to take you out to see the
+river and trees. And you will have the rest and comfort that you will be
+more and more in need of--nay, that I need for you. This is the claim I
+make on you, now that we have found each other."
+
+Deronda spoke in a tone of earnest, affectionate pleading, such as he
+might have used to a venerated elder brother. Mordecai's eyes were fixed
+on him with a listening contemplation, and he was silent for a little
+while after Deronda had ceased to speak. Then he said, with an almost
+reproachful emphasis--
+
+"And you would have me hold it doubtful whether you were born a Jew! Have
+we not from the first touched each other with invisible fibres--have we
+not quivered together like the leaves from a common stem with stirring
+from a common root? I know what I am outwardly, I am one among the crowd
+of poor--I am stricken, I am dying. But our souls know each other. They
+gazed in silence as those who have long been parted and meet again, but
+when they found voice they were assured, and all their speech is
+understanding. The life of Israel is in your veins."
+
+Deronda sat perfectly still, but felt his face tingling. It was impossible
+either to deny or assent. He waited, hoping that Mordecai would presently
+give him a more direct answer. And after a pause of meditation he did say.
+firmly--
+
+"What you wish of me I will do. And our mother--may the blessing of the
+Eternal be with her in our souls!--would have wished it too. I will accept
+what your loving kindness has prepared, and Mirah's home shall be mine."
+He paused a moment, and then added in a more melancholy tone, "But I shall
+grieve to part from these parents and the little ones. You must tell them,
+for my heart would fail me."
+
+"I felt that you would want me to tell them. Shall we go now at once?"
+said Deronda, much relieved by this unwavering compliance.
+
+"Yes; let us not defer it. It must be done," said Mordecai, rising with
+the air of a man who has to perform a painful duty. Then came, as an
+afterthought, "But do not dwell on my sister more than is needful."
+
+When they entered the parlor he said to the alert Jacob, "Ask your father
+to come, and tell Sarah to mind the shop. My friend has something to say,"
+he continued, turning to the elder Mrs. Cohen. It seemed part of
+Mordecai's eccentricity that he should call this gentleman his friend; and
+the two women tried to show their better manners by warm politeness in
+begging Deronda to seat himself in the best place.
+
+When Cohen entered with a pen behind his ear, he rubbed his hands and said
+with loud satisfaction, "Well, sir! I'm glad you're doing us the honor to
+join our family party again. We are pretty comfortable, I think."
+
+He looked round with shiny gladness. And when all were seated on the
+hearth the scene was worth peeping in upon: on one side Baby under her
+scarlet quilt in the corner being rocked by the young mother, and Adelaide
+Rebekah seated on the grandmother's knee; on the other, Jacob between his
+father's legs; while the two markedly different figures of Deronda and
+Mordecai were in the middle--Mordecai a little backward in the shade,
+anxious to conceal his agitated susceptibility to what was going on around
+him. The chief light came from the fire, which brought out the rich color
+on a depth of shadow, and seemed to turn into speech the dark gems of eyes
+that looked at each other kindly.
+
+"I have just been telling Mordecai of an event that makes a great change
+in his life," Deronda began, "but I hope you will agree with me that it is
+a joyful one. Since he thinks of you as his best friends, he wishes me to
+tell you for him at once."
+
+"Relations with money, sir?" burst in Cohen, feeling a power of divination
+which it was a pity to nullify by waiting for the fact.
+
+"No; not exactly," said Deronda, smiling. "But a very precious relation
+wishes to be reunited to him--a very good and lovely young sister, who
+will care for his comfort in every way."
+
+"Married, sir?"
+
+"No, not married."
+
+"But with a maintenance?"
+
+"With talents which will secure her a maintenance. A home is already
+provided for Mordecai."
+
+There was silence for a moment or two before the grandmother said in a
+wailing tone--
+
+"Well, well! and so you're going away from us, Mordecai."
+
+"And where there's no children as there is here," said the mother,
+catching the wail.
+
+"No Jacob, and no Adelaide, and no Eugenie!" wailed the grandmother again.
+
+"Ay, ay, Jacob's learning 'ill all wear out of him. He must go to school.
+It'll be hard times for Jacob," said Cohen, in a tone of decision.
+
+In the wide-open ears of Jacob his father's words sounded like a doom,
+giving an awful finish to the dirge-like effect of the whole announcement.
+His face had been gathering a wondering incredulous sorrow at the notion
+of Mordecai's going away: he was unable to imagine the change as anything
+lasting; but at the mention of "hard times for Jacob" there was no further
+suspense of feeling, and he broke forth in loud lamentation. Adelaide
+Rebekah always cried when her brother cried, and now began to howl with
+astonishing suddenness, whereupon baby awaking contributed angry screams,
+and required to be taken out of the cradle. A great deal of hushing was
+necessary, and Mordecai feeling the cries pierce him, put out his arms to
+Jacob, who in the midst of his tears and sobs was turning his head right
+and left for general observation. His father, who had been--saying, "Never
+mind, old man; you shall go to the riders," now released him, and he went
+to Mordecai, who clasped him, and laid his cheek on the little black head
+without speaking. But Cohen, sensible that the master of the family must
+make some apology for all this weakness, and that the occasion called for
+a speech, addressed Deronda with some elevation of pitch, squaring his
+elbows and resting a hand on each knee:--
+
+"It's not as we're the people to grudge anybody's good luck, sir, or the
+portion of their cup being made fuller, as I may say. I'm not an envious
+man, and if anybody offered to set up Mordecai in a shop of my sort two
+doors lower down, _I_ shouldn't make wry faces about it. I'm not one of
+them that had need have a poor opinion of themselves, and be frightened at
+anybody else getting a chance. If I'm offal, let a wise man come and tell
+me, for I've never heard it yet. And in point of business, I'm not a class
+of goods to be in danger. If anybody takes to rolling me, I can pack
+myself up like a caterpillar, and find my feet when I'm let alone. And
+though, as I may say, you're taking some of our good works from us, which
+is property bearing interest, I'm not saying but we can afford that,
+though my mother and my wife had the good will to wish and do for Mordecai
+to the last; and a Jew must not be like a servant who works for reward--
+though I see nothing against a reward if I can get it. And as to the extra
+outlay in schooling, I'm neither poor nor greedy--I wouldn't hang myself
+for sixpence, nor half a crown neither. But the truth of it is, the women
+and children are fond of Mordecai. You may partly see how it is, sir, by
+your own sense. A Jewish man is bound to thank God, day by day, that he
+was not made a woman; but a woman has to thank God that He has made her
+according to His will. And we all know what He has made her--a child-
+bearing, tender-hearted thing is the woman of our people. Her children are
+mostly stout, as I think you'll say Addy's are, and she's not mushy, but
+her heart is tender. So you must excuse present company, sir, for not
+being glad all at once. And as to this young lady--for by what you say
+'young lady' is the proper term"--Cohen here threw some additional
+emphasis into his look and tone--"we shall all be glad for Mordecai's sake
+by-and-by, when we cast up our accounts and see where we are."
+
+Before Deronda could summon any answer to this oddly mixed speech,
+Mordecai exclaimed--
+
+"Friends, friends! For food and raiment and shelter I would not have
+sought better than you have given me. You have sweetened the morsel with
+love; and what I thought of as a joy that would be left to me even in the
+last months of my waning strength was to go on teaching the lad. But now I
+am as one who had clad himself beforehand in his shroud, and used himself
+to making the grave his bed, when the divine command sounded in his ears,
+'Arise, and go forth; the night is not yet come.' For no light matter
+would I have turned away from your kindness to take another's. But it has
+been taught us, as you know, that _the reward of one duty is the power to
+fulfill another_--so said Ben Azai. You have made your duty to one of the
+poor among your brethren a joy to you and me; and your reward shall be
+that you will not rest without the joy of like deeds in the time to come.
+And may not Jacob come and visit me?"
+
+Mordecai had turned with this question to Deronda, who said--
+
+"Surely that can be managed. It is no further than Brompton."
+
+Jacob, who had been gradually calmed by the need to hear what was going
+forward, began now to see some daylight on the future, the word "visit"
+having the lively charm of cakes and general relaxation at his
+grandfather's, the dealer in knives. He danced away from Mordecai, and
+took up a station of survey in the middle of the hearth with his hands in
+his knickerbockers.
+
+"Well," said the grandmother, with a sigh of resignation, "I hope there'll
+be nothing in the way of your getting _kosher_ meat, Mordecai. For you'll
+have to trust to those you live with."
+
+"That's all right, that's all right, you may be sure, mother," said Cohen,
+as if anxious to cut off inquiry on matters in which he was uncertain of
+the guest's position. "So, sir," he added, turning with a look of amused
+enlightenment to Deronda, "it was better than learning you had to talk to
+Mordecai about! I wondered to myself at the time. I thought somehow there
+was a something."
+
+"Mordecai will perhaps explain to you how it was that I was seeking him,"
+said Deronda, feeling that he had better go, and rising as he spoke.
+
+It was agreed that he should come again and the final move be made on the
+next day but one; but when he was going Mordecai begged to walk with him
+to the end of the street, and wrapped himself in coat and comforter. It
+was a March evening, and Deronda did not mean to let him go far, but he
+understood the wish to be outside the house with him in communicative
+silence, after the exciting speech that had been filling the last hour. No
+word was spoken until Deronda had proposed parting, when he said--
+
+"Mirah would wish to thank the Cohens for their goodness. You would wish
+her to do so--to come and see them, would you not?"
+
+Mordecai did not answer immediately, but at length said--
+
+"I cannot tell. I fear not. There is a family sorrow, and the sight of my
+sister might be to them as the fresh bleeding of wounds. There is a
+daughter and sister who will never be restored as Mirah is. But who knows
+the pathways? We are all of us denying or fulfilling prayers--and men in
+their careless deeds walk amidst invisible outstretched arms and pleadings
+made in vain. In my ears I have the prayers of generations past and to
+come. My life is as nothing to me but the beginning of fulfilment. And yet
+I am only another prayer--which you will fulfil."
+
+Deronda pressed his hand, and they parted.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII.
+
+ "And you must love him ere to you
+ He will seem worthy of your love."
+ --WORDSWORTH.
+
+
+One might be tempted to envy Deronda providing new clothes for Mordecai,
+and pleasing himself as if he were sketching a picture in imagining the
+effect of the fine gray flannel shirts and a dressing-gown very much like
+a Franciscan's brown frock, with Mordecai's head and neck above them. Half
+his pleasure was the sense of seeing Mirah's brother through her eyes, and
+securing her fervid joy from any perturbing impression. And yet, after he
+had made all things ready, he was visited with doubt whether he were not
+mistaking her, and putting the lower effect for the higher: was she not
+just as capable as he himself had been of feeling the impressive
+distinction in her brother all the more for that aspect of poverty which
+was among the memorials of his past? But there were the Meyricks to be
+propitiated toward this too Judaic brother; and Deronda detected himself
+piqued into getting out of sight everything that might feed the ready
+repugnance in minds unblessed with that precious "seeing," that bathing of
+all objects in a solemnity as of sun-set glow, which is begotten of a
+loving reverential emotion.
+
+And his inclination would have been the more confirmed if he had heard the
+dialogue round Mrs. Meyrick's fire late in the evening, after Mirah had
+gone to her room. Hans, settled now in his Chelsea rooms, had stayed late,
+and Mrs. Meyrick, poking the fire into a blaze, said--
+
+"Now, Kate, put out your candle, and all come round the fire cosily. Hans,
+dear, do leave off laughing at those poems for the ninety-ninth time, and
+come too. I have something wonderful to tell."
+
+"As if I didn't know that, ma. I have seen it in the corner of your eye
+ever so long, and in your pretense of errands," said Kate, while the girls
+came up to put their feet on the fender, and Hans, pushing his chair near
+them, sat astride it, resting his fists and chin on the back.
+
+"Well, then, if you are so wise, perhaps you know that Mirah's brother is
+found!" said Mrs. Meyrick, in her clearest accents.
+
+"Oh, confound it!" said Hans, in the same moment.
+
+"Hans, that is wicked," said Mab. "Suppose we had lost you?"
+
+"I _cannot_ help being rather sorry," said Kate. "And her mother?--where is
+she?"
+
+"Her mother is dead."
+
+"I hope the brother is not a bad man," said Amy.
+
+"Nor a fellow all smiles and jewelry--a Crystal Palace Assyrian with a hat
+on," said Hans, in the worst humor.
+
+"Were there ever such unfeeling children?" said Mrs. Meyrick, a little
+strengthened by the need for opposition. "You don't think the least bit of
+Mirah's joy in the matter."
+
+"You know, ma, Mirah hardly remembers her brother," said Kate.
+
+"People who are lost for twelve years should never come back again," said
+Hans. "They are always in the way."
+
+"Hans!" said Mrs. Meyrick, reproachfully. "If you had lost me for _twenty_
+years, I should have thought--"
+
+"I said twelve years," Hans broke in. "Anywhere about twelve years is the
+time at which lost relations should keep out of the way."
+
+"Well, but it's nice finding people--there is something to tell," said
+Mab, clasping her knees. "Did Prince Camaralzaman find him?"
+
+Then Mrs. Meyrick, in her neat, narrative way, told all she knew without
+interruption. "Mr. Deronda has the highest admiration for him," she ended
+--"seems quite to look up to him. And he says Mirah is just the sister to
+understand this brother."
+
+"Deronda is getting perfectly preposterous about those Jews," said Hans
+with disgust, rising and setting his chair away with a bang. "He wants to
+do everything he can to encourage Mirah in her prejudices."
+
+"Oh, for shame, Hans!--to speak in that way of Mr. Deronda," said Mab. And
+Mrs. Meyrick's face showed something like an under-current of expression
+not allowed to get to the surface.
+
+"And now we shall never be all together," Hans went on, walking about with
+his hands thrust into the pockets of his brown velveteen coat, "but we
+must have this prophet Elijah to tea with us, and Mirah will think of
+nothing but sitting on the ruins of Jerusalem. She will be spoiled as an
+artist--mind that--she will get as narrow as a nun. Everything will be
+spoiled--our home and everything. I shall take to drinking."
+
+"Oh, really, Hans," said Kate, impatiently. "I do think men are the most
+contemptible animals in all creation. Every one of them must have
+everything to his mind, else he is unbearable."
+
+"Oh, oh, oh, it's very dreadful!" cried Mab. "I feel as if ancient Nineveh
+were come again."
+
+"I should like to know what is the good of having gone to the university
+and knowing everything, if you are so childish, Hans," said Amy. "You
+ought to put up with a man that Providence sends you to be kind to. _We_
+shall have to put up with him."
+
+"I hope you will all of you like the new Lamentations of Jeremiah--'to be
+continued in our next'--that's all," said Hans, seizing his wide-awake.
+"It's no use being one thing more than another if one has to endure the
+company of those men with a fixed idea, staring blankly at you, and
+requiring all your remarks to be small foot-notes to their text. If you're
+to be under a petrifying wall, you'd better be an old boot. I don't feel
+myself an old boot." Then abruptly, "Good night, little mother," bending to
+kiss her brow in a hasty, desperate manner, and condescendingly, on his
+way to the door, "Good-night, girls."
+
+"Suppose Mirah knew how you are behaving," said Kate. But her answer was a
+slam of the door. "I _should_ like to see Mirah when Mr. Deronda tells
+her," she went on to her mother. "I know she will look so beautiful."
+
+But Deronda, on second thoughts, had written a letter, which Mrs. Meyrick
+received the next morning, begging her to make the revelation instead of
+waiting for him, not giving the real reason--that he shrank from going
+again through a narrative in which he seemed to be making himself
+important and giving himself a character of general beneficence--but
+saying that he wished to remain with Mordecai while Mrs. Meyrick would
+bring Mirah on what was to be understood as a visit, so that there might
+be a little interval before that change of abode which he expected that
+Mirah herself would propose.
+
+Deronda secretly felt some wondering anxiety how far Mordecai, after years
+of solitary preoccupation with ideas likely to have become the more
+exclusive from continual diminution of bodily strength, would allow him to
+feel a tender interest in his sister over and above the rendering of pious
+duties. His feeling for the Cohens, and especially for little Jacob,
+showed a persistent activity of affection; but these objects had entered
+into his daily life for years; and Deronda felt it noticeable that
+Mordecai asked no new questions about Mirah, maintaining, indeed, an
+unusual silence on all subjects, and appearing simply to submit to the
+changes that were coming over his personal life. He donned the new clothes
+obediently, but said afterward to Deronda, with a faint smile, "I must
+keep my old garments by me for a remembrance." And when they were seated,
+awaiting Mirah, he uttered no word, keeping his eyelids closed, but yet
+showing restless feeling in his face and hands. In fact, Mordecai was
+undergoing that peculiar nervous perturbation only known to those whose
+minds, long and habitually moving with strong impetus in one current, are
+suddenly compelled into a new or reopened channel. Susceptible people,
+whose strength has been long absorbed by dormant bias, dread an interview
+that imperiously revives the past, as they would dread a threatening
+illness. Joy may be there, but joy, too, is terrible.
+
+Deronda felt the infection of excitement, and when he heard the ring at
+the door, he went out, not knowing exactly why, that he might see and
+greet Mirah beforehand. He was startled to find that she had on the hat
+and cloak in which he had first seen her--the memorable cloak that had
+once been wetted for a winding-sheet. She had come down-stairs equipped in
+this way; and when Mrs. Meyrick said, in a tone of question, "You like to
+go in that dress, dear?" she answered, "My brother is poor, and I want to
+look as much like him as I can, else he may feel distant from me"--
+imagining that she should meet him in the workman's dress. Deronda could
+not make any remark, but felt secretly rather ashamed of his own
+fastidious arrangements. They shook hands silently, for Mirah looked pale
+and awed.
+
+When Deronda opened the door for her, Mordecai had risen, and had his eyes
+turned toward it with an eager gaze. Mirah took only two or three steps,
+and then stood still. They looked at each other, motionless. It was less
+their own presence that they felt than another's; they were meeting first
+in memories, compared with which touch was no union. Mirah was the first
+to break the silence, standing where she was.
+
+"Ezra," she said, in exactly the same tone as when she was telling of her
+mother's call to him.
+
+Mordecai with a sudden movement advanced and laid his hand on her
+shoulders. He was the head taller, and looked down at her tenderly while
+he said, "That was our mother's voice. You remember her calling me?"
+
+"Yes, and how you answered her--'Mother!'--and I knew you loved her."
+Mirah threw her arms round her brother's neck, clasped her little hands
+behind it, and drew down his face, kissing it with childlike lavishness,
+Her hat fell backward on the ground and disclosed all her curls.
+
+"Ah, the dear head, the dear head?" said Mordecai, in a low loving tone,
+laying his thin hand gently on the curls.
+
+"You are very ill, Ezra," said Mirah, sadly looking at him with more
+observation.
+
+"Yes, dear child, I shall not be long with you in the body," was the quiet
+answer.
+
+"Oh, I will love you and we will talk to each other," said Mirah, with a
+sweet outpouring of her words, as spontaneous as bird-notes. "I will tell
+you everything, and you will teach me:--you will teach me to be a good
+Jewess--what she would have liked me to be. I shall always be with you
+when I am not working. For I work now. I shall get money to keep us. Oh, I
+have had such good friends."
+
+Mirah until now had quite forgotten that any one was by, but here she
+turned with the prettiest attitude, keeping one hand on her brother's arm
+while she looked at Mrs. Meyrick and Deronda. The little mother's happy
+emotion in witnessing this meeting of brother and sister had already won
+her to Mordecai, who seemed to her really to have more dignity and
+refinement than she had felt obliged to believe in from Deronda's account.
+
+"See this dear lady!" said Mirah. "I was a stranger, a poor wanderer, and
+she believed in me, and has treated me as a daughter. Please give my
+brother your hand," she added, beseechingly, taking Mrs. Meyrick's hand
+and putting it in Mordecai's, then pressing them both with her own and
+lifting them to her lips.
+
+"The Eternal Goodness has been with you," said Mordecai. "You have helped
+to fulfill our mother's prayer."
+
+"I think we will go now, shall we?--and return later," said Deronda,
+laying a gentle pressure on Mrs. Meyrick's arm, and she immediately
+complied. He was afraid of any reference to the facts about himself which
+he had kept back from Mordecai, and he felt no uneasiness now in the
+thought of the brother and sister being alone together.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+ 'Tis hard and ill-paid task to order all things beforehand by the rule
+ of our own security, as is well hinted by Machiavelli concerning
+ Caesar Borgia, who, saith he, had thought of all that might occur on
+ his father's death, and had provided against every evil chance save
+ only one: it had never come into his mind that when his father died,
+ his own death would quickly follow.
+
+
+Grandcourt's importance as a subject of this realm was of the grandly
+passive kind which consists in the inheritance of land. Political and
+social movements touched him only through the wire of his rental, and his
+most careful biographer need not have read up on Schleswig-Holstein, the
+policy of Bismarck, trade-unions, household suffrage, or even the last
+commercial panic. He glanced over the best newspaper columns on these
+topics, and his views on them can hardly be said to have wanted breadth,
+since he embraced all Germans, all commercial men, and all voters liable
+to use the wrong kind of soap, under the general epithet of "brutes;" but
+he took no action on these much-agitated questions beyond looking from
+under his eyelids at any man who mentioned them, and retaining a silence
+which served to shake the opinions of timid thinkers.
+
+But Grandcourt, within his own sphere of interest, showed some of the
+qualities which have entered into triumphal diplomacy of the wildest
+continental sort.
+
+No movement of Gwendolen in relation to Deronda escaped him. He would have
+denied that he was jealous; because jealousy would have implied some doubt
+of his own power to hinder what he had determined against. That his wife
+should have more inclination to another man's society than to his own
+would not pain him: what he required was that she should be as fully aware
+as she would have been of a locked hand-cuff, that her inclination was
+helpless to decide anything in contradiction with his resolve. However
+much of vacillating whim there might have been in his entrance on
+matrimony, there was no vacillating in his interpretation of the bond. He
+had not repented of his marriage; it had really brought more of aim into
+his life, new objects to exert his will upon; and he had not repented of
+his choice. His taste was fastidious, and Gwendolen satisfied it: he would
+not have liked a wife who had not received some elevation of rank from
+him; nor one who did not command admiration by her mien and beauty; nor
+one whose nails were not of the right shape; nor one the lobe of whose ear
+was at all too large and red; nor one who, even if her nails and ears were
+right, was at the same time a ninny, unable to make spirited answers.
+These requirements may not seem too exacting to refined contemporaries
+whose own ability to fall in love has been held in suspense for lack of
+indispensable details; but fewer perhaps may follow him in his contentment
+that his wife should be in a temper which would dispose her to fly out if
+she dared, and that she should have been urged into marrying him by other
+feelings than passionate attachment. Still, for those who prefer command
+to love, one does not see why the habit of mind should change precisely at
+the point of matrimony.
+
+Grandcourt did not feel that he had chosen the wrong wife; and having
+taken on himself the part of husband, he was not going in any way to be
+fooled, or allow himself to be seen in a light that could be regarded as
+pitiable. This was his state of mind--not jealousy; still, his behavior in
+some respects was as like jealousy as yellow is to yellow, which color we
+know may be the effect of very different causes.
+
+He had come up to town earlier than usual because he wished to be on the
+spot for legal consultation as to the arrangements of his will, the
+transference of mortgages, and that transaction with his uncle about the
+succession to Diplow, which the bait of ready money, adroitly dangled
+without importunity, had finally won him to agree upon. But another
+acceptable accompaniment of his being in town was the presentation of
+himself with the beautiful bride whom he had chosen to marry in spite of
+what other people might have expected of him. It is true that Grandcourt
+went about with the sense that he did not care a languid curse for any
+one's admiration: but this state of not-caring, just as much as desire,
+required its related object--namely, a world of admiring or envying
+spectators: for if you are fond of looking stonily at smiling persons--the
+persons must be and they must smile--a rudimentary truth which is surely
+forgotten by those who complain of mankind as generally contemptible,
+since any other aspect of the race must disappoint the voracity of their
+contempt. Grandcourt, in town for the first time with his wife, had his
+non-caring abstinence from curses enlarged and diversified by splendid
+receptions, by conspicuous rides and drives, by presentations of himself
+with her on all distinguished occasions. He wished her to be sought after;
+he liked that "fellows" should be eager to talk with her and escort her
+within his observation; there was even a kind of lofty coquetry on her
+part that he would not have objected to. But what he did not like were her
+ways in relation to Deronda.
+
+After the musical party at Lady Mallinger's, when Grandcourt had observed
+the dialogue on the settee as keenly as Hans had done, it was
+characteristic of him that he named Deronda for invitation along with the
+Mallinger's, tenaciously avoiding the possible suggestion to anybody
+concerned that Deronda's presence or absence could be of the least
+importance to him; and he made no direct observation to Gwendolen on her
+behavior that evening, lest the expression of his disgust should be a
+little too strong to satisfy his own pride. But a few days afterward he
+remarked, without being careful of the _a propos_--
+
+"Nothing makes a woman more of a gawky than looking out after people and
+showing tempers in public. A woman ought to have good manners. Else it's
+intolerable to appear with her."
+
+Gwendolen made the expected application, and was not without alarm at the
+notion of being a gawky. For she, too, with her melancholy distaste for
+things, preferred that her distaste should include admirers. But the sense
+of overhanging rebuke only intensified the strain of expectation toward
+any meeting with Deronda. The novelty and excitement of her town life was
+like the hurry and constant change of foreign travel; whatever might be
+the inward despondency, there was a programme to be fulfilled, not without
+gratification to many-sided self. But, as always happens with a deep
+interest, the comparatively rare occasions on which she could exchange any
+words with Deronda had a diffusive effect in her consciousness, magnifying
+their communication with each other, and therefore enlarging the place she
+imagined it to have in his mind. How could Deronda help this? He certainly
+did not avoid her; rather he wished to convince her by every delicate
+indirect means that her confidence in him had not been indiscreet since it
+had not lowered his respect. Moreover he liked being near her--how could
+it be otherwise? She was something more than a problem: she was a lovely
+woman, for the turn of whose mind and fate he had a care which, however
+futile it might be, kept soliciting him as a responsibility, perhaps all
+the more that, when he dared to think of his own future, he saw it lying
+far away from this splendid sad-hearted creature, who, because he had once
+been impelled to arrest her attention momentarily, as he might have seized
+her arm with warning to hinder her from stepping where there was danger,
+had turned to him with a beseeching persistent need.
+
+One instance in which Grandcourt stimulated a feeling in Gwendolen that he
+would have liked to suppress without seeming to care about it, had
+relation to Mirah. Gwendolen's inclination lingered over the project of
+the singing lessons as a sort of obedience to Deronda's advice, but day
+followed day with that want of perceived leisure which belongs to lives
+where there is no work to mark off intervals; and the continual liability
+to Grandcourt's presence and surveillance seemed to flatten every effort
+to the level of the boredom which his manner expressed; his negative mind
+was as diffusive as fog, clinging to all objects, and spoiling all
+contact.
+
+But one morning when they were breakfasting, Gwendolen, in a recurrent fit
+of determination to exercise the old spirit, said, dallying prettily over
+her prawns without eating them--
+
+"I think of making myself accomplished while we are in town, and having
+singing lessons."
+
+"Why?" said Grandcourt, languidly.
+
+"Why?" echoed Gwendolen, playing at sauciness; "because I can't eat _pate
+de foie gras_ to make me sleepy, and I can't smoke, and I can't go to the
+club to make me like to come away again--I want a variety of _ennui_. What
+would be the most convenient time, when you are busy with your lawyers and
+people, for me to have lessons from that little Jewess, whose singing is
+getting all the rage."
+
+"Whenever you like," said Grandcourt, pushing away his plate, and leaning
+back in his chair while he looked at her with his most lizard-like
+expression and, played with the ears of the tiny spaniel on his lap
+(Gwendolen had taken a dislike to the dogs because they fawned on him).
+
+Then he said, languidly, "I don't see why a lady should sing. Amateurs
+make fools of themselves. A lady can't risk herself in that way in
+company. And one doesn't want to hear squalling in private."
+
+"I like frankness: that seems to me a husband's great charm," said
+Gwendolen, with her little upward movement of her chin, as she turned her
+eyes away from his, and lifting a prawn before her, looked at the boiled
+ingenuousness of its eyes as preferable to the lizard's. "But;" she added,
+having devoured her mortification, "I suppose you don't object to Miss
+Lapidoth's singing at our party on the fourth? I thought of engaging her.
+Lady Brackenshaw had her, you know: and the Raymonds, who are very
+particular about their music. And Mr. Deronda, who is a musician himself
+and a first-rate judge, says there is no singing in such good taste as
+hers for a drawing-room. I think his opinion is an authority."
+
+She meant to sling a small stone at her husband in that way.
+
+"It's very indecent of Deronda to go about praising that girl," said
+Grandcourt in a tone of indifference.
+
+"Indecent!" exclaimed Gwendolen, reddening and looking at him again,
+overcome by startled wonder, and unable to reflect on the probable falsity
+of the phrase--"to go about praising."
+
+"Yes; and especially when she is patronized by Lady Mallinger. He ought to
+hold his tongue about her. Men can see what is his relation to her."
+
+"Men who judge of others by themselves," said Gwendolen, turning white
+after her redness, and immediately smitten with a dread of her own words.
+
+"Of course. And a woman should take their judgment--else she is likely to
+run her head into the wrong place," said Grandcourt, conscious of using
+pinchers on that white creature. "I suppose you take Deronda for a saint."
+
+"Oh dear no?" said Gwendolen, summoning desperately her almost miraculous
+power of self-control, and speaking in a high hard tone. "Only a little
+less of a monster."
+
+She rose, pushed her chair away without hurry, and walked out of the room
+with something like the care of a man who is afraid of showing that he has
+taken more wine than usual. She turned the keys inside her dressing-room
+doors, and sat down for some time looking pale and quiet as when she was
+leaving the breakfast-room. Even in the moments after reading the
+poisonous letter she had hardly had more cruel sensations than now; for
+emotion was at the acute point, where it is not distinguishable from
+sensation. Deronda unlike what she had believed him to be, was an image
+which affected her as a hideous apparition would have done, quite apart
+from the way in which it was produced. It had taken hold of her as pain
+before she could consider whether it were fiction or truth; and further to
+hinder her power of resistance came the sudden perception, how very slight
+were the grounds of her faith in Deronda--how little she knew of his life
+--how childish she had been in her confidence. His rebukes and his
+severity to her began to seem odious, along with all the poetry and lofty
+doctrine in the world, whatever it might be; and the grave beauty of his
+face seemed the most unpleasant mask that the common habits of men could
+put on.
+
+All this went on in her with the rapidity of a sick dream; and her start
+into resistance was very much like a waking. Suddenly from out the gray
+sombre morning there came a stream of sunshine, wrapping her in warmth and
+light where she sat in stony stillness. She moved gently and looked round
+her--there was a world outside this bad dream, and the dream proved
+nothing; she rose, stretching her arms upward and clasping her hands with
+her habitual attitude when she was seeking relief from oppressive feeling,
+and walked about the room in this flood of sunbeams.
+
+"It is not true! What does it matter whether _he_ believes it or not?"
+This is what she repeated to herself--but this was not her faith come back
+again; it was only the desperate cry of faith, finding suffocation
+intolerable. And how could she go on through the day in this state? With
+one of her impetuous alternations, her imagination flew to wild actions by
+which she would convince herself of what she wished: she would go to Lady
+Mallinger and question her about Mirah; she would write to Deronda and
+upbraid him with making the world all false and wicked and hopeless to
+her--to him she dared pour out all the bitter indignation of her heart.
+No; she would go to Mirah. This last form taken by her need was more
+definitely practicable, and quickly became imperious. No matter what came
+of it. She had the pretext of asking Mirah to sing at her party on the
+fourth. What was she going to say beside? How satisfy? She did not
+foresee--she could not wait to foresee. If that idea which was maddening
+her had been a living thing, she would have wanted to throttle it without
+waiting to foresee what would come of the act. She rang her bell and asked
+if Mr. Grandcourt were gone out: finding that he was, she ordered the
+carriage, and began to dress for the drive; then she went down, and walked
+about the large drawing-room like an imprisoned dumb creature, not
+recognizing herself in the glass panels, not noting any object around her
+in the painted gilded prison. Her husband would probably find out where
+she had been, and punish her in some way or other--no matter--she could
+neither desire nor fear anything just now but the assurance that she had
+not been deluding herself in her trust.
+
+She was provided with Mirah's address. Soon she was on the way with all
+the fine equipage necessary to carry about her poor uneasy heart,
+depending in its palpitations on some answer or other to questioning which
+she did not know how she should put. She was as heedless of what happened
+before she found that Miss Lapidoth was at home, as one is of lobbies and
+passages on the way to a court of justice--heedless of everything till she
+was in a room where there were folding-doors, and she heard Deronda's
+voice behind it. Doubtless the identification was helped by forecast, but
+she was as certain of it as if she had seen him. She was frightened at her
+own agitation, and began to unbutton her gloves that she might button them
+again, and bite her lips over the pretended difficulty, while the door
+opened, and Mirah presented herself with perfect quietude and a sweet
+smile of recognition. There was relief in the sight of her face, and
+Gwendolen was able to smile in return, while she put out her hand in
+silence; and as she seated herself, all the while hearing the voice, she
+felt some reflux of energy in the confused sense that the truth could not
+be anything that she dreaded. Mirah drew her chair very near, as if she
+felt that the sound of the conversation should be subdued, and looked at
+her visitor with placid expectation, while Gwendolen began in a low tone,
+with something that seemed like bashfulness--
+
+"Perhaps you wonder to see me--perhaps I ought to have written--but I
+wished to make a particular request."
+
+"I am glad to see you instead of having a letter," said Mirah, wondering
+at the changed expression and manner of the "Vandyke duchess," as Hans had
+taught her to call Gwendolen. The rich color and the calmness of her own
+face were in strong contrast with the pale agitated beauty under the
+plumed hat.
+
+"I thought," Gwendolen went on--"at least I hoped, you would not object to
+sing at our house on the 4th--in the evening--at a party like Lady
+Brackenshaw's. I should be so much obliged."
+
+"I shall be very happy to sing for you. At ten?" said Mirah, while
+Gwendolen seemed to get more instead of less embarrassed.
+
+"At ten, please," she answered; then paused, and felt that she had nothing
+more to say. She could not go. It was impossible to rise and say good-bye.
+Deronda's voice was in her ears. She must say it--she could contrive no
+other sentence--
+
+"Mr. Deronda is in the next room."
+
+"Yes," said Mirah, in her former tone. "He is reading Hebrew with my
+brother."
+
+"You have a brother?" said Gwendolen, who had heard this from Lady
+Mallinger, but had not minded it then.
+
+"Yes, a dear brother who is ill-consumptive, and Mr. Deronda is the best
+of friends to him, as he has been to me," said Mirah, with the impulse
+that will not let us pass the mention of a precious person indifferently.
+
+"Tell me," said Gwendolen, putting her hand on Mirah's, and speaking
+hardly above a whisper--"tell me--tell me the truth. You are sure he is
+quite good. You know no evil of him. Any evil that people say of him is
+false."
+
+Could the proud-spirited woman have behaved more like a child? But the
+strange words penetrated Mirah with nothing but a sense of solemnity and
+indignation. With a sudden light in her eyes and a tremor in her voice,
+she said--
+
+"Who are the people that say evil of him? I would not believe any evil of
+him, if an angel came to tell it me. He found me when I was so miserable--
+I was going to drown myself; I looked so poor and forsaken; you would have
+thought I was a beggar by the wayside. And he treated me as if I had been
+a king's daughter. He took me to the best of women. He found my brother
+for me. And he honors my brother--though he too was poor--oh, almost as
+poor as he could be. And my brother honors him. That is no light thing to
+say"--here Mirah's tone changed to one of profound emphasis, and she shook
+her head backward: "for my brother is very learned and great-minded. And
+Mr. Deronda says there are few men equal to him." Some Jewish defiance had
+flamed into her indignant gratitude and her anger could not help including
+Gwendolen since she seemed to have doubted Deronda's goodness.
+
+But Gwendolen was like one parched with thirst, drinking the fresh water
+that spreads through the frame as a sufficient bliss. She did not notice
+that Mirah was angry with her; she was not distinctly conscious of
+anything but of the penetrating sense that Deronda and his life were no
+more like her husband's conception than the morning in the horizon was
+like the morning mixed with street gas. Even Mirah's words sank into the
+indefiniteness of her relief. She could hardly have repeated them, or said
+how her whole state of feeling was changed. She pressed Mirah's hand, and
+said, "Thank you, thank you," in a hurried whisper, then rose, and added,
+with only a hazy consciousness, "I must go, I shall see you--on the
+fourth--I am so much obliged"--bowing herself out automatically, while
+Mirah, opening the door for her, wondered at what seemed a sudden retreat
+into chill loftiness.
+
+Gwendolen, indeed, had no feeling to spare in any effusiveness toward the
+creature who had brought her relief. The passionate need of contradiction
+to Grandcourt's estimate of Deronda, a need which had blunted her
+sensibility to everything else, was no sooner satisfied than she wanted to
+be gone. She began to be aware that she was out of place, and to dread
+Deronda's seeing her. And once in the carriage again, she had the vision
+of what awaited her at home. When she drew up before the door in Grosvenor
+Square, her husband was arriving with a cigar between his fingers. He
+threw it away and handed her out, accompanying her up-stairs. She turned
+into the drawing-room, lest he should follow her farther and give her no
+place to retreat to; then she sat down with a weary air, taking off her
+gloves, rubbing her hand over her forehead, and making his presence as
+much of a cipher as possible. But he sat, too, and not far from her--just
+in front, where to avoid looking at him must have the emphasis of effort.
+
+"May I ask where you have been at this extraordinary hour?" said
+Grandcourt.
+
+"Oh, yes; I have been to Miss Lapidoth's, to ask her to come and sing for
+us," said Gwendolen, laying her gloves on the little table beside her, and
+looking down at them.
+
+"And to ask her about her relations with Deronda?" said Grandcourt, with
+the coldest possible sneer in his low voice which in poor Gwendolen's ear
+was diabolical.
+
+For the first time since their marriage she flashed out upon him without
+inward check. Turning her eyes full on his she said, in a biting tone--
+
+"Yes; and what you said is false--a low, wicked falsehood."
+
+"She told you so--did she?" returned Grandcourt, with a more thoroughly
+distilled sneer.
+
+Gwendolen was mute. The daring anger within her was turned into the rage
+of dumbness. What reasons for her belief could she give? All the reasons
+that seemed so strong and living within her--she saw them suffocated and
+shrivelled up under her husband's breath. There was no proof to give, but
+her own impression, which would seem to him her own folly. She turned her
+head quickly away from him and looked angrily toward the end of the room:
+she would have risen, but he was in her way.
+
+Grandcourt saw his advantage. "It's of no consequence so far as her
+singing goes," he said, in his superficial drawl. "You can have her to
+sing, if you like." Then, after a pause, he added in his lowest imperious
+tone, "But you will please to observe that you are not to go near that
+house again. As my wife, you must take my word about what is proper for
+you. When you undertook to be Mrs. Grandcourt, you undertook not to make a
+fool of yourself. You have been making a fool of yourself this morning;
+and if you were to go on as you have begun, you might soon get yourself
+talked of at the clubs in a way you would not like. What do _you_ know
+about the world? You have married _me_, and must be guided by my opinion."
+
+Every slow sentence of that speech had a terrific mastery in it for
+Gwendolen's nature. If the low tones had come from a physician telling her
+that her symptoms were those of a fatal disease, and prognosticating its
+course, she could not have been more helpless against the argument that
+lay in it. But she was permitted to move now, and her husband never again
+made any reference to what had occurred this morning. He knew the force of
+his own words. If this white-handed man with the perpendicular profile had
+been sent to govern a difficult colony, he might have won reputation among
+his contemporaries. He had certainly ability, would have understood that
+it was safer to exterminate than to cajole superseded proprietors, and
+would not have flinched from making things safe in that way.
+
+Gwendolen did not, for all this, part with her recovered faith;--rather,
+she kept it with a more anxious tenacity, as a Protestant of old kept his
+bible hidden or a Catholic his crucifix, according to the side favored by
+the civil arm; and it was characteristic of her that apart from the
+impression gained concerning Deronda in that visit, her imagination was
+little occupied with Mirah or the eulogised brother. The one result
+established for her was, that Deronda had acted simply as a generous
+benefactor, and the phrase "reading Hebrew" had fleeted unimpressively
+across her sense of hearing, as a stray stork might have made its peculiar
+flight across her landscape without rousing any surprised reflection on
+its natural history.
+
+But the issue of that visit, as it regarded her husband, took a strongly
+active part in the process which made an habitual conflict within her, and
+was the cause of some external change perhaps not observed by any one
+except Deronda. As the weeks went on bringing occasional transient
+interviews with her, he thought that he perceived in her an intensifying
+of her superficial hardness and resolute display, which made her abrupt
+betrayals of agitation the more marked and disturbing to him.
+
+In fact, she was undergoing a sort of discipline for the refractory which,
+as little as possible like conversion, bends half the self with a terrible
+strain, and exasperates the unwillingness of the other half. Grandcourt
+had an active divination rather than discernment of refractoriness in her,
+and what had happened about Mirah quickened his suspicion that there was
+an increase of it dependent on the occasions when she happened to see
+Deronda: there was some "confounded nonsense" between them: he did not
+imagine it exactly as flirtation, and his imagination in other branches
+was rather restricted; but it was nonsense that evidently kept up a kind
+of simmering in her mind--an inward action which might become disagreeable
+outward. Husbands in the old time are known to have suffered from a
+threatening devoutness in their wives, presenting itself first
+indistinctly as oddity, and ending in that mild form of lunatic asylum, a
+nunnery: Grandcourt had a vague perception of threatening moods in
+Gwendolen which the unity between them in his views of marriage required
+him peremptorily to check. Among the means he chose, one was peculiar, and
+was less ably calculated than the speeches we have just heard.
+
+He determined that she should know the main purport of the will he was
+making, but he could not communicate this himself, because it involved the
+fact of his relation to Mrs. Glasher and her children; and that there
+should be any overt recognition of this between Gwendolen and himself was
+supremely repugnant to him. Like all proud, closely-wrapped natures, he
+shrank from explicitness and detail, even on trivialities, if they were
+personal: a valet must maintain a strict reserve with him on the subject
+of shoes and stockings. And clashing was intolerable to him; his habitual
+want was to put collision out of the question by the quiet massive
+pressure of his rule. But he wished Gwendolen to know that before he made
+her an offer it was no secret to him that she was aware of his relations
+with Lydia, her previous knowledge being the apology for bringing the
+subject before her now. Some men in his place might have thought of
+writing what he wanted her to know, in the form of a letter. But
+Grandcourt hated writing: even writing a note was a bore to him, and he
+had long been accustomed to have all his writing done by Lush. We know
+that there are persons who will forego their own obvious interest rather
+than do anything so disagreeable as to write letters; and it is not
+probable that these imperfect utilitarians would rush into manuscript and
+syntax on a difficult subject in order to save another's feelings. To
+Grandcourt it did not even occur that he should, would, or could write to
+Gwendolen the information in question; and the only medium of
+communication he could use was Lush, who, to his mind, was as much of an
+implement as pen and paper. But here too Grandcourt had his reserves, and
+would not have uttered a word likely to encourage Lush in an impudent
+sympathy with any supposed grievance in a marriage which had been
+discommended by him. Who that has a confidant escapes believing too little
+in his penetration, and too much in his discretion? Grandcourt had always
+allowed Lush to know his external affairs indiscriminately--
+irregularities, debts, want of ready money; he had only used
+discrimination about what he would allow his confidant to say to him; and
+he had been so accustomed to this human tool, that the having him at call
+in London was a recovery of lost ease. It followed that Lush knew all the
+provisions of the will more exactly than they were known to the testator
+himself.
+
+Grandcourt did not doubt that Gwendolen, since she was a woman who could
+put two and two together, knew or suspected Lush to be the contriver of
+her interview with Lydia, and that this was the reason why her first
+request was for his banishment. But the bent of a woman's inferences on
+mixed subjects which excites mixed passions is not determined by her
+capacity for simple addition; and here Grandcourt lacked the only organ of
+thinking that could have saved him from mistake--namely, some experience
+of the mixed passions concerned. He had correctly divined one-half of
+Gwendolen's dread--all that related to her personal pride, and her
+perception that his will must conquer hers; but the remorseful half, even
+if he had known of her broken promise, was as much out of his imagination
+as the other side of the moon. What he believed her to feel about Lydia
+was solely a tongue-tied jealousy, and what he believed Lydia to have
+written with the jewels was the fact that she had once been used to
+wearing them, with other amenities such as he imputed to the intercourse
+with jealous women. He had the triumphant certainty that he could
+aggravate the jealousy and yet smite it with a more absolute dumbness. His
+object was to engage all his wife's egoism on the same side as his own,
+and in his employment of Lush he did not intend an insult to her: she
+ought to understand that he was the only possible envoy. Grandcourt's view
+of things was considerably fenced in by his general sense, that what
+suited him others must put up with. There is no escaping the fact that
+want of sympathy condemns us to corresponding stupidity. Mephistopheles
+thrown upon real life, and obliged to manage his own plots, would
+inevitably make blunders.
+
+One morning he went to Gwendolen in the boudoir beyond the back drawing-
+room, hat and gloves in hand, and said with his best-tempered, most
+persuasive drawl, standing before her and looking down on her as she sat
+with a book on her lap--
+
+"A--Gwendolen, there's some business about property to be explained. I
+have told Lush to come and explain it to you. He knows all about these
+things. I am going out. He can come up now. He's the only person who can
+explain. I suppose you'll not mind."
+
+"You know that I do mind," said Gwendolen, angrily, starting up. "I shall
+not see him." She showed the intention to dart away to the door.
+Grandcourt was before her, with his back toward it. He was prepared for
+her anger, and showed none in return, saying, with the same sort of
+remonstrant tone that he might have used about an objection to dining
+out--
+
+"It's no use making a fuss. There are plenty of brutes in the world that
+one has to talk to. People with any _savoir vivre_ don't make a fuss about
+such things. Some business must be done. You can't expect agreeable people
+to do it. If I employ Lush, the proper thing for you is to take it as a
+matter of course. Not to make a fuss about it. Not to toss your head and
+bite your lips about people of that sort."
+
+The drawling and the pauses with which this speech was uttered gave time
+for crowding reflections in Gwendolen, quelling her resistance. What was
+there to be told her about property? This word had certain dominant
+associations for her, first with her mother, then with Mrs. Glasher and
+her children. What would be the use if she refused to see Lush? Could she
+ask Grandcourt to tell her himself? That might be intolerable, even if he
+consented, which it was certain he would not, if he had made up his mind
+to the contrary. The humiliation of standing an obvious prisoner, with her
+husband barring the door, was not to be borne any longer, and she turned
+away to lean against a cabinet, while Grandcourt again moved toward her.
+
+"I have arranged for Lush to come up now, while I am out," he said, after
+a long organ stop, during which Gwendolen made no sign. "Shall I tell him
+he may come?"
+
+Yet another pause before she could say "Yes"--her face turned obliquely
+and her eyes cast down.
+
+"I shall come back in time to ride, if you like to get ready," said
+Grandcourt. No answer. "She is in a desperate rage," thought he. But the
+rage was silent, and therefore not disagreeable to him. It followed that
+he turned her chin and kissed her, while she still kept her eyelids down,
+and she did not move them until he was on the other side of the door.
+
+What was she to do? Search where she would in her consciousness, she found
+no plea to justify a plaint. Any romantic allusions she had had in
+marrying this man had turned on her power of using him as she liked. He
+was using her as he liked.
+
+She sat awaiting the announcement of Lush as a sort of searing operation
+that she had to go through. The facts that galled her gathered a burning
+power when she thought of their lying in his mind. It was all a part of
+that new gambling, in which the losing was not simply a _minus_, but a
+terrible _plus_ that had never entered into her reckoning.
+
+Lush was neither quite pleased nor quite displeased with his task.
+Grandcourt had said to him by way of conclusion, "Don't make yourself more
+disagreeable than nature obliges you."
+
+"That depends," thought Lush. But he said, "I will write a brief abstract
+for Mrs. Grandcourt to read." He did not suggest that he should make the
+whole communication in writing, which was a proof that the interview did
+not wholly displease him.
+
+Some provision was being made for himself in the will, and he had no
+reason to be in a bad humor, even if a bad humor had been common with him.
+He was perfectly convinced that he had penetrated all the secrets of the
+situation; but he had no diabolical delight in it. He had only the small
+movements of gratified self-loving resentment in discerning that this
+marriage had fulfilled his own foresight in not being as satisfactory as
+the supercilious young lady had expected it to be, and as Grandcourt
+wished to feign that it was. He had no persistent spite much stronger than
+what gives the seasoning of ordinary scandal to those who repeat it and
+exaggerate it by their conjectures. With no active compassion or good-
+will, he had just as little active malevolence, being chiefly occupied in
+liking his particular pleasures, and not disliking anything but what
+hindered those pleasures--everything else ranking with the last murder and
+the last _opera bouffe_, under the head of things to talk about.
+Nevertheless, he was not indifferent to the prospect of being treated
+uncivilly by a beautiful woman, or to the counter-balancing fact that his
+present commission put into his hands an official power of humiliating
+her. He did not mean to use it needlessly; but there are some persons so
+gifted in relation to us that their "How do you do?" seems charged with
+offense.
+
+By the time that Mr. Lush was announced, Gwendolen had braced herself to a
+bitter resolve that he should not witness the slightest betrayal of her
+feeling, whatever he might have to tell. She invited him to sit down with
+stately quietude. After all, what was this man to her? He was not in the
+least like her husband. Her power of hating a coarse, familiar-mannered
+man, with clumsy hands, was now relaxed by the intensity with which she
+hated his contrast.
+
+He held a small paper folded in his hand while he spoke.
+
+"I need hardly say that I should not have presented myself if Mr.
+Grandcourt had not expressed a strong wish to that effect--as no doubt he
+has mentioned to you."
+
+From some voices that speech might have sounded entirely reverential, and
+even timidly apologetic. Lush had no intention to the contrary, but to
+Gwendolen's ear his words had as much insolence in them as his prominent
+eyes, and the pronoun "you" was too familiar. He ought to have addressed
+the folding-screen, and spoke of her as Mrs. Grandcourt. She gave the
+smallest sign of a bow, and Lush went on, with a little awkwardness,
+getting entangled in what is elegantly called tautology.
+
+"My having been in Mr. Grandcourt's confidence for fifteen years or more--
+since he was a youth, in fact--of course gives me a peculiar position. He
+can speak to me of affairs that he could not mention to any one else; and,
+in fact, he could not have employed any one else in this affair. I have
+accepted the task out of friendship for him. Which is my apology for
+accepting the task--if you would have preferred some one else."
+
+He paused, but she made no sign, and Lush, to give himself a countenance
+in an apology which met no acceptance, opened the folded paper, and looked
+at it vaguely before he began to speak again.
+
+"This paper contains some information about Mr. Grandcourt's will, an
+abstract of a part he wished you to know--if you'll be good enough to cast
+your eyes over it. But there is something I had to say by way of
+introduction--which I hope you'll pardon me for, if it's not quite
+agreeable." Lush found that he was behaving better than he had expected,
+and had no idea how insulting he made himself with his "not quite
+agreeable."
+
+"Say what you have to say without apologizing, please," said Gwendolen,
+with the air she might have bestowed on a dog-stealer come to claim a
+reward for finding the dog he had stolen.
+
+"I have only to remind you of something that occurred before your
+engagement to Mr. Grandcourt," said Lush, not without the rise of some
+willing insolence in exchange for her scorn. "You met a lady in Cardell
+Chase, if you remember, who spoke to you of her position with regard to
+Mr. Grandcourt. She had children with her--one a very fine boy."
+
+Gwendolen's lips were almost as pale as her cheeks; her passion had no
+weapons--words were no better than chips. This man's speech was like a
+sharp knife-edge drawn across her skin: but even her indignation at the
+employment of Lush was getting merged in a crowd of other feelings, dim
+and alarming as a crowd of ghosts.
+
+"Mr. Grandcourt was aware that you were acquainted with this unfortunate
+affair beforehand, and he thinks it only right that his position and
+intentions should be made quite clear to you. It is an affair of property
+and prospects; and if there were any objection you had to make, if you
+would mention it to me--it is a subject which of course he would rather
+not speak about himself--if you will be good enough just to read this."
+With the last words Lush rose and presented the paper to her.
+
+When Gwendolen resolved that she would betray no feeling in the presence
+of this man, she had not prepared herself to hear that her husband knew
+the silent consciousness, the silently accepted terms on which she had
+married him. She dared not raise her hand to take the paper, least it
+should visibly tremble. For a moment Lush stood holding it toward her, and
+she felt his gaze on her as ignominy, before she could say even with low-
+toned haughtiness--
+
+"Lay it on the table. And go into the next room, please."
+
+Lush obeyed, thinking as he took an easy-chair in the back drawing-room,
+"My lady winces considerably. She didn't know what would be the charge for
+that superfine article, Henleigh Grandcourt." But it seemed to him that a
+penniless girl had done better than she had any right to expect, and that
+she had been uncommonly knowing for her years and opportunities: her words
+to Lydia meant nothing, and her running away had probably been part of her
+adroitness. It had turned out a master-stroke.
+
+Meanwhile Gwendolen was rallying her nerves to the reading of the paper.
+She must read it. Her whole being--pride, longing for rebellion, dreams of
+freedom, remorseful conscience, dread of fresh visitation--all made one
+need to know what the paper contained. But at first it was not easy to
+take in the meaning of the words. When she had succeeded, she found that
+in the case of there being no son as issue of her marriage, Grandcourt had
+made the small Henleigh his heir; that was all she cared to extract from
+the paper with any distinctness. The other statement as to what provision
+would be made for her in the same case, she hurried over, getting only a
+confused perception of thousands and Gadsmere. It was enough. She could
+dismiss the man in the next room with the defiant energy which had revived
+in her at the idea that this question of property and inheritance was
+meant as a finish to her humiliations and her thraldom.
+
+She thrust the paper between the leaves of her book, which she took in her
+hand, and walked with her stateliest air into the next room, where Lush
+immediately arose, awaiting her approach. When she was four yards from
+him, it was hardly an instant that she paused to say in a high tone, while
+she swept him with her eyelashes--
+
+"Tell Mr. Grandcourt that his arrangements are just what I desired"--
+passing on without haste, and leaving Lush time to mingle some admiration
+of her graceful back with that half-amused sense of her spirit and
+impertinence, which he expressed by raising his eyebrows and just
+thrusting his tongue between his teeth. He really did not want her to be
+worse punished, and he was glad to think that it was time to go and lunch
+at the club, where he meant to have a lobster salad.
+
+What did Gwendolen look forward to? When her husband returned he found her
+equipped in her riding-dress, ready to ride out with him. She was not
+again going to be hysterical, or take to her bed and say she was ill. That
+was the implicit resolve adjusting her muscles before she could have
+framed it in words, as she walked out of the room, leaving Lush behind
+her. She was going to act in the spirit of her message, and not to give
+herself time to reflect. She rang the bell for her maid, and went with the
+usual care through her change of toilet. Doubtless her husband had meant
+to produce a great effect on her: by-and-by perhaps she would let him see
+an effect the very opposite of what he intended; but at present all that
+she could show was a defiant satisfaction in what had been presumed to be
+disagreeable. It came as an instinct rather than a thought, that to show
+any sign which could be interpreted as jealousy, when she had just been
+insultingly reminded that the conditions were what she had accepted with
+her eyes open, would be the worst self-humiliation. She said to herself
+that she had not time to-day to be clear about her future actions; all she
+could be clear about was that she would match her husband in ignoring any
+ground for excitement. She not only rode, but went out with him to dine,
+contributing nothing to alter their mutual manner, which was never that of
+rapid interchange in discourse; and curiously enough she rejected a
+handkerchief on which her maid had by mistake put the wrong scent--a scent
+that Grandcourt had once objected to. Gwendolen would not have liked to be
+an object of disgust to this husband whom she hated: she liked all disgust
+to be on her side.
+
+But to defer thought in this way was something like trying to talk without
+singing in her own ears. The thought that is bound up with our passion is
+as penetrative as air--everything is porous to it; bows, smiles,
+conversation, repartee, are mere honeycombs where such thoughts rushes
+freely, not always with a taste of honey. And without shutting herself up
+in any solitude, Gwendolen seemed at the end of nine or ten hours to have
+gone through a labyrinth of reflection, in which already the same
+succession of prospects had been repeated, the same fallacious outlets
+rejected, the same shrinking from the necessities of every course. Already
+she was undergoing some hardening effect from feeling that she was under
+eyes which saw her past actions solely in the light of her lowest motives.
+She lived back in the scenes of her courtship, with the new bitter
+consciousness of what had been in Grandcourt's mind--certain now, with her
+present experience of him, that he had a peculiar triumph in conquering
+her dumb repugnance, and that ever since their marriage he had had a cold
+exultation in knowing her fancied secret. Her imagination exaggerated
+every tyrannical impulse he was capable of. "I will insist on being
+separated from him"--was her first darting determination; then, "I will
+leave him whether he consents or not. If this boy becomes his heir, I have
+made an atonement." But neither in darkness nor in daylight could she
+imagine the scenes which must carry out those determinations with the
+courage to feel them endurable. How could she run away to her own family--
+carry distress among them, and render herself an object of scandal in the
+society she had left behind her? What future lay before her as Mrs.
+Grandcourt gone back to her mother, who would be made destitute again by
+the rupture of the marriage for which one chief excuse had been that it
+had brought that mother a maintenance? She had lately been seeing her
+uncle and Anna in London, and though she had been saved from any
+difficulty about inviting them to stay in Grosvenor Square by their wish
+to be with Rex, who would not risk a meeting with her, the transient visit
+she had had from them helped now in giving stronger color to the picture
+of what it would be for her to take refuge in her own family. What could
+she say to justify her flight? Her uncle would tell her to go back. Her
+mother would cry. Her aunt and Anna would look at her with wondering
+alarm. Her husband would have power to compel her. She had absolutely
+nothing that she could allege against him in judicious or judicial ears.
+And to "insist on separation!" That was an easy combination of words; but
+considered as an action to be executed against Grandcourt, it would be
+about as practicable as to give him a pliant disposition and a dread of
+other people's unwillingness. How was she to begin? What was she to say
+that would not be a condemnation of herself? "If I am to have misery
+anyhow," was the bitter refrain of her rebellious dreams, "I had better
+have the misery that I can keep to myself." Moreover, her capability of
+rectitude told her again and again that she had no right to complain of
+her contract, or to withdraw from it.
+
+And always among the images that drove her back to submission was Deronda.
+The idea of herself separated from her husband, gave Deronda a changed,
+perturbing, painful place in her consciousness: instinctively she felt
+that the separation would be from him too, and in the prospective vision
+of herself as a solitary, dubiously-regarded woman, she felt some tingling
+bashfulness at the remembrance of her behavior towards him. The
+association of Deronda with a dubious position for herself was
+intolerable. And what would he say if he knew everything? Probably that
+she ought to bear what she had brought on herself, unless she were sure
+that she could make herself a better woman by taking any other course. And
+what sort of woman was she to be--solitary, sickened of life, looked at
+with a suspicious kind of pity?--even if she could dream of success in
+getting that dreary freedom. Mrs. Grandcourt "run away" would be a more
+pitiable creature than Gwendolen Harleth condemned to teach the bishop's
+daughters, and to be inspected by Mrs. Mompert.
+
+One characteristic trait in her conduct is worth mentioning. She would not
+look a second time at the paper Lush had given her; and before ringing for
+her maid she locked it up in a traveling-desk which was at hand, proudly
+resolved against curiosity about what was allotted to herself in
+connection with Gadsmere--feeling herself branded in the minds of her
+husband and his confidant with the meanness that would accept marriage and
+wealth on any conditions, however dishonorable and humiliating.
+
+Day after day the same pattern of thinking was repeated. There came
+nothing to change the situation--no new elements in the sketch--only a
+recurrence which engraved it. The May weeks went on into June, and still
+Mrs. Grandcourt was outwardly in the same place, presenting herself as she
+was expected to do in the accustomed scenes, with the accustomed grace,
+beauty, and costume; from church at one end of the week, through all the
+scale of desirable receptions, to opera at the other. Church was not
+markedly distinguished in her mind from the other forms of self-
+presentation, for marriage had included no instruction that enabled her to
+connect liturgy and sermon with any larger order of the world than that of
+unexplained and perhaps inexplicable social fashions. While a laudable
+zeal was laboring to carry the light of spiritual law up the alleys where
+law is chiefly known as the policeman, the brilliant Mrs. Grandcourt,
+condescending a little to a fashionable rector and conscious of a feminine
+advantage over a learned dean, was, so far as pastoral care and religious
+fellowship were concerned, in as complete a solitude as a man in a
+lighthouse.
+
+Can we wonder at the practical submission which hid her constructive
+rebellion? The combination is common enough, as we know from the number of
+persons who make us aware of it in their own case by a clamorous unwearied
+statement of the reasons against their submitting to a situation which, on
+inquiry, we discover to be the least disagreeable within their reach. Poor
+Gwendolen had both too much and too little mental power and dignity to
+make herself exceptional. No wonder that Deronda now marked some hardening
+in a look and manner which were schooled daily to the suppression of
+feeling.
+
+For example. One morning, riding in Rotten Row with Grandcourt by her
+side, she saw standing against the railing at the turn, just facing them,
+a dark-eyed lady with a little girl and a blonde boy, whom she at once
+recognized as the beings in all the world the most painful for her to
+behold. She and Grandcourt had just slackened their pace to a walk; he
+being on the outer side was the nearer to the unwelcome vision, and
+Gwendolen had not presence of mind to do anything but glance away from the
+dark eyes that met hers piercingly toward Grandcourt, who wheeled past the
+group with an unmoved face, giving no sign of recognition.
+
+Immediately she felt a rising rage against him mingling with her shame for
+herself, and the words, "You might at least have raised your hat to her,"
+flew impetuously to her lips--but did not pass them. If as her husband, in
+her company, he chose to ignore these creatures whom she herself had
+excluded from the place she was filling, how could she be the person to
+reproach him? She was dumb.
+
+It was not chance, but her own design, that had brought Mrs. Glasher there
+with her boy. She had come to town under the pretext of making purchases--
+really wanting educational apparatus for her children, and had had
+interviews with Lush in which she had not refused to soothe her uneasy
+mind by representing the probabilities as all on the side of her ultimate
+triumph. Let her keep quiet, and she might live to see the marriage
+dissolve itself in one way or other--Lush hinted at several ways--leaving
+the succession assured to her boy. She had had an interview with
+Grandcourt, too, who had as usual told her to behave like a reasonable
+woman, and threatened punishment if she were troublesome; but had, also as
+usual, vindicated himself from any wish to be stingy, the money he was
+receiving from Sir Hugo on account of Diplow encouraging him to be lavish.
+Lydia, feeding on the probabilities in her favor, devoured her helpless
+wrath along with that pleasanter nourishment; but she could not let her
+discretion go entirely without the reward of making a Medusa-apparition
+before Gwendolen, vindictiveness and jealousy finding relief in an outlet
+of venom, though it were as futile as that of a viper already flung on the
+other side of the hedge. Hence, each day, after finding out from Lush the
+likely time for Gwendolen to be riding, she had watched at that post,
+daring Grandcourt so far. Why should she not take little Henleigh into the
+Park?
+
+The Medusa-apparition was made effective beyond Lydia's conception by the
+shock it gave Gwendolen actually to see Grandcourt ignoring this woman who
+had once been the nearest in the world to him, along with the children she
+had borne him. And all the while the dark shadow thus cast on the lot of a
+woman destitute of acknowledged social dignity, spread itself over her
+visions of a future that might be her own, and made part of her dread on
+her own behalf. She shrank all the more from any lonely action. What
+possible release could there be for her from this hated vantage ground,
+which yet she dared not quit, any more than if fire had been raining
+outside it? What release, but death? Not her own death. Gwendolen was not
+a woman who could easily think of her own death as a near reality, or
+front for herself the dark entrance on the untried and invisible. It
+seemed more possible that Grandcourt should die:--and yet not likely. The
+power of tyranny in him seemed a power of living in the presence of any
+wish that he should die. The thought that his death was the only possible
+deliverance for her was one with the thought that deliverance would never
+come--the double deliverance from the injury with which other beings might
+reproach her and from the yoke she had brought on her own neck. No! she
+foresaw him always living, and her own life dominated by him; the "always"
+of her young experience not stretching beyond the few immediate years that
+seemed immeasurably long with her passionate weariness. The thought of his
+dying would not subsist: it turned as with a dream-change into the terror
+that she should die with his throttling fingers on her neck avenging that
+thought. Fantasies moved within her like ghosts, making no break in her
+more acknowledged consciousness and finding no obstruction in it: dark
+rays doing their work invisibly in the broad light.
+
+Only an evening or two after that encounter in the Park, there was a grand
+concert at Klesmer's, who was living rather magnificently now in one of
+the large houses in Grosvenor Place, a patron and prince among musical
+professors. Gwendolen had looked forward to this occasion as one on which
+she was sure to meet Deronda, and she had been meditating how to put a
+question to him which, without containing a word that she would feel a
+dislike to utter, would yet be explicit enough for him to understand it.
+The struggle of opposite feelings would not let her abide by her instinct
+that the very idea of Deronda's relation to her was a discouragement to
+any desperate step towards freedom. The next wave of emotion was a longing
+for some word of his to enforce a resolve. The fact that her opportunities
+of conversation with him had always to be snatched in the doubtful privacy
+of large parties, caused her to live through them many times beforehand,
+imagining how they would take place and what she would say. The irritation
+was proportionate when no opportunity came; and this evening at Klesmer's
+she included Deronda in her anger, because he looked as calm as possible
+at a distance from her, while she was in danger of betraying her
+impatience to every one who spoke to her. She found her only safety in a
+chill haughtiness which made Mr. Vandernoodt remark that Mrs. Grandcourt
+was becoming a perfect match for her husband. When at last the chances of
+the evening brought Deronda near her, Sir Hugo and Mrs. Raymond were close
+by and could hear every word she said. No matter: her husband was not
+near, and her irritation passed without check into a fit of daring which
+restored the security of her self-possession. Deronda was there at last,
+and she would compel him to do what she pleased. Already and without
+effort rather queenly in her air as she stood in her white lace and green
+leaves she threw a royal permissiveness into her way of saying, "I wish
+you would come and see me to-morrow between five and six, Mr. Deronda."
+
+There could be but one answer at that moment: "Certainly," with a tone of
+obedience.
+
+Afterward it occurred to Deronda that he would write a note to excuse
+himself. He had always avoided making a call at Grandcourt's. He could not
+persuade himself to any step that might hurt her, and whether his excuse
+were taken for indifference or for the affectation of indifference it
+would be equally wounding. He kept his promise. Gwendolen had declined to
+ride out on the plea of not feeling well enough having left her refusal to
+the last moment when the horses were soon to be at the door--not without
+alarm lest her husband should say that he too would stay at home. Become
+almost superstitious about his power of suspicious divination, she had a
+glancing forethought of what she would do in that case--namely, have
+herself denied as not well. But Grandcourt accepted her excuse without
+remark, and rode off.
+
+Nevertheless when Gwendolen found herself alone, and had sent down the
+order that only Mr. Deronda was to be admitted, she began to be alarmed at
+what she had done, and to feel a growing agitation in the thought that he
+would soon appear, and she should soon be obliged to speak: not of
+trivialities, as if she had no serious motive in asking him to come: and
+yet what she had been for hours determining to say began to seem
+impossible. For the first time the impulse of appeal to him was being
+checked by timidity, and now that it was too late she was shaken by the
+possibility that he might think her invitation unbecoming. If so, she
+would have sunk in his esteem. But immediately she resist ed this
+intolerable fear as an infection from her husband's way of thinking. That
+_he_ would say she was making a fool of herself was rather a reason why
+such a judgment would be remote from Deronda's mind. But that she could
+not rid herself from this sudden invasion of womanly reticence was
+manifest in a kind of action which had never occurred to her before. In
+her struggle between agitation and the effort to suppress it, she was
+walking up and down the length of the two drawing-rooms, where at one end
+a long mirror reflected her in her black dress, chosen in the early
+morning with a half-admitted reference to this hour. But above this black
+dress her head on its white pillar of a neck showed to advantage. Some
+consciousness of this made her turn hastily and hurry to the boudoir,
+where again there was a glass, but also, tossed over a chair, a large
+piece of black lace which she snatched and tied over her crown of hair so
+as completely to conceal her neck, and leave only her face looking out
+from the black frame. In this manifest contempt of appearance, she thought
+it possible to be freer from nervousness, but the black lace did not take
+away the uneasiness from her eyes and lips.
+
+She was standing in the middle of the room when Deronda was announced, and
+as he approached her she perceived that he too for some reason was not his
+usual self. She could not have defined the change except by saying that he
+looked less happy than usual, and appeared to be under some effort in
+speaking to her. And yet the speaking was the slightest possible. They
+both said, "How do you do?" quite curtly; and Gwendolen, instead of
+sitting down, moved to a little distance, resting her arms slightly on the
+tall back of a chair, while Deronda stood where he was,--both feeling it
+difficult to say any more, though the preoccupation in his mind could
+hardly have been more remote than it was from Gwendolen's conception. She
+naturally saw in his embarrassment some reflection of her own. Forced to
+speak, she found all her training in concealment and self-command of no
+use to her and began with timid awkwardness--
+
+"You will wonder why. I begged you to come. I wanted to ask you something.
+You said I was ignorant. That is true. And what can I do but ask you?"
+
+And at this moment she was feeling it utterly impossible to put the
+questions she had intended. Something hew in her nervous manner roused
+Deronda's anxiety lest there might be a new crisis. He said with the
+sadness of affection in his voice--
+
+"My only regret is, that I can be of so little use to you." The words and
+the tone touched a new spring in her, and she went on with more sense of
+freedom, yet still not saying anything she had designed to say, and
+beginning to hurry, that she might somehow arrive at the right words.
+
+"I wanted to tell you that I have always been thinking of your advice, but
+is it any use?--I can't make myself different, because things about me
+raise bad feelings--and I must go on--I can alter nothing--it is no use."
+
+She paused an instant, with the consciousness that she was not finding the
+right words, but began again hurriedly, "But if I go on I shall get worse.
+I want not to get worse. I should like to be what you wish. There are
+people who are good and enjoy great things--I know there are. I am a
+contemptible creature. I feel as if I should get wicked with hating
+people. I have tried to think that I would go away from everybody. But I
+can't. There are so many things to hinder me. You think, perhaps, that I
+don't mind. But I do mind. I am afraid of everything. I am afraid of
+getting wicked. Tell me what I can do."
+
+She had forgotten everything but that image of her helpless misery which
+she was trying to make present to Deronda in broken allusive speech--
+wishing to convey but not express all her need. Her eyes were tearless,
+and had a look of smarting in their dilated brilliancy; there was a
+subdued sob in her voice which was more and more veiled, till it was
+hardly above a whisper. She was hurting herself with the jewels that
+glittered on her tightly-clasped fingers pressed against her heart.
+
+The feeling Deronda endured in these moments he afterward called horrible.
+Words seemed to have no more rescue in them than if he had been beholding
+a vessel in peril of wreck--the poor ship with its many-lived anguish
+beaten by the inescapable storm. How could he grasp the long-growing
+process of this young creature's wretchedness?--how arrest and change it
+with a sentence? He was afraid of his own voice. The words that rushed
+into his mind seemed in their feebleness nothing better than despair made
+audible, or than that insensibility to another's hardship which applies
+precept to soothe pain. He felt himself holding a crowd of words
+imprisoned within his lips, as if the letting them escape would be a
+violation of awe before the mysteries of our human lot. The thought that
+urged itself foremost was--"Confess everything to your husband; have
+nothing concealed:"--the words carried in his mind a vision of reasons
+which would have needed much fuller expressions for Gwendolen to apprehend
+them, but before he had begun those brief sentences, the door opened and
+the husband entered.
+
+Grandcourt had deliberately gone out and turned back to satisfy a
+suspicion. What he saw was Gwendolen's face of anguish framed black like a
+nun's, and Deronda standing three yards from her with a look of sorrow
+such as he might have bent on the last struggle of life in a beloved
+object. Without any show of surprise Grandcourt nodded to Deronda, gave a
+second look at Gwendolen, passed on, and seated himself easily at a little
+distance crossing his legs, taking out his handkerchief and trifling with
+it elegantly.
+
+Gwendolen had shrunk and changed her attitude on seeing him, but she did
+not turn or move from her place. It was not a moment in which she could
+feign anything, or manifest any strong revulsion of feeling: the
+passionate movement of her last speech was still too strong within her.
+What she felt beside was a dull despairing sense that her interview with
+Deronda was at an end: a curtain had fallen. But he, naturally, was urged
+into self-possession and effort by susceptibility to what might follow for
+her from being seen by her husband in this betrayal of agitation; and
+feeling that any pretence of ease in prolonging his visit would only
+exaggerate Grandcourt's possible conjectures of duplicity, he merely
+said--
+
+"I will not stay longer now. Good bye."
+
+He put out his hand, and she let him press her poor little chill fingers;
+but she said no good-bye.
+
+When he had left the room, Gwendolen threw herself into a seat, with an
+expectation as dull as her despair--the expectation that she was going to
+be punished. But Grandcourt took no notice: he was satisfied to have let
+her know that she had not deceived him, and to keep a silence which was
+formidable with omniscience. He went out that evening, and her plea of
+feeling ill was accepted without even a sneer.
+
+The next morning at breakfast he said, "I am going yachting to the
+Mediterranean."
+
+"When?" said Gwendolen, with a leap of heart which had hope in it.
+
+"The day after to-morrow. The yacht is at Marseilles. Lush is gone to get
+everything ready."
+
+"Shall I have mamma to stay with me, then?" said Gwendolen, the new sudden
+possibility of peace and affection filling her mind like a burst of
+morning light.
+
+"No; you will go with me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+ Ever in his soul
+ That larger justice which makes gratitude
+ Triumphed above resentment. 'Tis the mark
+ Of regal natures, with the wider life.
+ And fuller capability of joy:--
+ Not wits exultant in the strongest lens
+ To show you goodness vanished into pulp
+ Never worth "thank you"--they're the devil's friars,
+ Vowed to be poor as he in love and trust,
+ Yet must go begging of a world that keeps
+ Some human property.
+
+
+Deronda, in parting from Gwendolen, had abstained from saying, "I shall
+not see you again for a long while: I am going away," lest Grandcourt
+should understand him to imply that the fact was of importance to her.
+
+He was actually going away under circumstances so momentous to himself
+that when he set out to fulfill his promise of calling on her, he was
+already under the shadow of a solemn emotion which revived the deepest
+experience of his life.
+
+Sir Hugo had sent for him to his chambers with the note--"Come
+immediately. Something has happened:" a preparation that caused him some
+relief when, on entering the baronet's study, he was received with grave
+affection instead of the distress which he had apprehended.
+
+"It is nothing to grieve you, sir?" said Deronda, in a tone rather of
+restored confidence than question, as he took the hand held out to him.
+There was an unusual meaning in Sir Hugo's look, and a subdued emotion in
+his voice, as he said--
+
+"No, Dan, no. Sit down. I have something to say."
+
+Deronda obeyed, not without presentiment. It was extremely rare for Sir
+Hugo to show so much serious feeling.
+
+"Not to grieve me, my boy, no. At least, if there is nothing in it that
+will grieve you too much. But I hardly expected that this--just this--
+would ever happen. There have been reasons why I have never prepared you
+for it. There have been reasons why I have never told you anything about
+your parentage. But I have striven in every way not to make that an injury
+to you."
+
+Sir Hugo paused, but Deronda could not speak. He could not say, "I have
+never felt it an injury." Even if that had been true, he could not have
+trusted his voice to say anything. Far more than any one but himself could
+know of was hanging on this moment when the secrecy was to be broken. Sir
+Hugo had never seen the grand face he delighted in so pale--the lips
+pressed together with such a look of pain. He went on with a more anxious
+tenderness, as if he had a new fear of wounding.
+
+"I have acted in obedience to your mother's wishes. The secrecy was her
+wish. But now she desires to remove it. She desires to see you. I will put
+this letter into your hands, which you can look at by-and-by. It will
+merely tell you what she wishes you to do, and where you will find her."
+
+Sir Hugo held out a letter written on foreign paper, which Deronda thrust
+into his breast-pocket, with a sense of relief that he was not called on
+to read anything immediately. The emotion on Daniel's face had gained on
+the baronet, and was visibly shaking his composure. Sir Hugo found it
+difficult to say more. And Deronda's whole soul was possessed by a
+question which was the hardest in the world to utter. Yet he could not
+bear to delay it. This was a sacramental moment. If he let it pass, he
+could not recover the influences under which it was possible to utter the
+words and meet the answer. For some moments his eyes were cast down, and
+it seemed to both as if thoughts were in the air between them. But at last
+Deronda looked at Sir Hugo, and said, with a tremulous reverence in his
+voice--dreading to convey indirectly the reproach that affection had for
+years been stifling--
+
+"Is my father also living?"
+
+The answer came immediately in a low emphatic tone--"No."
+
+In the mingled emotions which followed that answer it was impossible to
+distinguish joy from pain.
+
+Some new light had fallen on the past for Sir Hugo too in this interview.
+After a silence in which Deronda felt like one whose creed is gone before
+he has religiously embraced another, the baronet said, in a tone of
+confession--
+
+"Perhaps I was wrong, Dan, to undertake what I did. And perhaps I liked it
+a little too well--having you all to myself. But if you have had any pain
+which I might have helped, I ask you to forgive me."
+
+"The forgiveness has long been there," said Deronda "The chief pain has
+always been on account of some one else--whom I never knew--whom I am now
+to know. It has not hindered me from feeling an affection for you which
+has made a large part of all the life I remember."
+
+It seemed one impulse that made the two men clasp each other's hand for a
+moment.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VII.--THE MOTHER AND THE SON
+
+
+CHAPTER L.
+
+ "If some mortal, born too soon,
+ Were laid away in some great trance--the ages
+ Coming and going all the while--till dawned
+ His true time's advent; and could then record
+ The words they spoke who kept watch by his bed,
+ Then I might tell more of the breath so light
+ Upon my eyelids, and the fingers warm
+ Among my hair. Youth is confused; yet never
+ So dull was I but, when that spirit passed,
+ I turned to him, scarce consciously, as turns
+ A water-snake when fairies cross his sleep."
+ --BROWNING: _Paracelsus_.
+
+
+This was the letter which Sir Hugo put into Deronda's hands:--
+
+ TO MY SON, DANIEL DERONDA.
+
+ My good friend and yours, Sir Hugo Mallinger, will have told you that
+ I wish to see you. My health is shaken, and I desire there should be
+ no time lost before I deliver to you what I have long withheld. Let
+ nothing hinder you from being at the _Albergo dell' Italia_ in
+ Genoa by the fourteenth of this month. Wait for me there. I am
+ uncertain when I shall be able to make the journey from Spezia, where
+ I shall be staying. That will depend on several things. Wait for me--
+ the Princess Halm-Eberstein. Bring with you the diamond ring that Sir
+ Hugo gave you. I shall like to see it again.--Your unknown mother,
+
+ LEONORA HALM-EBERSTEIN.
+
+This letter with its colorless wording gave Deronda no clue to what was in
+reserve for him; but he could not do otherwise than accept Sir Hugo's
+reticence, which seeded to imply some pledge not to anticipate the
+mother's disclosures; and the discovery that his life-long conjectures had
+been mistaken checked further surmise. Deronda could not hinder his
+imagination from taking a quick flight over what seemed possibilities, but
+he refused to contemplate any of them as more likely than another, lest he
+should be nursing it into a dominant desire or repugnance, instead of
+simply preparing himself with resolve to meet the fact bravely, whatever
+it might turn out to be.
+
+In this state of mind he could not have communicated to any one the reason
+for the absence which in some quarters he was obliged to mention
+beforehand, least of all to Mordecai, whom it would affect as powerfully
+as it did himself, only in rather a different way. If he were to say, "I
+am going to learn the truth about my birth," Mordecai's hope would gather
+what might prove a painful, dangerous excitement. To exclude suppositions,
+he spoke of his journey as being undertaken by Sir Hugo's wish, and threw
+as much indifference as he could into his manner of announcing it, saying
+he was uncertain of its duration, but it would perhaps be very short.
+
+"I will ask to have the child Jacob to stay with me," said Mordecai,
+comforting himself in this way, after the first mournful glances.
+
+"I will drive round and ask Mrs. Cohen to let him come," said Mirah.
+
+"The grandmother will deny you nothing," said Deronda. "I'm glad you were
+a little wrong as well as I," he added, smiling at Mordecai. "You thought
+that old Mrs. Cohen would not bear to see Mirah."
+
+"I undervalued her heart," said Mordecai. "She is capable of rejoicing
+that another's plant blooms though her own be withered."
+
+"Oh, they are dear good people; I feel as if we all belonged to each
+other," said Mirah, with a tinge of merriment in her smile.
+
+"What should you have felt if that Ezra had been your brother?" said
+Deronda, mischievously--a little provoked that she had taken kindly at
+once to people who had caused him so much prospective annoyance on her
+account.
+
+Mirah looked at him with a slight surprise for a moment, and then said,
+"He is not a bad man--I think he would never forsake any one." But when
+she uttered the words she blushed deeply, and glancing timidly at
+Mordecai, turned away to some occupation. Her father was in her mind,
+and this was a subject on which she and her brother had a painful mutual
+consciousness. "If he should come and find us!" was a thought which to
+Mirah sometimes made the street daylight as shadowy as a haunted forest
+where each turn screened for her an imaginary apparition.
+
+Deronda felt what was her involuntary allusion, and understood the blush.
+How could he be slow to understand feelings which now seemed nearer than
+ever to his own? for the words of his mother's letter implied that his
+filial relation was not to be freed from painful conditions; indeed,
+singularly enough that letter which had brought his mother nearer as a
+living reality had thrown her into more remoteness for his affections. The
+tender yearning after a being whose life might have been the worse for not
+having his care and love, the image of a mother who had not had all her
+dues, whether of reverence or compassion, had long been secretly present
+with him in his observation of all the women he had come near. But it
+seemed now that this picturing of his mother might fit the facts no better
+than his former conceptions about Sir Hugo. He wondered to find that when
+this mother's very hand-writing had come to him with words holding her
+actual feeling, his affections had suddenly shrunk into a state of
+comparative neutrality toward her. A veiled figure with enigmatic speech
+had thrust away that image which, in spite of uncertainty, his clinging
+thought had gradually modeled and made the possessor of his tenderness and
+duteous longing. When he set off to Genoa, the interest really uppermost
+in his mind had hardly so much relation to his mother as to Mordecai and
+Mirah.
+
+"God bless you, Dan!" Sir Hugo had said, when they shook hands. "Whatever
+else changes for you, it can't change my being the oldest friend you have
+known, and the one who has all along felt the most for you. I couldn't
+have loved you better if you'd been my own-only I should have been better
+pleased with thinking of you always as the future master of the Abbey
+instead of my fine nephew; and then you would have seen it necessary for
+you to take a political line. However--things must be as they may." It was
+a defensive movement of the baronet's to mingle purposeless remarks with
+the expression of serious feeling.
+
+When Deronda arrived at the _Italia_ in Genoa, no Princess Halm-Eberstein
+was there; but on the second day there was a letter for him, saying that
+her arrival might happen within a week, or might be deferred a fortnight
+and more; she was under circumstances which made it impossible for her to
+fix her journey more precisely, and she entreated him to wait as patiently
+as he could.
+
+With this indefinite prospect of suspense on matters of supreme moment to
+him, Deronda set about the difficult task of seeking amusement on
+philosophic grounds, as a means of quieting excited feeling and giving
+patience a lift over a weary road. His former visit to the superb city had
+been only cursory, and left him much to learn beyond the prescribed round
+of sight-seeing, by spending the cooler hours in observant wandering about
+the streets, the quay, and the environs; and he often took a boat that he
+might enjoy the magnificent view of the city and harbor from the sea. All
+sights, all subjects, even the expected meeting with his mother, found a
+central union in Mordecai and Mirah, and the ideas immediately associated
+with them; and among the thoughts that most filled his mind while his boat
+was pushing about within view of the grand harbor was that of the
+multitudinous Spanish Jews centuries ago driven destitute from their
+Spanish homes, suffered to land from the crowded ships only for a brief
+rest on this grand quay of Genoa, overspreading it with a pall of famine
+and plague--dying mothers and dying children at their breasts--fathers and
+sons a-gaze at each other's haggardness, like groups from a hundred
+Hunger-towers turned out beneath the midday sun. Inevitably dreamy
+constructions of a possible ancestry for himself would weave themselves
+with historic memories which had begun to have a new interest for him on
+his discovery of Mirah, and now, under the influence of Mordecai, had
+become irresistibly dominant. He would have sealed his mind against such
+constructions if it had been possible, and he had never yet fully admitted
+to himself that he wished the facts to verify Mordecai's conviction: he
+inwardly repeated that he had no choice in the matter, and that wishing
+was folly--nay, on the question of parentage, wishing seemed part of that
+meanness which disowns kinship: it was a disowning by anticipation. What
+he had to do was simply to accept the fact; and he had really no strong
+presumption to go upon, now that he was assured of his mistake about Sir
+Hugo. There had been a resolved concealment which made all inference
+untrustworthy, and the very name he bore might be a false one. If Mordecai
+was wrong--if he, the so-called Daniel Deronda, were held by ties entirely
+aloof from any such course as his friend's pathetic hope had marked out?--
+he would not say "I wish"; but he could not help feeling on which side the
+sacrifice lay.
+
+Across these two importunate thoughts, which he resisted as much as one
+can resist anything in that unstrung condition which belongs to suspense,
+there came continually an anxiety which he made no effort to banish--
+dwelling on it rather with a mournfulness, which often seems to us the
+best atonement we can make to one whose need we have been unable to meet.
+The anxiety was for Gwendolen. In the wonderful mixtures of our nature
+there is a feeling distinct from that exclusive passionate love of which
+some men and women (by no means all) are capable, which yet is not the
+same with friendship, nor with a merely benevolent regard, whether
+admiring or compassionate: a man, say--for it is a man who is here
+concerned--hardly represents to himself this shade of feeling toward a
+woman more nearly than in words, "I should have loved her, if----": the
+"if" covering some prior growth in the inclinations, or else some
+circumstances which have made an inward prohibitory law as a stay against
+the emotions ready to quiver out of balance. The "if" in Deronda's case
+carried reasons of both kinds; yet he had never throughout his relations
+with Gwendolen been free from the nervous consciousness that there was
+something to guard against not only on her account but on his own--some
+precipitancy in the manifestations of impulsive feeling--some ruinous
+inroad of what is but momentary on the permanent chosen treasure of the
+heart--some spoiling of her trust, which wrought upon him now as if it had
+been the retreating cry of a creature snatched and carried out of his
+reach by swift horsemen or swifter waves, while his own strength was only
+a stronger sense of weakness. How could his feelings for Gwendolen ever be
+exactly like his feelings for other women, even when there was one by
+whose side he desired to stand apart from them? Strangely the figure
+entered into the pictures of his present and future; strangely (and now it
+seemed sadly) their two lots had come in contact, hers narrowly personal,
+his charged with far-reaching sensibilities, perhaps with durable
+purposes, which were hardly more present to her than the reasons why men
+migrate are present to the birds that come as usual for the crumbs and
+find them no more. Not that Deronda was too ready to imagine himself of
+supreme importance to a woman; but her words of insistance that he must
+"remain near her--must not forsake her"--continually recurred to him with
+the clearness and importunity of imagined sounds, such as Dante has said
+pierce us like arrows whose points carry the sharpness of
+pity--
+
+ "Lamenti saettaron me diversi
+ Ca che di piefermti avean gli strali?"
+
+Day after day passed, and the very air of Italy seemed to carry the
+consciousness that war had been declared against Austria, and every day
+was a hurrying march of crowded Time toward the world-changing battle of
+Sadowa. Meanwhile, in Genoa, the noons were getting hotter, the converging
+outer roads getting deeper with white dust, the oleanders in the tubs
+along the wayside gardens looking more and more like fatigued holiday-
+makers, and the sweet evening changing her office--scattering abroad those
+whom the midday had sent under shelter, and sowing all paths with happy
+social sounds, little tinklings of mule-bells and whirrings of thrumbed
+strings, light footsteps and voices, if not leisurely, then with the hurry
+of pleasure in them; while the encircling heights, crowned with forts,
+skirted with fine dwellings and gardens, seemed also to come forth and
+gaze in fullness of beauty after their long siesta, till all strong color
+melted in the stream of moonlight which made the Streets a new spectacle
+with shadows, both still and moving, on cathedral steps and against the
+facades of massive palaces; and then slowly with the descending moon all
+sank in deep night and silence, and nothing shone but the port lights of
+the great Lanterna in the blackness below, and the glimmering stars in the
+blackness above. Deronda, in his suspense, watched this revolving of the
+days as he might have watched a wonderful clock where the striking of the
+hours was made solemn with antique figures advancing and retreating in
+monitory procession, while he still kept his ear open for another kind of
+signal which would have its solemnity too: He was beginning to sicken of
+occupation, and found himself contemplating all activity with the
+aloofness of a prisoner awaiting ransom. In his letters to Mordecai and
+Hans, he had avoided writing about himself, but he was really getting into
+that state of mind to which all subjects become personal; and the few
+books he had brought to make him a refuge in study were becoming
+unreadable, because the point of view that life would make for him was in
+that agitating moment of uncertainty which is close upon decision.
+
+Many nights were watched through by him in gazing from the open window of
+his room on the double, faintly pierced darkness of the sea and the
+heavens; often in Struggling under the oppressive skepticism which
+represented his particular lot, with all the importance he was allowing
+Mordecai to give it, as of no more lasting effect than a dream--a set of
+changes which made passion to him, but beyond his consciousness were no
+more than an imperceptible difference of mass and shadow; sometimes with a
+reaction of emotive force which gave even to sustained disappointment,
+even to the fulfilled demand of sacrifice, the nature of a satisfied
+energy, and spread over his young future, whatever it might be, the
+attraction of devoted service; sometimes with a sweet irresistible
+hopefulness that the very best of human possibilities might befall him--
+the blending of a complete personal love in one current with a larger
+duty; and sometimes again in a mood of rebellion (what human creature
+escapes it?) against things in general because they are thus and not
+otherwise, a mood in which Gwendolen and her equivocal fate moved as busy
+images of what was amiss in the world along with the concealments which he
+had felt as a hardship in his own life, and which were acting in him now
+under the form of an afflicting doubtfulness about the mother who had
+announced herself coldly and still kept away.
+
+But at last she was come. One morning in his third week of waiting there
+was a new kind of knock at the door. A servant in Chasseurs livery
+entered and delivered in French the verbal message that, the Princess
+Halm-Eberstein had arrived, that she was going to rest during the day, but
+would be obliged if Monsieur would dine early, so as to be at liberty at
+seven, when she would be able to receive him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI.
+
+ She held the spindle as she sat,
+ Errina with the thick-coiled mat
+ Of raven hair and deepest agate eyes,
+ Gazing with a sad surprise
+ At surging visions of her destiny--
+ To spin the byssus drearily
+ In insect-labor, while the throng
+ Of gods and men wrought deeds that poets wrought in song.
+
+
+When Deronda presented himself at the door of his mother's apartment in
+the _Italia_ he felt some revival of his boyhood with its premature
+agitations. The two servants in the antechamber looked at him markedly, a
+little surprised that the doctor their lady had come to consult was this
+striking young gentleman whose appearance gave even the severe lines of an
+evening dress the credit of adornment. But Deronda could notice nothing
+until, the second door being opened, he found himself in the presence of a
+figure which at the other end of the large room stood awaiting his
+approach.
+
+She was covered, except as to her face and part of her arms, with black
+lace hanging loosely from the summit of her whitening hair to the long
+train stretching from her tall figure. Her arms, naked to the elbow,
+except for some rich bracelets, were folded before her, and the fine poise
+of her head made it look handsomer than it really was. But Deronda felt no
+interval of observation before he was close in front of her, holding the
+hand she had put out and then raising it to his lips. She still kept her
+hand in his and looked at him examiningly; while his chief consciousness
+was that her eyes were piercing and her face so mobile that the next
+moment she might look like a different person. For even while she was
+examining him there was a play of the brow and nostril which made a tacit
+language. Deronda dared no movement, not able to conceive what sort of
+manifestation her feeling demanded; but he felt himself changing color
+like a girl, and yet wondering at his own lack of emotion; he had lived
+through so many ideal meetings with his mother, and they had seemed more
+real than this! He could not even conjecture in what language she would
+Speak to him. He imagined it would not be English. Suddenly, she let fall
+his hand, and placed both hers on his shoulders, while her face gave out a
+flash of admiration in which every worn line disappeared and seemed to
+leave a restored youth.
+
+"You are a beautiful creature!" she said, in a low melodious voice, with
+syllables which had what might be called a foreign but agreeable outline.
+"I knew you would be." Then she kissed him on each cheek, and he returned
+the kisses. But it was something like a greeting between royalties.
+
+She paused a moment while the lines were coming back into her face, and
+then said in a colder tone, "I am your mother. But you can have no love
+for me."
+
+"I have thought of you more than of any other being in the world," said
+Deronda, his voice trembling nervously.
+
+"I am not like what you thought I was," said the mother decisively,
+withdrawing her hands from his shoulders, and folding her arms as before,
+looking at him as if she invited him to observe her. He had often pictured
+her face in his imagination as one which had a likeness to his own: he saw
+some of the likeness now, but amidst more striking differences. She was a
+remarkable looking being. What was it that gave her son a painful sense of
+aloofness?--Her worn beauty had a strangeness in it as if she were not
+quite a human mother, but a Melusina, who had ties with some world which
+is independent of ours.
+
+"I used to think that you might be suffering," said Deronda, anxious above
+all not to wound her. "I used to wish that I could be a comfort to you."
+
+"I _am_ suffering. But with a suffering that you can't comfort," said the
+Princess, in a harder voice than before, moving to a sofa where cushions
+had been carefully arranged for her. "Sit down." She pointed to a seat
+near her; and then discerning some distress in Deronda's face, she added,
+more gently, "I am not suffering at this moment. I am at ease now. I am
+able to talk."
+
+Deronda seated himself and waited for her to speak again. It seemed as if
+he were in the presence of a mysterious Fate rather than of the longed-for
+mother. He was beginning to watch her with wonder, from the spiritual
+distance to which she had thrown him.
+
+"No," she began: "I did not send for you to comfort me. I could not know
+beforehand--I don't know now--what you will feel toward me. I have not the
+foolish notion that you can love me merely because I am your mother, when
+you have never seen or heard of me in all your life. But I thought I chose
+something better for you than being with me. I did not think I deprived
+you of anything worth having."
+
+"You cannot wish me to believe that your affection would not have been
+worth having," said Deronda, finding that she paused as if she expected
+him to make some answer.
+
+"I don't mean to speak ill of myself," said the princess, with proud
+impetuosity, "But I had not much affection to give you. I did not want
+affection. I had been stifled with it. I wanted to live out the life that
+was in me, and not to be hampered with other lives. You wonder what I was.
+I was no princess then." She rose with a sudden movement, and stood as she
+had done before. Deronda immediately rose too; he felt breathless.
+
+"No princess in this tame life that I live in now. I was a great singer,
+and I acted as well as I sang. All the rest were poor beside me. Men
+followed me from one country to another. I was lining a myriad lives in
+one. I did not want a child."
+
+There was a passionate self-defence in her tone. She had cast all
+precedent out of her mind. Precedent had no excuse for, her and she could
+only seek a justification in the intensest words she could find for her
+experience. She seemed to fling out the last words against some possible
+reproach in the mind of her son, who had to stand and hear them--clutching
+his coat-collar as if he were keeping himself above water by it, and
+feeling his blood in the sort of commotion that might have been excited if
+he had seen her going through some strange rite of a religion which gave a
+sacredness to crime. What else had she to tell him? She went on with the
+same intensity and a sort of pale illumination in her face.
+
+"I did not want to marry. I was forced into marrying your father--forced,
+I mean, by my father's wishes and commands; and besides, it was my best
+way of getting some freedom. I could rule my husband, but not my father. I
+had a right to be free. I had a right to seek my freedom from a bondage
+that I hated."
+
+She seated herself again, while there was that subtle movement in her eyes
+and closed lips which is like the suppressed continuation of speech.
+Deronda continued standing, and after a moment or two she looked up at him
+with a less defiant pleading as she said--
+
+"And the bondage I hated for myself I wanted to keep you from. What better
+could the most loving mother have done? I relieved you from the bondage of
+having been born a Jew."
+
+"Then I _am_ a Jew?" Deronda burst out with a deep-voiced energy that made
+his mother shrink a little backward against her cushions. "My father was a
+Jew, and you are a Jewess?"
+
+"Yes, your father was my cousin," said the mother, watching him with a
+change in her look, as if she saw something that she might have to be
+afraid of.
+
+"I am glad of it," said Deronda, impetuously, in the veiled voice of
+passion. He could not have imagined beforehand how he would have come to
+say that which he had never hitherto admitted. He could not have dreamed
+that it would be in impulsive opposition to his mother. He was shaken by a
+mixed anger which no reflection could come soon enough to check, against
+this mother who it seemed had borne him unwillingly, had willingly made
+herself a stranger to him, and--perhaps--was now making herself known
+unwillingly. This last suspicion seemed to flash some explanation over her
+speech.
+
+But the mother was equally shaken by an anger differently mixed, and her
+frame was less equal to any repression. The shaking with her was visibly
+physical, and her eyes looked the larger for her pallid excitement as she
+said violently--
+
+"Why do you say you are glad? You are an English gentleman. I secured you
+that."
+
+"You did not know what you secured me. How could you choose my birthright
+for me?" said Deronda, throwing himself sideways into his chair again,
+almost unconsciously, and leaning his arm over the back, while he looked
+away from his mother.
+
+He was fired with an intolerance that seemed foreign to him. But he was
+now trying hard to master himself and keep silence. A horror had swept in
+upon his anger lest he should say something too hard in this moment which
+made an epoch never to be recalled. There was a pause before his mother
+spoke again, and when she spoke her voice had become more firmly resistant
+in its finely varied tones:
+
+"I chose for you what I would have chosen for myself. How could I know
+that you would have the spirit of my father in you? How could I know that
+you would love what I hated?--if you really love to be a Jew." The last
+words had such bitterness in them that any one overhearing might have
+supposed some hatred had arisen between the mother and son.
+
+But Deronda had recovered his fuller self. He was recalling his
+sensibilities to what life had been and actually was for her whose best
+years were gone, and who with the signs of suffering in her frame was now
+exerting herself to tell him of a past which was not his alone but also
+hers. His habitual shame at the acceptance of events as if they were his
+only, helped him even here. As he looked at his mother silently after her
+last words, his face regained some of its penetrative calm; yet it seemed
+to have a strangely agitating influence over her: her eyes were fixed on
+him with a sort of fascination, but not with any repose of maternal
+delight.
+
+"Forgive me, if I speak hastily," he said, with diffident gravity. "Why
+have you resolved now on disclosing to me what you took care to have me
+brought up in ignorance of? Why--since you seem angry that I should be
+glad?"
+
+"Oh--the reasons of our actions!" said the Princess, with a ring of
+something like sarcastic scorn. "When you are as old as I am, it will not
+seem so simple a question--'Why did you do this?' People talk of their
+motives in a cut and dried way. Every woman is supposed to have the same
+set of motives, or else to be a monster. I am not a monster, but I have
+not felt exactly what other women feel--or say they feel, for fear of
+being thought unlike others. When you reproach me in your heart for
+sending you away from me, you mean that I ought to say I felt about you as
+other women say they feel about their children. I did _not_ feel that. I
+was glad to be freed from you. But I did well for you, and I gave you your
+father's fortune. Do I seem now to be revoking everything?--Well, there
+are reasons. I feel many things that I cannot understand. A fatal illness
+has been growing in me for a year. I shall very likely not live another
+year. I will not deny anything I have done. I will not pretend to love
+where I have no love. But shadows are rising round me. Sickness makes
+them. If I have wronged the dead--I have but little time to do what I left
+undone."
+
+The varied transitions of tone with which this speech was delivered were
+as perfect as the most accomplished actress could have made them. The
+speech was in fact a piece of what may be called sincere acting; this
+woman's nature was one in which all feeling--and all the more when it was
+tragic as well as real--immediately became matter of conscious
+representation: experience immediately passed into drama, and she acted
+her own emotions. In a minor degree this is nothing uncommon, but in the
+Princess the acting had a rare perfection of physiognomy, voice, and
+gesture. It would not be true to say that she felt less because of this
+double consciousness: she felt--that is, her mind went through--all the
+more, but with a difference; each nucleus of pain or pleasure had a deep
+atmosphere of the excitement or spiritual intoxication which at once
+exalts and deadens. But Deronda made no reflection of this kind. All his
+thoughts hung on the purport of what his mother was saying; her tones and
+her wonderful face entered into his agitation without being noted. What he
+longed for with an awed desire was to know as much as she would tell him
+of the strange mental conflict under which it seemed he had been brought
+into the world; what his compassionate nature made the controlling idea
+within him were the suffering and the confession that breathed through her
+later words, and these forbade any further question, when she paused and
+remained silent, with her brow knit, her head turned a little away from
+him, and her large eyes fixed as if on something incorporeal. He must wait
+for her to speak again. She did so with strange abruptness, turning her
+eyes upon him suddenly, and saying more quickly--
+
+"Sir Hugo has written much about you. He tells me you have a wonderful
+mind--you comprehend everything--you are wiser than he is with all his
+sixty years. You say you are glad to know that you were born a Jew. I am
+not going to tell you that I have changed my mind about that. Your
+feelings are against mine. You don't thank me for what I did. Shall you
+comprehend your mother, or only blame her?"
+
+"There is not a fibre within me but makes me wish to comprehend her," said
+Deronda, meeting her sharp gaze solemnly. "It is a bitter reversal of my
+longing to think of blaming her. What I have been most trying to do for
+fifteen years is to have some understanding of those who differ from
+myself."
+
+"Then you have become unlike your grandfather in that." said the mother,
+"though you are a young copy of him in your face. He never comprehended
+me, or if he did, he only thought of fettering me into obedience. I was to
+be what he called 'the Jewish woman' under pain of his curse. I was to
+feel everything I did not feel, and believe everything I did not believe.
+I was to feel awe for the bit of parchment in the _mezuza_ over the door;
+to dread lest a bit of butter should touch a bit of meat; to think it
+beautiful that men should bind the _tephillin_ on them, and women not,--to
+adore the wisdom of such laws, however silly they might seem to me. I was
+to love the long prayers in the ugly synagogue, and the howling, and the
+gabbling, and the dreadful fasts, and the tiresome feasts, and my father's
+endless discoursing about our people, which was a thunder without meaning
+in my ears. I was to care forever about what Israel had been; and I did
+not care at all. I cared for the wide world, and all that I could
+represent in it. I hated living under the shadow of my father's
+strictness. Teaching, teaching for everlasting--'this you must be,' 'that
+you must not be'--pressed on me like a frame that got tighter and tighter
+as I grew. I wanted to live a large life, with freedom to do what every
+one else did, and be carried along in a great current, not obliged to
+care. Ah!"--here her tone changed to one of a more bitter incisiveness--
+"you are glad to have been born a Jew. You say so. That is because you have
+not been brought up as a Jew. That separateness seems sweet to you because
+I saved you from it."
+
+"When you resolved on that, you meant that I should never know my origin?"
+said Deronda, impulsively. "You have at least changed in your feeling on
+that point."
+
+"Yes, that was what I meant. That is what I persevered in. And it is not
+true to say that I have changed. Things have changed in spite of me. I am
+still the same Leonora"--she pointed with her forefinger to her breast--
+"here within me is the same desire, the same will, the same choice,
+_but_"--she spread out her hands, palm upward, on each side of her, as she
+paused with a bitter compression of her lip, then let her voice fall into
+muffled, rapid utterance--"events come upon us like evil enchantments: and
+thoughts, feelings, apparitions in the darkness are events--are they not?
+I don't consent. We only consent to what we love. I obey something
+tyrannic"--she spread out her hands again--"I am forced to be withered, to
+feel pain, to be dying slowly. Do I love that? Well, I have been forced to
+obey my dead father. I have been forced to tell you that you are a Jew,
+and deliver to you what he commanded me to deliver."
+
+"I beseech you to tell me what moved you--when you were young, I mean--to
+take the course you did," said Deronda, trying by this reference to the
+past to escape from what to him was the heart-rending piteousness of this
+mingled suffering and defiance. "I gather that my grandfather opposed your
+bent to be an artist. Though my own experience has been quite different, I
+enter into the painfulness of your struggle. I can imagine the hardship of
+an enforced renunciation."
+
+"No," said the Princess, shaking her head and folding her arms with an air
+of decision. "You are not a woman. You may try--but you can never imagine
+what it is to have a man's force of genius in you, and yet to suffer the
+slavery of being a girl. To have a pattern cut out--'this is the Jewish
+woman; this is what you must be; this is what you are wanted for; a
+woman's heart must be of such a size and no larger, else it must be
+pressed small, like Chinese feet; her happiness is to be made as cakes
+are, by a fixed receipt.' That was what my father wanted. He wished I had
+been a son; he cared for me as a make-shift link. His heart was set on his
+Judaism. He hated that Jewish women should be thought of by the Christian
+world as a sort of ware to make public singers and actresses of. As if we
+were not the more enviable for that! That is a chance of escaping from
+bondage."
+
+"Was my grandfather a learned man?" said Deronda, eager to know
+particulars that he feared his mother might not think of.
+
+She answered impatiently, putting up her hand, "Oh, yes,--and a clever
+physician--and good: I don't deny that he was good. A man to be admired in
+a play--grand, with an iron will. Like the old Foscari before he pardons.
+But such men turn their wives and daughters into slaves. They would rule
+the world if they could; but not ruling the world, they throw all the
+weight of their will on the necks and souls of women. But nature sometimes
+thwarts them. My father had no other child than his daughter, and she was
+like himself."
+
+She had folded her arms again, and looked as if she were ready to face
+some impending attempt at mastery.
+
+"Your father was different. Unlike me--all lovingness and affection. I
+knew I could rule him; and I made him secretly promise me, before I
+married him, that he would put no hindrance in the way of my being an
+artist. My father was on his deathbed when we were married: from the first
+he had fixed his mind on my marrying my cousin Ephraim. And when a woman's
+will is as strong as the man's who wants to govern her, half her strength
+must be concealment. I meant to have my will in the end, but I could only
+have it by seeming to obey. I had an awe of my father--always I had had an
+awe of him: it was impossible to help it. I hated to feel awed--I wished I
+could have defied him openly; but I never could. It was what I could not
+imagine: I could not act it to myself that I should begin to defy my
+father openly and succeed. And I never would risk failure."
+
+This last sentence was uttered with an abrupt emphasis, and she paused
+after it as if the words had raised a crowd of remembrances which
+obstructed speech. Her son was listening to her with feelings more and
+more highly mixed; the first sense of being repelled by the frank coldness
+which had replaced all his preconceptions of a mother's tender joy in the
+sight of him; the first impulses of indignation at what shocked his most
+cherished emotions and principles--all these busy elements of collision
+between them were subsiding for a time, and making more and more room for
+that effort at just allowance and that admiration of a forcible nature
+whose errors lay along high pathways, which he would have felt if, instead
+of being his mother, she had been a stranger who had appealed to his
+sympathy. Still it was impossible to be dispassionate: he trembled lest
+the next thing she had to say would be more repugnant to him than what had
+gone before: he was afraid of the strange coercion she seemed to be under
+to lay her mind bare: he almost wished he could say, "Tell me only what is
+necessary," and then again he felt the fascination which made him watch
+her and listen to her eagerly. He tried to recall her to particulars by
+asking--
+
+"Where was my grandfather's home?"
+
+"Here in Genoa, where I was married; and his family had lived here
+generations ago. But my father had been in various countries."
+
+"You must surely have lived in England?"
+
+"My mother was English--a Jewess of Portuguese descent. My father married
+her in England. Certain circumstances of that marriage made all the
+difference in my life: through that marriage my father thwarted his own
+plans. My mother's sister was a singer, and afterward she married the
+English partner of a merchant's house here in Genoa, and they came and
+lived here eleven years. My mother died when I was eight years old, and my
+father allowed me to be continually with my Aunt Leonora and be taught
+under her eyes, as if he had not minded the danger of her encouraging my
+wish to be a singer, as she had been. But this was it--I saw it again and
+again in my father:--he did not guard against consequences, because he
+felt sure he could hinder them if he liked. Before my aunt left Genoa, I
+had had enough teaching to bring out the born singer and actress within
+me: my father did not know everything that was done; but he knew that I
+was taught music and singing--he knew my inclination. That was nothing to
+him: he meant that I should obey his will. And he was resolved that I
+should marry my cousin Ephraim, the only one left of my father's family
+that he knew. I wanted not to marry. I thought of all plans to resist it,
+but at last I found that I could rule my cousin, and I consented. My
+father died three weeks after we were married, and then I had my way!"
+She uttered these words almost exultantly; but after a little pause her
+face changed, and she said in a biting tone, "It has not lasted, though.
+My father is getting his way now."
+
+She began to look more contemplatively again at her son, and presently
+said--
+
+"You are like him--but milder--there is something of your own father in
+you; and he made it the labor of his life to devote himself to me: wound
+up his money-changing and banking, and lived to wait upon me--he went
+against his conscience for me. As I loved the life of my art, so he loved
+me. Let me look at your hand again: the hand with the ring on. It was your
+father's ring."
+
+He drew his chair nearer to her and gave her his hand. We know what kind
+of a hand it was: her own, very much smaller, was of the same type. As he
+felt the smaller hand holding his, as he saw nearer to him the face that
+held the likeness of his own, aged not by time but by intensity, the
+strong bent of his nature toward a reverential tenderness asserted itself
+above every other impression and in his most fervent tone he said--
+
+"Mother! take us all into your heart--the living and the dead. Forgive
+every thing that hurts you in the past. Take my affection."
+
+She looked at him admiringly rather than lovingly, then kissed him on the
+brow, and saying sadly, "I reject nothing, but I have nothing to give,"
+she released his hand and sank back on her cushions. Deronda turned pale
+with what seems always more of a sensation than an emotion--the pain of
+repulsed tenderness. She noticed the expression of pain, and said, still
+with melodious melancholy in her tones--
+
+"It is better so. We must part again soon and you owe me no duties. I did
+not wish you to be born. I parted with you willingly. When your father
+died I resolved that I would have no more ties, but such as I could free
+myself from. I was the Alcharisi you have heard of: the name had magic
+wherever it was carried. Men courted me. Sir Hugo Mallinger was one who
+wished to marry me. He was madly in love with me. One day I asked him, 'Is
+there a man capable of doing something for love of me, and expecting
+nothing in return?' He said: 'What is it you want done?' I said, 'Take my
+boy and bring him up as an Englishman, and never let him know anything
+about his parents.' You were little more than two years old, and were
+sitting on his foot. He declared that he would pay money to have such a
+boy. I had not meditated much on the plan beforehand, but as soon as I had
+spoken about it, it took possession of me as something I could not rest
+without doing. At first he thought I was not serious, but I convinced him,
+and he was never surprised at anything. He agreed that it would be for
+your good, and the finest thing for you. A great singer and actress is a
+queen, but she gives no royalty to her son. All that happened at Naples.
+And afterward I made Sir Hugo the trustee of your fortune. That is what I
+did; and I had a joy in doing it. My father had tyrannized over me--he
+cared more about a grandson to come than he did about me: I counted as
+nothing. You were to be such a Jew as he; you were to be what he wanted.
+But you were my son, and it was my turn to say what you should be. I said
+you should not know you were a Jew."
+
+"And for months events have been preparing me to be glad that I am a Jew,"
+said--Deronda, his opposition roused again. The point touched the quick of
+his experience. "It would always have been better that I should have known
+the truth. I have always been rebelling against the secrecy that looked
+like shame. It is no shame to have Jewish parents--the shame is to disown
+it."
+
+"You say it was a shame to me, then, that I used that secrecy," said his
+mother, with a flash of new anger. "There is no shame attaching to me. I
+have no reason to be ashamed. I rid myself of the Jewish tatters and
+gibberish that make people nudge each other at sight of us, as if we were
+tattooed under our clothes, though our faces are as whole as theirs. I
+delivered you from the pelting contempt that pursues Jewish separateness.
+I am not ashamed that I did it. It was the better for you."
+
+"Then why have you now undone the secrecy?--no, not undone it--the effects
+will never be undone. But why have you now sent for me to tell me that I
+am a Jew?" said Deronda, with an intensity of opposition in feeling that
+was almost bitter. It seemed as if her words had called out a latent
+obstinacy of race in him.
+
+"Why?--ah, why?" said the Princess, rising quickly and walking to the
+other side of the room, where she turned round and slowly approached him,
+as he, too, stood up. Then she began to speak again in a more veiled
+voice. "I can't explain; I can only say what is. I don't love my father's
+religion now any more than I did then. Before I married the second time I
+was baptized; I made myself like the people I lived among. I had a right
+to do it; I was not like a brute, obliged to go with my own herd. I have
+not repented; I will not say that I have repented. But yet"--here she had
+come near to her son, and paused; then again retreated a little and stood
+still, as if resolute not to give way utterly to an imperious influence;
+but, as she went on speaking, she became more and more unconscious of
+anything but the awe that subdued her voice. "It is illness, I don't doubt
+that it has been gathering illness--my mind has gone back: more than a
+year ago it began. You see my gray hair, my worn look: it has all come
+fast. Sometimes I am in an agony of pain--I dare say I shall be to-night.
+Then it is as if all the life I have chosen to live, all thoughts, all
+will, forsook me and left me alone in spots of memory, and I can't get
+away: my pain seems to keep me there. My childhood--my girlhood--the day
+of my marriage--the day of my father's death--there seems to be nothing
+since. Then a great horror comes over me: what do I know of life or death?
+and what my father called 'right' may be a power that is laying hold of
+me--that is clutching me now. Well, I will satisfy him. I cannot go into
+the darkness without satisfying him. I have hidden what was his. I thought
+once I would burn it. I have not burned it. I thank God I have not burned
+it!"
+
+She threw herself on her cushions again, visibly fatigued. Deronda, moved
+too strongly by her suffering for other impulses to act within him, drew
+near her, and said, entreatingly--
+
+"Will you not spare yourself this evening? Let us leave the rest till to-
+morrow."
+
+"No," she said decisively. "I will confess it all, now that I have come up
+to it. Often when I am at ease it all fades away; my whole self comes
+quite back; but I know it will sink away again, and the other will come--
+the poor, solitary, forsaken remains of self, that can resist nothing. It
+was my nature to resist, and say, 'I have a right to resist.' Well, I say
+so still when I have any strength in me. You have heard me say it, and I
+don't withdraw it. But when my strength goes, some other right forces
+itself upon me like iron in an inexorable hand; and even when I am at
+ease, it is beginning to make ghosts upon the daylight. And now you have
+made it worse for me," she said, with a sudden return of impetuosity; "but
+I shall have told you everything. And what reproach is there against me,"
+she added bitterly, "since I have made you glad to be a Jew? Joseph
+Kalonymos reproached me: he said you had been turned into a proud
+Englishman, who resented being touched by a Jew. I wish you had!" she
+ended, with a new marvelous alternation. It was as if her mind were
+breaking into several, one jarring the other into impulsive action.
+
+"Who is Joseph Kalonymos?" said Deronda, with a darting recollection of
+that Jew who touched his arm in the Frankfort synagogue.
+
+"Ah! some vengeance sent him back from the East, that he might see you and
+come to reproach me. He was my father's friend. He knew of your birth: he
+knew of my husband's death, and once, twenty years ago, after he had been
+away in the Levant, he came to see me and inquire about you. I told him
+that you were dead: I meant you to be dead to all the world of my
+childhood. If I had said that your were living, he would have interfered
+with my plans: he would have taken on him to represent my father, and have
+tried to make me recall what I had done. What could I do but say you were
+dead? The act was done. If I had told him of it there would have been
+trouble and scandal--and all to conquer me, who would not have been
+conquered. I was strong then, and I would have had my will, though there
+might have been a hard fight against me. I took the way to have it without
+any fight. I felt then that I was not really deceiving: it would have come
+to the same in the end; or if not to the same, to something worse. He
+believed me and begged that I would give up to him the chest that my
+father had charged me and my husband to deliver to our eldest son. I knew
+what was in the chest--things that had been dinned in my ears since I had
+had any understanding--things that were thrust on my mind that I might
+feel them like a wall around my life--my life that was growing like a
+tree. Once, after my husband died, I was going to burn the chest. But it
+was difficult to burn; and burning a chest and papers looks like a
+shameful act. I have committed no shameful act--except what Jews would
+call shameful. I had kept the chest, and I gave it to Joseph Kalonymos. He
+went away mournful, and said, 'If you marry again, and if another grandson
+is born to him who is departed, I will deliver up the chest to him.' I
+bowed in silence. I meant not to marry again--no more than I meant to be
+the shattered woman that I am now."
+
+She ceased speaking, and her head sank back while she looked vaguely
+before her. Her thought was traveling through the years, and when she
+began to speak again her voice had lost its argumentative spirit, and had
+fallen into a veiled tone of distress.
+
+"But months ago this Kalonymos saw you in the synagogue at Frankfort. He
+saw you enter the hotel, and he went to ask your name. There was nobody
+else in the world to whom the name would have told anything about me."
+
+"Then it is not my real name?" said Deronda, with a dislike even to this
+trifling part of the disguise which had been thrown round him.
+
+"Oh, as real as another," said his mother, indifferently. "The Jews have
+always been changing their names. My father's family had kept the name of
+Charisi: my husband was a Charisi. When I came out as a singer, we made it
+Alcharisi. But there had been a branch of the family my father had lost
+sight of who called themselves Deronda, and when I wanted a name for you,
+and Sir Hugo said, 'Let it be a foreign name,' I thought of Deronda. But
+Joseph Kalonymos had heard my father speak of the Deronda branch, and the
+name confirmed his suspicion. He began to suspect what had been done. It
+was as if everything had been whispered to him in the air. He found out
+where I was. He took a journey into Russia to see me; he found me weak and
+shattered. He had come back again, with his white hair, and with rage in
+his soul against me. He said I was going down to the grave clad in
+falsehood and robbery--falsehood to my father and robbery of my own child.
+He accused me of having kept the knowledge of your birth from you, and
+having brought you up as if you had been the son of an English gentleman.
+Well, it was true; and twenty years before I would have maintained that I
+had a right to do it. But I can maintain nothing now. No faith is strong
+within me. My father may have God on his side. This man's words were like
+lion's teeth upon me. My father's threats eat into me with my pain. If I
+tell everything--if I deliver up everything--what else can be demanded of
+me? I cannot make myself love the people I have never loved--is it not
+enough that I lost the life I did love?"
+
+She had leaned forward a little in her low-toned pleading, that seemed
+like a smothered cry: her arms and hands were stretched out at full
+length, as if strained in beseeching, Deronda's soul was absorbed in the
+anguish of compassion. He could not mind now that he had been repulsed
+before. His pity made a flood of forgiveness within him. His single
+impulse was to kneel by her and take her hand gently, between his palms,
+while he said in that exquisite voice of soothing which expresses oneness
+with the sufferer--
+
+"Mother, take comfort!"
+
+She did not seem inclined to repulse him now, but looked down at him and
+let him take both her hands to fold between his. Gradually tears gathered,
+but she pressed her handkerchief against her eyes and then leaned her
+cheek against his brow, as if she wished that they should not look at each
+other.
+
+"Is it not possible that I could be near you often and comfort you?" said
+Deronda. He was under that stress of pity that propels us on sacrifices.
+
+"No, not possible," she answered, lifting up her head again and
+withdrawing her hand as if she wished him to move away. "I have a husband
+and five children. None of them know of your existence."
+
+Deronda felt painfully silenced. He rose and stood at a little distance.
+
+"You wonder why I married," she went on presently, under the influence of
+a newly-recurring thought. "I meant never to marry again. I meant to be
+free and to live for my art. I had parted with you. I had no bonds. For
+nine years I was a queen. I enjoyed the life I had longed for. But
+something befell me. It was like a fit of forgetfulness. I began to sing
+out of tune. They told me of it. Another woman was thrusting herself in my
+place. I could not endure the prospect of failure and decline. It was
+horrible to me." She started up again, with a shudder, and lifted
+screening hands like one who dreads missiles. "It drove me to marry. I
+made believe that I preferred being the wife of a Russian noble to being
+the greatest lyric actress of Europe; I made believe--I acted that part.
+It was because I felt my greatness sinking away from me, as I feel my life
+sinking now. I would not wait till men said, 'She had better go.'"
+
+She sank into her seat again, and looked at the evening sky as she went
+on: "I repented. It was a resolve taken in desperation. That singing out
+of tune was only like a fit of illness; it went away. I repented; but it
+was too late. I could not go back. All things hindered, me--all things."
+
+A new haggardness had come in her face, but her son refrained from again
+urging her to leave further speech till the morrow: there was evidently
+some mental relief for her in an outpouring such as she could never have
+allowed herself before. He stood still while she maintained silence longer
+than she knew, and the light was perceptibly fading. At last she turned to
+him and said--
+
+"I can bear no more now." She put out her hand, but then quickly withdrew
+it saying, "Stay. How do I know that I can see you again? I cannot bear to
+be seen when I am in pain."
+
+She drew forth a pocket-book, and taking out a letter said, "This is
+addressed to the banking-house in Mainz, where you are to go for your
+grandfather's chest. It is a letter written by Joseph Kalonymos: if he is
+not there himself, this order of his will be obeyed."
+
+When Deronda had taken the letter, she said, with effort but more gently
+than before, "Kneel again, and let me kiss you."
+
+He obeyed, and holding his head between her hands, she kissed him solemnly
+on the brow. "You see, I had no life left to love you with," she said, in
+a low murmur. "But there is more fortune for you. Sir Hugo was to keep it
+in reserve. I gave you all your father's fortune. They can never accuse me
+of robbery there."
+
+"If you had needed anything I would have worked for you," said Deronda,
+conscious of disappointed yearning--a shutting out forever from long early
+vistas of affectionate imagination.
+
+"I need nothing that the skill of man can give me," said his mother, still
+holding his head, and perusing his features. "But perhaps now I have
+satisfied my father's will, your face will come instead of his--your
+young, loving face."
+
+"But you will see me again?" said Deronda, anxiously.
+
+"Yes--perhaps. Wait, wait. Leave me now."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII.
+
+ "La meme fermete qui sert a resister a l'amour sert aussi a le rendre
+ violent et durable; et les personnes faibles qui sont toujours
+ agitees des passions n'en sont presque jamais veritablement remplies."
+ --LA ROCHEFOUCAULD.
+
+
+Among Deronda's letters the next morning was one from Hans Meyrick of four
+quarto pages, in the small, beautiful handwriting which ran in the Meyrick
+family.
+
+ MY DEAR DERONDA,--In return for your sketch of Italian movements and
+ your view of the world's affairs generally, I may say that here at
+ home the most judicious opinion going as to the effects of present
+ causes is that "time will show." As to the present causes of past
+ effects, it is now seen that the late swindling telegrams account for
+ the last year's cattle plague--which is a refutation of philosophy
+ falsely so called, and justifies the compensation to the farmers. My
+ own idea that a murrain will shortly break out in the commercial
+ class, and that the cause will subsequently disclose itself in the
+ ready sale of all rejected pictures, has been called an unsound use of
+ analogy; but there are minds that will not hesitate to rob even the
+ neglected painter of his solace. To my feeling there is great beauty
+ in the conception that some bad judge might give a high price for my
+ Berenice series, and that the men in the city would have already been
+ punished for my ill-merited luck.
+
+ Meanwhile I am consoling myself for your absence by finding my
+ advantage in it--shining like Hesperus when Hyperion has departed;
+ sitting with our Hebrew prophet, and making a study of his head, in
+ the hours when he used to be occupied with you--getting credit with
+ him as a learned young Gentile, who would have been a Jew if he could
+ --and agreeing with him in the general principle, that whatever is
+ best is for that reason Jewish. I never held it my _forte_ to be
+ a severe reasoner, but I can see that if whatever is best is A, and B
+ happens to be best, B must be A, however little you might have
+ expected it beforehand. On that principle I could see the force of a
+ pamphlet I once read to prove that all good art was Protestant.
+ However, our prophet is an uncommonly interesting sitter--a better
+ model than Rembrandt had for his Rabbi--and I never come away from him
+ without a new discovery. For one thing, it is a constant wonder to me
+ that, with all his fiery feeling for his race and their traditions, he
+ is no straight-laced Jew, spitting after the word Christian, and
+ enjoying the prospect that the Gentile mouth will water in vain for a
+ slice of the roasted Leviathan, while Israel will be sending up plates
+ for more, _ad libitum_, (You perceive that my studies had taught
+ me what to expect from the orthodox Jew.) I confess that I have always
+ held lightly by your account of Mordecai, as apologetic, and merely
+ part of your disposition to make an antedeluvian point of view lest
+ you should do injustice to the megatherium. But now I have given ear
+ to him in his proper person, I find him really a sort of
+ philosophical-allegorical-mystical believer, and yet with a sharp
+ dialectic point, so that any argumentative rattler of peas in a
+ bladder might soon be pricked in silence by him. The mixture may be
+ one of the Jewish prerogatives, for what I know. In fact, his mind
+ seems so broad that I find my own correct opinions lying in it quite
+ commodiously, and how they are to be brought into agreement with the
+ vast remainder is his affair, not mine. I leave it to him to settle
+ our basis, never yet having seen a basis which is not a world-
+ supporting elephant, more or less powerful and expensive to keep. My
+ means will not allow me to keep a private elephant. I go into mystery
+ instead, as cheaper and more lasting--a sort of gas which is likely to
+ be continually supplied by the decomposition of the elephants. And if
+ I like the look of an opinion, I treat it civilly, without suspicious
+ inquiries. I have quite a friendly feeling toward Mordecai's notion
+ that a whole Christian is three-fourths a Jew, and that from the
+ Alexandrian time downward the most comprehensive minds have been
+ Jewish; for I think of pointing out to Mirah that, Arabic and other
+ incidents of life apart, there is really little difference between me
+ and--Maimonides. But I have lately been finding out that it is your
+ shallow lover who can't help making a declaration. If Mirah's ways
+ were less distracting, and it were less of a heaven to be in her
+ presence and watch her, I must long ago have flung myself at her feet,
+ and requested her to tell me, with less indirectness, whether she
+ wished me to blow my brains out. I have a knack of hoping, which is as
+ good as an estate in reversion, if one can keep from the temptation of
+ turning it into certainty, which may spoil all. My Hope wanders among
+ the orchard blossoms, feels the warm snow falling on it through the
+ sunshine, and is in doubt of nothing; but, catching sight of Certainty
+ in the distance, sees an ugly Janus-faced deity, with a dubious wink
+ on the hither side of him, and turns quickly away. But you, with your
+ supreme reasonableness, and self-nullification, and preparation for
+ the worst--you know nothing about Hope, that immortal, delicious
+ maiden forever courted forever propitious, whom fools have called
+ deceitful, as if it were Hope that carried the cup of disappointment,
+ whereas it is her deadly enemy, Certainty, whom she only escapes by
+ transformation. (You observe my new vein of allegory?) Seriously,
+ however, I must be permitted to allege that truth will prevail, that
+ prejudice will melt before it, that diversity, accompanied by merit,
+ will make itself felt as fascination, and that no virtuous aspiration
+ will be frustrated--all which, if I mistake not, are doctrines of the
+ schools, and they imply that the Jewess I prefer will prefer me. Any
+ blockhead can cite generalities, but the mind-master discerns the
+ particular cases they represent.
+
+ I am less convinced that my society makes amends to Mordecai for your
+ absence, but another substitute occasionally comes in the form of
+ Jacob Cohen. It is worth while to catch our prophet's expression when
+ he has that remarkable type of young Israel on his knee, and pours
+ forth some Semitic inspiration with a sublime look of melancholy
+ patience and devoutness. Sometimes it occurs to Jacob that Hebrew will
+ be more edifying to him if he stops his ears with his palms, and
+ imitates the venerable sounds as heard through that muffled medium.
+ When Mordecai gently draws down the little fists and holds them fast,
+ Jacob's features all take on an extraordinary activity, very much as
+ if he was walking through a menagerie and trying to imitate every
+ animal in turn, succeeding best with the owl and the peccary. But I
+ dare say you have seen something of this. He treats me with the
+ easiest familiarity, and seems in general to look at me as a second-
+ hand Christian commodity, likely to come down in price; remarking on
+ my disadvantages with a frankness which seems to imply some thoughts
+ of future purchase. It is pretty, though, to see the change in him if
+ Mirah happens to come in. He turns child suddenly--his age usually
+ strikes one as being like the Israelitish garments in the desert,
+ perhaps near forty, yet with an air of recent production. But, with
+ Mirah, he reminds me of the dogs that have been brought up by women,
+ and remain manageable by them only. Still, the dog is fond of Mordecai
+ too, and brings sugar-plums to share with him, filling his own mouth
+ to rather an embarrassing extent, and watching how Mordecai deals with
+ a smaller supply. Judging from this modern Jacob at the age of six, my
+ astonishment is that his race has not bought us all up long ago, and
+ pocketed our feebler generations in the form of stock and scrip, as so
+ much slave property. There is one Jewess I should not mind being slave
+ to. But I wish I did not imagine that Mirah gets a little sadder, and
+ tries all the while to hide it. It is natural enough, of course, while
+ she has to watch the slow death of this brother, whom she has taken to
+ worshipping with such looks of loving devoutness that I am ready to
+ wish myself in his place.
+
+ For the rest, we are a little merrier than usual. Rex Gascoigne--you
+ remember a head you admired among my sketches, a fellow with a good
+ upper lip, reading law--has got some rooms in town now not far off us,
+ and has had a neat sister (upper lip also good) staying with him the
+ last fortnight. I have introduced them both to my mother and the
+ girls, who have found out from Miss Gascoigne that she is cousin to
+ your Vandyke duchess!!! I put the notes of exclamation to mark the
+ surprise that the information at first produced on my feeble
+ understanding. On reflection I discovered that there was not the least
+ ground for surprise, unless I had beforehand believed that nobody
+ could be anybody's cousin without my knowing it. This sort of
+ surprise, I take it, depends on a liveliness of the spine, with a more
+ or less constant nullity of brain. There was a fellow I used to meet
+ at Rome who was in an effervescence of surprise at contact with the
+ simplest information. Tell him what you would--that you were fond of
+ easy boots--he would always say, "No! are you?" with the same energy
+ of wonder: the very fellow of whom pastoral Browne wrote
+ prophetically--
+
+ "A wretch so empty that if e'er there be
+ In nature found the least vacuity
+ 'Twill be in him."
+
+ I have accounted for it all--he had a lively spine.
+
+ However, this cousinship with the duchess came out by chance one day
+ that Mirah was with them at home and they were talking about the
+ Mallingers. _Apropos_; I am getting so important that I have
+ rival invitations. Gascoigne wants me to go down with him to his
+ father's rectory in August and see the country round there. But I
+ think self-interest well understood will take me to Topping Abbey, for
+ Sir Hugo has invited me, and proposes--God bless him for his rashness!
+ --that I should make a picture of his three daughters sitting on a
+ bank--as he says, in the Gainsborough style. He came to my studio the
+ other day and recommended me to apply myself to portrait. Of course I
+ know what that means.--"My good fellow, your attempts at the historic
+ and poetic are simply pitiable. Your brush is just that of a
+ successful portrait-painter--it has a little truth and a great
+ facility in falsehood--your idealism will never do for gods and
+ goddesses and heroic story, but it may fetch a high price as flattery.
+ Fate, my friend, has made you the hinder wheel--_rota posterior
+ curras, et in axe secundo_--run behind, because you can't help it."
+ --What great effort it evidently costs our friends to give us these
+ candid opinions! I have even known a man to take the trouble to call,
+ in order to tell me that I had irretrievably exposed my want of
+ judgment in treating my subject, and that if I had asked him we would
+ have lent me his own judgment. Such was my ingratitude and my
+ readiness at composition, that even while he was speaking I inwardly
+ sketched a Last Judgment with that candid friend's physiognomy on the
+ left. But all this is away from Sir Hugo, whose manner of implying
+ that one's gifts are not of the highest order is so exceedingly good-
+ natured and comfortable that I begin to feel it an advantage not to be
+ among those poor fellows at the tip-top. And his kindness to me tastes
+ all the better because it comes out of his love for you, old boy. His
+ chat is uncommonly amusing. By the way, he told me that your Vandyke
+ duchess is gone with her husband yachting to the Mediterranean. I
+ bethink me that it is possible to land from a yacht, or to be taken on
+ to a yacht from the land. Shall you by chance have an opportunity of
+ continuing your theological discussion with the fair Supralapsarian--I
+ think you said her tenets were of that complexion? Is Duke Alphonso
+ also theological?--perhaps an Arian who objects to triplicity. (Stage
+ direction. While D. is reading, a profound scorn gathers in his face
+ till at the last word he flings down the letter, grasps his coat-
+ collar in a statuesque attitude and so remains with a look generally
+ tremendous, throughout the following soliloquy, "O night, O blackness,
+ etc., etc.")
+
+ Excuse the brevity of this letter. You are not used to more from me
+ than a bare statement of facts, without comment or digression. One
+ fact I have omitted--that the Klesmers on the eve of departure have
+ behaved magnificently, shining forth as might be expected from the
+ planets of genius and fortune in conjunction. Mirah is rich with their
+ oriental gifts.
+
+ What luck it will be if you come back and present yourself at the
+ Abbey while I am there! I am going to behave with consummate
+ discretion and win golden opinions, But I shall run up to town now and
+ then, just for a peep into Gad Eden. You see how far I have got in
+ Hebrew lore--up with my Lord Bolingbroke, who knew no Hebrew, but
+ "understood that sort of learning and what is writ about it." If Mirah
+ commanded, I would go to a depth below the tri-literal roots. Already
+ it makes no difference to me whether the points are there or not. But
+ while her brother's life lasts I suspect she would not listen to a
+ lover, even one whose "hair is like a flock of goats on Mount Gilead"
+ --and I flatter myself that few heads would bear that trying
+ comparison better than mine. So I stay with my hope among the orchard-
+ blossoms.
+
+ Your devoted,
+
+ HANS MEYRICK.
+
+Some months before, this letter from Hans would have divided Deronda's
+thoughts irritatingly: its romancing, about Mirah would have had an
+unpleasant edge, scarcely anointed with any commiseration for his friend's
+probable disappointment. But things had altered since March. Mirah was no
+longer so critically placed with regard to the Meyricks, and Deronda's own
+position had been undergoing a change which had just been crowned by the
+revelation of his birth. The new opening toward the future, though he
+would not trust in any definite visions, inevitably shed new lights, and
+influenced his mood toward past and present; hence, what Hans called his
+hope now seemed to Deronda, not a mischievous unreasonableness which
+roused his indignation, but an unusually persistent bird-dance of an
+extravagant fancy, and he would have felt quite able to pity any
+consequent suffering of his friend's, if he had believed in the suffering
+as probable. But some of the busy thought filling that long day, which
+passed without his receiving any new summons from his mother, was given to
+the argument that Hans Meyrick's nature was not one in which love could
+strike the deep roots that turn disappointment into sorrow: it was too
+restless, too readily excitable by novelty, too ready to turn itself into
+imaginative material, and wear its grief as a fantastic costume. "Already
+he is beginning to play at love: he is taking the whole affair as a
+comedy," said Deronda to himself; "he knows very well that there is no
+chance for him. Just like him--never opening his eyes on any possible
+objection I could have to receive his outpourings about Mirah. Poor old
+Hans! If we were under a fiery hail together he would howl like a Greek,
+and if I did not howl too it would never occur to him that I was as badly
+off as he. And yet he is tender-hearted and affectionate in intention, and
+I can't say that he is not active in imagining what goes on in other
+people--but then he always imagines it to fit his own inclination."
+
+With this touch of causticity Deronda got rid of the slight heat at
+present raised by Hans's naive expansiveness. The nonsense about
+Gwendolen, conveying the fact that she was gone yachting with her husband,
+only suggested a disturbing sequel to his own strange parting with her.
+But there was one sentence in the letter which raised a more immediate,
+active anxiety. Hans's suspicion of a hidden sadness in Mirah was not in
+the direction of his wishes, and hence, instead of distrusting his
+observation here, Deronda began to conceive a cause for the sadness. Was
+it some event that had occurred during his absence, or only the growing
+fear of some event? Was it something, perhaps alterable, in the new
+position which had been made for her? Or--had Mordecai, against his
+habitual resolve, communicated to her those peculiar cherished hopes about
+him, Deronda, and had her quickly sensitive nature been hurt by the
+discovery that her brother's will or tenacity of visionary conviction had
+acted coercively on their friendship--been hurt by the fear that there was
+more of pitying self-suppression than of equal regard in Deronda's
+relation to him? For amidst all Mirah's quiet renunciation, the evident
+thirst of soul with which she received the tribute of equality implied a
+corresponding pain if she found that what she had taken for a purely
+reverential regard toward her brother had its mixture of condescension.
+
+In this last conjecture of Deronda's he was not wrong as to the quality in
+Mirah's nature on which he was founding--the latent protest against the
+treatment she had all her life being subject to until she met him. For
+that gratitude which would not let her pass by any notice of their
+acquaintance without insisting on the depth of her debt to him, took half
+its fervor from the keen comparison with what others had thought enough to
+render to her. Deronda's affinity in feeling enabled him to penetrate such
+secrets. But he was not near the truth in admitting the idea that Mordecai
+had broken his characteristic reticence. To no soul but Deronda himself
+had he yet breathed the history of their relation to each other, or his
+confidence about his friend's origin: it was not only that these subjects
+were for him too sacred to be spoken of without weighty reason, but that
+he had discerned Deronda's shrinking at any mention of his birth; and the
+severity of reserve which had hindered Mordecai from answering a question
+on a private affair of the Cohen family told yet more strongly here.
+
+"Ezra, how is it?" Mirah one day said to him--"I am continually going to
+speak to Mr. Deronda as if he were a Jew?"
+
+He smiled at her quietly, and said, "I suppose it is because he treats us
+as if he were our brother. But he loves not to have the difference of
+birth dwelt upon."
+
+"He has never lived with his parents, Mr. Hans, says," continued Mirah, to
+whom this was necessarily a question of interest about every one for whom
+she had a regard.
+
+"Seek not to know such things from Mr. Hans," said Mordecai, gravely,
+laying his hand on her curls, as he was wont. "What Daniel Deronda wishes
+us to know about himself is for him to tell us."
+
+And Mirah felt herself rebuked, as Deronda had done. But to be rebuked in
+this way by Mordecai made her rather proud.
+
+"I see no one so great as my brother," she said to Mrs. Meyrick one day
+that she called at the Chelsea house on her way home, and, according to
+her hope, found the little mother alone. "It is difficult to think that he
+belongs to the same world as those people I used to live amongst. I told
+you once that they made life seem like a madhouse; but when I am with Ezra
+he makes me feel that his life is a great good, though he has suffered so
+much; not like me, who wanted to die because I had suffered a little, and
+only for a little while. His soul is so full, it is impossible for him to
+wish for death as I did. I get the same sort of feeling from him that I
+got yesterday, when I was tired, and came home through the park after the
+sweet rain had fallen and the sunshine lay on the grass and flowers.
+Everything in the sky and under the sky looked so pure and beautiful that
+the weariness and trouble and folly seemed only a small part of what is,
+and I became more patient and hopeful."
+
+A dove-like note of melancholy in this speech caused Mrs. Meyrick to look
+at Mirah with new examination. After laying down her hat and pushing her
+curls flat, with an air of fatigue, she placed herself on a chair opposite
+her friend in her habitual attitude, her feet and hands just crossed; and
+at a distance she might have seemed a colored statue of serenity. But Mrs.
+Meyrick discerned a new look of suppressed suffering in her face, which
+corresponded to the hint that to be patient and hopeful required some
+extra influence.
+
+"Is there any fresh trouble on your mind, my dear?" said Mrs. Meyrick,
+giving up her needlework as a sign of concentrated attention.
+
+Mirah hesitated before she said, "I am too ready to speak of troubles, I
+think. It seems unkind to put anything painful into other people's minds,
+unless one were sure it would hinder something worse. And perhaps I am too
+hasty and fearful."
+
+"Oh, my dear, mothers are made to like pain and trouble for the sake of
+their children. Is it because the singing lessons are so few, and are
+likely to fall off when the season comes to an end? Success in these
+things can't come all at once." Mrs. Meyrick did not believe that she was
+touching the real grief; but a guess that could be corrected would make an
+easier channel for confidence.
+
+"No, not that," said Mirah, shaking her head gently. "I have been a little
+disappointed because so many ladies said they wanted me to give them or
+their daughters lessons, and then I never heard of them again, But perhaps
+after the holidays I shall teach in some schools. Besides, you know, I am
+as rich as a princess now. I have not touched the hundred pounds that Mrs.
+Klesmer gave me; and I should never be afraid that Ezra would be in want
+of anything, because there is Mr. Deronda," and he said, "It is the chief
+honor of my life that your brother will share anything with me. Oh, no!
+Ezra and I can have no fears for each other about such things as food and
+clothing."
+
+"But there is some other fear on your mind," said Mrs. Meyrick not without
+divination--"a fear of something that may disturb your peace; Don't be
+forecasting evil, dear child, unless it is what you can guard against.
+Anxiety is good for nothing if we can't turn it into a defense. But
+there's no defense against all the things that might be. Have you any more
+reason for being anxious now than you had a month ago?"
+
+"Yes, I have," said Mirah. "I have kept it from Ezra. I have not dared to
+tell him. Pray forgive me that I can't do without telling you. I _have_
+more reason for being anxious. It is five days ago now. I am quite sure I
+saw my father."
+
+Mrs. Meyrick shrank into a smaller space, packing her arms across her
+chest and leaning forward--to hinder herself from pelting that father with
+her worst epithets.
+
+"The year has changed him," Mirah went on. "He had already been much
+altered and worn in the time before I left him. You remember I said how he
+used sometimes to cry. He was always excited one way or the other. I have
+told Ezra everything that I told you, and he says that my father had taken
+to gambling, which makes people easily distressed, and then again exalted.
+And now--it was only a moment that I saw him--his face was more haggard,
+and his clothes were shabby. He was with a much worse-looking man, who
+carried something, and they were hurrying along after an omnibus."
+
+"Well, child, he did not see you, I hope?"
+
+"No. I had just come from Mrs. Raymond's, and I was waiting to cross near
+the Marble Arch. Soon he was on the omnibus and gone out of sight. It was
+a dreadful moment. My old life seemed to have come back again, and it was
+worse than it had ever been before. And I could not help feeling it a new
+deliverance that he was gone out of sight without knowing that I was
+there. And yet it hurt me that I was feeling so--it seemed hateful in me--
+almost like words I once had to speak in a play, that 'I had warmed my
+hands in the blood of my kindred.' For where might my father be going?
+What may become of him? And his having a daughter who would own him in
+spite of all, might have hindered the worst. Is there any pain like seeing
+what ought to be the best things in life turned into the worst? All those
+opposite feelings were meeting and pressing against each other, and took
+up all my strength. No one could act that. Acting is slow and poor to what
+we go through within. I don't know how I called a cab. I only remember
+that I was in it when I began to think, 'I cannot tell Ezra; he must not
+know.'"
+
+"You are afraid of grieving him?" Mrs. Meyrick asked, when Mirah had
+paused a little.
+
+"Yes--and there is something more," said Mirah, hesitatingly, as if she
+were examining her feeling before she would venture to speak of it. "I
+want to tell you; I cannot tell any one else. I could not have told my own
+mother: I should have closed it up before her. I feel shame for my father,
+and it is perhaps strange--but the shame is greater before Ezra than
+before any one else in the world. He desired me to tell him all about my
+life, and I obeyed him. But it is always like a smart to me to know that
+those things about my father are in Ezra's mind. And--can you believe it?
+when the thought haunts me how it would be if my father were to come and
+show himself before us both, what seems as if it would scorch me most is
+seeing my father shrinking before Ezra. That is the truth. I don't know
+whether it is a right feeling. But I can't help thinking that I would
+rather try to maintain my father in secret, and bear a great deal in that
+way, if I could hinder him from meeting my brother."
+
+"You must not encourage that feeling, Mirah," said Mrs. Meyrick, hastily.
+"It would be very dangerous; it would be wrong. You must not have
+concealment of that sort."
+
+"But ought I now to tell Ezra that I have seen my father?" said Mirah,
+with deprecation in her tone.
+
+"No," Mrs. Meyrick answered, dubitatively. "I don't know that it is
+necessary to do that. Your father may go away with the birds. It is not
+clear that he came after you; you may never see him again. And then your
+brother will have been spared a useless anxiety. But promise me that if
+your father sees you--gets hold of you in any way again--and you will let
+us all know. Promise me that solemnly, Mirah. I have a right to ask it."
+
+Mirah reflected a little, then leaned forward to put her hands in Mrs.
+Meyrick's, and said, "Since you ask it, I do promise. I will bear this
+feeling of shame. I have been so long used to think that I must bear that
+sort of inward pain. But the shame for my father burns me more when I
+think of his meeting Ezra." She was silent a moment or two, and then said,
+in a new tone of yearning compassion, "And we are his children--and he was
+once young like us--and my mother loved him. Oh! I cannot help seeing it
+all close, and it hurts me like a cruelty."
+
+Mirah shed no tears: the discipline of her whole life had been against
+indulgence in such manifestation, which soon falls under the control of
+strong motives; but it seemed that the more intense expression of sorrow
+had entered into her voice. Mrs. Meyrick, with all her quickness and
+loving insight, did not quite understand that filial feeling in Mirah
+which had active roots deep below her indignation for the worst offenses.
+She could conceive that a mother would have a clinging pity and shame for
+a reprobate son, but she was out of patience with what she held an
+exaggerated susceptibility on behalf of this father, whose reappearance
+inclined her to wish him under the care of a turnkey. Mirah's promise,
+however, was some security against her weakness.
+
+That incident was the only reason that Mirah herself could have stated for
+the hidden sadness which Hans had divined. Of one element in her changed
+mood she could have given no definite account: it was something as dim as
+the sense of approaching weather-change, and had extremely slight external
+promptings, such as we are often ashamed to find all we can allege in
+support of the busy constructions that go on within us, not only without
+effort, but even against it, under the influence of any blind emotional
+stirring. Perhaps the first leaven of uneasiness was laid by Gwendolen's
+behavior on that visit which was entirely superfluous as a means of
+engaging Mirah to sing, and could have no other motive than the excited
+and strange questioning about Deronda. Mirah had instinctively kept the
+visit a secret, but the active remembrance of it had raised a new
+susceptibility in her, and made her alive as she had never been before to
+the relations Deronda must have with that society which she herself was
+getting frequent glimpses of without belonging to it. Her peculiar life
+and education had produced in her an extraordinary mixture of
+unworldliness, with knowledge of the world's evil, and even this knowledge
+was a strange blending of direct observation with the effects of reading
+and theatrical study. Her memory was furnished with abundant passionate
+situation and intrigue, which she never made emotionally her own, but felt
+a repelled aloofness from, as she had done from the actual life around
+her. Some of that imaginative knowledge began now to weave itself around
+Mrs. Grandcourt; and though Mirah would admit no position likely to affect
+her reverence for Deronda, she could not avoid a new painfully vivid
+association of his general life with a world away from her own, where
+there might be some involvement of his feeling and action with a woman
+like Gwendolen, who was increasingly repugnant to her--increasingly, even
+after she had ceased to see her; for liking and disliking can grow in
+meditation as fast as in the more immediate kind of presence. Any
+disquietude consciously due to the idea that Deronda's deepest care might
+be for something remote not only from herself but even from his friendship
+for her brother, she would have checked with rebuking questions:--What was
+she but one who had shared his generous kindness with many others? and his
+attachment to her brother, was it not begun late to be soon ended? Other
+ties had come before, and others would remain after this had been cut by
+swift-coming death. But her uneasiness had not reached that point of self-
+recognition in which she would have been ashamed of it as an indirect,
+presumptuous claim on Deronda's feeling. That she or any one else should
+think of him as her possible lover was a conception which had never
+entered her mind; indeed it was equally out of the question with Mrs.
+Meyrick and the girls, who with Mirah herself regarded his intervention in
+her life as something exceptional, and were so impressed by his mission as
+her deliverer and guardian that they would have held it an offense to hint
+at his holding any other relation toward her: a point of view which Hans
+also had readily adopted. It is a little hard upon some men that they
+appear to sink for us in becoming lovers. But precisely to this innocence
+of the Meyricks was owing the disturbance of Mirah's unconsciousness. The
+first occasion could hardly have been more trivial, but it prepared her
+emotive nature for a deeper effect from what happened afterward.
+
+It was when Anna Gascoigne, visiting the Meyricks; was led to speak of her
+cousinship with Gwendolen. The visit had been arranged that Anna might see
+Mirah; the three girls were at home with their mother, and there was
+naturally a flux of talk among six feminine creatures, free from the
+presence of a distorting male standard. Anna Gascoigne felt herself much
+at home with the Meyrick girls, who knew what it was to have a brother,
+and to be generally regarded as of minor importance in the world; and she
+had told Rex that she thought the University very nice, because brothers
+made friends there whose families were not rich and grand, and yet (like
+the University) were very nice. The Meyricks seemed to her almost
+alarmingly clever, and she consulted them much on the best mode of
+teaching Lotta, confiding to them that she herself was the least clever of
+her family. Mirah had lately come in, and there was a complete bouquet of
+young faces around the tea-table--Hafiz, seated a little aloft with large
+eyes on the alert, regarding the whole scene as an apparatus for supplying
+his allowance of milk.
+
+"Think of our surprise, Mirah," said Kate. "We were speaking of Mr.
+Deronda and the Mallingers, and it turns out that Miss Gascoigne knows
+them."
+
+"I only knew about them," said Anna, a little flushed with excitement,
+what she had heard and now saw of the lovely Jewess being an almost
+startling novelty to her. "I have not even seen them. But some months ago,
+my cousin married Sir Hugo Mallinger's nephew, Mr. Grandcourt, who lived
+in Sir Hugo's place at Diplow, near us."
+
+"There!" exclaimed Mab, clasping her hands. "Something must come of that.
+Mrs. Grandcourt, the Vandyke duchess, is your cousin?"
+
+"Oh, yes; I was her bridesmaid," said Anna. "Her mamma and mine are
+sisters. My aunt was much richer before last year, but then she and mamma
+lost all their fortune. Papa is a clergyman, you know, so it makes very
+little difference to us, except that we keep no carriage, and have no
+dinner parties--and I like it better. But it was very sad for poor Aunt
+Davilow, for she could not live with us, because she has four daughters
+besides Gwendolen; but then, when she married Mr. Grandcourt, it did not
+signify so much, because of his being so rich."
+
+"Oh, this finding out relationships is delightful!" said Mab. "It is like
+a Chinese puzzle that one has to fit together. I feel sure something
+wonderful may be made of it, but I can't tell what."
+
+"Dear me, Mab," said Amy, "relationships must branch out. The only
+difference is, that we happen to know some of the people concerned. Such
+things are going on every day."
+
+"And pray, Amy, why do you insist on the number nine being so wonderful?"
+said Mab. "I am sure that is happening every day. Never mind, Miss
+Gascoigne; please go on. And Mr. Deronda?--have you never seen Mr.
+Deronda? You _must_ bring him in."
+
+"No, I have not seen him," said Anna; "but he was at Diplow before my
+cousin was married, and I have heard my aunt speaking of him to papa. She
+said what you have been saying about him--only not so much: I mean, about
+Mr. Deronda living with Sir Hugo Mallinger, and being so nice, she
+thought. We talk a great deal about every one who comes near Pennicote,
+because it is so seldom there is any one new. But I remember, when I asked
+Gwendolen what she thought of Mr. Deronda, she said, 'Don't mention it,
+Anna: but I think his hair is dark.' That was her droll way of answering:
+she was always so lively. It is really rather wonderful that I should come
+to hear so much about him, all through Mr. Hans knowing Rex, and then my
+having the pleasure of knowing you," Anna ended, looking at Mrs. Meyrick
+with a shy grace.
+
+"The pleasure is on our side too; but the wonder would have been, if you
+had come to this house without hearing of Mr. Deronda--wouldn't it,
+Mirah?" said Mrs. Meyrick.
+
+Mirah smiled acquiescently, but had nothing to say. A confused discontent
+took possession of her at the mingling of names and images to which she
+had been listening.
+
+"My son calls Mrs. Grandcourt the Vandyke duchess," continued Mrs.
+Meyrick, turning again to Anna; "he thinks her so striking and
+picturesque."
+
+"Yes," said Anna. "Gwendolen was always so beautiful--people fell
+dreadfully in love with her. I thought it a pity, because it made them
+unhappy."
+
+"And how do you like Mr. Grandcourt, the happy lover?" said Mrs. Meyrick,
+who, in her way, was as much interested as Mab in the hints she had been
+hearing of vicissitude in in the life of a widow with daughters.
+
+"Papa approved of Gwendolen's accepting him, and my aunt says he is very
+generous," said Anna, beginning with a virtuous intention of repressing
+her own sentiments; but then, unable to resist a rare occasion for
+speaking them freely, she went on--"else I should have thought he was not
+very nice--rather proud, and not at all lively, like Gwendolen. I should
+have thought some one younger and more lively would have suited her
+better. But, perhaps, having a brother who seems to us better than any one
+makes us think worse of others."
+
+"Wait till you see Mr. Deronda," said Mab, nodding significantly.
+"Nobody's brother will do after him."
+
+"Our brothers _must_ do for people's husbands," said Kate, curtly,
+"because they will not get Mr. Deronda. No woman will do for him to
+marry."
+
+"No woman ought to want him to marry him," said Mab, with indignation.
+"_I_ never should. Fancy finding out that he had a tailor's bill, and used
+boot-hooks, like Hans. Who ever thought of his marrying?"
+
+"I have," said Kate. "When I drew a wedding for a frontispiece to 'Hearts
+and Diamonds,' I made a sort of likeness to him for the bridegroom, and I
+went about looking for a grand woman who would do for his countess, but I
+saw none that would not be poor creatures by the side of him."
+
+"You should have seen this Mrs. Grandcourt then," said Mrs. Meyrick. "Hans
+says that she and Mr. Deronda set each other off when they are side by
+side. She is tall and fair. But you know her, Mirah--you can always say
+something descriptive. What do _you_ think of Mrs. Grandcourt?"
+
+"I think she is the _Princess of Eboli_ in _Don Carlos_," said Mirah, with
+a quick intensity. She was pursuing an association in her own mind not
+intelligible to her hearers--an association with a certain actress as well
+as the part she represented.
+
+"Your comparison is a riddle for me, my dear," said Mrs. Meyrick, smiling.
+
+"You said that Mrs. Grandcourt was tall and fair," continued Mirah,
+slightly paler. "That is quite true."
+
+Mrs. Meyrick's quick eye and ear detected something unusual, but
+immediately explained it to herself. Fine ladies had often wounded Mirah
+by caprices of manner and intention.
+
+"Mrs. Grandcourt had thought of having lessons of Mirah," she said turning
+to Anna. "But many have talked of having lessons, and then have found no
+time. Fashionable ladies have too much work to do."
+
+And the chat went on without further insistance on the _Princess of
+Eboli_. That comparison escaped Mirah's lips under the urgency of a pang
+unlike anything she had felt before. The conversation from the beginning
+had revived unpleasant impressions, and Mrs. Meyrick's suggestion of
+Gwendolen's figure by the side of Deronda's had the stinging effect of a
+voice outside her, confirming her secret conviction that this tall and
+fair woman had some hold on his lot. For a long while afterward she felt
+as if she had had a jarring shock through her frame.
+
+In the evening, putting her cheek against her brother's shoulder as she
+was sitting by him, while he sat propped up in bed under a new difficulty
+of breathing, she said--
+
+"Ezra, does it ever hurt your love for Mr. Deronda that so much of his
+life was all hidden away from you--that he is amongst persons and cares
+about persons who are all so unlike us--I mean unlike you?"
+
+"No, assuredly no," said Mordecai. "Rather it is a precious thought to me
+that he has a preparation which I lacked, and is an accomplished
+Egyptian." Then, recollecting that his words had reference which his
+sister must not yet understand, he added. "I have the more to give him,
+since his treasure differs from mine. That is a blessedness in
+friendship."
+
+Mirah mused a little.
+
+"Still," she said, "it would be a trial to your love for him if that other
+part of his life were like a crowd in which he had got entangled, so that
+he was carried away from you--I mean in his thoughts, and not merely
+carried out of sight as he is now--and not merely for a little while, but
+continually. How should you bear that! Our religion commands us to bear.
+But how should you bear it?"
+
+"Not well, my sister--not well; but it will never happen," said Mordecai,
+looking at her with a tender smile. He thought that her heart needed
+comfort on his account.
+
+Mirah said no more. She mused over the difference between her own state of
+mind and her brother's, and felt her comparative pettiness. Why could she
+not be completely satisfied with what satisfied his larger judgment? She
+gave herself no fuller reason than a painful sense of unfitness--in what?
+Airy possibilities to which she could give no outline, but to which one
+name and one figure gave the wandering persistency of a blot in her
+vision. Here lay the vaguer source of the hidden sadness rendered
+noticeable to Hans by some diminution of that sweet ease, that ready
+joyousness of response in her speech and smile, which had come with the
+new sense of freedom and safety, and had made her presence like the
+freshly-opened daisies and clear bird-notes after the rain. She herself
+regarded her uneasiness as a sort of ingratitude and dullness of
+sensibility toward the great things that had been given her in her new
+life; and whenever she threw more energy than usual into her singing, it
+was the energy of indignation against the shallowness of her own content.
+In that mood she once said, "Shall I tell you what is the difference
+between you and me, Ezra? You are a spring in the drought, and I am an
+acorn-cup; the waters of heaven fill me, but the least little shake leaves
+me empty."
+
+"Why, what has shaken thee?" said Mordecai. He fell into this antique form
+of speech habitually in talking to his sister and to the Cohen children.
+
+"Thoughts," said Mirah; "thoughts that come like the breeze and shake me--
+bad people, wrong things, misery--and how they might touch our life."
+
+"We must take our portion, Mirah. It is there. On whose shoulder would we
+lay it, that we might be free?"
+
+The one voluntary sign she made of her inward care was this distant
+allusion.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII.
+
+ "My desolation does begin to make
+ A better life."
+ --SHAKESPEARE: _Antony and Cleopatra._
+
+
+Before Deronda was summoned to a second interview with his mother, a day
+had passed in which she had only sent him a message to say that she was
+not yet well enough to receive him again; but on the third morning he had
+a note saying, "I leave to-day. Come and see me at once."
+
+He was shown into the same room as before; but it was much darkened with
+blinds and curtains. The Princess was not there, but she presently
+entered, dressed in a loose wrap of some soft silk, in color a dusky
+orange, her head again with black lace floating about it, her arms showing
+themselves bare from under her wide sleeves. Her face seemed even more
+impressive in the sombre light, the eyes larger, the lines more vigorous.
+You might have imagined her a sorceress who would stretch forth her
+wonderful hand and arm to mix youth-potions for others, but scorned to mix
+them for herself, having had enough of youth.
+
+She put her arms on her son's shoulders at once, and kissed him on both
+cheeks, then seated herself among her cushions with an air of assured
+firmness and dignity unlike her fitfulness in their first interview, and
+told Deronda to sit down by her. He obeyed, saying, "You are quite
+relieved now, I trust?"
+
+"Yes, I am at ease again. Is there anything more that you would like to
+ask me?" she said, with the matter of a queen rather than of a mother.
+
+"Can I find the house in Genoa where you used to live with my
+grandfather?" said Deronda.
+
+"No," she answered, with a deprecating movement of her arm, "it is pulled
+down--not to be found. But about our family, and where my father lived at
+various times--you will find all that among the papers in the chest,
+better than I can tell you. My father, I told you, was a physician. My
+mother was a Morteira. I used to hear all those things without listening.
+You will find them all. I was born amongst them without my will. I
+banished them as soon as I could."
+
+Deronda tried to hide his pained feeling, and said, "Anything else that I
+should desire to know from you could only be what it is some satisfaction
+to your own feeling to tell me."
+
+"I think I have told you everything that could be demanded of me," said
+the Princess, looking coldly meditative. It seemed as if she had exhausted
+her emotion in their former interview. The fact was, she had said to
+herself, "I have done it all. I have confessed all. I will not go through
+it again. I will save myself from agitation." And she was acting out that
+scheme.
+
+But to Deronda's nature the moment was cruel; it made the filial yearning
+of his life a disappointed pilgrimage to a shrine where there were no
+longer the symbols of sacredness. It seemed that all the woman lacking in
+her was present in him, as he said, with some tremor in his voice--
+
+"Then are we to part and I never be anything to you?"
+
+"It is better so," said the Princess, in a softer, mellower voice. "There
+could be nothing but hard duty for you, even if it were possible for you
+to take the place of my son. You would not love me. Don't deny it," she
+said, abruptly, putting up her hand. "I know what is the truth. You don't
+like what I did. You are angry with me. You think I robbed you of
+something. You are on your grandfather's side, and you will always have a
+condemnation of me in your heart."
+
+Deronda felt himself under a ban of silence. He rose from his seat by her,
+preferring to stand, if he had to obey that imperious prohibition of any
+tenderness. But his mother now looked up at him with a new admiration in
+her glance, saying--
+
+"You are wrong to be angry with me. You are the better for what I did."
+After pausing a little, she added, abruptly, "And now tell me what you
+shall do?"
+
+"Do you mean now, immediately," said Deronda; "or as to the course of my
+future life?"
+
+"I mean in the future. What difference will it make to you that I have
+told you about your birth?"
+
+"A very great difference," said Deronda, emphatically. "I can hardly think
+of anything that would make a greater difference."
+
+"What shall you do then?" said the Princess, with more sharpness. "Make
+yourself just like your grandfather--be what he wished you--turn yourself
+into a Jew like him?"
+
+"That is impossible. The effect of my education can never be done away
+with. The Christian sympathies in which my mind was reared can never die
+out of me," said Deronda, with increasing tenacity of tone. "But I
+consider it my duty--it is the impulse of my feeling--to identify myself,
+as far as possible, with my hereditary people, and if I can see any work
+to be done for them that I can give my soul and hand to I shall choose to
+do it."
+
+His mother had her eyes fixed on him with a wondering speculation,
+examining his face as if she thought that by close attention she could
+read a difficult language there. He bore her gaze very firmly, sustained
+by a resolute opposition, which was the expression of his fullest self.
+She bent toward him a little, and said, with a decisive emphasis--
+
+"You are in love with a Jewess."
+
+Deronda colored and said, "My reasons would be independent of any such
+fact."
+
+"I know better. I have seen what men are," said the Princess,
+peremptorily. "Tell me the truth. She is a Jewess who will not accept any
+one but a Jew. There _are_ a few such," she added, with a touch of scorn.
+
+Deronda had that objection to answer which we all have known in speaking
+to those who are too certain of their own fixed interpretations to be
+enlightened by anything we may say. But besides this, the point
+immediately in question was one on which he felt a repugnance either to
+deny or affirm. He remained silent, and she presently said--
+
+"You love her as your father loved me, and she draws you after her as I
+drew him."
+
+Those words touched Deronda's filial imagination, and some tenderness in
+his glance was taken by his mother as an assent. She went on with rising
+passion: "But I was leading him the other way. And now your grandfather is
+getting his revenge."
+
+"Mother," said Deronda, remonstrantly, "don't let us think of it in that
+way. I will admit that there may come some benefit from the education you
+chose for me. I prefer cherishing the benefit with gratitude, to dwelling
+with resentment on the injury. I think it would have been right that I
+should have been brought up with the consciousness that I was a Jew, but
+it must always have been a good to me to have as wide an instruction and
+sympathy as possible. And now, you have restored me my inheritance--events
+have brought a fuller restitution than you could have made--you have been
+saved from robbing my people of my service and me of my duty: can you not
+bring your whole soul to consent to this?"
+
+Deronda paused in his pleading: his mother looked at him listeningly, as
+if the cadence of his voice were taking her ear, yet she shook her head
+slowly. He began again, even more urgently.
+
+"You have told me that you sought what you held the best for me: open your
+heart to relenting and love toward my grandfather, who sought what he held
+the best for you."
+
+"Not for me, no," she said, shaking her head with more absolute denial,
+and folding her arms tightly. "I tell you, he never thought of his
+daughter except as an instrument. Because I had wants outside his purpose,
+I was to be put in a frame and tortured. If that is the right law for the
+world, I will not say that I love it. If my acts were wrong--if it is God
+who is exacting from me that I should deliver up what I withheld--who is
+punishing me because I deceived my father and did not warn him that I
+should contradict his trust--well, I have told everything. I have done
+what I could. And _your_ soul consents. That is enough. I have after all
+been the instrument my father wanted.--'I desire a grandson who shall have
+a true Jewish heart. Every Jew should rear his family as if he hoped that
+a Deliverer might spring from it.'"
+
+In uttering these last sentences the Princess narrowed her eyes, waved her
+head up and down, and spoke slowly with a new kind of chest-voice, as if
+she were quoting unwillingly.
+
+"Were those my grandfather's words?" said Deronda.
+
+"Yes, yes; and you will find them written. I wanted to thwart him," said
+the Princess, with a sudden outburst of the passion she had shown in the
+former interview. Then she added more slowly, "You would have me love what
+I have hated from the time I was so high"--here she held her left hand a
+yard from the floor.--"That can never be. But what does it matter? His
+yoke has been on me, whether I loved it or not. You are the grandson he
+wanted. You speak as men do--as if you felt yourself wise. What does it
+all mean?"
+
+Her tone was abrupt and scornful. Deronda, in his pained feeling, and
+under the solemn urgency of the moment, had to keep a clutching
+remembrance of their relationship, lest his words should become cruel. He
+began in a deep entreating tone:
+
+"Mother, don't say that I feel myself wise. We are set in the midst of
+difficulties. I see no other way to get any clearness than by being
+truthful--not by keeping back facts which may--which should carry
+obligation within them--which should make the only guidance toward duty.
+No wonder if such facts come to reveal themselves in spite of
+concealments. The effects prepared by generations are likely to triumph
+over a contrivance which would bend them all to the satisfaction of self.
+Your will was strong, but my grandfather's trust which you accepted and
+did not fulfill--what you call his yoke--is the expression of something
+stronger, with deeper, farther-spreading roots, knit into the foundations
+of sacredness for all men. You renounced me--you still banish me--as a
+son"--there was an involuntary movement of indignation in Deronda's voice
+--"But that stronger Something has determined that I shall be all the more
+the grandson whom also you willed to annihilate."
+
+His mother was watching him fixedly, and again her face gathered
+admiration. After a moment's silence she said, in a low, persuasive tone--
+
+"Sit down again," and he obeyed, placing himself beside her. She laid her
+hand on his shoulder and went on--
+
+"You rebuke me. Well--I am the loser. And you are angry because I banish
+you. What could you do for me but weary your own patience? Your mother is
+a shattered woman. My sense of life is little more than a sense of what
+was--except when the pain is present. You reproach me that I parted with
+you. I had joy enough without you then. Now you are come back to me, and I
+cannot make you a joy. Have you the cursing spirit of the Jew in you? Are
+you not able to forgive me? Shall you be glad to think that I am punished
+because I was not a Jewish mother to you?"
+
+"How can you ask me that?" said Deronda, remonstrantly. "Have I not
+besought you that I might now at least be a son to you? My grief is that
+you have declared me helpless to comfort you. I would give up much that is
+dear for the sake of soothing your anguish."
+
+"You shall give up nothing," said his mother, with the hurry of agitation.
+"You shall be happy. You shall let me think of you as happy. I shall have
+done you no harm. You have no reason to curse me. You shall feel for me as
+they feel for the dead whom they say prayers for--you shall long that I
+may be freed from all suffering--from all punishment. And I shall see you
+instead of always seeing your grandfather. Will any harm come to me
+because I broke his trust in the daylight after he was gone into darkness?
+I cannot tell:--if you think _Kaddish_ will help me--say it, say it. You
+will come between me and the dead. When I am in your mind, you will look
+as you do now--always as if you were a tender son--always--as if I had
+been a tender mother."
+
+She seemed resolved that her agitation should not conquer her, but he felt
+her hand trembling on his shoulder. Deep, deep compassion hemmed in all
+words. With a face of beseeching he put his arm around her and pressed her
+head tenderly under his. They sat so for some moments. Then she lifted her
+head again and rose from her seat with a great sigh, as if in that breath
+she were dismissing a weight of thoughts. Deronda, standing in front of
+her, felt that the parting was near. But one of her swift alternations had
+come upon his mother.
+
+"Is she beautiful?" she said, abruptly.
+
+"Who?" said Deronda, changing color.
+
+"The woman you love."
+
+It was not a moment for deliberate explanation. He was obliged to say,
+"Yes."
+
+"Not ambitious?"
+
+"No, I think not."
+
+"Not one who must have a path of her own?"
+
+"I think her nature is not given to make great claims."
+
+"She is not like that?" said the Princess, taking from her wallet a
+miniature with jewels around it, and holding it before her son. It was her
+own in all the fire of youth, and as Deronda looked at it with admiring
+sadness, she said, "Had I not a rightful claim to be something more than a
+mere daughter and mother? The voice and the genius matched the face.
+Whatever else was wrong, acknowledge that I had a right to be an artist,
+though my father's will was against it. My nature gave me a charter."
+
+"I do acknowledge that," said Deronda, looking from the miniature to her
+face, which even in its worn pallor had an expression of living force
+beyond anything that the pencil could show.
+
+"Will you take the portrait?" said the Princess, more gently. "If she is a
+kind woman, teach her to think of me kindly."
+
+"I shall be grateful for the portrait," said Deronda, "but--I ought to
+say, I have no assurance that she whom I love will have any love for me. I
+have kept silence."
+
+"Who and what is she?" said the mother. The question seemed a command.
+
+"She was brought up as a singer for the stage," said Deronda, with inward
+reluctance. "Her father took her away early from her mother, and her life
+has been unhappy. She is very young--only twenty. Her father wished to
+bring her up in disregard--even in dislike of her Jewish origin, but she
+has clung with all her affection to the memory of her mother and the
+fellowship of her people."
+
+"Ah, like you. She is attached to the Judaism she knows nothing of," said
+the Princess, peremptorily. "That is poetry--fit to last through an opera
+night. Is she fond of her artist's life--is her singing worth anything?"
+
+"Her singing is exquisite. But her voice is not suited to the stage. I
+think that the artist's life has been made repugnant to her."
+
+"Why, she is made for you then. Sir Hugo said you were bitterly against
+being a singer, and I can see that you would never have let yourself be
+merged in a wife, as your father was."
+
+"I repeat," said Deronda, emphatically--"I repeat that I have no assurance
+of her love for me, of the possibility that we can ever be united. Other
+things--painful issues may lie before me. I have always felt that I should
+prepare myself to renounce, not cherish that prospect. But I suppose I
+might feel so of happiness in general. Whether it may come or not, one
+should try and prepare one's self to do without it."
+
+"Do you feel in that way?" said his mother, laying her hands on his
+shoulders, and perusing his face, while she spoke in a low meditative
+tone, pausing between her sentences. "Poor boy!----I wonder how it would
+have been if I had kept you with me----whether you would have turned your
+heart to the old things against mine----and we should have quarreled----
+your grandfather would have been in you----and you would have hampered my
+life with your young growth from the old root."
+
+"I think my affection might have lasted through all our quarreling," said
+Deronda, saddened more and more, "and that would not have hampered--surely
+it would have enriched your life."
+
+"Not then, not then----I did not want it then----I might have been glad of
+it now," said the mother, with a bitter melancholy, "if I could have been
+glad of anything."
+
+"But you love your other children, and they love you?" said Deronda,
+anxiously.
+
+"Oh, yes," she answered, as to a question about a matter of course, while
+she folded her arms again. "But,"----she added in a deeper tone,----"I am
+not a loving woman. That is the truth. It is a talent to love--I lack it.
+Others have loved me--and I have acted their love. I know very well what
+love makes of men and women--it is subjection. It takes another for a
+larger self, enclosing this one,"--she pointed to her own bosom. "I was
+never willingly subject to any man. Men have been subject to me."
+
+"Perhaps the man who was subject was the happier of the two," said
+Deronda--not with a smile, but with a grave, sad sense of his mother's
+privation.
+
+"Perhaps--but I _was_ happy--for a few years I was happy. If I had not
+been afraid of defeat and failure, I might have gone on. I miscalculated.
+What then? It is all over. Another life! Men talk of 'another life,' as if
+it only began on the other side of the grave. I have long entered on
+another life." With the last words she raised her arms till they were bare
+to the elbow, her brow was contracted in one deep fold, her eyes were
+closed, her voice was smothered: in her dusky flame-colored garment, she
+looked like a dreamed visitant from some region of departed mortals.
+
+Deronda's feeling was wrought to a pitch of acuteness in which he was no
+longer quite master of himself. He gave an audible sob. His mother, opened
+her eyes, and letting her hands again rest on his shoulders, said--
+
+"Good-bye, my son, good-bye. We shall hear no more of each other. Kiss
+me."
+
+He clasped his arms round her neck, and they kissed each other.
+
+Deronda did not know how he got out of the room. He felt an older man. All
+his boyish yearnings and anxieties about his mother had vanished. He had
+gone through a tragic experience which must forever solemnize his life and
+deepen the significance of the acts by which he bound himself to others.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV.
+
+ "The unwilling brain
+ Feigns often what it would not; and we trust
+ Imagination with such phantasies
+ As the tongue dares not fashion into words;
+ Which have no words, their horror makes them dim
+ To the mind's eye."
+ --SHELLEY.
+
+
+Madonna Pia, whose husband, feeling himself injured by her, took her to
+his castle amid the swampy flats of the Maremma and got rid of her there,
+makes a pathetic figure in Dante's Purgatory, among the sinners who
+repented at the last and desire to be remembered compassionately by their
+fellow-countrymen. We know little about the grounds of mutual discontent
+between the Siennese couple, but we may infer with some confidence that
+the husband had never been a very delightful companion, and that on the
+flats of the Maremma his disagreeable manners had a background which threw
+them out remarkably; whence in his desire to punish his wife to the
+unmost, the nature of things was so far against him that in relieving
+himself of her he could not avoid making the relief mutual. And thus,
+without any hardness to the poor Tuscan lady, who had her deliverance long
+ago, one may feel warranted in thinking of her with a less sympathetic
+interest than of the better known Gwendolen who, instead of being
+delivered from her errors or earth and cleansed from their effect in
+purgatory, is at the very height of her entanglement in those fatal meshes
+which are woven within more closely than without, and often make the
+inward torture disproportionate to what is discernable as outward cause.
+
+In taking his wife with him on a yachting expedition, Grandcourt had no
+intention to get rid of her; on the contrary, he wanted to feel more
+securely that she was his to do as he liked with, and to make her feel it
+also. Moreover, he was himself very fond of yachting: its dreamy do-
+nothing absolutism, unmolested by social demands, suited his disposition,
+and he did not in the least regard it as an equivalent for the dreariness
+of the Maremma. He had his reasons for carrying Gwendolen out of reach,
+but they were not reasons that can seem black in the mere statement. He
+suspected a growing spirit of opposition in her, and his feeling about the
+sentimental inclination she betrayed for Deronda was what in another man
+he would have called jealously. In himself it seemed merely a resolution
+to put an end to such foolery as must have been going on in that
+prearranged visit of Deronda's which he had divined and interrupted.
+
+And Grandcourt might have pleaded that he was perfectly justified in
+taking care that his wife should fulfill the obligations she had accepted.
+Her marriage was a contract where all the ostensible advantages were on
+her side, and it was only of those advantages that her husband should use
+his power to hinder her from any injurious self committal or unsuitable
+behavior. He knew quite well that she had not married him--had not
+overcome her repugnance to certain facts--out of love to him personally;
+he had won her by the rank and luxuries he had to give her, and these she
+had got: he had fulfilled his side of the contract.
+
+And Gwendolen, we know, was thoroughly aware of the situation. She could
+not excuse herself by saying that there had been a tacit part of the
+contract on her side--namely, that she meant to rule and have her own way.
+With all her early indulgence in the disposition to dominate, she was not
+one of the narrow-brained women who through life regard all their own
+selfish demands as rights, and every claim upon themselves as an injury.
+She had a root of conscience in her, and the process of purgatory had
+begun for her on the green earth: she knew that she had been wrong.
+
+But now enter into the soul of this young creature as she found herself,
+with the blue Mediterranean dividing her from the world, on the tiny
+plank-island of a yacht, the domain of the husband to whom she felt that
+she had sold herself, and had been paid the strict price--nay, paid more
+than she had dared to ask in the handsome maintenance of her mother:--the
+husband to whom she had sold her truthfulness and sense of justice, so
+that he held them throttled into silence, collared and dragged behind him
+to witness what he would, without remonstrance.
+
+What had she to complain of? The yacht was of the prettiest; the cabin
+fitted up to perfection, smelling of cedar, soft-cushioned, hung with
+silk, expanded with mirrors; the crew such as suited an elegant toy, one
+of them having even ringlets, as well as a bronze complexion and fine
+teeth; and Mr. Lush was not there, for he had taken his way back to
+England as soon as he had seen all and everything on board. Moreover,
+Gwendolen herself liked the sea: it did not make her ill; and to observe
+the rigging of the vessel and forecast the necessary adjustments was a
+sort of amusement that might have gratified her activity and enjoyment of
+imaginary rule; the weather was fine, and they were coasting southward,
+where even the rain-furrowed, heat-cracked clay becomes gem-like with
+purple shadows, and where one may float between blue and blue in an open-
+eyed dream that the world has done with sorrow.
+
+But what can still that hunger of the heart which sickens the eye for
+beauty, and makes sweet-scented ease an oppression? What sort of Moslem
+paradise would quiet the terrible fury of moral repulsion and cowed
+resistance which, like an eating pain intensifying into torture,
+concentrates the mind in that poisonous misery? While Gwendolen, throned
+on her cushions at evening, and beholding the glory of sea and sky
+softening as if with boundless love around her, was hoping that Grandcourt
+in his march up and down was not going to pause near her, not going to
+look at her or speak to her, some woman, under a smoky sky, obliged to
+consider the price of eggs in arranging her dinner, was listening for the
+music of a footstep that would remove all risk from her foretaste of joy;
+some couple, bending cheek by cheek, over a bit of work done by the one
+and delighted in by the other, were reckoning the earnings that would make
+them rich enough for a holiday among the furze and heather.
+
+Had Grandcourt the least conception of what was going on in the breast of
+his wife? He conceived that she did not love him; but was that necessary?
+She was under his power, and he was not accustomed to soothe himself, as
+some cheerfully-disposed persons are, with the conviction that he was very
+generally and justly beloved. But what lay quite away from his conception
+was, that she could have any special repulsion for him personally. How
+could she? He himself knew what personal repulsion was--nobody better; his
+mind was much furnished with a sense of what brutes his fellow-creatures
+were, both masculine and feminine; what odious familiarities they had,
+what smirks, what modes of flourishing their handkerchiefs, what costume,
+what lavender water, what bulging eyes, and what foolish notions of making
+themselves agreeable by remarks which were not wanted. In this critical
+view of mankind there was an affinity between him and Gwendolen before
+their marriage, and we know that she had been attractingly wrought upon by
+the refined negations he presented to her. Hence he understood her
+repulsion for Lush. But how was he to understand or conceive her present
+repulsion for Henleigh Grandcourt? Some men bring themselves to believe,
+and not merely maintain, the non-existence of an external world; a few
+others believe themselves objects of repulsion to a woman without being
+told so in plain language. But Grandcourt did not belong to this eccentric
+body of thinkers. He had all his life had reason to take a flattering view
+of his own attractiveness, and to place himself in fine antithesis to the
+men who, he saw at once, must be revolting to a woman of taste. He had no
+idea of moral repulsion, and could not have believed, if he had been told
+it, that there may be a resentment and disgust which will gradually make
+beauty more detestable than ugliness, through exasperation at that outward
+virtue in which hateful things can flaunt themselves or find a
+supercilious advantage.
+
+How, then, could Grandcourt divine what was going on in Gwendolen's
+breast?
+
+For their behavior to each other scandalized no observer--not even the
+foreign maid, warranted against sea-sickness; nor Grandcourt's own
+experienced valet: still less the picturesque crew, who regarded them as a
+model couple in high life. Their companionship consisted chiefly in a
+well-bred silence. Grandcourt had no humorous observations at which
+Gwendolen could refuse to smile, no chit-chat to make small occasions of
+dispute. He was perfectly polite in arranging an additional garment over
+her when needful, and in handing her any object that he perceived her to
+need, and she could not fall into the vulgarity of accepting or rejecting
+such politeness rudely.
+
+Grandcourt put up his telescope and said, "There's a plantation of sugar-
+canes at the foot of that rock; should you like to look?"
+
+Gwendolen said, "Yes, please," remembering that she must try and interest
+herself in sugar-canes as something outside her personal affairs. Then
+Grandcourt would walk up and down and smoke for a long while, pausing
+occasionally to point out a sail on the horizon, and at last would seat
+himself and look at Gwendolen with his narrow immovable gaze, as if she
+were part of the complete yacht; while she, conscious of being looked at
+was exerting her ingenuity not to meet his eyes. At dinner he would remark
+that the fruit was getting stale, and they must put in somewhere for more;
+or, observing that she did not drink the wine, he asked her if she would
+like any other kind better. A lady was obliged to respond to these things
+suitably; and even if she had not shrunk from quarrelling on other
+grounds, quarreling with Grandcourt was impossible; she might as well have
+made angry remarks to a dangerous serpent ornamentally coiled in her cabin
+without invitation. And what sort of dispute could a woman of any pride
+and dignity begin on a yacht?
+
+Grandcourt had intense satisfaction in leading his wife captive after this
+fashion; it gave their life on a small scale a royal representation and
+publicity in which every thing familiar was got rid of, and every body
+must do what was expected of them whatever might be their private protest
+--the protest (kept strictly private) adding to the piquancy of despotism.
+
+To Gwendolen, who even in the freedom of her maiden time, had had very
+faint glimpses of any heroism or sublimity, the medium that now thrust
+itself everywhere before her view was this husband and her relation to
+him. The beings closest to us, whether in love or hate, are often
+virtually our interpreters of the world, and some feather-headed gentleman
+or lady whom in passing we regret to take as legal tender for a human
+being, may be acting as a melancholy theory of life in the minds of those
+who live with them--like a piece of yellow and wavy glass that distorts
+form and makes color an affliction. Their trivial sentences, their petty
+standards, their low suspicions, their loveless _ennui_, may be making
+somebody else's life no better than a promenade through a pantheon of ugly
+idols. Gwendolen had that kind of window before her, affecting the distant
+equally with the near. Some unhappy wives are soothed by the possibility
+that they may become mothers; but Gwendolen felt that to desire a child
+for herself would have been a consenting to the completion of the injury
+she had been guilty of. She was reduced to dread lest she should become a
+mother. It was not the image of a new sweetly-budding life that came as a
+vision of deliverance from the monotony of distaste: it was an image of
+another sort. In the irritable, fluctuating stages of despair, gleams of
+hope came in the form of some possible accident. To dwell on the benignity
+of accident was a refuge from worse temptation.
+
+The embitterment of hatred is often as unaccountable to onlookers as the
+growth of devoted love, and it not only seems but is really out of direct
+relation with any outward causes to be alleged. Passion is of the nature
+of seed, and finds nourishment within, tending to a predominance which
+determines all currents toward itself, and makes the whole life its
+tributary. And the intensest form of hatred is that rooted in fear, which
+compels to silence and drives vehemence into a constructive
+vindictiveness, an imaginary annihilation of the detested object,
+something like the hidden rites of vengeance with which the persecuted
+have made a dark vent for their rage, and soothed their suffering into
+dumbness. Such hidden rites went on in the secrecy of Gwendolen's mind,
+but not with soothing effect--rather with the effect of a struggling
+terror. Side by side with the dread of her husband had grown the self-
+dread, which urged her to flee from the pursuing images wrought by her
+pent-up impulse. The vision of her past wrong-doing, and what it had
+brought on her, came with a pale ghastly illumination over every imagined
+deed that was a rash effort at freedom, such as she had made in her
+marriage. Moreover, she had learned to see all her acts through the
+impression they would make on Deronda: whatever relief might come to her,
+she could not sever it from the judgment of her that would be created in
+his mind. Not one word of flattery, of indulgence, of dependence on her
+favor, could be fastened on by her in all their intercourse, to weaken his
+restraining power over her (in this way Deronda's effort over himself was
+repaid); and amid the dreary uncertainties of her spoiled life the
+possible remedies that lay in his mind, nay, the remedy that lay in her
+feeling for him, made her only hope. He seemed to her a terrible-browed
+angel, from whom she could not think of concealing any deed so as to win
+an ignorant regard from him: it belonged to the nature of their relation
+that she should be truthful, for his power over her had begun in the
+raising of a self-discontent which could be satisfied only by genuine
+change. But in no concealment had she now any confidence: her vision of
+what she had to dread took more decidedly than ever the form of some
+fiercely impulsive deed, committed as in a dream that she would
+instantaneously wake from to find the effects real though the images had
+been false: to find death under her hands, but instead of darkness,
+daylight; instead of satisfied hatred, the dismay of guilt; instead of
+freedom, the palsy of a new terror--a white dead face from which she was
+forever trying to flee and forever held back. She remembered Deronda's
+words: they were continually recurring in her thought--
+
+"Turn your fear into a safeguard. Keep your dread fixed on the idea of
+increasing your remorse. * * * Take your fear as a safeguard. It is like
+quickness of hearing. It may make consequences passionately present to
+you."
+
+And so it was. In Gwendolen's consciousness temptation and dread met and
+stared like two pale phantoms, each seeing itself in the other--each
+obstructed by its own image; and all the while her fuller self beheld the
+apparitions and sobbed for deliverance from them.
+
+Inarticulate prayers, no more definite than a cry, often swept out from
+her into the vast silence, unbroken except by her husband's breathing or
+the plash of the wave or the creaking of the masts; but if ever she
+thought of definite help, it took the form of Deronda's presence and
+words, of the sympathy he might have for her, of the direction he might
+give her. It was sometimes after a white-lipped fierce-eyed temptation
+with murdering fingers had made its demon-visit that these best moments of
+inward crying and clinging for rescue would come to her, and she would lie
+with wide-open eyes in which the rising tears seemed a blessing, and the
+thought, "I will not mind if I can keep from getting wicked," seemed an
+answer to the indefinite prayer.
+
+So the days passed, taking with them light breezes beyond and about the
+Balearic Isles, and then to Sardinia, and then with gentle change
+persuading them northward again toward Corsica. But this floating, gentle-
+wafted existence, with its apparently peaceful influences, was becoming as
+bad as a nightmare to Gwendolen.
+
+"How long are we to be yachting?" she ventured to ask one day after they
+had been touching at Ajaccio, and the mere fact of change in going ashore
+had given her a relief from some of the thoughts which seemed now to cling
+about the very rigging of the vessel, mix with the air in the red silk
+cabin below, and make the smell of the sea odious.
+
+"What else should we do?" said Grandcourt. "I'm not tired of it. I don't
+see why we shouldn't stay out any length of time. There's less to bore one
+in this way. And where would you go to? I'm sick of foreign places. And we
+shall have enough of Ryelands. Would you rather be at Ryeland's?"
+
+"Oh, no," said Gwendolen, indifferently, finding all places alike
+undescribable as soon as she imagined herself and her husband in them. "I
+only wondered how long you would like this."
+
+"I like yachting longer than anything else," said Grandcourt; "and I had
+none last year. I suppose you are beginning to tire of it. Women are so
+confoundedly whimsical. They expect everything to give way to them."
+
+"Oh, dear, no!" said Gwendolen, letting out her scorn in a flute-like
+tone. "I never expect you to give way."
+
+"Why should I?" said Grandcourt, with his inward voice, looking at her,
+and then choosing an orange--for they were at table.
+
+She made up her mind to a length of yatching that she could not see
+beyond; but the next day, after a squall which had made her rather ill for
+the first time, he came down to her and said--
+
+"There's been the devil's own work in the night. The skipper says we shall
+have to stay at Genoa for a week while things are set right."
+
+"Do you mind that?" said Gwendolen, who lay looking very white amidst her
+white drapery.
+
+"I should think so. Who wants to be broiling at Genoa?"
+
+"It will be a change," said Gwendolen, made a little incautious by her
+languor.
+
+"_I_ don't want any change. Besides, the place is intolerable; and one
+can't move along the roads. I shall go out in a boat, as I used to do, and
+manage it myself. One can get a few hours every day in that way instead of
+striving in a damnable hotel."
+
+Here was a prospect which held hope in it. Gwendolen thought of hours when
+she would be alone, since Grandcourt would not want to take her in the
+said boat, and in her exultation at this unlooked-for relief, she had
+wild, contradictory fancies of what she might do with her freedom--that
+"running away" which she had already innumerable times seen to be a worse
+evil than any actual endurance, now finding new arguments as an escape
+from her worse self. Also, visionary relief on a par with the fancy of a
+prisoner that the night wind may blow down the wall of his prison and save
+him from desperate devices, insinuated itself as a better alternative,
+lawful to wish for.
+
+The fresh current of expectation revived her energies, and enabled her to
+take all things with an air of cheerfulness and alacrity that made a
+change marked enough to be noticed by her husband. She watched through the
+evening lights to the sinking of the moon with less of awed loneliness
+than was habitual to her--nay, with a vague impression that in this mighty
+frame of things there might be some preparation of rescue for her. Why
+not?--since the weather had just been on her side. This possibility of
+hoping, after her long fluctuation amid fears, was like a first return of
+hunger to the long-languishing patient.
+
+She was waked the next morning by the casting of the anchor in the port of
+Genoa--waked from a strangely-mixed dream in which she felt herself
+escaping over the Mont Cenis, and wondering to find it warmer even in the
+moonlight on the snow, till suddenly she met Deronda, who told her to go
+back.
+
+In an hour or so from that dream she actually met Deronda. But is was on
+the palatial staircase of the _Italia_, where she was feeling warm in her
+light woolen dress and straw hat; and her husband was by her side.
+
+There was a start of surprise in Deronda before he could raise his hat and
+pass on. The moment did not seem to favor any closer greeting, and the
+circumstances under which they had last parted made him doubtful whether
+Grandcourt would be civilly inclined to him.
+
+The doubt might certainly have been changed into a disagreeable certainty,
+for Grandcourt on this unaccountable appearance of Deronda at Genoa of all
+places, immediately tried to conceive how there could have been an
+arrangement between him and Gwendolen. It is true that before they were
+well in their rooms, he had seen how difficult it was to shape such an
+arrangement with any probability, being too cool-headed to find it at once
+easily credible that Gwendolen had not only while in London hastened to
+inform Deronda of the yachting project, but had posted a letter to him
+from Marseilles or Barcelona, advising him to travel to Genoa in time for
+the chance of meeting her there, or of receiving a letter from her telling
+of some other destination--all which must have implied a miraculous
+foreknowledge in her, and in Deronda a bird-like facility in flying about
+and perching idly. Still he was there, and though Grandcourt would not
+make a fool of himself by fabrications that others might call
+preposterous, he was not, for all that, disposed to admit fully that
+Deronda's presence was, so far as Gwendolen was concerned, a mere
+accident. It was a disgusting fact; that was enough; and no doubt she was
+well pleased. A man out of temper does not wait for proofs before feeling
+toward all things animate and inanimate as if they were in a conspiracy
+against him, but at once threshes his horse or kicks his dog in
+consequence. Grandcourt felt toward Gwendolen and Deronda as if he knew
+them to be in a conspiracy against him, and here was an event in league
+with them. What he took for clearly certain--and so far he divined the
+truth--was that Gwendolen was now counting on an interview with Deronda
+whenever her husband's back was turned.
+
+As he sat taking his coffee at a convenient angle for observing her, he
+discerned something which he felt sure was the effect of a secret delight
+--some fresh ease in moving and speaking, some peculiar meaning in her
+eyes, whatever she looked on. Certainly her troubles had not marred her
+beauty. Mrs. Grandcourt was handsomer than Gwendolen Harleth: her grace
+and expression were informed by a greater variety of inward experience,
+giving new play to her features, new attitudes in movement and repose; her
+whole person and air had the nameless something which often makes a woman
+more interesting after marriage than before, less confident that all
+things are according to her opinion, and yet with less of deer-like
+shyness--more fully a human being.
+
+This morning the benefits of the voyage seemed to be suddenly revealing
+themselves in a new elasticity of mien. As she rose from the table and put
+her two heavily-jewelled hands on each side of her neck, according to her
+wont, she had no art to conceal that sort of joyous expectation which
+makes the present more bearable than usual, just as when a man means to go
+out he finds it easier to be amiable to the family for a quarter of an
+hour beforehand. It is not impossible that a terrier whose pleasure was
+concerned would perceive those amiable signs and know their meaning--know
+why his master stood in a peculiar way, talked with alacrity, and even had
+a peculiar gleam in his eye, so that on the least movement toward the
+door, the terrier would scuttle to be in time. And, in dog fashion,
+Grandcourt discerned the signs of Gwendolen's expectation, interpreting
+them with the narrow correctness which leaves a world of unknown feeling
+behind.
+
+"A--just ring, please, and tell Gibbs to order some dinner for us at
+three," said Grandcourt, as he too rose, took out a cigar, and then
+stretched his hand toward the hat that lay near. "I'm going to send Angus
+to find a little sailing-boat for us to go out in; one that I can manage,
+with you at the tiller. It's uncommonly pleasant these fine evenings--the
+least boring of anything we can do."
+
+Gwendolen turned cold. There was not only the cruel disappointment; there
+was the immediate conviction that her husband had determined to take her
+because he would not leave her out of his sight; and probably this dual
+solitude in a boat was the more attractive to him because it would be
+wearisome to her. They were not on the plank-island; she felt it the more
+possible to begin a contest. But the gleaming content had died out of her.
+There was a change in her like that of a glacier after sunset.
+
+"I would rather not go in the boat," she said. "Take some one else with
+you."
+
+"Very well; if you don't go, I shall not go," said Grandcourt. "We shall
+stay suffocating here, that's all."
+
+"I can't bear to go in a boat," said Gwendolen, angrily.
+
+"That is a sudden change," said Grandcourt, with a slight sneer. "But,
+since you decline, we shall stay indoors."
+
+He laid down his hat again, lit his cigar, and walked up and down the
+room, pausing now and then to look out of the windows. Gwendolen's temper
+told her to persist. She knew very well now that Grandcourt would not go
+without her; but if he must tyrannize over her, he should not do it
+precisely in the way he would choose. She would oblige him to stay in the
+hotel. Without speaking again, she passed into the adjoining bedroom and
+threw herself into a chair with her anger, seeing no purpose or issue--
+only feeling that the wave of evil had rushed back upon her, and dragged
+her away from her momentary breathing-place.
+
+Presently Grandcourt came in with his hat on, but threw it off and sat
+down sideways on a chair nearly in front of her, saying, in his
+superficial drawl--
+
+"Have you come round yet? or do you find it agreeable to be out of temper.
+You make things uncommonly pleasant for me."
+
+"Why do you want to make them unpleasant for _me_?" said Gwendolen,
+getting helpless again, and feeling the hot tears rise.
+
+"Now, will you be good enough to say what it is you have to complain of?"
+said Grandcourt, looking into her eyes, and using his most inward voice.
+"Is it that I stay indoors when you stay?"
+
+She could give no answer. The sort of truth that made any excuse for her
+anger could not be uttered. In the conflict of despair and humiliation she
+began to sob, and the tears rolled down her cheeks--a form of agitation
+which she had never shown before in her husband's presence.
+
+"I hope this is useful," said Grandcourt, after a moment or two. "All I
+can say is, it's most confoundedly unpleasant. What the devil women can
+see in this kind of thing, I don't know. _You_ see something to be got by
+it, of course. All I can see is, that we shall be shut up here when we
+might have been having a pleasant sail."
+
+"Let us go, then," said Gwendolen, impetuously. "Perhaps we shall be
+drowned." She began to sob again.
+
+This extraordinary behavior, which had evidently some relation to Deronda,
+gave more definiteness to Grandcourt's conclusions. He drew his chair
+quite close in front of her, and said, in a low tone, "Just be quiet and
+listen, will you?"
+
+There seemed to be a magical effect in this close vicinity. Gwendolen
+shrank and ceased to sob. She kept her eyelids down and clasped her hands
+tightly.
+
+"Let us understand each other," said Grandcourt, in the same tone. "I know
+very well what this nonsense means. But if you suppose I am going to let
+you make a fool of me, just dismiss that notion from your mind. What are
+you looking forward to, if you can't behave properly as my wife? There is
+disgrace for you, if you like to have it, but I don't know anything else;
+and as to Deronda, it's quite clear that he hangs back from you."
+
+"It's all false!" said Gwendolen, bitterly. "You don't in the least
+imagine what is in my mind. I have seen enough of the disgrace that comes
+in that way. And you had better leave me at liberty to speak with any one
+I like. It will be better for you."
+
+"You will allow me to judge of that," said Grandcourt, rising and moving
+to a little distance toward the window, but standing there playing with
+his whiskers as if he were awaiting something.
+
+Gwendolen's words had so clear and tremendous a meaning for herself that
+she thought they must have expressed it to Grandcourt, and had no sooner
+uttered them than she dreaded their effect. But his soul was garrisoned
+against presentiments and fears: he had the courage and confidence that
+belong to domination, and he was at that moment feeling perfectly
+satisfied that he held his wife with bit and bridle. By the time they had
+been married a year she would cease to be restive. He continued standing
+with his air of indifference, till she felt her habitual stifling
+consciousness of having an immovable obstruction in her life, like the
+nightmare of beholding a single form that serves to arrest all passage
+though the wide country lies open.
+
+"What decision have you come to?" he said, presently looking at her. "What
+orders shall I give?"
+
+"Oh, let us go," said Gwendolen. The walls had begun to be an
+imprisonment, and while there was breath in this man he would have the
+mastery over her. His words had the power of thumb-screws and the cold
+touch of the rock. To resist was to act like a stupid animal unable to
+measure results.
+
+So the boat was ordered. She even went down to the quay again with him to
+see it before midday. Grandcourt had recovered perfect quietude of temper,
+and had a scornful satisfaction in the attention given by the nautical
+groups to the _milord_, owner of the handsome yacht which had just put in
+for repairs, and who being an Englishman was naturally so at home on the
+sea that he could manage a sail with the same ease that he could manage a
+horse. The sort of exultation he had discerned in Gwendolen this morning
+she now thought that she discerned in him; and it was true that he had set
+his mind on this boating, and carried out his purpose as something that
+people might not expect him to do, with the gratified impulse of a strong
+will which had nothing better to exert itself upon. He had remarkable
+physical courage, and was proud of it--or rather he had a great contempt
+for the coarser, bulkier men who generally had less. Moreover, he was
+ruling that Gwendolen should go with him.
+
+And when they came down again at five o'clock, equipped for their boating,
+the scene was as good as a theatrical representation for all beholders.
+This handsome, fair-skinned English couple, manifesting the usual
+eccentricity of their nation, both of them proud, pale, and calm, without
+a smile on their faces, moving like creatures who were fulfilling a
+supernatural destiny--it was a thing to go out and see, a thing to paint.
+The husband's chest, back, and arms, showed very well in his close-fitting
+dress, and the wife was declared to be a statue.
+
+Some suggestions were proffered concerning a possible change in the
+breeze, and the necessary care in putting about, but Grandcourt's manner
+made the speakers understand that they were too officious, and that he
+knew better than they.
+
+Gwendolen, keeping her impassable air, as they moved away from the strand,
+felt her imagination obstinately at work. She was not afraid of any
+outward dangers--she was afraid of her own wishes which were taking shapes
+possible and impossible, like a cloud of demon-faces. She was afraid of
+her own hatred, which under the cold iron touch that had compelled her to-
+day had gathered a fierce intensity. As she sat guiding the tiller under
+her husband's eyes, doing just what he told her, the strife within her
+seemed like her own effort to escape from herself. She clung to the
+thought of Deronda: she persuaded herself that he would not go away while
+she was there--he knew that she needed help. The sense that he was there
+would save her from acting out the evil within. And yet quick, quick, came
+images, plans of evil that would come again and seize her in the night,
+like furies preparing the deed that they would straightway avenge.
+
+They were taken out of the port and carried eastward by a gentle breeze.
+Some clouds tempered the sunlight, and the hour was always deepening
+toward the supreme beauty of evening. Sails larger and smaller changed
+their aspect like sensitive things, and made a cheerful companionship,
+alternately near and far. The grand city shone more vaguely, the mountains
+looked out above it, and there was stillness as in an island sanctuary.
+Yet suddenly Gwendolen let her hands fall, and said in a scarcely audible
+tone, "God help me!"
+
+"What is the matter?" said Grandcourt, not distinguishing the words.
+
+"Oh, nothing," said Gwendolen, rousing herself from her momentary
+forgetfulness and resuming the ropes.
+
+"Don't you find this pleasant?" said Grandcourt.
+
+"Very."
+
+"You admit now we couldn't have done anything better?"
+
+"No--I see nothing better. I think we shall go on always, like the Flying
+Dutchman," said Gwendolen wildly.
+
+Grandcourt gave her one of his narrow examining glances, and then said,
+"If you like, we can go to Spezia in the morning, and let them take us up
+there."
+
+"No; I shall like nothing better than this."
+
+"Very well: we'll do the same to-morrow. But we must be turning in soon. I
+shall put about."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV.
+
+ "Ritorna a tua scienza
+ Che vuoi, quanto la cosa e piu perfetta
+ Piu senta if bene, e cosi la doglienza."
+ --DANTE.
+
+
+When Deronda met Gwendolen and Grandcourt on the staircase, his mind was
+seriously preoccupied. He had just been summoned to the second interview
+with his mother.
+
+In two hours after his parting from her he knew that the Princess Halm-
+Eberstein had left the hotel, and so far as the purpose of his journey to
+Genoa was concerned, he might himself have set off on his way to Mainz, to
+deliver the letter from Joseph Kalonymos, and get possession of the family
+chest. But mixed mental conditions, which did not resolve themselves into
+definite reasons, hindered him from departure. Long after the farewell he
+was kept passive by a weight of retrospective feeling. He lived again,
+with the new keenness of emotive memory, through the exciting scenes which
+seemed past only in the sense of preparation for their actual presence in
+his soul. He allowed himself in his solitude to sob, with perhaps more
+than a woman's acuteness of compassion, over that woman's life so near to
+his, and yet so remote. He beheld the world changed for him by the
+certitude of ties that altered the poise of hopes and fears, and gave him
+a new sense of fellowship, as if under cover of the night he had joined
+the wrong band of wanderers, and found with the rise of morning that the
+tents of his kindred were grouped far off. He had a quivering imaginative
+sense of close relation to the grandfather who had been animated by strong
+impulses and beloved thoughts, which were now perhaps being roused from
+their slumber within himself. And through all this passionate meditation
+Mordecai and Mirah were always present, as beings who clasped hands with
+him in sympathetic silence.
+
+Of such quick, responsive fibre was Deronda made, under that mantle of
+self-controlled reserve into which early experience had thrown so much of
+his young strength.
+
+When the persistent ringing of a bell as a signal reminded him of the hour
+he thought of looking into _Bradshaw_, and making the brief necessary
+preparations for starting by the next train--thought of it, but made no
+movement in consequence. Wishes went to Mainz and what he was to get
+possession of there--to London and the beings there who made the strongest
+attachments of his life; but there were other wishes that clung in these
+moments to Genoa, and they kept him where he was by that force which urges
+us to linger over an interview that carries a presentiment of final
+farewell or of overshadowing sorrow. Deronda did not formally say, "I will
+stay over to-night, because it is Friday, and I should like to go to the
+evening service at the synagogue where they must all have gone; and
+besides, I may see the Grandcourts again." But simply, instead of packing
+and ringing for his bill, he sat doing nothing at all, while his mind went
+to the synagogue and saw faces there probably little different from those
+of his grandfather's time, and heard the Spanish-Hebrew liturgy which had
+lasted through the seasons of wandering generations like a plant with
+wandering seed, that gives the far-off lands a kinship to the exile's
+home--while, also, his mind went toward Gwendolen, with anxious
+remembrance of what had been, and with a half-admitted impression that it
+would be hardness in him willingly to go away at once without making some
+effort, in spite of Grandcourt's probable dislike, to manifest the
+continuance of his sympathy with her since their abrupt parting.
+
+In this state of mind he deferred departure, ate his dinner without sense
+of flavor, rose from it quickly to find the synagogue, and in passing the
+porter asked if Mr. and Mrs. Grandcourt were still in the hotel, and what
+was the number of their apartment. The porter gave him the number, but
+added that they were gone out boating. That information had somehow power
+enough over Deronda to divide his thoughts with the memories wakened among
+the sparse _talithim_ and keen dark faces of worshippers whose way of
+taking awful prayers and invocations with the easy familiarity which might
+be called Hebrew dyed Italian, made him reflect that his grandfather,
+according to the Princess's hints of his character, must have been almost
+as exceptional a Jew as Mordecai. But were not men of ardent zeal and far-
+reaching hope everywhere exceptional? the men who had the visions which,
+as Mordecai said, were the creators and feeders of the world--moulding and
+feeding the more passive life which without them would dwindle and shrivel
+into the narrow tenacity of insects, unshaken by thoughts beyond the reach
+of their antennae. Something of a mournful impatience perhaps added itself
+to the solicitude about Gwendolen (a solicitude that had room to grow in
+his present release from immediate cares) as an incitement to hasten from
+the synagogue and choose to take his evening walk toward the quay, always
+a favorite haunt with him, and just now attractive with the possibility
+that he might be in time to see the Grandcourts come in from their
+boating. In this case, he resolved that he would advance to greet them
+deliberately, and ignore any grounds that the husband might have for
+wishing him elsewhere.
+
+The sun had set behind a bank of cloud, and only a faint yellow light was
+giving its farewell kisses to the waves, which were agitated by an active
+breeze. Deronda, sauntering slowly within sight of what took place on the
+strand, observed the groups there concentrating their attention on a
+sailing-boat which was advancing swiftly landward, being rowed by two men.
+Amidst the clamorous talk in various languages, Deronda held it the surer
+means of getting information not to ask questions, but to elbow his way to
+the foreground and be an unobstructed witness of what was occurring.
+Telescopes were being used, and loud statements made that the boat held
+somebody who had been drowned. One said it was the _milord_ who had gone
+out in a sailing boat; another maintained that the prostrate figure he
+discerned was _miladi_; a Frenchman who had no glass would rather say that
+it was _milord_ who had probably taken his wife out to drown her,
+according to the national practice--a remark which an English skipper
+immediately commented on in our native idiom (as nonsense which--had
+undergone a mining operation), and further dismissed by the decision that
+the reclining figure was a woman. For Deronda, terribly excited by
+fluctuating fears, the strokes of the oars as he watched them were divided
+by swift visions of events, possible and impossible, which might have
+brought about this issue, or this broken-off fragment of an issue, with a
+worse half undisclosed--if this woman apparently snatched from the waters
+were really Mrs. Grandcourt.
+
+But soon there was no longer any doubt: the boat was being pulled to land,
+and he saw Gwendolen half raising herself on her hands, by her own effort,
+under her heavy covering of tarpaulin and pea-jackets--pale as one of the
+sheeted dead, shivering, with wet hair streaming, a wild amazed
+consciousness in her eyes, as if she had waked up in a world where some
+judgment was impending, and the beings she saw around were coming to seize
+her. The first rower who jumped to land was also wet through, and ran off;
+the sailors, close about the boat, hindered Deronda from advancing, and he
+could only look on while Gwendolen gave sacred glances, and seemed to
+shrink with terror as she was carefully, tenderly helped out, and led on
+by the strong arms of those rough, bronzed men, her wet clothes clinging
+about her limbs, and adding to the impediment of her weakness. Suddenly
+her wandering eyes fell on Deronda, standing before her, and immediately,
+as if she had been expecting him and looking for him, she tried to stretch
+out her arms, which were held back by her supporters, saying, in a muffled
+voice--
+
+"It is come, it is come! He is dead!"
+
+"Hush, hush!" said Deronda, in a tone of authority; "quiet yourself." Then
+to the men who were assisting her, "I am a connection of this lady's
+husband. If you will get her on to the _Italia_ as quickly as possible, I
+will undertake everything else."
+
+He stayed behind to hear from the remaining boatman that her husband had
+gone down irrecoverably, and that his boat was left floating empty. He and
+his comrade had heard a cry, had come up in time to see the lady jump in
+after her husband, and had got her out fast enough to save her from much
+damage.
+
+After this, Deronda hastened to the hotel to assure himself that the best
+medical help would be provided; and being satisfied on this point, he
+telegraphed the event to Sir Hugo, begging him to come forthwith, and also
+to Mr. Gascoigne, whose address at the rectory made his nearest known way
+of getting the information to Gwendolen's mother. Certain words of
+Gwendolen's in the past had come back to him with the effectiveness of an
+inspiration: in moments of agitated confession she had spoken of her
+mother's presence, as a possible help, if she could have had it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI.
+
+ "The pang, the curse with which they died,
+ Had never passed away:
+ I could not draw my eyes from theirs,
+ Nor lift them up to pray."
+ --COLERIDGE.
+
+
+Deronda did not take off his clothes that night. Gwendolen, after
+insisting on seeing him again before she would consent to be undressed,
+had been perfectly quiet, and had only asked him, with a whispering,
+repressed eagerness, to promise that he would come to her when she sent
+for him in the morning. Still, the possibility that a change might come
+over her, the danger of a supervening feverish condition, and the
+suspicion that something in the late catastrophe was having an effect
+which might betray itself in excited words, acted as a foreboding within
+him. He mentioned to her attendant that he should keep himself ready to be
+called if there were any alarming change of symptoms, making it understood
+by all concerned that he was in communication with her friends in England,
+and felt bound meanwhile to take all care on her behalf--a position which
+it was the easier for him to assume, because he was well known to
+Grandcourt's valet, the only old servant who had come on the late voyage.
+
+But when fatigue from the strangely various emotion of the day at last
+sent Deronda to sleep, he remained undisturbed except by the morning
+dreams, which came as a tangled web of yesterday's events, and finally
+waked him, with an image drawn by his pressing anxiety.
+
+Still, it was morning, and there had been no summons--an augury which
+cheered him while he made his toilet, and reflected that it was too early
+to send inquiries. Later, he learned that she had passed a too wakeful
+night, but had shown no violent signs of agitation, and was at last
+sleeping. He wondered at the force that dwelt in this creature, so alive
+to dread; for he had an irresistible impression that even under the
+effects of a severe physical shock she was mastering herself with a
+determination of concealment. For his own part, he thought that his
+sensibilities had been blunted by what he had been going through in the
+meeting with his mother: he seemed to himself now to be only fulfilling
+claims, and his more passionate sympathy was in abeyance. He had lately
+been living so keenly in an experience quite apart from Gwendolen's lot,
+that his present cares for her were like a revisiting of scenes familiar
+in the past, and there was not yet a complete revival of the inward
+response to them.
+
+Meanwhile he employed himself in getting a formal, legally recognized
+statement from the fisherman who had rescued Gwendolen. Few details came
+to light. The boat in which Grandcourt had gone out had been found
+drifting with its sail loose, and had been towed in. The fishermen thought
+it likely that he had been knocked overboard by the flapping of the sail
+while putting about, and that he had not known how to swim; but, though
+they were near, their attention had been first arrested by a cry which
+seemed like that of a man in distress, and while they were hastening with
+their oars, they heard a shriek from the lady, and saw her jump in.
+
+On re-entering the hotel, Deronda was told that Gwendolen had risen, and
+was desiring to see him. He was shown into a room darkened by blinds and
+curtains, where she was seated with a white shawl wrapped round her,
+looking toward the opening door like one waiting uneasily. But her long
+hair was gathered up and coiled carefully, and, through all, the blue
+stars in her ears had kept their place: as she started impulsively to her
+full height, sheathed in her white shawl, her face and neck not less
+white, except for a purple line under her eyes, her lips a little apart
+with the peculiar expression of one accused and helpless, she looked like
+the unhappy ghost of that Gwendolen Harleth whom Deronda had seen turning
+with firm lips and proud self-possession from her losses at the gaming
+table. The sight pierced him with pity, and the effects of all their past
+relations began to revive within him.
+
+"I beseech you to rest--not to stand," said Deronda, as he approached her;
+and she obeyed, falling back into her chair again.
+
+"Will you sit down near me?" she said. "I want to speak very low."
+
+She was in a large arm-chair, and he drew a small one near to her side.
+The action seemed to touch her peculiarly: turning her pale face full upon
+his, which was very near, she said, in the lowest audible tone, "You know
+I am a guilty woman?"
+
+Deronda himself turned paler as he said, "I know nothing." He did not dare
+to say more.
+
+"He is dead." She uttered this with the same undertoned decision.
+
+"Yes," said Deronda, in a mournful suspense which made him reluctant to
+speak.
+
+"His face will not be seen above the water again," said Gwendolen, in a
+tone that was not louder, but of a suppressed eagerness, while she held
+both her hands clenched.
+
+"No."
+
+"Not by any one else--only by me--a dead face--I shall never get away from
+it."
+
+It was with an inward voice of desperate self-repression that she spoke
+these last words, while she looked away from Deronda toward something at a
+distance from her on the floor. She was seeing the whole event--her own
+acts included--through an exaggerating medium of excitement and horror?
+Was she in a state of delirium into which there entered a sense of
+concealment and necessity for self-repression? Such thoughts glanced
+through Deronda as a sort of hope. But imagine the conflict of feeling
+that kept him silent. She was bent on confession, and he dreaded hearing
+her confession. Against his better will he shrank from the task that was
+laid on him: he wished, and yet rebuked the wish as cowardly, that she
+could bury her secrets in her own bosom. He was not a priest. He dreaded
+the weight of this woman's soul flung upon his own with imploring
+dependence. But she spoke again, hurriedly, looking at him--
+
+"You will not say that I ought to tell the world? you will not say that I
+ought to be disgraced? I could not do it. I could not bear it. I cannot
+have my mother know. Not if I were dead. I could not have her know. I must
+tell you; but you will not say that any one else should know."
+
+"I can say nothing in my ignorance," said Deronda, mournfully, "except
+that I desire to help you."
+
+"I told you from the beginning--as soon as I could--I told you I was
+afraid of myself." There was a piteous pleading in the low murmur in which
+Deronda turned his ear only. Her face afflicted him too much. "I felt a
+hatred in me that was always working like an evil spirit--contriving
+things. Everything I could do to free myself came into my mind; and it got
+worse--all things got worse. That is why I asked you to come to me in
+town. I thought then I would tell you the worst about myself. I tried. But
+I could not tell everything. And _he_ came in."
+
+She paused, while a shudder passed through her; but soon went on.
+
+"I will tell you everything now. Do you think a woman who cried, and
+prayed, and struggled to be saved from herself, could be a murderess?"
+
+"Great God!" said Deronda, in a deep, shaken voice, "don't torture me
+needlessly. You have not murdered him. You threw yourself into the water
+with the impulse to save him. Tell me the rest afterward. This death was
+an accident that you could not have hindered."
+
+"Don't be impatient with me." The tremor, the childlike beseeching in
+these words compelled Deronda to turn his head and look at her face. The
+poor quivering lips went on. "You said--you used to say--you felt more for
+those who had done something wicked and were miserable; you said they
+might get better--they might be scourged into something better. If you had
+not spoken in that way, Everything would have been worse. I _did_ remember
+all you said to me. It came to me always. It came to me at the very last--
+that was the reason why I--But now, if you cannot bear with me when I tell
+you everything--if you turn away from me and forsake me, what shall I do?
+Am I worse than I was when you found me and wanted to make me better? All
+the wrong I have done was in me then--and more--and more--if you had not
+come and been patient with me. And now--will you forsake me?"
+
+Her hands, which had been so tightly clenched some minutes before, were
+now helplessly relaxed and trembling on the arm of her chair. Her
+quivering lips remained parted as she ceased speaking. Deronda could not
+answer; he was obliged to look away. He took one of her hands, and clasped
+it as if they were going to walk together like two children: it was the
+only way in which he could answer, "I will not forsake you." And all the
+while he felt as if he were putting his name to a blank paper which might
+be filled up terribly. Their attitude, his adverted face with its
+expression of a suffering which he was solemnly resolved to undergo, might
+have told half the truth of the situation to a beholder who had suddenly
+entered.
+
+That grasp was an entirely new experience to Gwendolen: she had never
+before had from any man a sign of tenderness which her own being had
+needed, and she interpreted its powerful effect on her into a promise of
+inexhaustible patience and constancy. The stream of renewed strength made
+it possible for her to go on as she had begun--with that fitful, wandering
+confession where the sameness of experience seems to nullify the sense of
+time or of order in events. She began again in a fragmentary way--
+
+"All sorts of contrivances in my mind--but all so difficult. And I fought
+against them--I was terrified at them--I saw his dead face"--here her
+voice sank almost to a whisper close to Deronda's ear--"ever so long ago
+I saw it and I wished him to be dead. And yet it terrified me. I was like
+two creatures. I could not speak--I wanted to kill--it was as strong as
+thirst--and then directly--I felt beforehand I had done something
+dreadful, unalterable--that would make me like an evil spirit. And it
+came--it came."
+
+She was silent a moment or two, as if her memory had lost itself in a web
+where each mesh drew all the rest.
+
+"It had all been in my mind when I first spoke to you--when we were at the
+Abbey. I had done something then. I could not tell you that. It was the
+only thing I did toward carrying out my thoughts. They went about over
+everything; but they all remained like dreadful dreams--all but one. I did
+one act--and I never undid it--it is there still--as long ago as when we
+were at Ryelands. There it was--something my fingers longed for among the
+beautiful toys in the cabinet in my boudoir--small and sharp like a long
+willow leaf in a silver sheath. I locked it in the drawer of my dressing-
+case. I was continually haunted with it and how I should use it. I fancied
+myself putting it under my pillow. But I never did. I never looked at it
+again. I dared not unlock the drawer: it had a key all to itself; and not
+long ago, when we were in the yacht, I dropped the key into the deep
+water. It was my wish to drop it and deliver myself. After that I began to
+think how I could open the drawer without the key: and when I found we
+were to stay at Genoa, it came into my mind that I could get it opened
+privately at the hotel. But then, when we were going up the stairs, I met
+you; and I thought I should talk to you alone and tell you this--
+everything I could not tell you in town; and then I was forced to go out
+in the boat."
+
+A sob had for the first time risen with the last words, and she sank back
+in her chair. The memory of that acute disappointment seemed for the
+moment to efface what had come since. Deronda did not look at her, but he
+said, insistently--
+
+"And it has all remained in your imagination. It has gone on only in your
+thought. To the last the evil temptation has been resisted?"
+
+There was silence. The tears had rolled down her cheeks. She pressed her
+handkerchief against them and sat upright. She was summoning her
+resolution; and again, leaning a little toward Deronda's ear, she began in
+a whisper--
+
+"No, no; I will tell you everything as God knows it. I will tell you no
+falsehood; I will tell you the exact truth. What should I do else? I used
+to think I could never be wicked. I thought of wicked people as if they
+were a long way off me. Since then I have been wicked. I have felt wicked.
+And everything has been a punishment to me--all the things I used to wish
+for--it is as if they had been made red-hot. The very daylight has often
+been a punishment to me. Because--you know--I ought not to have married.
+That was the beginning of it. I wronged some one else. I broke my promise.
+I meant to get pleasure for myself, and it all turned to misery. I wanted
+to make my gain out of another's loss--you remember?--it was like
+roulette--and the money burned into me. And I could not complain. It was
+as if I had prayed that another should lose and I should win. And I had
+won, I knew it all--I knew I was guilty. When we were on the sea, and I
+lay awake at night in the cabin, I sometimes felt that everything I had
+done lay open without excuse--nothing was hidden--how could anything be
+known to me only?--it was not my own knowledge, it was God's that had
+entered into me, and even the stillness--everything held a punishment for
+me--everything but you. I always thought that you would not want me to be
+punished--you would have tried and helped me to be better. And only
+thinking of that helped me. You will not change--you will not want to
+punish me now?"
+
+Again a sob had risen.
+
+"God forbid!" groaned Deronda. But he sat motionless.
+
+This long wandering with the conscious-stricken one over her past was
+difficult to bear, but he dared not again urge her with a question. He
+must let her mind follow its own need. She unconsciously left intervals in
+her retrospect, not clearly distinguishing between what she said and what
+she had only an inward vision of. Her next words came after such an
+interval.
+
+"That all made it so hard when I was forced to go in the boat. Because
+when I saw you it was an unexpected joy, and I thought I could tell you
+everything--about the locked-up drawer and what I had not told you before.
+And if I had told you, and knew it was in your mind, it would have less
+power over me. I hoped and trusted in that. For after all my struggles and
+my crying, the hatred and rage, the temptation that frightened me, the
+longing, the thirst for what I dreaded, always came back. And that
+disappointment--when I was quite shut out from speaking to you, and was
+driven to go in the boat--brought all the evil back, as if I had been
+locked in a prison with it and no escape. Oh, it seems so long ago now
+since I stepped into that boat! I could have given up everything in that
+moment, to have the forked lightning for a weapon to strike him dead."
+
+Some of the compressed fierceness that she was recalling seemed to find
+its way into her undertoned utterance. After a little silence she said,
+with agitated hurry--
+
+"If he were here again, what should I do? I cannot wish him here--and yet
+I cannot bear his dead face. I was a coward. I ought to have borne
+contempt. I ought to have gone away--gone and wandered like a beggar
+rather than to stay to feel like a fiend. But turn where I would there was
+something I could not bear. Sometimes I thought he would kill _me_ if I
+resisted his will. But now--his dead face is there, and I cannot bear it."
+
+Suddenly loosing Deronda's hand, she started up, stretching her arms to
+their full length upward, and said with a sort of moan--
+
+"I have been a cruel woman! What can _I_ do but cry for help? _I_ am
+sinking. Die--die--you are forsaken--go down, go down into darkness.
+Forsaken--no pity--_I_ shall be forsaken."
+
+She sank in her chair again and broke into sobs. Even Deronda had no place
+in her consciousness at that moment. He was completely unmanned. Instead
+of finding, as he had imagined, that his late experience had dulled his
+susceptibility to fresh emotion, it seemed that the lot of this young
+creature, whose swift travel from her bright rash girlhood into this agony
+of remorse he had had to behold in helplessness, pierced him the deeper
+because it came close upon another sad revelation of spiritual conflict:
+he was in one of those moments when the very anguish of passionate pity
+makes us ready to choose that we will know pleasure no more, and live only
+for the stricken and afflicted. He had risen from his seat while he
+watched that terrible outburst--which seemed the more awful to him
+because, even in this supreme agitation, she kept the suppressed voice of
+one who confesses in secret. At last he felt impelled to turn his back
+toward her and walk to a distance.
+
+But presently there was stillness. Her mind had opened to the sense that
+he had gone away from her. When Deronda turned round to approach her
+again, he saw her face bent toward him, her eyes dilated, her lips parted.
+She was an image of timid forlorn beseeching--too timid to entreat in
+words while he kept himself aloof from her. Was she forsaken by him--now--
+already? But his eyes met hers sorrowfully--met hers for the first time
+fully since she had said, "You know I am a guilty woman," and that full
+glance in its intense mournfulness seemed to say, "I know it, but I shall
+all the less forsake you." He sat down by her side again in the same
+attitude--without turning his face toward her and without again taking her
+hand.
+
+Once more Gwendolen was pierced, as she had been by his face of sorrow at
+the Abbey, with a compunction less egoistic than that which urged her to
+confess, and she said, in a tone of loving regret--
+
+"I make you very unhappy."
+
+Deronda gave an indistinct "Oh," just shrinking together and changing his
+attitude a little, Then he had gathered resolution enough to say clearly,
+"There is no question of being happy or unhappy. What I most desire at
+this moment is what will most help you. Tell me all you feel it a relief
+to tell."
+
+Devoted as these words were, they widened his spiritual distance from her,
+and she felt it more difficult to speak: she had a vague need of getting
+nearer to that compassion which seemed to be regarding her from a halo of
+superiority, and the need turned into an impulse to humble herself more.
+She was ready to throw herself on her knees before him; but no--her
+wonderfully mixed consciousness held checks on that impulse, and she was
+kept silent and motionless by the pressure of opposing needs. Her
+stillness made Deronda at last say--
+
+"Perhaps you are too weary. Shall I go away, and come again whenever you
+wish it?"
+
+"No, no," said Gwendolen--the dread of his leaving her bringing back her
+power of speech. She went on with her low-toned eagerness, "I want to tell
+you what it was that came over me in that boat. I was full of rage at
+being obliged to go--full of rage--and I could do nothing but sit there
+like a galley slave. And then we got away--out of the port--into the deep
+--and everything was still--and we never looked at each other, only he
+spoke to order me--and the very light about me seemed to hold me a
+prisoner and force me to sit as I did. It came over me that when I was a
+child I used to fancy sailing away into a world where people were not
+forced to live with any one they did not like--I did not like my father-
+in-law to come home. And now, I thought, just the opposite had come to me.
+I had stepped into a boat, and my life was a sailing and sailing away--
+gliding on and no help--always into solitude with _him_, away from
+deliverance. And because I felt more helpless than ever, my thoughts went
+out over worse things--I longed for worse things--I had cruel wishes--I
+fancied impossible ways of--I did not want to die myself; I was afraid of
+our being drowned together. If it had been any use I should have prayed--I
+should have prayed that something might befall him. I should have prayed
+that he might sink out of my sight and leave me alone. I knew no way of
+killing hint there, but I did, I did kill him in my thoughts."
+
+She sank into silence for a minute, submerged by the weight of memory
+which no words could represent.
+
+"But yet, all the while I felt that I was getting more wicked. And what
+had been with me so much, came to me just then--what you once said--about
+dreading to increase my wrong-doing and my remorse--I should hope for
+nothing then. It was all like a writing of fire within me. Getting wicked
+was misery--being shut out forever from knowing what you--what better
+lives were. That had always been coming back to me then--but yet with a
+despair--a feeling that it was no use--evil wishes were too strong. I
+remember then letting go the tiller and saying 'God help me!' But then I
+was forced to take it again and go on; and the evil longings, the evil
+prayers came again and blotted everything else dim, till, in the midst of
+them--I don't know how it was--he was turning the sail--there was a gust--
+he was struck--I know nothing--I only know that I saw my wish outside me."
+
+She began to speak more hurriedly, and in more of a whisper.
+
+"I saw him sink, and my heart gave a leap as if it were going out of me. I
+think I did not move. I kept my hands tight. It was long enough for me to
+be glad, and yet to think it was no use--he would come up again. And he
+_was_ come--farther off--the boat had moved. It was all like lightning.
+'The rope!' he called out in a voice--not his own--I hear it now--and I
+stooped for the rope--I felt I must--I felt sure he could swim, and he
+would come back whether or not, and I dreaded him. That was in my mind--he
+would come back. But he was gone down again, and I had the rope in my
+hand--no, there he was again--his face above the water--and he cried
+again--and I held my hand, and my heart said, 'Die!'--and he sank; and I
+felt 'It is done--I am wicked, I am lost!--and I had the rope in my hand--
+I don't know what I thought--I was leaping away from myself--I would have
+saved him then. I was leaping from my crime, and there it was--close to me
+as I fell--there was the dead face--dead, dead. It can never be altered.
+That was what happened. That was what I did. You know it all. It can never
+be altered."
+
+She sank back in her chair, exhausted with the agitation of memory and
+speech. Deronda felt the burden on his spirit less heavy than the
+foregoing dread. The word "guilty" had held a possibility of
+interpretations worse than the fact; and Gwendolen's confession, for the
+very reason that her conscience made her dwell on the determining power of
+her evil thoughts, convinced him the more that there had been throughout a
+counterbalancing struggle of her better will. It seemed almost certain
+that her murderous thought had had no outward effect--that, quite apart
+from it, the death was inevitable. Still, a question as to the outward
+effectiveness of a criminal desire dominant enough to impel even a
+momentary act, cannot alter our judgment of the desire; and Deronda shrank
+from putting that question forward in the first instance. He held it
+likely that Gwendolen's remorse aggravated her inward guilt, and that she
+gave the character of decisive action to what had been an inappreciably
+instantaneous glance of desire. But her remorse was the precious sign of a
+recoverable nature; it was the culmination of that self-disapproval which
+had been the awakening of a new life within her; it marked her off from
+the criminals whose only regret is failure in securing their evil wish.
+Deronda could not utter one word to diminish that sacred aversion to her
+worst self--that thorn-pressure which must come with the crowning of the
+sorrowful better, suffering because of the worse. All this mingled thought
+and feeling kept him silent; speech was too momentous to be ventured on
+rashly. There were no words of comfort that did not carry some sacrilege.
+If he had opened his lips to speak, he could only have echoed, "It can
+never be altered--it remains unaltered, to alter other things." But he was
+silent and motionless--he did not know how long--before he turned to look
+at her, and saw her sunk back with closed eyes, like a lost, weary, storm-
+beaten white doe, unable to rise and pursue its unguided way. He rose and
+stood before her. The movement touched her consciousness, and she opened
+her eyes with a slight quivering that seemed like fear.
+
+"You must rest now. Try to rest: try to sleep. And may I see you again
+this evening--to-morrow--when you have had some rest? Let us say no more
+now."
+
+The tears came, and she could not answer except by a slight movement of
+the head. Deronda rang for attendance, spoke urgently of the necessity
+that she should be got to rest, and then left her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI
+
+ "The unripe grape, the ripe, and the dried. All things are changes,
+ not into nothing, but into that which is not at present."--MARCUS
+ AURELIUS.
+
+ Deeds are the pulse of Time, his beating life,
+ And righteous or unrighteous, being done,
+ Must throb in after-throbs till Time itself
+ Be laid in darkness, and the universe
+ Quiver and breathe upon no mirror more.
+
+
+In the evening she sent for him again. It was already near the hour at
+which she had been brought in from the sea the evening before, and the
+light was subdued enough with blinds drawn up and windows open. She was
+seated gazing fixedly on the sea, resting her cheek on her hand, looking
+less shattered than when he had left her, but with a deep melancholy in
+her expression which as Deronda approached her passed into an anxious
+timidity. She did not put out her hand, but said, "How long ago it is!"
+Then, "Will you sit near me again a little while?"
+
+He placed himself by her side as he had done before, and seeing that she
+turned to him with that indefinable expression which implies a wish to say
+something, he waited for her to speak. But again she looked toward the
+window silently, and again turned with the same expression, which yet did
+not issue in speech. There was some fear hindering her, and Deronda,
+wishing to relieve her timidity, averted his face. Presently he heard her
+cry imploringly--
+
+"You will not say that any one else should know?"
+
+"Most decidedly not," said Deronda. "There is no action that ought to be
+taken in consequence. There is no injury that could be righted in that
+way. There is no retribution that any mortal could apportion justly."
+
+She was so still during a pause that she seemed to be holding her breath
+before she said--
+
+"But if I had not had that murderous will--that moment--if I had thrown
+the rope on the instant--perhaps it would have hindered death?"
+
+"No--I think not," said Deronda, slowly. "If it were true that he could
+swim, he must have been seized with cramp. With your quickest, utmost
+effort, it seems impossible that you could have done anything to save him.
+That momentary murderous will cannot, I think, have altered the course of
+events. Its effect is confined to the motives in your own breast. Within
+ourselves our evil will is momentous, and sooner or later it works its way
+outside us--it may be in the vitiation that breeds evil acts, but also it
+may be in the self-abhorrence that stings us into better striving."
+
+"I am saved from robbing others--there are others--they will have
+everything--they will have what they ought to have. I knew that some time
+before I left town. You do not suspect me of wrong desires about those
+things?" She spoke hesitatingly.
+
+"I had not thought of them," said Deronda; "I was thinking too much of the
+other things."
+
+"Perhaps you don't quite know the beginning of it all," said Gwendolen,
+slowly, as if she were overcoming her reluctance. "There was some one else
+he ought to have married. And I knew it, and I told her I would not hinder
+it. And I went away--that was when you first saw me. But then we became
+poor all at once, and I was very miserable, and I was tempted. I thought,
+'I shall do as I like and make everything right.' I persuaded myself. And
+it was all different. It was all dreadful. Then came hatred and wicked
+thoughts. That was how it all came. I told you I was afraid of myself. And
+I did what you told me--I did try to make my fear a safeguard. I thought
+of what would be if I--I felt what would come--how I should dread the
+morning--wishing it would be always night--and yet in the darkness always
+seeing something--seeing death. If you did not know how miserable I was,
+you might--but now it has all been no use. I can care for nothing but
+saving the rest from knowing--poor mamma, who has never been happy."
+
+There was silence again before she said with a repressed sob--"You cannot
+bear to look at me any more. You think I am too wicked. You do not
+believe that I can become any better--worth anything--worthy enough--I
+shall always be too wicked to--" The voice broke off helpless.
+
+Deronda's heart was pierced. He turned his eyes on her poor beseeching
+face and said, "I believe that you may become worthier than you have ever
+yet been--worthy to lead a life that may be a blessing. No evil dooms us
+hopelessly except the evil we love, and desire to continue in, and make no
+effort to escape from. You _have_ made efforts--you will go on making
+them."
+
+"But you were the beginning of them. You must not forsake me," said
+Gwendolen, leaning with her clasped hands on the arm of her chair and
+looking at him, while her face bore piteous traces of the life-experience
+concentrated in the twenty-four hours--that new terrible life lying on the
+other side of the deed which fulfills a criminal desire. "I will bear any
+penance. I will lead any life you tell me. But you must not forsake me.
+You must be near. If you had been near me--if I could have said everything
+to you, I should have been different. You will not forsake me?"
+
+"It could never be my impulse to forsake you," said Deronda promptly, with
+that voice which, like his eyes, had the unintentional effect of making
+his ready sympathy seem more personal and special than it really was. And
+in that moment he was not himself quite free from a foreboding of some
+such self-committing effect. His strong feeling for this stricken creature
+could not hinder rushing images of future difficulty. He continued to meet
+her appealing eyes as he spoke, but it was with the painful consciousness
+that to her ear his words might carry a promise which one day would seem
+unfulfilled: he was making an indefinite promise to an indefinite hope.
+Anxieties, both immediate and distant, crowded on his thought, and it was
+under their influence that, after a moment's silence, he said--
+
+"I expect Sir Hugh Mallinger to arrive by to-morrow night at least; and I
+am not without hope that Mrs. Davilow may shortly follow him. Her presence
+will be the greatest comfort to you--it will give you a motive to save her
+from unnecessary pain?"
+
+"Yes, yes--I will try. And you will not go away?"
+
+"Not till after Sir Hugo has come."
+
+"But we shall all go to England?"
+
+"As soon as possible," said Deronda, not wishing to enter into
+particulars.
+
+Gwendolen looked toward the window again with an expression which seemed
+like a gradual awakening to new thoughts. The twilight was perceptibly
+deepening, but Deronda could see a movement in her eyes and hands such as
+accompanies a return of perception in one who has been stunned.
+
+"You will always be with Sir Hugo now!" she said presently, looking at
+him. "You will always live at the Abbey--or else at Diplow?"
+
+"I am quite uncertain where I shall live," said Deronda, coloring.
+
+She was warned by his changed color that she had spoken too rashly, and
+fell silent. After a little while she began, again looking away--
+
+"It is impossible to think how my life will go on. I think now it would be
+better for me to be poor and obliged to work."
+
+"New promptings will come as the days pass. When you are among your
+friends again, you will discern new duties," said Deronda. "Make it a task
+now to get as well and calm--as much like yourself as you can, before--"
+He hesitated.
+
+"Before my mother comes," said Gwendolen. "Ah! I must be changed. I have
+not looked at myself. Should you have known me," she added, turning toward
+him, "if you had met me now?--should you have known me for the one you saw
+at Leubronn?"
+
+"Yes, I should have known you," said Deronda, mournfully. "The outside
+change is not great. I should have seen at once that it was you, and that
+you had gone through some great sorrow."
+
+"Don't wish now that you had never seen me; don't wish that," said
+Gwendolen, imploringly, while the tears gathered.
+
+"I should despise myself for wishing it," said Deronda. "How could I know
+what I was wishing? We must find our duties in what comes to us, not in
+what we imagine might have been. If I took to foolish wishing of that
+sort, I should wish--not that I had never seen you, but that I had been
+able to save you from this."
+
+"You have saved me from worse," said Gwendolen, in a sobbing voice. "I
+should have been worse if it had not been for you. If you had not been
+good, I should have been more wicked than I am."
+
+"It will be better for me to go now," said Deronda, worn in spirit by the
+perpetual strain of this scene. "Remember what we said of your task--to
+get well and calm before other friends come."
+
+He rose as he spoke, and she gave him her hand submissively. But when he
+had left her she sank on her knees, in hysterical crying. The distance
+between them was too great. She was a banished soul--beholding a possible
+life which she had sinned herself away from.
+
+She was found in this way, crushed on the floor. Such grief seemed natural
+in a poor lady whose husband had been drowned in her presence.
+
+
+
+
+BOOK VIII.--FRUIT AND SEED.
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII.
+
+
+ "Much adoe there was, God wot;
+ He wold love and she wold not."
+ --NICHOLAS BRETON.
+
+
+Extension, we know, is a very imperfect measure of things; and the length
+of the sun's journeying can no more tell us how life has advanced than the
+acreage of a field can tell us what growths may be active within it. A man
+may go south, and, stumbling over a bone, may meditate upon it till he has
+found a new starting-point for anatomy; or eastward, and discover a new
+key to language telling a new story of races; or he may head an expedition
+that opens new continental pathways, get himself mained in body, and go
+through a whole heroic poem of resolve and endurance; and at the end of a
+few months he may come back to find his neighbors grumbling at the same
+parish grievance as before, or to see the same elderly gentleman treading
+the pavement in discourse with himself, shaking his head after the same
+percussive butcher's boy, and pausing at the same shop-window to look at
+the same prints. If the swiftest thinking has about the pace of a
+greyhound, the slowest must be supposed to move, like the limpet, by an
+apparent sticking, which after a good while is discerned to be a slight
+progression. Such differences are manifest in the variable intensity which
+we call human experience, from the revolutionary rush of change which
+makes a new inner and outer life, to that quiet recurrence of the
+familiar, which has no other epochs than those of hunger and the heavens.
+
+Something of this contrast was seen in the year's experience which had
+turned the brilliant, self-confident Gwendolen Harleth of the Archery
+Meeting into the crushed penitent impelled to confess her unworthiness
+where it would have been her happiness to be held worthy; while it had
+left her family in Pennicote without deeper change than that of some
+outward habits, and some adjustment of prospects and intentions to reduced
+income, fewer visits, and fainter compliments. The rectory was as pleasant
+a home as before: and the red and pink peonies on the lawn, the rows of
+hollyhocks by the hedges, had bloomed as well this year as last: the
+rector maintained his cheerful confidence in the good will of patrons and
+his resolution to deserve it by diligence in the fulfillment of his
+duties, whether patrons were likely to hear of it or not; doing nothing
+solely with an eye to promotion except, perhaps, the writing of two
+ecclesiastical articles, which having no signature, were attributed to
+some one else, except by the patrons who had a special copy sent them, and
+these certainly knew the author but did not read the articles. The rector,
+however, chewed no poisonous cud of suspicion on this point: he made
+marginal notes on his own copies to render them a more interesting loan,
+and was gratified that the Archdeacon and other authorities had nothing to
+say against the general tenor of his argument. Peaceful authorship!--
+living in the air of the fields and downs, and not in the thrice-breathed
+breath of criticism--bringing no Dantesque leanness; rather, assisting
+nutrition by complacency, and perhaps giving a more suffusive sense of
+achievement than the production of a whole _Divina Commedia_. Then there
+was the father's recovered delight in his favorite son, which was a
+happiness outweighing the loss of eighteen hundred a year. Of whatever
+nature might be the hidden change wrought in Rex by the disappointment of
+his first love, it was apparently quite secondary to that evidence of more
+serious ambition which dated from the family misfortune; indeed, Mr.
+Gascoigne was inclined to regard the little affair which had caused him so
+much anxiety the year before as an evaporation of superfluous moisture, a
+kind of finish to the baking process which the human dough demands. Rex
+had lately come down for a summer visit to the rectory, bringing Anna
+home, and while he showed nearly the old liveliness with his brothers and
+sisters, he continued in his holiday the habits of the eager student,
+rising early in the morning and shutting himself up early in the evenings
+to carry on a fixed course of study.
+
+"You don't repent the choice of the law as a profession, Rex?" said his
+father.
+
+"There is no profession I would choose before it," said Rex. "I should
+like to end my life as a first-rate judge, and help to draw up a code. I
+reverse the famous dictum. I should say, 'Give me something to do with
+making the laws, and let who will make the songs.'"
+
+"You will have to stow in an immense amount of rubbish, I suppose--that's
+the worst of it," said the rector.
+
+"I don't see that law-rubbish is worse than any other sort. It is not so
+bad as the rubbishy literature that people choke their minds with. It
+doesn't make one so dull. Our wittiest men have often been lawyers. Any
+orderly way of looking at things as cases and evidence seems to me better
+than a perpetual wash of odds and ends bearing on nothing in particular.
+And then, from a higher point of view, the foundations and the growth of
+law make the most interesting aspects of philosophy and history. Of course
+there will be a good deal that is troublesome, drudging, perhaps
+exasperating. But the great prizes in life can't be won easily--I see
+that."
+
+"Well, my boy, the best augury of a man's success in his profession is
+that he thinks it the finest in the world. But I fancy it so with most
+work when a man goes into it with a will. Brewitt, the blacksmith, said to
+me the other day that his 'prentice had no mind to his trade; 'and yet,
+sir,' said Brewitt, 'what would a young fellow have if he doesn't like the
+blacksmithing?"
+
+The rector cherished a fatherly delight, which he allowed to escape him
+only in moderation. Warham, who had gone to India, he had easily borne
+parting with, but Rex was that romance of later life which a man sometimes
+finds in a son whom he recognizes as superior to himself, picturing a
+future eminence for him according to a variety of famous examples. It was
+only to his wife that he said with decision: "Rex will be a distinguished
+man, Nancy, I am sure of it--as sure as Paley's father was about his son."
+
+"Was Paley an old bachelor?" said Mrs. Gascoigne.
+
+"That is hardly to the point, my dear," said the rector, who did not
+remember that irrelevant detail. And Mrs. Gascoigne felt that she had
+spoken rather weakly.
+
+This quiet trotting of time at the rectory was shared by the group who had
+exchanged the faded dignity of Offendene for the low white house not a
+mile off, well enclosed with evergreens, and known to the villagers, as
+"Jodson's." Mrs. Davilow's delicate face showed only a slight deepening of
+its mild melancholy, her hair only a few more silver lines, in consequence
+of the last year's trials; the four girls had bloomed out a little from
+being less in the shade; and the good Jocosa preserved her serviceable
+neutrality toward the pleasures and glories of the world as things made
+for those who were not "in a situation."
+
+The low narrow drawing-room, enlarged by two quaint projecting windows,
+with lattices wide open on a July afternoon to the scent of monthly roses,
+the faint murmurs of the garden, and the occasional rare sound of hoofs
+and wheels seeming to clarify the succeeding silence, made rather a
+crowded, lively scene, Rex and Anna being added to the usual group of six.
+Anna, always a favorite with her younger cousins, had much to tell of her
+new experience, and the acquaintances she had made in London, and when on
+her first visit she came alone, many questions were asked her about
+Gwendolen's house in Grosvenor Square, what Gwendolen herself had said,
+and what any one else had said about Gwendolen. Had Anna been to see
+Gwendolen after she had known about the yacht? No:--an answer which left
+speculation free concerning everything connected with that interesting
+unknown vessel beyond the fact that Gwendolen had written just before she
+set out to say that Mr. Grandcourt and she were going yachting on the
+Mediterranean, and again from Marseilles to say that she was sure to like
+the yachting, the cabins were very elegant, and she would probably not
+send another letter till she had written quite a long diary filled with
+_dittos_. Also, this movement of Mr. and Mrs. Grandcourt had been
+mentioned in "the newspaper;" so that altogether this new phase of
+Gwendolen's exalted life made a striking part of the sisters' romance, the
+book-devouring Isabel throwing in a corsair or two to make an adventure
+that might end well.
+
+But when Rex was present, the girls, according to instructions, never
+started this fascinating topic, and to-day there had only been animated
+descriptions of the Meyricks and their extraordinary Jewish friends, which
+caused some astonished questioning from minds to which the idea of live
+Jews, out of a book, suggested a difference deep enough to be almost
+zoological, as of a strange race in Pliny's Natural History that might
+sleep under the shade of its own ears. Bertha could not imagine what Jews
+believed now; and she had a dim idea that they rejected the Old Testament
+since it proved the New; Miss Merry thought that Mirah and her brother
+could "never have been properly argued with," and the amiable Alice did
+not mind what the Jews believed, she was sure she "couldn't bear them."
+Mrs. Davilow corrected her by saying that the great Jewish families who
+were in society were quite what they ought to be both in London and Paris,
+but admitted that the commoner unconverted Jews were objectionable; and
+Isabel asked whether Mirah talked just as they did, or whether you might
+be with her and not find out that she was a Jewess.
+
+Rex, who had no partisanship with the Israelites, having made a
+troublesome acquaintance with the minutiae of their ancient history in the
+form of "cram," was amusing himself by playfully exaggerating the notion
+of each speaker, while Anna begged them all to understand that he was only
+joking, when the laughter was interrupted by the bringing in of a letter
+for Mrs. Davilow. A messenger had run with it in great haste from the
+rectory. It enclosed a telegram, and as Mrs. Davilow read and re-read it
+in silence and agitation, all eyes were turned on her with anxiety, but no
+one dared to speak. Looking up at last and seeing the young faces "painted
+with fear," she remembered that they might be imagining something worse
+than the truth, something like her own first dread which made her unable
+to understand what was written, and she said, with a sob which was half
+relief--
+
+"My dears, Mr. Grandcourt--" She paused an instant, and then began again,
+"Mr. Grandcourt is drowned."
+
+Rex started up as if a missile had been suddenly thrown into the room. He
+could not help himself, and Anna's first look was at him. But then,
+gathering some self-command while Mrs. Davilow was reading what the rector
+had written on the enclosing paper, he said--
+
+"Can I do anything, aunt? Can I carry any word to my father from you?"
+
+"Yes, dear. Tell him I will be ready--he is very good. He says he will go
+with me to Genoa--he will be here at half-past six. Jocosa and Alice, help
+me to get ready. She is safe--Gwendolen is safe--but she must be ill. I am
+sure she must be very ill. Rex, dear--Rex and Anna--go and and tell your
+father I will be quite ready. I would not for the world lose another
+night. And bless him for being ready so soon. I can travel night and day
+till we get there."
+
+Rex and Anna hurried away through the sunshine which was suddenly solemn
+to them, without uttering a word to each other: she chiefly possessed by
+solicitude about any reopening of his wound, he struggling with a
+tumultuary crowd of thoughts that were an offence against his better will.
+The tumult being undiminished when they were at the rectory gate, he
+said--
+
+"Nannie, I will leave you to say everything to my father. If he wants me
+immediately, let me know. I shall stay in the shrubbery for ten minutes--
+only ten minutes."
+
+Who has been quite free from egoistic escapes of the imagination,
+picturing desirable consequences on his own future in the presence of
+another's misfortune, sorrow, or death? The expected promotion or legacy
+is the common type of a temptation which makes speech and even prayer a
+severe avoidance of the most insistent thoughts, and sometimes raises an
+inward shame, a self-distaste that is worse than any other form of
+unpleasant companionship. In Rex's nature the shame was immediate, and
+overspread like an ugly light all the hurrying images of what might come,
+which thrust themselves in with the idea that Gwendolen was again free--
+overspread them, perhaps, the more persistently because every phantasm of
+a hope was quickly nullified by a more substantial obstacle. Before the
+vision of "Gwendolen free" rose the impassable vision of "Gwendolen rich,
+exalted, courted;" and if in the former time, when both their lives were
+fresh, she had turned from his love with repugnance, what ground was there
+for supposing that her heart would be more open to him in the future?
+
+These thoughts, which he wanted to master and suspend, were like a
+tumultuary ringing of opposing chimes that he could not escape from by
+running. During the last year he had brought himself into a state of calm
+resolve, and now it seemed that three words had been enough to undo all
+that difficult work, and cast him back into the wretched fluctuations of a
+longing which he recognized as simply perturbing and hopeless. And at this
+moment the activity of such longing had an untimeliness that made it
+repulsive to his better self. Excuse poor Rex; it was not much more than
+eighteen months since he had been laid low by an archer who sometimes
+touches his arrow with a subtle, lingering poison. The disappointment of a
+youthful passion has effects as incalculable as those of small-pox which
+may make one person plain and a genius, another less plain and more
+foolish, another plain without detriment to his folly, and leave perhaps
+the majority without obvious change. Everything depends--not on the mere
+fact of disappointment, but--on the nature affected and the force that
+stirs it. In Rex's well-endowed nature, brief as the hope had been, the
+passionate stirring had gone deep, and the effect of disappointment was
+revolutionary, though fraught with a beneficent new order which retained
+most of the old virtues; in certain respects he believed that it had
+finally determined the bias and color of his life. Now, however, it seemed
+that his inward peace was hardly more than that of republican Florence,
+and his heart no better than the alarm-bell that made work slack and
+tumult busy.
+
+Rex's love had been of that sudden, penetrating, clinging sort which the
+ancients knew and sung, and in singing made a fashion of talk for many
+moderns whose experience has by no means a fiery, demonic character. To
+have the consciousness suddenly steeped with another's personality, to
+have the strongest inclinations possessed by an image which retains its
+dominance in spite of change and apart from worthiness--nay, to feel a
+passion which clings faster for the tragic pangs inflicted by a cruel,
+reorganized unworthiness--is a phase of love which in the feeble and
+common-minded has a repulsive likeness to his blind animalism insensible
+to the higher sway of moral affinity or heaven-lit admiration. But when
+this attaching force is present in a nature not of brutish
+unmodifiableness, but of a human dignity that can risk itself safely, it
+may even result in a devotedness not unfit to be called divine in a higher
+sense than the ancient. Phlegmatic rationality stares and shakes its head
+at these unaccountable prepossessions, but they exist as undeniably as the
+winds and waves, determining here a wreck and there a triumphant voyage.
+
+This sort of passion had nested in the sweet-natured, strong Rex, and he
+had made up his mind to its companionship, as if it had been an object
+supremely dear, stricken dumb and helpless, and turning all the future of
+tenderness into a shadow of the past. But he had also made up his mind
+that his life was not to be pauperized because he had had to renounce one
+sort of joy; rather, he had begun life again with a new counting-up of the
+treasures that remained to him, and he had even felt a release of power
+such as may come from ceasing to be afraid of your own neck.
+
+And now, here he was pacing the shrubbery, angry with himself that the
+sense of irrevocableness in his lot, which ought in reason to have been as
+strong as ever, had been shaken by a change of circumstances that could
+make no change in relation to him. He told himself the truth quite
+roughly--
+
+"She would never love me; and that is not the question--I could never
+approach her as a lover in her present position. I am exactly of no
+consequence at all, and am not likely to be of much consequence till my
+head is turning gray. But what has that to do with it? She would not have
+me on any terms, and I would not ask her. It is a meanness to be thinking
+about it now--no better than lurking about the battle-field to strip the
+dead; but there never was more gratuitous sinning. I have nothing to gain
+there--absolutely nothing. * * * Then why can't I face the facts, and
+behave as they demand, instead of leaving my father to suppose that there
+are matters he can't speak to me about, though I might be useful in them?"
+
+The last thought made one wave with the impulse that sent Rex walking
+firmly into the house and through the open door of the study, where he saw
+his father packing a traveling-desk.
+
+"Can I be of any use, sir?" said Rex, with rallied courage, as his father
+looked up at him.
+
+"Yes, my boy; when I'm gone, just see to my letters, and answer where
+necessary, and send me word of everything. Dymock will manage the parish
+very well, and you will stay with your mother, or, at least, go up and
+down again, till I come back, whenever that may be."
+
+"You will hardly be very long, sir, I suppose," said Rex, beginning to
+strap a railway rug. "You will perhaps bring my cousin back to England?"
+He forced himself to speak of Gwendolen for the first time, and the rector
+noticed the epoch with satisfaction.
+
+"That depends," he answered, taking the subject as a matter-of-course
+between them. "Perhaps her mother may stay there with her, and I may come
+back very soon. This telegram leaves us in ignorance which is rather
+anxious. But no doubt the arrangements of the will lately made are
+satisfactory, and there may possibly be an heir yet to be born. In any
+case, I feel confident that Gwendolen will be liberally--I should expect,
+splendidly--provided for."
+
+"It must have been a great shock for her," said Rex, getting more resolute
+after the first twinge had been borne. "I suppose he was a devoted
+husband."
+
+"No doubt of it," said the rector, in his most decided manner. "Few men of
+his position would have come forward as he did under the circumstances."
+
+Rex had never seen Grandcourt, had never been spoken to about him by any
+one of the family, and knew nothing of Gwendolen's flight from her suitor
+to Leubronn. He only knew that Grandcourt, being very much in love with
+her, had made her an offer in the first weeks of her sudden poverty, and
+had behaved very handsomely in providing for her mother and sisters. That
+was all very natural and what Rex himself would have liked to do.
+Grandcourt had been a lucky fellow, and had had some happiness before he
+got drowned. Yet Rex wondered much whether Gwendolen had been in love with
+the successful suitor, or had only forborne to tell him that she hated
+being made love to.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX.
+
+ "I count myself in nothing else so happy
+ As in a soul remembering my good friends."
+ --SHAKESPEARE.
+
+
+Sir Hugo Mallinger was not so prompt in starting for Genoa as Mr.
+Gascoigne had been, and Deronda on all accounts would not take his
+departure until he had seen the baronet. There was not only Grandcourt's
+death, but also the late crisis in his own life to make reasons why his
+oldest friend would desire to have the unrestrained communication of
+speech with him, for in writing he had not felt able to give any details
+concerning the mother who had come and gone like an apparition. It was not
+till the fifth evening that Deronda, according to telegram, waited for Sir
+Hugo at the station, where he was to arrive between eight and nine; and
+while he was looking forward to the sight of the kind, familiar face,
+which was part of his earliest memories, something like a smile, in spite
+of his late tragic experience, might have been detected in his eyes and
+the curve of his lips at the idea of Sir Hugo's pleasure in being now
+master of his estates, able to leave them to his daughters, or at least--
+according to a view of inheritance which had just been strongly impressed
+on Deronda's imagination--to take makeshift feminine offspring as
+intermediate to a satisfactory heir in a grandson. We should be churlish
+creatures if we could have no joy in our fellow-mortals' joy, unless it
+were in agreement with our theory of righteous distribution and our
+highest ideal of human good: what sour corners our mouths would get--our
+eyes, what frozen glances! and all the while our own possessions and
+desires would not exactly adjust themselves to our ideal. We must have
+some comradeship with imperfection; and it is, happily, possible to feel
+gratitude even where we discern a mistake that may have been injurious,
+the vehicle of the mistake being an affectionate intention prosecuted
+through a life-time of kindly offices. Deronda's feeling and judgment were
+strongly against the action of Sir Hugo in making himself the agent of a
+falsity--yes, a falsity: he could give no milder name to the concealment
+under which he had been reared. But the baronet had probably had no clear
+knowledge concerning the mother's breach of trust, and with his light,
+easy way of taking life, had held it a reasonable preference in her that
+her son should be made an English gentleman, seeing that she had the
+eccentricity of not caring to part from her child, and be to him as if she
+were not. Daniel's affectionate gratitude toward Sir Hugo made him wish to
+find grounds of excuse rather than blame; for it is as possible to be
+rigid in principle and tender in blame, as it is to suffer from the sight
+of things hung awry, and yet to be patient with the hanger who sees amiss.
+If Sir Hugo in his bachelorhood had been beguiled into regarding children
+chiefly as a product intended to make life more agreeable to the full-
+grown, whose convenience alone was to be consulted in the disposal of
+them--why, he had shared an assumption which, if not formally avowed, was
+massively acted on at that date of the world's history; and Deronda, with
+all his keen memory of the painful inward struggle he had gone through in
+his boyhood, was able also to remember the many signs that his experience
+had been entirely shut out from Sir Hugo's conception. Ignorant kindness
+may have the effect of cruelty; but to be angry with it as if it were
+direct cruelty would be an ignorant _un_kindness, the most remote from
+Deronda's large imaginative lenience toward others. And perhaps now, after
+the searching scenes of the last ten days, in which the curtain had been
+lifted for him from the secrets of lives unlike his own, he was more than
+ever disposed to check that rashness of indignation or resentment which
+has an unpleasant likeness to the love of punishing. When he saw Sir
+Hugo's familiar figure descending from the railway carriage, the life-long
+affection which had been well accustomed to make excuses, flowed in and
+submerged all newer knowledge that might have seemed fresh ground for
+blame.
+
+"Well, Dan," said Sir Hugo, with a serious fervor, grasping Deronda's
+hand. He uttered no other words of greeting; there was too strong a rush
+of mutual consciousness. The next thing was to give orders to the courier,
+and then to propose walking slowly in, the mild evening, there being no
+hurry to get to the hotel.
+
+"I have taken my journey easily, and am in excellent condition," he said,
+as he and Deronda came out under the starlight, which was still faint with
+the lingering sheen of day. "I didn't hurry in setting off, because I
+wanted to inquire into things a little, and so I got sight of your letter
+to Lady Mallinger before I started. But now, how is the widow?"
+
+"Getting calmer," said Deronda. "She seems to be escaping the bodily
+illness that one might have feared for her, after her plunge and terrible
+excitement. Her uncle and mother came two days ago, and she is being well
+taken care of."
+
+"Any prospect of an heir being born?"
+
+"From what Mr. Gascoigne said to me, I conclude not. He spoke as if it
+were a question whether the widow would have the estates for her life."
+
+"It will not be much of a wrench to her affections, I fancy, this loss of
+the husband?" said Sir Hugo, looking round at Deronda.
+
+"The suddenness of the death has been a great blow to her," said Deronda,
+quietly evading the question.
+
+"I wonder whether Grandcourt gave her any notion what were the provisions
+of his will?" said Sir Hugo.
+
+"Do you know what they are, sir?" parried Deronda.
+
+"Yes, I do," said the baronet, quickly. "Gad! if there is no prospect of a
+legitimate heir, he has left everything to a boy he had by a Mrs. Glasher;
+you know nothing about the affair, I suppose, but she was a sort of wife
+to him for a good many years, and there are three older children--girls.
+The boy is to take his father's name; he is Henleigh already, and he is to
+be Henleigh Mallinger Grandcourt. The Mallinger will be of no use to him,
+I am happy to say; but the young dog will have more than enough with his
+fourteen years' minority--no need to have had holes filled up with my
+fifty thousand for Diplow that he had no right to: and meanwhile my
+beauty, the young widow, is to put up with a poor two thousand a year and
+the house at Gadsmere--a nice kind of banishment for her if she chose to
+shut herself up there, which I don't think she will. The boy's mother has
+been living there of late years. I'm perfectly disgusted with Grandcourt.
+I don't know that I'm obliged to think the better of him because he's
+drowned, though, so far as my affairs are concerned, nothing in his life
+became him like the leaving it."
+
+"In my opinion he did wrong when he married this wife--not in leaving his
+estates to the son," said Deronda, rather dryly.
+
+"I say nothing against his leaving the land to the lad," said Sir Hugo;
+"but since he had married this girl he ought to have given her a handsome
+provision, such as she could live on in a style fitted to the rank he had
+raised her to. She ought to have had four or five thousand a year and the
+London house for her life; that's what I should have done for her. I
+suppose, as she was penniless, her friends couldn't stand out for a
+settlement, else it's ill trusting to the will a man may make after he's
+married. Even a wise man generally lets some folly ooze out of him in his
+will--my father did, I know; and if a fellow has any spite or tyranny in
+him, he's likely to bottle off a good deal for keeping in that sort of
+document. It's quite clear Grandcourt meant that his death should put an
+extinguisher on his wife, if she bore him no heir."
+
+"And, in the other case, I suppose everything would have been reversed--
+illegitimacy would have had the extinguisher?" said Deronda, with some
+scorn.
+
+"Precisely--Gadsmere and the two thousand. It's queer. One nuisance is
+that Grandcourt has made me an executor; but seeing he was the son of my
+only brother, I can't refuse to act. And I shall mind it less if I can be
+of any use to the widow. Lush thinks she was not in ignorance about the
+family under the rose, and the purport of the will. He hints that there
+was no very good understanding between the couple. But I fancy you are the
+man who knew most about what Mrs. Grandcourt felt or did not feel--eh,
+Dan?" Sir Hugo did not put this question with his usual jocoseness, but
+rather with a lowered tone of interested inquiry; and Deronda felt that
+any evasion would be misinterpreted. He answered gravely--
+
+"She was certainly not happy. They were unsuited to each other. But as to
+the disposal of the property--from all I have seen of her, I should
+predict that she will be quite contented with it."
+
+"Then she is not much like the rest of her sex; that's all I can say,"
+said Sir Hugo, with a slight shrug. "However, she ought to be something
+extraordinary, for there must be an entanglement between your horoscope
+and hers--eh? When that tremendous telegram came, the first thing Lady
+Mallinger said was, 'How very strange that it should be Daniel who sends
+it!' But I have had something of the same sort in my own life. I was once
+at a foreign hotel where a lady had been left by her husband without
+money. When I heard of it, and came forward to help her, who should she be
+but an early flame of mine, who had been fool enough to marry an Austrian
+baron with a long mustache and short affection? But it was an affair of my
+own that called me there--nothing to do with knight-errantry, any more
+than you coming to Genoa had to do with the Grandcourts."
+
+There was silence for a little while. Sir Hugo had begun to talk of the
+Grandcourts as the less difficult subject between himself and Deronda; but
+they were both wishing to overcome a reluctance to perfect frankness on
+the events which touched their relation to each other. Deronda felt that
+his letter, after the first interview with his mother, had been rather a
+thickening than a breaking of the ice, and that he ought to wait for the
+first opening to come from Sir Hugo. Just when they were about to lose
+sight of the port, the baronet turned, and pausing as if to get a last
+view, said in a tone of more serious feeling--"And about the main
+business of your coming to Genoa, Dan? You have not been deeply pained by
+anything you have learned, I hope? There is nothing that you feel need
+change your position in any way? You know, whatever happens to you must
+always be of importance to me."
+
+"I desire to meet your goodness by perfect confidence, sir," said Deronda.
+"But I can't answer those questions truly by a simple yes or no. Much that
+I have heard about the past has pained me. And it has been a pain to meet
+and part with my mother in her suffering state, as I have been compelled
+to do, But it is no pain--it is rather a clearing up of doubts for which I
+am thankful, to know my parentage. As to the effect on my position, there
+will be no change in my gratitude to you, sir, for the fatherly care and
+affection you have always shown me. But to know that I was born a Jew, may
+have a momentous influence on my life, which I am hardly able to tell you
+of at present."
+
+Deronda spoke the last sentence with a resolve that overcame some
+diffidence. He felt that the differences between Sir Hugo's nature and his
+own would have, by-and-by, to disclose themselves more markedly than had
+ever yet been needful. The baronet gave him a quick glance, and turned to
+walk on. After a few moments' silence, in which he had reviewed all the
+material in his memory which would enable him to interpret Deronda's
+words, he said--
+
+"I have long expected something remarkable from you, Dan; but, for God's
+sake, don't go into any eccentricities! I can tolerate any man's
+difference of opinion, but let him tell it me without getting himself up
+as a lunatic. At this stage of the world, if a man wants to be taken
+seriously, he must keep clear of melodrama. Don't misunderstand me. I am
+not suspecting you of setting up any lunacy on your own account. I only
+think you might easily be led arm in arm with a lunatic, especially if he
+wanted defending. You have a passion for people who are pelted, Dan. I'm
+sorry for them too; but so far as company goes, it's a bad ground of
+selection. However, I don't ask you to anticipate your inclination in
+anything you have to tell me. When you make up your mind to a course that
+requires money, I have some sixteen thousand pounds that have been
+accumulating for you over and above what you have been having the interest
+of as income. And now I am come, I suppose you want to get back to England
+as soon as you can?"
+
+"I must go first to Mainz to get away a chest of my grandfather's, and
+perhaps to see a friend of his," said Deronda. "Although the chest has
+been lying there these twenty years, I have an unreasonable sort of
+nervous eagerness to get it away under my care, as if it were more likely
+now than before that something might happen to it. And perhaps I am the
+more uneasy, because I lingered after my mother left, instead of setting
+out immediately. Yet I can't regret that I was here--else Mrs. Grandcourt
+would have had none but servants to act for her."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Sir Hugo, with a flippancy which was an escape of some
+vexation hidden under his more serious speech; "I hope you are not going
+to set a dead Jew above a living Christian."
+
+Deronda colored, and repressed a retort. They were just turning into the
+_Italia_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LX.
+
+ "But I shall say no more of this at this time; for this is to be felt
+ and not to be talked of; and they who never touched it with their
+ fingers may secretly perhaps laugh at it in their hearts and be never
+ the wiser."--JEREMY TAYLOR.
+
+ The Roman Emperor in the legend put to death ten learned Israelites to
+ avenge the sale of Joseph by his brethren. And there have always been
+ enough of his kidney, whose piety lies in punishing who can see the
+ justice of grudges but not of gratitude. For you shall never convince
+ the stronger feeling that it hath not the stronger reason, or incline
+ him who hath no love to believe that there is good ground for loving.
+ As we may learn from the order of word-making, wherein _love_
+ precedeth _lovable_.
+
+
+When Deronda presented his letter at the banking-house in the _Schuster
+Strasse_ at Mainz, and asked for Joseph Kalonymos, he was presently shown
+into an inner room, where, seated at a table arranging open letters, was
+the white-bearded man whom he had seen the year before in the synagogue at
+Frankfort. He wore his hat--it seemed to be the same old felt hat as
+before--and near him was a packed portmanteau with a wrap and overcoat
+upon it. On seeing Deronda enter he rose, but did not advance or put out
+his hand. Looking at him with small penetrating eyes which glittered like
+black gems in the midst of his yellowish face and white hair, he said in
+German--
+
+"Good! It is now you who seek me, young man."
+
+"Yes; I seek you with gratitude, as a friend of my grandfather's," said
+Deronda, "and I am under an obligation to you for giving yourself much
+trouble on my account." He spoke without difficulty in that liberal German
+tongue which takes many strange accents to its maternal bosom.
+
+Kalonymos now put out his hand and said cordially, "So you are no longer
+angry at being something more than an Englishman?"
+
+"On the contrary. I thank you heartily for helping to save me from
+remaining in ignorance of my parentage, and for taking care of the chest
+that my grandfather left in trust for me."
+
+"Sit down, sit down," said Kalonymos, in a quick undertone, seating
+himself again, and pointing to a chair near him. Then deliberately laying
+aside his hat and showing a head thickly covered, with white hair, he
+stroked and clutched his beard while he looked examiningly at the young
+face before him. The moment wrought strongly on Deronda's imaginative
+susceptibility: in the presence of one linked still in zealous friendship
+with the grandfather whose hope had yearned toward him when he was unborn,
+and who, though dead, was yet to speak with him in those written memorials
+which, says Milton, "contain a potency of life in them to be as active as
+that soul whose progeny they are," he seemed to himself to be touching the
+electric chain of his own ancestry; and he bore the scrutinizing look of
+Kalonymos with a delighted awe, something like what one feels in the
+solemn commemoration of acts done long ago but still telling markedly on
+the life of to-day. Impossible for men of duller, fibre--men whose
+affection is not ready to diffuse itself through the wide travel of
+imagination, to comprehend, perhaps even to credit this sensibility of
+Deronda's; but it subsisted, like their own dullness, notwithstanding
+their lack of belief in it--and it gave his face an expression which
+seemed very satisfactory to the observer.
+
+He said in Hebrew, quoting from one of the fine hymns in the Hebrew
+liturgy, "As thy goodness has been great to the former generations, even
+so may it be to the latter." Then after pausing a little he began, "Young
+man, I rejoice that I was not yet set off again on my travels, and that
+you are come in time for me to see the image of my friend as he was in his
+youth--no longer perverted from the fellowship of your people--no longer
+shrinking in proud wrath from the touch of him who seemed to be claiming
+you as a Jew. You come with thankfulness yourself to claim the kindred and
+heritage that wicked contrivance would have robbed you of. You come with a
+willing soul to declare, 'I am the grandson of Daniel Charisi.' Is it not
+so?"
+
+"Assuredly it is," said Deronda. "But let me say that I should at no time
+have been inclined to treat a Jew with incivility simply because he was a
+Jew. You can understand that I shrank from saying to a stranger, 'I know
+nothing of my mother.'"
+
+"A sin, a sin!" said Kalonymos, putting up his hand and closing his eyes
+in disgust. "A robbery of our people--as when our youths and maidens were
+reared for the Roman Edom. But it is frustrated. I have frustrated it.
+When Daniel Charisi--may his Rock and his Redeemer guard him!--when Daniel
+Charisi was a stripling and I was a lad little above his shoulder, we made
+a solemn vow always to be friends. He said, 'Let us bind ourselves with
+duty, as if we were sons of the same mother.' That was his bent from first
+to last--as he said, to fortify his soul with bonds. It was a saying of
+his, 'Let us bind love with duty; for duty is the love of law; and law is
+the nature of the Eternal.' So we bound ourselves. And though we were much
+apart in our later life, the bond has never been broken. When he was dead,
+they sought to rob him; but they could not rob him of me. I rescued that
+remainder of him which he had prized and preserved for his offspring. And
+I have restored to him the offspring they had robbed him of. I will bring
+you the chest forthwith."
+
+Kalonymos left the room for a few minutes, and returned with a clerk who
+carried the chest, set it down on the floor, drew off a leather cover, and
+went out again. It was not very large, but was made heavy by ornamental
+bracers and handles of gilt iron. The wood was beautifully incised with
+Arabic lettering.
+
+"So!" said Kalonymos, returning to his seat. "And here is the curious
+key," he added, taking it from a small leathern bag. "Bestow it carefully.
+I trust you are methodic and wary." He gave Deronda the monitory and
+slightly suspicious look with which age is apt to commit any object to the
+keeping of youth.
+
+"I shall be more careful of this than of any other property," said
+Deronda, smiling and putting the key in his breast-pocket. "I never before
+possessed anything that was a sign to me of so much cherished hope and
+effort. And I shall never forget that the effort was partly yours. Have
+you time to tell me more of my grandfather? Or shall I be trespassing in
+staying longer?"
+
+"Stay yet a while. In an hour and eighteen minutes I start for Trieste,"
+said Kalonymos, looking at his watch, "and presently my sons will expect my
+attention. Will you let me make you known to them, so that they may have
+the pleasure of showing hospitality to my friend's grandson? They dwell
+here in ease and luxury, though I choose to be a wanderer."
+
+"I shall be glad if you will commend me to their acquaintance for some
+future opportunity," said Deronda. "There are pressing claims calling me
+to England--friends who may be much in need of my presence. I have been
+kept away from them too long by unexpected circumstances. But to know more
+of you and your family would be motive enough to bring me again to Mainz."
+
+"Good! Me you will hardly find, for I am beyond my threescore years and
+ten, and I am a wanderer, carrying my shroud with me. But my sons and
+their children dwell here in wealth and unity. The days are changed for us
+since Karl the Great fetched my ancestors from Italy to bring some
+tincture of knowledge to our rough German brethren. I and my
+contemporaries have had to fight for it too. Our youth fell on evil days;
+but this we have won; we increase our wealth in safety, and the learning
+of all Germany is fed and fattened by Jewish brains--though they keep not
+always their Jewish hearts. Have you been left altogether ignorant of your
+people's life, young man?"
+
+"No," said Deronda, "I have lately, before I had any true suspicion of my
+parentage, been led to study everything belonging to their history with
+more interest than any other subject. It turns out that I have been making
+myself ready to understand my grandfather a little." He was anxious less
+the time should be consumed before this circuitous course of talk could
+lead them back to the topic he most cared about. Age does not easily
+distinguish between what it needs to express and what youth needs to know-
+distance seeming to level the objects of memory; and keenly active as
+Joseph Kalonymos showed himself, an inkstand in the wrong place would have
+hindered his imagination from getting to Beyrout: he had been used to
+unite restless travel with punctilious observation. But Deronda's last
+sentence answered its purpose.
+
+"So-you would perhaps have been such a man as he if your education had not
+hindered; for you are like him in features:--yet not altogether, young
+man. He had an iron will in his face: it braced up everybody about him.
+When he was quite young he had already got one deep upright line in his
+brow. I see none of that in you. Daniel Charisi used to say, 'Better, a
+wrong will than a wavering; better a steadfast enemy than an uncertain
+friend; better a false belief than no belief at all.' What he despised
+most was indifference. He had longer reasons than I can give you."
+
+"Yet his knowledge was not narrow?" said Deronda, with a tacit reference
+to the usual excuse for indecision--that it comes from knowing too much.
+
+"Narrow? no," said Kalonymos, shaking his head with a compassionate smile
+"From his childhood upward, he drank in learning as easily as the plant
+sucks up water. But he early took to medicine and theories about life and
+health. He traveled to many countries, and spent much of his substance in
+seeing and knowing. What he used to insist on was that the strength and
+wealth of mankind depended on the balance of separateness and
+communication, and he was bitterly against our people losing themselves
+among the Gentiles; 'It's no better,' said he, 'than the many sorts of
+grain going back from their variety into sameness.' He mingled all sorts
+of learning; and in that he was like our Arabic writers in the golden
+time. We studied together, but he went beyond me. Though we were bosom
+friends, and he poured himself out to me, we were as different as the
+inside and outside of the bowl. I stood up for two notions of my own: I
+took Charisi's sayings as I took the shape of the trees: they were there,
+not to be disputed about. It came to the same thing in both of us; we were
+both faithful Jews, thankful not to be Gentiles. And since I was a ripe
+man, I have been what I am now, for all but age-loving to wander, loving
+transactions, loving to behold all things, and caring nothing about
+hardship. Charisi thought continually of our people's future: he went with
+all his soul into that part of our religion: I, not. So we have freedom, I
+am content. Our people wandered before they were driven. Young man when I
+am in the East, I lie much on deck and watch the greater stars. The sight
+of them satisfies me. I know them as they rise, and hunger not to know
+more. Charisi was satisfied with no sight, but pieced it out with what had
+been before and what would come after. Yet we loved each other, and as he
+said, he bound our love with duty; we solemnly pledged ourselves to help
+and defend each other to the last. I have fulfilled my pledge." Here
+Kalonymos rose, and Deronda, rising also, said--
+
+"And in being faithful to him you have caused justice to be done to me. It
+would have been a robbery of me too that I should never have known of the
+inheritance he had prepared for me. I thank you with my whole soul."
+
+"Be worthy of him, young man. What is your vocation?" This question was
+put with a quick abruptness which embarrassed Deronda, who did not feel it
+quite honest to allege his law-reading as a vocation. He answered--
+
+"I cannot say that I have any."
+
+"Get one, get one. The Jew must be diligent. You will call yourself a Jew
+and profess the faith of your fathers?" said Kalonymos, putting his hand
+on Deronda's shoulder and looking sharply in his face.
+
+"I shall call myself a Jew," said Deronda, deliberately, becoming slightly
+paler under the piercing eyes of his questioner. "But I will not say that
+I shall profess to believe exactly as my fathers have believed. Our
+fathers themselves changed the horizon of their belief and learned of
+other races. But I think I can maintain my grandfather's notion of
+separateness with communication. I hold that my first duty is to my own
+people, and if there is anything to be done toward restoring or perfecting
+their common life, I shall make that my vocation."
+
+It happened to Deronda at that moment, as it has often happened to others,
+that the need for speech made an epoch in resolve. His respect for the
+questioner would not let him decline to answer, and by the necessity to
+answer he found out the truth for himself.
+
+"Ah, you argue and you look forward--you are Daniel Charisi's grandson,"
+said Kalonymos, adding a benediction in Hebrew.
+
+With that they parted; and almost as soon as Deronda was in London, the
+aged man was again on shipboard, greeting the friendly stars without any
+eager curiosity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXI.
+
+ "Within the gentle heart Love shelters him,
+ As birds within the green shade of the grove.
+ Before the gentle heart, in Nature's scheme,
+ Love was not, nor the gentle heart ere Love."
+ --GUIDO GUNICELLI (_Rossetti's Translation_).
+
+
+There was another house besides the white house at Pennicote, another
+breast besides Rex Gascoigne's, in which the news of Grandcourt's death
+caused both strong agitation and the effort to repress it.
+
+It was Hans Meyrick's habit to send or bring in the _Times_ for his
+mother's reading. She was a great reader of news, from the widest-reaching
+politics to the list of marriages; the latter, she said, giving her the
+pleasant sense of finishing the fashionable novels without having read
+them, and seeing the heroes and heroines happy without knowing what poor
+creatures they were. On a Wednesday, there were reasons why Hans always
+chose to bring the paper, and to do so about the time that Mirah had
+nearly ended giving Mab her weekly lesson, avowing that he came then
+because he wanted to hear Mirah sing. But on the particular Wednesday now
+in question, after entering the house as quietly as usual with his latch-
+key, he appeared in the parlor, shaking the _Times_ aloft with a crackling
+noise, in remorseless interruption of Mab's attempt to render _Lascia
+ch'io pianga_ with a remote imitation of her teacher. Piano and song
+ceased immediately; Mirah, who had been playing the accompaniment,
+involuntarily started up and turned round, the crackling sound, after the
+occasional trick of sounds, having seemed to her something thunderous; and
+Mab said--
+
+"O-o-o, Hans! why do you bring a more horrible noise than my singing?"
+
+"What on earth is the wonderful news?" said Mrs. Meyrick, who was the only
+other person in the room. "Anything about Italy--anything about the
+Austrians giving up Venice?"
+
+"Nothing about Italy, but something from Italy," said Hans, with a
+peculiarity in his tone and manner which set his mother interpreting.
+Imagine how some of us feel and behave when an event, not disagreeable
+seems to be confirming and carrying out our private constructions. We say,
+"What do you think?" in a pregnant tone to some innocent person who has
+not embarked his wisdom in the same boat with ours, and finds our
+information flat.
+
+"Nothing bad?" said Mrs. Meyrick anxiously, thinking immediately of
+Deronda; and Mirah's heart had been already clutched by the same thought.
+
+"Not bad for anybody we care much about," said Hans, quickly; "rather
+uncommonly lucky, I think. I never knew anybody die conveniently before.
+Considering what a dear gazelle I am, I am constantly wondering to find
+myself alive."
+
+"Oh me, Hans!" said Mab, impatiently, "if you must talk of yourself, let
+it be behind your own back. What _is_ it that has happened?"
+
+"Duke Alfonso is drowned, and the Duchess is alive, that's all," said
+Hans, putting the paper before Mrs. Meyrick, with his finger against a
+paragraph. "But more than all is--Deronda was at Genoa in the same hotel
+with them, and he saw her brought in by the fishermen who had got her out
+of the water time enough to save her from any harm. It seems they saw her
+jump in after her husband, which was a less judicious action than I should
+have expected of the Duchess. However Deronda is a lucky fellow in being
+there to take care of her."
+
+Mirah had sunk on the music stool again, with her eyelids down and her
+hands tightly clasped; and Mrs. Meyrick, giving up the paper to Mab,
+said--
+
+"Poor thing! she must have been fond of her husband to jump in after him."
+
+"It was an inadvertence--a little absence of mind," said Hans, creasing
+his face roguishly, and throwing himself into a chair not far from Mirah.
+"Who can be fond of a jealous baritone, with freezing glances, always
+singing asides?--that was the husband's _role_, depend upon it. Nothing
+can be neater than his getting drowned. The Duchess is at liberty now to
+marry a man with a fine head of hair, and glances that will melt instead
+of freezing her. And I shall be invited to the wedding."
+
+Here Mirah started from her sitting posture, and fixing her eyes on Hans,
+with an angry gleam in them, she said, in a deeply-shaken voice of
+indignation--
+
+"Mr. Hans, you ought not to speak in that way. Mr. Deronda would not like
+you to speak so. Why will you say he is lucky--why will you use words of
+that sort about life and death--when what is life to one is death to
+another? How do you know it would be lucky if he loved Mrs. Grandcourt? It
+might be a great evil to him. She would take him away from my brother--I
+know she would. Mr. Deronda would not call that lucky to pierce my
+brother's heart."
+
+All three were struck with the sudden transformation. Mirah's face, with a
+look of anger that might have suited Ithuriel, pale, even to the lips that
+were usually so rich of tint, was not far from poor Hans, who sat
+transfixed, blushing under it as if he had been a girl, while he said,
+nervously--
+
+"I am a fool and a brute, and I withdraw every word. I'll go and hang
+myself like Judas--if it's allowable to mention him." Even in Hans's
+sorrowful moments, his improvised words had inevitably some drollery.
+
+But Mirah's anger was not appeased: how could it be? She had burst into
+indignant speech as creatures in intense pain bite and make their teeth
+meet even through their own flesh, by way of making their agony bearable.
+She said no more, but, seating herself at the piano, pressed the sheet of
+music before her, as if she thought of beginning to play again.
+
+It was Mab who spoke, while. Mrs. Meyrick's face seemed to reflect some of
+Hans' discomfort.
+
+"Mirah is quite right to scold you, Hans. You are always taking Mr.
+Deronda's name in vain. And it is horrible, joking in that way about his
+marrying Mrs. Grandcourt. Men's minds must be very black, I think," ended
+Mab, with much scorn.
+
+"Quite true, my dear," said Hans, in a low tone, rising and turning on his
+heel to walk toward the back window.
+
+"We had better go on, Mab; you have not given your full time to the
+lesson," said Mirah, in a higher tone than usual. "Will you sing this
+again, or shall I sing it to you?"
+
+"Oh, please sing it to me," said Mab, rejoiced to take no more notice of
+what had happened.
+
+And Mirah immediately sang _Lascia ch'io pianga_, giving forth its
+melodious sobs and cries with new fullness and energy. Hans paused in his
+walk and leaned against the mantel-piece, keeping his eyes carefully away
+from his mother's. When Mirah had sung her last note and touched the last
+chord, she rose and said, "I must go home now. Ezra expects me."
+
+She gave her hand silently to Mrs. Meyrick and hung back a little, not
+daring to look at her, instead of kissing her, as usual. But the little
+mother drew Mirah's face down to hers, and said, soothingly, "God bless
+you, my dear." Mirah felt that she had committed an offense against Mrs.
+Meyrick by angrily rebuking Hans, and mixed with the rest of her suffering
+was the sense that she had shown something like a proud ingratitude, an
+unbecoming assertion of superiority. And her friend had divined this
+compunction.
+
+Meanwhile Hans had seized his wide-awake, and was ready to open the door.
+
+"Now, Hans," said Mab, with what was really a sister's tenderness
+cunningly disguised, "you are not going to walk home with Mirah. I am sure
+she would rather not. You are so dreadfully disagreeable to-day."
+
+"I shall go to take care of her, if she does not forbid me," said Hans,
+opening the door.
+
+Mirah said nothing, and when he had opened the outer door for her and
+closed it behind him, he walked by her side unforbidden. She had not the
+courage to begin speaking to him again--conscious that she had perhaps
+been unbecomingly severe in her words to him, yet finding only severer
+words behind them in her heart. Besides, she was pressed upon by a crowd
+of thoughts thrusting themselves forward as interpreters of that
+consciousness which still remained unaltered to herself.
+
+Hans, on his side, had a mind equally busy. Mirah's anger had waked in him
+a new perception, and with it the unpleasant sense that he was a dolt not
+to have had it before. Suppose Mirah's heart were entirely preoccupied
+with Deronda in another character than that of her own and her brother's
+benefactor; the supposition was attended in Hans's mind with anxieties
+which, to do him justice, were not altogether selfish. He had a strong
+persuasion, which only direct evidence to the contrary could have
+dissipated, and that was that there was a serious attachment between
+Deronda and Mrs. Grandcourt; he had pieced together many fragments of
+observation, and gradually gathered knowledge, completed by what his
+sisters had heard from Anna Gascoigne, which convinced him not only that
+Mrs. Grandcourt had a passion for Deronda, but also, notwithstanding his
+friend's austere self-repression, that Deronda's susceptibility about her
+was the sign of concealed love. Some men, having such a conviction, would
+have avoided allusions that could have roused that susceptibility; but
+Hans's talk naturally fluttered toward mischief, and he was given to a
+form of experiment on live animals which consisted in irritating his
+friends playfully. His experiments had ended in satisfying him that what
+he thought likely was true.
+
+On the other hand, any susceptibility Deronda had manifested about a
+lover's attentions being shown to Mirah, Hans took to be sufficiently
+accounted for by the alleged reason, namely, her dependent position; for
+he credited his friend with all possible unselfish anxiety for those whom
+he could rescue and protect. And Deronda's insistence that Mirah would
+never marry one who was not a Jew necessarily seemed to exclude himself,
+since Hans shared the ordinary opinion, which he knew nothing to disturb,
+that Deronda was the son of Sir Hugo Mallinger.
+
+Thus he felt himself in clearness about the state of Deronda's affections;
+but now, the events which really struck him as concurring toward the
+desirable union with Mrs. Grandcourt, had called forth a flash of
+revelation from Mirah--a betrayal of her passionate feeling on this
+subject which had made him melancholy on her account as well as his own--
+yet on the whole less melancholy than if he had imagined Deronda's hopes
+fixed on her. It is not sublime, but it is common, for a man to see the
+beloved object unhappy because his rival loves another, with more
+fortitude and a milder jealousy than if he saw her entirely happy in his
+rival. At least it was so with the mercurial Hans, who fluctuated between
+the contradictory states of feeling, wounded because Mirah was wounded,
+and of being almost obliged to Deronda for loving somebody else. It was
+impossible for him to give Mirah any direct sign of the way in which he
+had understood her anger, yet he longed that his speechless companionship
+should be eloquent in a tender, penitent sympathy which is an admissible
+form of wooing a bruised heart.
+
+Thus the two went side by side in a companionship that yet seemed an
+agitated communication, like that of two chords whose quick vibrations lie
+outside our hearing. But when they reached the door of Mirah's home, and
+Hans said "Good-bye," putting out his hand with an appealing look of
+penitence, she met the look with melancholy gentleness, and said, "Will
+you not come in and see my brother?"
+
+Hans could not but interpret this invitation as a sign of pardon. He had
+not enough understanding of what Mirah's nature had been wrought into by
+her early experience, to divine how the very strength of her late
+excitement had made it pass more quickly into the resolute acceptance of
+pain. When he had said, "If you will let me," and they went in together,
+half his grief was gone, and he was spinning a little romance of how his
+devotion might make him indispensable to Mirah in proportion as Deronda
+gave his devotion elsewhere. This was quite fair, since his friend was
+provided for according to his own heart; and on the question of Judaism
+Hans felt thoroughly fortified:--who ever heard in tale or history that a
+woman's love went in the track of her race and religion? Moslem and Jewish
+damsels were always attracted toward Christians, and now if Mirah's heart
+had gone forth too precipitately toward Deronda, here was another case in
+point. Hans was wont to make merry with his own arguments, to call himself
+a Giaour, and antithesis the sole clue to events; but he believed a little
+in what he laughed at. And thus his bird-like hope, constructed on the
+lightest principles, soared again in spite of heavy circumstances.
+
+They found Mordecai looking singularly happy, holding a closed letter in
+his hand, his eyes glowing with a quiet triumph which in his emaciated
+face gave the idea of a conquest over assailing death. After the greeting
+between him and Hans, Mirah put her arm round her brother's neck and
+looked down at the letter in his hand, without the courage to ask about
+it, though she felt sure that it was the cause of his happiness.
+
+"A letter from Daniel Deronda," said Mordecai, answering her look. "Brief
+--only saying that he hopes soon to return. Unexpected claims have
+detained him. The promise of seeing him again is like the bow in the cloud
+to me," continued Mordecai, looking at Hans; "and to you it must be a
+gladness. For who has two friends like him?"
+
+While Hans was answering Mirah slipped away to her own room; but not to
+indulge in any outburst of the passion within her. If the angels, once
+supposed to watch the toilet of women, had entered the little chamber with
+her and let her shut the door behind them, they would only have seen her
+take off her hat, sit down and press her hands against her temples as if
+she had suddenly reflected that her head ached; then rise to dash cold
+water on her eyes and brow and hair till her backward curls were full of
+crystal beads, while she had dried her brow and looked out like a freshly-
+opened flower from among the dewy tresses of the woodland; then give deep
+sighs of relief, and putting on her little slippers, sit still after that
+action for a couple of minutes, which seemed to her so long, so full of
+things to come, that she rose with an air of recollection, and went down
+to make tea.
+
+Something of the old life had returned. She had been used to remember that
+she must learn her part, must go to rehearsal, must act and sing in the
+evening, must hide her feelings from her father; and the more painful her
+life grew, the more she had been used to hide. The force of her nature had
+long found its chief action in resolute endurance, and to-day the violence
+of feeling which had caused the first jet of anger had quickly transformed
+itself into a steady facing of trouble, the well-known companion of her
+young years. But while she moved about and spoke as usual, a close
+observer might have discerned a difference between this apparent calm,
+which was the effect of restraining energy, and the sweet genuine calm of
+the months when she first felt a return of her infantine happiness.
+
+Those who have been indulged by fortune and have always thought of
+calamity as what happens to others, feel a blind incredulous rage at the
+reversal of their lot, and half believe that their wild cries will alter
+the course of the storm. Mirah felt no such surprise when familiar Sorrow
+came back from brief absence, and sat down with her according to the old
+use and wont. And this habit of expecting trouble rather than joy,
+hindered her from having any persistent belief in opposition to the
+probabilities which were not merely suggested by Hans, but were supported
+by her own private knowledge and long-growing presentiment. An attachment
+between Deronda and Mrs. Grandcourt, to end in their future marriage, had
+the aspect of a certainty for her feeling. There had been no fault in him:
+facts had ordered themselves so that there was a tie between him and this
+woman who belonged to another world than hers and Ezra's--nay, who seemed
+another sort of being than Deronda, something foreign that would be a
+disturbance in his life instead of blending with it. Well, well--but if it
+could have been deferred so as to make no difference while Ezra was there!
+She did not know all the momentousness of the relation between Deronda and
+her brother, but she had seen, and instinctively felt enough to forebode
+its being incongruous with any close tie to Mrs. Grandcourt; at least this
+was the clothing that Mirah first gave to her mortal repugnance. But in
+the still, quick action of her consciousness, thoughts went on like
+changing states of sensation unbroken by her habitual acts; and this
+inward language soon said distinctly that the mortal repugnance would
+remain even if Ezra were secured from loss.
+
+"What I have read about and sung about and seen acted, is happening to me
+--this that I am feeling is the love that makes jealousy;" so impartially
+Mirah summed up the charge against herself. But what difference could this
+pain of hers make to any one else? It must remain as exclusively her own,
+and hidden, as her early yearning and devotion to her lost mother. But
+unlike that devotion, it was something that she felt to be a misfortune of
+her nature--a discovery that what should have been pure gratitude and
+reverence had sunk into selfish pain, that the feeling she had hitherto
+delighted to pour out in words was degraded into something she was ashamed
+to betray--an absurd longing that she who had received all and given
+nothing should be of importance where she was of no importance--an angry
+feeling toward another woman who possessed the good she wanted. But what
+notion, what vain reliance could it be that had lain darkly within her and
+was now burning itself into sight as disappointment and jealousy? It was
+as if her soul had been steeped in poisonous passion by forgotten dreams
+of deep sleep, and now flamed out in this unaccountable misery. For with
+her waking reason she had never entertained what seemed the wildly
+unfitting thought that Deronda could love her. The uneasiness she had felt
+before had been comparatively vague and easily explained as part of a
+general regret that he was only a visitant in her and her brother's world,
+from which the world where his home lay was as different as a portico with
+lights and lacqueys was different from the door of a tent, where the only
+splendor came from the mysterious inaccessible stars. But her feeling was
+no longer vague: the cause of her pain--the image of Mrs. Grandcourt by
+Deronda's side, drawing him farther and farther into the distance, was as
+definite as pincers on her flesh. In the Psyche-mould of Mirah's frame
+there rested a fervid quality of emotion, sometimes rashly supposed to
+require the bulk of a Cleopatra; her impressions had the thoroughness and
+tenacity that give to the first selection of passionate feeling the
+character of a lifelong faithfulness. And now a selection had declared
+itself, which gave love a cruel heart of jealousy: she had been used to a
+strong repugnance toward certain objects that surrounded her, and to walk
+inwardly aloof from them while they touched her sense. And now her
+repugnance concentrated itself on Mrs. Grandcourt, of whom she
+involuntarily conceived more evil than she knew. "I could bear everything
+that used to be--but this is worse--this is worse,--I used not to have
+horrible feelings!" said the poor child in a loud whisper to her pillow.
+Strange that she should have to pray against any feeling which concerned
+Deronda!
+
+But this conclusion had been reached through an evening spent in attending
+to Mordecai, whose exaltation of spirit in the prospect of seeing his
+friend again, disposed him to utter many thoughts aloud to Mirah, though
+such communication was often interrupted by intervals apparently filled
+with an inward utterance that animated his eyes and gave an occasional
+silent action to his lips. One thought especially occupied him.
+
+"Seest thou, Mirah," he said once, after a long silence, "the _Shemah_,
+wherein we briefly confess the divine Unity, is the chief devotional
+exercise of the Hebrew; and this made our religion the fundamental
+religion for the whole world; for the divine Unity embraced as its
+consequence the ultimate unity of mankind. See, then--the nation which has
+been scoffed at for its separateness, has given a binding theory to the
+human race. Now, in complete unity a part possesses the whole as the whole
+possesses every part: and in this way human life is tending toward the
+image of the Supreme Unity: for as our life becomes more spiritual by
+capacity of thought, and joy therein, possession tends to become more
+universal, being independent of gross material contact; so that in a brief
+day the soul of man may know in fuller volume the good which has been and
+is, nay, is to come, than all he could possess in a whole life where he
+had to follow the creeping paths of the senses. In this moment, my sister,
+I hold the joy of another's future within me: a future which these eyes
+will not see, and which my spirit may not then recognize as mine. I
+recognize it now, and love it so, that I can lay down this poor life upon
+its altar and say: 'Burn, burn indiscernibly into that which shall be,
+which is my love and not me.' Dost thou understand, Mirah?"
+
+"A little," said Mirah, faintly, "but my mind is too poor to have felt
+it."
+
+"And yet," said Mordecai, rather insistently, "women are specially framed
+for the love which feels possession in renouncing, and is thus a fit image
+of what I mean. Somewhere in the later _Midrash_, I think, is the story of
+a Jewish maiden who loved a Gentile king so well, that this was what she
+did:--she entered into prison and changed clothes with the woman who was
+beloved by the king, that she might deliver that woman from death by dying
+in her stead, and leave the king to be happy in his love which was not for
+her. This is the surpassing love, that loses self in the object of love."
+
+"No, Ezra, no," said Mirah, with low-toned intensity, "that was not it.
+She wanted the king when she was dead to know what she had done, and feel
+that she was better than the other. It was her strong self, wanting to
+conquer, that made her die."
+
+Mordecai was silent a little, and then argued--
+
+"That might be, Mirah. But if she acted so, believing the king would never
+know."
+
+"You can make the story so in your mind, Ezra, because you are great, and
+like to fancy the greatest that could be. But I think it was not really
+like that. The Jewish girl must have had jealousy in her heart, and she
+wanted somehow to have the first place in the king's mind. That is what
+she would die for."
+
+"My sister, thou hast read too many plays, where the writers delight in
+showing the human passions as indwelling demons, unmixed with the
+relenting and devout elements of the soul. Thou judgest by the plays, and
+not by thy own heart, which is like our mother's."
+
+Mirah made no answer.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXII.
+
+ "Das Gluck ist eine leichte Dirne,
+ Und weilt nicht gern am selben Ort;
+ Sie streicht das Haar dir von der Stirn
+ Und kusst dich rasch und flattert fort
+
+ Frau Ungluck hat im Gegentheile
+ Dich liebefest an's Herz gedruckt;
+ Sie sagt, sie habe keine Eile,
+ Setzt sich zu dir ans Bett und strickt."
+ --HEINE.
+
+
+Something which Mirah had lately been watching for as the fulfilment of a
+threat, seemed now the continued visit of that familiar sorrow which had
+lately come back, bringing abundant luggage.
+
+Turning out of Knightsbridge, after singing at a charitable morning
+concert in a wealthy house, where she had been recommended by Klesmer, and
+where there had been the usual groups outside to see the departing
+company, she began to feel herself dogged by footsteps that kept an even
+pace with her own. Her concert dress being simple black, over which she
+had thrown a dust cloak, could not make her an object of unpleasant
+attention, and render walking an imprudence; but this reflection did not
+occur to Mirah: another kind of alarm lay uppermost in her mind. She
+immediately thought of her father, and could no more look round than if
+she had felt herself tracked by a ghost. To turn and face him would be
+voluntarily to meet the rush of emotions which beforehand seemed
+intolerable. If it were her father he must mean to claim recognition, and
+he would oblige her to face him. She must wait for that compulsion. She
+walked on, not quickening her pace--of what use was that?--but picturing
+what was about to happen as if she had the full certainty that the man
+behind her was her father; and along with her picturing went a regret that
+she had given her word to Mrs. Meyrick not to use any concealment about
+him. The regret at last urged her, at least, to try and hinder any sudden
+betrayal that would cause her brother an unnecessary shock. Under the
+pressure of this motive, she resolved to turn before she reached her own
+door, and firmly will the encounter instead of merely submitting to it.
+She had already reached the entrance of the small square where her home
+lay, and had made up her mind to turn, when she felt her embodied
+presentiment getting closer to her, then slipping to her side, grasping
+her wrist, and saying, with a persuasive curl of accent, "Mirah!"
+
+She paused at once without any start; it was the voice she expected, and
+she was meeting the expected eyes. Her face was as grave as if she had
+been looking at her executioner, while his was adjusted to the intention
+of soothing and propitiating her. Once a handsome face, with bright color,
+it was now sallow and deep-lined, and had that peculiar impress of
+impudent suavity which comes from courting favor while accepting
+disrespect. He was lightly made and active, with something of youth about
+him which made the signs of age seem a disguise; and in reality he was
+hardly fifty-seven. His dress was shabby, as when she had seen him before.
+The presence of this unreverend father now, more than ever, affected Mirah
+with the mingled anguish of shame and grief, repulsion and pity--more than
+ever, now that her own world was changed into one where there was no
+comradeship to fence him from scorn and contempt.
+
+Slowly, with a sad, tremulous voice, she said, "It is you, father."
+
+"Why did you run away from me, child?" he began with rapid speech which
+was meant to have a tone of tender remonstrance, accompanied with various
+quick gestures like an abbreviated finger-language. "What were you afraid
+of? You knew I never made you do anything against your will. It was for
+your sake I broke up your engagement in the Vorstadt, because I saw it
+didn't suit you, and you repaid me by leaving me to the bad times that
+came in consequence. I had made an easier engagement for you at the
+Vorstadt Theater in Dresden: I didn't tell you, because I wanted to take
+you by surprise. And you left me planted there--obliged to make myself
+scarce because I had broken contract. That was hard lines for me, after I
+had given up everything for the sake of getting you an education which was
+to be a fortune to you. What father devoted himself to his daughter more
+than I did to you? You know how I bore that disappointment in your voice,
+and made the best of it: and when I had nobody besides you, and was
+getting broken, as a man must who has had to fight his way with his
+brains--you chose that time to leave me. Who else was it you owed
+everything to, if not to me? and where was your feeling in return? For
+what my daughter cared, I might have died in a ditch."
+
+Lapidoth stopped short here, not from lack of invention, but because he
+had reached a pathetic climax, and gave a sudden sob, like a woman's,
+taking out hastily an old yellow silk handkerchief. He really felt that
+his daughter had treated him ill--a sort of sensibility which is naturally
+strong in unscrupulous persons, who put down what is owing to them,
+without any _per contra_. Mirah, in spite of that sob, had energy enough
+not to let him suppose that he deceived her. She answered more firmly,
+though it was the first time she had ever used accusing words to him.
+
+"You know why I left you, father; and I had reason to distrust you,
+because I felt sure that you had deceived my mother. If I could have
+trusted you, I would have stayed with you and worked for you."
+
+"I never meant to deceive your mother, Mirah," said Lapidoth, putting back
+his handkerchief, but beginning with a voice that seemed to struggle
+against further sobbing. "I meant to take you back to her, but chances
+hindered me just at the time, and then there came information of her
+death. It was better for you that I should stay where I was, and your
+brother could take care of himself. Nobody had any claim on me but you. I
+had word of your mother's death from a particular friend, who had
+undertaken to manage things for me, and I sent him over money to pay
+expenses. There's one chance to be sure--" Lapidoth had quickly conceived
+that he must guard against something unlikely, yet possible--"he may have
+written me lies for the sake of getting the money out of me."
+
+Mirah made no answer; she could not bear to utter the only true one--"I
+don't believe one word of what you say"--and she simply showed a wish that
+they should walk on, feeling that their standing still might draw down
+unpleasant notice. Even as they walked along, their companionship might
+well have made a passer-by turn back to look at them. The figure of Mirah,
+with her beauty set off by the quiet, careful dress of an English lady,
+made a strange pendant to this shabby, foreign-looking, eager, and
+gesticulating man, who withal had an ineffaceable jauntiness of air,
+perhaps due to the bushy curls of his grizzled hair, the smallness of his
+hands and feet, and his light walk.
+
+"You seem to have done well for yourself, Mirah? _You_ are in no want, I
+see," said the father, looking at her with emphatic examination.
+
+"Good friends who found me in distress have helped me to get work," said
+Mirah, hardly knowing what she actually said, from being occupied with
+what she would presently have to say. "I give lessons. I have sung in
+private houses. I have just been singing at a private concert." She
+paused, and then added, with significance, "I have very good friends, who
+know all about me."
+
+"And you would be ashamed they should see your father in this plight? No
+wonder. I came to England with no prospect, but the chance of finding you.
+It was a mad quest; but a father's heart is superstitious--feels a
+loadstone drawing it somewhere or other. I might have done very well,
+staying abroad: when I hadn't you to take care of, I could have rolled or
+settled as easily as a ball; but it's hard being lonely in the world, when
+your spirit's beginning to break. And I thought my little Mirah would
+repent leaving her father when she came to look back. I've had a sharp
+pinch to work my way; I don't know what I shall come down to next. Talents
+like mine are no use in this country. When a man's getting out at elbows
+nobody will believe in him. I couldn't get any decent employ with my
+appearance. I've been obliged to get pretty low for a shilling already."
+
+Mirah's anxiety was quick enough to imagine her father's sinking into a
+further degradation, which she was bound to hinder if she could. But
+before she could answer his string of inventive sentences, delivered with
+as much glibness as if they had been learned by rote, he added promptly---
+
+"Where do you live, Mirah?"
+
+"Here, in this square. We are not far from the house."
+
+"In lodgings?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Any one to take care of you?"
+
+"Yes," said Mirah again, looking full at the keen face which was turned
+toward hers--"my brother."
+
+The father's eyelids fluttered as if the lightning had come across them,
+and there was a slight movement of the shoulders. But he said, after a
+just perceptible pause: "Ezra? How did you know--how did you find him?"
+
+"That would take long to tell. Here we are at the door. My brother would
+not wish me to close it on you."
+
+Mirah was already on the doorstep, but had her face turned toward her
+father, who stood below her on the pavement. Her heart had begun to beat
+faster with the prospect of what was coming in the presence of Ezra; and
+already in this attitude of giving leave to the father whom she had been
+used to obey--in this sight of him standing below her, with a perceptible
+shrinking from the admission which he had been indirectly asking for, she
+had a pang of the peculiar, sympathetic humiliation and shame--the stabbed
+heart of reverence--which belongs to a nature intensely filial.
+
+"Stay a minute, _Liebchen_," said Lapidoth, speaking in a lowered tone;
+"what sort of man has Ezra turned out?"
+
+"A good man--a wonderful man," said Mirah, with slow emphasis, trying to
+master the agitation which made her voice more tremulous as she went on.
+She felt urged to prepare her father for the complete penetration of
+himself which awaited him. "But he was very poor when my friends found him
+for me--a poor workman. Once--twelve years ago--he was strong and happy,
+going to the East, which he loved to think of; and my mother called him
+back because--because she had lost me. And he went to her, and took care
+of her through great trouble, and worked for her till she died--died in
+grief. And Ezra, too, had lost his health and strength. The cold had
+seized him coming back to my mother, because she was forsaken. For years
+he has been getting weaker--always poor, always working--but full of
+knowledge, and great-minded. All who come near him honor him. To stand
+before him is like standing before a prophet of God"--Mirah ended with
+difficulty, her heart throbbing--"falsehoods are no use."
+
+She had cast down her eyes that she might not see her father while she
+spoke the last words--unable to bear the ignoble look of frustration that
+gathered in his face. But he was none the less quick in invention and
+decision.
+
+"Mirah, _Liebchen_," he said, in the old caressing way, "shouldn't you
+like me to make myself a little more respectable before my son sees me? If
+I had a little sum of money, I could fit myself out and come home to you
+as your father ought, and then I could offer myself for some decent place.
+With a good shirt and coat on my back, people would be glad enough to have
+me. I could offer myself for a courier, if I didn't look like a broken-
+down mountebank. I should like to be with my children, and forget and
+forgive. But you have never seen your father look like this before. If you
+had ten pounds at hand--or I could appoint you to bring it me somewhere--I
+could fit myself out by the day after to-morrow."
+
+Mirah felt herself under a temptation which she must try to overcome. She
+answered, obliging herself to look at him again--
+
+"I don't like to deny you what you ask, father; but I have given a promise
+not to do things for you in secret. It _is_ hard to see you looking needy;
+but we will bear that for a little while; and then you can have new
+clothes, and we can pay for them." Her practical sense made her see now
+what was Mrs. Meyrick's wisdom in exacting a promise from her.
+
+Lapidoth's good humor gave way a little. He said, with a sneer, "You are a
+hard and fast young lady--you have been learning useful virtues--keeping
+promises not to help your father with a pound or two when you are getting
+money to dress yourself in silk--your father who made an idol of you, and
+gave up the best part of his life to providing for you."
+
+"It seems cruel--I know it seems cruel," said Mirah, feeling this a worse
+moment than when she meant to drown herself. Her lips were suddenly pale.
+"But, father, it is more cruel to break the promises people trust in. That
+broke my mother's heart--it has broken Ezra's life. You and I must eat now
+this bitterness from what has been. Bear it. Bear to come in and be cared
+for as you are."
+
+"To-morrow, then," said Lapidoth, almost turning on his heel away from
+this pale, trembling daughter, who seemed now to have got the inconvenient
+world to back her; but he quickly turned on it again, with his hands
+feeling about restlessly in his pockets, and said, with some return to his
+appealing tone, "I'm a little cut up with all this, Mirah. I shall get up
+my spirits by to-morrow. If you've a little money in your pocket, I
+suppose it isn't against your promise to give me a trifle--to buy a cigar
+with."
+
+Mirah could not ask herself another question--could not do anything else
+than put her cold trembling hands in her pocket for her _portemonnaie_ and
+hold it out. Lapidoth grasped it at once, pressed her fingers the while,
+said, "Good-bye, my little girl--to-morrow then!" and left her. He had not
+taken many steps before he looked carefully into all the folds of the
+purse, found two half-sovereigns and odd silver, and, pasted against the
+folding cover, a bit of paper on which Ezra had inscribed, in a beautiful
+Hebrew character, the name of his mother, the days of her birth, marriage,
+and death, and the prayer, "May Mirah be delivered from evil." It was
+Mirah's liking to have this little inscription on many articles that she
+used. The father read it, and had a quick vision of his marriage day, and
+the bright, unblamed young fellow he was at that time; teaching many
+things, but expecting by-and-by to get money more easily by writing; and
+very fond of his beautiful bride Sara--crying when she expected him to
+cry, and reflecting every phase of her feeling with mimetic
+susceptibility. Lapidoth had traveled a long way from that young self, and
+thought of all that this inscription signified with an unemotional memory,
+which was like the ocular perception of a touch to one who has lost the
+sense of touch, or like morsels on an untasting palate, having shape and
+grain, but no flavor. Among the things we may gamble away in a lazy
+selfish life is the capacity for ruth, compunction, or any unselfish
+regret--which we may come to long for as one in slow death longs to feel
+laceration, rather than be conscious of a widening margin where
+consciousness once was. Mirah's purse was a handsome one--a gift to her,
+which she had been unable to reflect about giving away--and Lapidoth
+presently found himself outside of his reverie, considering what the purse
+would fetch in addition to the sum it contained, and what prospect there
+was of his being able to get more from his daughter without submitting to
+adopt a penitential form of life under the eyes of that formidable son. On
+such a subject his susceptibilities were still lively.
+
+Meanwhile Mirah had entered the house with her power of reticence overcome
+by the cruelty of her pain. She found her brother quietly reading and
+sifting old manuscripts of his own, which he meant to consign to Deronda.
+In the reaction from the long effort to master herself, she fell down
+before him and clasped his knees, sobbing, and crying, "Ezra, Ezra!"
+
+He did not speak. His alarm for her spending itself on conceiving the
+cause of her distress, the more striking from the novelty in her of this
+violent manifestation. But Mirah's own longing was to be able to speak and
+tell him the cause. Presently she raised her hand, and still sobbing, said
+brokenly--
+
+"Ezra, my father! our father! He followed me. I wanted him to come in. I
+said you would let him come in. And he said No, he would not--not now, but
+to-morrow. And he begged for money from me. And I gave him my purse, and
+he went away."
+
+Mirah's words seemed to herself to express all the misery she felt in
+them. Her brother found them less grievous than his preconceptions, and
+said gently, "Wait for calm, Mirah, and then tell me all,"--putting off
+her hat and laying his hands tenderly on her head. She felt the soothing
+influence, and in a few minutes told him as exactly as she could all that
+had happened.
+
+"He will not come to-morrow," said Mordecai. Neither of them said to the
+other what they both thought, namely, that he might watch for Mirah's
+outgoings and beg from her again.
+
+"Seest thou," he presently added, "our lot is the lot of Israel. The grief
+and the glory are mingled as the smoke and the flame. It is because we
+children have inherited the good that we feel the evil. These things are
+wedded for us, as our father was wedded to our mother."
+
+The surroundings were of Brompton, but the voice might have come from a
+Rabbi transmitting the sentences of an elder time to be registered in
+_Babli_--by which (to our ears) affectionate-sounding diminutive is meant
+the voluminous Babylonian Talmud. "The Omnipresent," said a Rabbi, "is
+occupied in making marriages." The levity of the saying lies in the ear of
+him who hears it; for by marriages the speaker meant all the wondrous
+combinations of the universe whose issue makes our good and evil.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIII.
+
+ "Moses, trotz seiner Bafeindung der Kunst, dennoch selber ein grosser
+ Kuenstler war und den wahren Kuenstlergeist besass. Nur war dieser
+ Kuenstlergeist bei ihm, wie bei seinen aegyptischen Landsleuteu, nurauf
+ das Colossale und Unverwustliche gerichtet. Aber nicht vie die
+ Aegypter formirte er seine Kunstwerke aus Backstem und Granit, sondern
+ er baute Menchen-pyramiden, er meisselte Menschen Obelisken, ernahm
+ einen armen Hirtenstamm und Schuf daraus ein Volk, das ebenfalls den
+ Jahrhahunderten, trotzen sollte * * * er Schuf Israel."--HEINE:
+ _Gestandnisse_.
+
+
+Imagine the difference in Deronda's state of mind when he left England and
+when he returned to it. He had set out for Genoa in total uncertainty how
+far the actual bent of his wishes and affections would be encouraged--how
+far the claims revealed to him might draw him into new paths, far away
+from the tracks his thoughts had lately been pursuing with a consent of
+desire which uncertainty made dangerous. He came back with something like
+a discovered charter warranting the inherited right that his ambition had
+begun to yearn for: he came back with what was better than freedom--with a
+duteous bond which his experience had been preparing him to accept gladly,
+even if it had been attended with no promise of satisfying a secret
+passionate longing never yet allowed to grow into a hope. But now he dared
+avow to himself the hidden selection of his love. Since the hour when he
+left the house at Chelsea in full-hearted silence under the effect of
+Mirah's farewell look and words--their exquisite appealingness stirring in
+him that deep-laid care for womanhood which had begun when his own lip was
+like a girl's--her hold on his feeling had helped him to be blameless in
+word and deed under the difficult circumstances we know of. There seemed
+no likelihood that he could ever woo this creature who had become dear to
+him amidst associations that forbade wooing; yet she had taken her place
+in his soul as a beloved type--reducing the power of other fascination and
+making a difference in it that became deficiency. The influence had been
+continually strengthened. It had lain in the course of poor Gwendolen's
+lot that her dependence on Deronda tended to rouse in him the enthusiasm
+of self-martyring pity rather than of personal love, and his less
+constrained tenderness flowed with the fuller stream toward an indwelling
+image in all things unlike Gwendolen. Still more, his relation to Mordecai
+had brought with it a new nearness to Mirah which was not the less
+agitating because there was no apparent change in his position toward her;
+and she had inevitably been bound up in all the thoughts that made him
+shrink from an issue disappointing to her brother. This process had not
+gone on unconsciously in Deronda: he was conscious of it as we are of some
+covetousness that it would be better to nullify by encouraging other
+thoughts than to give it the insistency of confession even to ourselves:
+but the jealous fire had leaped out at Hans's pretensions, and when his
+mother accused him of being in love with a Jewess any evasion suddenly
+seemed an infidelity. His mother had compelled him to a decisive
+acknowledgment of his love, as Joseph Kalonymos had compelled him to a
+definite expression of his resolve. This new state of decision wrought on
+Deronda with a force which surprised even himself. There was a release of
+all the energy which had long been spent in self-checking and suppression
+because of doubtful conditions; and he was ready to laugh at his own
+impetuosity when, as he neared England on his way from Mainz, he felt the
+remaining distance more and more of an obstruction. It was as if he had
+found an added soul in finding his ancestry--his judgment no longer
+wandering in the mazes of impartial sympathy, but choosing, with that
+partiality which is man's best strength, the closer fellowship that makes
+sympathy practical--exchanging that bird's eye reasonableness which soars
+to avoid preference and loses all sense of quality for the generous
+reasonableness of drawing shoulder to shoulder with men of like
+inheritance. He wanted now to be again with Mordecai, to pour forth
+instead of restraining his feeling, to admit agreement and maintain
+dissent, and all the while to find Mirah's presence without the
+embarrassment of obviously seeking it, to see her in the light of a new
+possibility, to interpret her looks and words from a new starting-point.
+He was not greatly alarmed about the effect of Hans's attentions, but he
+had a presentiment that her feeling toward himself had from the first lain
+in a channel from which it was not likely to be diverted into love. To
+astonish a woman by turning into her lover when she has been thinking of
+you merely as a Lord Chancellor is what a man naturally shrinks from: he
+is anxious to create an easier transition.
+
+What wonder that Deronda saw no other course than to go straight from the
+London railway station to the lodgings in that small square in Brompton?
+Every argument was in favor of his losing no time. He had promised to run
+down the next day to see Lady Mallinger at the Abbey, and it was already
+sunset. He wished to deposit the precious chest with Mordecai, who would
+study its contents, both in his absence and in company with him; and that
+he should pay this visit without pause would gratify Mordecai's heart.
+Hence, and for other reasons, it gratified Deronda's heart. The strongest
+tendencies of his nature were rushing in one current--the fervent
+affectionateness which made him delight in meeting the wish of beings near
+to him, and the imaginative need of some far-reaching relation to make the
+horizon of his immediate, daily acts. It has to be admitted that in this
+classical, romantic, world-historic position of his, bringing as it were
+from its hiding-place his hereditary armor, he wore--but so, one must
+suppose, did the most ancient heroes, whether Semitic or Japhetic--the
+summer costume of his contemporaries. He did not reflect that the drab
+tints were becoming to him, for he rarely went to the expense of such
+thinking; but his own depth of coloring, which made the becomingness, got
+an added radiance in the eyes, a fleeting and returning glow in the skin,
+as he entered the house wondering what exactly he should find. He made his
+entrance as noiseless as possible.
+
+It was the evening of that same afternoon on which Mirah had had the
+interview with her father. Mordecai, penetrated by her grief, and also the
+sad memories which the incident had awakened, had not resumed his task of
+sifting papers: some of them had fallen scattered on the floor in the
+first moments of anxiety, and neither he nor Mirah had thought of laying
+them in order again. They had sat perfectly still together, not knowing
+how long; while the clock ticked on the mantelpiece, and the light was
+fading, Mirah, unable to think of the food that she ought to have been
+taking, had not moved since she had thrown off her dust-cloak and sat down
+beside Mordecai with her hand in his, while he had laid his head backward,
+with closed eyes and difficult breathing, looking, Mirah thought, as he
+would look when the soul within him could no longer live in its straitened
+home. The thought that his death might be near was continually visiting
+her when she saw his face in this way, without its vivid animation; and
+now, to the rest of her grief, was added the regret that she had been
+unable to control the violent outburst which had shaken him. She sat
+watching him--her oval cheeks pallid, her eyes with the sorrowful
+brilliancy left by young tears, her curls in as much disorder as a just-
+awakened child's--watching that emaciated face, where it might have been
+imagined that a veil had been drawn never to be lifted, as if it were her
+dead joy which had left her strong enough to live on in sorrow. And life
+at that moment stretched before Mirah with more than a repetition of
+former sadness. The shadow of the father was there, and more than that, a
+double bereavement--of one living as well as one dead.
+
+But now the door was opened, and while none entered, a well-known voice
+said: "Daniel Deronda--may he come in?"
+
+"Come! come!" said Mordecai, immediately rising with an irradiated face
+and opened eyes--apparently as little surprised as if he had seen Deronda
+in the morning, and expected this evening visit; while Mirah started up
+blushing with confused, half-alarmed expectation.
+
+Yet when Deronda entered, the sight of him was like the clearness after
+rain: no clouds to come could hinder the cherishing beam of that moment.
+As he held out his right hand to Mirah, who was close to her brother's
+left, he laid his other hand on Mordecai's right shoulder, and stood so a
+moment, holding them both at once, uttering no word, but reading their
+faces, till he said anxiously to Mirah, "Has anything happened?--any
+trouble?"
+
+"Talk not of trouble now," said Mordecai, saving her from the need to
+answer. "There is joy in your face--let the joy be ours."
+
+Mirah thought, "It is for something he cannot tell us." But they all sat
+down, Deronda drawing a chair close in front of Mordecai.
+
+"That is true," he said, emphatically. "I have a joy which will remain to
+us even in the worst trouble. I did not tell you the reason of my journey
+abroad, Mordecai, because--never mind--I went to learn my parentage. And
+you were right. I am a Jew."
+
+The two men clasped hands with a movement that seemed part of the flash
+from Mordecai's eyes, and passed through Mirah like an electric shock. But
+Deronda went on without pause, speaking from Mordecai's mind as much as
+from his own--
+
+"We have the same people. Our souls have the same vocation. We shall not
+be separated by life or by death."
+
+Mordecai's answer was uttered in Hebrew, and in no more than a loud
+whisper. It was in the liturgical words which express the religious bond:
+"Our God and the God of our fathers."
+
+The weight of feeling pressed too strongly on that ready-winged speech
+which usually moved in quick adaptation to every stirring of his fervor.
+
+Mirah fell on her knees by her brother's side, and looked at his now
+illuminated face, which had just before been so deathly. The action was an
+inevitable outlet of the violent reversal from despondency to a gladness
+which came over her as solemnly as if she had been beholding a religious
+rite. For the moment she thought of the effect on her own life only
+through the effect on her brother.
+
+"And it is not only that I am a Jew," Deronda went on, enjoying one of
+those rare moments when our yearnings and our acts can be completely one,
+and the real we behold is our ideal good; "but I come of a strain that has
+ardently maintained the fellowship of our race--a line of Spanish Jews
+that has borne many students and men of practical power. And I possess
+what will give us a sort of communion with them. My grandfather, Daniel
+Charisi, preserved manuscripts, family records stretching far back, in the
+hope that they would pass into the hands of his grandson. And now his hope
+is fulfilled, in spite of attempts to thwart it by hiding my parentage
+from me. I possess the chest containing them, with his own papers, and it
+is down below in this house. I mean to leave it with you, Mordecai, that
+you may help me to study the manuscripts. Some of them I can read easily
+enough--those in Spanish and Italian. Others are in Hebrew, and, I think,
+Arabic; but there seem to be Latin translations. I was only able to look
+at them cursorily while I stayed at Mainz. We will study them together."
+
+Deronda ended with that bright smile which, beaming out from the habitual
+gravity of his face, seemed a revelation (the reverse of the continual
+smile that discredits all expression). But when this happy glance passed
+from Mordecai to rest on Mirah, it acted like a little too much sunshine,
+and made her change her attitude. She had knelt under an impulse with
+which any personal embarrassment was incongruous, and especially any
+thoughts about how Mrs. Grandcourt might stand to this new aspect of
+things--thoughts which made her color under Deronda's glance, and rise to
+take her seat again in her usual posture of crossed hands and feet, with
+the effort to look as quiet as possible. Deronda, equally sensitive,
+imagined that the feeling of which he was conscious, had entered too much
+into his eyes, and had been repugnant to her. He was ready enough to
+believe that any unexpected manifestation might spoil her feeling toward
+him--and then his precious relation to brother and sister would be marred.
+If Mirah could have no love for him, any advances of love on his part
+would make her wretched in that continual contact with him which would
+remain inevitable.
+
+While such feelings were pulsating quickly in Deronda and Mirah, Mordecai,
+seeing nothing in his friend's presence and words but a blessed
+fulfillment, was already speaking with his old sense of enlargement in
+utterance--
+
+"Daniel, from the first, I have said to you, we know not all the pathways.
+Has there not been a meeting among them, as of the operations in one soul,
+where an idea being born and breathing draws the elements toward it, and
+is fed and glows? For all things are bound together in that Omnipresence
+which is the place and habitation of the world, and events are of a glass
+wherethrough our eyes see some of the pathways. And if it seems that the
+erring and unloving wills of men have helped to prepare you, as Moses was
+prepared, to serve your people the better, that depends on another order
+than the law which must guide our footsteps. For the evil will of man
+makes not a people's good except by stirring the righteous will of man;
+and beneath all the clouds with which our thought encompasses the Eternal,
+this is clear--that a people can be blessed only by having counsellors and
+a multitude whose will moves in obedience to the laws of justice and love.
+For see, now, it was your loving will that made a chief pathway, and
+resisted the effect of evil; for, by performing the duties of brotherhood
+to my sister, and seeking out her brother in the flesh, your soul has been
+prepared to receive with gladness this message of the Eternal, 'behold the
+multitude of your brethren.'"
+
+"It is quite true that you and Mirah have been my teachers," said Deronda.
+"If this revelation had been made to me before I knew you both, I think my
+mind would have rebelled against it. Perhaps I should have felt then--'If
+I could have chosen, I would not have been a Jew.' What I feel now is--
+that my whole being is a consent to the fact. But it has been the gradual
+accord between your mind and mine which has brought about that full
+consent."
+
+At the moment Deronda was speaking, that first evening in the book-shop
+was vividly in his remembrance, with all the struggling aloofness he had
+then felt from Mordecai's prophetic confidence. It was his nature to
+delight in satisfying to the utmost the eagerly-expectant soul, which
+seemed to be looking out from the face before him, like the long-enduring
+watcher who at last sees the mountain signal-flame; and he went on with
+fuller fervor--
+
+"It is through your inspiration that I have discerned what may be my
+life's task. It is you who have given shape to what, I believe, was an
+inherited yearning--the effect of brooding, passionate thoughts in many
+ancestors--thoughts that seem to have been intensely present in my
+grandfather. Suppose the stolen offspring of some mountain tribe brought
+up in a city of the plain, or one with an inherited genius for painting,
+and born blind--the ancestral life would lie within them as a dim longing
+for unknown objects and sensations, and the spell-bound habit of their
+inherited frames would be like a cunningly-wrought musical instrument,
+never played on, but quivering throughout in uneasy mysterious meanings of
+its intricate structure that, under the right touch, gives music.
+Something like that, I think, has been my experience. Since I began to
+read and know, I have always longed for some ideal task, in which I might
+feel myself the heart and brain of a multitude--some social captainship,
+which would come to me as a duty, and not be striven for as a personal
+prize. You have raised the image of such a task for me--to bind our race
+together in spite of heresy. You have said to me--'Our religion united us
+before it divided us--it made us a people before it made Rabbanites and
+Karaites.' I mean to try what can be done with that union--I mean to work
+in your spirit. Failure will not be ignoble, but it would be ignoble for
+me not to try."
+
+"Even as my brother that fed at the breasts of my mother," said Mordecai,
+falling back in his chair with a look of exultant repose, as after some
+finished labor.
+
+To estimate the effect of this ardent outpouring from Deronda we must
+remember his former reserve, his careful avoidance of premature assent or
+delusive encouragement, which gave to this decided pledge of himself a
+sacramental solemnity, both for his own mind and Mordecai's. On Mirah the
+effect was equally strong, though with a difference: she felt a surprise
+which had no place in her brother's mind, at Deronda's suddenly revealed
+sense of nearness to them: there seemed to be a breaking of day around her
+which might show her other facts unlike her forebodings in the darkness.
+But after a moment's silence Mordecai spoke again--
+
+"It has begun already--the marriage of our souls. It waits but the passing
+away of this body, and then they who are betrothed shall unite in a
+stricter bond, and what is mine shall be thine. Call nothing mine that I
+have written, Daniel; for though our masters delivered rightly that
+everything should be quoted in the name of him that said it--and their
+rule is good--yet it does not exclude the willing marriage which melts
+soul into soul, and makes thought fuller as the clear waters are made
+fuller, where the fullness is inseparable and the clearness is
+inseparable. For I have judged what I have written, and I desire the body
+that I gave my thought to pass away as this fleshly body will pass; but
+let the thought be born again from our fuller soul which shall be called
+yours."
+
+"You must not ask me to promise that," said Deronda, smiling. "I must be
+convinced first of special reasons for it in the writings themselves. And
+I am too backward a pupil yet. That blent* transmission must go on without
+any choice of ours; but what we can't hinder must not make our rule for
+what we ought to choose. I think our duty is faithful tradition where we
+can attain it. And so you would insist for any one but yourself. Don't ask
+me to deny my spiritual parentage, when I am finding the clue of my life
+in the recognition of natural parentage."
+
+"I will ask for no promise till you see the reason," said Mordecai. "You
+have said the truth: I would obey the Master's rule for another. But for
+years my hope, nay, my confidence, has been, not that the imperfect image
+of my thought, which is an ill-shaped work of the youthful carver who has
+seen a heavenly pattern, and trembles in imitating the vision--not that
+this should live, but that my vision and passion should enter into yours--
+yea, into yours; for he whom I longed for afar, was he not you whom I
+discerned as mine when you came near? Nevertheless, you shall judge. For
+my soul is satisfied." Mordecai paused, and then began in a changed tone,
+reverting to previous suggestions from Deronda's disclosure: "What moved
+your parents----?" but he immediately checked himself, and added, "Nay, I
+ask not that you should tell me aught concerning others, unless it is your
+pleasure."
+
+"Some time--gradually--you will know all," said Deronda. "But now tell me
+more about yourselves, and how the time has passed since I went away. I am
+sure there has been some trouble. Mirah has been in distress about
+something."
+
+He looked at Mirah, but she immediately turned to her brother, appealing
+to him to give the difficult answer. She hoped he would not think it
+necessary to tell Deronda the facts about her father on such an evening as
+this. Just when Deronda had brought himself so near, and identified
+himself with her brother, it was cutting to her that he should hear of
+this disgrace clinging about them, which seemed to have become partly his.
+To relieve herself she rose to take up her hat and cloak, thinking she
+would go to her own room: perhaps they would speak more easily when she
+had left them. But meanwhile Mordecai said--
+
+"To day there has been a grief. A duty which seemed to have gone far into
+the distance, has come back and turned its face upon us, and raised no
+gladness--has raised a dread that we must submit to. But for the moment we
+are delivered from any visible yoke. Let us defer speaking of it as if
+this evening which is deepening about us were the beginning of the
+festival in which we must offer the first fruits of our joy, and mingle no
+mourning with them."
+
+Deronda divined the hinted grief, and left it in silence, rising as he saw
+Mirah rise, and saying to her, "Are you going? I must leave almost
+immediately--when I and Mrs. Adam have mounted the precious chest, and I
+have delivered the key to Mordecai--no, Ezra,--may I call him Ezra now? I
+have learned to think of him as Ezra since I have heard you call him so."
+
+"Please call him Ezra," said Mirah, faintly, feeling a new timidity under
+Deronda's glance and near presence. Was there really something different
+about him, or was the difference only in her feeling? The strangely
+various emotions of the last few hours had exhausted her; she was faint
+with fatigue and want of food. Deronda, observing her pallor and
+tremulousness, longed to show more feeling, but dared not. She put out her
+hand with an effort to smile, and then he opened the door for her. That
+was all.
+
+A man of refined pride shrinks from making a lover's approaches to a woman
+whose wealth or rank might make them appear presumptuous or low-motived;
+but Deronda was finding a more delicate difficulty in a position which,
+superficially taken, was the reverse of that--though to an ardent
+reverential love, the loved woman has always a kind of wealth and rank
+which makes a man keenly susceptible about the aspect of his addresses.
+Deronda's difficulty was what any generous man might have felt in some
+degree; but it affected him peculiarly through his imaginative sympathy
+with a mind in which gratitude was strong. Mirah, he knew, felt herself
+bound to him by deep obligations, which to her sensibilities might give
+every wish of his the aspect of a claim; and an inability to fulfill it
+would cause her a pain continually revived by their inevitable communion
+in care of Ezra. Here were fears not of pride only, but of extreme
+tenderness. Altogether, to have the character of a benefactor seemed to
+Deronda's anxiety an insurmountable obstacle to confessing himself a
+lover, unless in some inconceivable way it could be revealed to him that
+Mirah's heart had accepted him beforehand. And the agitation on his own
+account, too, was not small.
+
+Even a man who has practised himself in love-making till his own glibness
+has rendered him sceptical, may at last be overtaken by the lover's awe--
+may tremble, stammer, and show other signs of recovered sensibility no
+more in the range of his acquired talents than pins and needles after
+numbness: how much more may that energetic timidity possess a man whose
+inward history has cherished his susceptibilities instead of dulling them,
+and has kept all the language of passion fresh and rooted as the lovely
+leafage about the hill-side spring!
+
+As for Mirah her dear head lay on its pillow that night with its former
+suspicions thrown out of shape but still present, like an ugly story which
+had been discredited but not therefore dissipated. All that she was
+certain of about Deronda seemed to prove that he had no such fetters upon
+him as she had been allowing herself to believe in. His whole manner as
+well as his words implied that there were no hidden bonds remaining to
+have any effect in determining his future. But notwithstanding this
+plainly reasonable inference, uneasiness still clung about Mirah's heart.
+Deronda was not to blame, but he had an importance for Mrs. Grandcourt
+which must give her some hold on him. And the thought of any close
+confidence between them stirred the little biting snake that had long lain
+curled and harmless in Mirah's gentle bosom.
+
+But did she this evening feel as completely as before that her jealousy
+was no less remote from any possibility for herself personally than if her
+human soul had been lodged in the body of a fawn that Deronda had saved
+from the archers? Hardly. Something indefinable had happened and made a
+difference. The soft warm rain of blossoms which had fallen just where she
+was--did it really come because she was there? What spirit was there among
+the boughs?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIV.
+
+ "Questa montagna e tale,
+ Che sempre al cominciar di sotto a grave.
+ E quanto uom piu va su e men fa male."
+ --DANTE: _Il Purgatorio_.
+
+
+It was not many days after her mother's arrival that Gwendolen would
+consent to remain at Genoa. Her desire to get away from that gem of the
+sea, helped to rally her strength and courage. For what place, though it
+were the flowery vale of Enna, may not the inward sense turn into a circle
+of punishment where the flowers are no better than a crop of flame-tongues
+burning the soles of our feet?
+
+"I shall never like to see the Mediterranean again," said Gwendolen, to
+her mother, who thought that she quite understood her child's feeling
+--even in her tacit prohibition of any express reference to her late
+husband.
+
+Mrs. Davilow, indeed, though compelled formally to regard this time as one
+of severe calamity, was virtually enjoying her life more than she had ever
+done since her daughter's marriage. It seemed that her darling was brought
+back to her not merely with all the old affection, but with a conscious
+cherishing of her mother's nearness, such as we give to a possession that
+we have been on the brink of losing.
+
+"Are you there, mamma?" cried Gwendolen, in the middle of the night (a bed
+had been made for her mother in the same room with hers), very much as she
+would have done in her early girlhood, if she had felt frightened in lying
+awake.
+
+"Yes, dear; can I do anything for you?"
+
+"No, thank you; only I like so to know you are there. Do you mind my
+waking you?" (This question would hardly have been Gwendolen's in her
+early girlhood.)
+
+"I was not asleep, darling."
+
+"It seemed not real that you were with me. I wanted to make it real. I can
+bear things if you are with me. But you must not lie awake, anxious about
+me. You must be happy now. You must let me make you happy now at last--
+else what shall I do?"
+
+"God bless you, dear; I have the best happiness I can have, when you make
+much of me."
+
+But the next night, hearing that she was sighing and restless Mrs. Davilow
+said, "Let me give you your sleeping-draught, Gwendolen."
+
+"No, mamma, thank you; I don't want to sleep."
+
+"It would be so good for you to sleep more, my darling."
+
+"Don't say what would be good for me, mamma," Gwendolen answered,
+impetuously. "You don't know what would be good for me. You and my uncle
+must not contradict me and tell me anything is good for me when I feel it
+is not good."
+
+Mrs. Davilow was silent, not wondering that the poor child was irritable.
+Presently Gwendolen said--
+
+"I was always naughty to you, mamma."
+
+"No, dear, no."
+
+"Yes, I was," said Gwendolen insistently. "It is because I was always
+wicked that I am miserable now."
+
+She burst into sobs and cries. The determination to be silent about all
+the facts of her married life and its close, reacted in these escapes of
+enigmatic excitement.
+
+But dim lights of interpretation were breaking on the mother's mind
+through the information that came from Sir Hugo to Mr. Gascoigne, and,
+with some omissions, from Mr. Gascoigne to herself. The good-natured
+baronet, while he was attending to all decent measures in relation to his
+nephew's death, and the possible washing ashore of the body, thought it
+the kindest thing he could do to use his present friendly intercourse with
+the rector as an opportunity for communicating with him, in the mildest
+way, the purport of Grandcourt's will, so as to save him the additional
+shock that would be in store for him if he carried his illusions all the
+way home. Perhaps Sir Hugo would have been communicable enough without
+that kind motive, but he really felt the motive. He broke the unpleasant
+news to the rector by degrees: at first he only implied his fear that the
+widow was not so splendidly provided for as Mr. Gascoigne, nay, as the
+baronet himself had expected; and only at last, after some previous vague
+reference to large claims on Grandcourt, he disclosed the prior relations
+which, in the unfortunate absence of a legitimate heir, had determined all
+the splendor in another direction.
+
+The rector was deeply hurt, and remembered, more vividly than he had ever
+done before, how offensively proud and repelling the manners of the
+deceased had been toward him--remembered also that he himself, in that
+interesting period just before the arrival of the new occupant at Diplow,
+had received hints of former entangling dissipations, and an undue
+addiction to pleasure, though he had not foreseen that the pleasure which
+had probably, so to speak, been swept into private rubbish-heaps, would
+ever present itself as an array of live caterpillars, disastrous to the
+green meat of respectable people. But he did not make these retrospective
+thoughts audible to Sir Hugo, or lower himself by expressing any
+indignation on merely personal grounds, but behaved like a man of the
+world who had become a conscientious clergyman. His first remark was--
+
+"When a young man makes his will in health, he usually counts on living a
+long while. Probably Mr. Grandcourt did not believe that this will would
+ever have its present effect." After a moment, he added, "The effect is
+painful in more ways than one. Female morality is likely to suffer from
+this marked advantage and prominence being given to illegitimate
+offspring."
+
+"Well, in point of fact," said Sir Hugo, in his comfortable way, "since
+the boy is there, this was really the best alternative for the disposal of
+the estates. Grandcourt had nobody nearer than his cousin. And it's a
+chilling thought that you go out of this life only for the benefit of a
+cousin. A man gets a little pleasure in making his will, if it's for the
+good of his own curly heads; but it's a nuisance when you're giving the
+bequeathing to a used-up fellow like yourself, and one you don't care two
+straws for. It's the next worse thing to having only a life interest in
+your estates. No; I forgive Grandcourt for that part of his will. But,
+between ourselves, what I don't forgive him for, is the shabby way he has
+provided for your niece--_our_ niece, I will say--no better a position
+than if she had been a doctor's widow. Nothing grates on me more than that
+posthumous grudgingness toward a wife. A man ought to have some pride and
+fondness for his widow. _I_ should, I know. I take it as a test of a man,
+that he feels the easier about his death when he can think of his wife and
+daughters being comfortable after it. I like that story of the fellows in
+the Crimean war, who were ready to go to the bottom of the sea if their
+widows were provided for."
+
+"It has certainly taken me by surprise," said Mr. Gascoigne, "all the more
+because, as the one who stood in the place of father to my niece, I had
+shown my reliance on Mr. Grandcourt's apparent liberality in money matters
+by making no claims for her beforehand. That seemed to me due to him under
+the circumstances. Probably you think me blamable."
+
+"Not blamable exactly. I respect a man for trusting another. But take my
+advice. If you marry another niece, though it may be to the Archbishop of
+Canterbury, bind him down. Your niece can't be married for the first time
+twice over. And if he's a good fellow, he'll wish to be bound. But as to
+Mrs. Grandcourt, I can only say that I feel my relation to her all the
+nearer because I think that she has not been well treated. And I hope you
+will urge her to rely on me as a friend."
+
+Thus spake the chivalrous Sir Hugo, in his disgust at the young and
+beautiful widow of a Mallinger Grandcourt being left with only two
+thousand a year and a house in a coal-mining district. To the rector that
+income naturally appeared less shabby and less accompanied with mortifying
+privations; but in this conversation he had devoured a much keener sense
+than the baronet's of the humiliation cast over his niece, and also over
+her nearest friends, by the conspicuous publishing of her husband's
+relation to Mrs. Glasher. And like all men who are good husbands and
+fathers, he felt the humiliation through the minds of the women who would
+be chiefly affected by it; so that the annoyance of first hearing the
+facts was far slighter than what he felt in communicating them to Mrs.
+Davilow, and in anticipating Gwendolen's feeling whenever her mother saw
+fit to tell her of them. For the good rector had an innocent conviction
+that his niece was unaware of Mrs. Glasher's existence, arguing with
+masculine soundness from what maidens and wives were likely to know, do,
+and suffer, and having had a most imperfect observation of the particular
+maiden and wife in question. Not so Gwendolen's mother, who now thought
+that she saw an explanation of much that had been enigmatic in her child's
+conduct and words before and after her engagement, concluding that in some
+inconceivable way Gwendolen had been informed of this left-handed marriage
+and the existence of the children. She trusted to opportunities that would
+arise in moments of affectionate confidence before and during their
+journey to England, when she might gradually learn how far the actual
+state of things was clear to Gwendolen, and prepare her for anything that
+might be a disappointment. But she was spared from devices on the subject.
+
+"I hope you don't expect that I am going to be rich and grand, mamma,"
+said Gwendolen, not long after the rector's communication; "perhaps I
+shall have nothing at all."
+
+She was dressed, and had been sitting long in quiet meditation. Mrs.
+Davilow was startled, but said, after a moment's reflection--
+
+"Oh yes, dear, you will have something. Sir Hugo knows all about the
+will."
+
+"That will not decide," said Gwendolen, abruptly.
+
+"Surely, dear: Sir Hugo says you are to have two thousand a year and the
+house at Gadsmere."
+
+"What I have will depend on what I accept," said Gwendolen. "You and my
+uncle must not attempt to cross me and persuade me about this. I will do
+everything I can do to make you happy, but in anything about my husband I
+must not be interfered with. Is eight hundred a year enough for you,
+mamma?"
+
+"More than enough, dear. You must not think of giving me so much." Mrs.
+Davilow paused a little, and then said, "Do you know who is to have the
+estates and the rest of the money?"
+
+"Yes," said Gwendolen, waving her hand in dismissal of the subject. "I
+know everything. It is all perfectly right, and I wish never to have it
+mentioned."
+
+The mother was silent, looked away, and rose to fetch a fan-screen, with a
+slight flush on her delicate cheeks. Wondering, imagining, she did not
+like to meet her daughter's eyes, and sat down again under a sad
+constraint. What wretchedness her child had perhaps gone through, which
+yet must remain as it always had been, locked away from their mutual
+speech. But Gwendolen was watching her mother with that new divination
+which experience had given her; and in tender relenting at her own
+peremptoriness, said, "Come and sit nearer to me, mamma, and don't be
+unhappy."
+
+Mrs. Davilow did as she was told, but bit her lips in the vain attempt to
+hinder smarting tears. Gwendolen leaned toward her caressingly and said,
+"I mean to be very wise; I do, really. And good--oh, so good to you, dear,
+old, sweet mamma, you won't know me. Only you must not cry."
+
+The resolve that Gwendolen had in her mind was that she would ask Deronda
+whether she ought to accept any of her husband's money--whether she might
+accept what would enable her to provide for her mother. The poor thing
+felt strong enough to do anything that would give her a higher place in
+Deronda's mind.
+
+An invitation that Sir Hugo pressed on her with kind urgency was that she
+and Mrs. Davilow should go straight with him to Park Lane, and make his
+house their abode as long as mourning and other details needed attending
+to in London. Town, he insisted, was just then the most retired of places;
+and he proposed to exert himself at once in getting all articles belonging
+to Gwendolen away from the house in Grosvenor Square. No proposal could
+have suited her better than this of staying a little while in Park Lane.
+It would be easy for her there to have an interview with Deronda, if she
+only knew how to get a letter into his hands, asking him to come to her.
+During the journey, Sir Hugo, having understood that she was acquainted
+with the purport of her husband's will, ventured to talk before her and to
+her about her future arrangements, referring here and there to mildly
+agreeable prospects as matters of course, and otherwise shedding a
+decorous cheerfulness over her widowed position. It seemed to him really
+the more graceful course for a widow to recover her spirits on finding
+that her husband had not dealt as handsomely by her as he might have done;
+it was the testator's fault if he compromised all her grief at his
+departure by giving a testamentary reason for it, so that she might be
+supposed to look sad, not because he had left her, but because he had left
+her poor. The baronet, having his kindliness doubly fanned by the
+favorable wind on his fortunes and by compassion for Gwendolen, had become
+quite fatherly in his behavior to her, called her "my dear," and in
+mentioning Gadsmere to Mr. Gascoigne, with its various advantages and
+disadvantages, spoke of what "we" might do to make the best of that
+property. Gwendolen sat by in pale silence while Sir Hugo, with his face
+turned toward Mrs. Davilow or Mr. Gascoigne, conjectured that Mrs.
+Grandcourt might perhaps prefer letting Gadsmere to residing there during
+any part of the year, in which case he thought that it might be leased on
+capital terms to one of the fellows engaged with the coal: Sir Hugo had
+seen enough of the place to know that it was as comfortable and
+picturesque a box as any man need desire, providing his desires were
+circumscribed within a coal area.
+
+"_I_ shouldn't mind about the soot myself," said the baronet, with that
+dispassionateness which belongs to the potential mood. "Nothing is more
+healthy. And if one's business lay there, Gadsmere would be a paradise. It
+makes quite a feature in Scrogg's history of the county, with the little
+tower and the fine piece of water--the prettiest print in the book."
+
+"A more important place than Offendene, I suppose?" said Mr. Gascoigne.
+
+"Much," said the baronet, decisively. "I was there with my poor brother--
+it is more than a quarter of a century ago, but I remember it very well.
+The rooms may not be larger, but the grounds are on a different scale."
+
+"Our poor dear Offendene is empty after all," said Mrs. Davilow. "When it
+came to the point, Mr. Haynes declared off, and there has been no one to
+take it since. I might as well have accepted Lord Brackenshaw's kind offer
+that I should remain in it another year rent-free: for I should have kept
+the place aired and warmed."
+
+"I hope you've something snug instead," said Sir Hugo.
+
+"A little too snug," said Mr. Gascoigne, smiling at his sister-in-law.
+"You are rather thick upon the ground."
+
+Gwendolen had turned with a changed glance when her mother spoke of
+Offendene being empty. This conversation passed during one of the long
+unaccountable pauses often experienced in foreign trains at some country
+station. There was a dreamy, sunny stillness over the hedgeless fields
+stretching to the boundary of poplars; and to Gwendolen the talk within
+the carriage seemed only to make the dreamland larger with an indistinct
+region of coal-pits, and a purgatorial Gadsmere which she would never
+visit; till at her mother's words, this mingled, dozing view seemed to
+dissolve and give way to a more wakeful vision of Offendene and Pennicote
+under their cooler lights. She saw the gray shoulders of the downs, the
+cattle-specked fields, the shadowy plantations with rutted lanes where the
+barked timber lay for a wayside seat, the neatly-clipped hedges on the
+road from the parsonage to Offendene, the avenue where she was gradually
+discerned from the window, the hall-door opening, and her mother or one of
+the troublesome sisters coming out to meet her. All that brief experience
+of a quiet home which had once seemed a dullness to be fled from, now came
+back to her as a restful escape, a station where she found the breath of
+morning and the unreproaching voice of birds after following a lure
+through a long Satanic masquerade, which she had entered on with an
+intoxicated belief in its disguises, and had seen the end of in shrieking
+fear lest she herself had become one of the evil spirits who were dropping
+their human mummery and hissing around her with serpent tongues.
+
+In this way Gwendolen's mind paused over Offendene and made it the scene
+of many thoughts; but she gave no further outward sign of interest in this
+conversation, any more than in Sir Hugo's opinion on the telegraphic cable
+or her uncle's views of the Church Rate Abolition Bill. What subjects will
+not our talk embrace in leisurely day-journeying from Genoa to London? Even
+strangers, after glancing from China to Peru and opening their mental
+stores with a liberality threatening a mutual impression of poverty on any
+future meeting, are liable to become excessively confidential. But the
+baronet and the rector were under a still stronger pressure toward
+cheerful communication: they were like acquaintances compelled to a long
+drive in a mourning-coach who having first remarked that the occasion is a
+melancholy one, naturally proceed to enliven it by the most miscellaneous
+discourse. "I don't mind telling _you_," said Sir Hugo to the rector, in
+mentioning some private details; while the rector, without saying so, did
+not mind telling the baronet about his sons, and the difficulty of placing
+them in the world. By the dint of discussing all persons and things within
+driving-reach of Diplow, Sir Hugo got himself wrought to a pitch of
+interest in that former home, and of conviction that it was his pleasant
+duty to regain and strengthen his personal influence in the neighborhood,
+that made him declare his intention of taking his family to the place for
+a month or two before the autumn was over; and Mr. Gascoigne cordially
+rejoiced in that prospect. Altogether, the journey was continued and ended
+with mutual liking between the male fellow-travellers.
+
+Meanwhile Gwendolen sat by like one who had visited the spirit-world and
+was full to the lips of an unutterable experience that threw a strange
+unreality over all the talk she was hearing of her own and the world's
+business; and Mrs. Davilow was chiefly occupied in imagining what her
+daughter was feeling, and in wondering what was signified by her hinted
+doubt whether she would accept her husband's bequest. Gwendolen in fact
+had before her the unsealed wall of an immediate purpose shutting off
+every other resolution. How to scale the wall? She wanted again to see and
+consult Deronda, that she might secure herself against any act he would
+disapprove. Would her remorse have maintained its power within her, or
+would she have felt absolved by secrecy, if it had not been for that outer
+conscience which was made for her by Deronda? It is hard to say how much
+we could forgive ourselves if we were secure from judgment by another
+whose opinion is the breathing-medium of all our joy--who brings to us
+with close pressure and immediate sequence that judgment of the Invisible
+and Universal which self-flattery and the world's tolerance would easily
+melt and disperse. In this way our brother may be in the stead of God to
+us, and his opinion which has pierced even to the joints and marrow, may
+be our virtue in the making. That mission of Deronda to Gwendolen had
+begun with what she had felt to be his judgment of her at the gaming-
+table. He might easily have spoiled it:--much of our lives is spent in
+marring our own influence and turning others' belief in us into a widely
+concluding unbelief which they call knowledge of the world, while it is
+really disappointment in you or me. Deronda had not spoiled his mission.
+
+But Gwendolen had forgotten to ask him for his address in case she wanted
+to write, and her only way of reaching him was through Sir Hugo. She was
+not in the least blind to the construction that all witnesses might put on
+her giving signs of dependence on Deronda, and her seeking him more than
+he sought her: Grandcourt's rebukes had sufficiently enlightened her
+pride. But the force, the tenacity of her nature had thrown itself into
+that dependence, and she would no more let go her hold on Deronda's help,
+or deny herself the interview her soul needed, because of witnesses, than
+if she had been in prison in danger of being condemned to death. When she
+was in Park Lane and knew that the baronet would be going down to the
+Abbey immediately (just to see his family for a couple of days and then
+return to transact needful business for Gwendolen), she said to him
+without any air of hesitation, while her mother was present--
+
+"Sir Hugo, I wish to see Mr. Deronda again as soon as possible. I don't
+know his address. Will you tell it me, or let him know that I want to see
+him?"
+
+A quick thought passed across Sir Hugo's face, but made no difference to
+the ease with which he said, "Upon my word, I don't know whether he's at
+his chambers or the Abbey at this moment. But I'll make sure of him. I'll
+send a note now to his chambers telling him to come, and if he's at the
+Abbey I can give him your message and send him up at once. I am sure he
+will want to obey your wish," the baronet ended, with grave kindness, as
+if nothing could seem to him more in the appropriate course of things than
+that she should send such a message.
+
+But he was convinced that Gwendolen had a passionate attachment to
+Deronda, the seeds of which had been laid long ago, and his former
+suspicion now recurred to him with more strength than ever, that her
+feeling was likely to lead her into imprudences--in which kind-hearted Sir
+Hugo was determined to screen and defend her as far as lay in his power.
+To him it was as pretty a story as need be that this fine creature and his
+favorite Dan should have turned out to be formed for each other, and that
+the unsuitable husband should have made his exit in such excellent time.
+Sir Hugo liked that a charming woman should be made as happy as possible.
+In truth, what most vexed his mind in this matter at present was a doubt
+whether the too lofty and inscrutable Dan had not got some scheme or other
+in his head, which would prove to be dearer to him than the lovely Mrs.
+Grandcourt, and put that neatly-prepared marriage with her out of the
+question. It was among the usual paradoxes of feeling that Sir Hugo, who
+had given his fatherly cautions to Deronda against too much tenderness in
+his relations with the bride, should now feel rather irritated against him
+by the suspicion that he had not fallen in love as he ought to have done.
+Of course all this thinking on Sir Hugo's part was eminently premature,
+only a fortnight or so after Grandcourt's death. But it is the trick of
+thinking to be either premature or behind-hand.
+
+However, he sent the note to Deronda's chambers, and it found him there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXV.
+
+ "O, welcome, pure-eyed Faith, white-handed Hope,
+ Thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings!"
+ --MILTON.
+
+
+Deronda did not obey Gwendolen's new summons without some agitation. Not
+his vanity, but his keen sympathy made him susceptible to the danger that
+another's heart might feel larger demands on him than he would be able to
+fulfill; and it was no longer a matter of argument with him, but of
+penetrating consciousness, that Gwendolen's soul clung to his with a
+passionate need. We do not argue the existence of the anger or the scorn
+that thrills through us in a voice; we simply feel it, and it admits of no
+disproof. Deronda felt this woman's destiny hanging on his over a
+precipice of despair. Any one who knows him cannot wonder at his inward
+confession, that if all this had happened little more than a year ago, he
+would hardly have asked himself whether he loved her; the impetuous
+determining impulse which would have moved him would have been to save her
+from sorrow, to shelter her life forevermore from the dangers of
+loneliness, and carry out to the last the rescue he had begun in that
+monitory redemption of the necklace. But now, love and duty had thrown
+other bonds around him, and that impulse could no longer determine his
+life; still, it was present in him as a compassionate yearning, a painful
+quivering at the very imagination of having again and again to meet the
+appeal of her eyes and words. The very strength of the bond, the certainty
+of the resolve, that kept him asunder from her, made him gaze at her lot
+apart with the more aching pity.
+
+He awaited her coming in the back drawing-room--part of that white and
+crimson space where they had sat together at the musical party, where
+Gwendolen had said for the first time that her lot depended on his not
+forsaking her, and her appeal had seemed to melt into the melodic cry--
+_Per pieta non dirmi addio_. But the melody had come from Mirah's dear
+voice.
+
+Deronda walked about this room, which he had for years known by heart,
+with a strange sense of metamorphosis in his own life. The familiar
+objects around him, from Lady Mallinger's gently smiling portrait to the
+also human and urbane faces of the lions on the pilasters of the chimney-
+piece, seemed almost to belong to a previous state of existence which he
+was revisiting in memory only, not in reality; so deep and transforming
+had been the impressions he had lately experienced, so new were the
+conditions under which he found himself in the house he had been
+accustomed to think of as a home--standing with his hat in his hand
+awaiting the entrance of a young creature whose life had also been
+undergoing a transformation--a tragic transformation toward a wavering
+result, in which he felt with apprehensiveness that his own action was
+still bound up.
+
+But Gwendolen was come in, looking changed; not only by her mourning
+dress, but by a more satisfied quietude of expression than he had seen in
+her face at Genoa. Her satisfaction was that Deronda was there; but there
+was no smile between them as they met and clasped hands; each was full of
+remembrance--full of anxious prevision. She said, "It was good of you to
+come. Let us sit down," immediately seating herself in the nearest chair.
+He placed himself opposite to her.
+
+"I asked you to come because I want you to tell me what I ought to do,"
+she began, at once. "Don't be afraid of telling me what you think is
+right, because it seems hard. I have made up my mind to do it. I was
+afraid once of being poor; I could not bear to think of being under other
+people; and that was why I did something--why I married. I have borne
+worse things now. I think I could bear to be poor, if you think I ought.
+Do you know about my husband's will?"
+
+"Yes, Sir Hugo told me," said Deronda, already guessing the question she
+had to ask.
+
+"Ought I to take anything he has left me? I will tell you what I have been
+thinking," said Gwendolen, with a more nervous eagerness. "Perhaps you may
+not quite know that I really did think a good deal about my mother when I
+married. I _was_ selfish, but I did love her, and feel about her poverty;
+and what comforted me most at first, when I was miserable, was her being
+better off because I had married. The thing that would be hardest to me
+now would be to see her in poverty again; and I have been thinking that if
+I took enough to provide for her, and no more--nothing for myself--it
+would not be wrong; for I was very precious to my mother--and he took me
+from her--and he meant--and if she had known--"
+
+Gwendolen broke off. She had been preparing herself for this interview by
+thinking of hardly anything else than this question of right toward her
+mother; but the question had carried with it thoughts and reasons which it
+was impossible for her to utter, and these perilous remembrances swarmed
+between her words, making her speech more and more agitated and tremulous.
+She looked down helplessly at her hands, now unladen of all rings except
+her wedding-ring.
+
+"Do not hurt yourself by speaking of that," said Deronda, tenderly. "There
+is no need; the case is very simple. I think I can hardly judge wrongly
+about it. You consult me because I am the only person to whom you have
+confided the most painful part of your experience: and I can understand
+your scruples." He did not go on immediately, waiting for her to recover
+herself. The silence seemed to Gwendolen full of the tenderness that she
+heard in his voice, and she had courage to lift up her eyes and look at
+him as he said, "You are conscious of something which you feel to be a
+crime toward one who is dead. You think that you have forfeited all claim
+as a wife. You shrink from taking what was his. You want to keep yourself
+from profiting by his death. Your feeling even urges you to some self-
+punishment--some scourging of the self that disobeyed your better will--
+the will that struggled against temptation. I have known something of that
+myself. Do I understand you?"
+
+"Yes--at least, I want to be good--not like what I have been," said
+Gwendolen. "I will try to bear what you think I ought to bear. I have
+tried to tell you the worst about myself. What ought I to do?"
+
+"If no one but yourself were concerned in this question of income," said
+Deronda, "I should hardly dare to urge you against any remorseful
+prompting; but I take as a guide now, your feeling about Mrs. Davilow,
+which seems to me quite just. I cannot think that your husband's dues even
+to yourself are nullified by any act you have committed. He voluntarily
+entered into your life, and affected its course in what is always the most
+momentous way. But setting that aside, it was due from him in his position
+that he should provide for your mother, and he of course understood that
+if this will took effect she would share the provision he had made for
+you."
+
+"She has had eight hundred a year. What I thought of was to take that and
+leave the rest," said Gwendolen. She had been so long inwardly arguing
+for this as a permission, that her mind could not at once take another
+attitude.
+
+"I think it is not your duty to fix a limit in that way," said Deronda.
+"You would be making a painful enigma for Mrs. Davilow; an income from
+which you shut yourself out must be embittered to her. And your own course
+would become too difficult. We agreed at Genoa that the burden on your
+conscience is one what no one ought to be admitted to the knowledge of.
+The future beneficence of your life will be best furthered by your saving
+all others from the pain of that knowledge. In my opinion you ought simply
+to abide by the provisions of your husband's will, and let your remorse
+tell only on the use that you will make of your monetary independence."
+
+In uttering the last sentence Deronda automatically took up his hat which
+he had laid on the floor beside him. Gwendolen, sensitive to his slightest
+movement, felt her heart giving a great leap, as if it too had a
+consciousness of its own, and would hinder him from going: in the same
+moment she rose from her chair, unable to reflect that the movement was an
+acceptance of his apparent intention to leave her; and Deronda, of course,
+also rose, advancing a little.
+
+"I will do what you tell me," said Gwendolen, hurriedly; "but what else
+shall I do?" No other than these simple words were possible to her; and
+even these were too much for her in a state of emotion where her proud
+secrecy was disenthroned: as the child-like sentences fell from her lips
+they re-acted on her like a picture of her own helplessness, and she could
+not check the sob which sent the large tears to her eyes. Deronda, too,
+felt a crushing pain; but imminent consequences were visible to him, and
+urged him to the utmost exertion of conscience. When she had pressed her
+tears away, he said, in a gently questioning tone--
+
+"You will probably be soon going with Mrs. Davilow into the country."
+
+"Yes, in a week or ten days." Gwendolen waited an instant, turning her
+eyes vaguely toward the window, as if looking at some imagined prospect.
+"I want to be kind to them all--they can be happier than I can. Is that
+the best I can do?"
+
+"I think so. It is a duty that cannot be doubtful," said Deronda. He
+paused a little between his sentences, feeling a weight of anxiety on all
+his words. "Other duties will spring from it. Looking at your life as a
+debt may seem the dreariest view of things at a distance; but it cannot
+really be so. What makes life dreary is the want of motive: but once
+beginning to act with that penitential, loving purpose you have in your
+mind, there will be unexpected satisfactions--there will be newly-opening
+needs--continually coming to carry you on from day to day. You will find
+your life growing like a plant."
+
+Gwendolen turned her eyes on him with the look of one athirst toward the
+sound of unseen waters. Deronda felt the look as if she had been
+stretching her arms toward him from a forsaken shore. His voice took an
+affectionate imploringness when he said--
+
+"This sorrow, which has cut down to the root, has come to you while you
+are so young--try to think of it not as a spoiling of your life, but as a
+preparation for it. Let it be a preparation----" Any one overhearing his
+tones would have thought he was entreating for his own happiness. "See!
+you have been saved from the worst evils that might have come from your
+marriage, which you feel was wrong. You have had a vision of injurious,
+selfish action--a vision of possible degradation; think that a severe
+angel, seeing you along the road of error, grasped you by the wrist and
+showed you the horror of the life you must avoid. And it has come to you
+in your spring-time. Think of it as a preparation. You can, you will, be
+among the best of women, such as make others glad that they were born."
+
+The words were like the touch of a miraculous hand to Gwendolen. Mingled
+emotions streamed through her frame with a strength that seemed the
+beginning of a new existence, having some new power or other which stirred
+in her vaguely. So pregnant is the divine hope of moral recovery with the
+energy that fulfills it. So potent in us is the infused action of another
+soul, before which we bow in complete love. But the new existence seemed
+inseparable from Deronda: the hope seemed to make his presence permanent.
+It was not her thought, that he loved her, and would cling to her--a
+thought would have tottered with improbability; it was her spiritual
+breath. For the first time since that terrible moment on the sea a flush
+rose and spread over her cheek, brow and neck, deepened an instant or two,
+and then gradually disappeared. She did not speak.
+
+Deronda advanced and put out his hand, saying, "I must not weary you."
+
+She was startled by the sense that he was going, and put her hand in his,
+still without speaking.
+
+"You look ill yet--unlike yourself," he added, while he held her hand.
+
+"I can't sleep much," she answered, with some return of her dispirited
+manner. "Things repeat themselves in me so. They come back--they will all
+come back," she ended, shudderingly, a chill fear threatening her.
+
+"By degrees they will be less insistent," said Deronda. He could not drop
+her hand or move away from her abruptly.
+
+"Sir Hugo says he shall come to stay at Diplow," said Gwendolen, snatching
+at previously intended words which had slipped away from her. "You will
+come too."
+
+"Probably," said Deronda, and then feeling that the word was cold, he
+added, correctively, "Yes, I shall come," and then released her hand, with
+the final friendly pressure of one who has virtually said good-bye.
+
+"And not again here, before I leave town?" said Gwendolen, with timid
+sadness, looking as pallid as ever.
+
+What could Deronda say? "If I can be of any use--if you wish me--certainly
+I will."
+
+"I must wish it," said Gwendolen, impetuously; "you know I must wish it.
+What strength have I? Who else is there?" Again a sob was rising.
+
+Deronda felt a pang, which showed itself in his face. He looked miserable
+as he said, "I will certainly come."
+
+Gwendolen perceived the change in his face; but the intense relief of
+expecting him to come again could not give way to any other feeling, and
+there was a recovery of the inspired hope and courage in her.
+
+"Don't be unhappy about me," she said, in a tone of affectionate
+assurance. "I shall remember your words--every one of them. I shall
+remember what you believe about me; I shall try."
+
+She looked at him firmly, and put out her hand again as if she had
+forgotten what had passed since those words of his which she promised to
+remember. But there was no approach to a smile on her lips. She had never
+smiled since her husband's death. When she stood still and in silence, she
+looked like a melancholy statue of the Gwendolen whose laughter had once
+been so ready when others were grave.
+
+It is only by remembering the searching anguish which had changed the
+aspect of the world for her that we can understand her behavior to
+Deronda--the unreflecting openness, nay, the importunate pleading, with
+which she expressed her dependence on him. Considerations such as would
+have filled the minds of indifferent spectators could not occur to her,
+any more than if flames had been mounting around her, and she had flung
+herself into his open arms and clung about his neck that he might carry
+her into safety. She identified him with the struggling regenerative
+process in her which had begun with his action. Is it any wonder that she
+saw her own necessity reflected in his feeling? She was in that state of
+unconscious reliance and expectation which is a common experience with us
+when we are preoccupied with our own trouble or our own purposes. We
+diffuse our feeling over others, and count on their acting from our
+motives. Her imagination had not been turned to a future union with
+Deronda by any other than the spiritual tie which had been continually
+strengthening; but also it had not been turned toward a future separation
+from him. Love-making and marriage--how could they now be the imagery in
+which poor Gwendolen's deepest attachment could spontaneously clothe
+itself? Mighty Love had laid his hand upon her; but what had he demanded
+of her? Acceptance of rebuke--the hard task of self-change--confession--
+endurance. If she cried toward him, what then? She cried as the child
+cries whose little feet have fallen backward--cried to be taken by the
+hand, lest she should lose herself.
+
+The cry pierced Deronda. What position could have been more difficult for
+a man full of tenderness, yet with clear foresight? He was the only
+creature who knew the real nature of Gwendolen's trouble: to withdraw
+himself from any appeal of hers would be to consign her to a dangerous
+loneliness. He could not reconcile himself to the cruelty of apparently
+rejecting her dependence on him; and yet in the nearer or farther distance
+he saw a coming wrench, which all present strengthening of their bond
+would make the harder.
+
+He was obliged to risk that. He went once and again to Park Lane before
+Gwendolen left; but their interviews were in the presence of Mrs. Davilow,
+and were therefore less agitating. Gwendolen, since she had determined to
+accept her income, had conceived a project which she liked to speak of: it
+was, to place her mother and sisters with herself in Offendene again, and,
+as she said, piece back her life unto that time when they first went
+there, and when everything was happiness about her, only she did not know
+it. The idea had been mentioned to Sir Hugo, who was going to exert
+himself about the letting of Gadsmere for a rent which would more than pay
+the rent of Offendene. All this was told to Deronda, who willingly dwelt
+on a subject that seemed to give some soothing occupation to Gwendolen. He
+said nothing and she asked nothing, of what chiefly occupied himself. Her
+mind was fixed on his coming to Diplow before the autumn was over; and she
+no more thought of the Lapidoths--the little Jewess and her brother--as
+likely to make a difference in her destiny, than of the fermenting
+political and social leaven which was making a difference in the history
+of the world. In fact poor Gwendolen's memory had been stunned, and all
+outside the lava-lit track of her troubled conscience, and her effort to
+get deliverance from it, lay for her in dim forgetfulness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVI.
+
+
+ "One day still fierce 'mid many a day struck calm."
+ --BROWNING: _The King and the Book_.
+
+
+Meanwhile Ezra and Mirah, whom Gwendolen did not include in her thinking
+about Deronda, were having their relation to him drawn closer and brought
+into fuller light.
+
+The father Lapidoth had quitted his daughter at the doorstep, ruled by
+that possibility of staking something in play of betting which presented
+itself with the handling of any sum beyond the price of staying actual
+hunger, and left no care for alternative prospects or resolutions. Until
+he had lost everything he never considered whether he would apply to Mirah
+again or whether he would brave his son's presence. In the first moment he
+had shrunk from encountering Ezra as he would have shrunk from any other
+situation of disagreeable constraint; and the possession of Mirah's purse
+was enough to banish the thought of future necessities. The gambling
+appetite is more absolutely dominant than bodily hunger, which can be
+neutralized by an emotional or intellectual excitation; but the passion
+for watching chances--the habitual suspensive poise of the mind in actual
+or imaginary play--nullifies the susceptibility of other excitation. In
+its final, imperious stage, it seems the unjoyous dissipation of demons,
+seeking diversion on the burning marl of perdition.
+
+But every form of selfishness, however abstract and unhuman, requires the
+support of at least one meal a day; and though Lapidoth's appetite for
+food and drink was extremely moderate, he had slipped into a shabby,
+unfriendly form of life in which the appetite could not be satisfied
+without some ready money. When, in a brief visit at a house which
+announced "Pyramids" on the window-blind, he had first doubled and trebled
+and finally lost Mirah's thirty shillings, he went out with her empty
+purse in his pocket, already balancing in his mind whether he should get
+another immediate stake by pawning the purse, or whether he should go back
+to her giving himself a good countenance by restoring the purse, and
+declaring that he had used the money in paying a score that was standing
+against him. Besides, among the sensibilities still left strong in
+Lapidoth was the sensibility to his own claims, and he appeared to himself
+to have a claim on any property his children might possess, which was
+stronger than the justice of his son's resentment. After all, to take up
+his lodging with his children was the best thing he could do; and the more
+he thought of meeting Ezra the less he winced from it, his imagination
+being more wrought on by the chances of his getting something into his
+pocket with safety and without exertion, than by the threat of a private
+humiliation. Luck had been against him lately; he expected it to turn--and
+might not the turn begin with some opening of supplies which would present
+itself through his daughter's affairs and the good friends she had spoken
+of? Lapidoth counted on the fascination of his cleverness--an old habit of
+mind which early experience had sanctioned: and it is not only women who
+are unaware of their diminished charm, or imagine that they can feign not
+to be worn out.
+
+The result of Lapidoth's rapid balancing was that he went toward the
+little square in Brompton with the hope that, by walking about and
+watching, he might catch sight of Mirah going out or returning, in which
+case his entrance into the house would be made easier. But it was already
+evening--the evening of the day next to that which he had first seen her;
+and after a little waiting, weariness made him reflect that he might ring,
+and if she were not at home he might ask the time at which she was
+expected. But on coming near the house he knew that she was at home: he
+heard her singing.
+
+Mirah, seated at the piano, was pouring forth "_Herz, mein Herz_," while
+Ezra was listening with his eyes shut, when Mrs. Adam opened the door, and
+said in some embarrassment--
+
+"A gentleman below says he is your father, miss."
+
+"I will go down to him," said Mirah, starting up immediately and looking
+at her brother.
+
+"No, Mirah, not so," said Ezra, with decision. "Let him come up, Mrs.
+Adam."
+
+Mirah stood with her hands pinching each other, and feeling sick with
+anxiety, while she continued looking at Ezra, who had also risen, and was
+evidently much shaken. But there was an expression in his face which she
+had never seen before; his brow was knit, his lips seemed hardened with
+the same severity that gleamed from his eye.
+
+When Mrs. Adam opened the door to let in the father, she could not help
+casting a look at the group, and after glancing from the younger man to
+the elder, said to herself as she closed the door, "Father, sure enough."
+The likeness was that of outline, which is always most striking at the
+first moment; the expression had been wrought into the strongest contrasts
+by such hidden or inconspicuous differences as can make the genius of a
+Cromwell within the outward type of a father who was no more than a
+respectable parishioner.
+
+Lapidoth had put on a melancholy expression beforehand, but there was some
+real wincing in his frame as he said--
+
+"Well, Ezra, my boy, you hardly know me after so many years."
+
+"I know you--too well--father," said Ezra, with a slow biting solemnity
+which made the word father a reproach.
+
+"Ah, you are not pleased with me. I don't wonder at it. Appearances have
+been against me. When a man gets into straits he can't do just as he would
+by himself or anybody else, _I_'ve suffered enough, I know," said
+Lapidoth, quickly. In speaking he always recovered some glibness and
+hardihood; and now turning toward Mirah, he held out her purse, saying,
+"Here's your little purse, my dear. I thought you'd be anxious about it
+because of that bit of writing. I've emptied it, you'll see, for I had a
+score to pay for food and lodging. I knew you would like me to clear
+myself, and here I stand--without a single farthing in my pocket--at the
+mercy of my children; You can turn me out if you like, without getting a
+policeman. Say the word, Mirah; say, 'Father, I've had enough of you; you
+made a pet of me, and spent your all on me, when I couldn't have done
+without you; but I can do better without you now,'--say that, and I'm gone
+out like a spark. I shan't spoil your pleasure again." The tears were in
+his voice as usual, before he had finished.
+
+"You know I could never say it, father," answered Mirah, with not the less
+anguish because she felt the falsity of everything in his speech except
+the implied wish to remain in the house.
+
+"Mirah, my sister, leave us!" said Ezra, in a tone of authority.
+
+She looked at her brother falteringly, beseechingly--in awe of his
+decision, yet unable to go without making a plea for this father who was
+like something that had grown in her flesh with pain. She went close to
+her brother, and putting her hand in his, said, in a low voice, but not so
+low as to be unheard by Lapidoth, "Remember, Ezra--you said my mother
+would not have shut him out."
+
+"Trust me, and go," said Ezra.
+
+She left the room, but after going a few steps up the stairs, sat down
+with a palpitating heart. If, because of anything her brother said to him,
+he went away---
+
+Lapidoth had some sense of what was being prepared for him in his son's
+mind, but he was beginning to adjust himself to the situation and find a
+point of view that would give him a cool superiority to any attempt at
+humiliating him. This haggard son, speaking as from a sepulchre, had the
+incongruity which selfish levity learns to see in suffering, and until the
+unrelenting pincers of disease clutch its own flesh. Whatever preaching he
+might deliver must be taken for a matter of course, as a man finding
+shelter from hail in an open cathedral! might take a little religious
+howling that happened to be going on there.
+
+Lapidoth was not born with this sort of callousness: he had achieved it.
+
+"This home that we have here," Ezra began, "is maintained partly by the
+generosity of a beloved friend who supports me, and partly by the labors
+of my sister, who supports herself. While we have a home we will not shut
+you out from it. We will not cast you out to the mercy of your vices. For
+you are our father, and though you have broken your bond, we acknowledge
+ours. But I will never trust you. You absconded with money, leaving your
+debts unpaid; you forsook my mother; you robbed her of her little child
+and broke her heart; you have become a gambler, and where shame and
+conscience were there sits an insatiable desire; you were ready to sell my
+sister--you had sold her, but the price was denied you. The man who has
+done these things must never expect to be trusted any more. We will share
+our food with you--you shall have a bed, and clothing. We will do this
+duty to you, because you are our father. But you will never be trusted.
+You are an evil man: you made the misery of our mother. That such a man is
+our father is a brand on our flesh which will not cease smarting. But the
+Eternal has laid it upon us; and though human justice were to flog you for
+crimes, and your body fell helpless before the public scorn, we would
+still say, 'This is our father; make way, that we may carry him out of
+your sight.'"
+
+Lapidoth, in adjusting himself to what was coming, had not been able to
+foresee the exact intensity of the lightning or the exact course it would
+take--that it would not fall outside his frame but through it. He could
+not foresee what was so new to him as this voice from the soul of his son.
+It touched that spring of hysterical excitability which Mirah used to
+witness in him when he sat at home and sobbed. As Ezra ended, Lapidoth
+threw himself into a chair and cried like a woman, burying his face
+against the table--and yet, strangely, while this hysterical crying was an
+inevitable reaction in him under the stress of his son's words, it was
+also a conscious resource in a difficulty; just as in early life, when he
+was a bright-faced curly young man, he had been used to avail himself of
+this subtly-poised physical susceptibility to turn the edge of resentment
+or disapprobation.
+
+Ezra sat down again and said nothing--exhausted by the shock of his own
+irrepressible utterance, the outburst of feelings which for years he had
+borne in solitude and silence. His thin hands trembled on the arms of the
+chair; he would hardly have found voice to answer a question; he felt as
+if he had taken a step toward beckoning Death. Meanwhile Mirah's quick
+expectant ear detected a sound which her heart recognized: she could not
+stay out of the room any longer. But on opening the door her immediate
+alarm was for Ezra, and it was to his side that she went, taking his
+trembling hand in hers, which he pressed and found support in; but he did
+not speak or even look at her. The father with his face buried was
+conscious that Mirah had entered, and presently lifted up his head,
+pressed his handkerchief against his eyes, put out his hand toward her,
+and said with plaintive hoarseness, "Good-bye, Mirah; your father will not
+trouble you again. He deserves to die like a dog by the roadside, and he
+will. If your mother had lived, she would have forgiven me--thirty-four
+years ago I put the ring on her finger under the _Chuppa_, and we were
+made one. She would have forgiven me, and we should have spent our old age
+together. But I haven't deserved it. Good-bye."
+
+He rose from the chair as he said the last "good-bye." Mirah had put her
+hand in his and held him. She was not tearful and grieving, but frightened
+and awe-struck, as she cried out--
+
+"No, father, no!" Then turning to her brother, "Ezra, you have not
+forbidden him?--Stay, father, and leave off wrong things. Ezra, I cannot
+bear it. How can I say to my father, 'Go and die!'"
+
+"I have not said it," Ezra answered, with great effort. "I have said, stay
+and be sheltered."
+
+"Then you will stay, father--and be taken care of--and come with me," said
+Mirah, drawing him toward the door.
+
+This was really what Lapidoth wanted. And for the moment he felt a sort of
+comfort in recovering his daughter's dutiful attendance, that made a
+change of habits seem possible to him. She led him down to the parlor
+below, and said--
+
+"This is my sitting-room when I am not with Ezra, and there is a bed-room
+behind which shall be yours. You will stay and be good, father. Think that
+you are come back to my mother, and that she has forgiven you--she speaks
+to you through me." Mirah's tones were imploring, but she could not give
+one of her former caresses.
+
+Lapidoth quickly recovered his composure, began to speak to Mirah of the
+improvement in her voice, and other easy subjects, and when Mrs. Adam came
+to lay out his supper, entered into converse with her in order to show her
+that he was not a common person, though his clothes were just now against
+him.
+
+But in his usual wakefulness at night, he fell to wondering what money
+Mirah had by her, and went back over old Continental hours at _Roulette_,
+reproducing the method of his play, and the chances that had frustrated
+it. He had had his reasons for coming to England, but for most things it
+was a cursed country.
+
+These were the stronger visions of the night with Lapidoth, and not the
+worn frame of his ireful son uttering a terrible judgment. Ezra did pass
+across the gaming-table, and his words were audible; but he passed like an
+insubstantial ghost, and his words had the heart eaten out of them by
+numbers and movements that seemed to make the very tissue of Lapidoth's
+consciousness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVII.
+
+ The godhead in us wrings our noble deeds
+ From our reluctant selves.
+
+
+It was an unpleasant surprise to Deronda when he returned from the Abbey
+to find the undesirable father installed in the lodgings at Brompton.
+Mirah had felt it necessary to speak of Deronda to her father, and even to
+make him as fully aware as she could of the way in which the friendship
+with Ezra had begun, and of the sympathy which had cemented it. She passed
+more lightly over what Deronda had done for her, omitting altogether the
+rescue from drowning, and speaking of the shelter she had found in Mrs.
+Meyrick's family so as to leave her father to suppose that it was through
+these friends Deronda had become acquainted with her. She could not
+persuade herself to more completeness in her narrative: she could not let
+the breath of her father's soul pass over her relation to Deronda. And
+Lapidoth, for reasons, was not eager in his questioning about the
+circumstances of her flight and arrival in England. But he was much
+interested in the fact of his children having a beneficent friend
+apparently high in the world.
+
+It was the brother who told Deronda of this new condition added to their
+life. "I am become calm in beholding him now," Ezra ended, "and I try to
+think it possible that my sister's tenderness, and the daily tasting a
+life of peace, may win him to remain aloof from temptation. I have
+enjoined her, and she has promised, to trust him with no money. I have
+convinced her that he will buy with it his own destruction."
+
+Deronda first came on the third day from Ladipoth's arrival. The new
+clothes for which he had been measured were not yet ready, and wishing to
+make a favorable impression, he did not choose to present himself in the
+old ones. He watched for Deronda's departure, and, getting a view of him
+from the window, was rather surprised at his youthfulness, which Mirah had
+not mentioned, and which he had somehow thought out of the question in a
+personage who had taken up a grave friendship and hoary studies with the
+sepulchral Ezra. Lapidoth began to imagine that Deronda's real or chief
+motive must be that he was in love with Mirah. And so much the better; for
+a tie to Mirah had more promise of indulgence for her father than a tie to
+Ezra: and Lapidoth was not without the hope of recommending himself to
+Deronda, and of softening any hard prepossessions. He was behaving with
+much amiability, and trying in all ways at his command to get himself into
+easy domestication with his children--entering into Mirah's music, showing
+himself docile about smoking, which Mrs. Adam could not tolerate in her
+parlor, and walking out in the square with his German pipe, and the
+tobacco with which Mirah supplied him. He was too acute to offer any
+present remonstrance against the refusal of money, which Mirah told him
+that she must persist in as a solemn duty promised to her brother. He was
+comfortable enough to wait.
+
+The next time Deronda came, Lapidoth, equipped in his new clothes, and
+satisfied with his own appearance, was in the room with Ezra, who was
+teaching himself, as a part of his severe duty, to tolerate his father's
+presence whenever it was imposed. Deronda was cold and distant, the first
+sight of this man, who had blighted the lives of his wife and children,
+creating in him a repulsion that was even a physical discomfort. But
+Lapidoth did not let himself be discouraged, asked leave to stay and hear
+the reading of papers from the old chest, and actually made himself useful
+in helping to decipher some difficult German manuscript. This led him to
+suggest that it might be desirable to make a transcription of the
+manuscript, and he offered his services for this purpose, and also to make
+copies of any papers in Roman characters. Though Ezra's young eyes he
+observed were getting weak, his own were still strong. Deronda accepted
+the offer, thinking that Lapidoth showed a sign of grace in the
+willingness to be employed usefully; and he saw a gratified expression in
+Ezra's face, who, however, presently said, "Let all the writing be done
+here; for I cannot trust the papers out of my sight, lest there be an
+accident by burning or otherwise." Poor Ezra felt very much as if he had a
+convict on leave under his charge. Unless he saw his father working, it
+was not possible to believe that he would work in good faith. But by this
+arrangement he fastened on himself the burden of his father's presence,
+which was made painful not only through his deepest, longest associations,
+but also through Lapidoth's restlessness of temperament, which showed
+itself the more as he become familiarized with his situation, and lost any
+awe he had felt of his son. The fact was, he was putting a strong
+constraint on himself in confining his attention for the sake of winning
+Deronda's favor; and like a man in an uncomfortable garment he gave
+himself relief at every opportunity, going out to smoke, or moving about
+and talking, or throwing himself back in his chair and remaining silent,
+but incessantly carrying on a dumb language of facial movement or
+gesticulation: and if Mirah were in the room, he would fall into his old
+habit of talk with her, gossiping about their former doings and
+companions, or repeating quirks and stories, and plots of the plays he
+used to adapt, in the belief that he could at will command the vivacity of
+his earlier time. All this was a mortal infliction to Ezra; and when Mirah
+was at home she tried to relieve him, by getting her father down into the
+parlor and keeping watch over him there. What duty is made of a single
+difficult resolve? The difficulty lies in the daily unflinching support of
+consequences that mar the blessed return of morning with the prospect of
+irritation to be suppressed or shame to be endured. And such consequences
+were being borne by these, as by many other heroic children of an unworthy
+father--with the prospect, at least to Mirah, of their stretching onward
+through the solid part of life.
+
+Meanwhile Lapidoth's presence had raised a new impalpable partition
+between Deronda and Mirah--each of them dreading the soiling inferences of
+his mind, each of them interpreting mistakenly the increased reserve and
+diffidence of the other. But it was not very long before some light came
+to Deronda.
+
+As soon as he could, after returning from his brief visit to the Abbey, he
+had called at Hans Meyrick's rooms, feeling it, on more grounds than one,
+a due of friendship that Hans should be at once acquainted with the
+reasons of his late journey, and the changes of intention it had brought
+about. Hans was not there; he was said to be in the country for a few
+days; and Deronda, after leaving a note, waited a week, rather expecting a
+note in return. But receiving no word, and fearing some freak of feeling
+in the incalculably susceptible Hans, whose proposed sojourn at the Abbey
+he knew had been deferred, he at length made a second call, and was
+admitted into the painting-room, where he found his friend in a light
+coat, without a waistcoat, his long hair still wet from a bath, but with a
+face looking worn and wizened--anything but country-like. He had taken up
+his palette and brushes, and stood before his easel when Deronda entered,
+but the equipment and attitude seemed to have been got up on short notice.
+
+As they shook hands, Deronda said, "You don't look much as if you had been
+in the country, old fellow. Is it Cambridge you have been to?"
+
+"No," said Hans, curtly, throwing down his palette with the air of one who
+has begun to feign by mistake; then pushing forward a chair for Deronda,
+he threw himself into another, and leaned backward with his hands behind
+his head, while he went on, "I've been to I-don't-know-where--No man's
+land--and a mortally unpleasant country it is."
+
+"You don't mean to say you have been drinking, Hans," said Deronda, who
+had seated himself opposite, in anxious survey.
+
+"Nothing so good. I've been smoking opium. I always meant to do it some
+time or other, to try how much bliss could be got by it; and having found
+myself just now rather out of other bliss, I thought it judicious to seize
+the opportunity. But I pledge you my word I shall never tap a cask of that
+bliss again. It disagrees with my constitution."
+
+"What has been the matter? You were in good spirits enough when you wrote
+to me."
+
+"Oh, nothing in particular. The world began to look seedy--a sort of
+cabbage-garden with all the cabbages cut. A malady of genius, you may be
+sure," said Hans, creasing his face into a smile; "and, in fact, I was
+tired of being virtuous without reward, especially in this hot London
+weather."
+
+"Nothing else? No real vexation?" said Deronda.
+
+Hans shook his head.
+
+"I came to tell you of my own affairs, but I can't do it with a good grace
+if you are to hide yours."
+
+"Haven't an affair in the world," said Hans, in a flighty way, "except a
+quarrel with a bric-a-brac man. Besides, as it is the first time in our
+lives that you ever spoke to me about your own affairs, you are only
+beginning to pay a pretty long debt."
+
+Deronda felt convinced that Hans was behaving artificially, but he trusted
+to a return of the old frankness by-and-by if he gave his own confidence.
+
+"You laughed at the mystery of my journey to Italy, Hans," he began. "It
+was for an object that touched my happiness at the very roots. I had never
+known anything about my parents, and I really went to Genoa to meet my
+mother. My father has been long dead--died when I was an infant. My mother
+was the daughter of an eminent Jew; my father was her cousin. Many things
+had caused me to think of this origin as almost a probability before I set
+out. I was so far prepared for the result that I was glad of it--glad to
+find myself a Jew."
+
+"You must not expect me to look surprised, Deronda," said Hans, who had
+changed his attitude, laying one leg across the other and examining the
+heel of his slipper.
+
+"You knew it?"
+
+"My mother told me. She went to the house the morning after you had been
+there--brother and sister both told her. You may imagine we can't rejoice
+as they do. But whatever you are glad of, I shall come to be glad of in
+the end--_when_ exactly the end may be I can't predict," said Hans,
+speaking in a low tone, which was as usual with him as it was to be out of
+humor with his lot, and yet bent on making no fuss about it.
+
+"I quite understand that you can't share my feeling," said Deronda; "but I
+could not let silence lie between us on what casts quite a new light over
+my future. I have taken up some of Mordecai's ideas, and I mean to try and
+carry them out, so far as one man's efforts can go. I dare say I shall by
+and by travel to the East and be away for some years."
+
+Hans said nothing, but rose, seized his palette and began to work his
+brush on it, standing before his picture with his back to Deronda, who
+also felt himself at a break in his path embarrassed by Hans's
+embarrassment.
+
+Presently Hans said, again speaking low, and without turning, "Excuse the
+question, but does Mrs. Grandcourt know of all this?"
+
+"No; and I must beg of you, Hans," said Deronda, rather angrily, "to cease
+joking on that subject. Any notions you have are wide of the truth--are
+the very reverse of the truth."
+
+"I am no more inclined to joke than I shall be at my own funeral," said
+Hans. "But I am not at all sure that you are aware what are my notions on
+that subject."
+
+"Perhaps not," said Deronda. "But let me say, once for all, that in
+relation to Mrs. Grandcourt, I never have had, and never shall have the
+position of a lover. If you have ever seriously put that interpretation on
+anything you have observed, you are supremely mistaken."
+
+There was silence a little while, and to each the silence was like an
+irritating air, exaggerating discomfort.
+
+"Perhaps I have been mistaken in another interpretation, also," said Hans,
+presently.
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"That you had no wish to hold the position of a lover toward another
+woman, who is neither wife nor widow."
+
+"I can't pretend not to understand you, Meyrick. It is painful that our
+wishes should clash. I hope you will tell me if you have any ground for
+supposing that you would succeed."
+
+"That seems rather a superfluous inquiry on your part, Deronda," said
+Hans, with some irritation.
+
+"Why superfluous?"
+
+"Because you are perfectly convinced on the subject--and probably have had
+the very best evidence to convince you."
+
+"I will be more frank with you than you are with me," said Deronda, still
+heated by Hans' show of temper, and yet sorry for him. "I have never had
+the slightest evidence that I should succeed myself. In fact, I have very
+little hope."
+
+Hans looked round hastily at his friend, but immediately turned to his
+picture again.
+
+"And in our present situation," said Deronda, hurt by the idea that Hans
+suspected him of insincerity, and giving an offended emphasis to his
+words, "I don't see how I can deliberately make known my feeling to her.
+If she could not return it, I should have embittered her best comfort; for
+neither she nor I can be parted from her brother, and we should have to
+meet continually. If I were to cause her that sort of pain by an unwilling
+betrayal of my feeling, I should be no better than a mischievous animal."
+
+"I don't know that I have ever betrayed _my_ feeling to her," said Hans,
+as if he were vindicating himself.
+
+"You mean that we are on a level, then; you have no reason to envy me."
+
+"Oh, not the slightest," said Hans, with bitter irony. "You have measured
+my conceit and know that it out-tops all your advantages."
+
+"I am a nuisance to you, Meyrick. I am sorry, but I can't help it," said
+Deronda, rising. "After what passed between us before, I wished to have
+this explanation; and I don't see that any pretensions of mine have made a
+real difference to you. They are not likely to make any pleasant
+difference to myself under present circumstances. Now the father is there
+--did you know that the father is there?"
+
+"Yes. If he were not a Jew I would permit myself to damn him--with faint
+praise, I mean," said Hans, but with no smile.
+
+"She and I meet under greater constraint than ever. Things might go on in
+this way for two years without my getting any insight into her feeling
+toward me. That is the whole state of affairs, Hans. Neither you nor I
+have injured the other, that I can see. We must put up with this sort of
+rivalry in a hope that is likely enough to come to nothing. Our friendship
+can bear that strain, surely."
+
+"No, it can't," said Hans, impetuously, throwing down his tools, thrusting
+his hands into his coat-pockets, and turning round to face Deronda, who
+drew back a little and looked at him with amazement. Hans went on in the
+same tone--
+
+"Our friendship--my friendship--can't bear the strain of behaving to you
+like an ungrateful dastard and grudging you your happiness. For you _are_
+the happiest dog in the world. If Mirah loves anybody better than her
+brother, _you are the man_."
+
+Hans turned on his heel and threw himself into his chair, looking up at
+Deronda with an expression the reverse of tender. Something like a shock
+passed through Deronda, and, after an instant, he said--
+
+"It is a good-natured fiction of yours, Hans."
+
+"I am not in a good-natured mood. I assure you I found the fact
+disagreeable when it was thrust on me--all the more, or perhaps all the
+less, because I believed then that your heart was pledged to the duchess.
+But now, confound you! you turn out to be in love in the right place--a
+Jew--and everything eligible."
+
+"Tell me what convinced you--there's a good fellow," said Deronda,
+distrusting a delight that he was unused to.
+
+"Don't ask. Little mother was witness. The upshot is, that Mirah is
+jealous of the duchess, and the sooner you relieve your mind the better.
+There! I've cleared off a score or two, and may be allowed to swear at you
+for getting what you deserve--which is just the very best luck I know of."
+
+"God bless you, Hans!" said Deronda, putting out his hand, which the other
+took and wrung in silence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXVIII.
+
+ "All thoughts, all passions, all delights,
+ Whatever stirs this mortal frame,
+ All are but ministers of Love,
+ And feed his sacred flame."
+ --COLERIDGE.
+
+
+Deronda's eagerness to confess his love could hardly have had a stronger
+stimulus than Hans had given it in his assurance that Mirah needed relief
+from jealousy. He went on his next visit to Ezra with the determination to
+be resolute in using--nay, in requesting--an opportunity of private
+conversation with her. If she accepted his love, he felt courageous about
+all other consequences, and as her betrothed husband he would gain a
+protective authority which might be a desirable defense for her in future
+difficulties with her father. Deronda had not observed any signs of
+growing restlessness in Lapidoth, or of diminished desire to recommend
+himself; but he had forebodings of some future struggle, some
+mortification, or some intolerable increase of domestic disquietude in
+which he might save Ezra and Mirah from being helpless victims.
+
+His forebodings would have been strengthened if he had known what was
+going on in the father's mind. That amount of restlessness, that
+desultoriness of attention, which made a small torture to Ezra, was to
+Lapidoth an irksome submission to restraint, only made bearable by his
+thinking of it as a means of by-and-by securing a well-conditioned
+freedom. He began with the intention of awaiting some really good chance,
+such as an opening for getting a considerable sum from Deronda; but all
+the while he was looking about curiously, and trying to discover where
+Mirah deposited her money and her keys. The imperious gambling desire
+within him, which carried on its activity through every other occupation,
+and made a continuous web of imagination that held all else in its meshes,
+would hardly have been under the control of a contracted purpose, if he
+had been able to lay his hands on any sum worth capturing. But Mirah, with
+her practical clear-sightedness, guarded against any frustration of the
+promise she had given to Ezra, by confiding all money, except what she was
+immediately in want of, to Mrs. Meyrick's care, and Lapidoth felt himself
+under an irritating completeness of supply in kind as in a lunatic asylum
+where everything was made safe against him. To have opened a desk or
+drawer of Mirah's, and pocketed any bank-notes found there, would have
+been to his mind a sort of domestic appropriation which had no disgrace in
+it; the degrees of liberty a man allows himself with other people's
+property being often delicately drawn, even beyond the boundary where the
+law begins to lay its hold--which is the reason why spoons are a safer
+investment than mining shares. Lapidoth really felt himself injuriously
+treated by his daughter, and thought that he ought to have had what he
+wanted of her other earnings as he had of her apple-tart. But he remained
+submissive; indeed, the indiscretion that most tempted him, was not any
+insistance with Mirah, but some kind of appeal to Deronda. Clever persons
+who have nothing else to sell can often put a good price on their absence,
+and Lapidoth's difficult search for devices forced upon him the idea that
+his family would find themselves happier without him, and that Deronda
+would be willing to advance a considerable sum for the sake of getting rid
+of him. But, in spite of well-practiced hardihood, Lapidoth was still in
+some awe of Ezra's imposing friend, and deferred his purpose indefinitely.
+
+On this day, when Deronda had come full of a gladdened consciousness,
+which inevitably showed itself in his air and speech, Lapidoth was at a
+crisis of discontent and longing that made his mind busy with schemes of
+freedom, and Deronda's new amenity encouraged them. This pre-occupation
+was at last so strong as to interfere with his usual show of interest in
+what went forward, and his persistence in sitting by even when there was
+reading which he could not follow. After sitting a little while, he went
+out to smoke and walk in the square, and the two friends were all the
+easier. Mirah was not at home, but she was sure to be in again before
+Deronda left, and his eyes glowed with a secret anticipation: he thought
+that when he saw her again he should see some sweetness of recognition for
+himself to which his eyes had been sealed before. There was an additional
+playful affectionateness in his manner toward Ezra.
+
+"This little room is too close for you, Ezra," he said, breaking off his
+reading. "The week's heat we sometimes get here is worse than the heat in
+Genoa, where one sits in the shaded coolness of large rooms. You must have
+a better home now. I shall do as I like with you, being the stronger
+half." He smiled toward Ezra, who said--
+
+"I am straitened for nothing except breath. But you, who might be in a
+spacious palace, with the wide green country around you, find this a
+narrow prison. Nevertheless, I cannot say, 'Go.'"
+
+"Oh, the country would be a banishment while you are here," said Deronda,
+rising and walking round the double room, which yet offered no long
+promenade, while he made a great fan of his handkerchief. "This is the
+happiest room in the world to me. Besides, I will imagine myself in the
+East, since I am getting ready to go there some day. Only I will not wear
+a cravat and a heavy ring there," he ended emphatically, pausing to take
+off those superfluities and deposit them on a small table behind Ezra, who
+had the table in front of him covered with books and papers.
+
+"I have been wearing my memorable ring ever since I came home," he went
+on, as he reseated himself. "But I am such a Sybarite that I constantly
+put it off as a burden when I am doing anything. I understand why the
+Romans had summer rings--_if_ they had them. Now then, I shall get on
+better."
+
+They were soon absorbed in their work again. Deronda was reading a piece
+of rabbinical Hebrew under Ezra's correction and comment, and they took
+little notice when Lapidoth re-entered and took a seat somewhat in the
+background.
+
+His rambling eyes quickly alighted on the ring that sparkled on the bit of
+dark mahogany. During his walk, his mind had been occupied with the
+fiction of an advantageous opening for him abroad, only requiring a sum of
+ready money, which, on being communicated to Deronda in private, might
+immediately draw from him a question as to the amount of the required sum:
+and it was this part of his forecast that Lapidoth found the most
+debatable, there being a danger in asking too much, and a prospective
+regret in asking too little. His own desire gave him no limit, and he was
+quite without guidance as to the limit of Deronda's willingness. But now,
+in the midst of these airy conditions preparatory to a receipt which
+remained indefinite, this ring, which on Deronda's finger had become
+familiar to Lapidoth's envy, suddenly shone detached and within easy
+grasp. Its value was certainly below the smallest of the imaginary sums
+that his purpose fluctuated between; but then it was before him as a solid
+fact, and his desire at once leaped into the thought (not yet an
+intention) that if he were quietly to pocket that ring and walk away he
+would have the means of comfortable escape from present restraint, without
+trouble, and also without danger; for any property of Deronda's (available
+without his formal consent) was all one with his children's property,
+since their father would never be prosecuted for taking it. The details of
+this thinking followed each other so quickly that they seemed to rise
+before him as one picture. Lapidoth had never committed larceny; but
+larceny is a form of appropriation for which people are punished by law;
+and, take this ring from a virtual relation, who would have been willing
+to make a much heavier gift, would not come under the head of larceny.
+Still, the heavier gift was to be preferred, if Lapidoth could only make
+haste enough in asking for it, and the imaginary action of taking the
+ring, which kept repeating itself like an inward tune, sank into a
+rejected idea. He satisfied his urgent longing by resolving to go below,
+and watch for the moment of Deronda's departure, when he would ask leave
+to join him in his walk and boldly carry out his meditated plan. He rose
+and stood looking out of the window, but all the while he saw what lay
+beyond him--the brief passage he would have to make to the door close by
+the table where the ring was. However he was resolved to go down; but--by
+no distinct change of resolution, rather by a dominance of desire, like
+the thirst of the drunkard--it so happened that in passing the table his
+fingers fell noiselessly on the ring, and he found himself in the passage
+with the ring in his hand. It followed that he put on his hat and quitted
+the house. The possibility of again throwing himself on his children
+receded into the indefinite distance, and before he was out on the square
+his sense of haste had concentrated itself on selling the ring and getting
+on shipboard.
+
+Deronda and Ezra were just aware of his exit; that was all. But, by-and-
+by, Mirah came in and made a real interruption. She had not taken off her
+hat; and when Deronda rose and advanced to shake hands with her, she said,
+in a confusion at once unaccountable and troublesome to herself--
+
+"I only came in to see that Ezra had his new draught. I must go directly
+to Mrs. Meyrick's to fetch something."
+
+"Pray allow me to walk with you," said Deronda urgently. "I must not tire
+Ezra any further; besides my brains are melting. I want to go to Mrs.
+Meyrick's: may I go with you?"
+
+"Oh, yes," said Mirah, blushing still more, with the vague sense of
+something new in Deronda, and turning away to pour out Ezra's draught;
+Ezra meanwhile throwing back his head with his eyes shut, unable to get
+his mind away from the ideas that had been filling it while the reading
+was going on. Deronda for a moment stood thinking of nothing but the walk,
+till Mirah turned round again and brought the draught, when he suddenly
+remembered that he had laid aside his cravat, and saying--"Pray excuse my
+dishabille--I did not mean you to see it," he went to the little table,
+took up his cravat, and exclaimed with a violent impulse of surprise,
+"Good heavens, where is my ring gone?" beginning to search about on the
+floor.
+
+Ezra looked round the corner of his chair. Mirah, quick as thought, went
+to the spot where Deronda was seeking, and said, "Did you lay it down?"
+
+"Yes," said Deronda, still unvisited by any other explanation than that
+the ring had fallen and was lurking in shadow, indiscernable on the
+variegated carpet. He was moving the bits of furniture near, and searching
+in all possible and impossible places with hand and eyes.
+
+But another explanation had visited Mirah and taken the color from her
+cheeks. She went to Ezra's ear and whispered "Was my father here?" He bent
+his head in reply, meeting her eyes with terrible understanding. She
+darted back to the spot where Deronda was still casting down his eyes in
+that hopeless exploration which are apt to carry on over a space we have
+examined in vain. "You have not found it?" she said, hurriedly.
+
+He, meeting her frightened gaze, immediately caught alarm from it and
+answered, "I perhaps put it in my pocket," professing to feel for it
+there.
+
+She watched him and said, "It is not there?--you put it on the table,"
+with a penetrating voice that would not let him feign to have found it in
+his pocket; and immediately she rushed out of the room. Deronda followed
+her--she was gone into the sitting-room below to look for her father--she
+opened the door of the bedroom to see if he were there--she looked where
+his hat usually hung--she turned with her hands clasped tight and her lips
+pale, gazing despairingly out of the window. Then she looked up at
+Deronda, who had not dared to speak to her in her white agitation. She
+looked up at him, unable to utter a word--the look seemed a tacit
+acceptance of the humiliation she felt in his presence. But he, taking her
+clasped hands between both his, said, in a tone of reverent adoration--
+
+"Mirah, let me think that he is my father as well as yours--that we can
+have no sorrow, no disgrace, no joy apart. I will rather take your grief
+to be mine than I would take the brightest joy of another woman. Say you
+will not reject me--say you will take me to share all things with you. Say
+you will promise to be my wife--say it now. I have been in doubt so long--
+I have had to hide my love so long. Say that now and always I may prove to
+you that I love you with complete love."
+
+The change in Mirah had been gradual. She had not passed at once from
+anguish to the full, blessed consciousness that, in this moment of grief
+and shame, Deronda was giving her the highest tribute man can give to
+woman. With the first tones and the first words, she had only a sense of
+solemn comfort, referring this goodness of Deronda's to his feeling for
+Ezra. But by degrees the rapturous assurance of unhoped-for good took
+possession of her frame: her face glowed under Deronda's as he bent over
+her; yet she looked up still with intense gravity, as when she had first
+acknowledged with religious gratitude that he had thought her "worthy of
+the best;" and when he had finished, she could say nothing--she could only
+lift up her lips to his and just kiss them, as if that were the simplest
+"yes." They stood then, only looking at each other, he holding her hands
+between his--too happy to move, meeting so fully in their new
+consciousness that all signs would have seemed to throw them farther
+apart, till Mirah said in a whisper: "Let us go and comfort Ezra."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXIX.
+
+ "The human nature unto which I felt
+ That I belonged, and reverenced with love,
+ Was not a punctual presence, but a spirit
+ Diffused through time and space, with aid derived
+ Of evidence from monuments, erect,
+ Prostrate, or leaning toward their common rest
+ In earth, the widely scattered wreck sublime
+ Of vanished nations."
+ --WORDSWORTH: _The Prelude_.
+
+
+Sir Hugo carried out his plan of spending part of the autumn at Diplow,
+and by the beginning of October his presence was spreading some
+cheerfulness in the neighborhood, among all ranks and persons concerned,
+from the stately home of Brackenshaw and Quetcham to the respectable shop-
+parlors in Wanchester. For Sir Hugo was a man who liked to show himself
+and be affable, a Liberal of good lineage, who confided entirely in reform
+as not likely to make any serious difference in English habits of feeling,
+one of which undoubtedly is the liking to behold society well fenced and
+adorned with hereditary rank. Hence he made Diplow a most agreeable house,
+extending his invitations to old Wanchester solicitors and young village
+curates, but also taking some care in the combination of the guests, and
+not feeding all the common poultry together, so that they should think
+their meal no particular compliment. Easy-going Lord Brackenshaw, for
+example, would not mind meeting Robinson the attorney, but Robinson would
+have been naturally piqued if he had been asked to meet a set of people
+who passed for his equals. On all these points Sir Hugo was well informed
+enough at once to gain popularity for himself and give pleasure to others
+--two results which eminently suited his disposition. The rector of
+Pennicote now found a reception at Diplow very different from the haughty
+tolerance he had undergone during the reign of Grandcourt. It was not that
+the baronet liked Mr. Gascoigne; it was that he desired to keep up a
+marked relation of friendliness with him on account of Mrs. Grandcourt,
+for whom Sir Hugo's chivalry had become more and more engaged. Why? The
+chief reason was one that he could not fully communicate, even to Lady
+Mallinger--for he would not tell what he thought one woman's secret to
+another, even though the other was his wife--which shows that his chivalry
+included a rare reticence.
+
+Deronda, after he had become engaged to Mirah, felt it right to make a
+full statement of his position and purposes to Sir Hugo, and he chose to
+make it by letter. He had more than a presentiment that his fatherly
+friend would feel some dissatisfaction, if not pain, at this turn of his
+destiny. In reading unwelcome news, instead of hearing it, there is the
+advantage that one avoids a hasty expression of impatience which may
+afterward be repented of. Deronda dreaded that verbal collision which
+makes otherwise pardonable feeling lastingly offensive.
+
+And Sir Hugo, though not altogether surprised, was thoroughly vexed. His
+immediate resource was to take the letter to Lady Mallinger, who would be
+sure to express an astonishment which her husband could argue against as
+unreasonable, and in this way divide the stress of his discontent. And in
+fact when she showed herself astonished and distressed that all Daniel's
+wonderful talents, and the comfort of having him in the house, should have
+ended in his going mad in this way about the Jews, the baronet could say--
+
+"Oh, nonsense, my dear! depend upon it, Dan will not make a fool of
+himself. He has large notions about Judaism--political views which you
+can't understand. No fear but Dan will keep himself head uppermost."
+
+But with regard to the prospective marriage she afforded him no counter-
+irritant. The gentle lady observed, without rancor, that she had little
+dreamed of what was coming when she had Mirah to sing at her musical party
+and give lessons to Amabel. After some hesitation, indeed, she confessed
+it _had_ passed through her mind that after a proper time Daniel might
+marry Mrs. Grandcourt--because it seemed so remarkable that she should be
+at Genoa just at that time--and although she herself was not fond of
+widows she could not help thinking that such a marriage would have been
+better than his going altogether with the Jews. But Sir Hugo was so
+strongly of the same opinion that he could not correct it as a feminine
+mistake; and his ill-humor at the disproof of his disagreeable conclusions
+on behalf of Gwendolen was left without vent. He desired Lady Mallinger
+not to breathe a word about the affair till further notice, saying to
+himself, "If it is an unkind cut to the poor thing (meaning Gwendolen),
+the longer she is without knowing it the better, in her present nervous
+state. And she will best learn it from Dan himself." Sir Hugo's
+conjectures had worked so industriously with his knowledge, that he
+fancied himself well informed concerning the whole situation.
+
+Meanwhile his residence with his family at Diplow enabled him to continue
+his fatherly attentions to Gwendolen; and in these Lady Mallinger,
+notwithstanding her small liking for widows, was quite willing to second
+him.
+
+The plan of removal to Offendene had been carried out; and Gwendolen, in
+settling there, maintained a calm beyond her mother's hopes. She was
+experiencing some of that peaceful melancholy which comes from the
+renunciation of demands for self, and from taking the ordinary good of
+existence, and especially kindness, even from a dog, as a gift above
+expectation. Does one who has been all but lost in a pit of darkness
+complain of the sweet air and the daylight? There is a way of looking at
+our life daily as an escape, and taking the quiet return of morn and
+evening--still more the star-like out-glowing of some pure fellow-feeling,
+some generous impulse breaking our inward darkness--as a salvation that
+reconciles us to hardship. Those who have a self-knowledge prompting such
+self-accusation as Hamlet's, can understand this habitual feeling of
+rescue. And it was felt by Gwendolen as she lived through and through
+again the terrible history of her temptations, from their first form of
+illusory self-pleasing when she struggled away from the hold of
+conscience, to their latest form of an urgent hatred dragging her toward
+its satisfaction, while she prayed and cried for the help of that
+conscience which she had once forsaken. She was now dwelling on every word
+of Deronda's that pointed to her past deliverance from the worst evil in
+herself, and the worst infliction of it on others, and on every word that
+carried a force to resist self-despair.
+
+But she was also upborne by the prospect of soon seeing him again: she did
+not imagine him otherwise than always within her reach, her supreme need
+of him blinding her to the separateness of his life, the whole scene of
+which she filled with his relation to her--no unique preoccupation of
+Gwendolen's, for we are all apt to fall into this passionate egoism of
+imagination, not only toward our fellow-men, but toward God. And the
+future which she turned her face to with a willing step was one where she
+would be continually assimilating herself to some type that he would hold
+before her. Had he not first risen on her vision as a corrective presence
+which she had recognized in the beginning with resentment, and at last
+with entire love and trust? She could not spontaneously think of an end to
+that reliance, which had become to her imagination like the firmness of
+the earth, the only condition of her walking.
+
+And Deronda was not long before he came to Diplow, which was a more
+convenient distance from town than the Abbey. He had wished to carry out a
+plan for taking Ezra and Mirah to a mild spot on the coast, while he
+prepared another home which Mirah might enter as his bride, and where they
+might unitedly watch over her brother. But Ezra begged not to be removed,
+unless it were to go with them to the East. All outward solicitations were
+becoming more and more of a burden to him; but his mind dwelt on the
+possibility of this voyage with a visionary joy. Deronda, in his
+preparations for the marriage, which he hoped might not be deferred beyond
+a couple of months, wished to have fuller consultation as to his resources
+and affairs generally with Sir Hugo, and here was a reason for not
+delaying his visit to Diplow. But he thought quite as much of another
+reason--his promise to Gwendolen. The sense of blessedness in his own lot
+had yet an aching anxiety at his heart: this may be held paradoxical, for
+the beloved lover is always called happy, and happiness is considered as a
+well-fleshed indifference to sorrow outside it. But human experience is
+usually paradoxical, if that means incongruous with the phrases of
+current, talk or even current philosophy. It was no treason to Mirah, but
+a part of that full nature which made his love for her the more worthy,
+that his joy in her could hold by its side the care for another. For what
+is love itself, for the one we love best?--an enfolding of immeasurable
+cares which yet are better than any joys outside our love.
+
+Deronda came twice to Diplow, and saw Gwendolen twice--and yet he went
+back to town without having told her anything about the change in his lot
+and prospects. He blamed himself; but in all momentous communication
+likely to give pain we feel dependent on some preparatory turn of words or
+associations, some agreement of the other's mood with the probable effect
+of what we have to impart. In the first interview Gwendolen was so
+absorbed in what she had to say to him, so full of questions which he must
+answer, about the arrangement of her life, what she could do to make
+herself less ignorant, how she could be kindest to everybody, and make
+amends for her selfishness and try to be rid of it, that Deronda utterly
+shrank from waiving her immediate wants in order to speak of himself, nay,
+from inflicting a wound on her in these moments when she was leaning on
+him for help in her path. In the second interview, when he went with new
+resolve to command the conversation into some preparatory track, he found
+her in a state of deep depression, overmastered by some distasteful
+miserable memories which forced themselves on her as something more real
+and ample than any new material out of which she could mould her future.
+She cried hysterically, and said that he would always despise her. He
+could only seek words of soothing and encouragement: and when she
+gradually revived under them, with that pathetic look of renewed childlike
+interest which we see in eyes where the lashes are still beaded with
+tears, it was impossible to lay another burden on her.
+
+But time went on, and he felt it a pressing duty to make the difficult
+disclosure. Gwendolen, it was true, never recognized his having any
+affairs; and it had never even occurred to her to ask him why he happened
+to be at Genoa. But this unconsciousness of hers would make a sudden
+revelation of affairs that were determining his course in life all the
+heavier blow to her; and if he left the revelation to be made by different
+persons, she would feel that he had treated her with cruel
+inconsiderateness. He could not make the communication in writing: his
+tenderness could not bear to think of her reading his virtual farewell in
+solitude, and perhaps feeling his words full of a hard gladness for
+himself and indifference for her. He went down to Diplow again, feeling
+that every other peril was to be incurred rather than that of returning
+and leaving her still in ignorance.
+
+On this third visit Deronda found Hans Meyrick installed with his easel at
+Diplow, beginning his picture of the three daughters sitting on a bank,
+"in the Gainsborough style," and varying his work by rambling to Pennicote
+to sketch the village children and improve his acquaintance with the
+Gascoignes. Hans appeared to have recovered his vivacity, but Deronda
+detected some feigning in it, as we detect the artificiality of a lady's
+bloom from its being a little too high-toned and steadily persistent (a
+"Fluctuating Rouge" not having yet appeared among the advertisements).
+Also with all his grateful friendship and admiration for Deronda, Hans
+could not help a certain irritation against him, such as extremely
+incautious, open natures are apt to feel when the breaking of a friend's
+reserve discloses a state of things not merely unsuspected but the reverse
+of what had been hoped and ingeniously conjectured. It is true that poor
+Hans had always cared chiefly to confide in Deronda, and had been quite
+incurious as to any confidence that might have been given in return; but
+what outpourer of his own affairs is not tempted to think any hint of his
+friend's affairs is an egotistic irrelevance? That was no reason why it was
+not rather a sore reflection to Hans that while he had been all along
+naively opening his heart about Mirah, Deronda had kept secret a feeling
+of rivalry which now revealed itself as the important determining fact.
+Moreover, it is always at their peril that our friends turn out to be
+something more than we were aware of. Hans must be excused for these
+promptings of bruised sensibility, since he had not allowed them to govern
+his substantial conduct: he had the consciousness of having done right by
+his fortunate friend; or, as he told himself, "his metal had given a
+better ring than he would have sworn to beforehand." For Hans had always
+said that in point of virtue he was a _dilettante_: which meant that he
+was very fond of it in other people, but if he meddled with it himself he
+cut a poor figure. Perhaps in reward of his good behavior he gave his
+tongue the more freedom; and he was too fully possessed by the notion of
+Deronda's happiness to have a conception of what lie was feeling about
+Gwendolen, so that he spoke of her without hesitation.
+
+"When did you come down, Hans?" said Deronda, joining him in the grounds
+where he was making a study of the requisite bank and trees.
+
+"Oh, ten days ago; before the time Sir Hugo fixed. I ran down with Rex
+Gascoigne and stayed at the rectory a day or two. I'm up in all the gossip
+of these parts; I know the state of the wheelwright's interior, and have
+assisted at an infant school examination. Sister Anna, with the good upper
+lip, escorted me, else I should have been mobbed by three urchins and an
+idiot, because of my long hair and a general appearance which departs from
+the Pennicote type of the beautiful. Altogether, the village is idyllic.
+Its only fault is a dark curate with broad shoulders and broad trousers
+who ought to have gone into the heavy drapery line. The Gascoignes are
+perfect--besides being related to the Vandyke duchess. I caught a glimpse
+of her in her black robes at a distance, though she doesn't show to
+visitors."
+
+"She was not staying at the rectory?" said Deronda,
+
+"No; but I was taken to Offendene to see the old house, and as a
+consequence I saw the duchess' family. I suppose you have been there and
+know all about them?"
+
+"Yes, I have been there," said Deronda, quietly.
+
+"A fine old place. An excellent setting for a widow with romantic
+fortunes. And she seems to have had several romances. I think I have found
+out that there was one between her and my friend Rex."
+
+"Not long before her marriage, then?" said Deronda, really interested,
+"for they had only been a year at Offendene. How came you to know anything
+of it?"
+
+"Oh--not ignorant of what it is to be a miserable devil. I learn to gloat
+on the signs of misery in others. I found out that Rex never goes to
+Offendene, and has never seen the duchess since she came back; and Miss
+Gascoigne let fall something in our talk about charade-acting--for I went
+through some of my nonsense to please the young ones--something that
+proved to me that Rex was once hovering about his fair cousin close enough
+to get singed. I don't know what was her part in the affair. Perhaps the
+duke came in and carried her off. That is always the way when an
+exceptionally worthy young man forms an attachment. I understand now why
+Gascoigne talks of making the law his mistress and remaining a bachelor.
+But these are green resolves. Since the duke did not get himself drowned
+for your sake, it may turn out to be for my friend Rex's sake. Who knows?"
+
+"Is it absolutely necessary that Mrs. Grandcourt should marry again?" said
+Deronda, ready to add that Hans's success in constructing her fortunes
+hitherto had not been enough to warrant a new attempt.
+
+"You monster!" retorted Hans, "do you want her to wear weeds for _you_ all
+her life--burn herself in perpetual suttee while you are alive and merry?"
+
+Deronda could say nothing, but he looked so much annoyed that Hans turned
+the current of his chat, and when he was alone shrugged his shoulders a
+little over the thought that there really had been some stronger feeling
+between Deronda and the duchess than Mirah would like to know of. "Why
+didn't she fall in love with me?" thought Hans, laughing at himself. "She
+would have had no rivals. No woman ever wanted to discuss theology with
+me."
+
+No wonder that Deronda winced under that sort of joking with a whip-lash.
+It touched sensibilities that were already quivering with the anticipation
+of witnessing some of that pain to which even Hans's light words seemed to
+give more reality:--any sort of recognition by another giving emphasis to
+the subject of our anxiety. And now he had come down with the firm resolve
+that he would not again evade the trial. The next day he rode to
+Offendene. He had sent word that he intended to call and to ask if
+Gwendolen could receive him; and he found her awaiting him in the old
+drawing-room where some chief crises of her life had happened. She seemed
+less sad than he had seen her since her husband's death; there was no
+smile on her face, but a placid self-possession, in contrast with the mood
+in which he had last found her. She was all the more alive to the sadness
+perceptible in Deronda; and they were no sooner seated--he at a little
+distance opposite to her--than she said:
+
+"You were afraid of coming to see me, because I was so full of grief and
+despair the last time. But I am not so today. I have been sorry ever
+since. I have been making it a reason why I should keep up my hope and be
+as cheerful as I can, because I would not give you any pain about me."
+
+There was an unwonted sweetness in Gwendolen's tone and look as she
+uttered these words that seemed to Deronda to infuse the utmost cruelty
+into the task now laid upon him. But he felt obliged to make his answer a
+beginning of the task.
+
+"I _am_ in some trouble to-day," he said, looking at her rather
+mournfully; "but it is because I have things to tell you which you will
+almost think it a want of confidence on my part not to have spoken of
+before. They are things affecting my own life--my own future. I shall seem
+to have made an ill return to you for the trust you have placed in me--
+never to have given you an idea of events that make great changes for me.
+But when we have been together we have hardly had time to enter into
+subjects which at the moment were really less pressing to me than the
+trials you have been going through." There was a sort of timid tenderness
+in Deronda's deep tones, and he paused with a pleading look, as if it had
+been Gwendolen only who had conferred anything in her scenes of beseeching
+and confession.
+
+A thrill of surprise was visible in her. Such meaning as she found in his
+words had shaken her, but without causing fear. Her mind had flown at once
+to some change in his position with regard to Sir Hugo and Sir Hugo's
+property. She said, with a sense of comfort from Deronda's way of asking
+her pardon--
+
+"You never thought of anything but what you could do to help me; and I was
+so troublesome. How could you tell me things?"
+
+"It will perhaps astonish you," said Deronda, "that I have only quite
+lately known who were my parents."
+
+Gwendolen was not astonished: she felt the more assured that her
+expectations of what was coming were right. Deronda went on without check.
+
+"The reason why you found me in Italy was that I had gone there to learn
+that--in fact, to meet my mother. It was by her wish that I was brought up
+in ignorance of my parentage. She parted with me after my father's death,
+when I was a little creature. But she is now very ill, and she felt that
+the secrecy ought not to be any longer maintained. Her chief reason had
+been that she did not wish me to know I was a Jew."
+
+"_A Jew_!" Gwendolen exclaimed, in a low tone of amazement, with an
+utterly frustrated look, as if some confusing potion were creeping through
+her system.
+
+Deronda colored, and did not speak, while Gwendolen, with her eyes fixed
+on the floor, was struggling to find her way in the dark by the aid of
+various reminiscences. She seemed at last to have arrived at some
+judgment, for she looked up at Deronda again and said, as if remonstrating
+against the mother's conduct--
+
+"What difference need that have made?"
+
+"It has made a great difference to me that I have known it," said Deronda,
+emphatically; but he could not go on easily--the distance between her
+ideas and his acted like a difference of native language, making him
+uncertain what force his words would carry.
+
+Gwendolen meditated again, and then said feelingly, "I hope there is
+nothing to make you mind. _You_ are just the same as if you were not a
+Jew."
+
+She meant to assure him that nothing of that external sort could affect
+the way in which she regarded him, or the way in which he could influence
+her. Deronda was a little helped by this misunderstanding.
+
+"The discovery was far from being painful to me," he said, "I had been
+gradually prepared for it, and I was glad of it. I had been prepared for
+it by becoming intimate with a very remarkable Jew, whose ideas have
+attracted me so much that I think of devoting the best part of my life to
+some effort at giving them effect."
+
+Again Gwendolen seemed shaken--again there was a look of frustration, but
+this time it was mingled with alarm. She looked at Deronda with lips
+childishly parted. It was not that she had yet connected his words with
+Mirah and her brother, but that they had inspired her with a dreadful
+presentiment of mountainous travel for her mind before it could reach
+Deronda's. Great ideas in general which she had attributed to him seemed
+to make no great practical difference, and were not formidable in the same
+way as these mysteriously-shadowed particular ideas. He could not quite
+divine what was going on within her; he could only seek the least abrupt
+path of disclosure.
+
+"That is an object," he said, after a moment, "which will by-and-by force
+me to leave England for some time--for some years. I have purposes which
+will take me to the East."
+
+Here was something clearer, but all the more immediately agitating.
+Gwendolen's lips began to tremble. "But you will come back?" she said,
+tasting her own tears as they fell, before she thought of drying them.
+
+Deronda could not sit still. He rose, and went to prop himself against the
+corner of the mantel-piece, at a different angle from her face. But when
+she had pressed her handkerchief against her cheeks, she turned and looked
+up at him, awaiting an answer.
+
+"If I live," said Deronda--"_some time_."
+
+They were both silent. He could not persuade himself to say more unless
+she led up to it by a question; and she was apparently meditating
+something that she had to say.
+
+"What are you going to do?" she asked, at last, very mildly. "Can I
+understand the ideas, or am I too ignorant?"
+
+"I am going to the East to become better acquainted with the condition of
+my race in various countries there," said Deronda, gently--anxious to be
+as explanatory as he could on what was the impersonal part of their
+separateness from each other. "The idea that I am possessed with is that
+of restoring a political existence to my people, making them a nation
+again, giving them a national center, such as the English has, though they
+too are scattered over the face of the globe. That is a task which
+presents itself to me as a duty; I am resolved to begin it, however
+feebly. I am resolved to devote my life to it. At the least, I may awaken
+a movement in other minds, such as has been awakened in my own."
+
+There was a long silence between them. The world seemed getting larger
+round poor Gwendolen, and she more solitary and helpless in the midst. The
+thought that he might come back after going to the East, sank before the
+bewildering vision of these wild-stretching purposes in which she felt
+herself reduced to a mere speck. There comes a terrible moment to many
+souls when the great movements of the world, the larger destinies of
+mankind, which have lain aloof in newspapers and other neglected reading,
+enter like an earthquake into their own lives--where the slow urgency of
+growing generations turns into the tread of an invading army or the dire
+clash of civil war, and gray fathers know nothing to seek for but the
+corpses of their blooming sons, and girls forgot all vanity to make lint
+and bandages which may serve for the shattered limbs of their betrothed
+husbands. Then it is as if the Invisible Power that had been the object of
+lip-worship and lip-resignation became visible, according to the imagery
+of the Hebrew poet, making the flames his chariot, and riding on the wings
+of the wind, till the mountains smoke and the plains shudder under the
+rolling fiery visitations. Often the good cause seems to lie prostrate
+under the thunder of relenting force, the martyrs live reviled, they die,
+and no angel is seen holding forth the crown and the palm branch. Then it
+is that the submission of the soul to the Highest is tested, and even in
+the eyes of frivolity life looks out from the scene of human struggle with
+the awful face of duty, and a religion shows itself which is something
+else than a private consolation.
+
+That was the sort of crisis which was at this moment beginning in
+Gwendolen's small life: she was for the first time feeling the pressure of
+a vast mysterious movement, for the first time being dislodged from her
+supremacy in her own world, and getting a sense that her horizon was but a
+dipping onward of an existence with which her own was revolving. All the
+troubles of her wifehood and widowhood had still left her with the
+implicit impression which had accompanied her from childhood, that
+whatever surrounded her was somehow specially for her, and it was because
+of this that no personal jealousy had been roused in her relation to
+Deronda: she could not spontaneously think of him as rightfully belonging
+to others more than to her. But here had come a shock which went deeper
+than personal jealousy--something spiritual and vaguely tremendous that
+thrust her away, and yet quelled all her anger into self-humiliation.
+
+There had been a long silence. Deronda had stood still, even thankful for
+an interval before he needed to say more, and Gwendolen had sat like a
+statue with her wrists lying over each other and her eyes fixed--the
+intensity of her mental action arresting all other excitation. At length
+something occurred to her that made her turn her face to Deronda and say
+in a trembling voice--
+
+"Is that all you can tell me?"
+
+The question was like a dart to him. "The Jew whom I mentioned just now,"
+he answered, not without a certain tremor in his tones too, "the
+remarkable man who has greatly influenced my mind, has not perhaps been
+totally unheard of by you. He is the brother of Miss Lapidoth, whom you
+have often heard sing."
+
+A great wave of remembrance passed through Gwendolen and spread as a deep,
+painful flush over neck and face. It had come first at the scene of that
+morning when she had called on Mirah, and heard Deronda's voice reading,
+and been told, without then heeding it, that he was reading Hebrew with
+Mirah's brother.
+
+"He is very ill--very near death now," Deronda went on, nervously, and
+then stopped short. He felt that he must wait. Would she divine the rest?
+
+"Did she tell you that I went to her?" said Gwendolen, abruptly, looking
+up at him.
+
+"No," said Deronda. "I don't understand you."
+
+She turned away her eyes again, and sat thinking. Slowly the color dried
+out of face and neck, and she was as pale as before--with that almost
+withered paleness which is seen after a painful flush. At last she said--
+without turning toward him--in a low, measured voice, as if she were only
+thinking aloud in preparation for future speech--
+
+"But _can_ you marry?"
+
+"Yes," said Deronda, also in a low voice. "I am going to marry."
+
+At first there was no change in Gwendolen's attitude: she only began to
+tremble visibly; then she looked before her with dilated eyes, as at
+something lying in front of her, till she stretched her arms out straight,
+and cried with a smothered voice--
+
+"I said I should be forsaken. I have been a cruel woman. And I am
+forsaken."
+
+Deronda's anguish was intolerable. He could not help himself. He seized
+her outstretched hands and held them together, and kneeled at her feet.
+She was the victim of his happiness.
+
+"I am cruel, too, I am cruel," he repeated, with a sort of groan, looking
+up at her imploringly.
+
+His presence and touch seemed to dispel a horrible vision, and she met his
+upward look of sorrow with something like the return of consciousness
+after fainting. Then she dwelt on it with that growing pathetic movement
+of the brow which accompanies the revival of some tender recollection. The
+look of sorrow brought back what seemed a very far-off moment--the first
+time she had ever seen it, in the library at the Abbey. Sobs rose, and
+great tears fell fast. Deronda would not let her hands go--held them still
+with one of his, and himself pressed her handkerchief against her eyes.
+She submitted like a half-soothed child, making an effort to speak, which
+was hindered by struggling sobs. At last she succeeded in saying,
+brokenly--
+
+"I said--I said--it should be better--better with me--for having known
+you."
+
+His eyes too were larger with tears. She wrested one of her hands from
+his, and returned his action, pressing his tears away.
+
+"We shall not be quite parted," he said. "I will write to you always, when
+I can, and you will answer?"
+
+He waited till she said in a whisper, "I will try."
+
+"I shall be more with you than I used to be," Deronda said with gentle
+urgency, releasing her hands and rising from his kneeling posture. "If we
+had been much together before, we should have felt our differences more,
+and seemed to get farther apart. Now we can perhaps never see each other
+again. But our minds may get nearer."
+
+Gwendolen said nothing, but rose too, automatically. Her withered look of
+grief, such as the sun often shines on when the blinds are drawn up after
+the burial of life's joy, made him hate his own words: they seemed to have
+the hardness of easy consolation in them. She felt that he was going, and
+that nothing could hinder it. The sense of it was like a dreadful whisper
+in her ear, which dulled all other consciousness; and she had not known
+that she was rising.
+
+Deronda could not speak again. He thought that they must part in silence,
+but it was difficult to move toward the parting, till she looked at him
+with a sort of intention in her eyes, which helped him. He advanced to put
+out his hand silently, and when she had placed hers within it, she said
+what her mind had been laboring with--
+
+"You have been very good to me. I have deserved nothing. I will try--try
+to live. I shall think of you. What good have I been? Only harm. Don't let
+me be harm to _you_. It shall be the better for me--"
+
+She could not finish. It was not that she was sobbing, but that the
+intense effort with which she spoke made her too tremulous. The burden of
+that difficult rectitude toward him was a weight her frame tottered under.
+
+She bent forward to kiss his cheek, and he kissed hers. Then they looked
+at each other for an instant with clasped hands, and he turned away.
+
+When he was quite gone, her mother came in and found her sitting
+motionless.
+
+"Gwendolen, dearest, you look very ill," she said, bending over her and
+touching her cold hands.
+
+"Yes, mamma. But don't be afraid. I am going to live," said Gwendolen,
+bursting out hysterically.
+
+Her mother persuaded her to go to bed, and watched by her. Through the day
+and half the night she fell continually into fits of shrieking, but cried
+in the midst of them to her mother, "Don't be afraid. I shall live. I mean
+to live."
+
+After all, she slept; and when she waked in the morning light, she looked
+up fixedly at her mother and said tenderly, "Ah, poor mamma! You have been
+sitting up with me. Don't be unhappy. I shall live. I shall be better."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LXX.
+
+ In the checkered area of human experience the seasons are all mingled
+ as in the golden age: fruit and blossom hang together; in the same
+ moment the sickle is reaping and the seed is sprinkled; one tends the
+ green cluster and another treads the winepress. Nay, in each of our
+ lives harvest and spring-time are continually one, until himself
+ gathers us and sows us anew in his invisible fields.
+
+
+Among the blessings of love there is hardly one more exquisite than the
+sense that in uniting the beloved life to ours we can watch over its
+happiness, bring comfort where hardship was, and over memories of
+privation and suffering open the sweetest fountains of joy. Deronda's love
+for Mirah was strongly imbued with that blessed protectiveness. Even with
+infantine feet she had begun to tread among thorns; and the first time he
+had beheld her face it had seemed to him the girlish image of despair.
+
+But now she was glowing like a dark-tipped yet delicate ivory-tinted
+flower in the warm sunlight of content, thinking of any possible grief as
+part of that life with Deronda, which she could call by no other name than
+good. And he watched the sober gladness which gave new beauty to her
+movements; and her habitual attitudes of repose, with a delight which made
+him say to himself that it was enough of personal joy for him to save her
+from pain. She knew nothing of Hans's struggle or of Gwendolen's pang; for
+after the assurance that Deronda's hidden love had been for her, she
+easily explained Gwendolen's eager solicitude about him as part of a
+grateful dependence on his goodness, such as she herself had known. And
+all Deronda's words about Mrs. Grandcourt confirmed that view of their
+relation, though he never touched on it except in the most distant manner.
+Mirah was ready to believe that he had been a rescuing angel to many
+besides herself. The only wonder was, that she among them all was to have
+the bliss of being continually by his side.
+
+So, when the bridal veil was around Mirah it hid no doubtful tremors--only
+a thrill of awe at the acceptance of a great gift which required great
+uses. And the velvet canopy never covered a more goodly bride and
+bridegroom, to whom their people might more wisely wish offspring; more
+truthful lips never touched the sacrament marriage-wine; the marriage-
+blessing never gathered stronger promise of fulfillment than in the
+integrity of their mutual pledge. Naturally, they were married according
+to the Jewish rite. And since no religion seems yet to have demanded that
+when we make a feast we should invite only the highest rank of our
+acquaintances, few, it is to be hoped, will be offended to learn that
+among the guests at Deronda's little wedding-feast was the entire Cohen
+family, with the one exception of the baby who carried on her teething
+intelligently at home. How could Mordecai have borne that those friends of
+his adversity should have been shut out from rejoicing in common with him?
+
+Mrs. Meyrick so fully understood this that she had quite reconciled
+herself to meeting the Jewish pawnbroker, and was there with her three
+daughters--all of them enjoying the consciousness that Mirah's marriage to
+Deronda crowned a romance which would always make a sweet memory to them.
+For which of them, mother or girls, had not had a generous part in it--
+giving their best in feeling and in act to her who needed? If Hans could
+have been there, it would have been better; but Mab had already observed
+that men must suffer for being so inconvenient; suppose she, Kate, and Amy
+had all fallen in love with Mr. Deronda?--but being women they were not so
+ridiculous.
+
+The Meyricks were rewarded for conquering their prejudices by hearing a
+speech from Mr. Cohen, which had the rare quality among speeches of not
+being quite after the usual pattern. Jacob ate beyond his years, and
+contributed several small whinnying laughs as a free accompaniment of his
+father's speech, not irreverently, but from a lively sense that his family
+was distinguishing itself; while Adelaide Rebekah, in a new Sabbath frock,
+maintained throughout a grave air of responsibility.
+
+Mordecai's brilliant eyes, sunken in their large sockets, dwelt on the
+scene with the cherishing benignancy of a spirit already lifted into an
+aloofness which nullified only selfish requirements and left sympathy
+alive. But continually, after his gaze had been traveling round on the
+others, it returned to dwell on Deronda with a fresh gleam of trusting
+affection.
+
+The wedding-feast was humble, but Mirah was not without splendid wedding-
+gifts. As soon as the betrothal had been known, there were friends who had
+entertained graceful devices. Sir Hugo and Lady Mallinger had taken
+trouble to provide a complete equipment for Eastern travel, as well as a
+precious locket containing an inscription--"_To the bride of our dear
+Daniel Deronda all blessings. H. and L. M._" The Klesmers sent a perfect
+watch, also with a pretty inscription.
+
+But something more precious than gold and gems came to Deronda from the
+neighborhood of Diplow on the morning of his marriage. It was a letter
+containing these words:--
+
+ Do not think of me sorrowfully on your wedding-day. I have remembered
+ your words--that I may live to be one of the best of women, who
+ make others glad that they were born. I do not yet see how that can
+ be, but you know better than I. If it ever comes true, it will be
+ because you helped me. I only thought of myself, and I made you
+ grieve. It hurts me now to think of your grief. You must not grieve
+ any more for me. It is better--it shall be better with me because I
+ have known you.
+
+ GWENDOLEN GRANDCOURT.
+
+The preparations for the departure of all three to the East began at once;
+for Deronda could not deny Ezra's wish that they should set out on the
+voyage forthwith, so that he might go with them, instead of detaining them
+to watch over him. He had no belief that Ezra's life would last through
+the voyage, for there were symptoms which seemed to show that the last
+stage of his malady had set in. But Ezra himself had said, "Never mind
+where I die, so that I am with you."
+
+He did not set out with them. One morning early he said to Deronda, "Do
+not quit me to-day. I shall die before it is ended."
+
+He chose to be dressed and sit up in his easy chair as usual, Deronda and
+Mirah on each side of him, and for some hours he was unusually silent, not
+even making the effort to speak, but looking at them occasionally with
+eyes full of some restful meaning, as if to assure them that while this
+remnant of breathing-time was difficult, he felt an ocean of peace beneath
+him.
+
+It was not till late in the afternoon, when the light was falling, that he
+took a hand of each in his and said, looking at Deronda, "Death is coming
+to me as the divine kiss which is both parting and reunion--which takes me
+from your bodily eyes and gives me full presence in your soul. Where thou
+goest, Daniel, I shall go. Is it not begun? Have I not breathed my soul
+into you? We shall live together."
+
+He paused, and Deronda waited, thinking that there might be another word
+for him. But slowly and with effort Ezra, pressing on their hands, raised
+himself and uttered in Hebrew the confession of the divine Unity, which
+long for generations has been on the lips of the dying Israelite.
+
+He sank back gently into his chair, and did not speak again. But it was
+some hours before he had ceased to breathe, with Mirah's and Deronda's
+arms around him.
+
+ "Nothing is here for tears, nothing to wail
+ Or knock the breast; no weakness, no contempt,
+ Dispraise or blame; nothing but well and fair,
+ And what may quiet us in a death so noble."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Daniel Deronda, by George Eliot
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANIEL DERONDA ***
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